Placide, Jason Michael ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                           PD-1607-14
    COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    AUSTIN, TEXAS
    Transmitted 1/19/2015 4:30:33 PM
    Accepted 1/22/2015 2:42:23 PM
    NO.    PD— 1607-14                                          ABEL ACOSTA
    CLERK
    IN THE TEXAS    COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    AT AUSTIN, TEXAS
    ***
    JASON MICHAEL PLACIDE,
    Petitioner,
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS,
    Respondent.
    ***
    January 22, 2015
    On Review from the
    Fourteenth Court of Appeals
    at Houston, Texas
    NO.    14- 13-00725-CR
    Appeal from the   180"‘ Criminal District   Court
    Harris County, Texas
    (Cause No. 1,353, 416)
    ***
    APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
    Michael A. McEnrue
    639 Heights Boulevard
    PO. Box 70978
    Houston, Texas 77270
    (713) 862-1975
    (713) 864-8587 (FAX)
    mmcenrue@justice.com
    Attorney for Petitioner
    Jason Michael Placide
    Identity of Trial Judge, Parties        and Counsel
    Marc W. Brown was           the presiding judge or a visiting judge with respect to
    all   matters determined        by the   180"‘ Criminal District   Court of Harris County, Texas
    in this case.
    Petitioner     is   Jason Michael Placide, SPN0l92237l, 701 North San Jacinto
    5A2 01H, Houston, Texas 77002
    Petitioner     was represented      in the 180"‘ Criminal District     Court by Kenneth
    Cager,    TBC    No. 34011189, 19901 Southwest Freeway, Suite 130, Sugar Land,
    Texas 77469. Michael A. McEnrue,                TBC No.    13589050, Post Office          Box   70978,
    Houston, Texas 77270-0978 was appointed to represent Petitioner in the court of
    appeals and represents him in this Court.
    Assistant District Attorney Seth Gagliardi,                TBC     No. 24073207, 1201
    Franklin, Houston, Texas           77002 represented the     State in the criminal district court.
    The    State   was   additionally represented in the court of appeals         by Assistant     District
    Attorney Eric Kugler, Appellate Division, 1201 Franklin, Houston, Texas 77002.
    Statement Regarding Indigency
    The undersigned counsel was appointed to represent                 Petitioner   on appeal by
    order of the    trial   judge signed on July 29, 2013.      (   C1kR. 51)
    (i)
    Statement Regarding Oral Argument
    Petitioner waives oral    argument on   his petition for discretionary review, but
    believes that this Court will   find oral argument on the merits useful   in this case.
    Table of Contents
    §1b_'L<:9.f;                                                                                                            Egg
    Identity       of Trial Judge, Parties and Counsel ...........................................                              .   .i
    Statement Regarding Indigency .............................................................................                      ..i
    Statement Regarding Oral Argument ....................................................................... ..ii
    Table of Contents ................................................................................................... ..iii
    Index of Authorities                  ....................................................................................... ..iv
    Statement of the Case            ..................................................................... ..2
    Statement of Facts and Proceedings ..................................................... ..2
    Question Presented..                  ........................................................................................ ..5
    Reasons for Review ................................................................................................. ..5
    Prayer for Relief.................................................................................................... .. 13
    Certificate of Service ............................................................................................. ..15
    Appendix
    -      January    7,   2014 Abatement Order
    -      March    10,    2014 Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law
    -      March    18,    2014 Reinstatement Order
    -      September 25, 2014 Memorandum Opinion
    -      October 24, 2014 Motion for Rehearing
    (iii)
    Index of Authorities
    Egg
    Tex. R. App. P. 38.7 ........................................................................ ..6
    hag
    Alabama v. White, 496, U.S. 325 (1990) ..............................................            ..13
    Balentine     V. State,   
    71 S.W.3d 763
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2002) ...................... ..1 1-12
    Costley V. State Farm Fire            &
    Casualty C0,, 
    894 S.W.2d 380
    (Tex. App.                          —
    Amarillo 1997, writ den’d) .................................................................        ..6
    Illinois v.   Wardlow, 
    528 U.S. 119
    (2000)        ............................................. ..13
    Lankston      V. State,   
    827 S.W.2d 907
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1992) ........................ ..l0
    Oliver V. State, 
    891 S.W.2d 651
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1995) ............................. ..7
    Reich—Bac0t      v. State,   
    952 S.W.2d 542
    (Tex. Crim. App.         1997’) ...................... . .7
    Resendez v.      State,   
    306 S.W.3d 308
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) ...................... ..9-10
    Theus   v. State,   
    863 S.W.2d 489
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1993) ............................. ..7
    United States     v.   Henley, 
    984 F.2d 1040
       (9"‘ Cir.   1992) .......................... ..10-11
    Wicker V.     State,   
    740 S.W.2d 779
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1987) ............................ ..S
    Wilson v. State, 
    296 S.W.3d 140
    (Tex. App.~
    Houston [14 Dist.] 2009, pet. ref’ d) .....................................................        ..6
    (iv)
    NO. PD —          1_607-14
    IN THE    TEXAS COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    AT AUSTIN, TEXAS
    ***
    JASON MICHAEL PLACIDE,
    Petitioner,
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS,
    Respondent.
    ***
    On Review from the
    Fourteenth Court of Appeals
    at Houston, Texas
    NO. 14-13-0O725—CR
    Appeal from the 180* Criminal District Court
    Harris County, Texas
    (Cause No. 1,353, 416)
    are   4:   ac:
    APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
    TO THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS:
    Petitioner Jason Michael Placide, Appellant below, applies for review of a
    Judgment and Opinion of the Fourteenth Court of Appeals with      this petition for
    discretionary review.
    Statement of the Case
    Petitioner challenges the July 26,                     2013 Judgment of the          180d‘ Criminal
    District   Court of Harris County, Texas, which sentenced him to a five-year term of
    confinement         in the institutional division             of the Texas. Department of Criminal
    Justice for possession of cocaine. (Clk. R. 45-48) In the court of appeals, Petitioner
    disputed the      trial   court’s ruling    on   his   motion to suppress heard prior to his guilty
    plea. (Clk. R. 32;        RpR. 99)
    Statement of Facts and Proceedings
    At the suppression hearing, the                State stipulated that     it   had the burden of proof.
    (RpR. 7)    Its   witnesses then told the following story:
    During the night          shift      on July     6,   2012, the Houston Police Department
    dispatched three patrol officers to an apartment complex at 8034 Antoine near
    West Gulf Bank with a report that three or                    four black males were “doing drugs and
    loading guns” outside a white truck and a black                         Dodge Magnum. (RpR.         13-14)
    When the officers arrived, they               found three black males near a white pickup in the
    parking lot of the complex. (RpR. 15-16)
    On    the strength of the         anonymous           tip,   the officers handcuffed each of the
    individuals,      and frisked them, but found no guns or drugs. (RpR.                       14, 25-26, 43,
    52-53, 57, 65) Although no one had attempted to flee, the officers locked each of
    the handcuffed suspects in           the.   back   seats     of separate patrol cars as they continued
    their investigation.    (RpR. 26, 36, 42) The officers then ran the suspects’ criminal
    histories,   but learned that none had outstanding warrants. (RpR. 16, 36)                          They
    searched the white pickup truck, but found no guns or drugs. (RpR. 25)
    The policemen spotted a black Dodge Magnum parked                         three spaces    away
    from the white pickup. (RpR. 43)                Two     of the patrolmen went to shine their
    flashlights through       its    passenger side window. They viewed plastic bags of
    marijuana and clear      pills    on the console between the two front              seats.   flKpR. 17)
    The   third officer   meanwhile questioned Petitioner who claimed ownership of the
    Magnum, admitted that he had driven              it,   and stated that he lived     at the address    on
    the registration. (RpR. 18, 46) That policeman testified that Petitioner                     was under
    arrest   when   the other officers found the drugs in the           Dodge Magnum. (RpR. 22)
    The police    further admitted that they did not give Petitioner the warnings                mandated
    by Miranda      v.   Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    (1966). (RpR. 32-33, 72)                  They    stated that
    they normally d0n’t do         that, that   they are not taught to do     it.   (RpR. 37, 53)
    Petitioner did not have a        key   to the vehicle; moreover,    it   was not registered to him.
