James Ray Hill v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 11, 2001
Docket03-00-00777-CR
StatusPublished

This text of James Ray Hill v. State (James Ray Hill 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
James Ray Hill v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-00-00777-CR

James Ray Hill, Appellant



v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 147TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT,

NO. 99-4600, HONORABLE WILFORD FLOWERS, JUDGE PRESIDING

A jury found James Ray Hill guilty of the offense of delivery of less than one gram of cocaine. Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 481.112(b) (West Supp. 2001). After finding that Hill previously had been convicted of two felonies, the district court assessed punishment at seven years in prison. In eight points of error, Hill contends that the district court erred during the guilt-innocence phase by admitting particular portions of testimony, not requiring the court reporter to record some portions of the proceedings, and answering questions from the jury incorrectly, and erred during the punishment phase by admitting certain exhibits. We affirm the judgment.

BACKGROUND

Testimony at the guilt-innocence phase came from three Austin police officers and two chemists. Austin police detective Vincent Hernandez testified about his activities in the undercover drug purchase that led to Hill's arrest. Hernandez testified that he prepared for the undercover drug transaction by photocopying a twenty-dollar bill and writing down its serial number. He then drove to an area of Austin known to be an "open-air drug market" where crack cocaine was sold. Hernandez testified that he made eye contact with one man who gave something to another man later identified as Hill. Hill approached the car and asked what Hernandez needed. Hernandez replied that he wanted "a twenty," which is slang for twenty dollars worth of crack cocaine. Hernandez testified that Hill leaned into the window and gave him a rock of crack cocaine. Hernandez gave Hill the twenty-dollar bill he had photocopied earlier, then drove away and notified a group of nearby officers to arrest Hill.

Austin police detective Robin Orten testified that he was part of the group of officers who arrested Hill based on a description given to them by another detective. At trial, Orten identified Hill as the man he arrested. Orten testified that, after other officers took Hill to the ground to secure him, Orten saw a twenty-dollar bill lying next to Hill's body, close to his hands and pocket. Orten picked up the twenty-dollar bill and took it to Hernandez.

Austin police chemists Tony Arnold and Ralph Owen testified regarding the recovered cocaine rock. Both testified about the chain of custody for the cocaine rock as well as their experience testing cocaine and the general characteristics of powdered cocaine and crack cocaine. Owen testified that the rock Hill sold Hernandez tested to be 0.16 grams of cocaine.



DISCUSSION

By points of error one and two, Hill contends that the district court erred at the guilt-innocence phase of trial by admitting evidence on the process of converting powdered cocaine into crack cocaine and the resultant increase in volume and profit reaped. Hill contends the admission of this evidence was error because it was irrelevant and was evidence of other crimes, wrongs or acts which were admitted in order to show his character and that he acted in conformity with that character. See Tex. R. Evid. 401, 402, 404(b). Hill complains specifically of an exchange that occurred during Detective Hernandez's testimony.

The State's examination of Hernandez began with Hernandez describing the scene of the arrest as an open-air drug market with a large number of customers. The defense objected to the relevance of a question regarding whether Hernandez knew how "they" process cocaine into rock form rather than powder. The court overruled that objection as well as an objection to the officer's expertise on that subject. The court sustained an objection to testimony regarding how cocaine affects the community. The following exchange then occurred:



[Prosecutor]: Now, sir, from your experience and from your training, can you please explain the difference between powder cocaine and crack cocaine?



[Defense counsel]: Judge, again, she hasn't established that [Hernandez] has the expertise to make that distinction, number one. Number two, it is not relevant to any issue in this case, and I object for those reasons.



The Court: Overruled.



[Prosecutor]: Q. You can go ahead and answer that question, sir.



[Hernandez]: A. Repeat the question please.



Q. Earlier you said that there was a difference between crack cocaine and powder cocaine. One was a solid form. Could you explain how cocaine is made into crack cocaine?



A. What you do is you take powder cocaine. Say, for example, I have an ounce in my hand. If I want to turn it into crack, what I will do is I will use what we refer to as cut, which is a dilutant of some type. Usually--it could be anything from baking soda to Vitablend, which is a name brand of vitamin B powder that you can purchase at nutrition stores.



Whatever I decide to use as cut, I will say take my ounce of powder cocaine, cut it and get a quarter of that ounce, mix it with whatever dilutant I am going to use. It is as simple as putting it in a lab beaker, mixing it up, popping it into the microwave and letting it cook. As the water evaporates in the beaker itself, what I am left with is a small cookie, what we refer to as a cookie because it looks just like a cookie. That is your crack cocaine.



It is an adulterated powder cocaine is what it is, and now it is in a solid form, so now from a quarter ounce of powder cocaine, I now have one ounce of crack cocaine. I will take that one ounce of crack cocaine and I will cut it up into individual rocks, so you can see where the profit is, you know, in making your powder cocaine into crack cocaine.



Q. Go ahead, I'm sorry.



A. And so that is basically what you do. You use cut, mix it with your powder and cook it, and then you have your crack cocaine.



Q. So in other words, you get, by cooking this cocaine, you get more cocaine--more usable cocaine than if you leave it in powder form?



A. What you do is you actually increase the volume of your product with an investment of say a thousand dollars for an ounce of powder cocaine, and I could cook, you know, just depends on how much I want to dilute it, how strong it is. If you want stronger crack, I put more cocaine in as I cook it. If I want weaker, I will take less powder cocaine and make more cookies. You are increasing your profit. It is a huge profit on it.



Hernandez then made statements about smoking crack and intravenous ingestion. Interspersed were sustained objections to nonresponsive answers and the irrelevance of questions about whether the arrest site was part of the department's weed-and-seed program.

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James Ray Hill v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-ray-hill-v-state-texapp-2001.