Jarrod Dwayne Marks v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 20, 2019
Docket09-17-00110-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jarrod Dwayne Marks v. State (Jarrod Dwayne Marks 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
Jarrod Dwayne Marks v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

____________________ NO. 09-17-00110-CR ____________________

JARROD DWAYNE MARKS, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee ________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 163rd District Court Orange County, Texas Trial Cause No. B160473-R ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In four appellate issues, Jarrod Dwayne Marks challenges his conviction for

possession of a controlled substance, hydromorphone, in an amount of less than one

gram. According to Marks, his conviction should be overturned for four reasons: (1)

the evidence introduced in his trial failed to establish that he ever owned, had custody

of, or controlled the hydromorphone that his wife took from him and then gave to

the police; (2) the trial court erred by admitting the hydromorphone into evidence,

1 given the breaks in the chain of custody needed to tie him to the hydromorphone or

its container; (3) the hydromorphone should have been excluded from evidence

because his wife took it from him without his consent before turning it over to the

police; and (4) if the hydromorphone was admissible, the trial court should have

instructed the jury to disregard it if the jury determined or had a reasonable doubt

about whether the hydromorphone was taken from Marks in an illegal search.

Based on our conclusions that issues one, two, and four are without merit and

that issue three was not properly preserved for appellate review, we affirm.

Background

The issues Marks raises in this case revolve around the hydromorphone that

the police discovered in a package of cigarettes that the jury determined was in

Marks’ possession or control. Charisa LeDoux, Marks’ ex-wife when the criminal

case was tried but his spouse on the day he was arrested, testified against Marks in

the guilt-innocence phase of the trial. According to Charisa, she arranged to meet

with Marks at an apartment complex so that Marks could sign some papers relevant

to their impending divorce. The testimony shows the meeting occurred in July 2016.

When the meeting was ending, Charisa called the police and notified them where

Marks could be found so that the police could arrest Marks on an outstanding warrant

as he left the meeting.

2 Shortly after Marks left the meeting, he was detained by the police while they

investigated whether he was the person who was wanted on an outstanding warrant.

After the police placed Marks in handcuffs, Charisa approached Marks. In the

presence of the police, Charisa went through Marks’ pockets to determine whether

he had any pawn tickets on him that she might use to reclaim property that he might

have pawned. While going through Marks’ pockets, Charisa removed a syringe, and

after determining that it was empty, returned it to Marks. When one of the officers

saw that, he told Charisa to retrieve the syringe and discard it because he did not

want to get pricked. She complied. With the officers watching, Charisa also took a

package of cigarettes and some money from Marks’ pockets that she stuffed into her

pocket.

Officer Bryan Perry, one of the police officers involved in Marks’ arrest,

testified in Marks’ trial. As Officer Bryan Perry was putting Marks into a patrol car,

Marks told Officer Perry that he wanted the property Charisa took from him to be

returned. Although Charisa had begun walking away from the patrol car, Officer

Perry caught up with her and advised her that Marks wanted his property back.

Charisa handed the package of cigarettes and the money to him. The testimony about

what transpired after the police arrived at the apartment complex is consistent with

video recordings that were taken by a camera in a patrol car next to the location

3 where the police arrested Marks and body-cameras that were worn by the police that

day. The three video recordings relevant to Marks’ arrest were admitted into

evidence during the trial.

Officer Perry testified that before returning the package of cigarettes to Marks,

he opened the package to inspect it for contraband. According to the officer, upon

inspecting the package, he found “a clear foil-type packaging that contained . . . one

and a half small white tablets of some sort” in the bottom of the package under where

the cigarettes would normally sit. Officer Perry’s testimony shows that in the course

of Marks’ arrest, the officers seized Marks’ Texas I.D. card, a package of cigarettes,

between five and seven dollars in cash, a lighter, and a wrapper that contained one

and one-half small white tablets. Two additional police officers testified during the

guilt-innocence phase of Marks’ trial: Officers Leslie Lovelace and Timothy Pruitt.

Their testimony is consistent with Officer Perry’s.

The State sent the white tablets found in the cigarette package for testing to

the Jefferson County Regional Crime Lab. A gas chromatograph analysis on one of

the tablets revealed that it contained at least .151 grams of hydromorphone. The

police did not retain the syringe. Officer Pruitt, who was the lead officer on the scene

of Marks’ arrest, testified that based on his twenty-six years of experience as a police

officer, he is aware that addicts use syringes to inject hydromorphone.

4 Prior to the trial, in a motion to suppress, Marks challenged the adequacy of

the chain of custody for the evidence that the officers seized from Marks. In the

motion, Marks argued that Charisa was out of sight for a sufficient period that she

could have tampered with the evidence before turning it over to Officer Perry.

During the hearing on Marks’ motion to suppress, which the trial court conducted

more than a month before Marks’ trial began, the trial court viewed the video

recordings and heard the following four witnesses testify about Marks’ arrest: (1)

Officer Perry; (2) Charisa; (3) Jason Ply, Charisa’s former boyfriend, who was

standing nearby when Charisa took the package of cigarettes from Marks; and (4)

Karen Northern, Marks’ mother, who testified that Charisa called her when she was

distraught and told her that she had set up Marks. When the hearing ended, the trial

court denied the motion to suppress.

Standard of Review

In his first issue, Marks argues the evidence the jury considered in his trial

was insufficient to allow the jury to find that he owned, had custody of, or controlled

the tablets that Officer Perry discovered in the package of cigarettes he got from

Charisa. According to Marks, the evidence from his trial shows that Charisa is the

person who had custody or control over the package of cigarettes containing the

tablets when the police arrested Marks.

5 We review a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting a

defendant’s conviction under the standards established by the United States Supreme

Court in Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979). 1 Under the Jackson standard,

we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict. 2 Based on that

evidence and any reasonable inferences from it, we determine whether any rational

factfinder could have found the essential elements of the offense beyond a

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