Kydrick Reshawd Benton v. State ( 2016 )


Menu:
  •                                  IN THE
    TENTH COURT OF APPEALS
    No. 10-14-00279-CR
    KYDRICK RESHAWD BENTON,
    Appellant
    v.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS,
    Appellee
    From the 361st District Court
    Brazos County, Texas
    Trial Court No. 13-04453-CRF-361
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Appellant Kydrick Benton pleaded guilty to aggravated robbery, and a jury
    assessed his punishment at thirty-eight years’ confinement. This appeal ensued.
    Guilty Plea
    In his first issue, Benton contends that the trial court denied him due process of
    law under the Fourteenth Amendment by accepting his guilty plea without properly
    admonishing him of his rights and without determining that he was competent and was
    entering his guilty plea freely and voluntarily. Similarly, in his second issue, Benton
    contends that the trial court erred in accepting a guilty plea that was in violation of Code
    of Criminal Procedure article 26.13(b), which states, “No plea of guilty or plea of nolo
    contendere shall be accepted by the court unless it appears that the defendant is mentally
    competent and the plea is free and voluntary.” TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 26.13(b)
    (West Supp. 2016). Benton addresses these two issues together in his brief, and, other
    than citing the statute itself, Benton offers no argument or authority regarding the specific
    protections provided by article 26.13(b) or how the protections provided by article
    26.13(b) differ from federal due-process protections. We therefore consider Benton’s
    second issue inadequately briefed and will address only his first issue regarding federal
    due-process jurisprudence. See Manns v. State, 
    122 S.W.3d 171
    , 192 n.97 (Tex. Crim. App.
    2003); Johnson v. State, 
    853 S.W.2d 527
    , 533 (Tex. Crim. App. 1992).
    In this case, the following exchange occurred just before the voir dire examination
    began:
    THE COURT: All right. We’re outside the presence of the jury,
    Cause No. 13-04453-CRF-361. Mr. Benton is present with his attorney.
    Mr. Benton, it’s my understanding you want to plead guilty to Count
    3 of the indictment; is that correct, sir?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.
    THE COURT: You understand you have a right to a trial by jury on
    the guilt phase as well as the punishment phase of the trial?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.
    Benton v. State                                                                        Page 2
    THE COURT: You also have the right to confront and cross-examine
    witnesses, you have the right to call witnesses on your own behalf, you have
    a right to testify or not testify as you wish. You cannot been [sic] compelled
    to testify. Do you understand that?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.
    THE COURT: You understand the range of punishment for this case
    is between five to 99 years or life imprisonment. I understand you have
    filed a request for probation, but you understand that is up to the jury and
    the jury alone?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.
    THE COURT: Okay. The State alleges in Count 3 that back on June
    the 13th of 2013, here in Brazos County, Texas, while in the course of
    committing theft of property, and with the intent to obtain or maintain
    control of that property, that you intentionally or knowingly threatened or
    placed Vidimara Garcia in fear of imminent bodily injury or death, and that
    when you did that you used or exhibited a deadly weapon, specifically a
    firearm.
    Do you understand that charge of aggravated robbery?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.
    THE COURT: And how do you plead to that charge?
    THE DEFENDANT: Guilty.
    THE COURT: It is my understanding that we are now going to go
    select the jury on the punishment phase of the trial and that the Defendant
    has filed his request for election for the jury to assess punishment and also
    filed his application for probation; am I correct?
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Those are on your bench, Tiffany wasn’t
    here, he signed, it’s been notarized, but it’s bench-filed.
    THE COURT: It’s bench-filed, yeah.
    Benton v. State                                                                          Page 3
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Judge, a scheduling question about all this
    just so we kind of have an idea about witnesses and what have you so we
    can work most efficiently for you.
    My understanding from the State - - well, can you walk through
    what y’all anticipate?
    ....
    [PROSECUTOR]: We could take - - we could take the Defense
    witnesses out of order.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: That would work, Judge, because some of
    my witnesses - - I’m going to put a probation officer on. That will take 30
    minutes.
