Joshua Casarez v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 2024
Docket04-22-00295-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Joshua Casarez v. the State of Texas (Joshua Casarez v. the State of Texas) 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
Joshua Casarez v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Fourth Court of Appeals San Antonio, Texas MEMORANDUM OPINION

No. 04-22-00295-CR

Joshua CASAREZ, Appellant

v.

The STATE of Texas, Appellee

From the 186th Judicial District Court, Bexar County, Texas Trial Court No. 2021CR4739 Honorable Jefferson Moore, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Liza A. Rodriguez, Justice

Sitting: Patricia O. Alvarez, Justice Liza A. Rodriguez, Justice Lori I. Valenzuela, Justice

Delivered and Filed: April 30, 2024

AFFIRMED

After a jury trial, Joshua Casarez was found guilty of possession of four to two-hundred

grams of methamphetamine and was sentenced to eighteen years of imprisonment. On appeal, he

argues the trial court erred by failing to grant his motion to suppress and by refusing to include a

jury instruction pursuant to article 38.23 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

In his motion to suppress, Casarez sought to suppress evidence seized during a warrantless

search and seizure, arguing that the police officers lacked reasonable suspicion to stop the vehicle 04-22-00295-CR

in which he was a passenger and lacked probable cause to detain him or search his person or the

vehicle. Casarez argued the evidence was seized in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the

Constitution, article I, section 9 of the Texas Constitution, and article 38.23 of the Texas Code of

Criminal Procedure. The two arresting officers testified and footage from the officers’ body

cameras were introduced in evidence.

Officer Joseph Flores testified that on January 14, 2021, he was assigned to San Antonio

Police Department’s Street Crimes Unit, which patrols high crime areas in San Antonio, and was

working with his partner, Officer Ashley Gerken. They were on patrol in a stealth black police

vehicle with subdued lettering. At 1:00 a.m, Officer Flores noticed a four-door sedan did not have

a working license plate light and stopped the vehicle for the violation. Officer Flores approached

the driver’s side of the vehicle while Officer Gerken approached the passenger’s side. Officer

Flores saw that there was a passenger in the sedan sitting directly behind the driver. Officer Flores

told the driver the reason he had been stopped and asked to see a valid driver’s license. The driver

replied that he did not have a valid driver’s license. Officer Flores explained that driving without

a valid driver’s license is an offense for which one can be arrested. Thus, Officer Flores asked the

driver to step out of the vehicle, and the driver complied.

Officer Flores testified that when the driver opened the door and stopped out, he could see

a “walkie-talkie and . . . the handle of what appeared to be a blade in between the console and the

seat—the front driver’s seat.” Officer Flores explained that when he said “blade” he meant a

knife—he just could not see the entire knife. When asked where the walkie-talkie was located,

Officer Flores replied, “Directly under his lap.” Officer Flores testified that based on his training

and experience, having a walkie-talkie in that manner at 1:00 in the morning is unusual and could

indicate the driver was “making narcotics deals,” was “stealing vehicles,” or “getting into vehicles

-2- 04-22-00295-CR

and burglarizing vehicles.” Officer Flores then patted down the driver for weapons and took him

to the front of the vehicle.

According to Officer Flores, while he was patting down the driver, Officer Gerken moved

from the passenger’s side of the vehicle to the driver’s side where Appellant Casarez was sitting

in the back seat. Officer Gerken told Casarez to get out of the vehicle because she saw in the

vehicle “baggies [and] a torch lighter, which are commonly used and known” tools for narcotics.

Officer Flores testified that Officer Gerken was trying to get Casarez out of the vehicle because “it

was a safety issue” and the knife in the vehicle was “still within reach” of Casarez. Casarez was

not compliant and “kept questioning the reason why.” Officer Flores testified he and Officer

Gerken “both took him out of the vehicle.” When Casarez got out of the sedan, Officer Flores saw

another walkie-talkie, the same kind as the driver. Officer Flores testified that when he saw Casarez

sitting in the back of the sedan with no other occupants, he was concerned “because if they [are]

both on one side, it makes it easily accessible for one to approach and for one to exit the vehicle

quickly.” Officer Flores testified both the driver and Casarez having the same type of walkie-talkie

indicated that “they were out doing illegal things.” Officer Flores explained, “Like I said, it could

be a number of things as far as what we call—or what is called—to rob somebody is called a ‘lick’

out on the streets. The slang name is to do a ‘lick.’ And that was what gave me that initial reason

that that’s what they were doing.”

Officer Flores testified that after getting Casarez out of the vehicle, he patted down Casarez

for weapons. Officer Flores did not find any weapons, but he did feel the contour of a gun holster

on Casarez’s right thigh underneath his pants, which made Officer Flores think there was “possibly

a weapon somewhere.” Officer Flores asked Casarez if there was a gun, and Casarez replied that

there was not.

-3- 04-22-00295-CR

Officer Gerken testified similarly to Officer Flores. According to Officer Gerken, when

she first approached the passenger-side of the four-door sedan, she saw the driver and Casarez

sitting in the backseat behind the driver. Officer Gerken testified,

Immediately upon approaching . . . the vehicle, I observed what appeared to be a torn-off baggie in the front seat. I also observed torch lighters. And those two items in my training and experience are commonly used with methamphetamine use. Also, I observed a walkie-talkie that the driver had and a scope that was sitting right next to [Casarez]. At that point I believed that those were tools to a crime in robberies.

Officer Gerken explained that she could see the baggie “protruding from another bag” and that

“[i]t appeared that the corner had been torn off.” The baggie was in the middle of the backseat near

Casarez. She testified, “In my experience with the narcotics cases, the appearance was that it was

bitten off, which is used—people do that to conceal illegal narcotics from officers.” The torch

lighters “are butane torch lighters” that make it “much easier to heat up drug paraphernalia.”

Officer Gerken testified that because of the scope she saw in the sedan, she moved to the driver’s

side of the sedan to make contact with Casarez. She explained that she did not know at that point

whether “there was a rifle attached to that rifle scope that [she] observed.” She wanted Casarez “to

be removed from the vehicle until [she] could retrieve the firearm.” Officer Gerken testified that

she was concerned about officer safety, and that she believed at that point the driver and Casarez

were “involved in robberies.” According to Officer Gerken, in her experience, robberies can be

associated with drug dealing: “People that use narcotics will tend to need that quick money, that

quick cash, so they’ll conduct a robbery for cash or assets and turn around and sell it so they can

have money for narcotics.”

Officer Gerken testified that she made contact with Casarez and asked him to get out of the

vehicle, but he was not cooperative. When Casarez got out of the backseat, Officer Gerken saw

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