dеlivered the opinion of the court: Following a bench trial, defendant Eduardo DeLuna (defendant) was convicted of two counts of possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver and sentenced to 18 years in prison. He makes four contentions on appeal: (1) the trial court erred in denying his motion to quash arrest and suppress evidence; (2) his trial counsel’s failure to move to suppress evidence seized from a car amounted to ineffective assistance; (3) he was not proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt because the State failed to establish a proper foundation for the opinion given by the forensic chemist; and (4) he was not proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt due to the State’s failure to prove a continuous chain of custody of the evidence. Defendant asks that we reverse his conviction outright or, alternatively, reverse and remand the cause for a new trial. For the following reasons, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
Defendant’s trial counsel filed a pretrial motion to quash defendant’s arrest and suppress evidence of cocaine found on defendant’s person. The following was adduced from that hearing.
Officer Glen Lewellen testified that at 6:15 p.m. on Sеptember 22, 1994, he, along with Officers Walter Smith and Thomas Horton, was executing a search for drugs in the second-floor apartment of Jack Willison at 5727 South Kenton, pursuant to a warrant. Around that time, Officer Lewellen received a radio call that a vehicle driven by a male Hispanic had pulled up to the apartment building. Officer Lewellen went to the back bedroom of the apartment, looked out the window, and from 25 to 30 feet away, saw defendant exit a red, two-door 1988 Oldsmobile in the building’s parking lot. Defendant had nothing in his hands. Officer Lewellen saw him reach into the rear of the car on the driver’s side and emerge with a gray “brick-size kilo-type package” in his hands. Defendant lifted his shirt, put the package in the waistband of his pants, and placed his shirt over the package to conceal it. Officer Lewellen testified that he had seen “at least a thousand kilos of that type of packaging” before and, based on his experience, he believed it to be suspected cocaine. He also stated that he did not see a gun in defendant’s possession. Defendant then walked away from the car and toward the building’s entrance.
Officer Lewellen further testified that about 30 seconds later, defendant knocked on the door of the apartment he and his fellow officers were searching. After one of the other officers opened the apartment door, Officer Lewellen conducted a pat-down search of defendant in the hallway. Officer Lewellen recovered a gray brick package, which he described as 2 to 3 inches thick, 8 to 12 inches long, and 2 to 3 inches wide. He testified that he poked a hole in the package to check its contents, whereupon he confirmed that it contained suspected cocaine. Defendant was then arrested and the officers brought him downstairs to the parking lot.
Officer Lewellen testified that he approached the red, two-door 1988 Oldsmobile and looked inside, but did not see any contraband from his vantage point. He opened the driver’s side door and saw a panel behind the seat that was somewhat ajar. Inside that panel, he recovered another gray brick package, a .25-caliber firearm with five live rounds, a scale and plastic bags. Officer Lewellen then noticed that there was another panel in the rear passenger side of the car; that panel was locked. Upon opening it, he found a large clear plastic bag containing a white chunky substance, five smaller bags containing a white substance and $4,370 in cash.
In deciding whether to grant defendant’s motion to quash his arrest and suppress the evidence found on his person, the court found that there were “reasonable articuable [sic] facts” for the pat-down search based both on case law and “plain view” — Officer Lewellen’s observations and the fact that defendant arrived at an apartment in the midst of being searched for drugs pursuant to a warrant. The court went on to also discuss the evidence found in the car and stated that it did not “see sufficient facts here” to justify the search and the officers’ failure to obtain a warrant. It commented that it would consider suppressing this evidence because it did not “know of any exception to the search warrant that would have allowed them to search that vehicle.”
At a subsequent hearing date, defense counsel pointed out to the court that the motion to suppress was limited to the evidence found on defendant’s person and did not cover what was found in the car. The court recognized its confusion and, though it now believed the search of the car was proper, stated that its reference to the car was “really a moot point because [defendant was] not really raising that argument.” Accordingly, it denied the motion to quash defendant’s arrest and suppress the evidence found on his person.
