OPINION
Appellant, Ashton Joel Carmen, appeals a judgment convicting him for the murder of his father, Reginald Carmen.
See
Tex. Penal Code ANN. § 19.02 (West 2003).
Background
Appellant was born prematurely to a mother who had used crack cocaine during her pregnancy. Although he initially lived with his mother, who continued to use cocaine, appellant’s maternal grandmother was his primary caretaker. When he was about six years old, appellant went to live with his father.
The next year, appellant’s father whipped appellant with a belt, causing bruising on the side of appellant’s body. After a teacher discovered the bruises, appellant was taken to the hospital. Child Protective Services removed appellant from his father’s custody and placed him with his mother. Six months later, after appellant’s father had completed anger management classes, appellant returned to live with his father.
In the years before his father’s death, appellant’s behavior and grades in school deteriorated. His father, being a strict disciplinarian, meted out punishments, which included whipping appellant with a belt and prohibiting him from seeing his friends. Appellant attempted to run away numerous times. Less than a month before his father’s death, a juvenile court placed appellant on probation for truancy subject to certain conditions, including a requirement that he attend school every day.
On December 8, 2005, appellant returned to his father’s house after school. His father’s bedroom, the master bedroom, was located on the ground floor of the house. The door to the master bedroom was locked. Appellant went into the backyard and removed a screen covering a window to the master bedroom. He broke the glass and entered through the window. Appellant located a locked suitcase containing several thousand dollars cash and a .40-caliber SIG Sauer semi-automatic pistol. Taking the suitcase with him, appellant exited the room and went upstairs. Using a hammer, appellant forced the suitcase open, and he removed about $2,000 dollars and the pistol. After his father arrived home, appellant fired multiple gunshot rounds from the pistol at his father, killing him. Appellant placed a bandana over his father’s face, took a shower upstairs, and then left in his father’s car.
After appellant’s father failed to show up to work the next morning, Friday, December 9, 2005, his employer contacted the police. The employer provided the police with appellant’s father’s address and a description of his car, a black Lexus. Officers DeSilvia and Herrera of the Pearland Police Department were dispatched to the house, arriving around 9:30 a.m. Officer DeSilvia knocked on the door and rang the doorbell but received no response. The
Officer Herrera kicked the door open, setting off the security alarm. The officers discovered that the man lying on the floor — appellant’s father — was deceased; his body was slightly stiff with rigor mor-tis, and he did not have shoes on his feet. Near the body lay spent shell casings and live rounds of ammunition. Officer Herrera walked from the foyer through the laundry room into the garage. The garage door was closed, and the black Lexus was missing.
After other officers arrived, Officers De-Silvia and Herrera searched the rest of the house, looking for other victims and suspects. On the dining-room table, they found a can of roach spray, a knife, a golf club, an open bottle of Dr. Pepper, and an earplug. Finding the door to the master bedroom locked, they proceeded upstairs. On the stairs, they found a spent shell casing. In appellant’s bedroom, they found an earplug package matching the earplug found in the dining room. After checking the upstairs, they returned to the locked master bedroom door, which Officer DeSilvia kicked open. The room was very messy; some of the dresser drawers had been emptied out. On the floor lay an Airsoft gun resembling a small machine gun. After searching the house, Officer DeSilvia secured the premises and stood in front of the house to ensure that only authorized persons entered the property.
Officer Bort, a crime scene investigator, arrived about 30 minutes after Officers DeSilvia and Herrera. In the backyard, Officer Bort saw the screen and glass from the broken window. He then conducted a walkthrough of the house. In the foyer, he saw a black glove, a hat, a bag of groceries, and some mail near the body. He also saw bullet holes in the walls. In the laundry room, he saw the appellant’s father’s shoes. In the kitchen, he saw a box of ammunition next to a SIG Sauer owner’s manual. He also saw a little napkin with what appeared to be a bloodstain. Upstairs, he saw a Nike glove package on a ledge overlooking the foyer. In the entertainment room, he saw a briefcase, which appeared to have been forced open with a nearby hammer. He also saw a Lexus manual and a SIG Sauer magazine. Officer Bort recorded a video of his walkthrough and took photographs of the items he observed.
