Raney v. State

958 S.W.2d 867, 1997 WL 784542
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 7, 1998
Docket10-96-158-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 958 S.W.2d 867 (Raney 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
Raney v. State, 958 S.W.2d 867, 1997 WL 784542 (Tex. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVIS, Chief Justice.

Appellant Steven Howard Raney pled guilty before a jury to the felony offense of tampering with physical evidence. See Tex. Pen.Code Ann. § 37.09(a)(1) (Vernon 1994). The jury assessed Raney’s punishment at ten years’ confinement and a $5,000 fine.

In eight points Raney argues that his conviction should be reversed because:

• the trial court failed to admonish him of the deportation consequences of his plea, which rendered the plea involuntary;
• he was denied effective assistance of counsel under the Texas Constitution and under the federal constitution;
• he was denied due process under the federal constitution or due course of law under the state constitution due to prose-cutorial misconduct; and
• the evidence is factually and legally insufficient to sustain his conviction.

We will reverse the judgment and remand this cause for a new punishment hearing.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The State’s indictment alleges that on or about December 5, 1995, Raney intentionally and knowingly concealed a quantity of cocaine knowing that an investigation was in progress concerning the persons found in possession of the cocaine and with intent to impair the concealed cocaine’s availability as evidence in the investigation.

Raney was employed as a deputy constable. On December 5, Deputy Constable Todd McGilvray and he observed a car traveling north on Interstate 35 which was occupied by two Hispanics, bore out-of-state license plates, and “bump[ed] the white line a couple of times.” The ear exited the interstate, and the officers stopped it on U.S. Highway 77 at the Waxahachie city limits. The deputies placed the driver of the car under arrest after determining that he had an outstanding warrant from another county.

*870 The driver and his passenger refused to consent to a search of the car. Raney’s narcotics dog “alerted” at the rear quarter panel of the car. Raney then searched the trunk of the car and recovered a “kilo” 1 of cocaine enclosed in a cellophane wrapper. The officers transported the suspects and their car to the office of the Justice of the Peace in Midlothian. At the J.P. office, the officers discovered another kilo of cocaine hidden in the car. Waxahachie Police Officer Matthew Boyden made a small incision in one of the kilos which revealed a white substance, confirming the officers’ suspicions.

By the time the contraband was taken inside, several officers from other agencies had arrived at the J.P. office. Deputy Constable Rodney Ramsey cut into the kilo in which Boyden had made the incision and “basically exposed the entire kilo.” Boyden testified that at this point the cocaine was “real hard” and could not be poured out of its packaging. Ramsey informed McGilvray and the other officers that because the scale they had only measured up to 200 grams, he intended to cut the kilo into smaller pieces and weigh each piece. Raney’s supervisor, Constable Perry Curry, advised that this would be unnecessary. Curry and McGil-vray left the room to locate duct tape and a plastic bag in which they intended to secure the evidence. By this time, the other officers present had also left, leaving Raney and Ramsey alone with the cocaine. Curry and McGilvray returned shortly thereafter. Curry securely wrapped the kilo Ramsey had cut open with duct tape and placed both kilos in the plastic bag.

Raney and McGilvray took the evidence to the Waxahachie Police Department for safekeeping. Raney kept the key to the locker in which they stored the cocaine. Raney, McGilvray, and Boyden agreed to meet the next morning to complete the necessary paperwork, retrieve the suspected cocaine, and take it to the Department of Public Safety laboratory in Garland for analysis.

Raney called McGilvray the next morning and informed him that he could not meet at the agreed time because his wife and children were ill. Raney asked McGilvray to come to his house about an hour after they had originally agreed to meet. When Raney answered his door, he appeared “very ill himself.... His eyes were very red and sunken. He was very pale.” McGilvray told Raney that Boyden and he would complete the paperwork and then take the evidence to the laboratory. Raney informed McGilvray that he had already retrieved the cocaine from the evidence locker.

McGilvray returned to Raney’s house with Curry to pick up the evidence. According to Curry and McGilvray, they went through Raney’s garage and met him at his door, where he gave them the narcotics. The bag containing the suspected cocaine was open when Raney gave it to the officers. Curry and McGilvray transported the cocaine to the Waxahachie Police Department, where they met Boyden. Boyden testified that when the officers brought the evidence to him that morning, the kilo which had been wrapped with duct tape ‘Vas open and there was a lot of powder that had fallen out in the bottom of the blue sack.” He described the cocaine as “loose and not in too good a shape.” Boyden field-tested some of the loose cocaine. He then placed the evidence in a sealed bag and ássisted Curry and McGilvray in preparing the necessary paperwork.

Curry and McGilvray took the evidence to the DPS lab in Garland. When they arrived at the lab, they found that someone had further tampered with the cocaine. A portion of the duct tape which Curry wrapped around the kilo had been peeled back and replaced. Underneath this tape, the officers discovered another incision in the package. McGilvray testified that Raney was the only person with access to the cocaine after they stored it in the locker. Curry, McGilvray, and Boyden all denied making this other incision.

A DPS criminalist tested the two kilos and found that each contained more than 950 grams of cocaine. He testified that the package which the officers had cut open and resealed had apparently been cut open again *871 and that the bag in which the evidence was packaged arrived at the laboratory with some tears in it. He stated that neither he nor any other lab employee made the incision discovered by Curry and MeGilvray when they delivered the cocaine to the lab for testing.

Early in the morning of December 7, a Waxahachie police officer discovered a Chevrolet Blazer which had run into a ditch and had been abandoned by its driver. The vehicle was registered to Raney. The officer found Raney’s badge and wallet in the console. The police department contacted Curry and advised him of this discovery.

The officers conducted an unsuccessful search for Raney. At some point after Curry arrived at the scene, Raney made a 911 phone call telling the police of his location. Curry advised that an officer needed to bring Raney to the accident scene. Boyden and Ramsey both drove to Raney’s location. Boyden arrived first and did not see Raney. He called Raney’s name. Raney asked who was calling in response to which Boyden identified himself. Raney then walked out from behind the store from which he had called 911.

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Bluebook (online)
958 S.W.2d 867, 1997 WL 784542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raney-v-state-texapp-1998.