Osvaldo Lopez, Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 2007
Docket11-05-00313-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Osvaldo Lopez, Jr. v. State (Osvaldo Lopez, Jr. 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
Osvaldo Lopez, Jr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion filed May 24, 2007

The court on this day, July 19, 2007, has withdrawn the opinion and judgment dated May 24, 2007, and substituted the opinion and judgment dated July 19, 2007.

Opinion filed May 24, 2007

                                                                        In The

    Eleventh Court of Appeals

                                                                 ____________

                                       Nos. 11-05-00312-CR & 11-05-00313-CR

                                                     __________

                                   OSVALDO LOPEZ, JR., Appellant

                                                             V.

                                        STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

                                         On Appeal from the 259th District Court

                                                          Jones County, Texas

                                             Trial Court Cause Nos. 9004 & 9005

                                                                   O P I N I O N

The jury convicted Osvaldo Lopez, Jr. of two deliveries of cocaine:  (1) a second degree felony offense enhanced to a first degree felony offense of more than one gram but less than four grams that occurred on September 4, 2001 (Cause No. 11-05-00313-CR) and (2) a state jail felony offense of less than one gram that occurred on September 6, 2001 (Cause No. 11-05-00312-CR).  The trial court assessed punishment at forty years confinement in Cause No. 11-05-00313-CR and at two years confinement in Cause No. 11-05-00312-CR, both sentences to run concurrently.


Appellant asserts that he was provided with ineffective assistance of counsel because his trial counsel failed (1) to object to the traffic stop of appellant for narcotics officers to obtain his driver=s license information and (2) to object to the unduly suggestive procedure of the undercover officer in identifying appellant from his driver=s license photograph.  Appellant also asserts that, without the in-court identification of appellant by the undercover officer, which was a result of the impermissible pretrial procedure, the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support the convictions.  Lastly, appellant contends that the trial court erred in admitting impeachment evidence of prior offenses dismissed under Tex. Pen. Code Ann. ' 12.45 (Vernon 2003) by an earlier court that had considered them in the punishment of appellant for an earlier felony conviction.  We modify and affirm.

Background Facts

Sergeant Teofilo Garcia Jr. of the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) was a narcotics officer based in Anson.  On September 4, 2001, a cooperating individual told him that a man named AJunior@ would sell cocaine if Sergeant Garcia wanted to set up a buy.  Born in Anson, Sergeant Garcia had lived there most of his life and knew many of the people who were involved with drugs, and they knew him.  Sergeant Garcia had received information that the Aguirre family had been trafficking in drugs.  The cooperating individual=s reference to AJunior,@ his mentioning of the names of members of the Aguirre family, and his description of where the named persons lived led Sergeant Garcia to wrongly assume that the cooperating individual was talking about Robert Aguirre Jr. as the potential seller of cocaine.  Sergeant Garcia=s assumption had the additional support of the cooperating individual=s description of the pickup that AJunior@ would be driving: a white Ford F150 with a buyer=s tag.  Sergeant Garcia had seen Larry Aguirre, Robert Aguirre Jr.=s brother, driving that pickup, and he had seen the pickup at the Aguirre residence.


Because Sergeant Garcia was well known in Anson, Sergeant James Rhodes was the undercover officer to purchase the cocaine.  Sergeant Rhodes told the cooperating individual to contact AJunior@ to set up a purchase of two grams of cocaine for $100 per gram later in the afternoon of September 4.  Sergeant Rhodes testified that, after appellant drove up in the white Ford F150 pickup, the cooperating individual simply introduced appellant as AJunior@ and then left.  Sergeant Rhodes then purchased 1.65 grams of cocaine from appellant for $200.  Sergeant Garcia testified that he was conducting surveillance for Sergeant Rhodes but that he did not see AJunior,@ only the white Ford F150 pickup with buyer=s tags. 

Two days later, on September 6, Sergeant Rhodes was preparing to make an undercover buy of methamphetamine from an individual named Wilcox.  AJunior@ was driving a white Chevrolet pickup, spotted Sergeant Rhodes, and stopped and asked Sergeant Rhodes if he would like to purchase $20 worth of cocaine.  Sergeant Rhodes made a second buy of .26 grams from AJunior.@

When Sergeant Rhodes delivered the two packets of cocaine to the DPS lab, he listed the suspect as Robert Aguirre Jr. on both initial reports.  The first report was dated September 5, a Wednesday, and the second report was dated September 7.  After the second buy, Sergeant Rhodes described AJunior@ to Sergeant Garcia who then realized that the AJunior

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