The cause then proceeded to trial. Officer Lewellen testified much in the same manner as he did at the pretrial hearing. He again stated that in his 10 years of experience, he had seen these types of brick packages many times before and that they were suspected cocaine. He also testified that while he did not see defendant with a gun outside the apartment building, he conducted the pat-down search for “safety” reasons. He felt a bulge in defendant’s waistband, removed the brick package, and continued the “protective pat-down search” of defendant. In addition to the brick package, he found a pager and a set of keys on defendant’s person and used these keys to open the car in the parking lot. He and Officer Smith, who was able to pop open the locked panel in the passenger side of the car, gave all the evidence retrieved from both defendant’s person and the car to Officer Horton, who inventoried it and brought it back to the police station.
Officer Horton corroborated much of Officer Lewellen’s testimony. While executing the search warrant at the apartment, he heard defendant knock on the door. He opened the door and Officer Lewellen conducted a pat-down search of defendant. Officer Horton took the gray brick package Officer Lewellen found in defendant’s waistband, put it in an evidence bag, sealed it and labeled it with defendant’s name. Officer Horton at first testified that he did not field test the contents of the package and that he did not puncture its wrapping. He later testified that, while he did not poke a hole in the brick, he may have looked inside it by lifting the wrapping. After the search of the car was completed, he brought all the evidence back to the police station, inventoried it, and weighed the brick packages with their wrapping. He then recorded their weights on inventory sheets: the package found on defendant’s person weighed 1,084 grams and the package found in the car weighed 1,743 grams. Officer Horton sealed all the evidence bags and put them in the crime lab’s vault. When asked if all the evidence he collected at the scene was present at triаl, Officer Horton noted that while the two cocaine brick packages, gun, clip, bullets, money and plastic bags were there, the scale, pager and other plastic bags were not.
Dr. Arthur Kruski, the forensic chemist who tested the brick packages, also testified. The parties stipulated that he was an expert in the analysis of controlled substances. Dr. Kruski stated that he first tested the package found on defendant’s person. Though he could not remember who gave him the evidence bag from the secured, locked lab vault, he did notice that the bag was sealed. He also verified the contents and the evidence numbers according to the attached inventory sheets. Dr. Kruski testified that the brick package was completely sealed; it had not been punctured or opened. He stated that the package’s dimensions were 8 to 9 inches wide by 8 to 9 inches long by 1 to IV2 inches thick. He then described how he weighed the evidence. He removed the gray duct tape and plastic wrappings from the package and placed it on a scale that he has used thousands of times and is periodically calibrated. Defense counsel stipulated that the scale is in good repair. Without the wraрpings, the package weighed 983 grams. Dr. Kruski then performed five preliminary tests on the package and described each one. Three of these tests positively indicated the presence of cocaine. Dr. Kruski also performed a definitive confirmative test: a gas chromatography mass spectrometer (GCMS) test. He testified that the GCMS machine was “daily tuned.” This test too indicated the presence of cocaine. Dr. Kruski testified that he also ran blank GCMS tests to corroborate these results. Based on all this, Dr. Kruski opined that the brick package found in defendant’s waistband contained cocaine.
Dr. Kruski further testified that he followed this same procedure when later testing the brick package retrieved from the car. Again, the evidence bag containing the package was sealed and Dr. Kruski verified its contents with the inventory sheets. He removed the package’s wrapping and, along with the five plastic bags of white powder, weighed them for a total of 1,629.7 grams. He then performed the same five preliminary tests on the package and each of the plastic bags, and the results were the same. He also performed the GCMS test on these items and obtained the same result. Again, Dr. Kruski testified that, based on all this, it was his opinion that the brick package and the plastic bags from the car all contained cocaine.
Defense counsel moved for a directed finding, arguing that the State had failed to prove a sufficient chain of custody for the evidence due to the discrepancies in the weight of the brick packages and that it failed to provide a proper foundation for Dr. Kruski’s opinions because it had not shown the “scientific efficacy” of the GCMS machine. The court denied the motion.
As the trial continued and defense counsel presented its case in chief, it questioned Officer Lewellen as to some discrepancies in his trial and pretrial testimony. Specifically, Officer Lewellen was asked about his testimony regarding the dimensions of the brick package he recovered from defendant’s person in relation to that of Dr. Kruski, who had testified about the package’s size while the evidence was in court. In explaining the size discrepancy, Officer Lewellen stated that he had been testifying as to the package’s approximate size, and because he did not have the package in front of him when he so testified, he had erred. Moreover, defensе counsel asked him about his prior testimony that he had poked a hole in the package he retrieved from defendant’s person during the pat-down search, while Dr. Kruski had testified that the package was completely sealed when he received it for testing. Officer Lewellen stated that he had not poked a hole in the package but he believed Officer Horton had done so.
