Mark Shane Conner v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 14, 2022
Docket09-21-00299-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Mark Shane Conner v. the State of Texas (Mark Shane Conner v. the State of Texas) 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
Mark Shane Conner v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

________________ NO. 09-21-00299-CR ________________

MARK SHANE CONNER, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee ________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 1A District Court Tyler County, Texas Trial Cause No. 13,648 ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found Mark Shane Conner guilty of possession of a controlled

substance with intent to deliver in an amount greater than four grams but less than

200 grams, a first-degree felony. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 481.112(d).

Conner pleaded “true” to enhancements, and the jury assessed punishment at

seventy-five years of confinement. In one issue, Conner complains that the trial court

erred by denying his pretrial motions to suppress. For the following reasons, we will

affirm the trial court’s judgment.

1 BACKGROUND1

In December 2019, Hardin County Sheriff Deputies Lieutenant Mark Vincent

and Sergeant Jesse Orr were investigating the theft of a vehicle. They received

information the vehicle might be in Conner’s possession on property covering

several acres in Tyler County owned by Paul Mark Freeman. When Vincent and Orr

arrived, they encountered Conner on one side of a driveway leading to the property,

leaning inside a white Chevrolet pickup truck.2 When Conner observed the officers,

Vincent explained that Conner began acting nervous and making furtive movements

with his hands as he leaned inside the truck.

While Orr talked with Conner about why the officers were there, Vincent

walked around to visually check that no weapons were in the vicinity, and in the

process, observed through the truck window what appeared to be methamphetamine

on the front seat. Vincent and Orr, being Hardin County Sheriff Deputies, did not

immediately arrest Conner, but called Tyler County Deputy Simon Prince, who

arrived at the scene shortly after. After observing the narcotics through the truck

window in plain view and doing an investigation on-site, Prince arrested Conner for

possession of narcotics.

1We limit our background discussion to those matters relevant to the Motion to Suppress. 2This truck was not the stolen vehicle the officers were investigating.

2 Conner was charged with possession of methamphetamine with intent to

distribute in an amount greater than four grams but less than 200 grams. Conner filed

two pretrial motions to suppress. The first pretrial Motion to Suppress asserted that

both the search and arrest violated various constitutional and statutory provisions

and were unlawful. Conner sought to suppress any evidence relating to the arrest,

officers’ testimony in connection with Conner’s detention and arrest, and “tangible

evidence seized.” Conner filed a second Motion to Suppress before trial, which also

addressed Conner’s statements and argued the arrest was unlawful. The trial court

denied both motions to suppress after holding separate pretrial hearings. Conner

complains in one issue that the trial court erred in denying his motions to suppress.

In support of this issue, he argues that the Hardin County and Tyler County officers

did not have a legal right to be on the premises, therefore the evidence and statements

obtained by Hardin County and Tyler County officers should be suppressed.

FIRST SUPPRESSION HEARING

In the first suppression hearing, Vincent testified they were investigating

stolen vehicles and received information that Conner may have stored a stolen

vehicle at the property owned by Freeman. According to Vincent, Freeman had

always been cooperative and friendly on the occasions when he visited with Freeman

on his property. When they arrived, Vincent and Orr drove through an open gate,

drove down the long driveway, and saw Conner while he was standing near the

3 pickup truck when he “began to shuffle around[.]” Vincent further testified that

Conner “appeared to be very nervous, [when] some furtive movement inside the

vehicle [ ]led me to believe that he could be concealing drugs, weapons, or anything

of that nature inside the vehicle.”

Vincent testified he walked around to speak to another man who was working

underneath a different vehicle on Freeman’s property and to make sure there were

not any weapons nearby. As Vincent visually checked the area for weapons “for

safety reasons,” Vincent looked through the window of the pickup truck he had seen

Conner reaching inside. According to Vincent, he saw “clear Ziploc baggies” in the

front seat of the truck that were “highly visible” and appeared to contain

methamphetamine. Vincent testified he asked Conner how much methamphetamine

was in the truck. Conner responded, “A lot.”

Vincent explained they did not place Conner under arrest or seize the

methamphetamine, but instead called Tyler County Deputy Prince. When Prince

arrived, he also observed what appeared to be methamphetamine in plain view.

Prince provided similar testimony at the suppression hearing that when Prince

arrived at the scene, he also observed the methamphetamine in “plain view through

a clear window” and seized the drugs, along with scales and small plastic baggies.

Vincent testified that Conner did not own the truck where he saw Conner and

the drugs. The State also introduced photographs of the truck’s license plate and

4 paperwork, which shows that Conner is not the registered owner of the truck. Conner

did not call any witnesses or introduce any exhibits at the hearing to establish he

owned the truck, borrowed it, or otherwise had permission from an authorized

individual to use it.

Conner did not offer any evidence at the hearing to establish he owned the

land in question. The evidence also showed multiple RVs on the property, and the

officers testified Conner gave conflicting information about living in an RV on the

premises some distance from where the truck was located. Body camera video

footage the trial court admitted during the hearing shows Freeman told the officers

that Conner lived in one of the RVs. 3 The same footage shows that while Freeman

knew Conner was on his property, Freeman expressed he was surprised about the

methamphetamine. Officers also testified that they had received information Conner

had been storing stolen property on Freeman’s property.

SECOND SUPPRESSION HEARING

The second Motion to Suppress and hearing focused on Conner’s statements

to the officers. During the pretrial hearing on Conner’s second Motion to Suppress,

he argued that officers failed to Mirandize him, and therefore, his statements should

have been suppressed. The State responded by reading from the first suppression

3While there is some evidence that Conner may have lived in an RV, which was later searched, no evidence obtained from the RV was offered or admitted. Rather, the issue centers on the officers’ ability to be on the land Freeman owned. 5 hearing transcript regarding Vincent’s testimony that Conner was not under arrest

and free to leave. The trial court again denied the Motion to Suppress. Conner then

requested a running objection based on the denials of both motions to suppress.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

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