That same morning, the general manager of a hotel in Texas City discovered in the parking lot an unidentified black Lexus, which was missing a front tire. Later that morning, the manager noticed that the Lexus had been moved to a nearby Sears parking lot. The manager called the police, who informed her that the car had been involved in a crime. The manager contacted Sears and discovered that Sears employees were fixing the car’s tire. The manager told the Sears employees to work slowly because the police were en route. When Texas City police arrived, they found both appellant and his father’s car.
Officer Hunt of the Pearland Police Department was the detective assigned to investigate the death of appellant’s father. He telephoned appellant’s school and learned that appellant was absent. He then contacted appellant’s probation officer, who drafted a directive to apprehend based on appellant’s violation of the conditions of his probation. After learning that the Texas City police had found appellant and the car, Officer Hunt went to the Sears parking lot. Shortly before 11:00 a.m., Texas City police took appellant into custody pursuant to a directive to apprehend. In the Sears parking lot, Officer Hunt observed a pistol in plain view on the
Around 1:30 p.m., a magistrate judge read appellant his rights outside the presence of law enforcement personnel. After waiving his rights, appellant gave an oral statement to police, in which he admitted killing his father. Appellant stated that he was having some problems with gang members from school and that he had heard that they were going to come over to his house. He accordingly took the weapon to protect himself. Appellant claimed that he shot his father because he had mistaken him for a gang member. Within an hour, appellant disavowed this statement.
Appellant reduced his second story to a written statement. He stated that his parents had engaged in an argument about his mother’s picking him up early from school and that his father had told her that he was going to impose corporal punishment on appellant sometime soon. Appellant claimed that this brought back memories of an incident seven years before in which his father’s punishment resulted in appellant’s hospitalization.
Shortly before 4:30 p.m. that same afternoon, December 9, the police obtained search-and-seizure warrants for appellant’s father’s house and car. From the house, Officer Bort seized the items that he had observed and documented during his walkthrough. From the car, he seized the pistol, which Officer Hunt had previously seen in plain view.
Before trial, appellant’s counsel filed two motions to suppress. In the first motion to suppress, appellant’s counsel contended that the police illegally arrested appellant without a valid warrant, probable cause, or reasonable suspicion. The first motion sought to suppress (1) evidence seized as a result of appellant’s arrest, (2) evidence seized as a result of the search of appellant’s person, papers, and effects, and (3) any written or oral statements that appellant made after his arrest. In the second motion to suppress, appellant’s counsel contended that the police had illegally arrested appellant without a valid warrant or authority to arrest without a warrant and that they had illegally detained appellant because they intensively questioned him before taking him to see a magistrate; no lawful commitment or capias had been issued; no arrest warrant had been issued; and the complaint against appellant was legally defective. Appellant’s counsel further contended that the police, without authority, made promises to appellant to induce him to sign his written confession and that appellant was not properly Mir-andized. The second motion sought to suppress (1) any written or oral confession that appellant made at the time of his arrest or during his subsequent detention, (2) any evidence obtained as a result of any statement that appellant made at the time of his arrest or during his subsequent detention, and (3) any evidence obtained by a search of appellant or appellant’s premises without proper search warrant.
At the pre-trial hearing on the motions to suppress, appellant’s counsel argued that the recording of appellant’s oral statement should be excluded because the magistrate failed to make a determination of voluntariness, reduce it to writing, sign it, and date it. Appellant’s counsel also argued that an interruption during appellant’s interview made the entire written statement inadmissible and that appellant never waived his rights voluntarily, intelligently, or knowingly. The trial court found that appellant was properly warned of his rights, understood his rights, and provided his statement to the police freely and voluntarily. The trial court also found
At a subsequent pre-trial hearing, the State offered into evidence a copy of the warrant to search appellant’s residence and a copy of the supporting affidavit for the purpose of establishing that the State had obtained a valid search warrant and performed a valid search. Appellant’s counsel objected on the ground that the State must produce the original warrant. The court overruled this objection.