Finally, defendant testified on his own behalf. He stated that he went to the apartment that day because he was considering renting it from Willison. He testified that he arrived in the neighborhood by means of public transportation and then walked the rest of the way to the apartment building. He rang the doorbell, was let inside and went up to the second floor. Defendant testified that police officers opened the apartment door, forcefully dragged him inside, handcuffed him, placed him in a choke hold and searched him. He further testified that the officers then put him in a squad car and took him to the station. He insisted that he did not have a brick package in his waistband or cocaine anywhere on his person; the officers took his pager, wallet and two sets of keys from his pants. He also testified that the red, two-door 1988 Oldsmobile in the рarking lot was not his and that he was taken away before it was searched.
At the conclusion of trial, the court found, based on the evidence and its observation of the witnesses, that the State had proven defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of two counts of possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver. It noted that it was considering both quantities: the amount found on defendant’s person and that found in the car, of which it believed defendant had constructive possession. It sentenced defendant to 18 years in prison.
ANALYSIS
As noted, defendant presents four arguments on appeal in support of his contention that reversal or a new trial is warranted. We address each separately.
A. Motion to Quash Arrest and Suppress Evidence
Defendant’s first contention is that the trial court erred in denying his motion to quash arrest and suppress the evidence found on his person for two reasons: first, the pat-down search violated his fourth and fourteenth amendment rights because Officer Lewellen was searching for drugs rather than weapons, and second, Officer Lewellen lacked probable cause to believe that the package he seized from defendant’s waistband was contraband. Because of this, defendant argues that we must reverse his conviction outright. We disagree.
1. Standard of Review
As a threshold matter, we note that both parties insist that our review of this issue must be on a de novo basis. Defendant’s reasoning for this is that neither the facts nor the witnesses’ credibility is being challenged. The State, meanwhile, bases its reasoning on case law which states that determinations of probable cause and reasonable suspicion merit de novo review. We, however, cannot agree completely with either party.
In a very real sense, defendant is challenging the facts of this case and the credibility of the witnesses — namely, Officer Lewellen. The first part of his argument regarding the pat-down search is that Officer Lewellen was searching for drugs instead of weapons, making the search invalid. A determination of this must come from the record and the facts presented to the trial court through, principally, the testimony of Officer Lewellen. When a court’s ruling on a motion to suppress involves factual determinations and assessments of credibility, we may not disturb the ultimate ruling unless it was manifestly erroneous. See People v. Sorenson,
However, the second part of defendant’s argument is a challenge to probable cause: did Officer Lewellen have probable cause, upon seeing and/or feeling the package, to believe it was contraband, thereby allowing him to seize it from defendant’s waistband? Recently, our courts declared that when a motion to suppress ultimately turns on questions of reasonable suspicion and probable cause, we must apply a de novo standard of review. See Sorenson,
Therefore, we cannot agree with the parties’ conclusion that only a de novo review should occur here. Instead, our review must be composed of two parts. See Rush,
2. The Pat-Down Search
Defendant’s first assignment of error in the tried court’s decision to deny his motion to quash arrest and suppress the evidence found on his person is that Officer Lewellen searched him to find drugs, not weapons, and thus violated the provisions of Terry v. Ohio,
Terry created an exception to the general rule that warrantless searches are unreasonable, and allows a police officer to stop an individual when his observations create a reasonable suspicion that the individual has committed or is about to commit a crime. See People v. Blake,
Defendant here bases his contention that Officer Lewellen was searching for drugs rather than weapons during the pat-down on Officer Lewellen’s failure to testify about a fear for safety at the pretrial hearing on the motion to suppress. Defendant further contends that because nothing in the record indicates that he was armed (i.e., Officer Lewellen testified he did not see defendant with a weapon, Officer Lewellen testified that defendant did not turn or make any move for a weapon when confronted, and drug possession is not a violent crime inherently indicative of weapons possession), Officer Lewellen must have been searching for contraband.
