Trina Lynn Olguin v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 18, 2003
Docket08-02-00241-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Trina Lynn Olguin v. State (Trina Lynn Olguin 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
Trina Lynn Olguin v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS

TRINA LYNN OLGUIN,

                            Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS,

                            Appellee.

'

                No. 08-02-00241-CR

Appeal from the

244th District Court

of Ector County, Texas

(TC# C-29,057)

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Trina Lynn Olguin appeals the trial court=s denial of her motion to suppress evidence and her motion to suppress unlawful stop, detention and arrest.  After the denial of these motions, Olguin pleaded guilty to possession of a controlled substance, to wit: cocaine, in an amount of four grams or more but less than two hundred grams, and received a sentence of eight years= confinement, probated, a 180 day suspension of her driver=s license, and payment of a fine.  We affirm.


Facts

On April 20, 2001, Officer Kelly Cecil stopped a Plymouth Neon driving forty-four miles per hour in a thirty mile per hour zone.  As he approached the vehicle on the corner of West 20th and Santa Monica, Trina Lynn Olguin, the driver, stuck her head out of the window and started talking to him.  When the officer asked for her license and insurance, Olguin said she had it in her trunk.  After looking through the trunk, Olguin told the officer that she could only find her birth certificate.

As Officer Cecil was looking at the birth certificate, he explained to Olguin that he could smell the odor of marijuana coming from the inside of her car.  He also noticed that she was Afidgety, kind of hyper, and I don=t know if you want to call it nervous, whatever, just kind of bouncing around a little.@  After Olguin told him there was no reason for the smell of marijuana to be coming from the car, Officer Cecil kept talking with her.  Then he noticed the smell of marijuana coming from her.  He asked her if she had been smoking marijuana that day.  She said no.  She then told the officer that she had just left her boyfriend=s house for lunch.  When asked if her boyfriend or anyone else was smoking marijuana there, she told the officer that she was at her cousin=s house and that the cousin was smoking marijuana.


Officer Cecil asked if she had any narcotics in the car.  She said no and offered to let the officer check her bag.  No narcotics were found in her bag.  He then asked if she had any narcotics in her car.  She answered no.  When Officer Cecil asked if he could search the car, Olguin walked to the door, which was open, but did not respond verbally.  When he asked a second time, Olguin just looked at him.  The third time, he asked if she would mind if he searched the car.  She said no, and he began his search.  There was no written consent, but the interaction was videotaped.  When the officer stepped to the open driver=s door, he found a half-burned marijuana cigarette in the handle of the door panel.  At that point, Olguin was arrested and handcuffed.  She was then read her Miranda rights.  After Olguin responded that she understood her rights, Officer Cecil escorted her to the back of his cruiser.

Officer Cecil continued to search the car; checking the pockets of a jacket in the passenger seat, he found a pack of cigarettes, some money, and a plastic bag containing what appeared to be cocaine.  A field test confirmed that the substance in the bag was cocaine.  The cocaine in the plastic bag was packaged in fourteen individually wrapped balls of cocaine with an aggregate weight of seventeen grams.  In the right pocket of the jacket was a small amount of marijuana and some rolling papers.


As they were driving to the law enforcement center, Olguin told Officer Cecil that she was getting dizzy and that her hands and feet were swelling.  He asked if she wanted an ambulance, but she declined.  He also asked her how long she had been using cocaine.  Olguin told him that she had been doing cocaine since she was seventeen years old, but Anot as bad as she=s been doing it now.@  She also told the officer that the cocaine was for personal use and that she bought it for $400.  At no point did Olguin indicate to the officer that she wanted to invoke her right to remain silent.  The video recording continued while he transported her.

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