During the guilt — innocence phase of trial, Officer Bort testified to what he observed during his walkthrough of the house, which occurred after the house had been secured but before the search-and-seizure warrant had been issued. Appellant’s counsel did not object to Officer Bort’s testimony describing his observations. The State introduced the photographs and video recording made during the walkthrough. Appellant’s counsel objected that the photographs and video recording were the product of an unreasonable search and seizure. The trial court overruled these objections. The State then introduced the items seized from the house. Appellant’s counsel objected based on the fact the supporting affidavit was a copy and not an original document. Appellant’s counsel did not object to the admission of the items seized on the grounds that they were the product of an unreasonable search and seizure.
After the guilt — innocence phase of trial, the jury returned a verdict of guilty. The trial then proceeded to the punishment phase. During closing arguments, the State argued, “Listen, you know he killed once. That’s not on you. To a degree, if he kills again, that is on you.” Appellant’s counsel objected on the ground that this comment went beyond a proper plea for law enforcement by making the jury individually and personally responsible for the acts of appellant. The trial court overruled the objection.
The jury found against appellant by a preponderance of the evidence on the special issue of whether appellant had acted under the immediate influence of a sudden passion arising from adequate cause. It assessed appellant’s punishment at life imprisonment and a $5,000 fine.
Admission of Photographs and Video of Pre-Warrant Walkthrough
In his first issue, appellant contends that the trial court erred by admitting photographs and a video recording made when Officer Bort conducted a walkthrough of the interior of appellant’s father’s house because they were made prior to the officers’ obtaining a search warrant and were the product of an unreasonable search and seizure.
A. Standard of Review
We review the admission of evidence by the trial court for an abuse of discretion.
McDonald v. State,
B. Applicable Law
The Fourth Amendment guarantees the right of individuals to be “secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. A war-rantless search by police is presumptively unreasonable.
Gutierrez v. State,
Our jurisprudence recognizes three exigent circumstances that justify an immediate warrantless entry by police officers. Id. The first exigent circumstance is when the police must provide assistance to persons whom the police reasonably believe are in need of assistance. Id. The second exigent circumstance is when the police need to protect themselves from persons whom the police reasonably believe to be present, armed, and dangerous. Id. The third exigent circumstance is when the police attempt to prevent destruction of evidence or contraband. Id.
Under the “fruit of the poisonous tree” doctrine, evidence may not be used against a criminal defendant if it was obtained by exploitation of an illegal search or seizure and not by means sufficiently distinguishable to be purged of the primary taint.
Wong Sun v. United States,
The plain-view doctrine is more than a mere exception to the warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment.
Walter v. State,
Where officers are privileged under the plain-view doctrine to observe or seize an article, they are likewise privileged to take a photograph or make a video recording of that article.
See Gordon v. State,
C. Analysis
Appellant concedes that Officers DeSil-via and Herrera properly searched the house pursuant to their community care-taking duty and that, under the plain-view doctrine, they could have seized outright any of the evidence photographed or videotaped. However, he contends that, once they secured the scene, after determining that there were no other victims or suspects on the premises, the exigencies that had justified the warrantless search came to an end. Accordingly, appellant reasons that Officer Bort’s subsequent walkth-rough constituted an unreasonable, war-rantless search, of which the photographs and the video were products. Appellant does not argue that Officer Bort’s search was any more expansive or intrusive than the permissible search already conducted by Officers DeSilvia and Herrera.
We agree with appellant that the exigencies that justified the initial war-rantless search had ended before Officer Bort’s search began. The question, therefore, is whether a subsequent search that is no more intrusive or expansive than the initial search is unreasonable merely because the exigencies have ended. “[O]nce the privacy of a residence has lawfully been invaded during an exigency, it makes no sense to require a warrant for other officers to enter and complete what officers on the scene could have properly done.”
Johnson v. State,
Appellant’s first issue is overruled.
Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
In his second issue, appellant contends that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to lodge a timely and proper objection to the physical evidence seized from the interior of appellant’s father’s house through a motion to suppress or at trial.
A. Standard of Review of Ineffective Assistance
To prevail on an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim, the appellant must demonstrate, by a preponderance of the evidence, that (1) his trial counsel’s performance was deficient and (2) a reasonable probability exists that, but for the deficiency, the result of the proceeding would have been different.
Strickland v. Washington,
We indulge a strong presumption that counsel’s conduct fell within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance, and therefore the appellant must overcome the presumption that the challenged action constituted “sound trial strategy.”
