Carl Dooley v. State ( 2004 )


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  •       TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
    NO. 03-02-00553-CR
    Carl Dooley, Appellant
    v.
    The State of Texas, Appellee
    FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 403RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    NO. 3010341, HONORABLE MICHAEL J. MCCORMICK, JUDGE PRESIDING
    OPINION
    A jury found appellant Carl Dooley guilty of tampering with physical evidence. See
    Tex. Pen. Code Ann. § 37.09 (West 2003). The district court assessed his punishment, enhanced by
    a previous felony conviction, at ten years’ imprisonment. Appellant now contends that the evidence
    is legally and factually insufficient to sustain the jury’s verdict.1 We will affirm.
    The events giving rise to this prosecution occurred when police officers went to an
    Austin address to execute a parole violator warrant for appellant’s sister, Linda Dooley. The
    building at this address housed a bait shop in the front and a residence in the rear. The officers saw
    1
    Appellant’s first court-appointed attorney filed a brief concluding that the appeal was frivolous.
    See Anders v. California, 
    386 U.S. 738
    (1967). Appellant then filed a pro se brief indirectly
    challenging the sufficiency of the evidence. After examining the record, we concluded that this issue
    could not be regarded as frivolous. We therefore ordered the district court to appoint substitute
    counsel to brief this and any other issues counsel might consider meritorious. See Stafford v. State,
    
    813 S.W.2d 503
    , 511 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991).
    a woman matching Linda Dooley’s description enter the shop. At least three officers, who were
    dressed in civilian clothing but wearing vests identifying them as police, followed her in and were
    met by a bait shop employee. When the officers told him they were looking for Linda Dooley, the
    employee said he would have to speak with Dooley’s mother. The officers followed the employee
    into the residential portion of the building.
    As Officer Arthur Arevalo stood in the hallway of the residence, he heard voices
    coming from the bathroom. Arevalo looked through the partially opened bathroom door and saw
    a man identified as appellant sitting on the edge of the bathtub. Appellant had a floor tile in his lap
    and was cutting what appeared to be a rock of crack cocaine with a razor blade. The rock was about
    the size of a pinto bean. Arevalo motioned for Officer Mike Cowden. As he did so, the bathroom
    door opened, and a woman stepped outside holding a crack pipe. When she saw the officers, she
    yelled something to appellant and ran to a bedroom. As the officers entered the bathroom, appellant
    made a motion as if attempting to place the rock of cocaine in his mouth. Arevalo seized appellant’s
    right hand, which held the cocaine. The two men struggled and fell into the bathtub. Appellant had
    something in his left hand that the officer first suspected was a weapon. It turned out to be a glass
    crack pipe that appellant smashed against the bathtub. After subduing appellant, the police were able
    to recover only a trace amount, two milligrams, of powder cocaine from the bathtub and appellant’s
    fingers. They also seized pieces of glass from the crack pipe.
    The indictment alleged that appellant, knowing that an investigation for possession
    of a controlled substance was in progress, destroyed or concealed the cocaine with the intent to
    impair its availability as evidence in the investigation. Tex. Pen. Code Ann. § 37.09(a)(1). In two
    points of error, appellant contends the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support a
    2
    finding that an investigation of controlled substances possession was in progress, that he intended
    to impair such an investigation, or that the rock of cocaine was either destroyed or concealed by his
    actions.2
    In determining the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support a criminal conviction,
    the question is whether, after viewing all the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, any
    rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the offense beyond a reasonable
    doubt. See Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 324 (1979); Griffin v. State, 
    614 S.W.2d 155
    , 158-59
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1981). A factual sufficiency review asks whether a neutral review of all the
    evidence, both for and against the finding of guilt, demonstrates that the proof of guilt is either so
    obviously weak or so greatly outweighed by contrary proof as to undermine confidence in the jury’s
    determination. See Johnson v. State, 
    23 S.W.3d 1
    , 11 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000).
    Investigation
    Appellant argues that when the officers burst into the bathroom, they were not
    engaged in a controlled substances investigation but were instead making a controlled substances
    arrest. Thus, appellant contends the State failed to prove either that he knew that a controlled
    2
    After substitute counsel filed his brief, appellant complained to this Court that he did not want
    counsel, but instead wanted his pro se brief to be heard. In the pro se brief, appellant contends the
    evidence is insufficient to sustain his conviction but that his trial counsel ineffectively failed to
    preserve the error for review. Contrary to appellant’s belief, the sufficiency of the evidence may be
    raised for the first time on appeal. Givens v. State, 
    26 S.W.3d 739
    , 740-41 (Tex. App.—Austin
    2000, pet. ref’d). Appellant’s contention that counsel was ineffective is therefore without merit.
