OPINION
A jury convicted Hubert Theodore Branch of possession of between four and two-hundred grams of cocaine with intent to deliver, a first-degree felony. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 481.112 (West 2010). Branch pled true to an enhancement paragraph alleging a previous conviction for the felony offense of delivery of cocaine, and the jury assessed punishment at life in prison and a $5,000 fine. Branch raises three issues on appeal, contending that the trial court erred in: (1) denying Branch’s motion to suppress the evidence found during a traffic stop; (2) denying Branch’s motion to suppress the evidence discovered in a search of his home after the traffic stop; and (8) denying Branch’s motion for new trial based on ineffective assistance of counsel.
Because we conclude that the trial court did not err in denying Branch’s motion to suppress, we affirm the portion of the trial court’s judgment finding guilt. Because we conclude that the trial court erred in denying Branch’s motion for new trial, we reverse the portion of the trial court’s judgment assessing punishment, and we remand this cause to the trial court for a new punishment hearing.
BACKGROUND
Evidence presented at a hearing on Branch’s motion to suppress shows that on September 14, 2007, Detective Joel Wadley of the Killeen Police Department Organized Crime Section was conducting an investigation of Branch. Wadley testified that Branch sold narcotics in Killeen and that Wadley had been investigating Branch for some time. Wadley further testified that on September 14, 2007, he believed that Branch was in possession of cocaine based on information he had learned from a confidential informant. On that day, Wadley was parked down the street from Branch’s home on Crockett Drive. While parked, he observed Branch load something into his ear, leave the car door open, and walk back inside his house. Wadley then observed Branch walk back outside, get into his car, and drive away. Wadley followed Branch from a distance in an unmarked car. Wadley testified that he followed Branch because he believed Branch was “going to a specific location to drop off some narcotics.”
Wadley testified that while he was following Branch, he observed Branch fail to signal his intent to turn on several occasions. Wadley contacted another officer, Officer Willie Wingfield, and asked him to make a traffic stop of Branch’s car. A video from Wingfield’s patrol car was admitted into evidence during the hearing on the motion to suppress. The video shows
Wadley contacted Detective Carl Per-gande, a detective with a trained narcotics-detection dog, and requested that Per-gande bring the dog to the site of the traffic stop to conduct an open-air sniff of Branch’s car. Pergande was already on his way to the site because Wadley had previously contacted him to inform him that Wadley was surveilling Branch’s residence and may need a narcotics-detection dog at some point. Wadley testified that Pergande arrived within approximately seven or eight minutes of the initial stop. The video from Wingfield’s patrol car shows that the dog arrived within eight minutes of the traffic stop. Wingfield testified that during the time after the initial stop and before Pergande arrived with the dog, Wingfield was checking Branch’s driver’s license and insurance information and waiting for a police dispatcher to respond regarding whether Branch had any warrants. Wingfield testified that waiting for Pergande to arrive with the dog did not delay the stop. Wadley testified that during the time after the initial stop and before Pergande and the dog arrived, Wadley informed Branch that he was being stopped for a traffic violation. He testified that Branch told him that he may have failed to signal a turn because he was talking to his son, who was in the car with him. Wadley spoke with Branch’s son, who was ten years old, and then allowed the boy to go inside the house.
When Pergande arrived, his police dog, “Justice,” conducted an open-air sniff of Branch’s car. Justice alerted to the presence of a controlled substance in the vicinity of the driver’s door. Pergande asked Branch to step out of the car. Branch initially refused, but after speaking further with Pergande, he stepped out and stood at the back of the car. Officers then began conducting a search of Branch’s car. Wadley testified that Branch remained standing at the back of the car and that he put his hands in his pockets several times. Wadley told Branch to stop putting his hands in his pockets and then patted Branch down. Wadley testified that Branch had something in his front, left pocket. Wadley removed the item from Branch’s pocket. The item was later determined to be 3.4 grams of crack cocaine. Wadley testified that the cocaine was still wet, indicating that it had recently been cooked and leading him to believe that Branch likely had more cocaine at his house. After the cocaine was discovered in Branch’s pocket, officers arrested Branch and took him to jail.
