Ramon Enrique Manzo v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 30, 2010
Docket08-08-00325-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ramon Enrique Manzo v. State (Ramon Enrique Manzo 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
Ramon Enrique Manzo v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

§ RAMON ENRIQUE MANZO, No. 08-08-00325-CR § Appellant, Appeal from § v. Criminal District Court No. 1 § THE STATE OF TEXAS, of El Paso County, Texas § Appellee. (TC # 20030D01620) §

OPINION

Ramon Enrique Manzo was indicted for intentionally and knowingly possessing a usable

quantity of marijuana, more than fifty pounds but 2,000 pounds or less. A jury found Appellant

guilty as charged in the indictment. We affirm the conviction, but we vacate the sentence and

remand for a new punishment hearing.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Deputy Sheriff Victor Donoso was called out to the Paso Del Norte port of entry on March

13, 2003 for a narcotics possession case. When he arrived, he was directed by customs inspectors

to 91 bundles of marijuana. The bundles weighed 175.3 pounds. He took possession of the bundles,

impounded a red Ford Mustang, and met with Appellant. Donoso advised Appellant of his rights,

placed him under arrest, and transported him to the Montana substation. Donoso booked Appellant

into jail and placed the marijuana in the evidence locker.

Customs and Border Protection Officer Ramiro Vega testified that while he patrolled with

a K-9 officer, the dog starting pulling toward a red Mustang driven by Appellant. Vega asked

Appellant what he was bringing from Mexico and Appellant responded that he was not bringing anything. Vega asked one of the officers carrying a density meter to come over to the vehicle. Vega

walked Appellant over to the headhouse where he was placed in a detention cell.

Meanwhile, Officer Maribel Terrazas ran the density meter along the bumper of the Mustang

once she saw the dog. She received an abnormal reading on the density meter. Terrazas then began

a visual inspection of the bumper and noticed that there was foam within the bumper and a gap

between the foam and the metal box. She inserted a probe and extracted what appeared to be a green

leafy substance. Terrazas then interviewed Appellant for basic biographical information. After

Appellant gave Terrazas his name, he asked her if they had found any drugs in the vehicle. Terrazas

asked for his date of birth, and again Appellant asked if they found drugs in the vehicle. As a matter

of policy, drivers are not informed of investigations until special agents take custody and read them

their rights. Appellant asked Terrazas a third time if they had found any drugs in the vehicle.

Terrazas described his demeanor as very anxious, pacing back and forth, walking around, moving

around, with his head looking down at the ground. Asked directly about his repeated

inquiries, Appellant responded, “Because I saw the dog run around my car, so I know there must be

drugs in the vehicle.” Terrazas tested the green leafy substance to confirm that it was marijuana.

On cross- examination, she admitted that she could not smell the odor or marijuana emanating from

the vehicle.

Jose Luis Perez, a special agent with the Immigration and Customs Enforcement, took

photographs of the vehicle to demonstrate exactly where the marijuana was located. He interviewed

Appellant and gave him his Miranda warnings. Appellant explained that he had come with his

mother to El Paso four days earlier. He had just purchased the Mustang for $4,000. He put his car

in the shop for some radiator problems and they took about three days to fix it. Appellant blamed

the people who fixed his car for putting the drugs in the car. But up to that point, Perez had not informed Appellant why he was being detained. Perez asked him what repairs were done at the shop

and Appellant responded that they replaced the radiator, the thermostat, and the belts. Perez then

asked him how he thought the drugs got in his vehicle. At that point Appellant requested a lawyer

and the interview was terminated. Perez inspected the vehicle and found no evidence of repairs, nor

did he locate receipts for the work done. Only the vehicle registration was inside the car.

Perez became suspicious of the vehicle because the key chain only contained two keys--one

for the ignition and one for the door. In his experience, the fact that Appellant only had two keys

is an indication that the vehicle was just recently given to him for the purpose of transporting the

vehicle. Perez corroborated previous testimony that the drug smugglers try to establish a pattern of

crossing to lower suspicion and to take advantage of shift changes as the opportune time to cross

cars. Appellant’s vehicle had exactly three crossings all close to shift changes. Appellant crossed

twice on March 12 and once on March 13 when he was detained. Perez testified that a pound of

marijuana sells for between $225 to $250 in El Paso. Once the drugs head north or east, the value

may increase substantially. Marijuana sells for close to $600 a pound in the Dallas/Fort Worth area.

In Perez’s experience, the transporters or “mules” that carry the drugs from Point A to Point B

typically are aware that they possess the drugs because the owners of the drugs are not willing to risk

their product on individual who is unaware.

During Appellant’s case-in-chief, his mother testified that her son came to the El Paso/ Juarez

area in March 2003 because she was having surgery on March 17. She admitted on cross-

examination that as of the date of the trial, she had not yet had the surgery.

Appellant’s girlfriend testified that she drove with Appellant from Fort Worth to Juarez in

March and stayed with his mother for a week.

Appellant testified that he lived in Fort Worth and worked as a heating and cooling technician, earning between $500 to $600 a week. He began experiencing car trouble while visiting

his mother in Juarez. Appellant had his brother take his car to a mechanic. The mechanic asked for

$100 to replace the radiator, and Appellant paid $125 to replace a belt, the thermostat, and the water

hose. He got his car back three days later, on March 12. He took his girlfriend shopping in El Paso

and then later that same day returned to El Paso to buy beer and cigarettes because they stop selling

beer at eight o’clock in Juarez.

While in Juarez, Appellant asked his cousin, Martha Rios, to wire him $200 by Western

Union because he was running low on money and wanted to stay until March 17. Appellant was

stopped on his way to El Paso to pick up the money. He was at his mother’s home the whole time

his car was at the shop and he never saw anyone put drugs in his car.

Appellant testified that while he was in line on the bridge, officers came by with a dog. The

dog began scratching at the bumper. The officer opened the passenger door of the Mustang and let

the dog inside the car. The dog began scratching everywhere. He told the officers at the bridge that

he was set up because he knew there were drugs in his car by the behavior of the dogs. He admitted

that none of the officers had informed him that there were drugs in the car when he made that

statement. SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE

In his first two Points of Error, Appellant challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the

evidence to support the conviction.

Standard of Review

In reviewing the legal sufficiency of evidence, we consider all evidence in the light most

favorable to the verdict and determine whether any rational trier of fact could have found the

essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v.

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