Eddie Arthur Cross, Sr. A/K/A Eddie Arthur Cross v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 13, 2003
Docket02-02-00404-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Eddie Arthur Cross, Sr. A/K/A Eddie Arthur Cross v. State (Eddie Arthur Cross, Sr. A/K/A Eddie Arthur Cross v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eddie Arthur Cross, Sr. A/K/A Eddie Arthur Cross v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

EDDIE ARTHUR CROSS, SR. A/K/A EDDIE ARTHUR CROSS V. STATE

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 2-02-404-CR

NO. 2-02-405-CR

APPELLANT

EDDIE ARTHUR CROSS, SR.

A/K/A EDDIE ARTHUR CROSS

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE

------------

FROM THE 372 ND DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

OPINION

I. I NTRODUCTION

A jury found appellant Eddie Arthur Cross, Sr. guilty of delivery of a controlled substance in an amount less than one gram and possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance in an amount more than four grams but less than two hundred grams. In five points, appellant challenges the factual sufficiency of the evidence to support his convictions and claims the trial court erred in allowing the State to question him about the veracity of the State’s witness over objection.  We affirm.

II. F ACTUAL AND P ROCEDURAL B ACKGROUND

On March 4, 1998, Officer Andre L. Smith and five other officers of the Fort Worth Police Department’s Narcotics Division set up an undercover “buy/bust” sting operation.  In preparation for the “buy/bust” operations, Officer Smith photocopied the cash that he would use in any undercover drug purchases, so the money could be identified if an arrest were made.  Officer Smith went to the area around the intersection of Lancaster and Riverside in Fort Worth, Texas, around noon dressed in plain clothes and driving an unmarked car.  The day was sunny and clear.

Upon approaching 2400 Cypress Street, Officer Smith observed a black male, who was later identified as Robert Adell, and signaled to him.  After Adell approached, Officer Smith asked him for a “dime,” which is street slang for ten dollars worth of crack cocaine.  Adell replied that he knew a place where he could take Officer Smith to make the purchase.  Addell got into Smith’s car and directed him to the 1300 block of Bessie Street, near Al’s Rec Center and an apparent vacant house at 1311 Bessie Street.

Officer Smith testified that when he pulled up to the curb, he could see two or three individuals in front of the house.  Adell asked Officer Smith for ten dollars, and Officer Smith handed him the money from the photocopied funds.  Adell left the car and walked approximately fifteen feet to a second man, whom Officer Smith identified as appellant.  Officer Smith testified that after speaking briefly with Adell, appellant took the ten dollar bill, turned, and walked by himself to the porch of the apparent vacant house, another five feet away.  As he sat in the car by the curb, Officer Smith watched appellant reach into a mailbox, located near the door, with his right hand and pull out an object, which Officer Smith could not identify more clearly.  Appellant walked back down to Adell, opened his right hand, and offered the object to him.  Immediately after taking the object out of appellant’s hand, Adell walked directly back to Officer Smith’s car and got in.  As they drove away, Adell opened his hand and presented Officer Smith with what appeared to be and what later testing established was a rock of crack cocaine in a yellow plastic baggie.

Officer Aaron Aguilar, Smith’s team member, had also monitored the undercover drug buy.  Officer Aguilar testified that he positioned his vehicle near the 1300 block of Bessie Street and watched from a distance as Officer Smith pulled up to the curb on Bessie and Adell got out.  He saw Addell approach a second man, whom he identified as appellant, and engage in “some type of hand-to-hand transaction” with him.  Appellant then turned away and walked out of Aguilar’s line of sight, only to return moments later and again engage in “some type of hand-to-hand transaction” with Adell.  Aguilar watched Adell reenter Officer Smith’s car and Officer Smith drive away.  Officer Aguilar testified no other person who matched appellant’s description entered the area even after Officer Smith left the scene.   

Officer Smith drove Adell back to where he had first picked him up and tipped him five dollars after Adell stated he “needed $5 for the hook up.” Officer Smith then notified the members of his team of the location and description of Adell and appellant.  Officer Smith described appellant as a real tall black male with an Afro wearing a white cap, white T-shirt, gray pants, and white tennis shoes.  Aguilar and two other officers approached the Bessie location and detained appellant, who, according to Aguilar, was the only person at the location that fit the description.  The officers also recovered a ten dollar bill appellant clutched in his hand, which matched the serial number of one of the photocopied ten dollar bills.  The team then took a Polaroid photograph of appellant, which they showed to Smith, who was waiting at a separate location.  Officer Smith identified appellant as the man involved in the drug buy with Adell, and appellant was formally arrested.

Officer Smith provided Aguilar by radio with the address of the house and description of the mailbox from which appellant appeared to retrieve the drugs.  Aguilar searched the mailbox and recovered a Ziploc bag that contained smaller baggies, each holding a green and white rock-like substance that appeared to be crack cocaine.  Aguilar testified that from his training and experience as a narcotics officer, he recognized this sort of packaging as a “common way” in which drugs are packaged for sale and distribution.  Members of the arrest team also arrested Adell and recovered the five dollar bill he received from Smith.  No drugs were found on Adell.

At trial, John Brooks, a forensic scientist with the Fort Worth Police Department Crime Laboratory, testified that he examined and analyzed the substances obtained by the officers two days before trial. (footnote: 1)  Brooks performed a Scott’s presumptive chemical test for cocaine on the substance sold to Officer Smith.  After the presumptive test proved positive for the possible presence of cocaine, Brooks conducted a gas chromatography mass spectrometry test (“GCMS”), which conclusively proved that the substance, which weighed 0.15 grams, contained cocaine.

The contents of the Ziploc bag taken from the mailbox by Officer Aguilar had been separated into two bags, “Lab Item 2A” and “Lab Item 2B,” which each contained several smaller plastic baggies of the substance.  Brooks performed six presumptive chemical tests on randomly selected substances in Lab Item 2A.  After all six presumptive tests proved positive for the possible presence of cocaine, Brooks conducted a GCMS on three of the six samples that were presumptively tested, and those conclusively contained cocaine as well.  The total weight of Lab Item 2A was 3.53 grams.  Brooks also performed six presumptive chemical tests on randomly selected substances in Lab Item 2B, which were all presumptive for the possible presence of cocaine.  The total weight of Lab Item 2B was 2.57 grams, making a total of “[a] [l]ittle over” six grams of substance seized from the mailbox that contained cocaine.

Further, Brooks testified that he does not know what other materials made up the substance that contained cocaine because he did not attempt to identify them, but they could be adulterants, dilutants, or byproducts.

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Eddie Arthur Cross, Sr. A/K/A Eddie Arthur Cross v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eddie-arthur-cross-sr-aka-eddie-arthur-cross-v-state-texapp-2003.