Meanwhile, Wadley began the process of obtaining a search warrant for Branch’s home, and Detective Pergande and other officers went to Branch’s home to attempt to secure the scene until the search warrant was obtained. When Pergande arrived at Branch’s home, he knocked on the door but no one answered. At some point later, Branch’s sister arrived at the home to pick up Branch’s younger son, who was there with a babysitter. When Branch’s sister arrived, Pergande was still waiting outside the house. Branch’s sister knocked on the door and identified herself. The woman babysitting Branch’s baby answered the door, and Branch’s sister walked into the home followed by Per-gande and other officers. Pergande told the babysitter that he and the other officers would be preserving the home as a
Wadley eventually obtained a search warrant. During the subsequent search, officers discovered two separate quantities of cocaine — one later determined to weigh 1.8 grams and the other later determined to weigh 12.6 grams. 1
The State indicted Branch for intentionally or knowingly possessing, with intent to deliver, between four and two-hundred grams of cocaine. The indictment also included an enhancement paragraph alleging that Branch had previously been convicted of the felony offense of delivery of cocaine. Before trial, Branch filed a motion to suppress the evidence obtained in the search of him and his home. At the conclusion of a hearing on the motion, the trial court denied the motion.
The case proceeded to a jury trial, and the jury convicted Branch of possession of between four and two-hundred grams of cocaine with intent to deliver. At the subsequent punishment hearing, Branch pled “true” to the enhancement paragraph. The applicable punishment range was fifteen to ninety-nine years or life in prison. During the State’s closing argument, the prosecutor addressed the issue of parole, stating, in part:
[Branch is] going to get out. You can see. You give him life, fifteen years he’s eligible for parole. He is not going to stay in prison until he dies, and that fifteen years, as you can see in here, is tempered by how he’s good. Okay? He’s a good boy, he stays in prison seven years, eight years. He’s going to be done on life. Give him thirty, give him forty, he’s going to get out quicker.
It’s almost obscene that we have to come to you and tell you that these number games [are] played. It would be much simpler if I could walk in here and tell you he’s going to go to prison for what you give him, and that’s it.
Later in the argument, the prosecutor referred to the issue again, stating, “You’re never — even with life — going to send him to prison for fifteen or twenty years. It’s not going to happen.”
The jury assessed punishment at life in prison and a $5,000 fine. Branch filed a motion for new trial, alleging that his trial attorneys provided ineffective assistance by failing to object to the prosecutor’s closing argument regarding parole. The trial court denied Branch’s motion by operation of law. Branch appeals his conviction.
DISCUSSION
Branch raises three issues on appeal, contending that the trial court erred in: (1) denying his motion to suppress the cocaine discovered in his pocket during the traffic stop; (2) denying his motion to suppress the cocaine found in the search of his home; and (3) denying his motion for new trial based on ineffective assistance of counsel. Because Branch’s first two issues both relate to his motion to suppress, we address them within the same section below. We then address Branch’s third issue separately.
We review a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress evidence for abuse of discretion, using a bifurcated standard.
See Valtierra v. State,
A. Evidence Discovered During Traffic Stop
Branch does not argue that the traffic stop itself was unreasonable. Rather, he contends that the police officers illegally prolonged his detention in order to allow time for a narcotics-detection dog to arrive to sniff his car. Branch argues that the alleged illegal extension of his detention renders inadmissible any evidence discovered after the initial detention.
We first note that a sniff of the exterior of a car by a trained canine during a lawful traffic stop is not a search within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.