    Appellant’s pro se arguments regarding the sufficiency of the evidence add nothing to the arguments
    in counsel’s brief.
    3
    substances investigation was in progress or that he intended to impair the availability of the cocaine
    as evidence in the investigation.
    Contrary to the assumption implicit in appellant’s argument, “arrest” and
    “investigation” are not mutually exclusive concepts. Officer Arevalo had probable cause to believe
    that appellant possessed cocaine and was clearly seeking to arrest him for that offense. But that does
    not mean that the investigation of this offense was complete. To the contrary, the suspect substance
    had to be seized and tested, and appellant’s arrest was a necessary predicate to that stage of the
    investigation.
    Appellant refers us to the opinion in Lewis v. State, 
    56 S.W.3d 617
    (Tex.
    App.—Texarkana 2000, no pet.). In that case, Lewis was the passenger in a car stopped for an
    equipment offense. 
    Id. at 618.
    Matters escalated when an officer noticed that Lewis was chewing
    something, and then saw a portion of a plastic bag sticking out of his mouth. 
    Id. at 619.
    Two plastic
    bags were eventually removed from Lewis’s mouth, one containing suspected marihuana and the
    other containing suspected cocaine. 
    Id. Lewis’s stomach
    was pumped and its contents included one
    gram of cocaine. 
    Id. at 620.
    The court of appeals held that the evidence was sufficient to support
    Lewis’s conviction for concealing evidence. 
    Id. at 625-26.
    Among other things, the court held that
    an investigation was pending when Lewis concealed the evidence because he refused to spit out the
    cocaine or otherwise allow its removal from his mouth after being ordered to do so. 
    Id. Appellant argues
    that Lewis supports his proposed distinction between an
    investigation and an arrest, noting that the police in that case spent hours attempting to recover and
    identify the substance or substances Lewis placed in his mouth. In his own case, appellant argues,
    4
    Arevalo knew that he possessed crack cocaine and simply acted to arrest him, a process that took
    only seconds. We believe, contrary to appellant’s argument, that Lewis supports the conclusion that
    a controlled substance investigation was ongoing when appellant crumbled the rock of crack cocaine.
    Like the officer in Lewis, Arevalo suspected that appellant possessed a controlled substance. While
    that suspicion was supported by probable cause, the substance could not be positively identified until
    it was seized and tested. Here, as in Lewis, it was necessary to arrest appellant in order to complete
    the investigation.
    Appellant also cites the opinion in Pannell v. State, 
    7 S.W.3d 222
    (Tex. App.—Dallas
    1999, pet. ref’d). In that case, a police officer initiated a traffic stop after he observed Pannell
    driving in a school zone at an excessive speed. 
    Id. at 223.
    After the officer turned on his emergency
    lights, he saw Pannell throw a cigarette out of his car window. 
    Id. He then
    saw Pannell empty the
    contents of a small plastic bag through the window. 
    Id. After Pannell
    stopped, he told the officer
    that he had thrown marihuana from the car. 
    Id. The court
    of appeals reversed Pannell’s conviction
    for destroying evidence, holding that at the time Pannell threw the marihuana from his car, the
    officer was investigating only a speeding violation. 
    Id. at 224.
    Because no investigation in which
    the marihuana would serve as evidence was pending or in progress at the time he threw it from his
    car window, there was no evidence that Pannell destroyed the marihuana knowing that an
    investigation was in progress. 
    Id. Pannell is
    factually distinguishable from appellant’s case. Although the police came
    to the residence to arrest a parole violator, the evidence shows that the officer who discovered
    5
    appellant in the bathroom immediately suspected that he was cutting crack cocaine. By the time
    appellant crumbled the rock of cocaine with his fingers, the officer had initiated his investigation of
    the suspected narcotics offense.
    Finally, appellant urges that even if a drug investigation was underway, the evidence
    fails to show that he acted with the intention of impairing it. He notes that when he was first seen
    by Officer Arevalo, he was cutting the rock of crack cocaine with a razor blade. He asserts that he
    merely “continued his activity by breaking it up during the seconds it took to effect his arrest.” In
    other words, appellant argues that when he crumbled the rock with his fingers, he was not trying to
    conceal or destroy the rock in order to impair the police investigation, but was merely continuing the
    process of cutting the rock that he began before the officers observed him. To support this argument,
    appellant cites this Court’s opinion in Hollingsworth v. State, 
    15 S.W.3d 586
    (Tex. App.—Austin
    2000, no pet.).
