Marcus Allen Bolden v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 31, 2009
Docket01-08-00859-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Marcus Allen Bolden v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion to: SR TJ EVK ERA GCH LCH JB JS MM TGT

Opinion issued December 31, 2009

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO.   01-08-00859-CR


marcus allen bolden, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee


On Appeal from the 337th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1140022


MEMORANDUM opinion

Enhanced as a habitual-felony-offender, Marcus Bolden pled guilty to cocaine possession with intent to deliver without an agreed punishment recommendation.[1]  The trial court sentenced him to thirty years.  In his sole point of error, appellant complains that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress because the officer who stopped his vehicle was without reasonable suspicion to do so.[2]  We affirm.

BACKGROUND

After the traffic stop, appellant was arrested and charged with possession with intent to deliver cocaine.[3]  Appellant filed a pretrial motion to suppress the drugs and incriminating statements of appellant obtained as a result of the stop, challenging the legality of the search and seizure.  At the suppression hearing, appellant attacked the underlying basis for the stop and argued, specifically and exclusively, that the officers did not have reasonable suspicion to detain him.

Testifying for the State, Sergeant Christopher Eads, Houston Police Department, stated that he and Officer Raymond Berger, along with several other plain-clothed officers in unmarked vehicles, had been conducting a burglary of motor vehicles sting operation in a shopping center parking lot on November 2, 2007.  Eads testified that Officer J. J. Mounsey had been stationed nearby in a marked unit in the event that backup was needed. 

Eads described how, while conducting surveillance in the parking lot, he observed a group of known crack addicts making calls on the gas station pay phone.  A Chevrolet Impala then pulled into the lot and parked near an unmarked vehicle driven by Berger.  According to both Eads and Berger, two men from the group approached and sat in the Impala, one in the front passenger seat, the other in the backseat.  Eads and Berger both testified that they then observed a thirty-second drug transaction between the driver and the two men.

Both Eads and Berger testified that after the two men exited the vehicle, the Impala drove towards the nearest exit.  Eads observed the driver fail to signal a lane change when exiting the lot and radioed Mounsey to advise that there was “probable cause” for a stop.  Eads and Berger then followed the Impala out of the lot with Berger behind Eads.  Although Berger did not see the violation, he heard Eads’s radio transmission to Mounsey about probable cause.  Eads and Berger were soon joined by Mounsey, who had pulled behind appellant at the intersection to make the stop.  Berger later identified appellant as the driver of the Impala.

Mounsey testified that as he was parked behind a nearby Target as a back-up unit, the sting officers radioed him that they had observed suspicious activity and “were getting ready to take somebody down.”  While moving into position, he received Eads’s radio call that they had “probable cause” to stop appellant for changing lanes without signaling.  Mounsey—who observed appellant leaving the parking lot, but witnessed no moving violation prior to detaining him—made the stop solely upon the word of Eads, who had told him that the “probable cause” to stop was based on a lane change without signaling.  Mounsey, however, never issued a citation for this offense; he instead issued a citation for making an “improper left turn, exiting a drive way,” an “offense” that Mounsey later determined was not an actual traffic violation.  According to Mounsey, he cited appellant because he had believed, based upon Eads’ radio communication, that was the reason for the stop.  Mounsey also testified—in contradiction to his own testimony earlier during the hearing—“All I was told was that they had probable cause but there was no explanation as to what it was for.”

The defense introduced photographs of appellant’s car and called appellant’s girlfriend, Alexia Wilburn, the defense’s sole witness, to testify as to the dark tint of appellant’s car windows.  The defense argued that the darkness of the tinted windows cast doubt upon Eads’s testimony that he witnessed a drug deal inside appellant’s car.  The defense also argued that Eads could not observe the alleged traffic violations from his location. Furthermore, relying upon Mounsey’s testimony, the defense argued that Eads did not convey sufficient “probable cause” information to allow Mounsey to make the stop.

The trial court denied appellant’s motion to suppress without stating the basis for its order.  Appellant did not ask the court to provide any written findings of fact.  See State v. Cullen, 195 S.W.3d 696, 699 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006) (holding that “upon the request of the losing party on a motion to suppress evidence, the trial court shall state its essential findings”). 

Reasonable suspicion

In his sole point of error, appellant asserts

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State v. Ross
32 S.W.3d 853 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2000)
Hargrove v. State
40 S.W.3d 556 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2001)
Hoag v. State
728 S.W.2d 375 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1987)
Pyles v. State
755 S.W.2d 98 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1988)
Guzman v. State
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Bluebook (online)
Marcus Allen Bolden v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marcus-allen-bolden-v-state-texapp-2009.