See Illinois v. Caballes,
Here, Officer Wingfield conducted a traffic stop after Branch failed to signal his intent to turn. Detective Wadley, who was also present at the stop, had previously contacted Detective Pergande, a detective with a trained narcotics-detection dog, to request that the dog do an open-air sniff of Branch’s car. As a result, Pergande had already begun driving toward the area of the traffic stop when he received the call to come to the stop. Wingfield testified that during the time after the initial stop and before Pergande arrived with the dog, Wingfield was checking Branch’s driver’s license and insurance information and waiting for a police dispatcher to respond to him regarding whether Branch had any warrants. Wingfield testified that his actions were the “normal procedure” for a traffic stop and that he proceeded in a “normal fashion.” He testified that wait
Given the evidence regarding the initial traffic stop and the arrival of the drug-detection dog, all of which shows that the dog arrived within eight minutes of the traffic stop and before Wingfield finished conducting normal procedures for a traffic stop, we conclude that the record supports an implied finding by the trial court that the time it took for the dog to arrive did not prolong the initial stop beyond the time reasonably required to complete the mission of the stop.
See Caballes,
The law is well established that as soon as a drug-detection dog alerts on a car, officers have probable cause to search the car without a warrant.
See Parker v. State,
Because the canine sniff of Branch’s car did not extend his detention, and because the dog’s alert on Branch’s ear furnished probable cause for the officers to arrest Branch and conduct a search of his person incident to arrest, we conclude that the
B. Evidence Discovered During Search of Branch’s Home
In his second issue, Branch contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress the cocaine found in the search of his home. Specifically, Branch argues that the cocaine found in his home in the search conducted pursuant to a search warrant should have been suppressed because police officers conducted an earlier, warrantless entry into his home. He alleges that the warrantless entry violated the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures because there was neither probable cause nor exigent circumstances to justify the entry.
See
U.S. Const. amend. IV.;
Parker v. State,
The pre-warrant sweep of Branch’s home, during which no cocaine was discovered, has no relevance to the admissibility of cocaine obtained in a later search. Even if officers had discovered evidence during their pre-warrant sweep of Branch’s home, evidence initially discovered during a pre-warrant search but later recovered pursuant to a valid warrant is admissible if the State can demonstrate that, absent any information learned from the pre-warrant search, law enforcement would have sought, and the judge would have issued, the warrant.
See Murray v. United States,
We turn now to the later search of Branch’s home that was conducted pursuant to a search warrant. Although it is unclear from Branch’s brief whether he means to challenge the validity of the later-obtained search warrant, we will address the issue in the interest of thoroughness and because the validity of the search warrant was discussed at oral argument in this case.
A magistrate may not issue a search warrant without first finding “probable cause” that a particular item will be found at a particular location.
Rodriguez v. State,
As a reviewing court, our duty is to ensure that the magistrate had a substantial basis for concluding that prob
The affidavit filed by Detective Wadley in support of his request for a search warrant for Branch’s home included the following facts as establishing probable cause for a warrant: (1) a confidential informant (“First Cl”) stated that Branch sold large quantities of cocaine; (2) First Cl observed a second cocaine dealer purchasing cocaine from Branch’s home on many occasions, sometimes multiple times a day; (3) First Cl correctly identified Branch in a photo and correctly described Branch’s car and house; (4) First Cl conducted a controlled buy of 0.6 grams of cocaine from Branch on behalf of Detective Wadley, after which Wadley observed Branch return directly to his home; (5) a second confidential informant (“Second Cl”) said that Branch was buying approximately four ounces of cocaine a day from another cocaine dealer; (6) a third confidential informant (“Third Cl”) observed a cocaine dealer purchase up to $1,000 worth of cocaine from Branch; (7) First Cl and Third Cl said Branch had recently started to deliver cocaine to his buyers rather than have the buyers pick it up at his home; (8) Wadley’s observations of Branch were consistent with First Cl and Third Cl’s statement about Branch recently delivering cocaine because Wadley recently noticed fewer people going to Branch’s home and Branch leaving the home more often; (9) on Sept. 14, 2007, Wadley saw Branch’s car with its driver door open in Branch’s driveway and then observed the car back out of the driveway and drive away; and (10) after observing Branch commit traffic violations, Wadley called a marked police car to conduct a traffic stop of Branch’s car, and after a drug-detection dog alerted on Branch’s car, Wadley discovered crack cocaine in Branch’s pocket.
