State v. Dubose

19 Fla. Supp. 2d 46
CourtCircuit Court for the Judicial Circuits of Florida
DecidedSeptember 3, 1986
DocketCase No. 86-4542-CF
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Fla. Supp. 2d 46 (State v. Dubose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Circuit Court for the Judicial Circuits of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Dubose, 19 Fla. Supp. 2d 46 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

LOUIS SAFER, Circuit Judge.

[47]*47 ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO DISMISS COUNT II OF INFORMATION

Defendant is charged in Count II of the Information under F.S. 893.135(1)(c) with Trafficking in Heroin.

Defendant filed a motion to dismiss this count or in the alternative to reduce the charge to possession.

A hearing was held at which the State presented the sworn testimony of Thomas E. Zimmer, a chemist with FDLE. For the purpose of this hearing, it was stipulated that the witness was an expert in the field of controlled substance analysis.

Mr. Zimmer testified in essence:

Direct Examination

1. He analyzed certain material submitted by a Jacksonville Law Enforcement Agency in connection with this case.

2. They were:

Exhibit 1
A piece of foil wrapped around a piece of foil containing a lump of white substance.
Exhibit 1A
A piece of foil wrapped around another piece of foil with some more white substance.
Exhibit 4
145 foil packets containing white powder from right front pocket of defendant.
Exhibit 5
16 foil packets containing white powder and black zipper pouch.

3. He performed an analysis of Exhibits 1 and 1A. Based on his analysis he found that Exhibit 1 weighed 2.0 grams and contained cocaine; Exhibit 2 weighed 9.7 grams and contained no controlled substance.

4. He performed an analysis on Exhibits 4 and 5 and in this manner:

Exhibit 4
Examined each foil; pulled 8 of the foils at random; did a series of 6 spot tests on 1 of the foils and 2 spot tests on the other 7 foils. The results of the spot tests on the 8 foils were the same, namely, that there was the probability that an opiate derivative was present. Mingled material from all 145 foils in a pile; ran a chemical analysis [48]*48of the bulk, which confirmed presence of heroin. Total weight of mixture, including heroin, was 3.76 grams.
Exhibit 5
Examined each individual foil; selected 4 foils at random; did 6 spot tests on 1 foil and 2 tests on 3 foils; results of the spot tests on the four foils were the same, namely, there was the probability that an opiate derivative was present; mingled material from all 76 foils together; ran chemical analysis of the bulk, which confirmed presence of heroin. Total weight of mixture, including heroin, was 2.13 grams.

5. In both Exhibits 4 and 5, all of the foil packaging was the same. There was no difference in the physical appearance of the sample substance and the substance in the foils not tested. He based this opinion on the color, texture and consistency. Each foil also contained approximately the same amount of substance.

6. Chemical identification of heroin as a component of Exhibits 4 and 5 was based on ultra violet spectrum and a gasophomatograph spectrometer.

Cross-examination

7. He cannot replace the mass substance in Exhibit 4 and Exhibit 5 back into individual foils in same condition as when delivered to him.

8. The decision to mix the foils together in each exhibit was his own decision — not that of the State Attorney’s office or a required FDLE policy.

9. Prior to his analysis he received no information from the State Attorney’s office about a concern on the total weight.

10. Of the total 3.76 grams in Exhibit 4, the amount of opiate derivative was very small on a percentage basis. A larger percentage of the bulk would be a noncontrolled substance such as quinine. He did not do a quantative analysis of the material.

11. He examined the exhibits in chronological order so he knew Exhibit 1A contained no controlled substance before he tested Exhibit 4 and Exhibit 5. When he got to Exhibits 4 and 5, he recognized that there may well be packages that did not contain certain controlled substances.

12. The spot tests he performed told him that opiate or opiate derivative might be present. The spot tests do not conclusively prove to him that opiate or opiate derivative is present. It tells him there is a compound that is consistent with an opiate or an opiate derivative.

[49]*4913. Quinine would give a different color reaction than opiate in testing.

14. All samples spot tested at random in both Exhibits 4 and 5 gave a similar color reaction. As an expert he concluded that an opiate or opiate derivative might be present in each random sample.

15. The spot tests are a screening tool. Further examination by gasophomatograph and spectrophotos are conclusive.

16. He is unable to visually distinguish between a controlled substance and a noncontrolled substance. A white powder is all he sees with his eye.

17. Had he been asked to analyze a bottle of pills and found one to be a controlled substance, he would not have crushed the other pills.

18. He cannot discount by visual examination that the foils that he did not spot test contained a noncontrolled substance.

Redirect

19. He had not heard from defense counsel prior to testing the exhibits as to concern about weight.

20. FDLE has no procedural guidelines for determining the weight.

21. He could have been weighed each foil in each exhibit individually to maintain the exhibit in the same form.

Further recross

22. There are two very time consuming ways that the exhibits could have been retained in their original form.

23. The reason he didn’t use the time consuming method was that all of the randomly selected samples all showed the same result. Had there been different results, he would have not been able to conclude they were the same and would have tested each foil individually.

Court

24. It is his discretion as to how he weights the exhibits. If they look the same to him, then he will take random samples. If they look different, he separates them as to physical packaging, color, consistency and will analyze each of the groups.

25. He has to come up with a weight. To weigh the contents in each foil separately is possible but not practical.

Further cross exam

26. He did not add any material to the exhibit. He weighed each exhibit separately.

[50]*50 DEFENDANTS CONTENTIONS

1. Defendant was arrested for possession. There was no issue as to weight until defendant was charged with trafficking. Defendant made a demand for discovery at arraignment. The conduct of the State through the action of FDLE has prejudiced the defendant. Defendant makes no claim that such conduct by the State was malicious.

2. Defendant has been deprived of the ability to defend himself against the trafficking charge because he is unable to obtain an analysis of the substance in the original form.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Fla. Supp. 2d 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dubose-flacirct-1986.