Quincy Ray Pillette v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 21, 2016
Docket09-15-00253-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Quincy Ray Pillette v. State (Quincy Ray Pillette 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
Quincy Ray Pillette v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont ____________________ NO. 09-15-00253-CR ____________________

QUINCY RAY PILLETTE, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 163rd District Court Orange County, Texas Trial Cause No. B-150032-R

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Quincy Ray Pillette (Pillette or Appellant) was indicted by an

Orange County grand jury for possession of a controlled substance, a second

degree felony. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 481.115(a), (d) (West 2010).

The indictment alleged that on or about October 1, 2014, Pillette “intentionally and

knowingly possess[ed] a controlled substance, to wit: Phencyclidine, in an amount

by aggregate weight . . . of four grams or more but less than 200 grams[.]” The

State sought to enhance Pillette’s punishment for a prior felony conviction. Pillette 1 entered a plea of not guilty and pleaded “true” to the enhancement. The jury found

Pillette guilty as charged in the indictment and assessed punishment at confinement

in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice for a term of twelve years. The trial

court entered a Judgment of Conviction by Jury consistent with the jury verdict and

certified that Pillette has the right of appeal. Pillette timely filed a written notice of

appeal. In a single issue, Pillette challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the

evidence to support his conviction. We affirm.

EVIDENCE AT TRIAL

Witnesses for the State

Amber Levette (Levette) and Courtney Janice (Janice), both employees at a

convenience store, testified they were working the night shift on October 1, 2014.

At trial, both Levette and Janice identified Pillette as a man who had come into the

store that night. According to Levette, Pillette smelled strange that night, like

“embalming fluid,” and she recognized the smell because she had known people

that smoked cigarettes that had been dipped in “embalming fluid.” 1 Levette

explained that Pillette asked her the same question repeatedly, and then “sat in the

parking lot for like a good ten minutes, and he kept turning the blinkers on and off 1 Later testimony revealed that street names for PCP or phencyclidine include “dip,” “wet,” and “embalming fluid,” and although PCP is referred to as “embalming fluid,” it is actually a different chemical than formaldehyde. Witnesses also testified that “strack” refers to a container used to carry PCP. 2 in the car and the windshield wipers on and off.” Levette suggested that Janice call

the police because “[s]omething just [didn’t] feel right.”

Janice testified that Pillette asked them where he was and he stated he

thought he was in Louisiana, and after he “stumbled around the store[,]” he then

stayed in the car in the parking lot for “quite awhile[,]” and then came back in to

the store to buy matches. According to Janice, Pillette returned to his car in the

parking lot for twenty or thirty minutes, Pillette’s car lights flashed on and off, and

the windshield wipers came on, although she explained that it was not raining at

the time. According to Janice, she could “faintly smell” some odor she could not

identify wherever Pillette walked, and she thought he was intoxicated. Janice

called the sheriff’s department because she “knew something wasn’t right.”

Sergeant Charles Williams (Williams), Corporal Andrew Hollier (Hollier),

and Deputy Dustin Bock (Bock) testified that they were law enforcement officers

who were called to the scene that night. According to Williams, it was “sprinkling

off and on” that night. Williams explained that he found Pillette sitting in the

driver’s seat of a red car, that Pillette was unsure of his whereabouts, and “[the]

longer we spoke, the more it was determined that he appeared to be intoxicated[,]”

however Williams did not notice any smell on Pillette. According to Williams, the

officers found drugs in less than five minutes once they began to search the

3 vehicle. Williams testified that he observed Hollier retrieve from Pillette’s vehicle

a cigarette that was wet and stained, that appeared to have been dipped in

something, as well as a small Scope bottle filled with a liquid that did not appear to

him to be Scope. Williams told Hollier to place the items back where Hollier had

found them so they could take photographs of where the items had been found in

the vehicle.

Williams also testified that Pillette was intoxicated that night, and he agreed

that Pillette was in possession of PCP. Williams agreed that being under the

influence of a substance was an indicator that a person is in possession of a

substance. And, Williams also explained that, in his experience, persons

intoxicated on PCP have memory problems.

Hollier testified that Pillette’s eyes were glassy and “it was obvious that he

was . . . impaired. He didn’t know how to go home[,]” and he did not know where

he was. Hollier explained that when searching Pillette’s vehicle, they located “a

small Scope clear bottle[]” and “a cigarette that looked like it was -- had gotten wet

somehow.” He testified that the Scope bottle was between the driver’s door and the

driver’s seat, and the cigarette was under the front part of the driver seat.

According to Hollier, Pillette had access to both the Scope bottle and the cigarette,

and both items were “in view from standing outside the car.” Photographs of the

4 car, the Scope bottle, and the cigarette were admitted into evidence. Hollier

testified that a photograph of the Scope bottle showed tobacco in the bottom of the

bottle.

Bock testified that he could smell alcohol on Pillette’s breath and that

Pillette was “sweating profusely[.]” Initially Pillette told Bock that he had not

consumed any alcohol, but later he told Bock he had consumed a couple of beers.

Bock testified that, in his professional career, he had dealt with people on drugs,

including people on PCP, and after questioning Pillette, Pillette admitted he had

taken PCP earlier in the night. When Bock saw the Scope bottle, he “[i]mmediately

[] suspected that it was going to be P.C.P.” because

[o]ne, . . . he’d already admitted to doing P.C.P. earlier in the night; and, two, because it was in a Scope bottle and it was a clear liquid substance. My personal experience with Scope is that it’s going to be either like a greenish color or a blue color, not clear.

Bock testified that he arrested Pillette for public intoxication and possession of a

controlled substance and that he believed Pillette was “in possession” based on

Pillette’s apparent intoxication at the time and because Pillette had access to the

Scope bottle and wet cigarette that Bock believed had been dipped in PCP. On

cross-examination, Bock was asked whether Pillette knew the drugs were in the

car:

5 [Defense attorney]: And did Mr. Pillette ever say anything to you that he knew that those drugs were in the car?

[Bock]: He eventually said that he was looking for it earlier.

[Defense attorney]: Looking for what earlier?

[Bock]: Looking for the substance inside the car.

[Defense attorney]: What did he say?

[Bock]: His words were -- to me were that “I was trying to find that earlier.”

[Defense attorney]: Trying to find what?

[Bock]: The P.C.P. I’m assuming the P.C.P.

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