Also in the affidavit, Wadley attested to his twelve years of experience as a police officer and stated that the information provided in the affidavit was based on evidence and information collected during his investigations into narcotics trafficking in Killeen. He also attested to the reliability of First Cl and Third Cl. 2
Based on the information in the affidavit, the magistrate could have inferred that: (1) Branch carried the cocaine that was found in his pocket out of his home; (2) the confidential informants, especially First Cl and Third Cl, had some familiarity with Branch and his affairs; (3) Branch had recently begun delivering cocaine tó buyers rather than allowing buyers to come to his home; and (4) Branch was attempting to deliver cocaine to a buyer when the traffic stop occurred.
Given the facts in the affidavit and the reasonable inferences that could be made from the facts, we conclude that the magistrate had a substantial basis for determining that probable cause existed to search Branch’s home. Although it is possible that Branch took all the cocaine stored at his home with him when he left
C. Conclusion Regarding Motion to Suppress
Because we find no error in the trial court’s decision to deny Branch’s motion to suppress, we overrule Branch’s first two issues.
Denial of Motion for New Trial
In his motion for new trial, Branch alleged that his trial attorneys had provided ineffective assistance of counsel. After a hearing, the trial court denied the motion by operation of law. On appeal, Branch contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion because his trial attorneys provided ineffective assistance when they failed to object to the prosecutor’s statements during closing argument about the way in which parole law would affect Branch’s sentence.
We review a trial court’s denial of a motion for new trial for an abuse of discretion.
Charles v. State,
It is the defendant’s burden to prove ineffective assistance of counsel by a preponderance of the evidence.
Thompson v. State,
In determining whether an attorney’s performance was deficient, we apply a strong presumption that the attorney’s conduct was within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance.
Id.
at 694-95,
A. Deficient Performance
Branch’s complaint regarding his trial attorneys’ performance pertains to his attorneys’ failure to object to statements the prosecutor made regarding parole law during the State’s closing argument. Before we discuss the propriety of the prosecutor’s statements, we will first provide background from the punishment phase of trial regarding the way in which parole law was addressed in the jury charge and both parties’ closing arguments. We begin with the jury charge, which stated in part:
Under the law applicable in this cause, the defendant, if sentenced to a term of imprisonment, may earn time off the period of incarceration imposed through the award of good conduct time. Prison authorities may award good conduct time to a prisoner who exhibits good behavior, diligence in carrying out prison work assignments, and attempts at rehabilitation. If a prisoner engages in misconduct, prison authorities may also take away all or part of any good conduct time earned by the prisoner.
It is also possible that the length of time for which the defendant will be imprisoned might be reduced by the award of parole.
Under the law applicable to this case, if the defendant is sentenced to a term of imprisonment, he will' not become eligible for parole until the actual time served plus any good conduct time earned equals one-fourth of the sentence imposed or thirty (30) years, whichever is less. 4 Eligibility for parole does not guarantee that parole will be granted. It cannot accurately be .predicted how the parole law and good conduct time might be applied to this defendant if he is sentenced to a term of imprisonment, because the application of these laws will depend on decisions made by prison and parole authorities.
You may consider the existence of the parole law and good conduct time. However, you are not to consider the extent to which good conduct time maybe awarded to or forfeited by this particular defendant. You are not to consider the manner in which the parole law may be applied to this particular defendant.
Both the State and the defense addressed parole law to varying degrees in their closing arguments. In the State’s initial closing argument, the prosecutor explained the parole-law portion of the jury charge to the jury and displayed a chart to assist in the explanation. The prosecutor stated:
[Pjarole eligibility begins when a defendant has served one-quarter of his sentence, taking in consideration good time and back time. All right. Realistically the minimum in this case is fifteen years because of the defendant’s prior conviction for distribution. Parole eligibility would be in three-and-a-quarter years. If you give him a sentence of the minimum, that’s what he’s looking at before he’s eligible. A twenty-year sentence is five years; a thirty-year sentence, seven-and-a-half; forty years, ten. You can see down the chart. A life sentence is thirty years before he is eligible because thirty years is tops what you’re going to do. Okay? That’s what “parole eligibility” means realistically. If you assess a sentence on the top line, he will be eligible somewhere along the bottom line.
