State Of Louisiana VS Rodney A. Hingle

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NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL FIRST CIRCUIT 2011 KA 0325 STATE OF LOUISIANA VERSUS RODNEY A HINGLE Judgment Rendered SEP 1 4 2011 On Appeal from the TwentySecond Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of St Tammany State of Louisiana Docket No 489283 Honorable Martin E Coady Judge Presiding Walter P Reed Counsel for Appellee District Attorney Covington Louisiana State of Louisiana Kathryn W Landry Special Appeals Counsel Baton Rouge Louisiana Margaret S Sollars Houma Louisiana Counsel for DefendantAppellant Rodney A Hingle BEFORE PETTIGREW MCCLENDON AND WELCH 33 McCLENDON 3 The defendant Rodney A Hingle was charged by bill of information with simple burglary of an inhabited dwelling count 1 a violation of LSAR S 2 62 14 and possession of a legend drug without a prescription Tramadol count 2 a violation of LSAR 40 The defendant pled not guilty and S 1238 1 following a jury trial was found guilty as charged on both counts The defendant filed a motion for postverdict judgment of acquittal which was denied For the simple burglary of an inhabited dwelling conviction count 1 the defendant was sentenced to ten years at hard labor one year of the sentence to be served without benefit of parole probation or suspension of sentence For the possession of a legend drug without a prescription Tramadol conviction count 2 the defendant was sentenced to five years at hard labor sentences were ordered to run concurrently multiple offender bill of information The The State subsequently filed a The defendant waived his right to a habitual offender hearing and upon admitting to the allegations in the multiple offender bill he was adjudicated a fourth felony habitual offender on each conviction Both of his sentences were vacated and on each conviction he was resentenced to thirty years at hard labor without benefit of probation or suspension of sentence in accordance with the provisions of LSAR 15 S 529 1 The sentences were ordered to run concurrently The defendant now appeals designating one assignment of error For the following reasons we affirm the convictions habitual offender adjudications and sentences FACTS On April 11 2010 at about 9 a in Lacombe the defendant used a 30 m screwdriver to gain entry through one of the doors of the mobile home of Cleveland Lewis Sr while Cleveland was at church Once inside the residence the defendant took Cleveland money including bills and rolls of coins and his s 1 Prior to stipulating or admitting to the allegations in the multiple offender bill of information the defendant waived the reading of the bill and the trial court advised the defendant that a multiple offender bill of information had been filed of his right to be tried to the truth thereof and of his right to remain silent See LSAR 15 State v Mickey 604 So S 529 a 1 1D 2d 675 678 La 1 Cir 1992 writ denied 610 So 795 La 1993 App 2d K prescription pill bottle containing Tramadol A neighbor observed the defendant breaking into Cleveland home and called the police By the time the defendant s was leaving the mobile home Deputy Victoria Dombrowski with the St Tammany Parish Sheriff Office had arrived and stopped the defendant s She found on the defendant person a screwdriver and Cleveland Tramadol and s s money The police returned Cleveland money and medication to him s The defendant did not testify at trial ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR In his sole assignment of error the defendant argues the evidence was insufficient to support the conviction for possession of a legend drug without a prescription Specifically the defendant contends that no chemical analysis was performed on the Tramadol that there was no testimony by Cleveland that other pills may have been in the prescription bottle and that there was no testimony by a pharmacist that the generic drug was a proper substitution for the original prescription The defendant does not contest the conviction for simple burglary of an inhabited dwelling A conviction based on insufficient evidence cannot stand as it violates Due Process See U Const amend XIV La Const art I S 2 The standard of review for the sufficiency of the evidence to uphold a conviction is whether viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt Jackson v Virginia 443 U 307 319 99 S 2781 S Ct 2789 61 L 560 1979 2d Ed See LSAC art 821 State v Ordodi P Cr 6 060207 La 11 946 So 654 660 State v Mussall 523 So 06 29 2d 2d 1305 1308 09 La 1988 The Jackson standard of review incorporated in Article 821 is an objective standard for testing the overall evidence both direct and circumstantial for reasonable doubt When analyzing circumstantial evidence LSAR 15 provides that the fact finder must be satisfied the S 438 overall evidence excludes every reasonable hypothesis of innocence See State v Patorno 01 2585 La App 1 Cir 6 822 So 141 144 02 21 2d 3 At trial the parties stipulated that there had been no chemical analysis of the pills found on the defendant While the defendant concedes there