    THE COURT: Right. We can get one of those across the street.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: And I have one sheriff’s guard that I’ll put
    on over there so that we can put that - - as long as we’re doing that, I’m
    confident that we can have him on a 15-minute standby so that if we get
    there - -
    THE COURT: Okay.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: And I don’t mind taking that out of order.
    Kydrick, do you understand what we’re talking about?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Do you have any questions about that?
    THE DEFENDANT: No, sir.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Do you trust me when I say that that’s
    okay?
    THE DEFENDANT: That’s okay.
    Benton v. State                                                                       Page 4
    THE COURT: Yeah. And that’s fine with the Court too, because the
    jury is going to hear the evidence no matter what.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Yes, sir.
    [PROSECUTOR]: Right.
    THE COURT: It just may not be in the same order that we normally
    hear it.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: And as long [as] we’re explaining it and
    everything is going along.
    THE COURT: Yeah, that’ll work.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: We talked about one other issue on this,
    Judge. The Court - - I had requested it and the Court had a competency
    and sanity evaluation done in this case. In voir dire, part of what - - we’ve
    talked about how to address that with the jury.
    My anticipation in voir dire is to bring up the issue that we wouldn’t
    be here if there wasn’t a finding of competency and sanity. Because what I
    want to avoid - - I think what everyone wants to avoid - - is that through
    this case there will be some questions about Mr. Benton’s mental status, but
    I don’t want a psychiatrist in the box that’s going to diagnose and do all
    sorts of strange things in there that - -
    THE COURT: Because there’s a question of when you put that
    psychiatrist on how much of his Fifth Amendment goes out the door,
    sometimes.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Yes, sir. Yes, sir.
    THE COURT: Okay. Very well.
    Benton subsequently pleaded guilty in front of the jury.
    Federal due process requires that “[w]aivers of constitutional rights
    not only must be voluntary but must be knowing, intelligent acts done with
    Benton v. State                                                                          Page 5
    sufficient awareness of the relevant circumstances and likely
    consequences.” A criminal defendant who enters a plea of guilty has by
    definition relinquished his Sixth Amendment rights to a trial by jury and to
    confront the witnesses against him, as well as his Fifth Amendment
    privilege against self-incrimination. “For this waiver to be valid under the
    Due Process Clause, it must be ‘an intentional relinquishment or
    abandonment of a known right or privilege.’” A criminal defendant who is
    induced to plead guilty in a state court in total ignorance of the precise
    nature of the charge and the range of punishment it carries has suffered a
    violation of procedural due process. Such a defendant
    has such an incomplete understanding of the charge that his
    plea cannot stand as an intelligent admission of guilt.
    Without adequate notice of the nature of the charge against
    him, or proof that he in fact understood the charge, the plea
    cannot be voluntary in this … sense.
    For his guilty plea to be constitutionally valid, then, the defendant must
    have an actual awareness of the nature and gravity of the charges against
    him and of the constitutional rights and privileges that he necessarily
    relinquishes—in short, “a full understanding of what the plea connotes and
    of its consequence.”
    Davison v. State, 
    405 S.W.3d 682
    , 686-87 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013) (footnotes omitted).
    Benton argues that the record does not demonstrate that his guilty plea was
    entered freely, voluntarily, and knowingly. Benton asserts that he did not execute any
    written waiver of his rights and that the trial court failed to advise him of the right to be
    convicted only upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt, to inquire whether he was
    entering his plea knowingly and voluntarily, and to inquire if anything had been
    promised to him in exchange for his guilty plea. The State responds that due process
    does not require these specific admonishments.
    Benton v. State                                                                        Page 6
    Although due process does not require specific admonishments, see Aguirre-Mata
    v. State, 
    125 S.W.3d 473
    , 475-76 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003), it does require that the defendant
    have “a full understanding of what the plea connotes and of its consequence.” See
    
    Davison, 405 S.W.3d at 686-87
    (quoting Boykin v. Alabama, 
    395 U.S. 238
    , 244, 
    89 S. Ct. 1709
    ,
    1712, 
    23 L. Ed. 2d 274
    (1969)). Here, the trial court informed Benton that he had a right to
    trial by jury at both the guilt/innocence and punishment phases of trial, that he had the
    right to confront and cross-examine witnesses, that he had the right to call witnesses, and
    that he had the right not to be compelled to testify. Benton responded that he understood
    that he had these rights. The trial court, however, never explained to Benton what effect
    his pleading guilty would have on these rights. The trial court never informed Benton
    that he was relinquishing any of these rights by pleading guilty.
