Reginald Clay Barnett appeals his judgment of conviction of trafficking in cocaine, driving a motor vehicle with defective equipment (burned-out headlight beam), violation of Georgia no-fault insurance law by operating an automobile without effective insurance as required by the Georgia Motor Vehicle Accident Reparations Act, and the sentence.
Officer Williams stopped a 2-door Chevrolet Monte Carlo, driven by appellant, the car borrowed from a friend, for a traffic violation (an inoperative headlight). No parking was allowed where the vehicle was stopped. Appellant admitted he had been drinking; he was nervous, he smelled of alcohol, his eyes were bloodshot, and his speech was somewhat slurred. Appellant did not perform well on a three-part field sobriety test. Officer Williams testified he then arrested appellant for DUI, driving an automobile without insurance, and driving an automobile with defective equipment. Two passengers were in the car, and they too smelled of alcohol. Officer Williams elected to impound the vehicle, because he could not allow anyone to drive it without effective insurance. Officer Williams further testified that he searched the car, pursuant to an inventory (conducted because the car was being impounded) and also pursuant to his arrest of appellant. Cocaine was found in a “Cheetos” bag stuffed into a slit in the back side of the front passenger’s seat. Although the evidence is contested, Officer Williams testified that the top of the open bag was sticking out of the slit, and he could see inside the bag.
Before Officer Williams searched the car, Officer Singleton was standing about two feet away when the passengers got out and he saw a hole in the back of the passenger seat. Although Singleton did not see a bag in view, a bulge made it apparent there was something down in the seat.
Officer Wallace testified that as he was taking defendant Pollard to the police car, Pollard, without solicitation from Wallace, stated crack cocaine was in a slit on the back side of the passenger’s seat. Officer Wallace made no response to Pollard regarding this statement, and he engaged in no conversation with Pollard at the scene. Officer Wallace returned and suggested that Williams search that specific area of the car, but Williams already had found the drugs. Wallace *492 too observed a “self-made” slit in the seat before the search, but saw nothing sticking out of the slit. Held:
1. Appellant asserts the trial court erred in failing to grant his motion to suppress. In considering the legality of a search, an appellate court can consider
all relevant evidence of record,
wherever located, including that adduced at a pretrial suppression hearing and that adduced at trial.
Newsome v. State,
Appellant argues inter alia that the stop of the vehicle was merely a pretext to investigate three black males. Appellant’s car was lawfully stopped for being operated with defective equipment. As Officer Williams observed appellant violating the traffic laws by driving the vehicle with a defective headlight, he had probable cause to stop the vehicle and investigate the incident.
Mallarino v. State,
Appellant also asserts that the inventory search was a pretext for an investigative search and also was not lawful because the Polk County Police Department has no written or verbal policy regarding impoundment and inventory searches of vehicles, thereby leaving the matter solely within the discretion of the arresting officer. Pretermitting the issue of the legality of the seizure of cocaine resulting from an inventory of the contents of the automobile is the question whether any other lawful basis exists for the seizure of the contraband. We find that at least two independent bases exist for the lawful seizure of the drugs.
(a) The misdemeanor offense of operating a vehicle with defective equipment (an inoperative headlight), see generally OCGA §§ 40-8-7; 40-8-20; 40-8-22; 40-8-30; and 40-8-31, was committed in Officer Williams’ presence; there also existed at the time of appellant’s arrest probable cause for the arresting officer to believe appellant had committed an offense by operating a motor vehicle without the required statutory insurance, as appellant could not produce proof of unexpired, required minimum insurance coverage, see generally § 40-6-10; and, finally there also existed at the time of appellant’s arrest probable cause, albeit minimal, to believe appellant was DUI in the officer’s presence. The fact a subsequent intoximeter test revealed only a .02 alcohol level, and that appellant was not indicted and tried for DUI does not negate the legitimacy of the arresting officer’s determination to arrest appellant, particularly when, in addition to overall physical appearance, appellant did not perform well on the three-part
*493
sobriety test. Cf.
Brooks v. State,
(b) Additionally, the search was valid for the following reason. Independent of and before Officer Williams’ search of the vehicle, two police officers observed the slit in the back seat in plain view from their lawful vantage points outside the car, although they did not likewise observe a bag in plain view. At least one of these officers also observed a bulge below the slit or hole indicating there was something deposited therein. Officer Wallace observed defendant Pollard sitting in the back, passenger side of the vehicle. Shortly thereafter, as he was being escorted to the patrol car, defendant Pollard made a voluntary and unsolicited statement to Officer Wallace that there was cocaine in the seat back where the slit was located. Although Officer Williams had already conducted his search and found the drugs before this information could be transmitted to him, this information was obtained by the police lawfully and independent of any information gained by Officer Williams during his actual search of the vehicle. Pollard’s voluntary admission against penal interest regarding the precise location of and nature of the drugs was corroborated adequately by the officer’s observation of Pollard’s location and vantage point within the car, the location of the slit and the presence of the bulge, and therefore provided the police with probable cause to be
*494
lieve cocaine was located within the seat back of the front passenger seat of the automobile. Compare
Massachusetts v. Upton,
2. Appellant asserts two separate errors in his third enumeration; first, that the trial court erred in denying appellant a directed verdict when the evidence was insufficient as a matter of law after excluding the incriminating statements of co-defendants and, secondly, that the trial court erred in failing to grant his motion to sever.