During the defense’s closing argument, one of Branch’s two trial attorneys addressed parole law as follows:
This is not a life without parole case. It may well be a life case, and you can determine that. And as [the prosecutor’s] wonderful chart shows, life is a term of sixty years. Now Mr. Branch is old enough. Sixty years from now he’ll been dead twenty years [sic]. So that’s not good. That’s fine. You want to give him a life sentence and make sure he dies in prison, then you need to do that. But, really, when you start looking at it, Texas says life is really sixty years. Then you start to cut that in half, and then you cut that into a quarter — you understand what I’m saying — and so you get a number. Well, okay, fine. And maybe everybody is sitting here saying, “Well, in real time I want him to serve this much time.” Doesn’t work that way. The parole board changes their standards quicker than I change my socks. But, the end result is [Branch] is going to be affected by that parole law, and it’s going to start today in this courtroom in about twenty minutes. Because in about twenty minutes I’m going to be through talking and [the prosecutor] will be through talking. You’ll have your twelve individual copies, and you will adjourn to the jury room. And you will be in there, and you’ll make a rational decision [as to] what you think this case is worth.
[[Image here]]
Ladies and gentlemen, the defendant will come home some day. The only issue is: When is that “some day” going to be against a whole lot of fancy figuring by the State Board of Pardons and Parole based on what verdict you render and whether or not my client can be an above-board citizen while he’s in prison? And I can’t give you that guarantee. All I can tell you is, I have every hope that [Branch] has learned something from this so that if and when he gets to [prison], he’s not allowed — Now that he’s got a record — He’s not a fight starter. He doesn’t join some prison gang. He just does his time and gets it done and gets it behind him and get[s] back.
Then, in the final portion of the State’s closing argument, the prosecutor again addressed the issue of parole. It is this portion of the closing, argument that Branch asserts was improper:
[Branch is] going to get out. You can see. You give him life, fifteen years he’seligible for parole. He is not going to stay in prison until he dies, and that fifteen years, as you can see in here, is tempered by how he’s good. Okay? He’s a good boy, he stays in prison seven years, eight years. He’s going to be done on life. Give him thirty, give him forty, he’s going to get out quicker. It’s almost obscene that we have to come to you and tell you that these number games [are] played. It would be much simpler if I could walk in here and tell you he’s going to go to prison for what you give him, and that’s it.
[[Image here]]
You’re never — even with life — going to send him to prison for fifteen or twenty years. It’s not going to happen.”
Branch contends that the prosecutor’s statements were improper. We agree. Although the State may attempt to clarify the meaning of the jury instructions pertaining to parole law and good-conduct time,
see Taylor v. State,
The prosecutor’s statements were improper because they went beyond merely explaining the parole-law portion of the jury charge and because they were also an inaccurate statement of the law. As previously quoted, the law in the jury charge explicitly stated that “[i]t cannot accurately be predicted. how the parole law and good conduct time might be applied to this defendant if he is sentenced to a term of imprisonment, because the application of these laws will depend on decisions made by prison and parole authorities.” Thus, according to the law, no one in the courtroom could accurately predict how parole law and good conduct time would be applied to Branch. Yet the prosecutor made just such a prediction by stating with certainty that Branch would be out of prison in seven or eight years if he exhibited good conduct in jail, that he would be out of prison even sooner with a lesser sentence, and that he would never serve longer than fifteen or twenty years of a life sentence. Branch’s trial attorneys should have, objected to the prosecutor’s improper statements.
5
See Andrews,
At the hearing on the motion for new trial, Branch’s trial attorneys testified regarding their reasons for not objecting to the prosecutor’s statements. The first attorney to testify, Jeffrey Parker, explained that he and the other defense attorney, Robert Harris, worked together in representing Branch but that Harris was the attorney responsible for conducting argument during the punishment phase of trial. Parker addressed the prosecutor’s statements in the following exchange:
Defense: [D]o you recall the prosecutor’s argument? Do you recall him making the argument something along the lines if the jury were to give Mr. Branch a life sentence, that, in fact, it would be somewhat equivalent to a seven years [sic] — that he would be out in seven years?