Id.
at 689,
Even the failure to file a motion to suppress evidence is not per se ineffective assistance of counsel.
Kimmelman v. Morrison,
We review a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress under a bifurcated standard of review.
McKissick v. State,
B. Validity of Search Warrant
Appellant contends that his trial counsel was ineffective by failing to properly object to the admission of the physical evidence seized from his father’s home pursuant to the search warrant and obtain its suppression. Specifically, appellant contends that his counsel should have objected on the ground that the search warrant was an evidentiary search warrant that failed to state probable cause and failed to meet the requirements of an evidentiary search warrant.
Article 18.01, subsection (b) of the Code of Criminal Procedure provides that no search warrant may issue unless supported by an affidavit setting forth substantial facts establishing probable cause for its issuance. Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. arts. 1.06, 18.01(b) (West 2005 & Supp. 2009). “The test for determination of probable cause is whether the magistrate had a substantial basis for concluding that a search would uncover evidence of wrongdoing.”
McKissick,
Article 18.02 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure sets forth 12 grounds for the issuance of search warrants:
A search warrant may be issued to search for and seize:
(1) property acquired by theft or in any other manner which makes its acquisition a penal offense;
(2) property specially designed, made, or adapted for or commonly used in the commission of an offense;
(3) arms and munitions kept or prepared for the purposes of insurrection or riot;
(4) weapons prohibited by the Penal Code;
(5) gambling devices or equipment, altered gambling equipment, or gambling paraphernalia;
(6) obscene materials kept or prepared for commercial distribution or exhibition, subject to the additional rules set forth by law;
(7) a drug, controlled substance, immediate precursor, chemical precursor, or other controlled substance property, including an apparatus or paraphernalia kept, prepared, or manufactured in violation of the laws of this state;
(8) any property the possession of which is prohibited by law;
(9) implements or instruments used in the commission of a crime;
(10) property or items, except the personal writings by the accused, constituting evidence of an offense or constituting evidence tending toshow that a particular person committed an offense;
(11) persons; or
(12) contraband subject to forfeiture under Chapter 59 of this code.
Tex.Code Ckim. Proc. Ann. arts. 18.02. Other than subdivision (11), concerning persons, the other subdivisions concern the search and seizure of property.
See id.
Subdivisions (1) through (9) and (12) describe specific categories of property that may be searched and seized.
See id.
In contrast, subdivision (10) is a catchall ground that applies only if the other articles do not.
State v. Acosta,
A mere-evidentiary search warrant differs from a warrant issued under the other subdivisions in two pertinent respects. First, unlike warrants issued under subdivisions (1) through (9) and (12), a warrant may be issued under subdivision (10) only if accompanied by an affidavit setting forth sufficient facts to establish probable cause:
(1) that a specific offense has been committed,
(2) that the specifically described property or items that are to be searched for or seized constitute evidence of that offense or evidence that a particular person committed that offense, and
(3) that the property or items constituting evidence to be searched for or seized are located at or on the particular person, place, or thing to be searched.
Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 18.01(c). Second, although it is well established that the plain-view exception is available during searches conducted pursuant to warrants issued under the other subdivisions, “there is a split of authority regarding whether the ‘plain view’ exception is available when unnamed items are seized during the execution of an ‘evidentiary search warrant’ issued pursuant to [article 18.02(10) ].”
Zarychta v. State,
1. Characterizing the Search Warrant
Both the heightened probable-cause requirement in article 18.01(c) and the limitation on the plain-view doctrine apply only if a warrant is issued under article 18.02(10) and not under any of the other subdivisions of article 18.02.
See
Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 18.01(c);
Joseph,
“[T]he classification of a warrant is an issue of law for the courts to decide.”
Young,
Paragraph two of the affidavit supporting the search warrant for appellant’s father’s house states the ground for issuance as follows:
THERE IS AT SAID SUSPECTED PLACE AND PREMISES PROPERTY OR ITEMS, ACCEPT [sic] THE PERSONAL WRITINGS BY THE ACCUSED, CONSTITUTING EVIDENCE OF AN OFFENSE OR CONSTITUTING EVIDENCE TENDING TO SHOW THAT A PARTICULAR PERSON COMMITTED AN OFFENSE AS FOLLOWS:
Any object used in the commission of murder, any physical evidence relating to the crime of murder, any evidence that characterized the nature of the relationship between the [sic] Reginald Carmen and Ashton Carmen. Including the body of the deceased, shell casings, bullets, weapons, blood, hair, fibers, clothing, DNA, [or] electronically captured data from answering machine, computer, and alarm system.
