Lamonte Dewayne Bush v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 10, 2011
Docket01-10-00681-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Lamonte Dewayne Bush v. State (Lamonte Dewayne Bush 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
Lamonte Dewayne Bush v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued November 10, 2011.

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

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NO. 01-10-00681-CR

NO. 01-10-00682-CR

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Lamonte Dewayne Bush, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 185th Judicial District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case Nos. 1127967, 1127968

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          A jury found appellant, Lamonte Dewayne Bush, guilty of two separate offenses of possession with the intent to deliver a controlled substance, namely cocaine weighing more than four grams but less than two hundred grams[1] and ecstasy weighing more than four grams but less than four hundred grams,[2] and the trial court assessed his punishment at confinement for twenty-five years.  In three points of error, appellant contends that the evidence is legally insufficient to support his convictions.

          We affirm.

Background

          Houston Police Department (“HPD”) Officer A. Turner testified that on January 13, 2010, he began his shift with a plan to coordinate with undercover officers performing surveillance on a suspected “drug house.”  His partner, HPD Officer A. Bock, searched and thoroughly cleaned their patrol car at the start of their shift.  Bock drove the patrol car to a position “just outside the neighborhood” of the “drug house” and waited for undercover officers, positioned closer to the house, to relay descriptions of cars as they arrived at and departed from the house.  Turner and Bock then saw a car, which matched a description provided by the undercover officers, fail to stop at a stop sign, and they initiated a traffic stop.

          After exiting the patrol car, Officer Bock approached the driver, Lisa Williams, and Officer Turner discretely approached the passenger side of the car.  Although the back windows of the car were tinted, Turner explained that he could see through the front windows.  As appellant, who was in the passenger seat of the car, opened the glove compartment to take out the driver’s insurance information for Williams, Turner saw him “toss . . . a slab of crack” into the compartment.  Not wanting to alert appellant, Turner “clicked [his] flashlight off and on” towards Bock to signal that “something [was] up.”  He then asked appellant to exit the car and quickly patted appellant down for weapons, finding $800 in cash.  Turner handcuffed appellant and sat him in the back of the patrol car.  As Bock was interviewing the driver, Turner returned to the car, searched the glove compartment, and found a bag containing 2.96 grams of crack cocaine.  Appellant told Turner that the cocaine belonged to his uncle.

          Officers Turner and Bock then parked their patrol car in a secured parking lot at the back of the complex and escorted appellant to the HPD central booking station.  After he removed appellant from the patrol car, Turner performed a “quick search” of the patrol car to “see if maybe [appellant] left anything,” but he did not find any narcotics.  He explained that he could not conduct a more comprehensive search at that time because he had to simultaneously “maintain control of the suspect.” 

Later, as the officers were getting ready to “put the patrol shop up for the night,” Bock performed another routine search of the patrol car.  Bock informed Turner that, “pushed up under the passenger’s seat” in the back of the patrol car, he found a tissue wrapped around powder cocaine and fourteen pills of ecstasy.  Turner explained that “street-level users” generally would not have in their possession three varieties of narcotics in such quantities or have $800 in cash.  On cross-examination, Turner admitted that he did not notice appellant “fidgeting” or acting “out of the ordinary” in the back of the patrol car.  He explained that he did not mention the “drug house” in his initial offense report because “with the elements of the offense, we didn’t need the fact that he was leaving a known drug house because that wasn’t the reason for the stop.”  Turner also explained that he did not want to “burn the location” and alert any suspects that the house was under surveillance.

Officer Bock testified that before beginning his shift with Turner, he performed a routine, “comprehensive search” and cleaning of the patrol car.  Because the patrol car was “dirty,” Bock also vacuumed it out.  After positioning themselves outside the neighborhood of the “drug house,” the officers saw the car in which appellant was a passenger run a stop sign “between 30 seconds and a minute” after receiving an undercover officer’s description of the car.  Bock explained that after Turner arrested appellant, Bock “talked with” the driver, Williams, “at length,” and she said that “she thought [appellant] was going to speak with somebody in the house about his vehicle being at a storage lot.”  After determining that Williams was unaware of appellant’s possession of the narcotics, Bock let her leave the scene, and the officers took appellant to the HPD central booking station.

After booking appellant, Turner typed up an offense report, and Bock performed another routine search of the patrol car.  He specifically checked under the back seat because “sometimes suspects are able to discard any narcotics that they have, and the first obvious thing [they] want to do is get it out of view, so [the narcotics are] kicked up underneath the seat.”  Underneath the back seat on the passenger side of the patrol car, Bock found a “balled-up napkin” containing approximately 14 grams of powder cocaine in a “clear, plastic baggy” and 14 pills of ecstasy.

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