Opinion
Eduardo Martinez Brown (defendant) was convicted of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute and sentenced, in accordance with the jury’s verdict, to forty years imprisonment. He appeals, contending that the trial court erred in admitting testimony that associated the location of the offense with notorious criminal activity. We disagree and affirm.
The evidence disclosed that Officers Angelo Chiota (Chiota) and Kenneth Hatten (Hatten), “responding ... to [a] complaint of open drug sales,” observed defendant exit a cab and enter a “park” located in Alexandria, Virginia. It was “around 7:30” on a February evening and the officers “noticed” only defendant and another individual in the park.
As the officers watched, defendant “thr[e]w . . . away” a “big, very shiny object,” which “appeared to be narcotics,” and “walked on.” While Chiota recovered the discarded article from “the ground,” Hatten ‘ ‘asked defendant to come over’ ’ to the police vehicle. Chiota returned with a “plastic Baggie,” which contained “14 little Baggies” of “crack cocaine,” having an estimated total value of “about $7,000.00.” The officers then arrested and searched defendant, and discovered a beeper under his shirt. Chiota testified that the “amounts” and “packaging” of the drug were “not consistent with personal use” and identified the beeper as a “tool that people who deal in drugs use.”
During trial, Chiota was permitted to describe “the area where the park is located” as an “open drug market.” This testimony followed uncontradicted evidence of Chiota’s training and expertise in the “identification of, the manufacture, sale, possession and distribution of . . . drugs, specifically cocaine” in the City of Alexandria. His description of the park area and its inclusion among “several spots in the city” “routinely” involved in “complaints” was supported by personal experience, well established in the record.
*234
Relying upon
Smith
v.
Commonwealth,
However, unlike defendant, Smith possessed no drugs at the time of his arrest, and the only evidence of criminal conduct was ‘ ‘the activity of [Smith] and others” in an area reputed “for trafficking in drugs.”
Id.
at 336-37,
The Court again considered the relevancy of evidence “about drug conditions” in a particular area in
Coe
v.
Commonwealth,
Distinguishing
Smith,
the Court noted the “abundant... evidence” of Coe’s guilt in addition to his visit to a disreputable area.
Id.
at 88-89,
Thus, although both
Smith
and
Coe
instruct that testimony relating an accused to a sinister location, without more, is irrelevant,
Coe
recognized that such evidence may be admissible when considered with “other evidence” of illegal activity.
1
Coe,
Similar to
Coe,
this record provides abundant evidence that defendant possessed crack cocaine with the intent to distribute it.
See Monroe
v.
Commonwealth, 4
Va. App. 154, 156,
However, defendant complains that even if admissible, the testimony improperly suggested an awareness of the area’s reputation and prejudiced him far beyond the probative value of that evidence. “The responsibility for balancing these competing considerations is largely within the sound discretion of the trial [court],” and its “ruling will not be disturbed on appeal absent a clear abuse of [that] discretion.”
Coe,
Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Duff, J., * , * and Willis, J., concurred.
Affirmed.
Notes
We further recognize that the defendant’s presence in a high crime area, standing alone, does not provide the requisite degree of suspicion to justify an investigatory stop.
See Riley
v.
Commonwealth,
Judge Duff participated in the hearing and decision of this case prior to the effective date of his retirement on September 1,1992 and thereafter by designation pursuant to Code § 17-116.01.
