Kimbell, Chanda Renee v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 26, 2013
Docket05-11-01211-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Kimbell, Chanda Renee v. State (Kimbell, Chanda Renee 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
Kimbell, Chanda Renee v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

AFFIRM; and Opinion Filed August 26,2013.

In The Court of Appeals Jfftftij Blatrict of teas at Ballaa No. 05-11-01211-CR

CHANDA RENEE KIMBELL V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 363rd Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F09-15728-W

OPINION Before Justices FitzGerald, Fillmore, and Richter1 Opinion by Justice Richter Following the trial court's denial of her motion to suppress, Chanda Renee Kimbell pleaded guilty to possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver. The trial court found Kimbell guilty and, pursuant to a plea agreement, assessed punishment of five years' imprisonment and a$3,000 fine. In two points of error, Kimbell asserts the trial court erred by denying her motion to suppress because the search of her car and purse was conducted during an unreasonably prolonged traffic stop and because the "dog sniff was not properly conducted. We affirm the trial court's judgment.

1TheHon. Martin Richter, Retired Justice, sitting by assignment Background

At the hearing on appellant’s motion to suppress, Coppell police officer Kenneth Cochran

testified that he stopped appellant at around midnight on May 22, 2009 for speeding (51 mph in a

45 mph zone) and failing to dim her high beam headlights for oncoming traffic. According to

Cochran, when he spoke with appellant, her hands were shaking and she would not make eye

contact with him. She also seemed “pretty chatty.” Appellant told Cochran she was going

home. The home where appellant had recently rented a room was also inhabited by an individual

Cochran knew to be a methamphetamine user. Appellant admitted to Cochran that she had been

previously arrested for license, traffic, and drug offenses. Cochran told appellant he was going

to check whether her license was valid or she had any outstanding warrants.

The stop was recorded on video, which was admitted into evidence at the suppression

hearing. According to the video, thirteen minutes after the stop, Cochran told appellant he would

not issue her any traffic tickets for the speeding and headlight infractions. While he was waiting

for the report on appellant’s license and warrant status, Cochran can be heard on the video telling

another officer he was going to try to obtain appellant’s consent to search the car. Seventeen

minutes after the stop, Cochran told appellant that she had been cleared on her license and

warrants. 2 During this seventeen minute period, Cochran made no effort to issue any traffic

citations or to conduct a canine sniff, but instead engaged in casual conversation with appellant. 3

Cochran testified that when his “cover” officer arrived on the scene, Cochran asked

appellant for her consent to search the car. Appellant refused to consent, responding that she

wanted to go home to bed. Cochran told appellant that he was going to search the outside of the

2 Cochran told appellant on the video that she was “all clear” on searches of her record. 3 Cochran and appellant talked about their mutual acquaintance, the methamphetamine user, the car appellant was driving, the difference between Oak Cliff and Coppell, night blindness, Cochran visiting Dallas, and the speed limits in Coppell. During this time, the officer said to appellant “what attracted me was your headlights and you just happened to be going 6 over.”

–2– car with his narcotics detection dog Nobel because of appellant’s history of prior arrests.

Appellant continuously voiced her objections that this was unfair. Cochran repeated he was not

going to arrest her for any traffic violations and would release her if Nobel did not alert.

However, Cochran indicated that if Nobel alerted to the presence of drugs, he was going to

search inside the car.

Cochran asked appellant to step out of her car. Appellant took her purse from the car as

she exited. Cochran explained that he usually asks people to leave their property inside the

vehicle for officer safety, and he believed that he asked appellant to leave the purse in the car.

Cochran had appellant sit on a curb.

Cochran then proceeded to run Nobel along the outside of the car. According to

Cochran, Nobel gave an “abnormal positive alert” on the passenger side of the car. The video

indicates this alert occurred twenty-three minutes after the stop. Cochran testified the abnormal

alert was “still an alert” for the purposes of his search. Nobel was trained to paw or bite at the

source of the odor of narcotics. Cochran said that Nobel had both paws on the passenger

window sill, with his head up sniffing. His head was looking down at the passenger seat.

Cochran explained, “[Y]ou can’t expect a K-9 to paw at that situation because they’ll fall down.”

He further explained,

In this case, on the window, he put his paws on it. He looked into the vehicle and looked down at the seat and sniff, sniff, sniff, sniff, sniff, sniff. You know, he’s like, “I found the odor. I found it.” Then he looks back at me like, “Where’s my toy at?” That’s just a normal part of dog training is they get rewarded when they find the odor.

During the search, Cochran remarked on the video that Nobel was acting “weird.” After

the search concluded, Cochran informed the other officer that the dog had given an abnormal

alert that was not his “normal thing,” but that he thought it meant the dog had found a faint odor.

–3– He told the officer he was going to “call it.” He reiterated that he was going to call the reaction

an alert, although it was not what he had expected.

Almost twenty-five minutes after the stop began, the officers asked appellant when she

last had drugs in the car. Appellant admitted she had methamphetamine and marijuana in the car

about a month earlier. At that point, Cochran told appellant that Nobel had given an abnormal

alert on the car window indicating whatever the narcotic odor was coming from had come out of

the car. The officer told appellant he had probable cause to search the car and all of its contents.

Cochran testified that, at that point, he suspected drugs were in appellant’s purse and that

Nobel was alerting to the lingering odor from where the purse had been in the car. He was

“stumped,” however, because appellant had removed the purse and was holding it. He told

appellant she needed to give the purse to the cover officer. Appellant refused, and she refused to

consent to a search of her purse or her car. This made Cochran more convinced that appellant

had drugs in the purse. Cochran testified,

My first instinct was to take the purse from her and search the purse based on the dog hit on the vehicle. But doing the best I could, be honest with you, with the hiccup [appellant taking her purse out of the car] I had encountered on the traffic stop, I made some phone calls to my on-duty patrol sergeant. He didn’t know anything, was useless. He said he was going to call the Narcotics Organized Crime Unit Sergeant. I then called the handler from Grapevine, who was no help to me. Then I finally got ahold of the detective . . . who actually trained me and Nobel . . . and I ran the scenario past him. He kind of guided me through the situation.

The trainer advised Cochran to first search appellant’s car. Then, if no paraphernalia was

found in the car, Cochran was to have Nobel search the inside of the car and see if he alerted. At

that point, the trainer advised, Cochran was to take the purse from appellant, put it on the ground

with two other control items and have Nobel sniff the three items. If Nobel alerted on the purse,

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