Kristin Vanwinkle v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 28, 2010
Docket02-09-00200-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Kristin Vanwinkle v. State (Kristin Vanwinkle 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
Kristin Vanwinkle v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 02-09-00200-CR

KRISTIN VANWINKLE

APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

STATE

------------

FROM THE 367TH DISTRICT COURT OF DENTON COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

          In three issues, appellant Kristin Vanwinkle appeals her conviction for obtaining or possessing hydrocodone through the use of a fraudulent prescription.[2]  She argues that the trial court erred by excluding evidence that she tested negative for drugs, by denying her discovery of a witness’s fingerprints, and by failing to make a reporter’s record of bench conferences. We affirm.

Background Facts

The facts as told by the State’s witnesses

          Candice Porter worked as a pharmacy technician at a Kroger store in Frisco.  One evening in August 2007, appellant, who regularly visited the pharmacy and who Porter knew by sight, came to the pharmacy’s drop-off window.  Pharmacist Lily Yang was working with Porter that night and also saw appellant in the store.

          Appellant told Porter that she needed some medicine because her son had been in a baseball accident, and she handed Porter a Lortab[3] prescription that contained the name of Dr. Neil Jacobson, was dated 8-22-07, and was written for “Austin Van Winkle.”[4]  Porter initialed the prescription, which contained an old, incorrect address for Dr. Jacobson’s office.  She then printed out a label for the prescription bottle.  After the bottle had been filled, appellant picked it up and signed a document to indicate that she had received it.[5]

          The transaction between Porter and appellant lasted for about fifteen minutes.  After appellant received the bottle, she spoke with Yang about how Austin, her son, could take the medicine.  According to Yang, the only people around the pharmacy at the time of appellant’s visit were her, appellant, and Porter.

          After appellant left the pharmacy area, one of Kroger’s customer service employees, Debra Smith, called the pharmacy because Smith suspected that appellant was shoplifting.  Yang became suspicious about the prescription and wanted to verify it.

          The next day, a pharmacy employee called Dr. Jacobson’s office and learned that the prescription had been forged.  On the request of Dr. Jacobson’s office, Yang called the police to tell them about the forgery.

          Days later, Frisco Police Department Sergeant Jay Reim went to Kroger to investigate and noticed that another officer was already there and was talking to appellant, who had coincidentally returned to the store.  Sergeant Reim took only a photocopy of the prescription that Porter had received because it is Kroger’s policy to retain original prescriptions and he did not believe that a fingerprint analysis would be useful since the prescription was likely touched by many people.  He met with appellant a few days later, and the police eventually got a warrant and arrested her.

The facts as told by appellant’s witnesses

          Appellant called Kroger store manager Donny Pauling as a witness to discredit Porter’s and Yang’s testimony by establishing that no one was working in customer service on the night that appellant allegedly obtained the prescription.  Pauling said that Smith (who, according to Porter, made the call from customer service about appellant’s alleged shoplifting) was working on the night in question, but Pauling conceded that Smith’s time card said that she was working near the self-checkout register.  Pauling explained that Smith typically worked as a customer service supervisor and that employees may work at “different places in their shift.”  He said that the information on Smith’s time card did not mean that she did not work in customer service on the evening in question.

          Appellant also presented testimony from Jimmy Chilcutt, a retired police latent fingerprint examiner.  Chilcutt said that he compared appellant’s fingerprints to eleven fingerprints from the prescription that appellant allegedly gave to Porter.  He testified that none of the eleven fingerprints matched appellant’s fingerprints.  On cross-examination, Chilcutt admitted that he could not testify that appellant did not touch the prescription but only that none of the eleven fingerprints on the prescription belonged to her.  Chilcutt admitted that more than three people touched the prescription before he examined it and that several fingerprints on the prescription overlapped.

          Appellant testified that she went to Kroger about twice a week in 2007.  She said that on the night in question, she ate pizza with friends and her son and did not go to Kroger.  She said that when she later saw Sergeant Reim at Kroger, she offered to let him search her bag and her car for a prescription pad.

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