Defendant’s contentions, as well as his entire argument in this regard, are misplaced for several reasons. First, though Officer Lewellen did not testify at the pretrial motion as to a fear for his safety upon opening the apartment door and seeing defendant, he did so testify at trial. In fact, defense counsel posed several questions to Officer Lewellen about the pat-down search at that time. It is true that Officer Lewellen testified that he did not see defendant with a gun or weapon. However, Officer Lewellen repeatedly stated that he performed the search for his “safety” and that the search was a “protective pat-down.” Because defendant asks that we review the trial court’s decision on the motion to suppress, we may consider not only the evidence presented at the suppression hearing, but also that introduced at trial. See People v. Kidd,
So, too, is his assertion that the record clearly indicates he was not armed and that Officer Lewellen had no reason to believe he was armed. The trial court presumably found Officer Lewellen’s testimony credible because it deemed the pat-down proper, and denied defendant’s motion to suppress, based on Officer Lewellen’s “observations,” the “circumstances” as he presented them and “his level of experience.” The record supports this conclusion. Officer Lewellen testified that he received a radio call about a certain car, saw defendant drive up in that very car to the apartment building where he was executing a search warrant for drugs, exit the car, reach back inside the rear portion, pull out a rectangular gray brick package, pull up his shirt, put the package in his waistband, and then conceal it by placing his shirt over his pants. Officer Lewellen also testified that, in his 10 years of experience as a police officer, he had seen brick packages wrapped like that “at least a thousand” times and that this is how kilos of cocaine are packaged. He further testified that he saw defendant leave the car and approach the apartment building’s entrance. Then, less than 30 seconds later, defendant knocked on the door of the very apartment being searched for drugs. From this, Officer Lewellen had reason to believe that defendant had just committed and/or was about to commit a crime.
Furthermore, before touching defendant, Officer Lewellen asked him who he was and how he arrived at the apartment. Officer Lewellen testified that defendant responded he took public transportation. Because this was in direct contradiction to what he had just witnessed, Officer Lewellen had further reason to infer that defendant was lying and was involved in some kind of dangerous criminal activity, putting his safety at risk. Moreover, Officer Lewellen testified that he saw a “bulge” under defendant’s shirt. Further indicative that Officer Lewellen’s search was for protective purposes rather than to find drugs is his testimony that after discovering the brick package during the search and removing it from defendant’s waistband, he continued to pat defendant down. He testified that the first object he found on defendant’s person was the package, and that upon continuing the pat-down, he found a pager and a set of keys. The trial court could well have reasoned that Officer Lewellen was not just searching for drugs, since he continued and completed the pat-down search after finding and removing the package. Officer Lewellen testified that before touching defendant, he had seen him hide what he believed, through his experience, to be a kilo of suspected cocaine in his waistband. This, however, along with his testimony that he did not see a gun and that the crime of possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver may not necessarily indicate the presence of a gun, does not nullify Officer Lewellen’s testimony that he feared for his safety based on the circumstances. See Sorenson,
Based on the record here, which is quite indicative of Officer Lewellen’s experiences and observations of the circumstances at hand, we find no support for defendant’s contention that the pat-down search violated the provisions of Terry because he was looking for drugs, not' weapons.
3. Probable Cause
Defendant’s second contention of error in the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress is that even if the pat-down search was appropriate, Officer Lewellen did not have probable cause to believe that the brick package contained cocaine and, thus, did not have the authority to seize it. Defendant argues that neither the plain touch doctrine, nor the plain view doctrine which the trial court specifically found gave Officer Lewellen probable cause, support the court’s conclusion.
If an officer, while conducting a lawful pat-down search, feels an object thаt he believes is not a weapon but whose shape or weight makes its identity apparent, he may seize it if he has probable cause to believe that the object is contraband. See Blake,
Probable cause is more than a mere suspicion that an offense has been committed and the individual in question committed it; however, probable cause does not require evidence sufficient to convict. See People v. Moody,
Defendant first argues that Officer Lewellen’s seizure of the brick package from defendant’s waistband was not supported by the plain touch doctrine because the knowledge Officer Lewellen gained from touching the package during the pat-down search did not amount to probable cause that it contained contraband. Dеfendant’s reasoning for this assertion is his claims that Officer Lewellen did not testify as to how the package felt, his experience in detecting drugs through touch, and that the information he obtained as a result of touching the package led him to believe it was contraband. Defendant also insists that Officer Lewellen’s testimony that he did not know the package contained cocaine until he poked a hole in it is further evidence that his touching of the package during the pat-down did not give him probable cause.
