State v. Cho

831 So. 2d 433, 2002 WL 31424536
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 29, 2002
Docket02-KA-274
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 831 So. 2d 433 (State v. Cho) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Cho, 831 So. 2d 433, 2002 WL 31424536 (La. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

831 So.2d 433 (2002)

STATE of Louisiana
v.
John J. CHO.

No. 02-KA-274.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

October 29, 2002.

*438 Martin E. Regan, Jr., Kris A. Moe, New Orleans, LA, for Appellant John J. Cho.

Paul D. Connick, Jr., District Attorney, Alan D. Alario, II—Counsel of Record on Appeal, Terry M. Boudreaux—Appellate Counsel, Assistant District Attorneys, Gretna, la, for Appellee State of Louisiana.

Panel composed of Judges JAMES L. CANNELLA, MARION F. EDWARDS and CLARENCE E. McMANUS.

JAMES L. CANNELLA, Judge.

The Defendant, John Ju Cho a/k/a Ju J. Cho, appeals from his conviction of attempted possession of marijuana with intent to distribute and from his sentence as a third felony habitual offender. We affirm the conviction and sentence and remand.

On January 12, 2002, the Defendant was charged with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, a violation of La.R.S. 40:966A. He pled not guilty and filed various pre-trial motions, including two motions to suppress the evidence. On July 11, 2000, the trial judge denied the motions to suppress the evidence.

The Defendant was tried by a 12 member jury on October 25 and 26, 2000. At the conclusion of trial, the jury returned a verdict of guilty of the lesser charge of attempted possession with intent to distribute marijuana, La. R.S. 40:979, La. R.S. 40:966A. On December 4, 2000, the trial judge sentenced the Defendant to ten years imprisonment at hard labor. The State filed a habitual offender bill of information on the same day, alleging the Defendant to be a third felony offender. On January 26, 2001, the Defendant denied the habitual offender bill of information. The Defendant appealed his conviction.

On February 2, 2001, a habitual offender hearing was held and the trial judge found the Defendant to be a third felony offender, vacated his original sentence, and imposed an enhanced sentence of life imprisonment at hard labor, without benefit of parole, probation or suspension of sentence. The Defendant made an oral motion for appeal.

FACTS

On November 18, 1999, Lieutenant Gerard Simone of the Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office (JPSO), assigned to the Narcotics Interdiction Unit at Armstrong International Airport, testified that he watched a man purchase a passenger ticket at the Southwest Airlines ticket counter and then leave the building. Lt. Simone's suspicions were aroused because the transaction took an unusually long time, the man was unable to produce picture identification and he paid cash for the ticket.

*439 After the man left the building, Lt. Simone questioned the ticket agent about the transaction. He learned that the subject had bought a round-trip ticket for Rene Hernandez (Hernandez), for a flight originating in Arlington, Texas and arriving in New Orleans on that day. The return flight was scheduled for later that afternoon. Lt. Simone testified that it is common for drug traffickers to purchase airline tickets in cash and that the route between Texas and New Orleans is a major corridor for marijuana distribution.

Lt. Simone, accompanied by a United States Customs agent, waited in the concourse for the flight to arrive. Lt. Simone identified Hernandez when he exited the airplane. He carried no luggage. They followed him to the airport lobby and observed that he appeared to be waiting for someone. Lt. Simone approached Hernandez and identified himself as a police officer. Hernandez voluntarily answered Lt. Simone's questions and produced his airline ticket and identification when requested. He informed the officers that he was in the city to visit his friend Mario Gonzalez (Gonzalez).[1]

Subsequently, two men arrived in a green Isuzu Rodeo car to pick up Hernandez. The Defendant was the driver and the passenger was Gonzalez. Lt. Simone recognized Gonzalez as the man who earlier had purchased the airline ticket. Lt. Simone asked Gonzalez to exit the vehicle and he complied. When Lt. Simone asked Gonzalez for identification, he could not produce any. He asked Gonzalez whether he knew Hernandez. Gonzalez responded that Hernandez was his friend and that he was in town to visit him for several weeks. Gonzalez said that he did not know who had purchased Hernandez' airline ticket and denied having bought it himself.

Lieutenant Simone asked the Defendant for identification and he produced a Louisiana driver's license. The Defendant stated that he did not know Gonzalez or Hernandez and that he had driven Gonzalez to the airport as a favor to a friend. The Defendant said that Gonzalez was staying at the Travelodge Hotel on Veterans Highway. Lt. Simone asked the Defendant for permission to search his vehicle and he consented. A cursory search of the vehicle revealed nothing and Lt. Simone allowed the Defendant to leave the airport. Lt. Simone then asked Gonzalez and Hernandez to accompany him to his office in the airport and they agreed to do so.

A criminal background check of Gonzalez revealed that he had been arrested in Dallas a month earlier. Gonzalez told Lt. Simone that he was willing to cooperate with police. He admitted that he had arrived in the New Orleans area two days earlier and had delivered 15 pounds of marijuana to the Defendant at the Defendant's residence. Gonzalez said he was staying at the Defendant's house. The address that Lt. Simone had recorded from the Defendant's driver's license was 21 Incarnate Word Drive in Kenner. Gonzalez said that he had transported the marijuana to the house in his own gray Nissan car.

Lt. Simone alerted other agents at the JPSO and the Kenner Police Department (KPD) about the information that Gonzalez had given him. Based on that information, officers from both agencies went to the Defendant's house. Lt. Simone transported Gonzalez to the Defendant's residence, while other agents took Hernandez there.

At the Defendant's residence, Lt. Simone met with Detective George Ansardi, a narcotics investigator with the KPD and informed him of the facts he had gathered *440 up to that point. Detective Ansardi used the information to prepare and obtain a search warrant for the Defendant's residence.

Detective Ansardi testified that none of the other officers went inside the Defendant's house until he arrived with the signed search warrant. Sergeant Ronald LaBarriere of the KPD's K-9 unit testified that he waited at the house until the search warrant arrived and did not see anyone go inside. The Defendant was not at home at the time that the officers arrived. When the Defendant returned to his residence and saw officers waiting outside, he attempted to flee. He was stopped by police and was held outside of his house while the officers entered by using a key that the Defendant had given to them.

Sergeant LaBarriere performed a sweep of the three-bedroom residence with a narcotics dog, who alerted him to several drug locations in the house. The dog also alerted the officers to drugs in a Nissan car in the garage. Detective Ansardi and other officers then proceeded to check the areas indicated by the dog.

The search of the house produced a Rave store shopping bag containing a clear plastic bag of marijuana, marijuana and cigarette rolling papers in plain view on the living room floor, marijuana cigarettes in ashtrays in various locations around the house, and a bottle of Ultimate Blend, a carbohydrate drink which purports to rid the body of "impurities" and is used before a drug screening.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
831 So. 2d 433, 2002 WL 31424536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cho-lactapp-2002.