Edwards, Brandon v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 15, 2002
Docket08-00-00551-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Edwards, Brandon v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

                                                            COURT OF APPEALS

                                                    EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                                               EL PASO, TEXAS

                                                                              )    

BRANDON EDWARDS,                                     )                    No.  08-00-00551-CR

Appellant,                          )                             Appeal from

v.                                                                           )                      161st District Court

THE STATE OF TEXAS,                                     )                   of Ector County, Texas

Appellee.                           )                           (TC# B-28,045)

O P I N I O N

Brandon Edwards appeals his conviction for the offense of manufacturing or possessing with intent to manufacture more than 400 grams of methamphetamine, enhanced by two prior felony convictions.  A jury found Appellant guilty, found the enhancement paragraphs true, and assessed punishment at imprisonment for a term of forty-five years.  We affirm.

FACTUAL SUMMARY


During the early morning hours of November 5, 1999, Officer Josh Greggory of the Odessa Police Department stopped a pickup truck due to a seat belt violation.  Greggory approached the driver, Timothy Perry, and obtained his driver=s license and insurance information.  He arrested Perry for driving with a suspended driver=s license.  The passenger, later identified as Appellant, told Greggory that he owned the truck but it was registered to his mother.  Following Perry=s arrest, Appellant consented to a search of the truck.  Greggory noticed that the bed of the pickup had a lot of trash in it along with some car parts and a blue and white ice chest.  Another officer found a syringe in the glove compartment.  Appellant told the officers that the syringe belonged to his diabetic mother.

Appellant initially presented a Texas driver=s license and identified himself to Greggory as AStance Ren,@ but a second officer who knew Appellant arrived at the scene and identified him.  Consequently, Greggory arrested Appellant for false identification.  Greggory and another officer transported Perry and Appellant to jail.  A third officer, Michael Gerke, impounded Appellant=s pickup.  Before leaving, Greggory asked Gerke to look inside of the ice chest to determine whether it had any alcoholic beverages in it.  In the ice chest, Gerke found a large pickle jar containing a clear liquid and some coffee filters.  He also found a beaker which had lines on it to indicate measurements.  Gerke noted these items on the impound report as things of value but he did not recognize their significance.

Mike Simms, who worked for a wrecker service at the time, went to the scene to transport Appellant=s truck to the impound yard.  He had to wait for the police to finish with their business and move their patrol cars before he could pick up the truck.  Upon walking up to the truck, Simms immediately noticed the strong smell of methamphetamine, which he described as being so strong that he almost Amessed his pants.@  Simms recognized the odor as methamphetamine because he Ahad an eighteen year problem with it.@  He did not mention what he had noticed to anyone and simply transported the truck to the wrecking yard in Odessa which is secured by a fence and locked gate.  Simms recalled that the following afternoon, someone came to the wrecking yard and got some property out of the truck.


Appellant=s mother, Virgie Worley, testified at trial on behalf of the State.  Worley owned the pickup driven by Appellant but he had used it regularly because of trouble with his own car.  Appellant called Worley and told her that he had been arrested and her truck had been impounded.  Worley went to the wrecking yard to pick it up later that same day.  Before driving home to Monahans, she stopped and put oil, gas, and water in the truck because the truck smelled so bad and she thought Appellant had Aburnt it up.@  When she found a Aneedle@ in the front of the pickup, she threw it out the window.  Worley does not have diabetes and she did not own a blue and white ice chest or any of the items found in the ice chest.

After Worley arrived in Monahans, she went to the grocery store.  She put the groceries in the back of the truck and noticed the blue and white ice chest.  Upon opening it and seeing the jar with a hose and some coffee filters, Worley became afraid because the items in it Adidn=t look right.@  Worley put the ice chest in the trunk of a car owned by Appellant=s girlfriend.[1]  The girlfriend=s car had broken down earlier in the day at the same grocery store and was still in the parking lot.  Worley then drove home.  Still concerned, Worley called her probation officer and told him what she had found.  Juan Rodriguez, Jr., a deputy sheriff, and her probation officer met her in the parking lot that evening.  Worley opened the trunk and showed them the ice chest and its contents.  Rodriguez described the items as smelling like ether.  After contacting other law enforcement officers, Rodriguez seized the items.  Subsequent laboratory analysis revealed that the jars contained approximately 2,114 grams of methamphetamine. 

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