    (RpR. 27, 33, 72) The policemen therefore called a tow truck, and asked the driver
    to   open the Dodge      Magnum upon           his arrival.   (RpR. 30, 58) They retrieved the
    marijuana as well as crack and powder cocaine they found underneath                           it   on the
    console.
    At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court denied                      Petitioner’s   motion   to
    suppress evidence, including Petitioner’s statements (RpR. 37, 97), then took
    Petitioner’s guilty plea    and certified his           right to "appeal.      (RpR. 99: ClkR. 36, 43)
    In his court of appeals brief, Petitioner argued that his statement to his
    arresting officer   was the           fi'uit   of an investigative detention that violated the Fourth
    Amendment because          it    lacked reasonable suspicion and also exceeded the scope
    permitted.    Petitioner        also         argued that his interrogation violated the Fifih
    Amendment       as well as Article 38.22 of the Texas                  Code of Criminal Procedure           for
    lack of prior   Miranda warnings.
    After Petitioner submitted his brief, but before the State replied, the court of
    appeals decided at least one of Petitioner’s arguments implicated the voluntariness
    of his statement. Relying on Wicker                   v.   State,   
    740 S.W.2d 779
    , 783 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 1987),     that court abated the appeal, directed the trial court to                    make    written
    findings of      fact   and conclusions of law on the voluntariness of Petitioner’s
    statement, and ordered          it   to   supplement the appellate record within          thirty days.
    (Appendix)      When     the         trial    court complied (Appendix), the appellate court
    reinstated the appeal and directed the State to file                   its   brief in 30 days. (Appendix)
    Afier     the State filed             its   responsive brief, the panel heard oral argument,
    issued an opinion which incorporated the                      trial   court’s findings of fact verbatim
    without question. (Appendix) That opinion concluded that Petitioner had failed to
    preserve his contentions regarding the fourth        amendment    violations.      With respect
    to Petitioner’s claimed violation        of the Fifth Amendment, the court decided          that
    Petitioner’s detention did not        amount    to custody that implicated the         Miranda
    requirements.     On November      6,    2014, the Fourteenth Court of Appeals denied
    Petitioner’s October 24,       2014 motion      for rehearing   which complained of         that
    court’s failure to provide for supplemental briefing after the trial court              made      its
    findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding the suppression of evidence.
    (Appendix)
    Questions Presented
    Whether the Court of Appeals’ Abatement and Reinstatement Procedure
    Correctly Implemented this Court’s Wicker Decision.
    to Preserve a Claim that
    Whether Petitioner Failed
    His Statement Regarding His Connection to a Black Dodge                     Magnum
    Was the Fruit of a Fourth Amendment Violation.
    Whether Petitioner Underwent a Custodial Interrogation
    Reasons for Review
    A.
    If a trial court    makes no     factual findings to support   its   ruling regarding the
    voluntaiiness of a confession, or if the court’s findings lack sufficient detail to
    permit resolution of the appellate dispute raised by a party, this Court’s decision in
    Wicker   v.   State,   
    740 S.W.2d 779
    , 783 (Tex. Crim. App. 1987)            directs the court    of
    appeals to abate an appeal and order the district judge to        make       written findings on
    the disputed issues regarding the voluntariness of a defendant’s challenged
    confession.
    If one leaves aside whether the Wicker procedure applies to challenges
    outside that specified in Texas            Code of Crim.       P. Art.   38.22 §6, there   still   remains a
    question about      how    to reconcile a briefing schedule that has already                 commenced
    with the sequence of abatement, supplementation of the record, and reinstatement
    of the appeal mandated by this Court in that case.
    As one alternative, one panel of the Fourteenth Court of Appeals has offered
    an appellant the opportunity to supplement                  his brief following the entry     of the      trial
    court’s findings and conclusions. Wilson                v.   State,   
    296 S.W.3d 140
    , 143 (Tex. App.-
    Houston [14       Dist.]   2009,   pet.   refd) (past example). That option         is   consistent with
    Tex. R. App. P. 38.7 which provides that “a brief                              may be amended               or
    supplemented whenever justice requires, on whatever reasonable terms the court
    may prescribe.”
    In at least one civil case, a Texas court of appeals has determined that a
    litigant is entitled to re-brief or             supplement his brief when the appellate process
    generates   new      issues. Costley v. State        Farm      Fire and Casualty Co., 
    894 S.W.2d 380
    , 387(Tex. App.—Amarillo 1997, writ denied) (issue arising during appeal).
    At    its   core, this   problem     is   akin to the one this Court addressed        when     it   held
    that an     indigent defendant’s mandatory right to re-brief                       on remand flows
    necessarily from his constitutional or statutory right to counsel. See,           e.g.,   Reich-
    Bacot     v.   State,   
    952 S.W.2d 542
    , 543 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997) (mandatory
    opportunity to re-brief on remand from Texas Court of Criminal Appeals); Oliver
    v.   State,    
    891 S.W.2d 651
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1995) (same); Theus           v.    State,    
    863 S.W.2d 489
    , 491 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993) (same). In                addition, failing to allow
    supplemental briefing       when the    issues change during the appellate process raises a
    question of fairness that    may rise on some occasions to the level of a deprivation of
    due process.
    This Court should therefore consider this issue and determine whether the
    court of appeals had a statutory duty under the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure
    or a constitutional duty based      on the due process clause or the due course of law
    provision of the Texas constitution to notify Petitioner of his right to re-brief after
    abatement and address the        new    or altered issues created by the Findings of Fact
    and Conclusions of        Law   supplementing the appellate record after Petitioner had
    filed his brief. Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 66.3(b).
    B.
    Prior to the hearing in the     trial court,   appointed counsel filed a motion to
    suppress certain physical evidence taken from the Black          Dodge Magnum as well          as
    “[a]ny other matters that the Court finds should be suppressed upon hearing of this
    motion.” (ClkR 32-33).        As the   State   adduced evidence and the specific    facts    of the
    encounter came to            light,    however, defense counsel expanded the range of his
    challenges to include:
    (a) the          scope of Petitioner’s detention (RpR. 25);
    (b)       whether the officer’s         call slip      from an anonymous source and the
    circumstances         witnessed    upon      arrival     would provide reasonable
    suspicion to detain Petitioner to the extent recounted (25-26);
    (c) the officer’s failure to afford Petitioner his               Miranda warnings (RpR. 32-
    33);   and
    (cl)   the recurring problem of both officers’ failure to give             Miranda warnings
    when     they handcuff people and lock them in patrol cars. (RpR. 37, 53                   &
    96)
    At     the close of the evidentiary hearing, trial counsel orally challenged
    Petitioner‘s purported statement admitting a connection with the                             Black Dodge
    Magnum          and the validity of his detention and          its   scope in light of the facts recited
    by the    officers. Petitioner’s attorney         summarized         his position as a set   of challenges
    to the actions of the officers based              on the Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Amendments                to
    the United States Constitution, Article              1,   §9 of the Texas Constitution and “Article
    28.23”    [sic]    of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. (RpR. 96-97).