While both parties argued the plain touch doctrine in the trial court, the court did not really consider this argument. On review, however, we believe this doctrine supports the court’s ultimate decision that probable cause existed for the seizure of the package. Officer Lewellen testified that when his partners opened the apartment door and he first saw defendant in front of him, he noticed an obvious “bulge” or “lump” protruding from his front waistband. He also testified that in the midst of his protective pat-down search, he felt “a very hard object” in defendant’s front waistband that was rectangular in shape. In addition, though Officer Lewellen may not have testified as to his exact experiences using the plain touch doctrine on prior occasions, he did inform the court that he had been a police officer for 10 years and worked in the narcotics division. He stated his “experience as a narcotics detective” indicated to him that defendant had contraband which he was delivering. As far as poking the package, defendant mischaracterizes Officer Lewellen’s testimony. Officer Lewellen stated that he knew for certain that the package contained cocaine after poking it. However, what he knew for certain after opening the package is irrelevant as to whether he had probable cause to suspect the package contained contraband at the time he seized it. Viewing the evidence as a whole, we believe Officer Lewellen had probable cause, based on his standpoint in these circumstance as well as his skill, knowledge and experience, to believe that the package he felt during the pat-down search of defendant was contraband and to thus properly seize it pursuant to the plain touch doctrine.
Even if Officer Lewellen did not have probable cause for the seizure of the package basеd upon touch, we believe, as the trial court specifically concluded, that he did so pursuant to the plain view doctrine. First, Officer Lewellen was lawfully in an area when he viewed the package. He was in the midst of executing a search warrant in the apartment when, after receiving a radio call, he moved to the back bedroom, looked out the window and saw defendant. From two floors above, he had a clear, unobstructed view of him in the parking lot. He saw him exit the car with nothing in his hands, reach into a panel in the back driver’s side, emerge with a gray, brick-size package, put it in his waistband and conceal it with his shirt. Officer Lewellen testified that it was his experience that cocaine was often transported and hidden in panels of automobiles known as “traps.” He also described how he had seen packages just like the one he saw in defendant’s possession — rectangular and wrapped in gray duct tape — at least a thousand times before and that his experience led him to believe “kilos” such as this one contained suspected cocaine. He also saw him approach the entrance to the apartment building, and less than 30 seconds later upon opening the apartment door, Officer Lewellen was able to identify him as the man he saw in the parking lot; he noticed that he had the same bulge in exactly the same place he saw him put the package while outside in the parking lot. Thus, we find no reason to disturb the trial court’s conclusion that Officer Lewellen properly seized the package from defendant’s waistband pursuant to the plain view doctrine because the record indicates that Officer Lewellen’s experience, as well as defendant’s actions in the parking lot which Officer Lewellen observed that day from the apartment, gave him probable cause to believe the package contained contraband.
Therefore, we conclude that the trial court did not err in denying the motion to quash arrest and suppress the evidence found on defendant’s person based on his contentions that Officer Lewellen conducted an unlawful pat-down search and lacked probable cause to believe the brick package seized was contraband. Accordingly, we will not reverse defendant’s conviction outright.
B. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Defendant next contends that his conviction should be reversed and the cause remanded because he was denied effective assistance of trial counsel. He bases this on defense counsel’s failure to move to suppress the evidence seized as a result of the warrantless search of the car. He asserts that this was professionally unreasonable and that there is a reasonable probability that had defense counsel filed such a motion, the court would have granted it and not convicted him of, and sentenced him on, count II of possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver. We disagree.
