OPINION
Aрpellant Randy Farrel Kelly,'appeals his conviction for possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver, claiming that the trial court erred in . 'denying his motion to suppress. We affirm.
*545 Factual and Procedural Background
Appellant was charged by indictment with the felony offense of possession of a controlled substance, methamphetamine weighing between four and two hundred grams, with intent to deliver. The primary offense was enhanced by two prior felony convictions.
Appellant filed a motion to suppress evidence he claimed was illegally obtained and any statements he made during his detention. At a hearing on the motion, the parties stipulated that officers searched appellant’s vehicle during a traffic stop without a warrant. When viewed in the light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling, 1 the evidence from the hearing reflects the following:
Deputies with the Harris County Sher-riff s Office were conducting surveillance as part of a narcotics investigation that focused on appellant. The deputies believed appellant’s red pick-up truck was parked at a nearby residence and that appellant was in pоssession of methamphetamine. One deputy sat in a marked patrol unit that was stopped along a roadway when he saw a vehicle matching the description of appellant’s vehicle traveling toward him. He observed that the vehicle had no front license plate and that the occupant inside wore no seat belt. He radioed the other deputies assisting in the investigation about the traffic violations that he observed. As the vehicle turned left, the deputy observed the vehicle’s rear license plate аnd conducted a computer search of the vehicle’s registration. He learned that appellant was the registered owner and informed other officers by radio of the license-plate number.
Deputy Shattuck learned of the traffic offenses via radio, observed the same vehicle approaching him, and also noticed the vehicle had no front license plate and that the driver wore no seat belt. Deputy Shattuck pursued and stopped the vehicle at a nearby service station. Deputy Shаt-tuck observed the driver reaching around inside the truck as if reaching toward the passenger side. Based on his training and experience, Deputy Shattuck believed that such movements are indicative of an occupant attempting to conceal or retrieve items.
Deputy Shattuck approached the vehicle and asked the driver for his driver’s license. Deputy Shattuck noticed that the driver seemed nervous and that his hands shook when he produced his identification. Deputy Shattuck saw that the driver continued to loоk through his wallet after producing his driver’s license, as if looking for something else. When the deputy learned appellant’s identity, he asked appellant to exit the vehicle and asked appellant a few questions. Appellant told the deputy that he had been visiting a friend’s home in the neighborhood. Around this time, other officers arrived on the scene. Deputy Shattuck conducted a computer check of appellant’s driver’s license and discovered appellant had a criminal history involving narcotics, but no outstanding warrants.
Deputy Shattuck testified that he developed suspicion about whether appellant possessed any contraband or weapons based on information gathered before the traffic stop, appellant’s furtive movements inside the vehicle, and appellant’s nervous demeanor. In response to the deputy’s questions, appellant denied possessing narcotics or other contraband. When Deputy Shattuck asked appellant for consent to search the vehicle, appellant stated, “Sure. I don’t have anything in there.” After obtaining consent, Deputy Shattuck asked *546 appellant to have a seat in the back of a patrol unit, citing safety reasons. Appellant agreed and voluntarily walked to the patrol'unit, opened the door, and sat in the backseat of the patrol unit with the windows rolled down because of the warm weather. According to the deputies’ testimony, appellant was not handcuffed or under arrest at this time.
Deputy Shattuck and two other officers searched appellant’s vehicle and discovered several plastic bags containing a substance that was later determined to be “crystal meth” and a plastic bag containing a “cutting agent” inside a false bottom of a cup that was located in the truck’s center floor console. One deputy informed appellant about finding the narcotics, and appellant indicated that the substance belonged to him. When the deputy asked appellant if there were any more narcotics in the vehicle, appellant told the deputy thаt there were two more plastic bags of methamphetamine behind the bristles of a hairbrush. The deputy testified that his investigation was still ongoing and that appellant was not handcuffed, informed of his rights, or arrested at the time the deputy learned of the narcotics in the hairbrush. The deputies located the narcotics in a hairbrush that was partially hidden between the driver’s seat and the passenger’s seat. The deputies then handcuffed appellant and placed him under arrest.
Appellant testified at the hearing and acknowledged that his vehicle had no front license plate at the time he was pulled over; however, he claimed to have been wearing a seat belt at the time of the stop. According to appellant, when asked for his consent to search the vehicle, appellant asked whether he had a choice, to which the deputy replied, “Not really.” Appellant testified that he then stated, “Well, you know, I can’t stop you, you know.” On cross-examination, appellant admitted that he did not expressly say “no” when he wаs asked for consent. Appellant testified that he did not tell the deputies to stop searching his vehicle. Appellant claimed that during the search he was handcuffed and placed in the back of the patrol unit; appellant stated that he believed he was not free to leave at the time.
