Moseley, Darryl

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 2008
DocketPD-0479-07
StatusPublished

This text of Moseley, Darryl (Moseley, Darryl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moseley, Darryl, (Tex. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS

NO. PD-479-07

DARRYL MOSELEY, Appellant

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

ON PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW FROM THE SEVENTH COURT OF APPEALS BEXAR COUNTY

J OHNSON, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.

OPINION

A jury convicted appellant of murder and assessed his sentence at life in prison. The court

of appeals affirmed the conviction and sentence. Moseley v. State, 223 S.W.3d 593 (Tex. App.–

Amarillo 2007). We granted appellant’s sole ground for review: “The Court of Appeals erred in

finding that the recording of Appellant’s telephone conversations made at the police station was not

an intercepted wire communication, and therefore was admissible against Appellant.”

San Antonio police officers arrested appellant after finding him in possession of the

complainant’s car and discovering her body in the trunk. At the homicide division of the police

department, detectives questioned appellant in an interview room. That interrogation and the periods 2

of time during which appellant was left alone and allowed to make telephone calls were recorded

on a digital video disc (DVD). Appellant unsuccessfully sought to prevent admission of that DVD

into evidence at trial. On appeal, appellant challenged the trial court’s denial of his suppression

motion. He contended that the trial court erred when it overruled his objection that the recording of

his telephone conversations in the interview room, during which he admitted the offense and elicited

help in creating an alibi, was made illegally because it constituted an interception1 of a wire

communication,2 in violation of TEX . PENAL CODE § 16.02,3 and that the conversations were

therefore inadmissible under TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 18.20, § 2(a)(1).4 We affirm the judgment

of the court of appeals.

The Appeal

The court of appeals determined that, although appellant’s statements were transmitted to a

third party via a wire communication, the wire communication was not offered into evidence. The

1 Article 18.20, § 1(3).

“Intercept” means the aural or other acquisition of the contents of a wire, oral, or electronic communication through the use of an electronic, mechanical, or other device.

2 Article 18.20, § 1(1).

“W ire communication” means an aural transfer made in whole or in part through the use of facilities for the transmission of communications by the aid of wire, cable, or other like connection between the point of origin and the point of reception, including the use of such a connection in a switching station, furnished or operated by a person authorized to engage in providing or operating the facilities for the transmission of communications as a communications carrier. The term includes the electronic storage of a wire communication.

3 T EX . P EN AL C O D E § 16.02 provides that interception of a wire or oral communication is a crime.

4 Sec. 2. Prohibition of Use as Evidence on Intercepted Communications.

(a) The contents of an intercepted communication and evidence derived from an intercepted communication may be received in evidence in any trial, hearing, or other proceeding in or before any court, . . . of this state . . . unless: (1) the communication was intercepted in violation of this article, Section 16.02, Penal Code, or federal law; . . . . 3

evidence offered was the DVD, a visual and aural recording of appellant’s words spoken in the

interview room that did not constitute a “wire communication.” Moseley v. State, 223 S.W.3d 593,

599 (Tex. App.–Amarillo 2007). The court of appeals also held that appellant’s words did not

constitute an “oral communication” under TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 18.20, § 1(2),5 because “the

communication itself was not made under circumstances that justify an expectation that the

communication would not be intercepted and is, therefore, not an ‘oral communication’ within” the

statutory definition of TEX . PENAL CODE § 16.02. Moseley, 223 S.W.3d at 599.6 Because the court

of appeals found that appellant’s words were neither a wire communication nor an oral

communication, it declined to decide whether the recording of appellant’s side of the telephone

conversation constituted an “interception” of a wire or oral communication for the purposes of TEX .

PENAL CODE § 16.02. Id.

Facts

Two detectives testified about the interrogation at both the pre-trial suppression hearing and

the trial. The record reflects that appellant was interrogated in a small interview room in the

homicide office at the police station. The entire interrogation, including the periods of time during

which appellant was alone in the room, was recorded on the contested DVD. Signs in the area of

the interview room stated that interviews were subject to recording, and appellant admitted near the

end of the DVD that he was aware that he was subject to being recorded.

5 Article 18.20, § 1(2)

“Oral communication” means an oral communication uttered by a person exhibiting an expectation that the communication is not subject to interception under circumstances justifying that expectation. The term does not include an electronic communication.

6 Appellant does not challenge that finding. 4

Detective Slaughter testified to the procedures used to record interrogations in the police

interview room: a DVD monitor and DVD recorder are set up in another room, and a pin-hole

camera in the interview room is used to record interrogations. He also testified that the DVD

recorded only what could be seen and heard in the interview room and that, if anyone were talking

on the telephone in the room, only the words of the person speaking in the room would be heard.

During the course of the interrogation, appellant was left alone for a few minutes and was

offered the use of a telephone that was in the room. While he was alone, appellant made multiple

telephone calls. What appellant said while talking on the telephone was recorded on the DVD, but

the responses of the person to whom appellant was speaking on the telephone, which were “wire

communications,” could not be heard and were not recorded.

The Arguments

Appellant’s sole ground for review asserts that the court of appeals erred in finding that the

recording of these telephone conversations was not an intercepted wire communication and was thus

admissible against him. Appellant argues that, because the recording of the telephone conversations

“constituted an illegal intercept of a wire communication” as described by TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC.

art. 18.20, § 1(3), the content of the conversations recorded on the DVD was obtained in violation

of TEX . PENAL CODE § 16.02. The DVD was, therefore, inadmissible under TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC.

art. 38.23, which provides that no evidence obtained in violation of the laws of Texas shall be

admitted into evidence against the accused on the trial of any criminal case. He asserts that, because

he did not know he was being recorded, the consent exception to the wiretap law does not apply and

that the law-enforcement exception does not apply because the San Antonio Police Department did

not make known to him any stated policy about monitoring all outgoing calls made from the police 5

station.7

Appellant concedes that, while “he was not in a jail or prison cell when he made these calls,

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