    In Boykin, the U.S. Supreme Court held that when the record of a criminal
    conviction obtained by guilty plea contains no evidence that a defendant knew of the
    rights he was putatively waiving, the conviction must be reversed. United States v.
    Benitez, 
    542 U.S. 74
    , 84 n.10, 
    124 S. Ct. 2333
    , 2341 n.10, 
    159 L. Ed. 2d 157
    (2004) (citing 
    Boykin, 395 U.S. at 243
    , 89 S.Ct. at 1712). But Boykin’s holding does not mean that a defendant
    necessarily prevails on his constitutional claim just because the record fails to show that
    he was properly admonished by the trial court. 
    Davison, 405 S.W.3d at 687
    . “[T]he record
    must also be silent with respect to whether he was otherwise provided, or nevertheless
    Benton v. State                                                                          Page 7
    aware of, the requisite information to render his guilty plea voluntary and intelligent.”
    
    Id. The record
    in this case is not totally “silent” with respect to Benton’s knowledge
    that, by pleading guilty, he was relinquishing his Sixth Amendment rights to a trial by
    jury and to confront the witnesses against him, as well as his Fifth Amendment privilege
    against self-incrimination, at the guilt/innocence phase of trial. As shown above, the trial
    court did inform Benton of each of these rights. Furthermore, the record reveals that
    Benton indicated to his counsel during the punishment phase that he was frustrated with
    the State’s presentation of the evidence against him, not because he wanted to challenge
    the witnesses or dispute the evidence, but because he had pleaded guilty because of what
    he had done and therefore wanted to simply accept his punishment without the State
    “bashing it in my head.” It may therefore be inferred that Benton did not plead guilty
    without knowing that he was relinquishing his Sixth Amendment rights to a trial by jury
    and to confront the witnesses against him, as well as his Fifth Amendment privilege
    against self-incrimination, at the guilt/innocence phase of trial. We thus conclude that
    the trial court did not violate Benton’s federal due-process rights by accepting his guilty
    plea as free and voluntary.
    Benton also argues that the record does not demonstrate that he was competent to
    enter his guilty plea. Benton contends that although there is a reference made to a
    Benton v. State                                                                       Page 8
    competency evaluation, there was no inquiry made of him or his counsel about his
    competency at the time of trial.1
    Under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, a trial court may
    not accept a defendant’s guilty plea unless that defendant is competent to make such a
    plea. See Medina v. California, 
    505 U.S. 437
    , 439, 
    112 S. Ct. 2572
    , 2574, 
    120 L. Ed. 2d 353
    (1992). But unless an issue is made of the defendant’s mental competency at the time of
    the plea, the trial court need not make inquiry or hear evidence on the issue. Kuyava v.
    State, 
    538 S.W.2d 627
    , 628 (Tex. Crim. App. 1976); see TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art.
    46B.004(c-1) (West Supp. 2016) (“A suggestion of incompetency is the threshold
    requirement for an informal inquiry.”); 
    Medina, 505 U.S. at 450-51
    , 112 S.Ct. at 2580
    (holding that allocation of burden of proof to defendant does not offend due process).
    This is particularly true when the trial court had an opportunity to observe the defendant
    in open court. 
    Kuyava, 538 S.W.2d at 628
    .
    About five months before Benton entered his guilty plea, his counsel filed a motion
    suggesting incompetency and requesting an examination of Benton. During the above-
    quoted exchange that occurred just before the voir-dire examination began, his counsel
    acknowledged that a competency evaluation had been done and that Benton had been
    1Benton asserts that the only other reference to his mental state was during the punishment phase when
    “the trial court was informed that [he] was threatening suicide,” and the trial court “made no inquiry into
    his state of mind but simply advised him and his counsel that he was free to absent himself from the
    proceedings.” Benton, however, does not argue that the trial court failed to inquire about his competency
    at that point in the punishment proceeding.