Because it authorizes the search for and seizure of “[a]ny object used in the commission of [the] murder ... including ... shell casings, bullets, [and] weapons,” the present warrant was issued pursuant to article 18.02(9), which authorizes the search for and seizure of “implements or instruments used in the commission of a crime.... ” TexCode Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 18.02(9). Because it was issued under arti
2. Failure to Meet Heightened Probable-Cause Requirement
Appellant concedes that the affidavit sets forth facts sufficient to establish probable cause that a murder had been committed. See TexCode Crim. Proo. Ann. art. 18.01(c)(1). However, appellant contends that the affidavit fails to set forth facts to establish probable cause that hair, fibers, clothing, DNA, or electronically captured data from an answering machine, computer, or alarm system constitutes either evidence of the murder’s occurrence or evidence that appellant in particular committed the murder. See id. art. 18.01(c)(2). Appellant also contends that the affidavit fails to set forth facts to establish probable cause that hair, fibers, clothing, DNA, or electronically captured data from an answering machine, computer, or alarm system were located at the address. See id. art. 18.01(c)(3).
However, because the present search warrant is not a mere-evidentiary search warrant, it is not subject to the heightened probable-cause requirement. See Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 18.01(c). Therefore, appellant’s argument fails. Moreover, even if the heightened probable-cause requirement did apply and the affidavit and the warrant were inadequate as to these categories of evidence, appellant failed to show any resulting prejudice because no evidence within any of these categories was seized or offered against him at trial.
3. Seizure of Evidence Not Specified
Appellant contends that 25 items seized from his father’s house were subject to suppression because they were not specifically described in the affidavit or warrant.
2
See Young,
We overrule appellant’s second point of error.
The State’s Closing Argument on Punishment
In his third issue, appellant contends that the trial court erred by overruling his objection to the State’s punishment-phase argument to the jury that “if he kills again, that is on you.”
A. Applicable Law
The law provides for and presumes a fair trial free from improper argument by the State.
Long v. State,
B. Analysis
Appellant contends that the State’s argument was not reasonable because it intimidates jurors by placing them in the shoes of a future victim.
See Boyington,
Appellant also argues that the State’s argument interjects new facts not on the record relating to appellant’s propensity to commit a future murder. The State’s argument does not indicate the likelihood of such a future occurrence. It merely poses the hypothetical possibility that a person who has murdered once could do so again. The evidence at trial supports the State’s theory that appellant prepared for the murder by practicing firing the pistol, that appellant lay in wait in
We overrule appellant’s third issue.
Conclusion
We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Notes
. "In determining whether a specific warrant meets the particularity requirement, a court must inquire whether an executing officer reading the description in the warrant would reasonably know what items are to be seized.”
Porath v. State,
. The 25 items are: (1) an earplug found on the dining-room table; (2) a hammer in a brown paper bag; (3) a two-liter bottle of Dr. Pepper; (4) can of Bengal Roach Spray; (5) an earplug from the dining-room floor; (6) wilderness folding-blade knife found on dining-room table; (7) PMC-ammunition box, Smith & Wesson .40 caliber, found in kitchen; (8) Sig Sauer owner’s manual found in kitchen; (9) Airsoft Uzi 9 found in master bedroom; (10) Nike glove package found on the upstairs ledge; (11) bandage from Nike glove found on upstairs ledge; (12) black leather glove found upstairs; (13) earplug found on game-room floor; (14) broken briefcase handle found in game room; (15) Sig Sauer magazine found in game room; (16) black briefcase found in living area upstairs; (17) earplug found in appellant's bedroom; (18) black shirt found in upstairs bathroom; (19) towels with stains found in upstairs bedroom; (20) broken Panama Jack sunglasses found in computer room; (21) golf club; (22) swab from golf club; (23) broken sunglasses piece found by the foyer, (24) black Nike leather glove found on the foyer floor; and (25) a 20-ounce A & W Root Beer bottle found on dining-room floor.
