|xThe State charged Terrance Duggar with violating multiple drug-related statutes. A jury found Duggar guilty of a lesser-included offense: possessing at least four ounces but less than ten pounds of
|2I. There was Sufficient Evidence that Duggar Constructively Possessed Marijuana
We address Duggar’s insufficient-evidence argument first. Boldin v. State,
In a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, we review the evidence in the light most favorable to the State and consider only the evidence that supports the conviction. Cluck v. State,
In August 2011, law enforcement converged upon a house located at 10900 Birchwood Drive in Little Rock and executed a search warrant. Duggar and another person named Larry Hatchett were in the house when police entered. Duggar was arrested and charged with violating Ark.Code Ann. §§ 5-64-436, 5-64A02, and 5-64-443 because a number of bags of marijuana, baggies, and a scale were found in the house while Duggar was [sthere. Duggar took his case to trial before a Pulaski County jury.
During the March 2012 jury trial, Little Rock Police Detective John Wesley Lott testified that when he entered the house he saw several large bags of marijuana in the corner of the dining room аnd kitchen area; Duggar was on the floor facing the bags. (SWAT Team members entered the house first to take control and ensure everyone’s safety.) Detective Lott did not, however, see “with [his] own eyes where [Duggar] was when the SWAT Team hit that door.” Detective Charles Weaver, also of the Little Rock Police Deрartment, testified during the trial that the house had a “big open floor plan” and that Dug-gar was on the floor next to the kitchen table when he entered the house. According to Detective Weaver, a number of bags of marijuana were located three or four feet from the kitchen table. Detective Lott identified State’s Exhibit No. 4 as being the six bags of marijuana that were located three to five feet to the left of the table, “in plain view of the kitchen.”
The police also found letters addressed to Duggar in the northwest bedroom of the house — another letter with Duggar’s name
On appeal, Duggar contends that the State did not sufficiently prove that he constructively possessed the mаrijuana. To prove constructive possession, the State must establish that Duggar exercised care, control, and management over the marijuana. McKenzie v. State,
These arguments do not persuade us to reverse. The jury was responsible fоr weighing and crediting the evidence in this case. Tatum v. State,
These facts are strikingly similar to a case we decided not long ago, where we upheld a drug-related conviction. Allen v. State,
II. There was No Meaningful Break in the Chain of Custody
The crux of Duggar’s attack on the chain of custody concerns State’s Exhibit No. 4. He argues that the circuit court erred when it admitted Exhibit No. 4 because the State did not sufficiently establish chain of custody over the marijuana at triаl.
We will not reverse the circuit court’s evidentiary ruling on Exhibit No. 4’s admissibility absent an abuse of discretion and a showing that it prejudiced Dug-gar. Guydon v. State,
We return to Detectives Lott and Weaver, who testifiеd that they saw (in plain view) several large bags of marijuana sitting out in the kitchen and dining area when they entered the house. Detective Lott — who was the property officer at the scene when the search warrant was executed at the Birehwood house — said that the bags weighed approximately five pоunds. He tagged and logged all the evidence on an inventory form; he then placed the evidence in lockup according to police procedures. Detective Lott identified the inventory tag on State’s Exhibit No. 4 at trial, and he described the exhibit as being the six bags of marijuana he recovered from the hоuse. He specifically said that he had placed the six bags of marijuana into the large, clear bag labeled State’s Exhibit No. 4. The jury saw the exhibit.
Julie Hathcock, a forensic chemist at the Arkansas State Crime Lab, testified for the State. (Duggar did not challenge her credentials.) Hathcock said that the crime lab where she works received all six items from Duggar’s case under seal and in a box. Hathcock testified that Exhibit No. 4 was sealed when she first contacted it. She also said that all the tag numbers (which the police department assigned) and the submission-sheet numbers (which the crime lab assigned) matched. Hath-cock unequivocally cоnfirmed at trial that Exhibit No. 4 was substantially in the same condition as when she had first received it at the crime lab.
|7On cross-examination, Hathcock said that Exhibit No. 4 contained six bags, and one of the bags contained three zippered zip-locks that she had labeled A-C. Exhibit No. 4 also contained two additional heat-sealеd bags — and each heat-sealed bag had zippered zip-locks. Hathcock labeled the two heat-sealed bags D and E. Exhibit No. 4 also contained one zip-lock bag that itself contained five tied plastic bags. Each of those bags she labeled F through J. While in the lab, Hathcock took the marijuana out оf the packages, aggregated it, and weighed it. The marijuana that was Exhibit No. 4 weighed 2,366.9 grams. Tests performed on each of the ten samples confirmed that Exhibit No. 4’s content was marijuana. The bottom line is that Hath-cock testified that Exhibit No. 4 contained ten different bags of marijuana and the
Our supreme court has said establishing the chain of custody for interchangeable items (like drugs) must be more conclusive than for other items. Crisco v. State,
Minor uncertainties, legally speaking, is what Duggar presents on appeal. He sаys that Detective Lott said Exhibit No. 4 was composed of six bags, a significantly different number from Hathcock’s tale of ten bags. Duggar wants the marijuana excluded because “[i]t is unclear whether additional marijuana had been added to State’s Exhibit No. 4 between the time of | ¡^seizure and testing by the State Crime Lab.” He says this differencе in bag numbers and whether more marijuana was added while Exhibit No. 4 was in transit is important because the weight of the marijuana was a factor to be considered by the jury. Duggar relies on Crisco v. State to support his exclusionary argument.
This case is not like Crisco. Here, the jury arguably heard conflicting testimony on the number of bags that Exhibit No. 4 contained (six bags versus ten bags). But the conflict is not pivotal given all the testimony. Hathcock explained on cross-examination why the six bags were actually ten. The jury was permitted to conclude that Hathcock had provided a rational explanation of the difference between her numbering scheme and Detective Lott’s. The differences between Detective Lott’s descriptions and Hathcock’s descriptions on the quantity and weight of the marijuana were minor discrepancies that the jury could consider and weigh as the parties made their cases. Our case law so holds. See Guydon v. State,
13Puggar also complains that Detective Lott did not testify that he took all the marijuana exhibits to the crime lab. The detective said that he sent Exhibit Nos. 2 and 3 to the crime lаb. Exhibit Nos. 2 and 3 were digital scales. He did not say that he took Exhibit No. 4 to the lab. Detective Lott said, however, he put all the evidence that was collected at the scene in lockup at the police station. Although Hathcock testified that the evidence was sealed when she first saw it, Detective Lott did not say that he put his initials or that he sealed the evidence when he put it
The questions of who took the evidence from the police station to the crime lab and who first received it at the crime lab do not, in this case, break the chain of custody because what Duggar needed to establish was that Exhibit No. 4 had been tampered with or adulterated in some way. We have no such evidence befоre us. E.g., Owens v. State,
The State need not eliminate every possibility of tampering. Instead, the circuit court need only be satisfied that, in all reasonable probability, the evidenсe was not tampered with. Hawkins v. State,
Duggar’s conviction is affirmed.
Affirmed.
