Ronald Wayne Sanders v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 7, 2014
Docket11-12-00151-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ronald Wayne Sanders v. State (Ronald Wayne Sanders 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
Ronald Wayne Sanders v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion filed August 7, 2014

In The

Eleventh Court of Appeals __________

No. 11-12-00151-CR __________

RONALD WAYNE SANDERS, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 42nd District Court Taylor County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 24915A

MEMORANDUM OPINION Ronald Wayne Sanders appeals his jury convictions for possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver and possession of certain chemicals with the intent to manufacture methamphetamine. See TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE ANN. §§ 481.112(a), 481.124(a)(3) (West 2010). For each conviction, the trial court assessed Appellant’s punishment at confinement in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice for a term of twenty-five years, with the sentences to begin only after the completion of Appellant’s sentence for his prior conviction in cause no. 6824 in the 42nd District Court of Callahan County. In three issues on appeal, Appellant argues that the evidence was insufficient to sustain his convictions and that his punishment is excessive and disproportionate and therefor violates the Eighth Amendment. See U.S. CONST. amend. VIII. We affirm. Background Facts The indictment alleged that, on or about August 27, 2010, Appellant knowingly possessed more than four hundred grams of methamphetamine with the intent to deliver. The indictment further alleged that, on or about August 27, 2010, Appellant possessed pseudoephedrine with the intent to unlawfully manufacture methamphetamine. Narcotics Agent Chad Jenkins of the Abilene Police Department testified that he obtained a warrant to search the house located at 1800 Jefferies in Abilene, Texas, after he received information that methamphetamine was being made and sold there by Tammy Sanders, Appellant’s mother.1 Agent Jenkins and several other officers executed the warrant on August 27, 2010. Using a battering ram, Agent Jenkins and the other officers entered the house through the side door. Once inside the house, Agent Jenkins smelled burning marihuana and found Rebecca Bardwell standing near the kitchen table. Agent Jenkins also observed Sanders running into the bathroom in order to flush something down the toilet. As another officer followed Sanders into the bathroom, Appellant attempted to block the officer’s path. The officer then forced Appellant to the ground and ran into the bathroom.

1 We will refer to Appellant’s mother as “Sanders” throughout this opinion.

2 After Appellant, Sanders, and Bardwell were seated in the living room, Agent Jenkins questioned them and read them their Miranda 2 rights. Agent Jenkins presented Sanders with the warrant to search the house. Sanders stated that “anything in the house was hers.” Agent Jenkins stated that he believed Appellant, Sanders, and Bardwell all lived at the house at 1800 Jefferies at the time the search warrant was executed. Agent Jenkins noted that all three individuals looked like they had just awakened. Appellant was not wearing a shirt, socks, or shoes, and Sanders had on pajama pants. Agent Jenkins explained that the house had two bedrooms. Agent Jenkins determined that the northwest bedroom belonged to Sanders, and on the bed in that room, he found the following items in plain view: a set of keys with a small metal container attached that contained four small Ziploc bags of methamphetamine, 3 $1,710 in cash, nine blister packs of pseudoephedrine pills of different strengths, and several cell phones that contained messages consistent with drug dealing. Agent Jenkins explained that pseudoephedrine is used to make methamphetamine and that drug dealers often carry multiple cell phones to avoid being identified by the police. Officers also found Sanders’s purse in her bedroom. Inside the purse, Agent Jenkins found a phone list and a ledger containing names and amounts of money. Agent Jenkins stated that drug dealers often maintain a ledger to keep track of the amount of drugs they have distributed and the money that is owed to them. On the floor of Sanders’s bedroom, Agent Jenkins found several crack pipes with traces of cocaine and a loaded syringe that later tested positive for

2 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966). 3 Forensic Scientist William L. Todsen testified that this substance weighed 0.43 grams and contained methamphetamine. 3 methamphetamine. In the closet of Sanders’s bedroom, Agent Jenkins found what he referred to as a “lab bag,” a bag containing several items commonly used to make methamphetamine. The bag contained coffee filters, plastic tubing, and electrical tape. Agent Jenkins noted that coffee filters can be used to filter off the fillers in pseudoephedrine pills and tubing can be used to manufacture anhydrous ammonia, an ingredient in methamphetamine. In the kitchen, Agent Jenkins found used coffee filters in a basket on a shelf, thirteen rounds of nine-millimeter ammunition on the table, and a picture of Bardwell on the refrigerator. In the refrigerator, Agent Jenkins found a prescription bottle with Appellant’s name on it. Underneath the kitchen sink, Agent Jenkins found three glass mason jars with a heavy-colored residue that tested positive for methamphetamine. Agent Jenkins explained that glassware is commonly used to make methamphetamine because the chemicals involved in the process are very volatile. After searching the southwest bedroom of the house, Agent Jenkins determined that Appellant was staying in that room. Agent Jenkins stated that he based this determination on several items he found in the room, including mail addressed to Appellant at the previous address he shared with his mother. Additionally, Appellant stated that he worked for a drilling company, and a hard hat was found in the bedroom closet. Men’s clothing and shoes were also found in the closet. Agent Jenkins additionally found a musical instrument case that contained a loaded nine-millimeter handgun, lithium batteries, and a pawn shop receipt in Appellant’s name in the southwest bedroom. Agent Jenkins explained that methamphetamine can be made by removing the lithium from lithium batteries and adding it to anhydrous ammonia and pseudoephedrine. Agent Jenkins also noted

4 that the pawn receipt was for two guitars Appellant purchased on layaway and that two guitars were found in the southwest bedroom. Additionally, in the southwest bedroom, Agent Jenkins found a small bag of marihuana; several driver’s licenses 4 that did not belong to Appellant, his mother, or Bardwell; and a set of digital scales with a residue that later tested positive for methamphetamine. Agent Jenkins explained that scales are often used by drug dealers to weigh and price their product. In the closet of the southwest bedroom, Agent Jenkins found several Ziploc bags, some of which had an eight-ball printed on them and some of which had a Playboy bunny printed on them; a cooler of used coffee filters; two used syringes; a metal spoon; and a measuring cylinder. The spoon and cylinder had a residue on them that later tested positive for methamphetamine. 5 Agent Jenkins explained that a metal spoon can be used to heat methamphetamine for injection. Agent Jenkins also searched a shed behind the house, and he determined that it was an active methamphetamine lab. Inside the shed, Agent Jenkins found a camp stove and a “lab bag” containing bottles of muriatic acid, tubing, plastic bottles, starting fluid, glassware, a garden sprayer, a pitcher, and fuel for the stove. In the pitcher were used coffee filters containing over 400 grams of pink granular material that was later confirmed to contain methamphetamine. 6 Based on the search of the house and Appellant’s behavior upon the officers’ arrival, Agent Jenkins determined that Appellant was an active participant in the manufacture of methamphetamine at the house.

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