Appellant was tried before a jury and found guilty of trafficking in cocaine, escape, and obstruction of an officer. He appeals from the judgments of conviction and sentences entered by the trial court on the jury’s verdicts of guilt. Appellant filed a pretrial motion to suppress the cocaine which had been seized from his automobile. The denial of this motion is the basis for appellant’s sole enumeration of error.
Appellant urges that the initial stop of his vehicle was pretextual. However, the evidence presented at the hearing on appellant’s motion authorized the following findings: An officer received a tip that cocaine would be delivered to a certain house after midnight by someone who would be driving a green Cadillac with tinted windows. Because the tip was from an unfamiliar and uncorroborated source, it did not, in and of itself, establish probable cause. However, in an effort to corroborate the tip, the officer observed, after midnight, a blue rather than green Cadillac being driven slowly past the named location, a so-called crack house, at 20 miles per hour, 15 miles per hour below the posted speed limit. This vehicle turned onto an adjacent street, where it crossed the yellow centerline for some distance. Having observed the vehicle cross the centerline, the officer stopped the car to investigate the possibility that the driver was under the influence of intoxicants.
Appellant’s reliance on
Tarwid v. State,
Appellant further urges that, even if the initial stop of his vehicle was authorized, the subsequent seizure of the cocaine from his vehicle was not. However, the evidence presented at the hearing on appellant’s motion authorized the following findings: When the officer approached the stopped vehicle, he observed that appellant was the driver. The officer had personal knowledge that appellant had prior involvement with drugs and that, during a previous arrest attempt, appellant had escaped and fled. The officer observed, through the open window and in plain view, an open brown paper bag in appellant’s vehicle. In the bag, the officer saw a white-capped bottle wrapped in tin foil. In the officer’s prior experience, cocaine was “carried that way and distributed that way.” This evidence clearly authorized the trial court to find that the officer, having received the tip and having made his observations, had probable cause to believe that the brown bag in appellant’s vehicle contained cocaine and that its immediate seizure was authorized under the “plain view” doctrine.
Texas v. Brown,
Appellant’s reliance upon
Arizona v. Hicks,
Judgments affirmed.
