Davis, Kristen Kay v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 31, 2002
Docket14-02-00112-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Davis, Kristen Kay v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion filed December 31, 2002

Affirmed and Opinion filed December 31, 2002.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-02-00112-CR

KRISTEN KAY DAVIS, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the County Criminal Court at Law No. 12

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1073432

O P I N I O N

Appellant, Kristen Kay Davis, was convicted on her guilty plea for possession of marijuana and sentenced in accordance with a plea agreement to two days in the Harris County Jail and assessed a $1,000 fine.  In her sole issue on appeal, appellant asserts the trial court erred in failing to suppress evidence.  We affirm.


                                                             I.  Background

On Aug. 15, 2001, Officer James Sheldon of the Houston Police Department was working an anti-drug program in the Greenspoint area.  Sheldon had staked out the area at the intersection of Aldine Bender and Imperial Valley where Sheldon had made prior drug related arrests.  Sheldon, in an unmarked vehicle, pulled into the parking lot of a small shopping center where several males were Amilling around drinking beer, wine.@  Sheldon observed one male smoking a marijuana cigarette and radioed the marked units that were out of sight, but nearby. 

When a marked unit arrived, Joseph Diaz, a young male on a bicycle who was in the middle of the group, immediately rode away.  Sheldon observed Diaz motioning to a black Mustang to leave the area.  When Sheldon saw the Mustang immediately begin to back up, he radioed for a marked unit to intercept the Mustang and another marked unit to apprehend Diaz.  When Sheldon radioed the marked units, he advised them of what he had observed concerning the Mustang.  Sheldon considered both Diaz=s actions in riding away from the crowd when the police arrived and the Mustang=s response to the Diaz=s motions as suspicious.  It has been Sheldon=s experience that where there is a group of people, and in this case an individual smoking a marijuana cigarette, A[w]hen the marked units start to roll into the area, inevitably somebody is going to start to get up and move.@ 

Officer Carl Sanders, who was in a marked unit, heard Sheldon=s request for the interception of the Mustang.  When Sanders arrived, the Mustang had backed up about five feet and was moving.  Sanders noticed a child under the age of two in the backseat; the child was not restrained.  Sanders then turned on the emergency lights and turned the spotlight on the Mustang.  When the Mustang stopped, appellant exited the vehicle and tried to restrain the child.  Sanders asked her if she had any Adope or guns@ in the vehicle.  Appellant pointed to a brown paper bag in the area of the console and said AI don=t know what it is, he threw it in here.@  Sanders understood that appellant was talking about the person on the bicycle, Diaz. 


Sanders had appellant step over to the front of his patrol car, while he looked in the Mustang.  There, he observed a brown paper bag from which protruded clear bags containing a green leafy substance that  he believed was marijuana.  Sanders placed appellant in the back of his patrol car.  Sanders retrieved the brown bag from the Mustang and poured its contents, 16 small bags of marijuana, onto the hood of his patrol car.  Sanders informed appellant she was under arrest, advised her of her rights, and asked for her consent to search the Mustang.  Sanders asked appellant if there were more drugs in her car; she responded there were on the other side of the floor.  Sanders did not see anything on the other side of the floor, but when he lifted up the floor mat, he found another bag of marijuana.  Sanders asked appellant how she knew what was underneath the floor mat when she did not know what was in the paper bag; appellant had no response. 

Appellant testified that she and Diaz were married but were separated.  Appellant claims she and Diaz were going to meet at his grandmother=s house.  When Diaz motioned for her to leave, she A figured he was just ready to go.@  Appellant=s son was climbing out of his car seat.  Appellant noticed a police car pulling up behind her after she had stopped and was trying to put her son back in his seat.  Appellant told the officer she was trying to put her son back in his car seat. 

Appellant claims she did not motion to the paper bag.  Instead, Appellant testified that Diaz Ahad just gotten out of rehab.  And so I was kind of suspicious of what he had handed me and I just let him know, I told him that there was a brown bag in the car, that I didn=t know what was in it.@  With regard to the bag of marijuana on the passenger side of the floor, appellant testified she did not tell the officer there were more drugs.  Appellant claims Diaz had been riding with her earlier that day and might have put the bag of marijuana on the passenger side of the floor without her knowledge. 

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Davis, Kristen Kay v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-kristen-kay-v-state-texapp-2002.