    The      State did not address the points           made by defense       counsel.     Instead,   it
    contended first that there had been reasonable suspicion for Petitioner’s detention
    and next   that the drugs     were found in a plain View                that the police   were allowed      in
    the circumstances. (RpR. 98-99).              The    assistant district attorney then closed his
    final remarks by      stating:     “As   for the other issues that are raised, as far as the links
    or connections to this defendant, that               falls   outside the scope of this motion to
    suppress hearing.”      (Id.)      Although    it   recognized that defense counsel had raised
    additional issues during the hearing, in other words, the State refused to deal with
    any that lay outside the scope of Petitioner’s written motion                          to suppress.   At   that
    point, the trial court orally denied Petitioner’s suppression motion.                      (RpR. 99)
    When the     State drafied proposed Findings of Fact                     and Conclusions of Law
    during the abatement of Petitioner’s appeal,                 it   continued     its   effort to forestall the
    latter’s assertion    of any claims about constitutional violations surrounding his
    statements in a preamble to the document. Subject to that proviso, the                            trial   court
    ruled   on   Petitioner’s         fifih amendment         claim;          it   did not explicitly rule on
    Petitioner’s fourth    amendment claim          in that   document. (Appendix).
    In Resendez     v.   State,     
    306 S.W.3d 308
    , 312 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009),                        this
    Court held that held that an argument made during a suppression hearing                                      is
    sufficient to alert a     trial     court that a defendant          is   arguing a claim of statutory or
    constitutional violation.          In explicating the governing law, the Court quoted                       its
    opinion in Larzkston         v.   State,   
    827 S.W.2d 907
    , 909 (Tex. Crim. App. 1992) to
    summarize the core requirements of preserving error under Texas Rule of
    Appellate Procedure 33.l(a) and Texas Rule of Evidence 103.                   It   framed them as
    follows:
    To preserve an error for appeal, a party must be specific enough so as
    to ‘let the trial judge know what he wants, why he thinks himself
    entitled to    and do so clearly enough for the judge to understand him
    it,
    at   a time when the trial court is in a proper position to do something
    about   it.’
    Resendez v.   State,   
    306 S.W.3d 308
    , 313 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009).
    The Court        also emphasized that appellate courts           must pay attention       to
    contextual clues concerning what particular arguments a party            is   making:
    [Courts] cannot consider just the specific complaint in
    question; [they] must also look at the context. When the correct
    ground for exclusion was obvious to the judge and opposing counsel,
    no forfeiture results from a general or imprecise objection.
    Resendez v.   
    State, 306 S.W.3d at 308
    , 313 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009).
    By    holding in this case that Petitioner failed to preserve a claim that his
    statement regarding a connection with a Black       Dodge Magnum was                 the fruit of a
    Fourth     Amendment       violation (Appendix Slip op. at 8), the Fourteenth Court             of
    Appeals has ignored the core principles outlined      in   Resendez      v.   State,   
    306 S.W.3d 308
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2009). Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure                 66.3(c).
    C.
    In United States       v.   Henley, 
    984 F.2d 1040
       (9th Cir.    1992), the court dealt
    with Henley’s claim that his statement he owned a car involved in a robbery was
    obtained in violation of his Miranda rights. Although the FBI had not formally
    10
    arrested    Henley        at the time,   an agent entered the police car where Henley                  sat in
    handcuffs, and asked             him whether he owned a                 particular   1974 Plymouth Duster.
    When Henley acknowledged                  his ownership, the agent disclosed that he suspected
    the car had been involved in a bank robbery, and obtained I-lenley’s consent to
    search the vehicle. With evidence taken                        fiom      the Duster, prosecutors obtained
    Hen1ey’s conviction not for the bank robbery then under investigation but for one
    that   had occurred eight days           earlier.
    Writing for the panel and relying directly on Miranda                          v.   Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 486
    (1966), Judge Kozinski              stated:
    Whether Henley was              in   custody     at the   time he admitted owning the
    car   is   easily resolved.
    ***
    It is fair   to say that   someone who
    being questioned by an FBI
    is
    agent while sitting handcuffed in the back of a police car is, indeed,
    not free to leave. We have no trouble concluding that Henley ‘had
    been taken into custody or otherwise deprived of his freedomof action
    in [a] significant way.’
    United States        v.   
    Henley, supra
    , 984 F.2d at 1042.
    The    court     went on     to hold that the         FBI questioning was not only         custodial
    but also constituted interrogation. United States                        v.   Henley, 
    984 F.2d 1040
    , 1043
    (9"‘ Cir.   1992).
    Relying on Balentine            v.   State, 
    71 S.W.3d 76
    .3 (Tex.   Crim. App. 2002), the
    court of appeals in this case concluded that Petitioner’s detention in a police car
    11
    while handcuffed was reasonable and did not amount to an unlawful                                      arrest.
    (Appendix Slip Op.            at 14)   That case     is   factually distinguishable         from the   instant
    one. In Balentine, the officer began investigating a report of gunfire from a                            knovm
    informant.       He   first   watched defendant        try to      evade an encounter, then repeatedly
    caught him in various           lies   and contradictions as Balentine allowed the officer                   to
    chauffer   him    to the address of       someone who could vouch                 for his identity.    As   the
    situation developed to the point           where the           officer felt the   need   to frisk Balentine a
    second time, he handcuffed the                  latter as      he took him out of the patrol car and
    conducted a second, more thorough pat-down search and found a                                    bullet.    The
    officer ultimately released Balentine               on the      instruction of a supervisor.       Balentine
    v.   State, 
    71 S.W.3d 763
    , 767 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002).
    In this case, the officers responding to a call                   by an unknown informant did
    not   find evasive      actors in the apartment parking              lot.   Every one they handcuffed and
    placed in separate patrol cars had no outstanding warrants. The officers found no
    weapons     to corroborate the         unknown inforrnant’s           tip.   They found no guns or drugs
    in the white pick-up truck they searched.                        As one      officer questioned Petitioner
    about his connection to a Black Dodge                 Magnum they spotted, the others conducted
    a plain view search through               its    passenger        window and saw marijuana on               the
    console inside. Because Petitioner did not have a key to the vehicle that was not
    12
    registered to him, the officers called a       tow    truck,   and asked the driver   to   open the
    Dodge    so they could retrieve the drugs.
    What the     court of appeals has ruled in this case      is   the following: If you are a
    black   man     standing next to a white pick-up truck in an apartment parking lot in
    Acres   Homes       at   4:00 a.m, a call from an unidentified individual that a black
    person, or 3 or 4,       is   doing drugs and loading guns next to a white pick-up            at that
    location will give the police reasonable suspicion to detain             you by handcuffing you
    and locking you          in a patrol car while they investigate the         anonymous      tip.   That
    detention, moreover, does not arise to the equivalent of an arrest. That holding                      is
    untenable in light of the United States Supreme Court’s decisions in both Illinois                    v.
    Wardlow, 528        US.       119, 124 (2000) and     Alabama    v.    White, 496, U.S. 325, 329
    (1990). For those reasons, this Court should review the lower court’s decision and
    reverse   it.   Texas Rule of Civil Procedure    66.3(c).
    Prayer for Relief
    WHEREFORE, PREMISES CONSIDERED,                            Petitioner respectfiilly asks
    this   Court to sustain Petitioner's grounds for review on the Miranda issue and
    reverse the judgments of the Fourteenth Court of Appeals and the                 trial court.     In the
    alternative, Petitioner asks this       Court to sustain his grounds for review on both the
    first and second issues, and then            remand     this case to the      Fourteenth Court of
    Appeals for fiirther proceedings consistent with the Court’s decision.
    13
    Respectfully submitted,
    é(4mu/,,_(,Lfls£nc/27/"“""‘/h‘
    By:
    MICHAEL A. MCENRUB
    TBC #13589050
    639 Heights Boulevard
    P.O. Box 70978
    Houston, Texas 77270-0978
    (713) 862-1975
    (713)864-8587 FAX
    mmcenrue@justice.com
    ATTORNEY FOR PETITIONER
    Certificate of Compliance
    Pursuant to Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.4(i)(3),    I   hereby certify that
    The word count   in the foregoing Appellant’s Petition for Discretionary         Review
    calculated under Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.4(i)(2) without allowance under
    Texas Rule of Civil Procedure   9.4(i)(l), is   3,069 words.
    g(/wag.”
