Rodrigo Atempa v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 14, 2001
Docket12-99-00464-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Rodrigo Atempa v. State (Rodrigo Atempa 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
Rodrigo Atempa v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

NOS. 12-99-00463-CR

12-99-00464-CR



IN THE COURT OF APPEALS



TWELFTH COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT



TYLER, TEXAS

RODRIGO ATEMPA,

§
APPEAL FROM THE EIGHTH

APPELLANT



V.

§
JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT OF



THE STATE OF TEXAS,

APPELLEE

§
HOPKINS COUNTY, TEXAS

Appellant Rodrigo Atempa pleaded not guilty to two separate indictments charging him with possession of more than four hundred grams of cocaine and more than four hundred grams of heroin. A jury found him guilty and assessed his punishment at fifty years of imprisonment in each cause. Appellant raises six issues for our consideration. We affirm.



Background (1)

On April 19, 1999, Texas Department of Public Safety ("D.P.S.") Trooper Todd Brackhahn ("Brackhahn") was working traffic on Interstate Highway 30, west of Sulphur Springs. Shortly after noon, Brackhahn, who was westbound, noticed an eastbound vehicle traveling above the posted speed limit of seventy miles per hour. Brackhahn checked the car's speed with his radar equipment to confirm that the car was exceeding the speed limit. He turned his patrol car around and stopped the vehicle, a 1986 Mercury Grand Marquis with Illinois license plates and registration.

Brackhahn approached the vehicle on the passenger side. Appellant, who was alone in the vehicle, produced an Illinois driver's license which identified him as Rodrigo Atempa of Waukegan, Illinois, date of birth March 13, 1966. Appellant informed the trooper that the car belonged to him. (2)

Brackhahn had noticed immediately that the windshield of Appellant's vehicle was new. The windshield was not scratched or pitted, and the trooper could smell some type of sealant around the windshield. Brackhahn asked Appellant if he had recently made any repairs to the vehicle. When Appellant hesitated in answering the question, the trooper asked the question a different way, saying "reparo," which he testified he believed was the Spanish word for "repair." Appellant told the trooper that the muffler had been repaired or needed to be repaired, (3) but did not mention the windshield. At that point, Brackhahn became suspicious that Appellant might be secreting contraband in his car.

The trooper testified that certain year-model Ford and Mercury vehicles have a hollow firewall compartment under the windshield where narcotics traffickers have been known to hide contraband in that hollow compartment. Brackhahn testified that to access the compartment, one must remove the windshield and cut open the firewall. After filling the hollow space with drugs, the traffickers typically replace the top of the firewall and repair it with Bond-O, repaint the section, and replace the windshield.

Brackhahn asked Appellant to step to the rear of his vehicle, explaining that he was going to issue him a warning ticket for speeding. Based on his developing suspicions, the trooper further questioned Appellant as he was writing the warning ticket. Appellant related that he was traveling from Mexico to Illinois, that he had been to Mexico for his father's funeral, that his wife and child were back home in Waukegan, and that he was a "taxi" driver. Appellant said he had crossed the border at Laredo at eight or nine o'clock the previous night.

Brackhahn testified that at that point, his suspicions had been fully aroused. The trooper based his suspicions on several factors: (1) the trooper had seen narcotics smugglers secrete contraband in the firewall area of a Mercury Grand Marquis, (2) to access the firewall area of a Mercury Grand Marquis, the windshield must be removed, (3) the trooper could smell fresh sealant around the windshield, (4) Appellant did not mention that his windshield had been replaced when asked about repairs, (5) Appellant had been traveling overnight-when police presence is lowest, (6) Appellant was traveling from a known drug source area to a known drug distribution area and from west to east, as illegal narcotics flow, (7) Appellant claimed to have been to a family funeral but his wife and child were not with him, (8) the trooper had often seen narcotics smugglers secrete contraband in the gas tank which is directly above the muffler in a Mercury Grand Marquis, and (9) Appellant mentioned that the muffler had been repaired or needed to be repaired.

About five minutes into the traffic stop, Brackhahn completed the warning ticket and asked Appellant to sign it. As Appellant was signing the ticket, Brackhahn asked Appellant, in Spanish, if he had any weapons in the vehicle. Appellant replied that he did not. Brackhahn asked if he could look, and Appellant consented, gesturing toward the vehicle. The trooper asked Appellant if he had any cocaine or marihuana in the car, and Appellant again responded in the negative and gestured toward the vehicle as he consented to Brackhahn's request to look.

Upon closer examination, Brackhahn discovered that the windshield sealant was tacky and noticed that the windshield stickers were original Illinois stickers. Brackhahn asked Appellant if the windshield had been replaced, and Appellant replied that it had been replaced in Mexico the week before the stop.

Brackhahn radioed for a drug-sniffing canine to come to the location. Then Brackhahn asked Appellant why he had not mentioned that the windshield had been replaced when the trooper asked him about repairs to the vehicle. Appellant said he had not understood the question. Brackhahn questioned Appellant about where and when the windshield had been replaced, and Appellant told the trooper that the windshield had been replaced in a Mexican junkyard at a cost of about thirty-five dollars.

Next, Brackhahn asked Appellant how long he had been in Mexico, and after looking at a calendar, Appellant responded that he had been there about three weeks. At that point, Brackhahn radioed for information regarding Appellant's recent border crossings.

Brackhahn indicated that he was going to continue searching the car, and Appellant responded, "I don't have no problem. You can check everything you want." Before he began searching the car again, Brackhahn asked Appellant, in Spanish, how to say "to fix, to repair," and Appellant told him, "reparar."

Brackhahn continued to search Appellant's vehicle, but did not investigate the windshield and firewall area for some time. The trooper testified that he thought he would be able to see into the firewall area of Appellant's car from under the dashboard, but that until another police officer arrived, he believed it would have been unsafe to lie on his back in the floorboard, with his head under the dash. Shortly, an off-duty D.P.S. corporal arrived at the location.

About fifteen minutes after Brackhahn had requested the drug dog be sent to his location, the dispatcher advised him that the dog was unavailable. The trooper requested that another canine unit be sent.

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Rodrigo Atempa v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodrigo-atempa-v-state-texapp-2001.