is case law that supports the proposition that scientific evidence is not necessary to prove the identity of a substance the defendant nevertheless asserts that upon viewing all of the evidence no rational trier of fact could have found him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt In support of this assertion the defendant states there was no testimony by Mr Lewis that he had not mixed his medications and placed other pills in the prescription bottle nor was there any testimony by a pharmacist that the generic drug was a proper substitution for the original prescription issued by a doctor We do not see how such testimony would have affected or enhanced the State quantum of proof s With the testimonial and documentary evidence that was submitted at trial the State met its burden of proving the pills were Tramadol Deputy Dombrowski testified at trial that the defendant upon being stopped read his Miranda rights and questioned told her that he broke into the mobile home looking for crack cocaine When he found none he took s Cleveland medication and money The defendant claimed he knew Cleveland but Cleveland testified that he did not know the defendant and had never seen him before The defendant was patted down and found to be in possession of an orange prescription bottle of pills A white prescription label was affixed to the pill bottle providing the name of the doctor prescribing the pills the dosage and the possible side effects from taking the pills The label also indicated TRAMADOL 50MG TABLETS and had the name CLEVELAND LEWIS at the top of the label with Cleveland home address underneath the name s Four photographs of the Tramadol pill bottle were taken along with the defendant s s driver license next to the bottle At trial Deputy Dombrowski identified the pill bottle in the photos as the pill bottle that the defendant had in his possession Deputy Dombrowski further testified that she carried in her unit at all times a reference manual titled Drug Identification Bible For Law Enforcement During the processing of the crime scene a crime lab technician took pictures of the 51 pills outside of the pill bottle Deputy Dombrowski identified the photos of one of these tablets which contained the etching AN627 The deputy stated she looked up the AN627 imprint in her Drug Bible which indicated that the drug was 50 milligrams of Tramadol Hydrochloride The reference page further described the appearance of the pill as a white round tablet its use as an analgesic and its brand name or equivalent as Ultram A copy of this reference page was submitted into evidence Deputy Dombrowski also testified that she returned the Tramadol pills to Cleveland because he was elderly and that medication was one he could not do without Cleveland testified at trial that he was sixtynine years old and that he took Tramadol which was a pain medication he needed all the time With a prescription from a doctor Cleveland obtained the Tramadol from a Walgreen s in Mandeville When Cleveland returned to his home after it had been burglarized he told the police he was missing money and his Tramadol Cleveland identified the same photos identified by Deputy Dombrowski of the orange pill bottle that the defendant briefly had in his possession testified that those were photos of his Tramadol Cleveland He further testified that the police returned his Tramadol to him Captain Harry O with the St Tammany Parish Sheriff Office was Neal s tendered at trial as an expert in drug analysis and identification Captain O Neal testified that he is Commander of the Crime Lab and that he is a drug chemist within the lab He spent thirty years with the New Orleans Police Department working mostly as a drug analyst and his entire employment with the St Tammany Parish Sheriff Office had been as a drug analyst s Prior to trial Captain O generated a singlepage copy of a computer reference index of Neal Tramadol He produced the copy of the index at trial and it was introduced into evidence Captain O explained he used a logo index that they have in their Neal computer that is supplied yearly by DEA The index contained a picture of a white pill with the imprint AN627 on its face The index indicates the pill is 50mg of Tramadol Hydrochloride It is described as a legend drug that is a white round tablet and used as an analgesic Captain O indicated that the picture Neal of the pill in the index would be the pill found in Cleveland prescription bottle s Captain O stated that the AN on the pill stood for Amneal the Neal manufacturer of the drug It was noted on direct examination that the manufacturer listed on Cleveland pill bottle was Akyma not Amneal Captain s Neal O explained that a pharmaceutical compound patent is good for only ten years After that period other pharmaceutical manufacturers can apply for and purchase the patent to manufacture the drug This would then result in the generic form of the drug by a new manufacturer Captain O surmised that Neal the new manufacturer Akyma purchased the rights to produce the compound from Amneal When asked if it concerned him that there was a