    Michael A. Mclfnrue
    14
    Certificate of Service
    I   hereby certify that a true copy of the foregoing Petition for Discretionary
    Review was     sent to   the following parties or counsel of record   thifi day     of
    January, 2014 by mail in compliance with Rules 9.5        &   68.11, Texas Rules   of
    Appellate Procedure:
    Eric Kugler
    Assistant District Attorney
    1201 Franklin
    Houston, Texas 77002
    State Prosecuting Attorney
    P.O.   Box 12405
    Austin, Texas 78711
    d,.,,z.M%4n,:,,4..a
    Michael A. Mc_Elnrue
    APPENDIX
    -
    v
    Abatement Order filed January 7, 2014.
    R
    In The
    3lun1'It2rIfl1¢'m1rfnfApr;12fln
    NO. 14»-13-00725-CR
    JASON MICHAEL PLACIDE, Appellant
    V.
    1'31:    spire or TEXAS, Appellee
    On Appeal rroxygié ism District Court
    ~~
    Harifis County,          Texas
    Q
    Trial Courif            "Le?   No. 331950130
    ~~
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    IE5‘-lib                       1   Q
    ABATEIVIENT ORDER
    The trial court failed .t6-‘submit findings of fact and conclusions of law on the
    voluntariness of appellant’s statement. Article 38.22, section 6 of the Texas                       Code
    of Criminal Procedure requires the          trial     court to   make   written fact findings and
    conclusions of law as to whether a challenged statement was                     made     voluntarily,
    even   if appellant   did not request them or object to their absence. Tex.              Code Crim.
    Proc. at. 38.22 § 6; Urias     v.   State, 
    155 S.W.3d 141
    ,      142- (Tex.   Crim.                    .
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    The     statute is   mandatory and the proper procedure to correct the error            is    to abate
    the appeal and direct the       trial   court to   make   the required findings and conclusions.
    See Tex. R. App. P. 44.4; Wicker            v. State,   
    740 S.W.2d 779
    , 784 (Tex. Crim. App.
    1987).
    Accordingly, the     trial   court is directed to reduce to writing     its   findings of
    fact    and conclusions of law on the voltmtariness of appel!ant’s statement and have
    a supplemental clerk’s record containing those findings filed with the clerk of this
    Court within thirty days of the date of this order.           3 '1! '10 ,4
    The appeal is    abated, treated as a closed case,      and removed from      this   Court’s
    active docket.       The appeal will be reinstated on this Court's      active docket    when the
    trial   court’s findings     and recommendations are filed in this Court. The Court will
    also consider an appropriate motion to reinstate the appeal filed            by either party.
    PER CURIAM
    P3
    35341;
    THE sun: or TEXAS                                       x                      [N THE    180"‘
    vs.                                                     x                      DISTRICT COURT or
    JASON MICHAEL PLACIDIZ                                  x                      HARRIS couwrv, TEXAS
    F      INGS OF FACT AND                 N            ONS OF LAW
    BE IT      REMEMBERED      that on July 22, 2013 this Court conducted an evidentiary hearing,
    pursuant to the Defendant’s       MOTION TO  SUPPRESS. Specifically, the Defendant sought to
    suppress, “all evidence seized on 7-6-2012 uneonscnted in the search of a Black dodge Magnum
    vehicle at 5700 Gulf bank.” During the aforementioned hearing, in addition to urging the
    suppression of physical evidence, the Defendant also urged suppression of certain orai
    statements, although such statements were           NOT
    mentioned in the              MOTION TO
    SUPPRESS.
    At the conclusion of said hearing, this Court denied the aforementioned            MOTION TO
    SUPPRESS._'I'his Court makes the following FINDINGS OF FACT                       AN
    D CONCLUSIONS
    OF LAW     with regard to       BOTH
    the physical evidence seized and the oral statements made by
    the Defendant, while not conceding that the consideration of such statements was properly before
    the Court based on the aforementioned           MOTION TO
    SUPPRESS:
    FINDINGS OF FACT
    1.   The Defendant, Jason Michael Placide, was charged by indictment in the above styled and
    numbered cause with the felony offense of Possession of a Controlled Substance.
    2.   Oflioers Joseph Little and Matthew Little of the Houston Police Department arecredible and
    reliable witnesses   who testified trrrthtirlly at the hearing regarding Defendant’s Motion To
    Suppress Evidence.
    3.   On   July 6, 2013, at approximately 4:00       am. a      report   was made   to the Houston Police
    Department    that three to four black ma]         were standing    in the area   of a white truck and a
    black   Dodge Magnum       at   8034 Antoine, Houston, Harris County, Texas, in possession of
    narcotics   and weapons.
    4.   On July 6, 2013, shortly afier 4:00 a.m., Officers Joseph Little and Matthew Little responded
    to the reported disturbance at 8034 Antoine, Houston, Harris County, Texas, involving three
    to four black   males allegedly    in possession   of narcotics and Weapons in the nreaof a white
    truck and a black   Dodge Magnum.
    5.   8034 Antoine, Houston, Harris County, Texas, is in a high crime area known for narcotics,
    and the officers arrived on scene at approximately 4:00 a.rn., in the hours of darkness.
    When the officers arrived at 8034 Antoine, Houston, Harris County, Texas, they observed
    three biack   males in the area of a white        truck,   and a black Dodge      Magnum within three
    parking spaces of the white truck, confirming several pieces of information fiorn the report.
    The oflieers briefly detained each of the three men, includingthe Defendant, Jason Plaeide,
    in order to safely investigate and ensure the continued presence of the suspects in the scene.
    At the time the Defendant was detained, the scene of the investigation was not yet secure,
    and the officers could not be certain whether there were unsecured weapons in the area.
    9.    There was no significant show of force during the investigative detention.
    10.   As part of the detention, the Defendant was frislted for weapons, handcuffed, and placed in
    the   back of a patrol     car.
    ll.   While conducting       their brief investigation with the help        of a third HPD ofiicer, Ofiicers
    Joseph    Little   and Matthew     Little   looked into the window of the black Dodge           Magnum
    vehicle (with the aid of a 360 lumen flmhlight) fiom outside the vehicle, and observed what
    they both believed to be marijuana, based on their training and experience.
    12.   The Defendant admitted to officers           that the   black Dodge   Magnum was the vehicle he had
    been driving and that he lived at the same address where the vehicle was registered.
    l3.   The Defendant was an-rated afier the discovery and recovay of the marijuana, and after he
    was linked to the black Dodge Magnurn through his statements.
    QONQLQ $038 OF LAW
    The officer’: testimony established specific, articulable             facts (the confirmed details    of the
    call,   the nature of the high crime area, time of night, and presence of the suspects in
    suspicious circumstances) and reasonable inferences substantial                       enough   to support
    reasonable suspicion that the suspects had b               engaged    in criminal activity.
    The investigative     detention of the Defendant         was lawful, in order to ensure officer safety,
    maintain the status quo, and ensure the continued presence of the Defendant during the
    course of a brief investigation, taking into consideration the nature ofthe area, time of night,
    and verified    details     of the call. State v. Sheppard, 27l S.W.3d 28l, 291 (Tex. Crim. App.
    2008); Chamber:       v.   State, 
    397 S.W.3d 777
    (Terr. App.-Houston        [!4"‘   Dist} 2013).
    3.   The marijuana in the black Dodge Magnum was in plain view and immediately reeogniuble
    to the ofliccts as contraband,   and the officers involved viewed the marijuana from a location
    where they were legitimately and lawfully present.