Parker: I don’t recall that. I recall the prosecutor ... making the statement that because he would serve a quarter of his sentence, that a thirty-year sentence equated to seven-and-a-half years and he would be back on the streets.
Defense: Okay. So in other words, the prosecutor indicated to the jury that with a life sentence, Mr. Branch would be back on the streets in seven-and-a-half years? That was the import of the argument as you recall?
Parker: As I recall.
[[Image here]]
Defense: Okay. And are you — with your understanding of the law, is the prosecutor permitted to make an argument about how the parole laws will apply to a particular defendant?
Parker: It is my understanding they are not.
Defense: Okay. And during trial, did you object when the prosecutor made this argument?
Parker: No. It would not have been proper for me to object.
Defense: Okay. And that’s because Mr. Harris was conducting the argument at that stage of the trial?
Parker: That’s correct.
Defense: Were you aware of any strategy for not objecting at that point in the trial?
Parker: I know that Mr. Harris had made some arguments, but at this time, I cannot recall what they were. I was not personally aware of his strategy, but I have not discussed this with Mr. Harris, so I don’t — I cannot answer that question.
Defense: So you didn’t discuss trial strategy between the two of you prior to trial?
Parker: Yes, we did. But not as to— with respect to parole issues.
Defense: Okay. Not with respect to that particular issue?
Parker: Correct.
Harris testified that he did not recall the prosecutor making an argument about the application of parole to Branch’s sentence. Harris further testified regarding the prosecutor’s statements in the following exchange with Branch’s appellate counsel:
Defense: And if the prosecutor had argued how the parole laws would apply to Mr. Branch specifically, himself personally in this case, would that jump out in your mind as an argument that’s improper or illegal under the law?
Harris: It would stand out in my mind as an argument that is reactionary. And the point being there, since paragraph two [of the jury charge] is — very obviously says we can’t determine what the parole board is going to do, how they’re going to rule, I would have been surprised if [the prosecutor] would have tried to influence a jury, to place themselves in the place of the parole board.
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Defense: How would you describe your strategy in not objecting to an argument about parole?
Harris: Well, my strategy wasn’t — there wasn’t any specific strategy to ignore things that I think are incorrect.
Harris then went on to explain his overall strategy, which was to humanize Branch and point out that Branch would get out of jail someday on parole, at which time he would have responsibilities just like every other human being and should therefore not be “warehoused” in prison until his release.
The testimony of both of Branch’s attorneys shows that their decisions not to object to the prosecutor’s improper statements were not the result of a particular trial strategy. Parker indicated that he felt it would be inappropriate for him to object when Harris was the attorney conducting argument, and Harris admitted that he did not have a trial strategy in declining to object. Even if they had provided some sort of explanation or apparent strategy, it would likely still be insufficient. See id. (“There can be no reasonable trial strategy in failing to correct a misstatement of law that is detrimental to the client.”).
The dissent suggests that the defense attorneys’ failure to object to the improper statements could be overlooked because by and large, the defense attorneys rendered effective assistance to Branch throughout trial. However, the court of criminal appeals has stated otherwise.
See id.
at 103 (defense attorney’s failure to object to prosecutor’s misstatement of law was alone sufficient to establish deficient performance). As previously mentioned, the
Andrews
court stated that “[tjhere can be no reasonable trial strategy in failing to correct a misstatement of law that is detrimental to the client.”
Id.
at 102. Here, the prosecutor misstated the law to Branch’s detriment and did so through three separate statements to the jury. Not only did Branch’s attorneys not object to the improper statements, but they also testified that they did not have a trial strategy in doing so. Thus, regardless of Branch’s attorneys’ conduct elsewhere during the trial, Branch has shown based on
Andrews
and his attorneys’ testimony that there was no reasonable trial strategy justifying his trial attorneys’ failure to object to the prosecutor’s improper statements, which is all that is required to establish deficient performance as a matter of law.
See id.; Strickland,
B. Prejudice
As previously stated, to prove the second prong of ineffective assistance, Branch must establish that there is a reasonable probability that the outcome of his punishment hearing would have been different if' not for his counsels’ deficient performance.