Generally, we are to evaluate defendant’s claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel under the two-part test established in Strickland v. Washington,
In the instant case, we find it difficult to imagine what strategy or tactic defense counsel was attempting to employ in not filing a motion to suppress the evidence found in the car. See Simmons v. United States,
The second part of the Strickland test requires defendant to show that there is a reasonable probability that the motion, if filed, would have been granted and that the outcome of the trial would have been different. See People v. Little,
“It is well recognized that a warrantless search of an automobile may be permissible where the searching officer has probable cause to believe that the vehicle contains contraband.” People v. Clark,
Here, the evidence adduced at trial showed that Officer Lewellen had probable cause to search the car and its interior panels. It is true that he testified that he could not see any contraband while standing in the parking lot looking into the car. However, he testified that from his vantage point while in the apartment two floors above, he saw defendant get out of the car, reach into a panel in the back portion behind the driver’s seat and retrieve the gray brick package which he believed, based on his experience, contained suspected cocaine. He also testified that panels in cars such as this one were called “traps.” Officer Lewellen saw defendant put the package in his waistband. After lawfully patting down defendant and retrieving the package, he and his fellow officers determined that the package did indeed contain suspected cocaine — i.e., contraband. Under the totality of the circumstances (Officer Lewellen saw defendant retrieve the package from a trap in the car; Officer Lewellen’s experience indicated to him that a package of this size, wrapping and hardness contained suspected cocaine; Officer Lewellen found this to be so upon testing the package; defendant had arrived at an apartment officers were in the midst of searching for contraband; defendant lied about not having driven the car; defendant had a set of keys that fit the car on his person; defendant had drug-related paraphernalia — a pager), Officer Lewellen had probable cause at that time to believe that the car might contain more contraband. See Lawrence,
Accordingly, there was not a reasonable probability here that the triаl court would have granted a motion to suppress the evidence found in the car and that the outcome of the trial would have been different. Because the motion would have been futile, defendant cannot prove that defense counsel’s failure to file the motion actually prejudiced him. See Robinson,
C. Foundation for Expert Opinion
Defendant’s third contention on appeal is that the State failed to prove him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt because it did not establish a proper foundation for Dr. Kruski’s opinion that the evidence seized contained cocaine. He asserts that we must reverse his conviction because the State did not prove that the facts Dr. Kruski relied on were of the type reasonably relied on by experts in his field, and the State did not prove that the GCMS machine was functioning properly or that Dr. Kruski ran the preliminary tests properly. We disagree.
As a threshold matter, we conclude that defendant has waived this argument. The law is clear that both a trial objection and a written posttrial motion are required to preserve an issue for appeal (see People v. Steidl,
Moreover, under the second part of Lopez, defendant’s contention as to proper foundation is an attack going to the admissibility of the evidence presented in Dr. Kruski’s opinion, not to its sufficiency. Arguably, sufficiency involves аbsence of proof of a basic element of the crime. Defendant here is not challenging the lack of proof as to the existence of an element of the crime, since Dr. Kruski testified to the identity of the controlled substance. The challenge is to the failure to lay a proper foundation for the proof of that element. This goes to a determination of its admissibility, rather than sufficiency of the evidence presented. Accordingly, defendant’s fundamental or substantive rights are not involved here. See Bynum,
The decision in People v. Bynum,
In the alternative, even were we to conclude that defendant here did not waive this issue and instead choose to address its merits, the result would remain the same. The party opposing the admission of the expert’s opinion has the burden to challenge its sufficiency and reliability on cross-examination. See People v. Lind,
Accordingly, defendant’s claim that his conviction must be reversed on grounds relating to the foundation for Dr. Kruski’s testimony must fail.
D. Chain of Custody
Defendant’s final contention involves chain of custody. He claims that we must reverse his conviction because the State’s failure to prove a continuous chain of custody, along with discrepancies in the weight, size and appearance of the evidence, indicate that it did not prove him guilty оf the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. We disagree.