    4.   The   officers involved   had probable cause to search the black Dodge Magnum, and the
    seizure of the narcotics without a warrant was lawful under the automobile exception.
    5.   Probable cause to arrest the Defendant did not exist prior to his statements linking him to the
    black   Dodge Magnum.
    6.   The officers used only a minimal amount offorce required to investigate, maintain the status
    quo, and ensure ofiicet‘ safety.
    7.   The statements of the Defendant in regards to his connection to the black Dodge Magnum
    were made during an investigative detention that had not evolved into custodial interrogation,
    and therefore are admissible pursuant to Article 38.22 of the Texas Code of Criminal
    Procedure.
    ELISE
    IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT THE FOREGOING FINDINGS OF FACT AND
    CONCLUSIONS OF LAW be made a part of the record in this cause pursuant to the Team
    Code of Criminal Procedure.
    SIGNED AND ENTERED this 10" day ofMarch, 2014
    ED
    Img.Lngnltl      '
    glutrlct clerk
    ‘77?«/Lb/3/b«cu«._
    Marc W. Brown            _
    W9"
    MAR 1 0 7.014
    "'9'"
    ',,_,
    1
    .3     Sittingbx assignment for the
    130 District Court
    Harris County, Texas
    /,
    Order filed January 7, 2014, Withdrawn, Appeal Reinstated and Order filed
    March     18,   2014
    NO. 14-13-00725-CR
    JASON MICHAEL PLACIDE, Appellant
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
    On Appeal from the 180th District Court
    Harris County, Texas
    Trial Court Cause No. 1353416
    ORDER
    On   January      7,   2014,   this   Court issued an order abating the appeal and
    directing the    trial   court to submit findings of fact and conclusions of law on the
    voluntariness of appelIant’s statement.
    On March        14, 2014, a supplemental clerk's record     was filed containing the
    trial   court’s findings         of   fact   and conclusions of law. Therefore., our order of
    January   7,   2014,   is   withdrawn. The appeal   is reinstated.   The   State’s brief   is   due
    April 17,2014.
    PER CURIAM
    Affirmed and        Memorandum Opinion filed September 25, 2014.
    In   The
    Ellnurteeutli (Enurt nf         Appeals
    N0. 14-13-00725-CR
    JASON MICHAEL PLACIDE, Appellant
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
    On Appeal from the 180th District Court
    Harris County, Texas
    Trial Court Cause No. 1353416
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Appellant Jason Michael Placide appeals his conviction for possession of
    cocaine. In   two   issues, appellant argues the trial court erred in   denying   his   motion
    to suppress   because (I) the officers lacked reasonable suspicion to detain him; and
    (2) his statement      was made     as a result of custodial interrogation and            was
    inadmissible under article 38.22, section 3 of the Texas                Code of Criminal
    Procedure.    We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    Appellant was indicted for possession of between one and four grams of
    cocaine. See Tex. Health            &   Safety    Code    § 481.1 l5(c). Appellant filed a pretrial
    motion to suppress          in   which he argued      that a   Houston Police   officer “broke into”
    his vehicle       and searched the vehicle without consent. Appellant argued              that “[a]ny
    controlled substances found in the vehicle” should be suppressed because the
    search   was without a warrant and without probable                  cause. Appellant also sought
    suppression of “[a]ny other matters that the Court finds should be suppressed upon
    hearing of this motion.” Appellant argued that the evidence should be suppressed
    because (1) the narcotics were not in plain view in the vehicle; and (2) the vehicle
    search was not incident to a lawful             arrest.
    At the hearing on appellant’s motion             to suppress Officer   Joseph Little of the
    Houston Police Department               testified that at      approximately 4:00 a.m. on July      6,
    2012, he was patrolling the north side of Houston in an area                    known   for narcotics
    and crime.        He   received a dispatch call for a disturbance at an apartment complex
    located at 8034 Antoine.           The 911      caller reported three or four    African-American
    males using narcotics and loading guns while standing outside a white truck near a
    black   Dodge Magnum. When               Little arrived at the     apartment complex he observed
    three African-American males standing outside of a white pickup truck near a
    black   Dodge Magnum. He            identified appellant as one of the       men he saw that night.
    Because     Little     had received      a report that the       men were   loading weapons, he
    detained    all   three   men, handcuffed them, and placed them          in separate patrol cars.
    In conducting his investigation, Little shined a flashlight into the black
    Dodge Magnum, and observed                narcotics on the car’s console. Little        saw   a bag of
    marijuana and a bag of clear            pills   with no label on them. Little asked appellant       if
    the black   Dodge Magnum was his car, and appellant “admitted that that was his                   car
    2
    and he had been driving              it   and he    lives at the registered address.”          Appellant was
    arrested after the marijuana and pills                       were discovered        in the vehicle. After
    appellant       was    arrested, officers     found crack cocaine in the vehicle. The                  pills also
    tested positive for cocaine.
    On cross-examination,         Little testified that        he did not know the     identity   of the
    911    caller.   The officers searched -all three men, but did not find weapons.
    Officer   Matthew was         also   on the scene and testifled           to the   same     events.’
    Matthew         Little testified that the three        men were         detained because the     call   reported
    they were loading weapons. The                men were handcuffed for officer safety and placed
    in the patrol cars so they                could not flee the scene until the investigation was
    complete.
    Appellant testified that the car belonged to his mother and he had no
    knowledge of drugs           in the car.    On cross-examination,             appellant admitted   more than
    one prior conviction for possession of controlled substances but could not
    remember an exact number of prior                    convictions. Appellant believed he            was under
    arrest at the     time he was handcuffed and placed                in   the patrol car.
    During his closing statement, appellant’s counsel argued that (1) appelIant’s
    statement that he           owned   the car should be excluded because he                 was under       arrest
    and officers did not read his It/firanda                     rights;2    and   (2) the evidence should         be
    excluded because the search was warrantless and not a proper inventory search
    incident to arrest.         The   State argued that the officers           had reasonable suspicion of a
    threat to their safety as a result                of the potential weapons reported            in the police
    dispatch. Officers detained appellant                  and the other individuals for            their safety
    '
    We refer to Joseph Little as ‘‘Little'’ throughout this opinion and refer to Matthew Little
    as   "Matthew    Little.”
    2
    See Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 444 (1966).
    3
    while they conducted an investigation. The investigation revealed marijuana in
    plain   view on the console of the black Dodge Magnum. The State                     further argued
    that appellant’s          argument about his statement   fell   outside the scope of the hearing.
    The       trial   court   made findings of    fact   and conclusions of law with the
    following preface:
    During the aforementioned hearing, in addition to urging the
    suppression of physical evidence, the Defendant also urged
    suppression of certain oral statements, although such statements were
    NOT mentioned in the MOTION TO SUPPRESS. At the conclusion
    of said hearing, this Court denied the aforementioned MOTION TO
    SUPPRESS. This Court makes the following FINDINGS OF FACT
    AND CONCLUSIONS OF                  LAW
    with regard to BOTH the physical
    evidence seized and the oral statements made by the Defendant, while
    not conceding that the consideration of such statements was properly
    before the Court based on the aforementioned MOTION TO
    SUPPRESS:
    Findings of Fact
    1.   The Defendant, Jason Michael Placide, was charged by indictment
    in   the above styled and numbered cause with the felony offense of
    Possession of a Controlled Substance.
    2. Officers  Joseph Little and Matthew Little of the Houston Police
    Department are credible and reliable witnesses who testified truthfully
    at the hearing regarding Defendant’s Motion To Suppress Evidence.
    3.   OnJuly 6, 2013, at approximately 4:00 a.m. a report was made to
    the Houston Police Department that three to four black males were
    standing in the area of a white truck and a black Dodge Magnum at
    8034 Antoine, Houston, Harris County, Texas, in possession of
    narcotics and weapons.
