Opinion by
Jоdy Lewis appeals his conviction by a jury for the offense of tampering with evidence. The trial court sentenced him to ten years’ confinement, but suspended the imposition of his sentence and placed him on ten years’ community supervision.
Lewis contends he received ineffective assistance of counsel when his trial attorney failed to seek the suppression of the cocaine, which was removed from Lewis’s stomach without his consent by means of a gastric lavage. He also contends thе evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction.
The record shows that Lewis was a passenger in a car that police stopped around 5:30 a.m. because it had a dealer’s tag improperly positioned in the rear window. Officer Jason Lowry testified that after *619 stopping the car, he observed it did not have a current inspection sticker. He testified that both Lewis and the driver, Jerome Leshaw, appeared extremely nervous.
Lowry wrote a citation and had Leshaw step to the back of the car to provide some of the needed information. He testified that for his own safety he frisked Leshaw for weapons. He then walked to the passenger’s side of the car, asked Lewis for identification, and asked him to step out of the car so he could check Lewis and the interior of the car for weapons.
Lowry testified that he witnessed Lewis first lean toward his left side with both hands and then emerge quickly from the car slumped over at his midsection with his hands toward his mouth. Lowry drew his service weapon and told Lewis to show him his hands. Lewis complied, but Low-ry noticed that Lewis was chewing something and had a plastic bag sticking partially from his mouth. Lowry restrained Lewis with handcuffs, put him on the ground, and ordered him to spit out the contents of his mouth, but Lewis refused to comply and kept chewing.
Another officer, Sergeant Steven Underwood, arrived and also ordered Lewis to spit out the contents of his mouth. This time Lewis spit out a small plastic bag containing less than an ounce of a green leafy substance, which Lowry and Underwood both testified looked and smelled like marihuana. Lowry testified he could also see a white substance inside Lewis’s mouth. Underwood testified that he saw a white powdery substance resembling cocaine on the bag they obtained from Lewis’s mouth and on the passenger’s seat of Lewis’s car. However, the testimony shows the bag was never tested and the substance found on the passenger’s seat was later determined not to be cocaine.
The officers tried to force open Lewis’s mouth by physically grabbing his jaw and also by applying pressure to certain points on his neck. They sprayed him with pepper spray. They also used tweezers to try to remove some of the contents of Lewis’s mouth. Lewis’s mouth began to bleed. Nevertheless, Lewis refused to expel the remaining contents of his mouth and continued chewing.
Underwood and Lowry testified that they called for the paramedics because they were concerned Lewis would either choke or suffer ill effects from swallowing cocaine. The paramedics testified they saw plastic, a green leafy substance, and a white powdery substance in Lewis’s mouth.
Lewis was transported to the hospital, where Dr. Larry Maples used a device to open his mouth and administered a gastric lavage, a stomach evacuation technique in which a plastic tube is inserted into the stomach through the mouth and saline is introduced into the stomach and then drained back out. Lowry testified that Maples removed from Lewis’s mouth another small plastic bag, which tests showed exhibited trace amounts of cocaine. Maples testified that he did not administer the gastric lavage on behalf of the police, but that it is standard procedure to evacuate the stomach of someone who has ingested a large quantity of a toxic substance. He testified that if Lewis had ingested one gram of cocaine, he could have a heart attack or a stroke leading to death.
Various witnesses testified that they saw blue plastic, large white particles, and a green leafy substance collected in the clear bags containing the contents of Lewis’s stomach. Officer Terry Bee testified that he obtained a warrant before seizing the product of the gastric lavage from the hospital, though that warrant is not in the *620 record. 1 The evidence showed that the contents of Lewis’s stomach contained one gram of cocaine.
Leshaw gave a similar account to Low-ry’s until the time Lowry approached the passenger side of the car. Leshaw testified that he saw Lowry open the passenger’s side door, that he looked away briefly, and that when he looked back, he saw Lowry behind Lewis with his forearm at Lewis’s throat and his service weapon at Lewis’s head. Later, he saw the officers trying to open Lewis’s mouth, and he testified he heard Lewis tell the officers to get off of him. He also testified that he did not see either cocaine or marihuana in the car.
Lewis testified that he did not have anything in his mouth and that the officers only thought they saw something there. He testified that while Lowry was frisking him for weapons, Lowry pulled his service weapon and told him to get on the ground. He also testified that he did not have cocaine in his stomach.