    Benton v. State                                                                                     Page 9
    found competent. During the voir-dire examination immediately following the above-
    quoted exchange, Benton’s counsel then stated:
    Okay. Tell you one thing here, is that in order to get to where we are today,
    where we are having a trial, the one thing that you can be guaranteed is that
    the individual on trial is competent and sane. Okay. That there are not
    questions about their competence or ability to understand the proceedings
    and what’s going on. And their sanity, their ability to comprehend what
    they did, when they did it and to realize that it was wrong. Okay.
    And there was no suggestion that Benton was incompetent when he subsequently
    pleaded guilty in front of the jury. Therefore, the trial court did not violate Benton’s due-
    process rights by not inquiring about his competency at the time he entered his guilty
    plea. We overrule Benton’s first and second issues.
    Motion to Suppress
    In his third issue, Benton contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion
    to suppress the evidence that was seized during the warrantless search of his vehicle.
    Benton states that the question before us is “whether the facts were sufficient to perform
    a Terry frisk of a silver Lincoln when the only information law enforcement possessed
    was that the witness said the suspect had left in a [gray] Mitsubishi Galant[ ] and
    provided no license tag number.”
    We review a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress evidence under a
    bifurcated standard of review. Amador v. State, 
    221 S.W.3d 666
    , 673 (Tex. Crim. App.
    2007). In reviewing the trial court’s decision, we do not engage in our own factual review.
    Romero v. State, 
    800 S.W.2d 539
    , 543 (Tex. Crim. App. 1990); Best v. State, 
    118 S.W.3d 857
    ,
    Benton v. State                                                                         Page 10
    861 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2003, no pet.). The trial judge is the sole trier of fact and
    judge of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given their testimony. Wiede
    v. State, 
    214 S.W.3d 17
    , 24-25 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007); State v. Ross, 
    32 S.W.3d 853
    , 855 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 2000), modified on other grounds by State v. Cullen, 
    195 S.W.3d 696
    (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2006). Therefore, we give almost total deference to the trial court’s rulings on (1)
    questions of historical fact, even if the trial court’s determination of those facts was not
    based on an evaluation of credibility and demeanor; and (2) application-of-law-to-fact
    questions that turn on an evaluation of credibility and demeanor. 
    Amador, 221 S.W.3d at 673
    ; Montanez v. State, 
    195 S.W.3d 101
    , 108-09 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006); Johnson v. State, 
    68 S.W.3d 644
    , 652-53 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002). But when application-of-law-to-fact questions
    do not turn on the credibility and demeanor of the witnesses, we review the trial court’s
    rulings on those questions de novo. 
    Amador, 221 S.W.3d at 673
    ; 
    Johnson, 68 S.W.3d at 652
    -
    53.
    Under Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 
    88 S. Ct. 1868
    , 
    20 L. Ed. 2d 889
    (1968), the police can
    stop and briefly detain a person for investigative purposes if they have a reasonable
    suspicion supported by articulable facts that criminal activity may be afoot. United States
    v. Sokolow, 
    490 U.S. 1
    , 7, 
    109 S. Ct. 1581
    , 1585, 
    104 L. Ed. 2d 1
    (1989) (citing 
    Terry, 392 U.S. at 30
    , 88 S.Ct. at 1884-85). Reasonable suspicion exists when, based on the totality of the
    circumstances, the officer has specific, articulable facts that, when combined with rational
    inferences from those facts, would lead him to reasonably conclude that a particular
    Benton v. State                                                                         Page 11
    person is, has been, or soon will be engaged in criminal activity. Ford v. State, 
    158 S.W.3d 488
    , 492-93 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005). This is an objective standard that disregards any
    subjective intent of the officer making the stop and looks solely to whether an objective
    basis for the stop exists. 
    Id. at 492.
    Whether the totality of the circumstances is sufficient
    to support an officer’s reasonable suspicion is a legal question that we review de novo.
    See Madden v. State, 
    242 S.W.3d 504
    , 517 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007).