    4.   OnJuly 6, 2013, shortly after 4:00a.m., Officers Joseph Little and
    Matthew Little responded to the reported disturbance at 8034 Antoine,
    Houston, Harris County, Texas, involving three to four black males
    allegedly in possession of narcotics and weapons in the area of a white
    truck and a black Dodge Magnum.
    5.   8034 Antoine, Houston, Hairis County, Texas,               is in   a high crime
    4
    area       known              and the officers arrived on scene
    for narcotics,                                        at
    approximately 4:00 a.m., in the hours of darkness.
    6.    When the officers arrived at 8034 Antoine,
    Houston, Harris County,
    Texas, they observed three black males in the area of a white truck,
    and a black Dodge Magnum within three parking spaces of the white
    truck, confirming several pieces of information from the report.
    7.    The
    officers briefly detained each of the three men, including the
    Defendant, Jason Placide, in order to safely investigate and ensure the
    continued presence of the suspects at the scene.
    8.    Atthe time the Defendant was detained, the scene of the
    investigation was not yet secure, and the ofiicers could not be certain
    whether there were unsecured weapons in the area.
    9.    There was no significant show of force during the investigative
    detention.
    10.    As   of the detention, the Defendant was frisked for weapons,
    part
    handcuffed, and placed in the back of a patrol car.
    11.   While conducting   their brief investigation with the help of a third
    HPD     officer, Officers Joseph Little and Matthew Little looked into the
    window of the black Dodge Magnum       vehicle (with the aid of a 360
    lumen flashlight) fiom outside the vehicle, and observed what they
    both believed to be marijuana, based on their training and experience.
    12.   The Defendant admittedto officers that the black Dodge Magnum
    was the vehicle he had been driving, and that he lived at the same
    address where the vehicle was registered.
    13.   The Defendant was  arrested after the discovery    and recovery of
    the marijuana, and after he was linked to the black      Dodge Magnum
    through his statements.
    Conclusions of Law
    1.   The officer’s testimony  established specific, articulable facts (the
    confirmed details of the call, the nature of the high crime area, time of
    night, and presence of the suspects in suspicious circumstances) and
    reasonable inferences substantial enough to support reasonable
    suspicion that the suspects had been engaged in criminal activity.
    2.   The
    investigative detention of the Defendant was lawful, in order to
    ensure officer safety, maintain the status quo, and ensure the
    continued presence of the Defendant during the course of a brief
    5
    investigation, taking into consideration the nature of the area, time of
    night, and verified details of the call. State v. Sheppard, 271 S.W.3d
    281,291 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008); Chambers                       v.   State,   
    397 S.W.3d 777
             (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2013).
    3.   The marijuana    black Dodge Magnum was in plain view and
    in the
    immediately recognizable to the officers as contraband, and the
    officers involved viewed the marijuana fiom a location where they
    were legitimately and lawfully present.
    4.   The                had probable cause to search the black Dodge
    officers involved
    Magnum, and the seizure of the narcotics without a warrant was
    lawful under the automobile exception.
    5.   Probable cause to arrest the Defendant did not exist prior to his
    statements linking him to the black Dodge Magnum.
    6.   The      officers    used only a minimal amount of force required to
    investigate, maintain the status quo,      and ensure officer safety.
    7.   The statements of the Defendant in regards to his connection to the
    black   Dodge Magnum were made during an investigative detention
    that    had not evolved
    into custodial interrogation,                     and therefore are
    admissible pursuant to Article 38.22 of the Texas                       Code of Criminal
    Procedure.
    STANDARD or REVIEW
    We      review a        trial   court’s denial of a       motion      to suppress for    abuse of
    discretion.      Johnson    v.    State,   
    414 S.W.3d 184
    , 192 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013); Thomas
    v.   State,   
    297 S.W.3d 458
    , 459 (Tex. App.~Houston [14th Dist] 2009,                          pet. ret’d).
    We     review the evidence               in the light   most favorable         to the trial court’s ruling.
    Gutierrez       v.   State, 
    221 S.W.3d 680
    , 687 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007). The                trial   court   is
    the exclusive factfinder and judge of the credibility of the witnesses. State                          v.   Ross,
    
    32 S.W.3d 853
    , 855 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000); Turner v. State, 
    252 S.W.3d 571
    , 576
    (Tex. App.——l-louston [14th Dist.] 2008, pet. refd).                             We    afford almost total
    deference to the          trial   court’s determination of historical facts supported by the
    record, especially         when      the   trial   court’s findings are based           on an evaluation of
    credibility      and demeanor. See Guzman                v.   State,   
    955 S.W.2d 85
    , 89 (Tex. Crim.
    
    6 Ohio App. 1997
    ).   We afford the same amount of deference to the trial court’s ruling on
    mixed questions of law and            fact if the resolution     of these questions tums on an
    evaluation of credibility and demeanor. 
    Id. We review
    questions not turning on
    credibility   and demeanor de novo.           
    Id. If the
    trial court’s decision is correct                under
    any theory of law applicable to the case, the decision will be sustained. Estrada                                   v.
    State,   
    154 S.W.3d 604
    , 607 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005).
    PRESERVATION or ERROR
    In his first issue appellant argues his statement                was the   fruit    of a Fourth
    Amendment          violation because the officers did not have reasonable suspicion to
    detain him.       The   State argues appellant failed to preserve error with regard to the
    denial of his motion to suppress his statement because appellant’s written motion
    to suppress only sought to suppress the physical evidence recovered                    from the car,
    A   motion to suppress        is    a specialized objection to the admissibility of
    evidence and must be timely and sufficiently specific to inform the                          trial    court of
    the complaint. Johnson        v.   State, 
    171 S.W.3d 643
    , 647 (Tex. App.—Houston [l4th
    Dist.) 2005, pet. refd).       To preserve      error for appellate review, an appellant                   must
    “let the trial    judge know what he wants,        why he thinks himself entitled to                it,   and   .    .
    .   do so clearly enough for the judge to understand him             at   a time when the      trial      court
    is   in a proper position to       do something about     it.”   Lankston     v.   State,    
    827 S.W.2d 907
    , 909 (Tex. Crim. App. 1992).
    Appellant’s written. motion specifically sought to suppress the physical
    evidence recovered from the           car,   and vaguely sought suppression of “[a]ny other
    matters that the Court finds should be suppressed                 upon hearing of this motion.”
    During the oral hearing on appellant’s motion           to suppress, appellant argued that his
    statement should be suppressed because he was in custody at the time he                              made       it
    and ofiicers did not inform him of his Miranda              rights.    We assume       for purposes              of
    7
    the analysis below that appellant’s argument at the hearing regarding suppression
    of his statement sufficed to preserved                  error.
    Appellant also argues on appeal that the officers lacked reasonable suspicion
    to detain       him and     that his statement              was an impermissible        fruit   of   that Fourth
    Amendment violation. Appellant did not bring such                             a contention to the attention of
    the    trial   court either in his written motion to suppress or during the oral hearing; he
    did not ask the         trial   court to decide the issue of reasonable suspicion and issue a
    ruling.    His motion failed to preserve his contention on appeal because                             it   did not
    alert the trial court that          he wished the issue to be decided. See Tex. R. App.                          P.
    33.l(a)(1) (requiring, in order to preserve error, sufficient specificity to                           make     trial
    court aware of complaint and ruling                    by court on complaint); Broxton           v.   State,   
    909 S.W.2d 912
    , 918 (Tex. Crim. App. 1995) (holding                                  that issue   on appeal must
    comport with complaint made                    at trial).
