OPINION
Appellant, Joe John Ortiz, pled not guilty before a jury to the offense of possession of a controlled substance, cocaine, with the intent to deliver. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 481.112(a), (d) (Vernon Supp.1999). He was convicted, and after the trial court found one enhancement to be true, the trial court assessed punishment at twenty years confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division. Appellant asserts five issues on appeal challenging the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence, the trial court’s rulings on hearsay objections, and the prosecutor’s improper argument. We reverse and remand.
Background
Officer Craig Full, an undercover narcotics officer, conducted a narcotics investigation at 404 Henry Street in Harris County, Texas. Officer Full conducted two controlled buys of cocaine through a confidential informant. Based on informant’s information, Officer Full drafted a warrant with an affidavit attached describing the seller as a Hispanic male named “Joe” who was about thirty-five years old, five feet eight inches tall, and weighing approximately two hundred pounds.
Officer Full and other members of the Narcotics Division executed the warrant at 404 Henry. As they approached the house, they found Raymond Sabala, Sr. in the front yard. Sabala, Sr. was carrying a syringe coated with cocaine and heroin residue. The officers entered the house and found several people. Included were appellant and Raymond Sabala, Jr. in the living room. They also discovered appellant’s wife tending to her elderly mother in one of the bedrooms. After appellant was identified from the warrant by name and description and the premises was secured, the officers executed the warrant by searching for the illegal drugs.
*603 Officer Full discovered eight small bags of cocaine in the pocket of a child’s coat, described later as a small sport’s coat, in the closet of the north bedroom. Each bag contained approximately one gram of cocaine. In the same closet, a package of aluminum foil was found in the pocket of an adult size flannel shirt. This shirt did not contained any ownership markings and could have fit either a male or a female. The package of aluminum foil contained between eighteen and nineteen grams of cocaine. Appellant’s name was found amongst documents located in a dresser in the north bedroom.
Analysis
Legal Sufficiency
In his first and second issues, appellant contends the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction because the evidence fails to affirmatively link him to the cocaine. We address appellant’s legal sufficiency point first. When reviewing the legal sufficiency of the evidence, we look at the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict and determine whether any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Jackson v. Virginia,
In the present case, the State was required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant (1) knowingly or intentionally (2) possessed (3) cocaine (4) in an amount of four grams or more but less than two hundred grams (5) with the intent to deliver.
See
Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 481.112(a), (d). The evidence must affirmatively link appellant to the cocaine. Stated another way, the evidence must establish appellant exercised care, control, and management over the contraband and knew the matter possessed was contraband.
See Washington v. State,
Appellant asserts the State failed to show that he was in exclusive possession of the place where the cocaine was found and that he had the intent to deliver. The evidence reveals that: (1) appellant was in the house when the search warrant was executed; (2) the cocaine was found in two garments hanging in the closet of the north bedroom; (3) documents located in and on the dresser of the north bedroom contained appellant’s name and address, Joe Ortiz and 404 Henry; (4) a scale commonly used for narcotics was found in a hall closet; and (5) the cocaine was divided up into eight small individual packages containing approximately one gram each and one large package containing almost nineteen grams. Additionally, information about the seller was entered through the warrant and the officer’s testimony, over objection. The specific information entered described the seller as a Hispanic man named “Joe” who is approximately thirty-five years old, five feet and eight inches tall, and two hundred pounds.
1
*604
With respect to a sufficiency review, whether this evidence was properly or improperly admitted is not material because the reviewing court must look at all evidence.
See Bobo v. State,
Reviewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, we find sufficient evidence to allow a rational jury to find that appellant knew of the cocaine and exercised control over it.
See Mason,
Factual Sufficiency
In appellant’s second issue, he claims the evidence was factually insufficient to support his conviction. When reviewing the factual sufficiency of the evidence, we review all the evidence without the prism of “in the light most favorable to the prosecution” and set aside the verdict only if it is “so contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence as to be clearly wrong and unjust.”
Clewis v. State,
Appellant contends the State failed to prove he had exclusive possession or control over the cocaine and that he had the intent to deliver it. The contrary evidence in support of appellant’s argument establishes that: four or more other adults occupied the house; the closet in the north bedroom was used by all occupants of the house and for various articles of clothing found laying around the house; Sabala, Sr., thirty-eight years old, was found in front of the house with a syringe containing heroin and cocaine residue; the eight bags of cocaine were found in what was described as a child’s coat; and that appellant was not present the day before when the buys were reportedly made.
The trier of fact is charged with judging the credibility of the witness and the weight of their testimony. Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 38.04 (Vernon 1979);
Clewis,
Jury Argument
In appellant’s sixth issue, he asserts the trial court erred in overruling the prosecutor’s improper jury argument. Specifically, appellant contends the prosecutor was allowed to urge the jury to consider two pages of a document that was not admitted into evidence in determining appellant’s guilt.
During appellant’s jury argument, he fairly challenged Officer Full’s credibility and ability to keep records, noting that Officer Full had no personal knowledge of any of the events transpiring in the house until after the execution of the warrant. He further argued the hearsay evidence of others is no evidence. During the prosecutor’s jury argument at the guilt/innocent phase of trial, the following transpired:
The State: The fact is that somebody that they know [sic] came into that house and ratted them out, but we don’t know that. We don’t know that, but that’s what it is. But I tell you what that document that you have before you doesn’t have, and — because *605 a couple of pages are not there anymore.
