OPINION
A jury convicted Robert Craig Cox of aggravated robbery and also found one enhancement paragraph to be true. The jury assessed punishment at life imprisonment and a $10,000 fine, and Cox appeals upon six points of error. Finding no reversible error, we affirm.
SECURITY RESTRAINT
The first point of error asserts that Cox was denied the presumption of innocence when he was compelled to stand trial while wearing a security leg brace that the jury noticed, and inquired about during deliberations. The harm a defendant suffers when the jury sees him in handcuffs or shackles is that his constitutional presumption of innocence is infringed.
Cooks v.
State,
The record is silent about the trial judge’s reasons for making Cox wear the item, but the State’s brief concedes that the item was placed on him for security reasons. The trial court abused its discretion and erred by not stating reasons on the record.
Id.
But, even if there was abuse of discretion, reversal may not be necessary if the abuse was harmless.
Cooks,
should examine the source of the error, the nature of the error, whether or to what extent it was emphasized by the State, and its probable collateral implications.
Further, the court should consider how much weight a juror would probably place upon the error. In addition, the Court must also determine whether declaring the error harmless would encourage the State to repeat it with impunity.
Id. at 587.
The source and nature of the error was the lack of recorded findings by the trial judge of reasons for Cox to wear a restraint during his trial. The State did not emphasize the fact that appellant was restrained. We are not persuaded beyond a reasonable doubt that this circumstance had any collateral implications. We find nothing in the *353 record to establish that any juror gave any weight to that particular error by the trial court. Contrary to Cox’s arguments, we find no evidence that the jury recognized that the appliance he wore was intended for security purposes or to shackle him. It was worn inside the pant leg, and only the end of the device was visible. The sole evidence that jurors even noticed the device was that during deliberations they sent the judge a note containing three questions. The first question was:
Why is defendant wearing a brace? [Emphasis added.]
The other two questions were on different subjects. The trial judge replied:
The Court, under the law, is not permitted to answer the questions you have presented. Please consider only the evidence which has been presented and the instructions that have been given you, and continue with your deliberations.
The three ways appellate courts have identified harm to a defendant who is restrained during trial are: (1) prejudice felt by jurors who conclude that because a defendant is shackled the court has already decided that he is guilty, dangerous, and untrustworthy, (2) a restraint may interfere with the defendant’s mental faculties and ability to communicate with counsel dining trial, and (3) restraints are an affront to a court and its proceedings.
See Brown v. State,
Cox is not required to prove that the jury was prejudiced against him as a result of seeing the edge of some device under the cuff of his pant leg, but absent evidence that the jury actually
recognized
that the device was a security restraint, we will not conclude that Cox has been harmed.
Cooks,
OPENING THE DOOR
Point of error number two asserts that the court violated Tex. R. CRiM. Evid. 403 by erroneously admitting evidence about Cox’s compulsive and illegal gambling activities. He argues that the probative value of that evidence was outweighed by the danger of .unfair prejudice. Cox contends that the evidence lacked probative value because it was not useful in proving that he committed the aggravated robbery. Eyewitnesses identified Cox as the person who entered the store and pointed a gun at them, and he argues that there was no proof that he gambled or paid any debts with the money taken in the robbery. Cox complains that evidence of his gambling was offered simply as proof that he has a general moral weakness and a propensity to engage in criminal activity.
The State responds that Cox was gainfully employed, earning $28,000 per year plus full benefits at the time of the robbery, but the fact that he owed debts because of his gambling supplied a motive for robbery. Evidence of motive is always admissible because it is relevant as a circumstance tending to prove the commission of an offense.
Bush v. State,
When testimony resumed, the prosecutor asked about Cox’s “gambling debts.” Caldwell testified that the amount of those debts was in excess of $1,400 or $1,500 and that Cox had said he planned to go to the Isle of Capri Casino in Louisiana to try to win enough money to pay off the debts he owed. Caldwell told the jury that when Cox returned from Louisiana, he said he had lost all the money he had taken with him. Without objection, Caldwell testified that Cox “had a pretty bad gambling problem.” Later cross-examination of Caldwell by Cox’s attorney included the following exchange:
Q. This gambling debt that you say' Mr. Cox told you about in October 1994, that was a legal gambling debt, was it not?
[[Image here]]
A. My expertise in what would be legal and not legal in that county as far as gambling debts, I couldn’t honestly tell you.
Q. Well, did he owe the Isle of Capri Casino?
A. No.
Q. Who did he owe?
A. He owed some other people in the county, Collin.
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Q. Was it a bookie?
