Derrick Lashawn Wright v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedNovember 19, 2024
Docket0879233
StatusUnpublished

This text of Derrick Lashawn Wright v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Derrick Lashawn Wright v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Derrick Lashawn Wright v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges O’Brien and Causey Argued at Lexington, Virginia

DERRICK LASHAWN WRIGHT MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0879-23-3 JUDGE DORIS HENDERSON CAUSEY NOVEMBER 19, 2024 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HENRY COUNTY James R. McGarry, Judge

Kelsey Bulger, Senior Appellate Attorney (Virginia Indigent Defense Commission, on briefs), for appellant.

Sheri H. Kelly, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General; Ken J. Baldassari, Assistant Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Derrick LaShawn Wright was convicted by a jury of possession with intent to distribute:

cocaine, second offense; fentanyl, second offense; more than ten grams of methamphetamine;

more than one-half ounce but less than five pounds of marijuana; and possession of more than

one pound of marijuana and/or a Schedule II controlled substance while in possession of a

firearm.1 The trial court imposed a term of incarceration of 55 years, with 39 years suspended.

On appeal, Wright challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to establish constructive possession

of the drugs or firearms. Additionally, he asserts that the Commonwealth did not prove his intent

to distribute on the marijuana and firearm charges. Finding that the evidence was sufficient to

create factual issues for the jury to resolve, we affirm.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). 1 The trial court granted Wright’s motion to reduce a similar possession of alprazolam with intent to distribute to simple possession. The jury acquitted him on that charge. BACKGROUND

On July 18, 2019, Henry County Investigator Darrell Foley and other members of an arrest

team went to a county residence to serve an arrest warrant on Wright. After they parked in the

driveway of the residence, Foley got out and started to walk toward the kitchen door in the carport.

Wright came out from the kitchen door and approached Foley. Foley arrested Wright and walked

him to the edge of the carport. Foley detected “a strong smell of marijuana” on Wright. Foley

searched Wright, who had $2,630 in his pants pocket.

Another officer then directed Foley to the rear of the residence. As he walked past the

kitchen door Foley “got a strong smell of marijuana coming from the doorway.” When Foley came

to a railing at the rear of the home, he saw what appeared to be marijuana plants growing in several

containers. Foley then walked back toward Wright, who was standing with two other officers off

the porch, and again detected “a strong smell of marijuana coming from the residence.” Foley also

saw an open bag on the kitchen table.

Foley told Wright that the officers were going to obtain a search warrant and look through

the house to ensure that no one else was present. Wright responded that “he would go inside and

get the marijuana” and told Foley that he “didn’t need a search warrant.” Nevertheless, the officers

conducted a safety sweep of the house and found no one else. They also secured the premises while

they waited for the arrival of a search warrant for the residence. Wright was standing outside a

patrol car about to be taken to the magistrate’s office on the arrest warrant when he asked to speak

with Foley. Wright informed him that a safe in the house contained “about fifteen thousand” and

“about six thousand of it [was] his girl’s.” Wright said, “I’m done and I’m going away for a long

time.”

Police then executed a search warrant for the house. Foley saw digital scales and a Glock

handgun in the open bag on the kitchen table. The handgun contained ammunition within the

-2- magazine. After removing the other items from the bag, Foley also recovered a medication bottle in

the bag containing 11 and a half pills. The bag also held a plastic bag “containing a chunky

substance.”

Foley also saw a glass jar and a cellphone on the kitchen table. A Virginia Criminal Justice

Agency form with Wright’s picture and name on it along with other personal information was also

on the table. Further, Foley seized a cellphone on the kitchen countertop and a backpack hanging

on the kitchen chair. A search of the backpack revealed a Walmart bag containing a Ziploc bag that

in turn contained two plastic bags. The bags variously contained an “off white substance,” pills, and

“green powder.” During the search of the kitchen the officers also came upon an EBT card bearing

the name “Bianca V. Hairston.”

The backpack also contained a set of digital scales and “an aftermarket piece you can put on

a handgun to make it automatic instead of every time you pull the trigger. When you pull the

trigger, . . . it shoots constantly.” More than 200 rounds of ammunition and another set of scales

were in various kitchen cabinets.

Next, the officers searched the living room, hallway closets, and bathroom but found

nothing of note. Likewise, the first two bedrooms along the hallway did not contain any potentially

incriminating items. In the third bedroom’s closet, however, an open safe contained “two large bags

of green plantlike material,” ammunition, and $15,060. A closed black bag next to the safe

contained a Glock handgun with an extended magazine and ammunition within the magazine.

Further examination of the bag disclosed a Diamondback AR style pistol. Inside a box were an AR

style rifle, four magazines, and 118 rounds of rifle ammunition. Three pairs of men’s shoes were

found on the floor next to the closet, which contained men’s clothing. On the other side of the room

from the safe was another woman’s bra, women’s shoes, and several lotions and similar items.

After searching the bedrooms, the officers went to the basement. There, they came upon a monitor

-3- that was a live feed to a camera facing in the direction of the marijuana plants behind the house.

The basement door led to the rear of the residence where the plants were growing. The officers also

found two handgun cases, a magazine and ammunition, and camouflaged body armor hanging on a

chair. When the officers removed the cushions from a couch in the basement, they discovered an

AK style 7.62 rifle and a magazine containing ten rounds.

Neil Vowels, a state forensic scientist, testified as an expert on chemistry and drug analysis.

Vowels determined that Commonwealth’s Exhibit 4, the “plastic bag containing a chunky

substance,” contained 7.3667 grams of cocaine. Vowels found that the off-white substance in the

Ziploc bag contained 308.49 grams of cocaine hydrochloride, and the smaller “green substance” in

the Ziploc bag contained 25.155 grams of fentanyl. The “knotted plastic bag . . . contain[ing] green

powder” was analyzed as 1.9758 grams of methamphetamine, and five of the 128 tablets were also

found to contain methamphetamine. Finally, Vowels determined that the two plastic bags with

plant-like material contained 650.77 grams, or a little over one pound, of marijuana and the plant

material in the glass jar contained an additional 41.16 grams of marijuana.

Henry County Sheriff’s Lieutenant Timothy Brummitt, qualified as an expert on illegal drug

distribution, opined that the amount of fentanyl was “inconsistent with personal use” considering

that personal use cases typically involve less than one gram. Brummitt testified that the recovery of

such items as the digital scales, large amount of money, firearms, body armor, and cellphones

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