    On    appeal, appellant argues the officers failed to corroborate the facts of the
    dispatch that indicated the occurrence of criminal activity. Appellant did not                               make
    this   argument to the          trial   court; instead,          he argued that the search of the vehicle
    was improper because             (1) the officers could not             have seen the contraband           in plain
    view, and (2) the search was not conducted as a proper inventory search after
    arrest.    We     conclude that appellant did not preserve this contention for appeal
    because neither his written motion nor his arguments                          at the hearing alerted the trial
    court to a contention that the officers lacked reasonable suspicion justifying an
    investigation. Additionally, appellant did not secure a ruling                         on such a complaint.
    See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a)(l); Swain                       v.   State, 
    181 S.W.3d 359
    , 365 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2005) (concluding                  that   when     appellant failed to object to admission of
    statement        at   motion-to—suppress hearing on ground for suppression raised on
    appeal, but instead, argued a different basis for suppression, issue                                   was not
    preserved);    Mbugua        v.   State,   
    312 S.W.3d 657
    , 666-67 (Tex. App.—Houston                         [lst
    Dist] 2009, pet. refd) (holding that appellant did not preserve his complaint
    regarding admissibility of his custodial statement because complaint on appeal did
    not comport with grounds argued in motion to suppress).                            We overmle appe1lant’s
    first issue.
    CUSTODY
    In his second issue, appellant argues his statement concerning ownership of
    the car   was the product of a custodial             interrogation. Appellant argues the statement
    was inadmissible because he did not receive warnings under Miranda.
    The Fourth Amendment and                   article     38.22 of the Texas Code of Criminal
    Procedure allow admission of noncustodial statements. See,                                e.g.,   
    Miranda, 384 U.S. at 444
    ; Dowthitf v. State, 
    931 S.W.2d 244
    , 263 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996). Thus.
    to determine         whether      appell-a.nt’s    statement about ownership of the car was
    admissible,    we must       first   detennine the point at which officers placed appellant in
    custody.
    A police officer may stop and briefly                     detain a person reasonably suspected
    of criminal activity in the absence of probable cause to arrest the person. Terry                              v.
    Ohio, 392      US.     l,   22 (1968). The officer              may     use such force as         is   reasonably
    necessary to effect the goal of the stop: investigation, maintenance of the status
    quo, or officer safety. Rhodes              v.    State,   
    945 S.W.2d 115
    , 117 (Tex. Crim. App.),
    cert.   denied, 
    522 U.S. 894
    (1997). There                 is   no    bright-line, test   providing that mere
    handcuffing      is    always the equivalent of an                     arrest. 
    Id. at 118.
    Instead,         when
    evaluating whether an investigative detention                    is   unreasonable,       “common      sense and
    ordinary   human experience must govern over rigid criteria.” Ia’.
    A police 0fficer’s interaction with a citizen can be classified as an encounter,
    detention, or arrest. See State             v.    Castleberry, 
    332 S.W.3d 460
    , 466 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2011). “A person             is   arrested   when he has been     actually placed under restraint
    or taken into custody by an officer or person executing a warrant of arrest, or by an
    officer or person arresting without a warrant.” Tex.                    Code. Crim. Proc.       art.   1522;
    Mount v.       State,    
    217 S.W.3d 716
    , 724 (Tex. App.——I-Iouston [14th                   Dist.]   2007, no
    pet.).   But      this restraint-of—liberty standard is         not adequate        when    distinguishing
    between an           arrest   and a detention because       it is   a characteristic      common    to both.
    
    Mount, 217 S.W.3d at 724
    . Rather, the distinction is       a matter of degree depending
    on the length of the            detention, the      amount of force employed, and whether the
    officer actually conducted an investigation.                 Id.;    Woods   v.   State,   
    970 S.W.2d 770
    ,
    775 (Tex. App.-Austin 1998,                 pet. refd).
    A court must detennine reasonableness from the perspective of a reasonable
    officer at the scene,          making allowances       for the fact that officers         must often make
    quick decisions under tense, uncertain, and rapidly changing circumstances.
    
    Rhodes, 945 S.W.2d at 118
    .   Relevant factors in the reasonableness inquiry are the
    nature of the crime under investigation, the degree of suspicion, the location of the
    stop, the time         of day, the reaction of the suspect, and whether the officer actually
    conducted an investigation afier seizing the suspect. 
    Mount, 217 S.W.3d at 725
    ;
    Chambers        v.   State,   
    397 S.W.3d 777
    , 782 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th                    Dist.]   2013,
    pet. refd).
    The   trial   court found that “[t]he investigative detention of the Defendant                   was
    lawful, in order to ensure officer safety, maintain the status quo, and ensure the
    continued presence of the Defendant during the course of a brief investigation,
    taking into consideration the nature of the area, time of night, and verified details
    of the   call.”
    During the suppression hearing,              Little testified that       he received a dispatch
    10
    describing three or four African—American males using drugs and loading weapons
    near a white pickup truck and a black          Dodge Magnum             at   8034 Antoine. When the
    officers arrived at 8034 Antoine, they observed three African-American males
    standing around a white pickup truck with a black                 Dodge Magnum parked              nearby.
    For officer safety the officers patted down the three men, handcuffed them, and
    placed them in separate patrol cars. Little testified that although they found no
    weapons during the pat-down search the handcuffs were necessary                        for the officers’
    safety,   and detention   in the patrol cars   was necessary           to prevent the suspects          from
    fleeing. The officers then shined a flashlight into the white pickup truck and the
    black     Dodge Magnum.      In response to Little’s question, appellant admitted the
    Dodge Magnum was his vehicle.
    Although   Little detained appellant in the patrol car                  with handcuffs, the
    amount of force was reasonable under the circumstances. The                       incident took place
    at   4:00 a.m. in a parking lot in a high-crime area where Little had previously
    responded    to narcotics   and weapons     calls. Little       conducted a brief investigation in
    which he discovered narcotics        in    a car appellant admitted              to   be   his.   The   trial
    coutt’s finding that Little did not use          more force than reasonably necessary                     to
    protect himself and those around         him during his        brief investigation is supported          by
    the evidence at the hearing. See Balenline            v.   State, 
    71 S.W.3d 763
    , 771 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2002) (handcuffing and escorting appellant                    to patrol car did not transform
    investigative detention into arrest      where    officer      had reasonable concem for safety
    because he was investigating crime involving a weapon).
    Appellant argues the officers depri\ ed him of his freedom to a degree
    comparable to a formal      arrest. In   support of his argument, appellant cites Ramirez
    v.   State, l05   S.W.3d 730, 740 (Tex. App.—Austin 2003, no                      pet.),    and Alford    v.
    State,   
    22 S.W.3d 669
    , 672 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2000,                      pet. ref’d).   Ramirez and
    ll
    Alford are distinguishable.
    In Ramirez,       an officer      who    arrived at Ramirez’s         home      in     response to a
    neighbor’s complaint noticed marijuana paraphernalia, marijuana residue, and the
    odor of marijuana as Ramirez stepped out of the garage and closed the door behind
    
    him. 105 S.W.3d at 735
    .             A second individual, Reynosa, exited the garage and left
    the door partially open.            
    Id. at 736.
      The    officer called for         back-up because he
    recognized Reynosa as a suspect in a shooting and became concerned that Reynosa
    or Ramirez       may have had weapons.              
    Id. Reynosa was
    subjected           to    a pat down,
    which revealed        a knife   and a plastic bag containing marijuana.                  Ia’.   Reynosa was
    arrested and     moved away from the             garage. 
    Id. Ramirez was
       also subjected to a pat
    down; while conducting the pat down, the                      officer told     Ramirez he was being
    detained and placed him in handcuffs.                
    Id. The officer
    informed        Ramirez     that   he
    could see drug paraphernalia and drug residue in the garage and asked, “Is there
    anything else I’m going to fmd in there that’s                    illegal,   any more marijuana?"            
    Id. Ramirez replied,
    “Well,      I   guess there’s some pot in the red cooler.” 