Lewis first contends he received ineffective assistance of counsel. The standard for testing claims of ineffective assistance of counsel is set out by the United States Supreme Court in
Strickland v. Washington,
To meet this burden, Lewis must prove that his attorney’s representation fell below the standard of prevailing professional norms and that there is a reasonable probability that, but for his attorney’s deficiency, the result of the trial would have been different.
Strickland,
Any allegation of ineffectiveness must be firmly founded in the record, and the record must affirmatively demonstrate the alleged ineffectiveness.
Thompson v. State,
Our review of counsel’s representation is highly deferential; we indulge a strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within a wide range of reasonable representation.
Strickland,
Lewis contends his trial attorney was deficient in failing to seek to have the cocaine suppressed as the fruit of an illegal
*621
search.
2
He contends the evidence should have been suppressed under
Rochin v. California,
[T]he proceedings by which this conviction was obtained do more than offend some fastidious squeamishness or private sentimentalism about combatting crime too energetically. This is conduct that shocks the consсience. Illegally breaking into the privacy of the petitioner, the struggle to open his mouth and remove what was there, the forcible extraction of his stomach’s contents — this course of proceeding by agents of government to obtain evidence is bound to offend even hardened sensibilities. They are methods too close to the rack and the screw to permit of constitutional differentiation.
Id.,
After
Rochin,
the Supreme Court rejected a similar due process challenge to the taking of a blood sаmple by a doctor at a hospital from a person who was suspected of driving while intoxicated.
Schmerber v. California,
In
Winston v. Lee,
Lower federal courts have upheld the use of stomach pumps, emetics, or laxatives in cases in which the defendants were suspeсted of having ingested potential evidence.
See
Michelle Migdal Gee, Annota
*622
tion,
Propriety of Search Involving Removal of Natural Substance or Foreign Object from Body by Actual or Threatened Force,
In light of these authorities, Lewis contends the evidence could have properly been suppressed.
3
However, as the State observes,
Rochin
is distinguishable from the present ease. In
Rochin,
the Supreme Court emphasized the fact-specific nature of its holding.
Rochin,
In the present case, Lewis concedes that the vehicle stop and the order for him to get out of the car were legal.
See Maryland v. Wilson,
Further, Lewis’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches was not abridged. This case is closer to the situation in Schmerber than it is to that in Winston. First, the officers had probable cause to believe that Lewis was ingesting narcotics. When told he would be searched for weapons, Lewis put the material into his mouth and refused to spit it out. Various witnesses testified that they saw a substance resembling marihuana and another white powdery substance in Lewis’s mouth and in the passenger’s seat of Lewis’s car.
Second, while there is little doubt that Lewis’s dignitary interest in his own bodily integrity was to some extent violated, the interests of the community in preserving the evidence were also great. In
Schmerber,
the Supreme Court noted that a blood sample prоvides a highly effective means of determining the degree to which a person is intoxicated and that the percentage of alcohol in the blood diminishes shortly after drinking stops.
Schmerber,
Similarly, in the present case, Maples testified that the stomach empties within an hour and a half, meaning the risk of losing the evidence would increase the longer the police waited. Further, unlike in Schmerber, there was testimony that Lewis could suffer a heart attaсk or stroke if his stomach was not cleared. Thus, the police had added justification for proceeding without first obtaining a warrant.
Third, the gastric lavage procedure was conducted by a doctor in a hospital setting according to accepted medical practices. Finally, there was testimony that police first obtained a warrant before seizing the evidence.
Lewis cites
Oviedo v. State,
While it is true that, unlike the defendant in
Oviedo,
Lewis did not consent to the trеatment, it is also true that the defendant in
Schmerber
did not consent either. Nevertheless, the Supreme Court did not consider this as a factor in weighing the reasonableness of the search under the Fourth Amendment, though it did note that the defendant’s refusal to consent did not offend the sense of justice required by
Rochin
for compliance with the Due Process Clause.
Schmerber,
Lewis also cites
Marmolejo v. State,
*624
Lewis contends the police could have used other, less invasive procedures to obtain the evidence. He cites
Hernandez v. State,
The court did not say, however, that physical contact is the only reasonable measure to be used to preserve evidence. In Hernandez, the balloons wеre self-contained and there was no indication the defendant had swallowed them. Here, the police were confronted with loose drugs and packaging, which Lewis was chewing and swallowing. Under these circumstances, Lewis did not receive ineffective assistance of counsel because the evidence was not subject to suppression under either the Due Process Clause or the Fourth Amendment.
Lewis next contends there was legally and factually insufficient evidence to convict him of tampering with evidence. In reviewing the legal sufficiency of the evidence, we look to see whether after viewing all of the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.