The State is not required to exclude every possibility of tampering or contamination of the evidence used to convict defendant. See Bynum,
Defendant first asserts that there was a missing link in the chain of custody, thereby defeating the State’s claim that it took reasonable protective measures to assure the accuracy of its tests. He argues that the break in the chain occurred when Dr. Kruski indicated that he could not remember exactly who gave him the evidence to test and the State failed to have that person testify at trial. However, Officer Horton testified that while Officers Lewellen and Smith seized the evidence at the scene, he was in charge of securing it, labeling it and transporting it back to the station. He put all the evidence in evidence bags and labeled them with defendant’s name. He testified that he brought the evidence to the station and began filling out the standard, required forms to inventory the evidence. After weighing the brick packages, Officer Horton recorded their weights, along with a list of all the other items seized, on the inventory sheets, assigned numbers to the bags, and placed the bags in a sealed condition in the crime lab vault. In addition, Dr. Kruski testified that when he received the evidence, it was still sealed in its bags. He further testified that the first thing he did was verify both the contents of the bags and the numbers assigned to them with the information and numbers recorded on the inventory sheets; the contents and numbers matched. At trial, both Officer Horton and Dr. Kruski identified the evidence bags and their contents. The testimony of Dr. Kruski, who tested the evidence, and Officer Horton, who was present at the scene, was consistent and corroborative; this indicates that reasonable protective measures were taken after seizure. Thus, all the State had to prove was that it was unlikely that the evidence was compromised. While the fact that no one testified as to removing the evidence bags from the vault and delivering them to Dr. Kruski to test does create a gap in the chain of custody, “this gap is not sufficient to require that the evidence be excluded absent some other indication of mishandling.” Bynum,
Defendant next argues that there are sufficient discrepancies in the testimony regarding the weight, size and appearance of the cocaine packages to require the State to exclude all possibility of tampering. Specifically, he notes the testimony of Officer Horton and Dr. Kruski which signified a difference in weight, the testimony of Officer Lewellen and Dr. Kruski which signified a difference in size, and the testimony of Officer Horton, Officer Lewellen and Dr. Kruski which signified a difference in appearance. However, defendant’s arguments regarding these “discrepancies” are without merit.
First, as to the weight of the packages, the reason for the discrepancy between what Officer Horton found (1,084 grams for the package found on defendant and 1,743 grams for that found in the car) and what Dr. Kruski found (983 grams for the package found on defendant and 1,629.7 grams for that found in the car) was explained. Officer Horton testified that he weighed the packages with their gray, heavy-duty duct tape wrapping still intact, while Dr. Kruski testified that he weighed the packages without this wrapping. Similarly, the reason for the discrepancy in the size of the package found on defendant testified to by Officer Lewellen (2 to 3 inches wide by 8 to 12 inches long by 2 to 3 inches thick) and that testified to by Dr. Kruski (8 to 9 inches wide by 8 to 9 inches long by 1 to IV2 inches thick) was also explained. When Officer Lewellen testified to these dimensions at the pretrial hearing on the motion to suppress, he did not have the package in front of him; he indicated that he was testifying as to its approximate size. Moreover, he was not the one who inventoried the package. In contrast, Dr. Kruski did have the package in front of him while testifying. At trial, defense counsel questioned Officer Lewellen about the discrepancy; he repeated thаt the differences were due to the fact that he could only base his pretrial testimony on approximations, as the package was not presented to him at that time; however, the package present for his inspection at trial was the one he seized from defendant’s waistband. Third, defendant claims severe discrepancies existed in the appearance of the package seized from his person — namely, that Officer Lewellen first testified he poked a hole in it but later denied this, that Officer Horton testified he poked a hole in it but later said he looked under the wrapping, and that Dr. Kruski testified that the package he received had no holes and was completely sealed. These discrepancies, however, are minor and do not create reasonable doubt. See People v. Cunningham,
Finally, defendant argues that his conviction must be reversed because the scale, pager and plastic bags seized by the officers at the scene were never presented at trial or admitted into evidence. Defendant contends that this missing evidence further demonstrates discrepancies and gaps in the chain of custody leading to the State’s failure to prove him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. However, this evidence was not used by the State against defendant or considered by the trial court in convicting or sentencing him. Moreover, the crime for which defendant was charged — possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver — does not require the presence of a scale, pager or plastic bags in order to obtain a conviction. In fact, quantity alone, or even packaging alone, is sufficient to prove intent to deliver beyond a reasonable doubt. See People v. Robinson,
Based on the record, we find that the State proved a sufficient chain of custody in this cause. The discrepancies defendant cites are only minor and do not affect the admissibility of the evidence against him. Therefore, his claims in this regard must fail.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the holding of the trial court.
Affirmed.
CAHILL and BURKE, JJ., concur.
Notes
While we recognize that a Terry stop and a Terry frisk or pat-down are two different concepts meriting their own analyses, we note that defendant does not contest the validity of the stop in this cause. Accordingly, we too focus our attention on his complaint at issue: the validity of the Terry pat-down search.
In addition to Bynum, several other cases discuss GCMS testing, including People v. Raney,
