The State of Texas v. Bobbie Lee Lankford

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 27, 2025
Docket08-24-00089-CR
StatusPublished

This text of The State of Texas v. Bobbie Lee Lankford (The State of Texas v. Bobbie Lee Lankford) 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
The State of Texas v. Bobbie Lee Lankford, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

THE STATE OF TEXAS, § No. 08-24-00089-CR

Appellant, § Appeal from the

V. § 327th District Court

BOBBIE LANKFORD, § of El Paso County, Texas

Appellee. § (TC# 20220D01216)

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The State appeals from the trial court’s granting of a pretrial motion to suppress filed by

Appellee, Bobbie Lankford. In a single issue on appeal, the State asserts the trial court abused its

discretion by granting the motion. We reverse the portion of the trial court’s order granting the

motion to suppress the results of a forensic examination on a Cricket Alcatel cell phone conducted

pursuant to a search warrant issued on January 16, 2024. We affirm the order in all other respects

and remand the cause to the trial court for further proceedings.

I. MOTION TO SUPPRESS HEARING

At issue in this appeal are two search warrants. The first authorized the search of

Lankford’s residence and the seizure of certain electronic devices. After a forensic examination of

the cell phones seized under this warrant, a second search warrant issued authorizing a forensic examination of one of the seized cell phones. The affidavits in support of both search warrants

stated the devices were suspected of containing “pornographic images and videos of children under

18 years of age at the time the visual depictions were made, identifying information for the

suspected party and information that can be used to identify child victims.”

Lankford filed a pretrial motion to suppress, asserting the State obtained “evidence without

probable cause and without a valid warrant.” More specifically, at the hearing on the motion to

suppress, Lankford sought to suppress (1) the results of the first forensic examination of the

electronic devices conducted after the first search warrant was executed, and (2) the results of the

second forensic examination of one of Lankford’s cell phones conducted pursuant to the second

search warrant. At the hearing, Lankford abandoned his probable cause challenge to the search

warrants.

Lankford argued the first search warrant was invalid; therefore, the results of the first

forensic examination were illegally obtained and should be suppressed. Maintaining that the results

of the first forensic examination led to the second search warrant, which in turn authorized the

second forensic examination, Lankford argued the results of the second forensic examination also

were illegally obtained and should be suppressed. At the suppression hearing, Detective Luis

Reyes (who executed supporting affidavits for both warrants) and Justice of the Peace Brian

Haggerty (who issued the first search warrant) testified. Both search warrants were admitted in

evidence.

Reyes, a detective with the El Paso Police Department, testified that in 2022 he was

assigned to the El Paso Police Department Crimes Against Children Unit. He was contacted by the

Rainbow City Police Department for assistance in obtaining a search warrant for Lankford’s

residence and executing an arrest warrant that the police department obtained for Lankford. Reyes

2 prepared the affidavit in support of the first search warrant for Lankford’s residence, which was

issued by Haggerty on March 2, 2022. The first warrant authorized the search of Lankford’s

residence and the seizure of the following:

Personal Computer(s), computer hardware, software, optical disks, CD Rom’s, micro SD cards, flash drives, hard drives, cellular phones, cameras, camcorders, and/ or any other means of recording and/or storing electronic data, text documents, text messages, videos, handwritten notes containing passwords to computer or cell phones, ownership information of cell phones and/or computer, and any printed images depicting child pornography. To include the pins/passwords/pattern/facial/ fingerprint locks for any of the electronic devices.

Pursuant to the first warrant, several electronic devices were collected inside Lankford’s

residence, including a Cricket Alcatel cell phone IMEl:015320001136360 (the Cricket Alcatel).

Though Reyes’s affidavit supporting the first search warrant and incorporated therein requested a

forensic examination of the seized items, the first search warrant did not authorize a forensic

examination of any device. However, Reyes testified that a “number of cell phones” were seized

pursuant to the first warrant and the cell phones “were examined under the authority of this search

warrant.” Reyes said the forensic examinations of the cell phones revealed identifying information

linking the cell phones to Lankford “as well as a crime scene involving children.” As a result of

the first forensic examination, Lankford was charged with the offense of possession of child

pornography.

Reyes said that because child pornography was found only on one cell phone, he prepared

a second affidavit and requested the second search warrant for the Cricket Alcatel. The second

search warrant was issued by District Court Judge William Moody on January 16, 2024. The

second warrant authorized the seizure of “[a]ll data contained within the Cricket Alcatel Cellular

phone to include: Ownership Information, Subscriber Information, Images, Videos, Attachments

to messages, Applications and data (image and or videos) contained within the applications, and

3 deleted material.” Police later conducted a forensic examination of the Cricket Alcatel. Reyes had

no reason to believe that the first forensic search was substantively different from the second

forensic search.

Haggerty testified that he is the Precinct 2 Justice of the Peace, a position he had held for

15 years. He is not a licensed attorney. He said he had signed search warrants in El Paso County a

lot of times, and justices of the peace are allowed to sign search warrants so long as there is

probable cause.

Following the hearing, the trial court issued the following “Findings of Fact and

Conclusions of Law on [Lankford’s] Motion to Suppress Evidence.”1

2. Judge Brian Haggerty did not have legal authority to authorize the seizure of the [Cricket Alcatel] or any other cellphone collected by law enforcement on March 3, 2022. 3. The cellphones, in particular the [Cricket Alcatel], were collected without a valid search warrant. 4. The March 2, 2022[] search warrant was not compliant with the requirements of Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Section 18.0215. 5. In addition, Judge Haggerty did not have legal authority to sign a search warrant under Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Section 18.0215. 6. Therefore, the first forensic examination of the [Cricket Alcatel] and all other cell phones was conducted without a valid search warrant. 7. The results of the first forensic examination of the [Cricket Alcatel] and all the other cellphones are therefore barred and suppressed as illegally obtained. 8. The subsequent search warrant signed on January 16, 2024, by Judge William Moody was compliant with the requirements of Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Section 18.0215. 9. However, because the results of both forensic examinations are consistent with each other, and the results of the first forensic examination are already suppressed, the results of the second forensic analysis are also barred and suppressed as illegally obtained.

1 The first conclusion addressed the existence of probable cause.

4 The State filed a Notice of Appeal and certified “that jeopardy has not yet attached in this

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