Diho Lloyd Brown v. the State of Texas

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 9th District (Beaumont)
DecidedJanuary 28, 2026
Docket09-24-00036-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Diho Lloyd Brown v. the State of Texas (Diho Lloyd Brown v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Court of Appeals, 9th District (Beaumont) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Diho Lloyd Brown v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

________________

NO. 09-24-00036-CR ________________

DIHO LLOYD BROWN, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee ________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 221st District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 23-01-00062-CR ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found Diho Lloyd Brown guilty of possession of a controlled substance

and sentenced him to forty years imprisonment. 1 He appeals the denial of his motion

to suppress the traffic stop and search that resulted in the discovery of

1 Brown pleaded true to two enhancements regarding two prior felony convictions. 1 methamphetamine, claiming that the search and seizure were unreasonable. For the

reasons discussed below, we affirm Brown’s conviction.

Background2

In January 2024, a Montgomery County grand jury indicted Brown for

possession of a controlled substance, a second-degree felony. See Tex. Health &

Safety Code Ann. § 481.115(d). The indictment included two enhancement

paragraphs for two prior felony convictions.

That same month, Brown filed a Motion to Suppress Evidence Seized without

a Warrant. In the Motion, Brown argued that all evidence seized on or about

December 29, 2023, is inadmissible as the search was conducted without a search

warrant and was without probable cause or exigent circumstances.

On January 19, 2024, a hearing on Brown’s Motion to Suppress was held. At

the hearing, the arresting officer, Sergeant Travis Higginbotham with the

Montgomery County Constable’s Office, testified and a video of his dash camera

and body camera were entered as evidence and played. According to Higginbotham,

on December 29, 2022, he initiated a traffic stop after he observed a pickup truck

2 Brown does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence or any other evidentiary rulings during the trial, so we limit our background discussion accordingly. See Tex. R. App. P. 47.1 (requiring appellate courts to hand down an opinion “as brief as practicable” but addressing every issue raised and necessary to the appeal’s final disposition). 2 traveling over the posted speed limit. Higginbotham testified that he turned on his

emergency lights and then his siren, but it took the driver over a minute to pull over.

He acknowledged that he originally thought the driver was looking for a place to

pull over, but once the driver continued, he turned on his siren. He further

acknowledged that in his training and experience as a peace officer, when a vehicle

prolongs pulling over for this length of time, the occupant(s) are looking to evade or

conceal something. Higginbotham made contact with the driver, who provided his

identification card, which identified Brown as the operator of the pickup truck.

Higginbotham testified that he requested to search the vehicle, and Brown was

hesitant but stated “he had nothing to hide, to go ahead.” Higginbotham did not

locate any contraband inside the vehicle, so he spoke further with Brown because he

suspected that Brown was concealing something based on how long it took for him

to pull over. He testified that he checked Brown’s clothes, including shaking his

clothes, to see if anything would fall out.

According to Higginbotham, he asked to check Brown’s shoes, and Brown

handed him his shoe. As Higginbotham grabbed the shoe, Brown tried pulling it

back and Higginbotham noticed a clear plastic top or bag inside. Higginbotham also

indicated that when Brown held onto the shoe, as Higginbotham put his hand on it,

he told Brown to go ahead and let go. Higginbotham testified that he handcuffed and

3 detained Brown to determine what was inside his shoe. Higginbotham stated that

based on the way Brown continued to hold onto his shoe, he felt Brown was

concealing something.

Higginbotham testified that Brown never said, “no or you can’t search or I

don’t want you searching that.” He stated that during the interaction, they discussed

casual things such as tattoos and work, and that Brown was not being uncooperative.

On cross-examination, Higginbotham testified that he did not initiate the stop

with Brown because he is black or had tattoos, because he did not know Brown’s

race and did not know Brown had tattoos until he got to the door. He stated that his

sole reason to turn around after Brown passed him was because Brown was going

three miles per hour over the posted speed limit.

Higginbotham testified that he calibrated the radar before beginning his shift,

and he explained how the calibration is done. He indicated that he does not keep a

calibration date log, nor does he have a maintenance and repair log. Though he did

not know the age of the radar, he had been using it since he was assigned that patrol

car in 2020. He testified that he does not have a certification of accuracy on the

tuning forks, and he indicated that he has never calibrated the tuning forks and is

unaware that the tuning forks are supposed to be or could be calibrated.

4 Higginbotham testified that he has not reviewed the Texas Law Enforcement manual

on calibrating tuning forks and has only calibrated his radar using the tuning forks.

Higginbotham again testified that he told Brown to let him see his shoe and

later to let the shoe go when he tried pulling it away instead of handing it to

Higginbotham. He indicated that he did not use the K9 dog that was present to sniff

around Brown because the dog is trained to track and attack, and there was no point

in risking Brown getting hurt. Higginbotham testified that it was an indication that

something was wrong when someone pulls something away from him and that he

wanted to make sure there was nothing that would “get us both in trouble.”

Higginbotham further testified that he did not need to deploy the K9 dog

because Brown granted his request to search his vehicle, and Brown did not refuse

the search of his person. According to Higginbotham, Brown never revoked consent

or stated that he wanted him to stop searching.

Next, Trooper Eric Cisneros testified that prior to his current role with the

Department of Public Safety as a highway patrol trooper, he worked as a constable

and K9 handler for Montgomery County. According to Cisneros, he was working

patrol for the Montgomery County Constable’s Office on December 29, 2022, when

he observed another patrol unit with lights activated attempting to conduct a traffic

stop on a pickup truck. Cisneros testified that when the truck passed, he noticed the

5 driver leaning down on the left side of the truck and this raised his concern that there

were weapons inside. In response, Cisneros followed the suspect and the deputy to

assist with the traffic stop.

Once stopped, Cisneros indicated that Higginbotham was speaking with

Brown, and Brown then stood near Cisneros at the front of Higginbotham’s patrol

vehicle. Cisneros indicated that once he was provided with Brown’s identification,

he went to check it. According to Cisneros, Brown was cooperative, talkative, calm

and not aggressive. Cisneros testified that after checking Brown’s identification, he

observed Higginbotham and Brown holding a shoe and when Brown let it go,

Higginbotham instructed Brown to put his hands behind his back. Cisneros then

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