(a) Appellant alleges there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction of trafficking in cocaine. In support of this argument, he claims inter alia that the jury erroneously considered the pretrial statements of the co-defendants against him. He also argues that he was prejudiced by Officer Wallace’s testimony regarding the statement of co-defendant Walker. As a preface to this statement, Wallace stated that Walker had said he “met with two other defendants.” The prosecutor immediately stopped Officer Wallace and directed his testimony away from any further reference to other defendants. Other than a leading question objection, appellant posed no timely objection and made no timely motion to strike the testimony pertaining to defendant Walker’s statements. Likewise, appellant’s counsel made no timely, specific objection or mistrial motion regarding the admissions attributed to the defendant Pollard. Accordingly, we cannot review
*495
these issues as appellant failed to make a timely objection at trial on the specific grounds he attempts to assert on appeal.
Ray v. State,
The trial court instructed the jury as to the legal theories of actual and constructive possession of contraband, and of joint possession thereof. Appellant has not raised a charging error as to this instruction in his enumerations of error. Further, “ ‘ “[w]here drugs are found in the ‘immediate presence’ of the defendant, the jury is authorized to find they are ‘in the constructive possession’ of the accused.” ’ ”
Sanders v. State,
(b) As appellant raised two separate errors within the same enumeration, we elect not to review his claim of error due to failure to grant severance.
Robinson v. State,
*496 3. Appellant asserts the trial court erred in failing to grant its motion for directed verdict of acquittal of trafficking in cocaine, because the indictment averred appellant committed the trafficking offense solely by having in his possession 28 grams or more of cocaine, and the evidence of record establishes that the actual amount of cocaine was less than 28 grams. Appellant asserts a fatal variance occurred which voided the conviction of the greater offense of trafficking.
OCGA § 16-13-31 (a) (1) provides in pertinent part that the offense of trafficking may be committed by being in knowing possession of
either
28 grams or more of cocaine,
or
of any mixture with a purity of 10 percent or more of cocaine. The term “cocaine” as used in this statute is as described in Schedule II (OCGA § 16-13-26), and any substance constituting cocaine under that definition cannot include decocainized coca leaves or extractions which do not contain cocaine or ecgonine. Thus, the statute
currently
defines, somewhat similar to a previous statutory definition, two methods of committing the crime of trafficking. One method deals with pure cocaine and the other with mixtures containing the statutorily required percentage of cocaine. Compare
Bassett v. Lemacks,
However, for whatever reason it chose to do so, the grand jury returned a trafficking count within the indictment which specifically averred that trafficking had occurred due to defendant’s possession of 28 grams or more of (pure) cocaine; the count did not include an averment that trafficking occurred due to defendant’s possession of a mixture containing at least the statutorily required percentage of cocaine. That is, the trafficking count of the indictment avers: “The grand jurors ... in the name and behalf of the citizens of Georgia, charge and accuse Lester Ray Walker, Reginald Clay Barnett and Darryl Pollard with the offense of trafficking in cocaine for that the accused, in the county aforesaid, on the 7th day of February, 1991, did unlawfully, knowingly possess and have under his control more that 28 grams of cocaine, a controlled substance in violation of the Georgia Controlled Substance Act.”
The uncontroverted testimony of the crime lab chemist established that the substance analyzed had a total mixture weight of 33.9 grams and was 82.5 percent cocaine. Accordingly, the total weight of pure cocaine found in the mixture was only 27.9675 grams; less than the 28 grams averred in the trafficking count of the indictment. Moreover, the substance was weighed at the beginning before any was extracted for testing.
This case is distinguishable from cases where the trafficking count in essence averred trafficking was committed by both means provided by statute, but only one means of offense commission was
*497
proven at trial. See e.g.,
Partridge v. State,
Moreover, although the operative facts pertaining to the content of the indictment are not fully developed in
Aguero v. State,
In
Ross v. State,
As only one means of offense commission was averred in the trafficking count of the grand jury’s indictment and as the evidence at trial was insufficient to prove that trafficking had been committed in that manner, a fatal variance occurred within the meaning of Lumpkin, supra,
Ross,
supra and
Feagin,
supra. Compare
Fulford v. State,
Judgment vacated and case remanded with direction.
