David, Sholomo

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 11, 2022
DocketPD-0307-21
StatusPublished

This text of David, Sholomo (David, Sholomo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David, Sholomo, (Tex. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS NO. PD-0307-21

SHOLOMO DAVID, Appellant

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

ON STATE’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW FROM THE EIGHTH COURT OF APPEALS EL PASO COUNTY

HERVEY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which RICHARDSON, NEWELL, KEEL, WALKER, and SLAUGHTER, JJ., joined. KELLER, P.J., and YEARY and MCCLURE, JJ., concurred.

OPINION

Sholomo David, Appellant, was indicted for felony tampering with physical

evidence, a third-degree felony. The State’s theories were that Appellant “altered,”

“concealed,” or “destroyed” marijuana when he dumped it into a toilet containing water David–2

and human waste during a police raid of the motel room he was in. 1 The jury convicted

Appellant and sentenced him to 30 years’ confinement as a habitual offender. Appellant

appealed and argued among other things that the evidence is legally insufficient to show

that he put the marijuana in the toilet and to prove that putting the marijuana into the

toilet with water and human waste altered, concealed, or destroyed it. The court of

appeals found the evidence legally insufficient and rendered an acquittal. We granted

review to decide whether the evidence is sufficient to show that Appellant altered or

destroyed the marijuana. Because we conclude that the evidence is legally sufficient to

show that Appellant altered the marijuana, we will reverse the judgment of the court of

appeals and remand the cause for it to address Appellant’s remaining issues.

1 Section 37.09(a) states, as relevant to this offense, that,

(a) A person commits an offense if, knowing that an investigation or official proceeding is pending or in progress, he:

(1) alters, destroys, or conceals any record, document, or thing with intent to impair its verity, legibility, or availability as evidence in the investigation or official proceeding; . . .

* * *

TEX. PENAL CODE § 37.09. David–3

FACTS

a. Background

In June 2016, Special Agent Gabriel Nava, a member of the gang/organized crime

unit of the Criminal Investigations Division of the Texas Department of Public Safety,

was coordinating surveillance at the Studio and Rooms motel complex in El Paso because

he believed that drugs were being sold there. The motel was associated with drug dealing,

mostly crack cocaine and methamphetamine, as well as human trafficking by gang

members. There had also been multiple assaults related to the illegal activities and a

stabbing not long before this incident.

b. The Day Before the Raid

The day before the raid, June 8, 2016, a criminal informant told police that drugs

were being sold in Room 15, so police set up a controlled buy. The undercover officer

went to Room 12, and a female answered the door. The female then went to Room 15,

obtained crack cocaine, returned to Room 12, and sold the drugs to the officer. Police

obtained search warrants for both rooms with plans to execute the search warrants the

following day.

c. The Day of the Raid

The following day, June 9, 2016, police surveilled the motel before executing the

search warrants, and they saw that the drug activity had shifted to Room 18. Lt. Nava

(then Special Agent Nava), who oversaw the operation, testified that he saw many brief,

hand-to-hand transactions, which in his experience, “tend to be quick street level deals

that are happening for narcotics.” In particular, he saw a female leave Room 18 numerous David–4

times on foot to conduct hand-to-hand transactions with other people who approached on

foot. Another agent saw a male leave Room 18, walk across the street (where the agent

was parked), produce a glass pipe, and begin smoking a “white rock-like substance.”

Because the drug activity had moved to Room 18, Lt. Nava decided that the agents

needed to regroup. They assigned a team of officers to execute the search warrant at

Room 15 and for a team of officers to do a “knock and talk” at Room 18. 2 Police did not

execute the search warrant for Room 12 at that time because they had insufficient

personnel. Police then arrived in force, some in a marked car wearing gear identifying

themselves as state police. As they were arriving, a woman approaching Room 18 saw

them. She went to the open doorway of Room 18 and yelled something to the occupants,

but Lt. Nava could not hear what she said. The woman then stepped away from the door

and sat on the curb. As police approached the motel rooms announcing their presence and

ordering the occupants to show themselves, someone inside Room 18 slammed that door

shut. When Lt. Nava reached the door, he smelled the strong odor of marijuana and could

hear “a bunch of movements.” According to him, it was “obviously more than one person

-- quick movement.” He told other agents behind him to keep knocking and try to contact

the occupants while he proceeded to Room 15, his assignment, to execute the no-knock

search warrant.

While Lt. Nava was executing the warrant, Special Agent Michael Carrasco had

continued directly to Room 18 and started knocking on the window. Other officers were

2 A “knock and talk” is where police knock on a door, hoping the occupants will answer and cooperate. David–5

already knocking on the door. Agent Carrasco could not see anything through the

window but heard the voices of multiple people and a lot of commotion inside the room,

“[l]ike shuffling of whatever they had inside -- their clothes or other things. You could

hear like a drawer trying to close.”

Lt. Nava and Agent Carrasco breached Room 18 together. According to Lt. Nava,

the room was a mess, with clothing everywhere, “like they had been staying an extended

amount of time.” “The room had a very, very strong odor of marijuana,” and in plain

view there were “cigarette-type Swisher Sweets or Phillies or other types of things like

that, they tend to roll marijuana in . . . .” Agent Carrasco said that the odor of marijuana

“hit [him] like a rock.” There was paraphernalia all over the room, including a glass pipe

commonly used to smoke either crack cocaine or methamphetamine. In a drawer were

found a realistic-looking pistol BB gun and four cell phones. According to Lt. Nava, it is

typical for narcotics dealers to have multiple cell phones.

There were two females in the immediate living area, and Lt. Nava and Agent

Carrasco heard someone in the bathroom. Agent Carrasco said that he was knocking on

the door and announcing himself as a police officer while ordering Appellant out, but

Appellant did not answer. Instead, Agent Carrasco started hearing “shuffling of stuff --

feet shuffling and movement.” At that point, Agent Carrasco tried to enter, but the door

was locked, so the team breached the door and found Appellant alone, completely

clothed, and standing in a one-to-two-foot space between the toilet and shower. Appellant

never said anything to police. David–6

In searching the bathroom, Lt. Nava found a loose green leafy substance in the

toilet. It had been mixed with water and excrement. He also saw some smaller glass pipes

at the bottom of the toilet. Lt. Nava believed that narcotics had been flushed prior to them

breaching the door and that they found only the remnants of what did not flush. A

photograph of the substance introduced by the State appears to show that some of the

substance is still burning. Lt.

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