Mr Howard: Objection, Your Honor, that’s talking about something that’s not in evidence.
The Court: Overruled.
Mr. Howard: And talking about something that’s not in opposed evidence.
The Court: Overruled.
The State: That document had four pages and it got objected to. And two pages are gone, and you’ve got two pages—
Mr. Howard: Objection, Your Honor. He’s talking about something proee-durally that was done outside the presence of this jury.
The Court: Overruled.
Mr. Howard: And now he’s bringing it before the jury.
The State: You’ve got to ask yourself a question, I wonder what’s absent on the other two pages that you don’t get to read? You didn’t lose your common sense yesterday, folks, I’m not going to belabor the point anymore.
(emphasis added).
Proper jury argument is described in four categories: (1) summation of the evidence; (2) reasonable deductions from the evidence; (3) responsive arguments; and (4) pleas for law enforcement.
See Coble v. State,
The State’s argument was a blatant attempt to invite the jury to speculate on what was on the other two pages. This argument implied the existence of other damaging evidence.
Argument injecting matters not in the record is clearly improper; but argument inviting speculation is even more dangerous because it leaves to the imagination of each juror whatever extraneous “facts” may be needed to support an conviction. Logical deductions from evidence do not permit within the rule logical deductions from non-evidence.
Everett,
We must now determine whether the error warrants reversal.
2
See
Tex.R.App. P. 44.2. Although a special concern, argument inviting speculation on evidence outside the record does not eonsti-
*606
tute constitutional error.
3
See Mosley v. State,
Rule 44.2(b) requires us to examine error in relation to the entire proceeding and determine whether it had a “substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict.”
See King v. State,
We now turn to the three factor test adopted in
Mosley.
Second, the court took no steps or measures to cure the misconduct. Instead, the court overruled appellant’s objection three times placing “the stamp of judicial approval” on the improper argument and magnifying the possibility of harm.
See Good v. State,
Finally, we must determine the certainty of conviction. Here, appellant asserted that the State never proved exclusive possession or intent to deliver. The only evidence that affirmatively linked appellant to the cocaine was the warrant, the documents containing appellant’s name found in the north bedroom, and his presence in the house. The evidence, however, also revealed that at least four other individuals, perhaps more, had access and used the north bedroom closet and that one of these four individuals, not appellant, possessed a syringe in his pocket containing cocaine and heroin residue. Although there is marginally legally and factually sufficient evidence, including the warrant, to convict, the certainty of conviction is not overwhelming. Compare Mosley, 983 S.W.2d *607 at 260 (obtaining as evidence defendant’s confession, defendant’s admissions, and murder weapon). None of the three factors weigh heavily in favor of the State. Given the offensiveness of the prosecutor’s argument, the exacerbation by the trial judge, and the marginal nature of the state’s case, we find the error to be harmful.
Admissibility of Evidence
In addition, appellant contends the trial court erred in admitting the warrant. During Officer Full’s redirect, the State offered the warrant as evidence, and defense counsel proffered a timely hearsay objection. The sequence occurred as follows:
The State: ... at this time the State would move to introduce the search and arrest warrants, and under 902.2 and 922.4[sic] of certified public document. And removing the last part, which was referred—which would be hearsay which the Court has referred to, which would be the affidavit.
The Court: You’re offering the warrant, not the affidavit?
The State: Yes, ma'am; trying to comport to the original objection to the hearsay on the affidavit.
The Court: Do you have any objection on the warrant?
Mr. Howard: May I examine it, Your Honor?
Your Honor, the objection is the same. In looking at this search and arrest warrant, it’s styled State’s Exhibit No. 6. It talks about the affiant, about information that the affiant has received. And that information is predicated upon hearsay, and this document still contains that information.
The State: It is the State’s position it’s not a hearsay document under 924.4[sic].
The Court: The warrant is admitted.
Recitals contained ‘ in a search warrant that are hearsay are not admissible before the jury, unless they are for a purpose other than to prove the truth of their contents.
See Foster v. State,
Here, appellant objected to the part of the warrant that is predicated upon the hearsay of the informant. This shifted the burden to the State to show that the evidence was not hearsay or admissible pursuant to a hearsay exception.
See Cofield v. State,
Having found reversible error based on the improper jury argument, we need not address the additional harm analysis caused by the erroneously admitted evidence. Similarly, we need not address appellant’s remaining issues asking only remand relief. We reverse and remand for a new trial.
Notes
. Officer Full testified that Raymond Sabala, Sr. was approximately thirty-eight years *604 whereas appellant was thirty-one years. Therefore, both individuals are close to the age of the seller as described by the informant.
. In
Wilson v. State,
the court stated that "the test to determine whether an improper argument constitutes reversible error is whether: (1) the argument is violative of a statute; (2) it injects a new and harmful fact into the case; or (3) it is manifestly improper, harmful, and prejudicial to the rights of the accused.”
. We do not hold this as an absolute because there may be circumstances where an improper argument might implicate a constitutional right for example one's Sixth Amendment right of confrontation or Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.
. This case was tried prior to March 1, 1998 the effective date of the Texas Rules of Evidence while the Texas Rules of Criminal Evidence where still in effect. Accordingly, all references are to the senior Texas Rules of Criminal Evidence.
