State v. Bell

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMay 7, 2008
Docket2008-UP-249
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Bell (State v. Bell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bell, (S.C. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

THIS OPINION HAS NO PRECEDENTIAL VALUE.  IT SHOULD NOT BE CITED OR RELIED ON AS PRECEDENT IN ANY PROCEEDING EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY RULE 239(d)(2), SCACR.

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
In The Court of Appeals

The State, Respondent,

v.

Herbert Lee Bell, Appellant.


Appeal From Sumter County
Clifton Newman, Circuit Court Judge


Unpublished Opinion No. 2008-UP-249
Submitted May 1, 2008 – Filed May 7, 2008


AFFIRMED


Appellate Defender Lanelle C. Durant, of Columbia, for Appellant.

Attorney General Henry Dargan McMaster, Chief Deputy Attorney General John W. McIntosh, Assistant Deputy Attorney General Salley W. Elliott, Senior Assistant Attorney General Norman Mark Rapoport, all of Columbia; and Solicitor C. Kelly Jackson, of Sumter, for Respondent.

PER CURIAM:  Herbert Lee Bell (Bell) appeals his conviction of trafficking in crack cocaine in an amount of more than two hundred grams but less than four hundred grams.  We affirm.[1]

FACTS

In late 2003, police obtained information about possible illegal drug activity in a trailer at 5595 Panola Road (“5595”) in Pinewood, in Sumter County.  Based on this information, the police sent a confidential informant wearing a wire to 5595 on November 12 to purchase drugs.  The informant purchased a quantity of crack cocaine (crack) from Reggie Robinson (Robinson).  The next day, an informant returned to 5595 and purchased another quantity of crack from Alexander Lewis (Lewis).  On November 20, the informant made another purchase of crack in 5595 from Robinson.  On November 25, the informant purchased more crack inside 5595 from Robinson. 

As a result of their investigation and the prior buys, the police obtained a search warrant for 5595 on November 26.  Before the warrant was executed, the police sent the informant back on December 4 to confirm the presence of drugs.  The informant went to 5595 in the morning, but there was no answer at the door.  The informant returned to the car where the police were waiting.  As they drove off down the road, Lewis walked out of another residence across the street at 5650 Panola Road (“5650”).  The informant got out of the car and talked with Lewis on the driveway of 5595.  Lewis told the informant to return at another time.  The informant returned to 5595 around eleven o’clock, but again nobody was home.  Lewis came out of 5650 and told him to return at two o’clock.  Around two o’clock, the informant returned and purchased crack inside 5595 from Lewis. 

A few hours later, the police executed the search warrant for 5595.  Lewis was seized inside the trailer and Robinson was apprehended as he tried to flee out the back door.  The police subsequently set up a reverse-sting and arrested numerous individuals who came to 5595 to purchase drugs.  They soon ran out of space to park the buyers’ cars, so they ceased the operation. 

During the search of 5595, the police found a chair by the window near the door.  There was a small sliding match box on the window sill with crack inside.  A walkie-talkie was near the chair.  An aspirin bottle with crack and a jar of crack were seized in a bedroom.  There was a marijuana pipe in the bedroom with trace amounts of crack in it.  The total weight of the crack from 5595 was 74.32 grams.  There was no furniture in the trailer other than the chair near the door and a mattress on the floor of the bedroom.  The bathroom was not functional.  Officer Angela Barger testified the trailer “doesn’t look like it’s actually a lived in residence.  It just appears to be used solely for the purpose of narcotics.”  An electric bill under the name “Racheka Michelle Bell” was found in the kitchen.  An appointment card and a medical receipt for Lewis were found in the kitchen.  A cash ticket for Bell from a furniture store for a roll-away bed was also found in the kitchen.

While the police were at 5595, other officers proceeded to 5650 to investigate.  Bell answered the door.  He agreed to accompany them across the street to 5595.  The police subsequently obtained a search warrant for 5650.

Pursuant to the search of 5650, the police seized a chair by the window in the living room with a clear view of 5595.  There was no other furniture inside except for a television and a video game system.  They found a scanner, binoculars, and a walkie-talkie nearby.  The kitchen had no dishes, food, or anything which indicated somebody lived in the residence.  The police discovered a half-gallon mason jar in the dishwasher in the kitchen, “one third to one half full” of crack.  The jar contained 227.03 grams of crack.  There were also assorted glassware and paraphernalia inside the dishwasher used to make crack.  There was crack residue on the items.  The walkie-talkies at 5650 and 5595 were set to the same channel.  The police found an insurance card for Bell in a drawer in the kitchen.  An application for pretrial intervention for Robinson was also inside the drawer.  Rental agreements for 5595 to Alexander Lewis and for 5650 to “Michael Lewis,” dated November 1, 2003, were found in the living room.  An electric bill to Michael Lewis was found in a bedroom.  The mason jar found in 5650 was dusted for fingerprints.  Robinson and Bell’s fingerprints were found on it. 

Bell was served with arrest warrants for manufacturing crack and trafficking in crack on December 5, 2003.  Bell was released on a $70,000 surety bond, and he signed a bond sheet wherein under the heading “ACKNOWLEDGEMENT BY THE DEFENDANT,” it indicates: “I understand and have been informed that I have a right and obligation to be present at trial, and should I fail to attend the court, the trial will proceed in my absence.” 

On February 19, 2004, the Sumter County Grand Jury indicted Bell on trafficking in crack cocaine in an amount of more than twenty-eight grams but less than one hundred grams and for trafficking in crack cocaine more than two hundred grams but less than four hundred grams.  On March 7, 2006, circuit court Judge Clifton Newman proceeded to trial with a jury against Bell on the trafficking charge of more than two hundred grams but less than four hundred grams.  Bell’s attorney was present and ready for trial, but Bell was not in attendance at the trial.  The bailiff called his name from the courthouse step three times, but Bell did not respond and present himself for trial.  The two-day trial proceeded in Bell’s absence.

Detective Allen Dailey explained the amount of crack seized from the mason jar in 5650 “is solely something you would find with a seller, it’s quite a bit of money.”  Dailey testified the crack was “freshly cut” for sale.  Deputy Trevor Brown testified the police “hardly ever” find that much crack at one location.  Brown further said it was not uncommon for drug dealers to store drugs at one location and then sell them from another location.

Mack McLeod testified he owned both properties.  He recalled that shortly before Bell’s arrest, Bell wanted to purchase 5650.  He paid rent in cash for it in November.  McLeod said 5595 was rented out by his father (since deceased), but he thought Lewis rented it. 

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State v. Bell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bell-scctapp-2008.