State v. Miesha Valrae Robinson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 16, 2016
Docket09-16-00090-CR
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Miesha Valrae Robinson (State v. Miesha Valrae Robinson) 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. Miesha Valrae Robinson, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont ____________________ NO. 09-16-00090-CR ____________________

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellant

V.

MIESHA VALRAE ROBINSON, Appellee

_______________________________________________________ ______________

On Appeal from the 253rd District Court Liberty County, Texas Trial Cause No. CR31304 ________________________________________________________ _____________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In this case, the State appeals from an order granting a motion filed by the

defendant to suppress the evidence seized by a state trooper following the trooper’s

warrantless search of Miesha Valrae Robinson’s car. See Tex. Health & Safety

Code Ann. § 481.112(a), (f) (West 2010). In the hearing on her motion to suppress,

Robinson argued that the trooper conducted a pretextual stop, that the stop was

unduly prolonged, given that the stated purpose of the stop was to issue a warning

1 for speeding, and that no legitimate basis existed justifying the trooper’s decision

to extend the mission of the stop to include a search of Robinson’s car. Following

the hearing the trial court conducted on Robinson’s motion, the trial court

determined that the facts known to the trooper did not justify his decision to extend

his investigation beyond the relatively brief period needed for the trooper to give

Robinson a warning for speeding. Further, the trial court found that although

Robinson consented to the request the trooper made to search her car, she

consented after the legitimate purpose that led to the stop had ended. The trial court

concluded that Robinson’s consent to the search was invalid, it granted Robinson’s

motion to suppress, and ruled that the State would not be allowed to introduce

testimony or evidence indicating what the trooper found during the search he

conducted on Robinson’s car. Given the highly deferential standard that applies to

an appellate court’s review of suppression rulings, we hold the trial court did not

abuse its discretion by granting Robinson’s motion.

Background

Prior to the trial, the trial court conducted a hearing on Robinson’s motion to

suppress. During the hearing, the State stipulated that the trooper searched

2 Robinson’s car without a warrant. 1 Therefore, at the hearing, the State bore the

burden of proving that the trooper reasonably decided to search Robinson’s car

based on the facts that became available to him during the stop. Amador v. State,

221 S.W.3d 666, 672 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007).

The trooper was the sole witness who testified in the suppression hearing. In

his testimony, the trooper indicated that he stopped Robinson’s car one evening on

U.S. Highway 59 in Liberty County, an area the trooper described as a known

corridor for transporting drugs. The trooper’s testimony reflects that he did not

have his radar on when Robinson’s car passed him while he was stopped next to

the highway, but he decided to follow Robinson because her car had out-of-state

plates and he felt that her car was “overly clean.” Approximately two minutes after

the trooper began following Robinson, he stopped Robinson for driving her car

five miles-per-hour over the posted speed limit.

After stopping Robinson, the trooper approached the car’s passenger

window. According to the trooper, when Robinson rolled down her window, he

smelled a strong odor of air freshener. The trooper’s testimony, and video-footage

of the stop that was captured by a camera in the trooper’s SUV, indicates that 1 A traffic stop based on a police officer’s suspected violation of law constitutes a “seizure” of the individuals that occupy the car; therefore, the seizure is required to be conducted in accordance with the Fourth Amendment. Heien v. North Carolina, 135 S.Ct. 530, 536 (2014). 3 within a minute after the stop, the trooper told Robinson that he intended to give

her a warning for speeding. Nevertheless, the trooper then asked Robinson to leave

her car and accompany him to his SUV.

Once Robinson was in the trooper’s SUV, the evidence before the trial court

indicates that the trooper continued to question Robinson about the purpose of her

trip. According to the trooper, the reasons Robinson gave him to explain why she

was traveling made him question whether she was telling him the truth. The

trooper also indicated that Robinson’s nervousness, which the trooper testified he

noticed shortly after the stop, did not subside even though he told Robinson shortly

after stopping her that she was going to be given a warning. According to the

trooper, he was suspicious that a crime had been committed based on Robinson’s

demeanor, and the “indicators” that he had “seen in the car.” 2 While talking to

Robinson in his car, the trooper requested and then obtained information from a 2 The “indicators” the trooper mentioned in his testimony were that Robinson’s explanation about the reasons for her travel did not strike him as plausible, that she was driving a car with out-of-state plates, that he could smell air freshener coming from the car when Robinson rolled down the car’s window, that the key in the ignition of Robinson’s car was not on a keychain with other keys, that Robinson’s car was very clean, and that Robinson’s hands were shaking when she handed him various documents. The evidence from the hearing shows that Robinson told the trooper that she was traveling from her home in Houston to see her brother in Ohio, and that she had borrowed the car from him because her car had been in a wreck. The trooper testified that the smell of air freshener coming from Robinson’s car was the first thing that caused him to think that Robinson might be engaged in criminal activity. 4 computer about Robinson’s driving history and the car. The information the

trooper obtained from the computer showed that Robinson did not have any

outstanding warrants for her arrest, and the information he received also showed

that the car she was driving was not stolen. The videotape of the stop shows that

the trooper asked Robinson if he could search her car while she was seated in his

SUV, and that his request occurred approximately seven minutes into the stop. The

videotape also shows that Robinson immediately agreed to the trooper’s request

and that she did not question the trooper about why he wanted to search her car.

In its written findings, the trial court concluded that the trooper’s decision to

stop Robinson for speeding was valid. However, the trial court also found that the

evidence the trooper subsequently gathered did not reveal facts sufficient to

reasonably justify Robinson’s detention beyond the period required to issue a

warning. The trial court concluded that at the point the trooper asked for

permission to search her car, the detention was unduly prolonged, and the trial

court ruled that Robinson’s consent to the search was not valid.

Standard of Review

In reviewing the trial court’s ruling on such motions, we do not engage in

our own factual review. Romero v. State, 800 S.W.2d 539, 543 (Tex. Crim. App.

1990); Flores v. State, 177 S.W.3d 8, 14 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2005,

5 pet. ref’d). Instead, as to a suppression ruling, the trial judge is the sole trier of any

disputed facts; therefore, the appeals court does not second-guess the trial court’s

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