State v. Christopher Reid Dewbre

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 31, 2017
Docket03-15-00786-CR
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Christopher Reid Dewbre (State v. Christopher Reid Dewbre) 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
State v. Christopher Reid Dewbre, (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-15-00786-CR

The State of Texas, Appellant

v.

Christopher Reid Dewbre, Appellee

FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 6 OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. C-1-CR-14-207714, HONORABLE BRANDY MUELLER, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The State of Texas appeals the trial court’s order granting Christopher Reid Dewbre’s

motion to suppress his statements to law-enforcement officers in the underlying prosecution for

driving while intoxicated. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 44.01(a)(5). The State contends that the

trial court abused its discretion by granting the motion. We will reverse the order suppressing

Dewbre’s statements and remand this cause for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

Austin Police Department Officer Collin Michael Fallon, the only witness at the

hearing on Dewbre’s motion to suppress, testified that he was dispatched to the 2000 block service

road of south IH-35 on an urgent “check welfare” report of a driver passed out in a vehicle with its

engine running. Officer Fallon stated that he was familiar with the area, located a few blocks south

of the downtown entertainment district, where he had worked numerous collisions and was once struck by an intoxicated driver. Using the description provided in the report, Officer Fallon said that

he located the vehicle in the parking lot of a service station. The trial court admitted dashboard-

camera video with date-and-time stamps showing events from Officer Fallon’s arrival at the scene

at 2:07 a.m. to Dewbre’s arrest and his subsequent transport to the police station.

Officer Fallon testified that when he arrived, Austin Fire Department and Emergency

Medical Services personnel were already on the scene and had placed “chock blocks” beneath the

tires of the vehicle to immobilize it. He recalled that the vehicle had its lights on, its engine running,

and was not parked at a gas pump or in any of the available parking spaces. Officer Fallon testified

that he parked his patrol car in front of the vehicle. The video shows Officer Fallon then approached

the vehicle on the passenger side, shined his flashlight inside, confirmed that the vehicle was in

“park,” and then opened the passenger-side door. Officer Fallon testified that he saw keys in the

ignition and a driver, passed out in a reclined position, whom he had trouble waking. The video

shows Officer Fallon announcing, “Austin Police” three times, and saying, “Wake up, man.” Officer

Fallon testified that he took the keys out of the ignition, and the video shows the lights

being deactivated.

The video then shows Officer Fallon walking to the driver’s side of the vehicle, and

saying to the occupant, “Sit up, man,” and asking if he needs EMS. When the occupant declines,

Officer Fallon says, “Hop out.” The occupant says, “I’m good,” as he reaches over toward the

driver’s-side door. Officer Fallon testified that the man (later identified as Dewbre) was attempting

to shut the door. Officer Fallon told him, “No, you don’t, no, nope, don’t. You need to hop out. So

we can check you out. You passed out with the car running.”

2 Officer Fallon testified that once Dewbre got out of the car, he smelled alcohol

coming from Dewbre’s breath, and Dewbre was “showing many signs of intoxication.” Officer

Fallon testified that Dewbre seemed like he was going to fall over. Video shows Officer Fallon

asking Dewbre whether he had any weapons on him, having him walk a few steps from the side of

the vehicle (which took two seconds) for a pat down, and asking if he can take out his identification.

Officer Fallon testified that he tried to get Dewbre “to a safe spot where I can continue to interview

him and ask him questions.”

The video shows Officer Fallon asking Dewbre to “walk over this way” and to “leave

the [truck] open for now,” but Dewbre proceeds to shut the driver’s-side door before walking for two

or three seconds toward the front of his vehicle. Officer Fallon tosses keys on the hood of the patrol

car and then asks Dewbre where he is coming from and how much he has had to drink. Dewbre says

twice that he “had a couple of drinks.” Then, Dewbre spontaneously expresses confusion about his

situation and states, “I’m not too sure of what’s going on.” Officer Fallon responds, “I’m going to

explain it to you,” and proceeds to recount that he was called to the scene, that he made certain

observations about Dewbre when he arrived, that he wanted to ensure Dewbre was all right, that

operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated is illegal in Texas, and that “now we’re at that point I

need to ask you some more questions; I need to make sure you’re safe to operate that motor vehicle.”

Officer Fallon’s statement that operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated is illegal in Texas occurs

on the video at time stamp 2:11:57 a.m., less than five minutes after he arrived at the scene, and less

than three minutes after Dewbre exited his vehicle.

3 Next, the video shows Officer Fallon telling Dewbre that another officer (backup had

recently arrived at the scene) would stand by with him, if Dewbre did not mind, while Officer Fallon

moved his patrol car, and he tells Dewbre, “Go over there with him.” Dewbre walks there (which

takes approximately five seconds) near his vehicle. Officer Fallon takes less than a minute to turn

his patrol car to face a well-lit area in front of a food truck—previously, the patrol car was parked

like Dewbre’s, parallel with the food truck—and then takes just over another minute adjusting his

dashboard camera to better record the area in front of his vehicle. Officer Fallon testified, as the

video confirms, that when he repositioned his patrol car, he stayed in the same parking lot and did

not move Dewbre from his location.

The video also shows that shortly after Officer Fallon joins Dewbre, the backup

officer steps away to a patrol car, and Officer Fallon and Dewbre walk fifteen seconds to get in

proper position before the patrol-car camera. Officer Fallon then reviews with Dewbre why he was

called to the scene: “You understand you drove to this point, the vehicle was still running, you’re

still behind the wheel. That’s why I gotta make sure you’re safe to drive.” Officer Fallon tells

Dewbre that he is going to “roll through some questions and then we’re going to run through some

tests.” Officer Fallon states that because of all that has taken place, he needs to make sure that

Dewbre is safe to drive, and “if you are, you are.” Officer Fallon testified that he had previously

responded to calls similar to this one and after determining that the individuals were fine, sent them

on their way.

The video shows that Officer Fallon proceeded with typical DWI questions about

what Dewbre had to drink, how much he had to drink, and whether he had driven. Officer Fallon

4 reiterates that if Dewbre is safe to drive, he can go home. Dewbre made several admissions,

including that he was driving earlier, that he had at least seven to eight drinks at Fringe Bar, that he

was disoriented, and that he was unsure whether he was able to drive a motor vehicle. Officer Fallon

administered three field-sobriety tests: horizontal gaze nystagmus, walking heel-to-toe, and one-leg

stand. After the tests, Dewbre refused to provide a sample of his breath.1 Video time stamped at

2:37:39 a.m.

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