Todd Parker Neuwirth v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 21, 2019
Docket09-18-00249-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Todd Parker Neuwirth v. State (Todd Parker Neuwirth 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
Todd Parker Neuwirth v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-18-00248-CR NO. 09-18-00249-CR __________________

TODD PARKER NEUWIRTH, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 221st District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause Nos. 17-09-11252-CR, 17-09-11254-CR __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

After the trial court denied appellant Todd Parker Neuwirth’s motion to

suppress, a jury found him guilty on two charges, tampering with a governmental

record and the fraudulent use or possession of identifying information. In five issues

on appeal, Neuwirth argues that the trial court erred by denying his motion to

suppress and that the evidence was legally insufficient to support his conviction for

1 the offense of tampering with a governmental record. In trial cause number 17-09-

11252-CR, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and render a judgment of acquittal.

In trial cause number 17-09-11254-CR, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

A grand jury indicted Neuwirth for tampering with a governmental record and

for the fraudulent use or possession of identifying information. See Tex. Penal Code

Ann. §§ 32.51(c)(3), 37.10(a)(1) (West 2016). Neuwirth filed a motion to suppress

evidence seized from the traffic stop that led to the search of his vehicle. Neuwirth

asserted that he was subjected to a warrantless search and seizure that went beyond

the scope of the alleged pretextual traffic stop, which Neuwirth contends was a

fishing expedition to search his vehicle for unrelated criminal activity. Neuwirth

argued that his seizure was unlawful because it was prolonged beyond the time

reasonably required to complete the investigation of the traffic offense, and that the

dog sniff was an unreasonable search because it was conducted after the traffic stop

was completed. According to Neuwirth, the traffic stop was merely a ruse to bypass

the need for a warrant or probable cause, and because he did not consent to the

search, all the evidence obtained from the illegal search was inadmissible. The trial

court did not conduct a pretrial hearing on the motion to suppress because the parties

agreed to carry the motion during the trial.

2 The trial court denied Neuwirth’s motion to suppress during the testimony of

Officer Michael St. Romain, a certified K9 officer with the Splendora Police

Department. St. Romain testified that his dog is trained in narcotics detection and

has several ways of alerting when drugs are present. St. Romain explained that a

false positive, which occurs when a dog alerts to the actual odor of a narcotic that is

no longer present, is a valid alert. St. Romain testified that he is not allowed to

prolong a traffic stop to see if the dog will alert on a vehicle, and he cannot coerce

the dog to make a positive alert. St. Romain testified that he knows the odor of

narcotics is present when a dog alerts on a vehicle, and a dog alert gives him probable

cause to search the vehicle without a search warrant.

St. Romain testified that he was on patrol on the morning of September 15,

2017, when he observed a vehicle traveling at a high rate of speed that he described

as being “very dangerous[.]” St. Romain explained that the speed was unsafe due to

the existing circumstances and traffic patterns in the area. St. Romain testified that

after he observed the vehicle change lanes without using a turn signal, he initiated a

traffic stop. St. Romain explained that Neuwirth was driving the vehicle, and

Neuwirth provided a Texas identification card and reported that his driver’s license

had been expired for about a year. According to St. Romain, Neuwirth claimed that

3 he had insurance and could access it on his cellular phone, but Neuwirth never

displayed it.

St. Romain testified that during the stop, he observed that Neuwirth was very

evasive, failed to keep eye contact, and kept looking down at a backpack in the

floorboard of the front passenger seat. St. Romain also testified that he observed

what appeared to be a switchblade or a large knife and the butt of a handgun in the

center console. After Neuwirth denied consent to search his vehicle, St. Romain

asked Neuwirth to exit the vehicle for safety purposes and conducted a frisk to check

if Neuwirth had any weapons on his person. St. Romain explained that he waited for

backup to arrive and for dispatch to run a check on the identification number that

Neuwirth had provided. After backup arrived, St. Romain advised Neuwirth that he

was going to run his dog on the vehicle, and at that point, St. Romain explained he

had not completed the traffic stop. According to St. Romain, he only intended to

allow the dog to do an open-air search of the exterior of the vehicle. St. Romain

testified that his dog positively alerted on the vehicle by jumping on the hood,

standing up at the door, and jumping through the driver’s side window and lying

down with his face buried in the backpack located in the front passenger seat. St.

Romain explained that once the dog alerted on the vehicle, he had probable cause to

search the vehicle, and he detained Neuwirth while he conducted the search.

4 At that point, defense counsel objected, and the trial court dismissed the jury

and conducted a hearing on Neuwirth’s motion to suppress. During the hearing, St.

Romain testified that Neuwirth was traveling at a high rate of speed and that he had

to accelerate to high rates of speed to catch up with Neuwirth, and St. Romain

explained that he observed Neuwirth change lanes. According to St. Romain, he

pulled Neuwirth over for driving at an unsafe speed and making an unsafe lane

change.

St. Romain testified that Neuwirth reported that his driver’s license was

expired and that he had previous convictions for possession of a controlled substance

and bank fraud, and that Neuwirth never provided proof of insurance. St. Romain

also testified that he observed a large knife in plain view, and that Neuwirth was

acting fidgety, evasive, and was focused on the center console and a backpack that

was in the floorboard of the front passenger seat. According to St. Romain, when

Neuwirth lifted the center console, he saw other knives and what appeared to be the

handle of a gun. St. Romain explained that he asked Neuwirth to exit the vehicle

because of safety concerns. St. Romain testified that when he asked Neuwirth if he

had anything illegal in the vehicle, Neuwirth stated that he did not have any drugs.

St. Romain described Neuwirth as evasive and explained that it was not a normal

traffic stop.

5 St. Romain testified that he could not write a citation after he frisked Neuwirth

because, at that point, he did not know if Neuwirth had a driver’s license or

insurance. St. Romain explained that Neuwirth was detained when the dog positively

alerted on the backpack in the vehicle and when St. Romain searched the vehicle.

After considering St. Romain’s testimony and viewing St. Romain’s in-car video,

the trial court denied the motion to suppress, and St. Romain continued with his

direct testimony.

St. Romain explained that he had a recording device in his vehicle that

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