difference between the manufacturer as specified by DEA and what was on Cleveland s label Captain O responded No The actual prescription itself for Tramadol Neal 50 milligrams the tablet shown if I subjected it to some chemical tests it would show that Tramadol is present which is what we would be looking for Shortly thereafter when he was asked if he was comfortable in his identification of that particular drug as Tramadol Captain O responded Yes sir This is in fact Neal one of the definitive ways we do identify prescription drugs is through a logo index identification Captain O reviewed the photos of the Tramadol Neal tablets taken by the crime lab at the scene and stated that they corresponded to the index printout he produced He testified that in his opinion the tablets in the photos were Tramadol In support of his position that the pills found on the defendant should have been chemically analyzed the defendant cites State v Carter 071237 La App 3 Cir 4 981 So 734 writ denied 081083 La 1 998 08 9 2d 09 9 2d So 712 In Carter the court found that a syrupy substance found by the police on the floorboard of the defendant car could not be used to prosecute s the defendant for illegal possession of codeine The police officer who scraped the substance from the defendant car testified that he thought it was s hydrocodone syrup a commonly prescribed cough medication Carter 981 2d So at 738 In his brief the defendant states that the syrup was not chemically examined and that the State did not prove the syrup contained codeine However the defendant reliance on Carter is misplaced The Carter s court found the evidence insufficient to convict the defendant of possession of codeine not because the syrup had not been chemically tested to show it contained codeine but because the State did not put on any direct evidence regarding how the syrup came to be on the floorboard that the defendant knew the syrup was on the floorboard or that the defendant knew the syrup contained codeine Carter 981 So at 742 43 2d It appeared in fact that the court assumed the syrup contained codeine The court noted that Alex King a forensic chemist with the North Louisiana Crime Lab testified at trial that the liquid substance removed from the floorboard of the defendant car contained s codeine Carter 981 So at 738 and 742 2d appear to have been disputed This factual finding does not The defendant was also charged with and convicted of possession with intent to distribute hydrocodone The defendant argued among other things that the pills were not subjected to a proper chemical analysis to determine whether they contained hydrocodone The court affirmed this conviction Despite no chemical analysis having been performed on the hydrocodone pills the court noted that King testified that the green pills found by the police contained hydrocodone The pills were identified via visual inspection and comparison with pictures in a book Also a detective testified that he had seen similar pills in the past as part of his job and that the pills at issue were hydrocodone pills Carter 981 So at 74344 2d In this matter the jury guilty verdict of possession of a legend drug s indicates that after considering the credibility of the witnesses and weighing the evidence it accepted the testimony of Cleveland Captain O and Deputy Neal Dombrowski regarding the identification of the pills There was sufficient lay and expert testimony from which the jury could find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was in possession of Tramadol See Carter 981 So at 2d 745 See also State v Harris 021589 La 5 846 So 709 03 20 2d 7 In the absence of internal contradiction or irreconcilable conflict with the physical evidence one witness testimony if believed by the trier of fact is sufficient to s support a factual conclusion State v Higgins 031980 La 4 898 05 1 2d So 1219 1226 cert denied 546 U 883 126 S 182 163 L 187 S Ct 2d Ed 2005 The trier of fact is free to accept or reject in whole or in part the testimony of any witness The trier of fact determination of the weight to be s given evidence is not subject to appellate review An appellate court will not reweigh the evidence to overturn a factfinder determination of guilt s State v Taylor 97 2261 La App 1 Cir 9 721 So 929 932 98 25 2d We are constitutionally precluded from acting as a thirteenth juror in assessing what weight to give evidence in criminal cases See State v Mitchell 993342 La 00 17 10 772 S0 78 83 2d After a thorough review of the record we find that the evidence supports the jury unanimous verdict We are convinced that viewing the evidence in the s light most favorable to the State any rational trier of fact could have found beyond a reasonable doubt and to the exclusion of every reasonable hypothesis of innocence that the defendant was guilty of possession of a legend drug Tramadol without a prescription See State v Calloway 072306 La 09 21 3d 1 1 So 417 418 per curiam The assignment of error is without merit CONVICTIONS SENTENCES AFFIRMED HABITUAL OFFENDER ADJUDICATIONS AND

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