Michael Leroy Cameron v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 16, 2004
Docket07-03-00362-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Michael Leroy Cameron v. State (Michael Leroy Cameron 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
Michael Leroy Cameron v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

NO. 07-03-0362-CR


IN THE COURT OF APPEALS


FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS


AT AMARILLO


PANEL A


AUGUST 16, 2004



______________________________


MICHAEL LEROY CAMERON, APPELLANT


V.


THE STATE OF TEXAS, APPELLEE


_________________________________


FROM THE 9TH DISTRICT COURT OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY;


NO. 01-09-05992-CR; HONORABLE FRED EDWARDS, JUDGE


_______________________________


Before JOHNSON, C.J., and REAVIS and CAMPBELL, JJ.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Michael Leroy Cameron pleaded not guilty, but was convicted of delivery of a controlled substance after a jury trial. Finding the enhancement allegations contained in the indictment to be true, the trial court assessed a sentence of 25 years confinement. With two issues, appellant asserts: (1) the trial court erred in prohibiting his prior attorney from testifying unless appellant waived the attorney-client privilege; and (2) his trial counsel was ineffective. We affirm.

Ron Pickering and Philip Cash were working as undercover narcotics officers at the Handle Bar nightclub in Conroe on the night of April 26, 2002. Just before midnight, Pickering was approached by Stacy Warden, appellant's co-defendant, who asked if he wanted to smoke some marihuana with her. Pickering declined, but asked if she knew where he could buy some cocaine. Warden "said she could probably get it" for him, then placed a call on Pickering's cell phone. After concluding the phone call, Warden confirmed that "it [the cocaine] would be there within 15 minutes." When Pickering inquired about price, Warden advised him that the drugs would cost $120.

Shortly before 2:00 a.m., a man later identified as appellant entered the nightclub, made eye contact with Warden, then walked out. Warden told Pickering that the drugs had arrived, then Pickering, Cash, and Warden went outside to the parking lot. There, the officers observed Warden standing by appellant next to a pickup truck. Warden took what Pickering "assumed was the cocaine" from appellant, "put it in her fist and folded her arms and walked across the parking lot" to him. She then opened her fist to reveal the cocaine. Pickering took the drugs from Warden and gave her the money, which she placed "in her hand and [then she] walked back with her hands crossed like she did when she approached" him. When Warden reached appellant, she handed him the money. Once the transaction was complete, Warden, Cash, Pickering, and appellant met at the truck, where Warden introduced appellant as Mike. Appellant asked Pickering "how he liked the blow," the street name for powder cocaine. After Pickering "told him it was great," appellant advised him that "if [he] needed anything more that [he] should contact [Warden]."

At some point during the evening, Pickering obtained the license plate number of the truck by which he saw appellant standing. Later that night, Pickering contacted his dispatcher and "had the plate run" and discovered that the truck was registered to an individual who previously had been "handled" by the Montague County Sheriff's Department. From that information, Pickering developed the owner's date of birth, height, and weight, which he transmitted to the Department of Public Safety. After DPS provided Pickering with a driver's license photo, he determined that the address on the license was the same as the address on the vehicle registration. Moreover, Pickering recognized the person depicted in the driver's license photo as the same individual with whom he had come into contact at the nightclub. Having thus developed appellant as the suspect in a delivery of a controlled substance case, Pickering referred the case to the district attorney's office. The grand jury indicted appellant for that offense in September of 2001.

With his first issue, appellant maintains the trial court erred in refusing to allow his former trial attorney, Guy Jones, to testify absent a complete waiver of the attorney-client privilege. Specifically, appellant contends that the testimony he sought to elicit from Jones was not privileged because it had nothing to do with confidential information between him and Jones. Rather, appellant maintains that Jones would have "provide[d] beneficial defense testimony based on inconsistencies in the State's file." Thus, the trial court was wrong to conclude that such testimony would violate the attorney-client privilege and open the attorney to unqualified cross-examination by the State. (1) We disagree.

The basis of appellant's contention under this issue is the following discussion which occurred during trial outside the presence of the jury:

Defense: Your Honor, it came to my attention when I was hired on this case that Mr. Jones when he first looked at the offense report that it was a handwritten report; went back to look at the report a second time and it was a typewritten report. When he looked at it the first time, it was a different colored truck given in the report as there was in the second report. That would be the whole purpose of his testimony.

Court: On the basis of his personal memory or his notes?

Defense: On the basis of his, actually his notes.

Court: Do you have your notes with you?

Jones: They're outside the courtroom, Your Honor.

Court: And your client is willing to waive the attorney-client privilege, I assume?

Defense: Yes, Your Honor.

Court: Well, that's an interesting question.

Prosecutor: He's got to waive it as to all aspects.

Defense: Your Honor, may I have a moment?

Court: Exactly. I think that if he waives the attorney-client privilege you cannot pick and choose as to what you get to say as to what areas you get to reveal. Once that attorney-client privilege crack has been opened, it's a gate, and they're allowed to now - because he's going to have to waive it on the record. I'll give you a moment to talk to him.

Defense: I understand they'll be allowed to go into any conversations as well.

Court: You need to talk to your client about that and if he is going to waive his attorney-client privilege then I want it on the record, especially for the protection of Mr. Jones. What's your decision?

Defense: Your Honor, I don't believe that it requires any type of waiver. He's certainly not going to - at this point he's not going to waive his attorney-client privilege.

Court: Then I'm not going to let Mr. Jones testify. Mr. Jones cannot get on the stand and testify as to work product in order to impeach testimony and yet not have a waiver of attorney. You can't have it both ways. You either get it on or you go to the extent of even asking him did he represent him or anything else. He has to do it. I'm not going to put him in that position or this Court.



Following this exchange, Jones testified during an offer of proof that when he reviewed the State's file for the first time, it included a handwritten police report designating the truck as white. Jones further averred that the second time he reviewed the file, the handwritten report had been replaced with a typewritten version that described the truck as dark blue. According to Jones, the two reports were otherwise identical.

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Michael Leroy Cameron v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-leroy-cameron-v-state-texapp-2004.