See Strickland,
Here, the prosecutor’s improper statements gave the jury the inaccurate impression that a life sentence would result in Branch’s release from prison in only seven or eight years, and that in any case, Branch would never serve more than fifteen or twenty years of a life sentence. If Branch’s attorneys had objected to the prosecutor’s improper statements, the trial court could have corrected the misstatements and instructed the jury to disregard
We also note that a prosecutor acts under the authority of the State and brings a great deal of expertise to a criminal trial. The prosecutor here, speaking from such a place of authority, purported to explain the sentencing provisions in the jury charge when he made the inaccurate statements. As previously explained, the law is well-established that neither the prosecutor nor anyone else in the courtroom could predict how the parole law would apply to Branch. Thus, a person with extensive expertise and authority in criminal matters gave the jury incorrect information with which to assess an appropriate sentence for Branch. It is also significant that the jury heard the inaccurate statements immediately before retiring to deliberate.
See Hall v. State,
We conclude that the record establishes that there is a “reasonable probability” that Branch’s sentence would have been different if his attorneys had lodged an objection to the prosecutor’s misstatements.
See Andrews,
C. Conclusion Regarding Ineffective Assistance
Given the impropriety of the prosecutor’s comments, the lack of a trial strategy in support of declining to object to the comments, and the likelihood that Branch would have received a different sentence if his attorneys would have objected to the comments, we conclude that Branch’s trial attorneys provided ineffective assistance in failing to object to the comments and that the trial court abused its discretion in denying Branch’s motion for new trial based on ineffective assistance of counsel.
CONCLUSION
Because we conclude that the trial court did not err in denying Branch’s motion to suppress, we affirm the portion of the trial court’s judgment finding guilt. Because of the unique combination of circumstances in this case — namely, the improper statements made by the prosecution, the defense attorneys’ testimony that they did not have a trial strategy for declining to object to the improper statements, and the fact that Branch was assessed the most severe sentence possible — we conclude that the trial court erred in denying Branch’s motion for new trial. Accordingly, we reverse the portion of the trial court’s judgment assessing punishment, and we remand this cause to the trial court for a new punishment hearing.
Dissenting opinion by Justice PURYEAR.
Notes
. The transcript from the hearing on the motion to suppress does not indicate where in the home the two quantities of cocaine were discovered.
. In reference to Second Cl, Wadley's affidavit states only that Wadley received the information about Second Cl from a detective at the Central Texas Narcotics Task Force.
. At the hearing on the motion to suppress, Detective Wadley testified that one of the reasons he believed that more cocaine might be found in Branch's home after discovering the cocaine in Branch’s pocket was that the cocaine in Branch's pocket, which was crack cocaine, was "not even dried yet” and had "just been cooked.” Wadley believed that Branch was processing the crack cocaine in his home. The affidavit Wadley filed in support of the search warrant did not include the detail about the crack cocaine being wet. However, we need not focus on the missing detail because we have already concluded that the facts included in the affidavit, coupled with the inferences from those facts, are sufficient to establish probable cause for the search. "The issue is not whether there are other facts that could have, or even should have, been included in the affidavit; we focus on the combined logical force of facts that
are
in the affidavit, not those that are omitted from the affidavit.”
Rodriguez v. State,
. Although the parties did not raise the issue of error in the jury charge, we noticed that the charge is incorrect in tracking the applicable statutory language regarding the time frame in which Branch would be eligible for parole. The charge states that Branch would "not become eligible for parole until the actual time served plus any good conduct time •earned equals one-fourth of the sentence imposed or thirty (30) years, whichever is less.” The statute applicable to this case, which is section 4(b) of article 37.07 of the code of criminal procedure, states that a defendant will "not become eligible' for parole until the actual time served plus any good conduct time earned equals one-fourth of the sentence imposed or 15 years, whichever is less.” See Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 37.07, § 4(b) (West Supp. 2010).
. The State contends that the prosecutor’s statements were proper because they were merely an answer to defense counsel’s argument regarding parole.
See Brown v. State,