    At the hearing on the motion to suppress, Bryan Police Sergeant Lance Mathews
    testified that, on June 19, 2013, a 911 call was made, reporting that a robbery had just
    occurred at Prosperity Bank. The 911 call was admitted into evidence. The 911 caller,
    who identified herself by name, reported that Prosperity Bank had been robbed by a black
    male who had a handgun and was wearing a black hoodie, blue mask, and sunglasses.
    The caller further stated that the man had just left in a light gray Mitsubishi Galant with
    no license plate on the front and a paper license plate on the back.
    Mathews testified that dispatch relayed that the suspect vehicle was a gray
    Mitsubishi Galant. Mathews has experience with civilian identifications of vehicles. He
    stated that sometimes civilians get the makes and models of vehicles “mixed up”;
    therefore, if dispatch said that the suspect vehicle was a gray Mitsubishi, he would try to
    narrow the search but would not limit it to only gray Mitsubishis.
    Bryan Police Officer Crystal O’Rear testified that, on June 19, when the call was
    received about the bank robbery, she was dispatched to Prosperity Bank in a marked
    Benton v. State                                                                        Page 12
    patrol car. Dispatch gave her the vehicle description of a silver Mitsubishi Galant and
    informed her that a gun had been used in the robbery. She knew nothing about whether
    there were license plates on the vehicle.
    O’Rear stated that, as she was traveling to Prosperity Bank, she saw a silver
    Lincoln LS with temporary tags on the back. She turned around to follow the vehicle
    because it looked similar to the vehicle described in the dispatch call. She was also a short
    distance—about a mile or two—from the bank, and she acknowledged that it would have
    been very reasonable for her to encounter the suspect vehicle at that point if it had left
    Prosperity Bank when she had gotten the dispatch call. She did not attempt to stop the
    vehicle at that time.
    Benton argues that these facts were not sufficient to establish reasonable suspicion
    because the only information that law enforcement had at that time was that a witness
    said that the suspect had left in a gray Mitsubishi Galant and, according to Mathews,
    witness information about vehicles can be unreliable. But Mathews did not testify that
    witness testimony should be ignored; he merely testified that civilians sometimes get the
    makes and models of vehicles “mixed up.” Furthermore, the reliability of an anonymous
    tip can be heightened when, as here, an informant places himself in a position to be easily
    identified and held responsible for the information provided. Hawes v. State, 
    125 S.W.3d 535
    , 538 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2002, no pet.). The U.S. Supreme Court has
    recognized that because the 911 system “has some features that allow for identifying and
    Benton v. State                                                                       Page 13
    tracing callers,” tips from 911 callers should be considered more reliable. Navarette v.
    California, 
    134 S. Ct. 1683
    , 1689-90, 
    188 L. Ed. 2d 680
    (2014). Courts also consider a person
    who is not connected with the police or who is not a paid informant to be inherently
    trustworthy when advising the police of suspected criminal activity. Taflinger v. State,
    
    414 S.W.3d 881
    , 885 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2013, no pet.). Most importantly,
    however, the information from the 911 caller is not the totality of the circumstances. See
    
    Ford, 158 S.W.3d at 492-93
    .
    O’Rear testified that when she turned around to follow the Lincoln, she lost sight
    of it but then saw it parked in a driveway. Another officer was with her by this point.
    They got out of their vehicles and walked toward the suspect vehicle. She did not see the
    driver because the windows of the vehicle were tinted. The vehicle then quickly reversed
    out of the driveway and drove away from them. O’Rear radioed dispatch to let them
    know that they “probably had the vehicle.” She then got into her patrol car to try to find
    the suspect vehicle again. She subsequently received a call that the vehicle had been
    found in the same area where she had initially tried to contact the vehicle.