The trial court denied appellant’s motion, finding that appellant was stopped pursuant to a legitimate traffic stop for having no front license plate and that the length of the detention was reasonable. Thе trial court found that appellant knowingly and voluntarily gave the deputies consent to search his vehicle, which applied to all of the narcotics found as a result of the search. The trial court deemed that appellant was in a custodial situation after the deputies discovered the narcotics inside the cup, and that appellant was being interrogated, was not free to leave, and was placed under arrest. The trial court found that “[t]hough I don’t think that has any affect [sic] at all on them ultimately finding the second set of drugs, I do think it has bearing on whether or not that statement ultimately would have been admissible.”
Appellant entered a plea of “guilty” and judicially confessed to committing the charged offense. Appellant entered a plea of “true” to the two enhancement paragraphs. After finding appellant guilty of the charged offense and finding the enhancement paragraphs to be true, the trial court sentenced appellant to twenty-five years’ confinement.
Issues and Analysis
Appellant, in three issues, challenges thе trial court’s denial of his pretrial motion to suppress. We review a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress evidence under a bifurcated standard of
*547
review.
Guzman v. State,
Did the State prove by clear and convincing evidence that appellant consented to a search of his vehicle?
In his first issue, appellant asserts the State failed to meet its burden of proving by clear and convincing evidence that appellant consented to the officers’ search of his vehicle.
Warrantless searches are “per se unreasonable,” unless they fall under one of a few specific exceptions.
Rayford v. State,
The trial court must look at the totality of the circumstances surrounding the statement of consent to determine whether consent was given voluntarily.
Id.
A showing that a suspect has been warned that he does not have to consent to the search and has a right to refuse is of evidentiary value in determining whether a valid consent was given.
See Johnson v. State,
In considering the totality of the circumstances, the record shows that clear and convincing evidence supports the trial
*548
court’s finding that during the traffic stop appellant voluntarily consented to the search.
See Reasor,
Appellant also points to the following circumstances to support his assertion that any consent was not positive and unequivocal:
• The officers were involved in an operation solely dedicated to stop and search appellant, an objective that the officers successfully attained.
• Deputy Shattuck did not use the consent forms that were in his possession, citing less expectation оf privacy of a vehicle.
• Only one of the three officers on the scene, Deputy Shattuck, heard appellant give consent.
• The prosecutor’s use of the term “acquiesce” when arguing that appellant consented to the search implies that appellant passively consented as opposed to offering positive and unequivocal consent. 2
Appellant, however, provides no citation to legal authority or argument in support of how these circumstances affect a determination of whether he gave consent. Tex. R.App. P. 38.1(i). Nor does appellant show that the record lacks clear and convincing evidence to support the trial court’s determination that consent was voluntary.
Viewing the record and all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling, we conclude the record supports a determination that appellant voluntarily consented to the deputies’ search of his vehicle.
See Reasor,
Were the officers justified in detaining appellant?
In his second issue, appellant asserts that the deputy’s reason for stopping appellant was “so pretextual as to render it a sham so that no amount of time spent on it is reasonable.” According to appellant, the officers abandoned the traffic investigation almost immediately after stopping him, and any further detention was unreasonable.
To establish grounds for the suppression of evidence for alleged violations under the Fourth Amendment, a defendant bears an initial burden to produce evidence that rebuts the presumption of proper police conduct. Ford v. State, 158 *549 S.W.3d 488, 492 (Tex.Crim.App.2005). This burden may be satisfied upon a showing that a search or seizure occurred without a warrant. Id. The burden then shifts to the State to establish that the search or seizure was conducted pursuant to a warrant or was reasonable. Id. The parties in this case stipulated that the deputies did not have a warrant; therefore, the State bore the burden of establishing the reasonableness of the warrantless detention. See id.
Appellant argues that the initial stop was pretextual and that the officers abandoned the purpose of the stop for the traffic offenses immediately without justification to conduct a narcotics investigation. An objectively valid traffic stop is not unlawful just because the detaining officer has some ulterior motive for making the stop.
Crittenden v. State,
A routine traffic stop is a detention and must be reasonable.
Davis v. State,
Appellant asserts that any suspicion Deputy Shattuck developed regarding appellant’s possession of narcotics was based on information he learned in the narcotics investigation prior to the traffic stop. Deputy Shattuck testified that his suspicion was aroused in part by information gleaned from the narcotics investigation before the stop, but also by appellant’s furtive movements inside the vehicle and аppellant’s nervousness after he was stopped. A person’s nervous behavior and furtive movements may constitute factors
*550
in determining reasonable suspicion.
See Lippert v. State,
Asking questions, including asking for cоnsent to search a vehicle, during a valid traffic stop is not a separate detention.
