Found in a house fall of illegal drugs and related paraphernalia, Keith Cooper was convicted of cocaine trafficking and possessing marijuana with intent to distribute. He claims his convictions cannot stand for three reasons: (i) the suspected cocaine found in the kitchen was not tested; (ii) no evidence linked Cooper to the cocaine found in the pocket of a jacket hanging in co-indictee Hurt’s closet or to the marijuana found in the bedroom of co-indictee Braswell; and (iii) constructive possession of contraband cannot rest upon mere proximity to the contraband.
After observing activities consistent with illegal drug sales at a house, an undercover officer on November 12, 1997 approached and witnessed a sale of apparent marijuana to the two persons in line ahead of him. He observed various men in the kitchen cutting up and packaging suspected cocaine from a pile on a table. He purchased some of the suspected cocaine from the men and it field tested positive for cocaine. He later identified the man who handed him the cocaine as Cooper.
Police obtained a search warrant and on November 14 found cocaine, marijuana, scales, razor blades, plastic baggies, packing tape; currency, walkie-talkies, and an arsenal of guns and ammunition in plain view throughout the residence. The primary stash of marijuana was found in the bedroom of Braswell and large amounts of suspected cocaine were found on the kitchen table and in the pocket of a coat hanging in Hurt’s bedroom closet. The crime lab tested and confirmed the substances found in the coat pocket and in the bedroom as cocaine and marijuana respectively, but did not test the suspected cocaine found in the kitchen.
During the search, police found Cooper, Braswell, Hurt, and five others in the residence. Cooper and another were hiding in the closet of the hallway bathroom, where police found numerous small bags of cocaine in a larger bag also containing a prescription bottle with Cooper’s name on it. All eight were arrested and charged with cocaine trafficking and marijuana selling. Held'.
1. Citing
Johnson v. State,
The crime lab did confirm the substance found in the coat pocket as weighing 149 grams and as containing 73 percent cocaine. The bags of cocaine found in the bathroom also tested positive and cumulatively weighed one gram. Braswell testified that Hurt headed the cocaine trafficking operation and that Cooper actively participated by cutting, packaging, and selling cocaine. The undercover officer purchased cocaine from Cooper at the residence only two days earlier. Regardless of whether the substances found in the kitchen on the search warrant date were confirmed as cocaine, Cooper’s aiding and abetting Hurt’s trafficking operation at the house linked Cooper to the cache of 149 grams of cocaine found in Hurt’s bedroom. See OCGA § 16-2-20;
Green v. State,
2. Cooper claims the convictions cannot stand because mere spatial proximity alone is insufficient to prove possession of contraband. See
Diggs v. State,
Nineteen small bags of cocaine in a container with Cooper’s pill bottle were found in the same bathroom as Cooper, and cocaine and marijuana were found throughout the house where Cooper was found. True, mere presence in the vicinity of contraband alone does not establish constructive possession. But possession may be joint or exclusive.
Lowe v. State,
Moreover, while mere presence in a house full of drugs is alone insufficient to convict an accused of being a party to trafficking, “the testimony of an accomplice tending to connect the accused to the crime will support a jury’s verdict if supported by slight evidence, which may be circumstantial. [Cits.]”
Leonard v. State,
Citing the “equal access” doctrine
(Griggs v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
