Joel Chubasco Obregon v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 9, 2007
Docket01-06-00467-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Joel Chubasco Obregon v. State (Joel Chubasco Obregon 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
Joel Chubasco Obregon v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

\Opinion issued August 9, 2007





In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas



NOS. 01-06-00467-CR

01-06-00468-CR



JOEL CHUBASCO OBREGON, Appellant



V.



THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee



On Appeal from the 232nd District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause Nos. 1035899 & 1064200



MEMORANDUM OPINION



In appellate cause no. 01-06-00467-CR, (1) appellant, Joel Chubasco Obregon, was charged with unlawful possession of a firearm. (2) In appellate cause no. 01-06-00468-CR, (3) appellant was charged with felony possession of a controlled substance. (4) After the trial court denied his motion to suppress, appellant pleaded guilty to the charged offenses. Pursuant to appellant's plea bargain with the State, the trial court sentenced appellant to eight years for each offense. In two points of error, appellant argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress because (1) his vehicle was illegally searched pursuant to the pretext doctrine and (2) the State failed to prove that the inventory and impoundment were conducted according to procedural guidelines.

We affirm.

Background

On August 1, 2005, Deputy C. Mullins of the Harris County Sheriff's Office responded to a trespass call in an apartment complex. When he arrived in the apartment, deputies had detained Leah Kimes and D.J. Carder. Deputy Mullins found a gun in the apartment and thought that he had seen narcotics in plain view. He also noticed glass pipes and narcotics paraphernalia in the apartment. He described Kimes and Carder as "involved and dealing" with methamphetamines. However, because the amount of narcotics in the room was so small, he did not test for a controlled substance; nor did he test for methamphetamines. Deputy Mullins testified that he contacted a District Attorney to get charges against Carder for unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon, but the District Attorney declined to press charges because the gun was not close enough to Carder.

Deputy Mullins eventually allowed Kimes and Carder to go, but they remained with him. Deputy Mullins testified that he asked Kimes and Carder if they had more narcotics, and they responded that they could get him more. Kimes and Carder made phone calls to get narcotics. They also met with Deputy Coffer.

Deputy Coffer later contacted Deputy Mullins with information that a white F-150 pickup truck with a large amount of methamphetamines was coming from Humble. Deputy Mullins then set up surveillance at an Exxon parking lot. At trial, Deputy Mullins admitted that he was looking for a "white 150" because he had reason to believe, based on information from people he did not know, that that particular vehicle might be transporting narcotics.

Deputy Mullins waited approximately 30 minutes at the Exxon station before seeing appellant's truck, a white F-150 with no license plate on the front of the vehicle, which prompted him to initiate a traffic stop. When asked if it was fair to say that appellant's car was the one car that he was going to stop, Deputy Mullins replied, "It matched the vehicle I was looking for, yes."

Appellant pulled over into a parking lot and drove approximately 150 feet before stopping his truck. Deputy Mullins noticed that appellant appeared "nervous" and "sweating." Upon learning that appellant did not have his driver's license, Deputy Mullins returned to his police car to check appellant's name in his computer. When he returned to appellant, Deputy Mullins testified that appellant still appeared "very nervous" and that he was "rubbing his hands together rapidly." Deputy Mullins then removed appellant from his truck and placed him under arrest because he "feared that he may have a weapon or something in that vehicle he didn't want [Deputy Mullins] to know about . . . ." Deputy Mullins handcuffed appellant, escorted him back to the patrol car, and read him his rights. While inventorying appellant's truck, Deputy Mullins found a clear plastic bag of methamphetamine and a holstered, loaded revolver in "plain view" in "the rear portion or the front portion of the rear floor board. . . ." Deputy Mullins testified that the revolver was "easily accessible" by appellant.

Deputy Mullins testified that no one else was in the truck besides appellant and that he could not have turned the truck over to anyone else for them to drive instead of impounding the truck. The State asked Deputy Mullins about the policy regarding inventory at the sheriff's department and subsequent to arrest to which Deputy Mullins responded, "If we arrest someone and their vehicle is there at the scene and no one to release it to . . . we have it towed to Harris County Wrecker yard. . . . [T]hat way the vehicle is not left behind to be . . . vandalized, stolen, you know damaged in any way. Criminal mischief." Deputy Mullins also testified that the sheriff's office follows this policy even if the stop is in a parking lot and not a public roadway because "once we have taken that Defendant in custody we've taken responsibility for that vehicle."

On cross-examination, Deputy Mullins admitted that the wrecker was at the scene 13 minutes after he pulled appellant over, but he also testified that wreckers usually follow police around 24 hours a day. Deputy Mullins testified that every vehicle that is towed gets inventoried unless it is a crime scene, such as a homicide with fingerprints and weapons. He also testified that the sheriff's department tows a vehicle if someone is arrested and no one is there to whom to release it. Deputy Mullins testified that he feared that the car or the valuables were at risk because he had previously taken over five reports of burglary in that same parking lot.

The trial court also heard Kimes's testimony that she and Carder were taken away from the apartment complex in a truck so that Carder could "work off his gun charge and dope charge." Kimes further testified that Deputy Mullins said that they "would pull [appellant] over as a street violation or traffic stop. They wouldn't just run in on him to where it would reveal [Kimes] or D.J." She also recalled that Deputy Mullins told her that he would not file a report describing her participation.

Motion to Suppress

In his first point of error, appellant argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress because the "vehicular inventory was a pretext to discover evidence rendering the search unconstitutional under the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I Section 9 of the Texas Constitution."

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