Lee Meng Taing v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 4, 2015
Docket14-13-00677-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Lee Meng Taing v. State (Lee Meng Taing 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
Lee Meng Taing v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed June 4, 2015.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-13-00677-CR

LEE MENG TAING, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 412th District Court Brazoria County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 68424

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Lee Meng Taing, appeals his conviction for three counts of engaging in organized criminal activity.1 He contends that his conviction rests on insufficient evidence and uncorroborated accomplice witness testimony. We affirm.

1 See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 71.02(a)(2) (Vernon Supp. 2014); Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 47.03(a)(1); 47.04; 47.06 (Vernon 2011). BACKGROUND

The Brazoria County Sheriff’s Office received information in September 2011 that appellant was running an eight-liner2 gambling operation in six different game rooms throughout Brazoria County; based on this information, the sheriff’s office began investigating and conducting surveillance of appellant and the six game rooms. About six months later, the six game rooms and the residences of appellant and his family were raided pursuant to a search warrant. Appellant was arrested during the raids and later charged with three counts of engaging in organized criminal activity based on gambling promotion (count one), keeping a gambling place (count two), and possession of a gambling device (count three). He also was charged with two counts of money laundering.

A week-long jury trial began on April 1, 2013, during which numerous witnesses testified. These witnesses included several police officers involved in the investigation, surveillance, and raids; several women who worked at the game rooms and were indicted for engaging in organized criminal activity; and appellant.

The jury first heard testimony from Sergeant James Brawner of the Brazoria County Sheriff’s Office. He testified that he and several police officers under his leadership started investigating appellant in mid-September 2011, after Betty Stewart, a former employee of appellant, complained that illegal cash payouts were being made at various game rooms appellant owned. He testified that the investigation encompassed the following game rooms: “Lucky 777 Amusement” located at 2214 FM 523 in Oyster Creek, Brazoria County, Texas; “Keno Palace” located at 6618 Hwy. 332, Freeport, Brazoria County, Texas; “Keno Gone Wild”

2 The eight-liners at the game rooms were electromechanical gaming machines that gave a player the opportunity to make bets or wagers and then win an item the value of which was “determined partially by chance.”

2 located at 3711 SH 288B, Angleton, Brazoria County, Texas; “Deuces Wild” located at 500 W. Mulberry, Angleton, Brazoria County, Texas; “Lucky Horseshoe” located at 6805 Hwy. 36, Jones Creek, Brazoria County, Texas; and “Four Kings” located at 20722 Hwy. 35, Old Ocean, Brazoria County, Texas.

Sergeant Brawner testified that the investigation encompassed anyone associated with these six game rooms, including appellant’s family: his wife Bridgette Taing, his mother Chhiv Churn, his father or stepfather Chhoeun Churn,3 his sister Barbara Churn, and his brother-in-law Son Le. Sergeant Brawner testified that, as part of the investigation, he and his team of approximately 14 police investigators started conducting surveillance of appellant and his family members on September 15, 2011.

The police investigation team arrived at 5:30 a.m. at appellant’s residence at 1619 Duncan Drive in Oyster Creek and started following appellant at 6:15 a.m. when he left his residence in a blue Hummer vehicle to drive to the Keno Gone Wild game room.4 The police investigators observed appellant exit his vehicle and walk to the game room carrying a “black duffle bag” — “a sort of a briefcase shoulder carry bag.” Appellant left the game room with his bag after approximately 45 minutes. Sergeant Brawner testified that appellant did not drive “in a normal fashion” as he left the game room, but drove instead in a manner consistent with a “heat run.” Sergeant Brawner explained that a “heat run is an erratic driving behavior that is used by persons that are attempting to detect law enforcement surveillance or other persons following them. It consists of abrupt turns, making sudden lane changes and turns, not using turn signals or anything to

3 It is unclear whether Chhoeun is appellant’s father or stepfather. 4 Because several game rooms changed names during the course of the investigation, we will for the sake of clarity refer to the game rooms by the names used at the time of the February 27, 2012 raids.

3 indicate which way a person may be driving.” The investigation team abandoned surveillance of appellant after observing appellant’s driving so he would not suspect that law enforcement was following him.

Sergeant Brawner and several police investigators conducted surveillance of appellant again on October 11, 2011. Sergeant Brawner testified that appellant drove from his residence in his Hummer vehicle to the Lucky 777 Amusement game room. He left the game room after a short time, “switched vehicles and left in a black Escalade, Cadillac.” Appellant then drove to the Keno Gone Wild game room where he stayed a short time. Sergeant Brawner and the investigation team later discovered that appellant had switched vehicles again after leaving the game room. Sergeant Brawner testified that appellant’s conduct in changing vehicles “twice in the same route” was significant because in Sergeant Brawner’s “experience it’s common that persons that are trying to elude law enforcement do that.” Surveillance of appellant stopped when he returned to his residence later in the afternoon.

Sergeant Brawner testified that at some point during the day the investigation team had split in order to conduct surveillance of both appellant and his father Chhoeun. Surveillance of Chhoeun revealed that he also visited different game rooms; he was driving a silver Mercedes SUV and later switched to the black Escalade appellant had been driving. Chhoeun was observed at the Keno Gone Wild game room with a black duffle bag.

Sergeant Brawner testified that, at some point, police were allowed to install a mobile tracking device on appellant’s Hummer and Escalade, and on Son Le’s and Barbara’s vehicles. Through the tracking device, the police investigators could observe the driving patterns of each vehicle. The investigation revealed that appellant drove regularly to the Lucky 777 Amusement, Keno Palace, and Keno

4 Gone Wild game rooms; drove on several occasions to the Deuces Wild game room; and drove once to the Lucky Horseshoe game room. Appellant’s routine was to start driving to Keno Gone Wild, then travel south to Keno Palace, and then return to Lucky 777 Amusement.

Surveillance of appellant’s sister Barbara and her husband Son Le showed that they regularly went to the Deuces Wild, Lucky Horseshoe, and Four Kings game rooms. Sergeant Brawner testified that Barbara and Son Le would leave their residence at 4106 Perry Drive in Pearland with a “black duffle style bag” — similar to the bag appellant carried — and then drive in one of their vehicles to various game rooms. “And on occasions after completing the run they would travel to Duncan Drive where [appellant] lives down in Oyster Creek.” Sergeant Brawner testified that Barbara and Son Le would drive to “game rooms and display the same patterns that [appellant] would when he would go. They would be in a short way, 30 to 45 minutes, and they would carry a bag in, carry a bag out, depart the location and go on to the next one.”

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