Robert Wilson Aleman v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 29, 2004
Docket03-03-00202-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Robert Wilson Aleman v. State (Robert Wilson Aleman 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
Robert Wilson Aleman v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-03-00202-CR

Robert Wilson Aleman, Appellant


v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TOM GREEN COUNTY, 119TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. B-02-1067-S, HONORABLE BEN WOODWARD, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N


Robert Wilson Aleman appeals his conviction for manufacturing methamphetamine in an amount of four grams or more but less than two hundred grams. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 112(d) (West 2003). After the jury found him guilty, it assessed punishment at twenty-five years in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice-Institutional Division. In two issues on appeal, Aleman challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction. We affirm the trial court's judgment.



Background


Ronald Scandolari testified that during the afternoon of October 27, 2001, he and his seventeen-year-old son, Blake, were at their deer lease on the March Ranch. As they were riding around the lease on their four-wheelers, they noticed a pile of trash they had not seen on the property before: a pump sprayer, Sudafed packages, starter fluid, Drano, a glass beaker, an empty salt container, and a syringe. Scandolari also noticed a piece of paper with what appeared to be some form of recipe and with mathematical formulas that equated to a dollar amount. Scandolari called the Tom Green County Sheriff's Department and told them about the debris he found, but the authorities could not respond to the scene that night.

The next morning, Scandolari, Blake, and Scandolari's other son, Michael, returned to the site of the debris, and found a vehicle parked there. Scandolari "saw a lady running off." Scandolari again called the sheriff's department, offering to have his sons meet the officers at the entrance to the ranch. While the sons waited at the gate, Scandolari continued to watch the vehicle. At one point that vehicle pulled up to his vehicle, allowing him to see the male driver, who was later identified as appellant, and the female passenger. Appellant then tried to leave the ranch and encountered a Tom Green County sheriff's deputy. Appellant fled, drove off the road, grounded the car on some brush, and then he and the passenger fled on foot.

Michael Scandolari testified that on the morning of October 28, while he was with his father and his brother Blake on the deer lease, they saw a man and a woman standing next to a vehicle. The man appeared to be loading items into the vehicle. Michael also testified that the vehicle was parked next to what he thought was a "drug lab" because he observed items such as a plastic pickle jar with "pinkish-red-like, crushed-up" materials inside, a sprayer, a couple of syringes, and a "bunch" of batteries that had been broken open. Michael testified that his father called the sheriff's office, then he and his brother met the deputy at the entrance to the ranch. As the deputy and the brothers approached the site, Michael saw appellant's vehicle turn off the road, ground itself on some brush, and stop. The occupants of the car then ran away on foot.

Buffy Jo Walker testified that early in the morning of October 28, 2001, appellant drove her to the ranch so he could show her how to "cook" methamphetamine. Before appellant picked her up, Walker purchased some pills, some lithium batteries, and other items needed to manufacture the methamphetamine. Walker testified that a cooler with anhydrous ammonia was already at the location. Walker said that appellant bought a pump sprayer and a metal suitcase and used it to hold screwdrivers, metal cutters, and other tools.

Walker then described how she and appellant manufactured the methamphetamine. They cut open the lithium batteries with a wire cutter, added pieces of lithium to a chemical in a bucket, and stirred the substance to create a chemical reaction. Walker testified that when Scandolari discovered them, they left the site and tried to leave the property. When they saw the deputy, appellant left the road and started driving through a pasture. After the car got stuck in the brush, they ran and hid.

Deputy Sheriff Charles Slaughter testified that he saw two people inside a vehicle that veered off the road and drove into a wooded area where the occupants fled. Slaughter testified that he stayed with the vehicle until the search for the occupants ended. Slaughter observed some gas or smoke coming from a container with an ammonia smell to it that was on the floorboard behind the driver's seat.

Deputy James Smith testified that he was involved in the investigation of the methamphetamine lab at the deer lease on the day in question. When he arrived on the scene, he smelled the odor of ammonia inside the car. At the lab's location, Smith found an orange cooler smelling of ammonia, numerous punctured starter fluid cans, and pieces of lithium batteries. Smith testified that these items were significant because they were commonly used in manufacturing methamphetamine.

Smith also testified that when he searched the vehicle, he found two duffle bags on the rear seat, and a small fire safe and pump spray bottle on the rear floorboard. Smith also found a cardboard box on the back seat with some glass Mason jars, plastic baggies, and an open container of "Liquid Fire," a source of sulfuric acid used in manufacturing methamphetamine. Two of the glass jars contained liquid. According to Smith, several of the containers he found contained "pill wash" or pseudoephedrine pills that were crushed up and soaked during the manufacture of methamphetamine. Smith also found an open box of coffee filters and a set of scales. Inside the safe, Smith found pliers, lithium batteries, and a package of five syringes.

Smith conducted a field test on the liquid contained in each of the two Mason jars. Only the liquid from the larger jar tested presumptively positive for methamphetamine. The liquid from each jar was poured into five smaller plastic containers and transported by Smith to the Department of Public Safety Laboratory in Midland.

Constable Alvie Hester testified that he assisted in the investigation. According to Hester, when he approached the appellant's vehicle, he noticed an odor of ammonia and ether coming from the vehicle. Hester said the odors were significant because these are odors from materials commonly used in clandestine drug labs to manufacture methamphetamine. Items collected at the lease included pieces from the insides of lithium batteries, a gallon jug with a "brownish, pinkish" residue inside, plastic tubing, cans of starter fluid with holes punched in the bottom to extract ether, a glove, and coffee filters, some of which had residue on them.

Sergeant Brian McDougal testified as an expert on the methods used in the clandestine manufacture of methamphetamine. A white or pinkish-red granular material such as that found at the scene is consistent with Sudafed, an item used in manufacturing methamphetamine. Tubing, cans of starter fluid, tools such as pliers and screwdrivers, mason jars, coolers, pump sprayers, plastic jugs, coffee filters, "Liquid Fire," and lithium batteries are all used in the clandestine manufacture of methamphetamine.

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Robert Wilson Aleman v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-wilson-aleman-v-state-texapp-2004.