Stephanie Baxter v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2011
Docket02-10-00364-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Stephanie Baxter v. State (Stephanie Baxter v. State) 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
Stephanie Baxter v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

02-10-364-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 02-10-00364-CR

Stephanie Baxter

APPELLANT

V.

The State of Texas

STATE

----------

FROM THE 367th District Court OF Denton COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

I.  Introduction

          Following the denial of her motion to suppress, Appellant Stephanie Baxter entered a plea of guilty to the possession of a controlled substance, to-wit: methamphetamine, in an amount of less than one gram.[2]  In three points, Baxter contends that the trial court erred by finding that the arresting officer lawfully questioned her during a traffic stop and by failing to suppress the evidence found during that seizure.  We will affirm.

II.  Background

After being arrested on July 3, 2009, during a traffic stop of the vehicle in which she was a passenger, Baxter filed a motion to suppress evidence of methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia found on her person.  At the suppression hearing, Texas Department of Public Safety Trooper Steven Quan testified for the State.  Quan said that he had been trained in various codes and criminal interdiction.  Quan testified that his duties included criminal interdiction and traffic law enforcement.  Quan recalled the early morning of July 3, 2009.  He averred that on that day, he was training a new trooper and doing traffic enforcement.  Quan said that at roughly 1:07 a.m., he was in a marked cruiser sitting stationary on I-35E between Lewisville and Sanger.  As he ran his rear radar, Quan saw two vehicles traveling northbound in the right-hand lane.  Quan said that one of the vehicles “swerved pretty hard to the left lane, and [his] first thought was that that car is trying to hide behind the -- the lead car.”  Quan testified that as the vehicle swerved left, it began to overtake the other vehicle.

After confirming that the vehicle was exceeding the speed limit, Quan initiated a traffic stop.  Quan averred, and the video of the stop confirms, that when he initiated the stop, his in-car video recorder initiated and captured the encounter on video.  According to Quan, the vehicle pulled immediately over to the right shoulder and came to a stop.

          Quan said that he approached the vehicle on the passenger side for safety reasons.  Although he could not recall whether the window was initially up or down, he said that he “looked at the driver, told him why he was being stopped, . . . and asked for his [driver] license.”  Quan testified that the trooper trainee was near him as he approached.  Quan said that Baxter was sitting in the front passenger seat, and he identified Baxter in the courtroom.  Quan said that as he initiated a conversation with the driver, Baxter began to answer his questions.  Quan testified that it is unusual for a passenger to answer his questions and that it struck him as suspicious because he was looking at and directing his questions to the driver of the vehicle.  Quan said that he averaged between “80 to 100 . . . traffic stops a week, and through [his] training and experience, most of the time when [he] conduct[ed his] business with the driver, the passengers [remained silent].”

          According to Quan, not only did Baxter answer his questions, but her answers were unusually detailed and long.  Quan also said that as Baxter answered the questions, he looked at the driver, and that the driver had an “extremely scared look on his face.”  Because of Baxter’s behavior and the driver’s appearance, Quan asked Baxter for identification.  Baxter stated that she had not renewed her driver license once it had expired.  Quan questioned Baxter about whether she had a criminal record, and he specifically asked her, “[W]hen was the last time she [had done] any kind of drugs.”  By Quan’s account, Baxter’s answer was vague, so he asked again.  Quan said that Baxter’s answer changed.  Quan testified that based on the unusual manner in which the vehicle swerved and accelerated, the unusually scared look on the driver’s face, the manner in which Baxter vaguely answered his questions, and the fact that Baxter did not present any identification, he asked Baxter to step out of the car.  Quan said that by that time he believed “that there must have been something else going on in the car and that [he] needed to further investigate it.”

          As Baxter exited the vehicle and walked toward Quan’s cruiser, Quan continued to ask her about drug use “because she gave . . . vague answer[s].”  Quan also testified that he believed that based on Baxter’s appearance, there was a “drug issue” afoot and that the drug was most likely methamphetamine.  Quan said that as he continued to question Baxter about drugs, her answers “changed” multiple times.  At first, Baxter said that she had not done drugs in “a long time,” but that answer changed to “every once in a while.”  Quan testified that he told Baxter that he had a hard time believing that she did not use methamphetamine more consistently than that.  Eventually, Baxter said that she had used methamphetamine earlier.  Quan then asked Baxter if she had any drugs on her.  Baxter initially stated that she did not.  But after Quan told her that he could have a female officer come and strip search her at a gas station, Baxter “became extremely nervous.”

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