    Benton asserts that the foregoing conduct by the driver of the Lincoln does not rise
    to a reasonable suspicion because it is not reasonable to presume that the driver of the
    Lincoln saw O’Rear when she attempted to approach the car while it was parked in the
    driveway. Benton argues that the driver’s behavior could not therefore be categorized as
    flight. But because the trial court denied Benton’s motion to suppress without express
    Benton v. State                                                                      Page 14
    findings of fact, we must assume that the trial court made implicit findings of fact that
    support its ruling as long as those findings are supported by the record. See Lujan v. State,
    
    331 S.W.3d 768
    , 771-72 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011). Here, O’Rear stated that she got out of
    her marked patrol car, along with another officer, and walked toward the suspect vehicle
    when the suspect vehicle quickly reversed out of the driveway and drove away from
    them. It can be rationally inferred from these facts that the driver of the Lincoln saw
    O’Rear as she attempted to approach the vehicle and fled. See Reyes v. State, 
    899 S.W.2d 319
    , 324-25 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1995, pet. ref’d) (stating that flight alone
    may not justify investigatory detention, but flight from show of authority is factor in
    support of a finding that there is reasonable suspicion that person is involved in criminal
    activity).
    Mathews testified that the suspect vehicle was found and that he went to the
    location. Several officers were already at the location where a silver Lincoln was parked
    in the driveway of one of the houses. Mathews said that the silver Lincoln looked very
    similar to a silver or gray Mitsubishi Galant. They set up a perimeter on the vehicle.
    Mathews stated that this was occurring minutes after the initial call came in about the
    bank robbery. At that point, they had not recovered the gun. The windows of the vehicle
    had dark tint on them, so they did not know if someone was still in the vehicle or how
    many suspects were involved. Sometimes in robbery cases, there is a person who never
    goes into the bank and whose job is to be the driver of the car.
    Benton v. State                                                                       Page 15
    Mathews testified that they called out to anyone who might be in the vehicle. They
    used a K-9 to try to draw someone out of the vehicle. Keys were then brought to Mathews
    by another officer. When asked by Benton’s counsel where Mathews believed the officer
    got the keys, Mathews replied, “Off of your client at the tire shop just adjacent or just
    west of this house.” Mathews “popped the trunk” with the key fob to make sure that the
    keys worked for the vehicle. He then unlocked the vehicle doors to give them the ability
    to more quickly and easily secure a person who might be in the vehicle. Officers then
    used the “K-9 Tahoe” as cover to approach the vehicle and open the driver’s side door.
    Once the door was opened, they discovered that no one was inside the vehicle. But laying
    in the front seat, visible from outside the open door, was clothing that matched the
    description of the clothing worn by the suspect during the bank robbery, including
    gloves, a hooded sweatshirt, sunglasses, and a ball cap. They then entered the vehicle
    without a warrant.
    We have already discussed the 911 caller’s information and the driver’s conduct
    when O’Rear walked toward the vehicle. Mathews’s testimony then shows that the
    Lincoln was found parked again. This was occurring just minutes after the initial call
    came in about the bank robbery, so law enforcement did not know how many suspects
    were involved. The windows of the vehicle had such dark tint that the officers did not
    know if someone was still in the vehicle. And although the keys to the vehicle were
    Benton v. State                                                                    Page 16
    recovered, the evidence shows that neither the gun nor the clothing worn by the suspect
    during the bank robbery had been recovered.
    We therefore conclude that, based on the totality of the circumstances, the officers
    had reasonable suspicion, supported by articulable facts and rational inferences from
    those facts, that there was a person in the Lincoln who was, had been, or soon would be
    engaged in criminal activity.    See 
    Ford, 158 S.W.3d at 492-93
    . It is not relevant that once
    the door to the Lincoln was opened, law enforcement discovered that no one was inside
    the vehicle. A mistake about the facts, if reasonable, will not vitiate an officer’s actions in
    hindsight so long as his actions were lawful under the facts as he reasonably, albeit
    mistakenly, perceived them to be. Robinson v. State, 
    377 S.W.3d 712
    , 720-21 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2012).
    The trial court did not err in denying Benton’s motion to suppress. We overrule
    his third issue.
    Having overruled all of Benton’s issues, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    REX D. DAVIS
    Justice
    Benton v. State                                                                         Page 17
    Before Chief Justice Gray,
    Justice Davis, and
    Justice Scoggins
    Affirmed
    Opinion delivered and filed November 9, 2016
    Do not publish
    [CRPM]
    Benton v. State                                Page 18