A. That could be the terminology used for that.
[[Image here]]
Q. Well, a bookie is not illegal, is he?
A. Again, I have no expertise in gambling.
The jury then left the courtroom at the request of Cox’s attorney. Out of the jury’s presence, he objected that the State’s questions about Cox’s “illegal” gambling had forced him to pursue the topic of illegal gambling on cross-examination and that the court had not given him an opportunity for a hearing outside the jury’s presence to evaluate the evidence under Criminal Evidence Rule 403. The judge overruled the objection, stating:
Right. Let me tell you what the Court ruling was in prior conference and that was that the State would not elicit from any witness that the gambling that was done was illegal and they did not. They elicited that there was gambling. There was absolutely no testimony as to whether or not it was legal or Illegal.
That, Mr. Morris, was elicited by you and if you’re objecting to that testimony at this time, it is simply overruled. Because you elicited it....
At the close of the State’s Direct Examination of this witness, the Court recalls that the only testimony about specific gambling was Isle of Capri Casino which is a legal place to gamble and nothing was testified to that any gambling was illegal.
Clearly, the court’s admission of evidence about gambling through “bookies” was not error because the only questions about possible “illegal” gambling were those asked by Cox in his cross-examination of Caldwell. He may not successfully challenge evidence that he introduced at trial.
Rogers v. State,
*355
When witness Cindy Hawkins later told the jury that she had loaned Cox several thousand dollars for his gambling, Cox’s objection “under 403 probative versus prejudicial regarding gambling” was overruled. Without objection, Hawkins testified that Cox “had a gambling problem.” Even when inadmissible evidence is erroneously admitted, the error is cured when the same evidence comes in without objection elsewhere at trial.
Johnson v. State,
Because the trial court did not err by admitting the evidence of Cox’s gambling habits, we need not reach the issue of whether the prejudicial effect of that evidence outweighed its probative value. The second point of error is overruled.
ENHANCEMENT PROOF
Point of error number three complains that in the punishment phase of the trial, the evidence was insufficient to demonstrate the enhancement counts alleging that Cox had three prior convictions in California, one for kidnapping and two for assault with a deadly weapon. To prove the California convictions, the prosecutor introduced the California abstract of judgment (State’s exhibit 18) and the California “pen packet” (State’s exhibit 18A), as official records of Cox’s convictions in that state. Fingerprint expert Robert Atkins, Supervisor of the Crime Lab of the Denton County Sheriffs Department, testified that the fingerprints contained in the California abstract of judgment are those of Robert Craig Cox, the defendant in this case.
For an out of state pen packet to suffice in Texas as evidence of a prior criminal record at the punishment phase of a trial, the State must either prove or ask the trial court to take judicial notice of what the sister state considers sufficient documentary proof of a final conviction or the foreign documents must be the functional equivalent of a Texas judgment.
Langston v. State,
As grounds for enhancement, however, the State is only required to prove one prior conviction even though it has alleged others. TexPenal Code Ann. § 12.42(c) (Vernon 1994);
State v. Delgado,
“BAD ACTS”
In the punishment phase of the trial, law enforcement officers Irvin Smothers and Jeff Ashton testified that Cox’s reputation *356 for being a lawful and peaceful person was bad. Point of error number four is that the court erred in that phase of the trial by admitting the State’s evidence of an extraneous wrongful act by Cox because the State did not prove Cox’s culpability for that conduct beyond a reasonable doubt. The conduct was the subject of testimony by Rhonda Beck. While driving to her home in Plano around 1:00 a.m. Beck noticed Cox following her in “a small white truck and it had a yellow light on top and on the side panel it had, like, SMP or some initials on the side.” Cox was then working for a company named “SMP.” Beck drove into a parking lot of her apartment complex, and Cox parked his truck nearby. She got out and saw Cox walk toward her. She quickly walked to her apartment, went inside, and locked the doors. Through a peephole, she could see Cox outside and watched while he walked up the sidewalk to her door. She testified that “then I saw his shoulder in the peephole and that’s when I backed up from the door ... I mean he was like right there.” She then “heard the door jiggle, the doorknob jiggle slowly,” and she called the police.
Plano police officer Susan Baumert responded to the call and found Cox’s truck parked at the apartment complex, but could not find him. She moved her police car and was turning around to hide nearby when Plano police officer Daniel Curtis drove up and told her that someone was driving the truck away. The officers followed, stopped the truck and learned that Cox was driving it. After talking with him and trying unsuccessfully to obtain facts about his identity, they arrested him on charges that he had failed to identify himself to a police officer and had failed to obtain a Texas driver’s license within 30 days of becoming a Texas resident.
Cox argues that his act of following Rhonda Beck and going to her door do not show a crime or the culpability to commit a crime. He complains that the State is trying to bootstrap admissibility of the evidence by simply calling the conduct a “bad act” instead of a crime. Nevertheless, in the punishment phase of a trial, the State is entitled to offer two categories of evidence: (1) evidence of any matter the court deems relevant to sentencing, including but not limited to the defendant’s prior criminal record, his general reputation, his character, and opinions regarding his character, and (2) evidence of either an extraneous crime or bad act shown beyond a reasonable doubt to have been committed by the defendant or for which he could be held criminally responsible, regardless of whether he has been charged or convicted, notwithstanding Criminal Evidence Rules 404 and 405. See Tex. Code Crim. PROC. ANN. art. 37.07(3)(a) (Vernon 1981 & Supp.1996).
