OPINION
Opinion by
Darnell Hartsfield was convicted of aggravated perjury and, after pleading true to six felony enhancement allegations, the trial court sentenced him to life imprisonment. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Background Facts
On September 23,1983, five people were abducted from a Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) restaurant in Kilgore, Texas. 1 Hours later, their bodies were found on an oil lease in Rusk County. On learning of the abduction, police officers, including Elliott and Captain Marvin Avance, went to KFC and found the restaurant in disarray, with blood spattered in various places. While the officers were investigating, the bodies of the individuals were found. Most of the officers went to the other crime scene, leaving Captain Avance in charge at the KFC until Tyler police officers arrived hours later to process the scene. Unfortunately, these investigative measures did not solve the case.
About twenty years later, in June 2001, DNA testing was done on a blood sample taken from a box from KFC. The sample was statistically matched to Hartsfield who, as an inmate in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice,
2
had a DNA sample in the Texas CODIS.
3
On September 22, 2003, Hartsfield appeared as a subpoenaed witness before a grand jury in Rusk County and repeatedly denied that he had been present in KFC September 23, 1983. On November 9, 2004, a grand
On the same day as the indictment, Kyle Freeman, the elected County Attorney at that time, signed and filed a deputation, conferring his duties with regard to Harts-field’s case to Lisa Tanner, an Assistant Attorney General. Tanner executed and filed the proper oath of office. On January 1, 2005, in the interim between the indictment and the trial, Michael Jimerson succeeded Freeman as County Attorney. Jimerson told Tanner to keep doing what she was doing in regard to the Hartsfield case. Even though Jimerson was present during the Hartsfield trial, Tanner presented the State’s case to the jury and the trial court.
Issues Presented
1. Was Tanner properly authorized by the duly elected County Attorney to prosecute this case?
2. Did the trial court err in admitting State’s Exhibits 29-34 (the cardboard box spattered with Hartsfield’s DNA and pictures of that box) into evidence over a timely and specific objection that the State could not prove a proper chain of custody of the exhibits?
1. Tanner’s Prosecutorial Authority
The first issue before this Court is whether the election of a different County Attorney invalidated Tanner’s authority to prosecute this matter. Hartsfield never complained about Tanner’s authority until such a complaint was made in the appellant’s brief before this Court. In order to preserve error, an objection should be made as soon as the grounds for the objection become apparent.
Angelo v. State,
Even if the issue was preserved, we do not believe error is present. There is no question that Freeman deputized Tanner to prosecute this case. Freeman’s deputation authorized Tanner “to do and perform any and all acts and things pertaining to the office of said County Attorney” in regard to the Hartsfield case. When Freeman left office, Tanner began serving at the will and pleasure of Jimerson. Jim-erson could have dismissed her at any point, but instead told her to keep doing what she was doing.
Instead of being a deputy, as in the Freeman tenure, Tanner could have remained on the case under Jimerson’s direction in the capacity of a special prosecutor.
See generally
Tex.Code Crim. Proo. Ann. art. 2.01 (Vernon 2005). On request, a special prosecutor assists a county attorney in the investigation and prosecution of a particular case.
Stephens,
The record does not demonstrate that Jimerson relinquished his constitutional or statutory duties or that he yielded control of this case. Since no objection was presented to Tanner’s prosecution, there was no hearing to develop a record as to Jimer-son’s control of the case. However, we note that Jimerson is listed on every volume of the court reporter’s record as one of the attorneys appearing on behalf of the State. It is undisputed that Jimerson was present during the trial. Tanner referred to Jimerson several times during the trial, stating they were “working alongside” each other.
We overrule the first point of error.
2. Admission of Exhibits 29-34
The second issue on appeal is whether State’s Exhibits 29-34 were improperly admitted over a timely objection that the State was unable to prove a proper chain of custody. The exhibits are a box spattered with blood and photographs of that box. The blood on the box is the only physical evidence of Hartsfield being present in KFC, and thus guilty of perjury. An abuse of discretion standard is used when reviewing a trial court’s decision to admit evidence.
City of Brownsville v. Alvarado,
Texas Rule of Evidence 901 requires the authentication or identification of evidence to establish that the matter in question is what the proponent claims it to be. TexR. Evid. 901. In providing the proof necessary to comply with Rule 901, the proponent of the item of evidence must present differing types of evidence depending on the nature of the item. Articles that are easily identifiable and are substantially unchanged normally do not require the introduction of a chain of custody.
See, e.g., Outland v. State,
The State maintains that the box has distinct or unique characteristics and, therefore, a chain of custody is unnecessary to prove authentication. Hartsfield emphasizes the evidence consists of a blood specimen, not just the box, and therefore the custody chain is required. But the evidence sought to be admitted here is not a vial of blood that could only be identified if it had been properly marked for identification when it was acquired and thereafter traced. Here, the item was a box that had an unusual characteristic — a marking that appeared to be blood spatter. Until that box was analyzed, it could not be determined that the marking on the box was in fact blood. This Court has considered an analogous situation in
Jackson v. State,
There are no photographs of the box at the restaurant, and at trial, the State conceded that it could not prove who removed the box from the restaurant. Officers used ten rolls of film to photograph the KFC, but only one of the rolls developed properly. None of the photographs showed the box at the KFC scene. The manager of KFC, Leann Killingsworth, testified that the box was the same
kind of
In Jackson, the wife’s personal knowledge that Jackson was wearing the jeans on the night of the assault sufficiently authenticated the pants to allow the admission of the results of DNA tests done on blood on the jeans. She had seen those jeans on Jackson that night. Id. at 500. Elliott saw this box at KFC that morning. Elliott’s testimony is sufficient to prove the item is what it is claimed to be — the box, spattered with distinctive markings, found inside the KFC September 24, 1983. The trial court did not err in admitting the evidence.
We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Notes
.The abduction occurred the night of September 23, 1983. Texas Ranger Glenn Elliott was called to the scene in the early morning of September 24, 1983.
. At punishment, the State introduced evidence that Hartsfield had prior convictions for two counts of burglary of a vehicle, burglary of a habitation, aggravated robbery, delivery of a controlled substance, and engaging in criminal activity.
. Combined Offender DNA Indexing System.