    In Hollingsworth, the defendant was seen by a police officer walking from the scene
    of a reported knife fight. 
    Id. at 589.
    When the officer called for him to stop, Hollingsworth stepped
    behind a dumpster and spit two rocks of crack cocaine from his mouth. 
    Id. at 590.
    There was
    testimony that users of crack cocaine commonly carry the substance in their mouths. 
    Id. This Court
    held that the evidence was legally insufficient to support a conviction for concealing evidence. 
    Id. at 595.
    The only relevant testimony showed that Hollingsworth was carrying the cocaine in his
    mouth because that is how it is commonly carried. 
    Id. There was
    no evidence that Hollingsworth
    placed the cocaine in his mouth to conceal it from the police in order to impair its availability as
    evidence in an investigation. 
    Id. 6 Once
    again, we find appellant’s case to be distinguishable. The evidence shows that
    appellant was discovered by the police cutting a rock of crack cocaine into smaller pieces. There is
    no evidence that appellant intended, before the police arrived, to crumble the rock into a fine powder
    and scatter it in the bathtub, while at the same time smashing his glass pipe. Appellant’s conduct
    cannot be characterized as routine behavior engaged in by all or most crack users.
    Viewing all the evidence in the light most favorable to the conviction, a rational trier
    of fact could find beyond a reasonable doubt that a controlled substance investigation was in
    progress, that appellant knew the investigation was in progress, and that appellant crumbled the rock
    of cocaine intending to impair its availability as evidence in the investigation. Viewing all the
    evidence neutrally, the proof of these elements is neither so obviously weak nor so greatly
    outweighed by contrary proof as to undermine confidence in the jury’s determination.
    Conceal or Destroy
    Appellant also contends the State failed to prove that the rock of crack cocaine was
    destroyed or concealed within the meaning of section 37.09. He relies on this Court’s opinion in
    Spector v. State, 
    746 S.W.2d 945
    (Tex. App.—Austin 1988, pet. ref’d). In that case, a police officer
    found a marihuana cigarette in Spector’s car after stopping her for speeding. 
    Id. at 946.
    When the
    officer placed the cigarette on the trunk of her car, Spector seized it and tore it into pieces. 
    Id. The officer
    recovered most of the pieces of the cigarette, and Spector was subsequently tried and
    convicted for both possessing marihuana and destroying evidence. This Court reversed Spector’s
    conviction for the latter offense, holding that something is destroyed within the meaning of section
    7
    37.09(a)(1) when its evidentiary value is destroyed. 
    Id. Although part
    of the cigarette was lost, the
    State did not contend that the recovered portions were untestable or insufficient to obtain a
    conviction for possession of the whole. We concluded that the portions of the marihuana cigarette
    recovered by the police were not shown to have less evidentiary value than the whole, and hence the
    cigarette was not destroyed within the meaning of the statute. 
    Id. In appellant’s
    case, the police were able to recover only a trace amount of the cocaine
    appellant was seen possessing. Most of this was destroyed in the course of chemical analysis,
    leaving only a few “little specks.” The State argues that appellant’s actions reduced the evidentiary
    value of the cocaine because he could not be prosecuted for the actual weight of the pinto-bean-sized
    rock of cocaine he possessed. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 481.115 (b)-(f) (West 2003)
    (punishment ranges for possession of penalty group one substances). Anticipating this argument,
    appellant asserts that there is no evidence that his actions reduced the weight of the cocaine because
    there is no evidence as to the weight of the rock in his possession. Appellant’s argument proves the
    State’s point. Because of appellant’s actions, the State was unable to determine the actual weight
    of the cocaine he possessed, hence reducing the evidentiary value of the cocaine.
    Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, the trace amount of
    powder cocaine recovered from the bathtub was shown to have less evidentiary value than the whole
    rock, and therefore the jury could rationally find beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant destroyed
    the rock of cocaine. Viewing all the evidence neutrally, the proof of this element of the offense is
    neither so obviously weak nor so greatly outweighed by contrary proof as to undermine confidence
    8
    in the jury’s determination. Because the State proved that appellant destroyed the cocaine, we need
    not decide if the evidence supports a finding that the cocaine was concealed.
    The points of error are overruled, and the judgment of conviction is affirmed.
    __________________________________________
    W. Kenneth Law, Chief Justice
    Before Chief Justice Law, Justices B. A. Smith and Puryear
    Affirmed
    Filed: March 11, 2004
    Publish
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