After the Court of Criminal Appeals decided G
runsfeld v. State,
that the defendant, on or about the 21st day of November, 1994, in the County of Collin and the State of Texas committed the following “bad act(s)” in connection with Rhonda Beck
(a) followed Rhonda Beck and entered the apartment complex of Rhonda Beck after she had previously done so,
(b) walked up to Rhonda Beck’s apartment and turned the door nob [sic] of same,
(c) possessed a holster for a small handgun,
*357 (d) returned to the apartment complex and retrieved items which resembled a jacket, a handgun, and gloves....
Article 37.07(3)(a) does not define the term “bad acts,” but the statute’s unambiguous wording makes evidence about them admissible in two situations: (1) where the “bad act” was an offense for which the defendant could be held criminally responsible, and (2) where the act was “bad,” but not an offense for which he could be held criminally responsible.
Id.; see Yates v. State,
The jury was entitled to consider and conclude that Cox’s conduct, following Rhonda Beck to her apartment, jiggling the doorknob, and frightening her, was a “bad act” within the meaning of article 37.07(3)(a). It is the conduct of following a woman he does not know and jiggling the door knob of her apartment after 1:00 a.m. that makes it bad. That Cox did it was proved beyond a reasonable doubt. Point of error number four is overruled.
BALANCING TEST
Point of error number five asserts that admitting evidence of the “door knob incident” in the punishment phase of trial violated Tex. R. Crim. Evid. 403, because the probative value did not outweigh the danger of unfair prejudice to Cox. He made the same objection at trial, but it was overruled. The trial court then granted Cox a running objection on that ground to the testimony of Rhonda Beck and the two Plano police officers in the punishment phase of the trial.
See Montgomery v. State,
When a trial court tests and determines that the balance is a close one, it should favor admission, in keeping with the presumption of admissibility of relevant evidence.
Id.
There is no requirement that the trial judge announce the balancing test on record, but our review of the record and the judge’s comments and responses to Cox’s attorney compels us to presume that the trial court did perform the mandatory test.
Nolen v. State,
We conclude that the trial court’s ruling on this issue in the punishment phase of Cox’s trial is within the zone of reasonable disagreement, and that the ruling was not an abuse of discretion. Our court will not disturb the ruling.
McFarland v. State,
STOP OR ARREST?
Point of error number six complains that the Plano police did not have reasonable suspicion to stop Cox’s vehicle after he left Rhonda Beck’s apartment, and that the evidence they seized was the fruit of an illegal stop, erroneously admitted in the punishment phase of the trial. Cox argues that where a stop or seizure is made without a warrant, the State has the burden to demonstrate the propriety of the stop.
Russell v. State,
A law enforcement officer is entitled to stop a vehicle containing a person suspected of criminal activity.
Terry v. Ohio,
A person’s failure to produce a valid driver’s license can provide an officer probable cause to arrest him. Tex.TraNSP. Code Ann. § 521.021 (Vernon Pamph.1996);
Snyder v. State,
Here, according to the testimony, Cox was not arrested until after the officers stopped him and talked to him. Cox gave the officers evasive answers but did disclose a telephone number of the place he was staying. Officer Baumert called the number and the person who answered the telephone said Cox had lived there for a month and a half. After that, the officers arrested Cox for refusing to identify himself and for not having a valid Texas driver’s license. After arresting Cox, Officer Baumert searched Cox’s truck and found surgical latex gloves, condoms, a blue jacket, an empty handgun holster, and an empty knife sheath. No search was made before the arrest, and the items found in the search were a subject of the testimony in the punishment phase of the trial.
Before that testimony, Cox filed a written motion to suppress that evidence on grounds that:
All statements, either written or oral, made after the said seizure of defendant are fruits of the illegal arrest and search and are therefore inadmissible as fruits of the poisonous tree.
In its brief on appeal, the State argues that because the motion to suppress only complained about the arrest and search (not the stop), the only issue before the trial court in the suppression hearing was whether the arrest was supported by probable cause. We agree.
It is well settled that almost every right, constitutional and statutory, may be waived by the failure to object.
Briggs v. State,
We conclude that because the arrest was lawful, the search of Cox’s truck by the police officers was lawful, and the items of evidence they found in the truck were not the fruit of a poisonous tree. That evidence was admissible in the punishment phase of Cox’s trial. The trial court did not err in denying Cox’s motion to suppress because it only complained about the arrest and search, for which the officers did have probable cause.
*359 The sixth point of error is overruled and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
