Issam Nasib Haddad v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 2006
Docket06-05-00167-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Issam Nasib Haddad v. State (Issam Nasib Haddad 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
Issam Nasib Haddad v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion



In The

Court of Appeals

Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana


______________________________


No. 06-05-00167-CR



ISSAM NASIB HADDAD, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee




On Appeal from the 282nd Judicial District Court

Dallas County, Texas

Trial Court No. F04-32941-PS





Before Morriss, C.J., Ross and Carter, JJ.

Memorandum Opinion by Justice Ross



MEMORANDUM OPINION


          Issam Nasib Haddad was convicted in a trial before the court of unlawfully passing a forged $100.00 bill. The trial court assessed punishment at five years' imprisonment and a $5,000.00 fine. Imposition of the imprisonment was suspended, and Haddad was placed on community supervision for five years. Haddad appeals, contending: 1) the trial court erred in admitting into evidence two counterfeit $100.00 bills; 2) the proof at trial did not establish the same complainant as alleged in the indictment; 3) the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to sustain Haddad's conviction; and 4) the trial court failed to follow the dictates of Article 42.07, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, during Haddad's sentencing. We overrule these contentions and affirm the judgment.

Background

           The evidence showed that Haddad is a Lebanese national who was sixty-nine years old at the time of trial. He had been working in the United States for fifteen years. On the date in question, Haddad drove to the airport to confirm his ticket back to Lebanon. Because he arrived too early, he decided to pass time by going to the horse races at Lone Star Park in Grand Prairie. Jody Luttrell was employed as a teller at the park pavilion where she took bets on horses. Luttrell testified that, on the occasion in question, an individual placed three or four bets with her and gave her a $100.00 bill that "felt like wax paper." Luttrell asked the individual if the bill was real, and he responded, "Is it not real?" and then paid for his bets with a cash voucher. Luttrell asked this individual to "[w]ait just a minute" and handed the $100.00 bill to her supervisor, who was standing nearby. Luttrell testified her supervisor used a counterfeit marking pen used to test suspect bills; the marking pen ink turns black on counterfeit money. Luttrell said the supervisor's mark on this bill turned black. Haddad testified that the supervisor had a "machine" and that she put the bill "on the machine" and then said, "[I]t's fake money; it's not good money." According to Luttrell, the individual said to the supervisor, "I'll be right back," and then exited the pavilion. Security personnel at the park were contacted, and Luttrell testified that she or her supervisor gave the suspect bill to Daniel Stankovich, director of security.

          Stankovich testified he went to the pavilion where a security supervisor had Haddad detained. Haddad went with Stankovich to a security office. He said Haddad appeared "antsy" and asked permission to use the restroom, but Stankovich refused because he was afraid Haddad might "dispose of evidence." Haddad testified that he had a prostate problem and that is why he wanted to use the restroom. At the time of Stankovich's initial contact with Haddad, Stankovich was aware of only the one $100.00 bill that had been passed to Luttrell. When Stankovich asked Haddad where he obtained that $100.00 bill, Haddad told him he recently acquired it on the black market in Beirut, Lebanon. Stankovich asked Haddad if he had any other monies, and Haddad gave him genuine money he had in his pockets and told Stankovich "what was in his pocket was what he had."

          Stankovich later learned that Haddad had passed two "one-hundred dollar bogus bills" to another teller at the park before he passed the one to Luttrell. He said all counterfeit bills passed at the park are normally sent to him, and specifically testified to receiving the bill that was passed to Luttrell. He testified that all three $100.00 bills passed at the park were determined to be counterfeit. Stankovich called the Grand Prairie police.           Walter Swayze, a United States postal inspector, accompanied police detective Randy Holten in transporting Haddad from Lone Star Park to the police department. During the process of booking Haddad into the city jail, and at a time when no one else was watching, Swayze observed Haddad remove something from his shoe and "acted like he was going to put it in his pocket." Swayze testified that, when he approached Haddad, Haddad had three counterfeit $100.00 bills in his hand. Before this incident, Haddad had been asked several times if he had any more counterfeit money and he had responded that he did not.

          Holten testified that five $100.00 bills were collected at Lone Star Park and three $100.00 bills were collected from Haddad at the jail. The State offered two of these bills into evidence, one of which contained the serial number of the one $100.00 bill alleged in the indictment as having been passed by Haddad to Stankovich. Holten testified that Haddad passed both these bills at the park. He admitted on cross-examination that, as for the other six $100.00 bills, he could not distinguish the three that came from Haddad's shoe from the other three that were passed at the park. He knew, however, that the two bills offered into evidence, including the one alleged in the indictment, were passed at the park because he logged those two bills separately from the other six, and he identified the log sheet where he had so listed those two bills by serial numbers. The other six bills were listed by serial numbers on a separate log sheet and had been taken by the Secret Service.

          Trent Steele, a Secret Service agent, testified that the two $100.00 bills introduced into evidence, including the one alleged in the indictment, were counterfeit. He further testified, without objection, that Haddad was given a polygraph examination. He said that, when Haddad was asked on the polygraph examination if he knew this money was counterfeit when he passed it, his answer that he did not know was "non-deceptive."           Haddad testified in his own behalf. He said that, in September 2004, he was living in Beirut, Lebanon, and had loaned his son $1,000.00 in United States currency to start a business. On the night before Haddad was to travel to the United States, his son awoke him and told him that he (the son) had $800.00 for Haddad. Haddad instructed his son to put the money in the jacket he intended to wear the next day when he traveled to the United States. The next day, Haddad wore the jacket on his trip to the United States. On arrival in the United States, he checked into a hotel. The next day, Haddad drove a rental car to the airport to confirm his ticket back to Lebanon. Because he arrived at the ticket counter before the airlines had opened for business, he decided to go to Lone Star Park for two or three hours.

          When Haddad arrived at the park, he took five of the eight $100.00 bills his son had placed in his jacket and put them in his shoes so he would not spend them at the park.

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