Sterling Ballard, Jr. v. State
This text of Sterling Ballard, Jr. v. State (Sterling Ballard, Jr. 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.
Opinion
IN THE
TENTH COURT OF APPEALS
No. 10-99-070-CR
STERLING BALLARD, JR.,
Appellant
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
Appellee
From the 13th District Court
Navarro County, Texas
Trial Court # 27,090
O P I N I O N
The court convicted Sterling Ballard, Jr. in a bench trial of delivery of less than one gram of cocaine and sentenced him to twenty months in a state jail. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 481.112(b) (Vernon Supp. 2000). Ballard contends in a single point that the court erred in admitting a videotape in evidence which was not properly authenticated.
A confidential informant testified at Ballard’s trial that he participated in an undercover operation to purchase narcotics from suspected dealers at various locations in Navarro County. On August 25, 1998, he met some officers to undertake one of these purchases. Corsicana Police Detective Charles Fincher searched him before sheriff’s deputy Elmer Tanner transported him to a location in Corsicana. The officers placed a video camera made to appear like a pager on the informant’s overalls to record the transaction. Tanner activated the camera when he let the informant out of his pickup. The informant met Ballard in a shop and purchased $30 worth of cocaine from him. The informant later met Tanner and gave the narcotics to him. Tanner turned off the video camera and took it from him. They later met Fincher who again searched the informant.
At this point in the testimony, the prosecutor approached the informant with a VHS video recording marked as State’s Exhibit No. 1. The informant testified that he had reviewed this recording earlier on the day of trial and it accurately depicts the events surrounding his purchase of the cocaine from Ballard. He confirmed that the recording equipment was working properly on the date in question and that, “to [his] knowledge,” the recording had not been altered in any manner.
On voir dire examination by Ballard’s counsel, the informant agreed that this recording is a duplicate of the much smaller original recording. He was not present when the duplicate was made and did not maintain custody of the duplicate after it was made. He is not an expert specialized in the field of video and audio recording.
The prosecutor explained that the duplicate was made to fit the court’s video player and requested a continuance until the afternoon to obtain the original recording and equipment with which to play it. The court expressed reluctance to postpone the trial and asked whether Ballard even had an objection. Counsel responded:
The objection we would have, your Honor, at this point in time we would object to the introduction of it on the basis that the tape has not been in Mr. McDade’s possession. He does not have the expertise to say whether or not the tape may or may not have been altered at this time. So we would object to it on that basis. It is not the original that was with him at that time, it is a copy made by, we will admit to the State’s statement that it was made from a micro onto this for viewing purposes for convenience of the Court.
We will stipulate that that was the process done, but this particular witness I don’t think has the ability to introduce this tape into evidence at this time.
The court overruled the objection stating, “I’m going to find the objection goes to the weight and not admissibility at this time. But I will reserve my right to change my mind.”
The prosecutor then played the video recording for the court. The informant described what was happening as the recording played. He identified the persons depicted in the video except for one man whom he could not name. The audio recording is so poor that most of the conversations recorded are either inaudible or unintelligible. After the exhibit was played, the informant again testified that the recording accurately portrays the transaction depicted and that there are no alterations or additions to it.
Deputy Tanner confirmed much of the informant’s testimony. He testified that the recording equipment was in good working condition on the date in question. He activated the recording device when the informant got out of his pickup and turned it off when he returned. At the conclusion of Tanner’s testimony, the trial court asked him whether he questioned the authenticity of the recording. He responded, “No question. I actually saw the original before it was ever made into a copy.” Ballard’s counsel concluded by asking whether there is “any deviation, alteration, whatsoever” between the duplicate and the original. Tanner replied, “Not to my knowledge.”
Detective Fincher similarly confirmed much of the informant’s testimony. He explained that the original recording is on an eight-millimeter tape. Fincher copied the original recording on the same afternoon he retrieved it from the informant. He then placed the original in the evidence locker and secured the duplicate under lock and key in his office. Only one other detective had access to the recordings. Fincher testified that the duplicate offered in evidence is “a true and accurate copy of all of the contents on the original tape.”
Ballard argues in his sole point that the court erred in admitting the duplicate video recording because it was not properly authenticated. Under this point he asserts that the original recording should have been required because: (1) the authenticity of the duplicate was questioned; (2) the original was easily obtainable by the State; and (3) the State failed to establish a proper chain of custody for the duplicate.
The State first responds that Ballard has failed to preserve all but the chain of custody complaint because he did not raise the other objections at trial. We disagree. Ballard’s objection questioned whether the duplicate had been altered. This objection challenged the accuracy of the duplicate and thus its authenticity. See Angleton v. State, 971 S.W.2d 65, 67 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998). The objection complained about the State’s use of a duplicate recording. Thus, we deem it adequate to include Ballard’s argument on appeal that the duplicate should have been excluded because the original was available. See Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(e).
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