State v. Robert Leahy Powell

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 5, 2008
Docket02-05-00477-CR
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Robert Leahy Powell (State v. Robert Leahy Powell) 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. Robert Leahy Powell, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

                                                COURT OF APPEALS

                                                 SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                                                 FORT WORTH

                                        NO. 2-05-477-CR

THE STATE OF TEXAS                                                                STATE

                                                   V.

ROBERT LEAHY POWELL                                                         APPELLEE

                                              ------------

        FROM CRIMINAL DISTRICT COURT NO. 4 OF TARRANT COUNTY

                                             OPINION


The State appeals from the trial court=s grant of Appellee Robert Leahy Powell=s motion to suppress.  In four points, the State argues that the trial court erred by granting the motion because (1) the detective=s affidavit set forth sufficient circumstances from which the magistrate could find probable cause to issue the search warrant; (2) the trial court failed to give great deference to the magistrate=s determination of probable cause; (3) the police officers did not exceed the scope of the search warrant; and (4) the police officers were not required to obtain an additional search warrant before opening the two safes that they seized from the premises to be searched, took with them to the police station, and opened the following day.  Because the trial court did not err by  granting Powell=s motion to suppress, we affirm the trial court=s suppression order.

Background Facts

On January 27, 2004, someone from Hurst TV & Appliance (Hurst TV) reported that a customer had purchased a big-screen television with a forged check.  Someone was supposed to pick up the television before the end of that day.  Hurst Police Officers James Hobbs and Terry Tabor went to the store to wait for the person to pick it up.  Although a woman called about it, no one came for the television. 

The next day, North Richland Hills (NRH) Police Detective Billy Daniels called Hobbs to say that the NRH police had arrested a woman named Lisa Lowery who had a receipt from Hurst TV for a big-screen television.  Hobbs went to the NRH jail and met with Daniels, and the two officers interviewed Lowery in connection with the forged check she passed at Hurst TV.  In all, Hobbs interviewed her once at the NRH jail and twice at the Hurst jail and secured three separate statements from her. 


Lowery denied that she had stolen or made the checks she had passed and claimed that she had bought the checks and identification from different locations.  One of the addresses that she gave Hobbs was 6919 Hardisty Street in Richland Hills (the Premises).  Hobbs used the information provided by Lowery to prepare an affidavit to support the arrest and search warrant signed by Judge Ken Whiteley, municipal judge for the City of Hurst. 

According to Hobbs=s affidavit in support of the warrant at issue, Lowery had told him that she had received the check she passed at Hurst TV from Leia McGee and Powell.  Lowery told Hobbs that Powell had called and asked her to buy the television for Athem@; in exchange, Powell and McGee would pay her $200.00.  Lowery told Hobbs that she had gone to the Premises on January 27, 2004 and that McGee had handed her the check and a Texas identification card, both in the name of Augustine Terrell.  Hobbs swore that Lowery had told him that McGee and Powell had stolen the checks from the counter next to a cash register at Cingular Wireless and that they were making forged checks on a computer in the back room of the Premises near the garage.  Lowery also told Hobbs that she saw some counterfeit twenty-dollar bills there on January 26, 2004. 


Lowery additionally told Hobbs that she had bought a big-screen television from Sam=s Furniture in Haltom City for Powell and McGee with another forged check in the name of Augustine Terrell on January 22, 2004.  According to Hobbs, Lowery said that the television she had bought from Sam=s Furniture was located at the Premises, which she claimed was the residence of Powell, McGee, and McGee=s grandmother, who was not involved in the criminal activity.  According to Hobbs, Lowery also told him that she had used another forged check to buy a safe from Home Depot for Powell and McGee and that the safe was at the Premises.  Lowery also told Hobbs that on January 27, 2004, she had seen at the Premises approximately fifty checks in the name of Stanley E. Rush and that there were guns and drugs at the Premises. 

Hobbs ran a computer check on Powell and learned that he was in jail, not at the Premises.  Hobbs also Awas able to identify Leia McGee=s grandmother as Roberta Halie McGee, a white female with a date of birth of August 20, 1920.@  He also confirmed that a white female had passed a forged check in the name of Augustine Terrell to purchase a Lexmark printer, mouse, and repair work on a laptop from Express Computer Repair.  Hobbs additionally confirmed through the Texas and National Crime Information centers (TCIC and NCIC) that Leia Michelle McGee, a white female with a date of birth of October 2, 1967, had been arrested for theft and DWI. 


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State v. Robert Leahy Powell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-robert-leahy-powell-texapp-2008.