Jackson v. Virginia,
Under a factual sufficiency analysis, we examine whether a neutral review of all the evidence, both for and against the finding, demonstrates that the proof of guilt is so obviously weak as to undermine confidence in the jury’s determination, or the proof of guilt, although adequate if taken alone, is greatly outweighed by contrary proof.
Johnson v. State,
As alleged in the indictment, the elements of tampering with evidence are that Lewis (1) destroyed, concealed, or altered the cocaine; (2) with intent to impair its verity or availability as evidence in an investigation or official proceeding; and (3) knowing that an investigation or official proceeding was pending. See Tex. Pen. Code Ann. § 37.09(a)(1) (Vernon Supp. 2001). Lewis contends the evidence is insufficient because (1) the cocaine used as evidence to convict him of possession of cocaine was the sаme cocaine used as evidence to convict him of tampering with evidence; (2) all of the cocaine was collected, measured, and tested; (3) the eviden-tiary value of the cocaine was not compromised by the fact that his stomach had to be evacuated; and (4) his action in swallowing the cocaine did not lead to a charge of possessing a lesser amount of cocaine.
He cites
Spector v. State,
The court of appeals held that something is destroyed within the meaning of the statute when its evidentiary valuе is destroyed and that form changes without a loss of evidentiary value are either attempts to destroy or alterations. Id. Thus, because the defendant was charged with destroying the evidence, her conviction was reversed and she was acquitted. Id.
In
Hollingsworth v. State,
In
Pannell v. State,
In the present case, Lewis was charged with destroying, concealing, or altering the cocaine, unlike the defendant in Spector who was charged only with destroying the evidence. As the State concedes, because the evidentiary value of the cocaine was not lost, the evidence in the present case was not destroyed. However, the evidence was sufficient to prove that Lewis concealed the cocaine. By showing that Lewis put the cocaine in his mouth and swallowed it, the State proved that he hid it or kept it from observation according to the Hollingsworth court’s definition of “conceal.”
Lewis’s broader contention — that he cannot be convicted of tampering with evidence when the evidentiary value of the evidence is not lost — is answered by the language of the statute. As mentioned previously, the Penal Code prohibits the concealing of evidence with the intent to impair its verity or availability as evidence in an investigation or official proceeding. See Tex. Pen.Code ANN. § 37.09(a)(1). The statute does not require that the evidence be made useless to the investigation or proceeding by its concealment; rather, it requires that the defendant have acted with the intent to impair its usefulness in the investigation or the proceeding.
The evidence was also sufficient to show that Lewis concealed the evidence knowing that an investigation was pending because the State showed he refused to spit out the cocaine or otherwise allow its removal after being ordered to do so. Panned is *626 thus distinguishable because in Pannell the defendant disposed of the evidence before police were investigating him for possession of marihuana.
Finally, the evidence was sufficient to prove that by putting the cocaine in his mouth and refusing to spit it out, Lewis was concealing it with the intent to impair its verity or availability in the investigation and at trial. Hollingsworth is distinguishable because in Hollingsworth the evidence showed that the defendant was carrying the crack cocaine in his mouth not because he intended to impair its availability as evidеnce, but because, the evidence showed, it is common for persons in possession of crack cocaine to carry it there. Here a rational jury could have concluded beyond a reasonable doubt that Lewis concealed the cocaine in his mouth and stomach in an effort to impair its availability as evidence.
Thus, the evidence was legally sufficient to convict Lewis of tampering with evidence. The evidence was also factually sufficient, in that the proof of his guilt is not so оbviously weak as to undermine confidence in the jury’s verdict.
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. The State contends the hospital required the police to obtain a warrant before it would release the contents of Lewis's stomach. However, the record does not support that contention.
. The record shows that Lewis’s trial attorney moved to suppress the cocaine on the ground that Lowry did not have a sufficient basis to order Lewis from his vehicle. The trial court overruled that motion after a hearing. However, Lewis’s attorney did nоt move for suppression based on the use of the gastric lavage.
. The primary thrust of Lewis's contention is that the evidence should be suppressed under Rochin. As mentioned, however, Rochin only discusses the Due Process Clause; it does not mention the Fourth Amendment as in Schmerber. Arguably, Lewis has not raised the issue of potential suppression under the Fourth Amendment. Nevertheless, some of the Texas cases Lewis and the State cite were decided on Fourth Amendment grounds. Therefore, we will consider possible suppression of the evidence under the Fourth Amendment.