    Id. The Austin
    Court of Appeals determined                   that   Ramirez was     in custody at the
    time the officer asked whether he was going to find anything else in the garage
    because a reasonable person                 in   Ramirez’s position would likely believe his
    freedom of movement had been restrained to the degree associated with an                               arrest.
    
    Id. at 740.
      The   court determined that by            handcuffing Ramirez,          telling    him he was
    being detained, and informing him that they had seen                      illegal   items in the garage, a
    reasonable person would have thought he was under arrest.                      la’.
    The    facts in   Ramirez are distinguishable because Ramirez was near                              his
    home; had been told he was being detained; and knew the officers had seen                              illegal
    contraband in his garage. In contrast, the officers in this case had a report that there
    were weapons being loaded and the men were                    in a   parking    lot in   a high crime area
    12
    after dark.       In Ramirez, unlike this case, the officers did not conduct an
    investigation after detaining Ramirez.
    In Alford, the appellant             was seen driving on an          interstate      highway passing
    cars and    weaving       in   and out of lanes.   
    Id. at 671.
      A police officer activated his siren
    after following Alford’s truck for a distance; Alford                   responded by turning off the
    interstate      highway and       into the    back of a mobile home park.            Ia’.     When    Alford did
    not heed the officer’s request to get out of the truck, the officer pulled Alford out
    of the truck; placed him on the ground; handcuffed him; and called for back-up.                                
    Id. When back—up
               arrived six or seven minutes later, Alford             was   still    in handcuffs    and
    the arriving officer asked whether he had been drinking.                               Ia’.       at 672.   Alford
    admitted drinking six beers.            
    Id. The Fort
    Woith Court of Appeals held that Alford was                        in custody at the time
    he admitted to drinking six beers. The court emphasized that by removing Alford
    from the vehicle, placing him on the ground, handcufling him, and holding him for
    back—up      officers, the      circumstances were elevated beyond those of an ordinary
    traffic stop. 
    Id. at 673.
    Alford    is   distinguishable because Alford             was physically removed from                 his
    truck, placed      on the ground, and handcuffed following a                     traffic stop. 
    Id. at 671.
    Alford then remained handcuffed for six or seven minutes until another officer
    arrived    on the scene who questioned him about                     his alcohol consumption. 
    Id. at 671-72.
    In Alford, as             in   Ramirez, no investigation took place, and Alford was
    “subjected to treatment that resulted in his being in custody for practical purposes.”
    
    Id. at 673.
    The    facts here are closer to Balentine           v.   
    State, 71 S.W.3d at 767
    . Balentine
    was placed        in handcuffs         and escorted to a patrol car while being questioned.
    Before placing Balentine in the patrol               car,   an officer frisked him and did not find
    13
    any weapons.      
    Id. Despite finding
    no weapons, the officer handcuffed Balentine,
    placed him in a patrol      car,    and drove Balentine to a friend’s home.      Ia’.   Before being
    released Balentine        was patted down a second time and handcuffed                    for officer
    safety despite the fact that the officer did not        find any weapons.        
    Id. The Court
    of
    Criminal Appeals concluded that Balentine’s detention was not an arrest based on
    the circumstances surrounding the investigation.           
    Id. at 771.
      The court determined
    that the detention      was temporary and that the handcuffs and placement               in   the patrol
    car did not elevate the temporary detention to an arrest because the officer
    encountered Balentine in an area where gunfire had been reported; Balentine
    exhibited suspicious behavior; and the restraint           was necessary       for officer safety
    while investigating Balentine’s possible involvement in gunfire.               
    Id. at 771.
    We conclude that Little’s investigative detention of appellant was reasonable
    and justified under the circumstances and did not constitute an unlawful                   arrest.   The
    trial   court did not abuse   its   discretion in denying the   motion to suppress appel1ant’s
    oral statement.   We overrule appellant’s second issue.
    We affirm the trial court’sjudgment.
    /s/    William   J.   Boyce
    Justice
    Panel consists of Justices Boyce, Jamison, and Donovan.
    Do Not Publish —- Tex. R. App. P. 472(1)).
    14
    i\\‘.3EFTED
    ‘I4-I3-O(}7225-C11
    FOURTEENTH COURT OF APPEIZ‘.
    HOUSTON. TEXAS
    10/24/2014 4:55:52       FL’!
    '3HRl5TOP‘r|ER PRSN
    CLERK
    NO.   14-1'3‘-O072S.CR
    IN THE F°‘j_§T5ENTH CQVRT OF APPEAIl§m COFl5ll§'lPO"l=‘
    APPEALS
    HOUSTON. TEXAS                                 HOUSTON. TEXAS
    10/24/2014 4:55:52 PM
    * * *
    CHRISTOPHER A. PRiNE
    Cierk
    JASON MICHAEL PLACID5.
    Appellant,
    v.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS,
    Appellée.
    ~
    Iii!!!
    Appeal     fmm the 180"‘ Criminal        District Court
    Harris County, Texas
    (Cause No. 1,353, 446)
    Mo'1*‘r¥3N?n‘o1*zn1:H”Ei&R1Nc
    T0 "ms HONORABLE"_QIf                                 cognr OF APPEALS:                       .
    H
    Appellant Jason Michael Placideimoves this Court far rehearillg lpulsuant                      tO_    _
    Rule 49, Texas Rules of A;ppg§}g$296 S.W.3d
    140
    , 143 (Tex. App.-Houston [14 Dist] 2009, pet. ref'd) (past example). See also
    Stewart      v.   Coldwell Banker   & Company, 
    552 S.W.2d 904
    , 906 (Tex. Civ. App.-—
    Houston [1“ Dist] 1977, writ ref‘d n.r.e.) (lack of prejudice); Costley v. State Farm
    Fire and Casualty C0,, 
    894 S.W.2d 380
    , 387(Tex. App.-—Amarlll0 1997, writ
    denied) (issue arising during appeal).        Cf Reich-Bacat        v.   State,      
    952 S.W.2d 542
    ,
    543 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997) (mandatory opportunity                  to re~brief        on remand from
    Texas Court of Criminal Appeals flows fi'om indigent’s right to counsel); Oliver                          v.
    State,      
    891 S.W.2d 651
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1995) (same); Theus                v.   State,   
    863 S.W.2d 489
    , 491 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993) (same)
    WHEREFORE, PREMISES CONSIDERED,                         Appellant Jason Michael
    Placide respectfiilly asks this Court to grant this Motion for Rehearing, to withdraw
    its   Judgment and Opinion, and allow Appellant to re-brief this appeal                  in light   of the
    findings of fact and conclusions of law submitted         in response to        its.   abatement
    order.
    Respectfillly submitted,
    By:       A/L    q;-’.(_.g;..«   ‘fig-»z<£q,¢l_,_‘_
    MICHAEL A. McENRUE
    TBC 13413589050
    PO. Box 70978
    Houston, Texas 77270-0978
    (713) 862-1975
    (713) 864-8587
    mmcenrue@]ustice.com
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT
    Certificate of Compliance
    Pursuant to Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.4(i)         (3), I   hereby certify
    that the   word count in the foregoing Appel1ant’s Motion        for Rehearing calculated
    under Rule of Appellate Procedure   9.4(i) (2) is   734 words.
    L4    '¢='~Cv{.~.,                   \ »S7,.,4-,£A_.._.
    Michael A. McEnrue
    Certificate of Service.
    I   hereby certify that a true copy of the foregoing Appel1ant’s Motion for
    Rehearing was sent to the following patties or counsel of record this 24th day of
    October, 2014    by mail   in compliance with Rules 9.5, Texas Rules of Appellate
    Procedure:
    Eric Kugler
    Assistant District Attorney
    1201 Franklin, Sixth Floor
    Houston, Texas 77002
    A.     11,4-,¢'r¢.   xeé 4‘! v-/A/:4/5—c.w‘-
    Michael A. McEnrue