Shamika Yvonne Satchell v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 10, 2010
Docket01-06-00659-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Shamika Yvonne Satchell v. State (Shamika Yvonne Satchell 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
Shamika Yvonne Satchell v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued June 10, 2010

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-06-00659-CR

SHAMIKA YVONNE SATCHELL, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee


On Appeal from the 178th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 983387


O P I N I O N

A jury found appellant, Shamika Yvonne Satchell, guilty of the offense of possession of Phencyclidine (“PCP”) weighing at least 400 grams by aggregate weight,[1] and the trial court assessed her punishment at confinement for 10 years, suspended the sentence, and placed appellant on community supervision for 10 years.  In three points of error, appellant contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support her conviction and the trial court erred in instructing the jury that it could find appellant guilty of the offense of possession of PCP as a lesser-included offense of the offense of possession with intent to deliver PCP.[2]

          We affirm.

Background

Houston Police Department (“HPD”) Narcotics Investigator A. Vanderberry testified that a confidential informant, whom he knew from past experience to be “reliable and credible,” had informed him that “an assault rifle and narcotics were being kept” at appellant’s apartment and PCP was being sold from there.  Vanderberry began surveillance of the apartment and set up a “controlled buy,” in which the informant would buy PCP from appellant’s boyfriend, Taj Smith, at the apartment.  During surveillance of the controlled buy, Vanderberry saw a black female enter the apartment and remain there while the informant made the buy, but he could not identify the woman as appellant.  Vanderberry obtained a combination search warrant for the apartment and arrest warrant for Smith.  When Vanderberry’s team later began surveillance on the apartment in preparation for executing the warrants, he saw Smith driving appellant’s car, with appellant and two children as his passengers.  Shortly after they had arrived at appellant’s apartment at 11:00 p.m., Vanderberry and his team detained appellant, arrested Smith, and executed the search warrant. 

When the officers entered to search the apartment, “the smell of PCP was so strong” that they had “problems breathing, their eyes were tearing up.”  Vanderberry explained that PCP has “a very distinct odor” and a “very harsh chemical smell.”  In a closed cabinet under the kitchen sink, officers found a Pine-Sol bottle and two Gatorade bottles containing PCP liquid, between 100 and 200 vials used to distribute PCP, a steel marijuana grinder, latex gloves for handling PCP, and a “baby bottle” with trace amounts of codeine.  On the kitchen countertop, officers found “loose-leaf” marijuana, a “Delaware Punch” bottle containing codeine, and a receipt for the purchase of ten vanilla extract bottles, which are commonly used to distribute PCP.  Vanderberry explained that marijuana is commonly used to distribute PCP by lacing the marijuana with PCP.  In another closed kitchen cabinet, officers found two “Pyrex beakers” with cocaine residue.  Stuffed inside or behind the couch in the living room, officers found an assault rifle and two ammunition clips.  In the master bedroom in a closed drawer in a nightstand, officers found ecstasy and hydrocodone pills in bottles with Smith’s name on the labels, $1,360 in cash, and Smith’s identification.  Vanderberry opined that the apartment was “a distribution center for narcotics.” 

On cross-examination, Vanderberry conceded that Smith was “the target of the investigation” and the person that he believed to be the “drug dealer.”  He did not observe appellant “handle [the] drugs” or “deal the drugs.”  The confidential informant provided “no intelligence” about appellant but relayed that appellant was “not engaged in any activity other than being there when the deal was going on.”  Appellant’s fingerprints were not found on any of the items of contraband because none of them was “conducive” for usable prints.  Vanderberry agreed that appellant did not flee, take evasive actions, get nervous, or give “shifty, inconsistent answers” when his team detained her.

HPD Narcotics Officer R. Chaison testified that over several days during his surveillance of appellant’s apartment, he observed significant “foot traffic” in and out of the apartment.  As he helped to execute the search warrant, Chaison smelled “a strong musty, musty smell” coming from appellant’s apartment.  He obtained consent from appellant to search her car, where he found a “marijuana cigar in the ashtray” and a “pharmaceutical” bottle of codeine under the driver’s seat.  On cross-examination, Chaison admitted that he did not see appellant handle or sell narcotics.  He confirmed that Smith was the target of the investigation, and appellant was not “on the radar screen.”  He could provide no “direct” evidence that appellant solicited, assisted, aided, or encouraged Smith’s dealing narcotics.

HPD Narcotics Officer D. De Blanc testified that when the warrants were served, he detained appellant outside of her apartment and informed her of her legal rights.  After arresting appellant, De Blanc videotaped an interview of her regarding the narcotics.  During the interview, appellant stated that she did not “know anything about PCP,” the narcotics were “not hers,” and she had never used or sold narcotics.  

Federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms Agent M.

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