Pubdate: Tue, 01 Nov 2005 Source: Midland Reporter-Telegram (TX) Copyright: 2005 The Midland Reporter-Telegram Contact: http://www.mywesttexas.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/264 Author: Bob Campbell EPHEDRINE THIEF'S PRIOR FELONY RAISES LIFE SENTENCE POSSIBILITY Final arguments are set for 9 a.m. today in the robbery trial of a Midland man who attacked an Albertsons Food & Drug Store employee while trying to escape from the store with the ingredients to make methamphetamine and now faces a possible life sentence. Midland Police Department Officer Chris Earp testified Monday in 238th District Court that Charles Vernon Snodgrass Jr. "was fighting" store manager Scott Harris and four other employees of the 3317 N. Midland Dr. store when he was called there at 8 a.m. last March 29. "Was Mr. Snodgrass was still trying to leave the scene?" asked court-appointed defense attorney Ray Fivecoat. "Yes, he was still punching and kicking," Earp said, adding that the 25-year-old suspect was being held down in the foyer between the inside and outside doors. Harris had earlier told the two-man, 10-woman jury in Judge John Hyde's court that the defendant knocked employee Frank McBride away and ran with a large amount of Sudafed when McBride asked, "Are you going to pay for that?" "I saw several associates running and there was a gentleman on the floor when I reached them near the south door," said Harris. "Jerry Salazar was holding him around the waist and Mr. McBride had him by the feet. There were seven packages of Sudafed on the floor." Harris said it is not Albertsons' policy for employees to restrain shoplifters physically, but it became a self-defense matter when Snodgrass hit McBride. "If there is contact made, it is usually safer to maintain control of the person," he said. Harris said McBride suffered a possible angina attack after Officer Earp handcuffed Snodgrass and left with him for Midland County Central Detention Center. He said McBride drove himself to the Midland Memorial Hospital Emergency Room and returned to work two days later. Snodgrass has been incarcerated since then in lieu of a $25,000 bond. Assistant District Attorney Dave Watson said robbery is a second-degree felony, carrying a possible sentence of two to 20 years in prison. But because Snodgrass was convicted in 1998 of assaulting a peace officer in Aurora, Colo., his indictment was enhanced to a first-degree offense for which he could serve five to 99 years or life if found guilty, said Watson. Snodgrass did a term in Colorado State Penitentiary in Canon City. Sudafed contains the cold remedy ephedrine, one of the main ingredients needed to "cook" methamphetamines. Harris said customers were limited to the number of packages they could buy when Snodgrass was arrested, but a new state law now requires the medicine to be kept in a locked cabinet. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman