State v. Nettles

216 S.W.3d 162, 2006 Mo. App. LEXIS 1722, 2006 WL 3350738
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 20, 2006
Docket27362
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 216 S.W.3d 162 (State v. Nettles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Nettles, 216 S.W.3d 162, 2006 Mo. App. LEXIS 1722, 2006 WL 3350738 (Mo. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

NANCY STEFFEN RAHMEYER, Presiding Judge.

Anthony Nettles (“Appellant”) was charged with the class B felony of trafficking in the second degree pursuant to section 195.223. 1 The information was later amended to charge Appellant as a prior offender under section 558.016. Appellant was found guilty of drug trafficking in the second degree and sentenced as a prior offender to twelve years imprisonment. He claims four trial court errors in the admission of evidence. We find no error and affirm the conviction.

A Missouri State Highway Patrol trooper, Matt Funderburk, observed Appellant’s vehicle exceeding the speed limit on eastbound Interstate 44. When he initiated a traffic stop, he noted that Appellant was driving a rental car from Indiana and claimed to be returning to Indiana from Texas. Appellant said he was taking his girlfriend to college in Texas but could not recall the name of the town. The trooper observed two cell phones, a radar detector, an opened road map, and a pillow, all of which he believed could indicate drug activity. He requested that Appellant come back and sit in the patrol car while he wrote out a warning for the speeding violation; however, he learned that Appellant had an extensive criminal record, was on probation, and did not have his probation officer’s permission to be out of the State of Indiana.

After writing out the warning, the trooper decided to ask more questions of the passenger, who gave inconsistent responses to the same questions that had been asked of Appellant. Trooper Funderburk requested permission from Appellant to search the car and Appellant consented. The trooper found a bottle of Inositol, a vitamin supplement often used to cut cocaine or methamphetamine, in the trunk; he also found a gallon-sized plastic baggie of white powder inside a Kentucky Fried Chicken bag in the glove compartment.

After Trooper Funderburk returned to the cruiser, he arrested Appellant and gave him the Miranda warning. 2 He then asked Appellant if the substance in the baggie was cocaine or methamphetamine. *164 Appellant said it was “coke.” Appellant refused to sign the waiver form when the Miranda rights were again read to him at troop headquarters, but he told the trooper that he knew he was in trouble. During the inventory search at headquarters, $2400 was found in the vehicle. Before placing the goods in the evidence locker, Trooper Funderburk weighed the plastic baggie on uncertified scales to approximate the weight of its contents. It weighed out at approximately a pound, or approximately 450 grams. Another trooper, Daniel Banasik, performed a preliminary narcotics field-test on the powder and testified at trial that it showed a “positive response for the presence of cocaine.”

The contents of the plastic bag were later tested at the Missouri State Highway Patrol Laboratory in Greene County, Missouri, on November 7, 2003, by criminalist Matthew Barb. The substance was determined to contain cocaine salt and weighed 490.47 grams. The street value would be approximately $49,300. Barb left the employment of the Highway Patrol in May 2004 amid suspicions that he was addicted to methamphetamine and that he had taken drugs from samples assigned to the laboratory. His supervisor, Kay Monk, testified at trial that she reviewed Barb’s report in Appellant’s case and found no irregularities. A second criminalist, Kristin Weiss, repeated the tests Barb had performed. She confirmed that the substances contained cocaine salt and noted the weight at 493.67 grams; she explained that the .65% difference in weight could be a failure of Barb to completely scrape all of the powder out of the plastic bag.

Appellant first claims on appeal that the trial court plainly erred in permitting Trooper Banasik to testify that the field-test he performed on the baggie of white powder was positive for cocaine. Prior to the statements given at trial, the trial court denied a motion in limine that the trooper could not testify regarding the field-test he conducted on the substance. The court stated:

Well, you’re right that it doesn’t prove it’s cocaine and that’s why they do the final test, but because there’s going to be an issue about whether this is the same evidence or not, it goes toward, like you said, if it was negative, then we would not even be at trial here.

The trial court continued that the field-test result was admissible:

I think it’s admissible, it goes to weight, but I’m not going to let them testify, yes, this is positive for cocaine because that’s not what it does. And if, you know, if they try and do that, you can clear them up on cross-examination because it’s just a screening test and I think that will be all clear to the jury but I think it is admissible that they took it and it reacted and you can go into the possible ranges of things it could react to.

Appellant now argues that the field-test was not conclusive as to the presence of cocaine and, therefore, more prejudicial than probative and unduly influenced the jury when Appellant was contesting the validity of tests later performed by lab personnel.

Appellant asks for plain error review. We note that Appellant was granted a continuing objection to the admission of the field-testing. We are at a loss to understand the request of a plain error review; however, we find no error, plain or otherwise. We find no error because the testimony was cumulative of properly-admitted evidence. There is no prejudice to Appellant and no reversible error when other evidence before the court establishes essentially the same facts. State v. Bucklew, 973 S.W.2d 83, 93 (Mo. banc 1998). When Appellant was asked by Trooper *165 Funderburk if the substance in the baggie was cocaine or methamphetamine, he said it was “coke.” There was also testimony from Monk that the original testing, which she supervised, was positive for cocaine. A second criminalist, Weiss, tested the powder and also concluded the substance was cocaine. Appellant does not claim error with the admission of his statement that the powder was “coke.” Although Appellant does contest the admission of testimony by Monk and Weiss in Points III and IV, we find no error in the admission of their testimony. Therefore, it is cumulative in that other properly-admitted evidence established the substance was cocaine.

Furthermore, the trial court correctly noted that there was an issue at trial whether the powder had been tampered with. (See Points III and IV.) The initial test results, whether positive for cocaine or a controlled substance, indicate a substance other than a legal substance was in the baggie. The court stated:

What I thought I remembered from the motion in limine is that everybody knows Barb is going to be spoken about. He was the original chemist that tested this. What I excluded was the fact that all these other cases had been dismissed. We may have to get the written motion out again or even look at the notes of the court reporter, but it was kind of the parameters, as [the prosecutor] said, about what would be asked about Barb, not that it wouldn’t be mentioned. I assumed all along that, you know, they’ve got a guy that tested it, he’s not here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
216 S.W.3d 162, 2006 Mo. App. LEXIS 1722, 2006 WL 3350738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nettles-moctapp-2006.