See Levi v. State,
As evidence thаt the officers abandoned the traffic investigation in lieu of a narcotics investigation, appellant points out that he did not receive a written traffic citation, Deputy Shattuck did not ask for proof of insurance as part of the traffic stop, and Deputy Shattuck did not discuss the traffic violations with him. Deputy Shattuck could not recall asking for appellant’s insurance card and testified that he informed appellant why he stopped appellant’s vehicle. Although the trial court was free to consider the failurе to issue a written citation in determining credibility of witness testimony, this evidence does not mean the officers lacked reasonable suspicion as a matter of law.
See Overshown v. State,
Additionally, appellant asserts that assuming
arguendo
that he gave consent, once the officers abandoned the investigation for the traffic violation and instead pursued a narcotics investigation, appellant’s detention before he consented to a search was unrеasonable. But, we already have determined that the detention was supported by reasonable suspicion for the traffic infraction. When, as in this case, consent to search is obtained during the scope of a lawful detention, the consent is valid.
See Cardenas,
Did the trial court err in refusing to suppress evidence of the additional narcotics found in the vehicle under article 38.23 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure?
In a third issue, appellant argues that trial court should have suppressed evidence of the narcotics fоund inside the hairbrush because they were found as a result of appellant’s response during the officers’ custodial interrogation of appellant when he had not been advised of his Miranda rights. 4 Appellant claims, “The trial court, however, held that, even though appellant was not advised of his rights under Miranda v. Arizona [...] prior to this second round of questioning, it did not have ‘any affect at all on them ultimately finding the second set of drugs.’” Appellant has not cited, and an independent review of the record does not show that, the trial court made any findings regarding аppellant’s Miranda rights. The trial court made the following findings as relevant to this issue:
[TRIAL COURT]: ... And based on the testimony in large part specifically of the defendant, the Court -will find that the consent that was given was knowing and voluntary. I think the consent was valid. And, so, I’m not going to suppress any of the contraband that was found inside the car. And I think that the consent being found valid will suffice for the recovery of all of the contraband that was found.
But I will make the following finding: With regard to the conversation that was made a little bit later, after the finding of the first piece of — I think it was coсaine, or whatever it was — the substance, the police officer went back to have a conversation with the defendant, showing him what had been found. I believe at that point in time the detention did turn into a custodial situation, the defendant was not free to leave. They found what they believed to be contraband. I believe at that point in time the defendant, in fact, was placed under arrest.
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At the time that the — I believe it was Officer Saveli walked up to him and showed him what had been found and asked, I think, something to the effect of, “Is there anything else that you want to tell me about?”
Though I don’t think that has any affect [sic] at all on them ultimately finding the second set of drugs, I do think that it has a bearing on whether or not that statement ultimately would have been admissible, 5 So I believe he was in *552 custody at that time and was being interrogated. And it would appear at first glance, he would be entitled to all of the 38.22 rules to comply. However, I think there’s an exception under [38.22(3)(c) ] that would allow that statement to be admissible anyway.
Appellant claims that the trial court improperly relied upon Texas Code of Criminal Procedure article 38.22(3)(c) in admitting the evidence of the narcotics found in the hairbrush. As reflected in the trial court’s express findings set forth above and contrary to appellant’s assertion, under this provision, referred to as the exclusionary rule, the trial court admitted appellant’s statement made to the deputies during custodial interrogation, but did not rely upon this provision to admit evidence of the narcotics found in the hairbrush. Appellant’s arguments in this regard lack merit.
In contending that article 38.22(3)(e) did not apply to the narcotiсs, appellant asserts that the “second batch of methamphetamine was found as a result in violation of his rights under
Miranda
” To the extent appellant claims that the narcotics within the hairbrush should have been suppressed under article 38.23 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, he has provided no argument, citation, analysis, or legal authority in support of this assertion. To present an issue for appellate review “the brief must contain a clear and concise argument for the contentions made, with appropriate citations to authorities and to the record.” Tex.R.App. P. 38.1(i). Appellant has not presented a single argument or citation in support of this issue or addressed any of the governing legal principles or applied them to the facts of this case.
See King v. State,
Conclusion
The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying appellant’s motion to suppress. The State met its burden of proving by clear and convincing evidence that appellant consented to the officers’ search of his vehicle after a legitimate traffic stop. The officers were justified in detaining appellant after the initial stop to effectuate the search based on appellant’s valid consent.
The trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
Notes
.
See Baldwin v. State,
. Appellant refers to this factor as an "observation” and acknowledges that the prosecutor’s argument is not evidence.
. On this basis, appellant’s reliance on
Herrera v. State,
. Appellant does not contest the admissibility of his statement to the deputies indicating the location of the narcotics; rather, he challenges the admissibility of the narcotics found in the hairbrush.
. Emphasis added.
