State v. Teague

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 6, 2022
Docket21-10
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Teague (State v. Teague) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Teague, (N.C. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

2022-NCCOA-600

No. COA21-10

Filed 6 September 2022

Wake County, Nos. 18 CRS 205570–71, 205588

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.

JOSEPH EDWARDS TEAGUE, III

Appeal by defendant from judgments entered 31 January 2020 by Judge

Thomas H. Lock in Wake County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 1

December 2021.

Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Assistant Attorney General Kristin J. Uicker, for the State.

Hynson Law, PLLC, by Warren D. Hynson, for defendant-appellant.

ZACHARY, Judge.

¶1 Defendant Joseph Edwards Teague, III, appeals from judgments entered upon

a jury’s verdicts finding him guilty of conspiracy to traffic marijuana by

transportation, possession with intent to sell or deliver marijuana, felony possession

of marijuana, felony keeping or maintaining a storage unit for keeping or selling

controlled substances, felony keeping or maintaining a dwelling for keeping or selling

controlled substances, and possession with intent to sell or deliver delta-9-

tetrahydrocannabinol (“THC”). After careful review, we affirm the trial court’s denial STATE V. TEAGUE

Opinion of the Court

of Defendant’s motion to suppress, and conclude that Defendant received a trial free

from prejudicial error.

I. Background

¶2 On 21 March 2018, Investigator Selburn Menzie of the Wake County Sheriff’s

Office High-Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (“HIDTA”) Task Force was working at

a FedEx facility as part of his routine parcel interdiction duty. On the conveyor belt,

he observed a package (the “target package”) with “all the seams . . . taped,” which he

later testified was “one of many indicators” that a parcel may contain illegal drugs.

The target package named “Marcus Rawls” as its sender and “Joe Teague” as its

intended recipient. The shipping label indicated that the target package had been

shipped from California and listed “(888) 888 8888” as the telephone number for the

addressee, “Joe Teague” in Raleigh, North Carolina. In his experience and training

as a member of the HIDTA Task Force, Investigator Menzie recognized these as

additional indicators of possible drug smuggling.

¶3 Investigator Menzie removed the target package from the belt and ran the

sender and recipient information from the shipping label through two law

enforcement databases. From these databases, Investigator Menzie determined that

the phone number given for the target package’s sender “Marcus Rawls” did not

match the phone number for the listed shipping address, and he confirmed that the

“(888) 888 8888” phone number provided for its recipient “Joe Teague” did not exist. STATE V. TEAGUE

Investigator Menzie also noticed that the target package had been sent from a

different location than its listed shipping address. Investigator Menzie then placed

the target package in a line with “four or five” other similar parcels. His partner,

Officer James Smith, was already on the scene with his certified narcotics detector

dog, Hydro. At Officer Smith’s command, Hydro conducted a drug sniff of the

packages. Hydro alerted to the target package.

¶4 Investigator Menzie removed the target package from the FedEx facility and

obtained a search warrant for it. Investigator Menzie, Officer Smith, and other law

enforcement officers then opened the target package at the interdiction unit office.

Inside the target package, the officers found approximately 15 yellow envelopes, each

containing vacuum-sealed bags of a green, leafy substance that they recognized as

marijuana; inside one of the bags, they also discovered what appeared to be a GPS

tracking device. After weighing and photographing the contents of each bag, the

officers determined that the target package contained approximately 15 pounds of

the green, leafy substance that they recognized as marijuana.

¶5 Investigator Menzie then drove to the address listed on the target package’s

shipping label, where he saw people (including one later identified as Defendant) in

the driveway. While surveilling the recipient’s address, Investigator Menzie observed

that there was a self-storage facility approximately two miles away. He later testified

that the proximity of this facility was noteworthy to him “[b]ecause a storage unit is STATE V. TEAGUE

commonly used by individuals who [are] dealing with large amounts of illegal

substance to store away sometimes from their residence, sometimes just to

disassociate themselves from the residence that they’re actually living in.”

¶6 Later that day, a FedEx employee informed Investigator Menzie that a man

identifying himself as “Marcus” had called FedEx to inquire about the status of the

target package, and that he left a phone number at which to contact him with further

information. Investigator Menzie called Marcus, who confirmed the tracking number

of the target package, its shipping address, and the name of its intended recipient. At

that point, Investigator Menzie identified himself as a law enforcement officer;

Marcus reacted with surprise, cussed, and abruptly ended the call.

¶7 The next day, on 22 March 2018, Investigator Menzie, Officer Smith, and

Sergeant Daniel Wright investigated the self-storage facility near the intended

recipient’s address. Officer Smith took Hydro to a row of storage units that were “out

of sight[,]” and Hydro alerted to a particular unit. Investigator Menzie left to obtain

a search warrant for the unit. Before Investigator Menzie returned, Defendant

arrived and approached the unit with a bag in his hand. Sergeant Wright intercepted

Defendant and patted him down.

¶8 When Defendant placed the bag on the back of his car, Sergeant Wright

observed a substance inside of the bag that he recognized, from his training and

experience, as “marijuana wax.” Sergeant Wright handcuffed Defendant, and they STATE V. TEAGUE

waited for Investigator Menzie to return with the search warrant. After Investigator

Menzie returned and read the search warrant to Defendant, the officers opened the

storage unit with the use of a key provided by Defendant. Inside, the officers found a

box containing more vacuum-sealed bags of what appeared to be the same green, leafy

substance that they recognized as marijuana, and a suitcase containing several clear

jars of a brown substance that Sergeant Wright later testified was “commonly

referred to as shatter . . . . [I]t’s cooked-down marijuana. It’s highly concentrated

THC.”

¶9 Investigator Menzie then obtained a document search warrant for Defendant’s

residence, which matched the address for the intended recipient of the target

package. Law enforcement officers executed the search warrant that same day and

discovered items that they believed to be drugs and drug paraphernalia. At that point,

the officers temporarily halted the search until they obtained a drug search warrant;

then, the search resumed. Inside a padlocked bedroom, officers discovered empty

vacuum-sealed bags in a dresser drawer; a butane gas canister used to manufacture

marijuana wax; a digital scale hidden behind a television; a bong; an e-cigarette with

cartridges containing a brown liquid; and glass jars similar to those found in the

search of Defendant’s storage unit.

¶ 10 On 5 June 2018, a Wake County grand jury returned indictments charging

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Teague, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-teague-ncctapp-2022.