Lydell Anton Jones v. State

466 S.W.3d 252, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 3139
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 2015
DocketNO. 01-13-00920-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 466 S.W.3d 252 (Lydell Anton Jones 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
Lydell Anton Jones v. State, 466 S.W.3d 252, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 3139 (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

Michael Massengale, Justice

A jury convicted appellant Lydell Anton Jones of possession with intent to deliver or manufacture a controlled substance, phencyclidine (“PCP”), in an amount greater than 400 grams. See Tex. Health & Safety Code § 481.102(8) (Penally Group 1); id. § 481.112(a) & (f) (Offense: Manufacture or Delivery of Substance in Penally Group 1). The jury found enhancement allegations in the indictment to be “true,” specifically that Jones previously had been convicted of possession of controlled substance with intent to deliver, possession of marihuana, and unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. The jury assessed punishment at 65 years in prison, and Jones appealed. In his first two issues, Jones challenges the trial court’s admission of evidence and the sufficiency of the evidence to support the conviction. In his third issue, he argues that he received ineffective assistance of counsel.

Finding no reversible error, we affirm.

Background

A United States postal inspector suspected that a package contained a controlled substance. The package was shipped by Priority Mail and addressed to “Lydell Jones” at the address of a restaurant in The Woodlands. The postal inspector notified local law enforcement, initiating a narcotics investigation conducted with the joint cooperation of the postal inspector, the Houston Police Department, and the Montgomery County Sheriffs Department. The postal inspector contacted Jones by telephone, and he agreed to pick up the package at the restaurant the following day. The next day, the postal inspector delivered the box to the restaurant, and then she waited in the parking lot with HPD officers in unmarked patrol cars. When Jones arrived and took possession of the box, the officers contacted Montgomery County Sheriffs Deputy S. Martin, who was in a marked patrol car nearby, and they described Jones’s car to him. Deputy Martin followed Jones for a short while before stopping him for a suspected window-tint violation.

When Jones pulled over, Deputy Martin’s dashboard-mounted camera was engaged, and a recording was made. Deputy Martin determined that Jones was driving while his license was suspended and that the window tint .on the car exceeded that allowed by law. Jones consented to a search of the car, stating that it was not his car, and he did not believe there was contraband or weapons inside, but because it was not his he could not be certain.

*257 Deputy Martin found the suspicious package on Jones’s backseat, in plain view. It was a box from a hardware store (“a Home Depot box”), prepared for shipment through the mail, with Jones’s name written in several places and addressed to him at the restaurant address. The return address indicated the sender as “Katrina Jones” in Long Beach, California. Deputy Martin also found “several deposit slips for different banks” in the center console. He testified that he saw deposit slips from “Bank of America and Chase,” with two indicating deposits in the amounts of $4,000 and approximately $8,500. He also found “a stack of several blank deposit slips.” Martin did not collect or retain the deposit slips.

Jones told Deputy Martin and the other officers, on the scene that he worked for both the restaurant and a barber shop. He said the package contained “perm” solution, and he denied consent to search it. But Martin’s suspicion about the package had been aroused by a combination of factors. The investigation had been initiated by the postal inspector’s tip. The return address was from Long Beach, California, and Martin knew that California was a primary source for exporting illegal drugs, which are frequently sent through the mail. In addition, he found it suspicious that perm solution would be shipped “in a Home Depot box” and addressed to Jones at the restaurant, not the barber shop. According to Deputy Martin, “Nothing he was telling me was adding up or making any sense.”

Deputy Martin arrested Jones for driving while his license was suspended when he had a prior conviction for the same offense. Because he was not certain whether he had sufficient justification to conduct a warrantless search of the box, Deputy Martin called for a K-9 unit. When the dog arrived, it alerted on the box, indicating the presence of an illegal substance. Deputy Martin and the other officers then opened the box. Inside they found another sealed cardboard box which held three 32-ounce bottles and one 20-ounce bottle, each filled with a yellowish liquid and packaged separately in vacuum-sealed plastic bags. Deputy Martin later testified that narcotics traffickers often use vacuum-sealed bags to mask odors and avoid detection by drug-sniffing dogs. He field-tested the liquid, which had a strong odor, and detected PCP. Jones was charged with possession with intent to deliver PCP, a controlled substance, in an amount of 400 grams or more.

Jones had a mobile telephone with him at the time of his arrest. Deputy Martin testified that it rang continually during their encounter. The phone was collected as evidence £nd turned over to Montgomery County Sheriffs Detective M. Pieper, who specialized in gathering forensic evidence from electronic devices. She obtained a search warrant for the contents of the phone and extracted text messages, photographs, call lists, and contact lists from it.

At trial, Jones objected to the admissibility of the evidence obtained from the phone, arguing that it was unauthenticated hearsay. He also asserted that the phone belonged to his mother-in-law, Pearly Green, who went by the nickname “Baby.” The State argued that Jones’s possession of the phone at the time of the arrest, his use of it at the scene of the traffic stop, and certain information on it showed that it was his phone and satisfied the authentication requirement. The State further argued that text messages shown to be sent from “Me,” i.e. the phone’s user, were statements against Jones’s interest or statements of a party opponent and therefore not hearsay. Finally, the State argued that the other text messages and *258 photographs were not hearsay because they were not offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted but to show the context for Jones’s responsive messages and to show a course of conduct. The trial court overruled Jones’s objection, holding that any questions about who sent or received the texts went to the weight of the evidence, not its admissibility.

Detective Pieper testified that she recovered several text messages from “Kool” originating from a phone number with a 562 area code, which is in southern California. The text messages dated from approximately two months before the arrest. Among these were approximately 25 text messages between “Kool” and “Me.” Many of these consisted of ten-digit numbers or phone numbers, bank names, names of people, and amounts of money. Two messages from “Kool” to “Me” addressed the recipient by the name “James.”

The mobile phone’s contact list included entries for “Baby” and “James Green,” but it did not include an entry for Jones. The call log showed two incoming phone calls from “James Green,” but with different associated phone numbers. The phone also contained photographs of shipping labels — one addressed to Jones at the restaurant and the other addressed to James Green.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
466 S.W.3d 252, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 3139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lydell-anton-jones-v-state-texapp-2015.