Torres v. State

137 S.W.3d 191, 2004 Tex. App. LEXIS 2939, 2004 WL 639686
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 1, 2004
Docket01-01-01195-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 137 S.W.3d 191 (Torres 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
Torres v. State, 137 S.W.3d 191, 2004 Tex. App. LEXIS 2939, 2004 WL 639686 (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

SHERRY RADACK, Chief Justice.

A jury found appellant, Thelma Yolanda Torres, guilty of possession with intent to deliver at least 400 grams of cocaine, and the trial court assessed punishment at 30 years’ confinement. Because we find that appellant’s complaint regarding the trial court’s refusal to submit a requested jury instruction requires us to reverse the judgment and remand the cause, we need only discuss that issue and appellant’s complaint regarding the legal sufficiency of the evidence. 1 We reverse and remand.

The Evidence

A. Confidential informant testimony

Ramon Deleon testified that he worked as a confidential informant for Officer Tom Hanslik of the Houston Police Department (HPD) and Special Agent Brian Haltom of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). On August 25, 2000, Deleon met with Hanslik and Haltom and discussed an undercover drug operation. Before the meeting, Haltom searched Deleon and the car the officers had supplied to him for the operation and found no drugs.

Deleon then drove to a restaurant to meet with a man known as “Alfredo.” Alfredo, later identified as Oscar Moneada, was already in the restaurant with two women. Deleon identified one of the women as appellant. After Deleon sat down, appellant greeted him, then the other woman and Moneada greeted him. Deleon asked if he could purchase 20 kilos of cocaine. Appellant responded that if he bought five kilos first, then she would get Deleon the other 15 kilos. Deleon responded that that was ok, but he indicated he first wanted to “see if [the cocaine] was *194 any good.” Appellant wanted $16,500 per kilo, but later she and Moneada agreed to take $16,400 per kilo. After spending about 20 minutes in the restaurant, Deleon and Moneada left in the undercover ear that had been provided to Deleon by the DEA, and appellant and the other woman left in a silver Mustang. When Deleon and Moneada arrived at a trailer park, the two women were already there.

The four went inside a trailer and Deleon asked, “Where is [sic] the drugs?” Appellant told Moneada, “Show it to him. It’s in the bedroom.” Appellant took a bag out of the closet and placed it on the bed. After seeing that all of the requested kilos were present, Deleon took a small sample of the cocaine from a hole in the top of one of the bricks. Deleon told them that if the cocaine was any good, he would call them in about an hour.

Deleon left the trailer and told Special Agent Haltom, who was monitoring audio transmitting equipment in the undercover car, that “Brian, I have a sample for you. Call me if you want it. I am on my way out.” He also mentioned to Haltom that “there were two girls [and a man] with five kilos of cocaine.” Deleon gave the sample to Haltom, who determined, after a performing a field test, that it was cocaine.

B. Other testimony

1.HPD Officer Tom Hanslik

Officer Hanslik testified that he and Special Agent Haltom met with Deleon on August 25, 2000, to discuss an undercover narcotics operation. Hanslik testified that Haltom searched Deleon and the undercover car before Deleon left to meet with Moneada at a restaurant. Hanslik testified that he and Haltom maintained physical surveillance on Deleon until he went into the restaurant around 2 p.m. that afternoon. About 20 minutes later, Deleon left the restaurant with Moneada and two women. Hanslik identified one of the women as appellant. Deleon and Moneada drove in the undercover car and appellant and the other woman drove in a Silver Mustang. The officers maintained surveillance by an airplane overhead until Deleon, Moneada, appellant, and the other woman arrived at a trailer park and went inside a trailer.

At approximately 2:36 p.m., Deleon left the trailer, met Hanslik and Haltom, and gave them a cocaine sample, which he told them he had obtained at the trailer. The officers searched Deleon and the undercover car again, and then field tested the sample, which was positive for cocaine. Hanslik left to obtain a search warrant.

The search warrant for the trailer was served at approximately 5:30 p.m. Hanslik arrested appellant in the living room of the trailer. Moneada and the other woman were also arrested. Six kilograms of marihuana were recovered from the bedroom of the trailer, which was in a broad area connected to the room where appellant was arrested. Thirty-two grams of cocaine were recovered from a matchbox on the kitchen counter. Six kilograms of cocaine were recovered from a box outside the trailer, which was near a broken-down van.

2. Cornell Wilson, chemist

Cornell Wilson, a forensic chemist for the DEA, testified that the total weight of the cocaine recovered outside the trailer was approximately 5000 grams, or five kilograms.

3. Edwin Kroschell, air surveillance

Edwin Kroschell, a detective with the Harris County Sheriffs Department, testified that he was conducting visual surveillance of the trailer from an airplane on the date of appellant’s arrest. Beginning around three o’clock, Kroschell saw some *195 people come and go from the trailer in a Silver Mustang and saw another woman arrive in a taxi. Around five o’clock, a man went outside the trailer and began looking around as if he were waiting for someone. He then saw that same male run out of the back door of the trailer with a package in his hand. The man placed the package near the rear of an old van and then ran back in the trailer. As soon as the man got back to the trailer, the officers arrived to execute the search warrant.

Jb Domingo Guerra, HPD officer

After the officers executed the search warrant, HPD officer Domingo Guerra and his canine partner, Bo, were called to the scene to perform a narcotics check on the silver Mustang. Bo alerted on the center console of the Mustang, but no narcotics were found in the car. Guerra testified that about 99 percent of the time, he finds drugs when Bo makes a positive alert. He was surprised to find no drugs in the car, and concluded that at some point in time, there had been narcotics in the center console and that Bo reacted to the scent left behind.

5. Brian Haltom, DEA Special Agent

Special Agent Haltom testified that he had used Deleon on several occasions in the past and had found him to be a reliable and credible informant. On the day of appellant’s arrest, Haltom and his partner, Hanslik, met with Deleon at 1:30 p.m. to plan an undercover meeting between Deleon and “Alfredo,” also known as Oscar Moneada. Haltom searched Deleon and the undercover car that was to be used in the operation. Haltom and Hanslik then followed Deleon to a restaurant, where they saw him meeting with Moneada and two women. After about 15 or 20 minutes, Deleon left with Moneada in the undercover car and the two women, one of which was appellant, left in a silver Mustang.

Haltom followed them to a trailer park. When Deleon left the trailer, he met with Haltom and gave him a sample of suspected cocaine, which field-tested positive.

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Bluebook (online)
137 S.W.3d 191, 2004 Tex. App. LEXIS 2939, 2004 WL 639686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/torres-v-state-texapp-2004.