State v. Absolu

2024 S.D. 66
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 2024
Docket30353
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 S.D. 66 (State v. Absolu) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Absolu, 2024 S.D. 66 (S.D. 2024).

Opinion

#30353-a-MES 2024 S.D. 66

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

****

STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA, Plaintiff and Appellee,

v.

ARNSON ABSOLU, Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT PENNINGTON COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA

THE HONORABLE ROBERT GUSINSKY Judge

TIMOTHY J. RENSCH of Rensch Law Rapid City, South Dakota Attorneys for defendant and appellant.

MARTY J. JACKLEY Attorney General

MATTHEW W. TEMPLAR Assistant Attorney General Pierre, South Dakota Attorneys for plaintiff and appellee.

ARGUED APRIL 25, 2024 OPINION FILED 10/30/24 #30353

SALTER, Justice

[¶1.] A jury convicted Arnson Absolu of three counts of first-degree murder.

Absolu moved for a new trial after discovering undisclosed information about a

State witness. The circuit court denied the motion. Absolu appeals, arguing the

court erred when it denied the motion for new trial because, he asserts, the State’s

failure to provide the information was a denial of due process and a violation of the

court’s pretrial discovery order. We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

The murders of Ashley Nagy and Charles Red Willow

[¶2.] In the evening hours of August 24, 2020, Rapid City police officers

responded to a call from a Thompson Park area resident who had heard several

gunshots. Once at the park, officers observed a parked Chevrolet Tahoe SUV inside

of which were two individuals with apparent gunshot wounds.

[¶3.] In the passenger seat was a man who would later be identified as

Charles Red Willow. He had suffered multiple gunshot wounds and appeared to be

deceased. A female in the driver seat, later identified as Ashley Nagy, was

breathing but had suffered a traumatic gunshot wound to her head. Emergency

medical responders determined that Nagy was exhibiting what is known as agonal

breathing and could not be saved. 1 As one emergency medical responder grimly

described it, “She was dead, her body just didn’t know it yet.” Law enforcement

officers took immediate action to preserve the crime scene.

1. At trial, a paramedic who responded to the scene described agonal breathing as not being “conducive to life.” Rather, it is “a reaction from the brain . . . due to insults to the brain such as hypoxia, hemorrhage, traumatic injury.” -1- #30353

[¶4.] Detectives began their investigation without any apparent suspects or

witnesses. However, after collecting video surveillance from surrounding homes

and businesses, the detectives were able to identify a dark-colored Chevrolet Malibu

that had driven near Thompson Park. The video showed two males getting out of

the vehicle, walking towards the parked Tahoe, and then running back to the

Malibu. One of the men was African American and appeared to be wearing white

shoes. The other man was Caucasian and was wearing a red shirt.

[¶5.] In the initial phase of the investigation, detectives began to search for

the dark-colored Chevrolet Malibu in the Rapid City area and, on a hunch, they

decided to focus on two rental vehicles that were owned by Casey’s Auto. The

detectives learned that on the morning of the shootings, one of the Malibus had

been rented by a man named Arnson Absolu. Surveillance footage from Casey’s

Auto that morning revealed that Absolu’s appearance was generally consistent with

one of the men depicted in the park video surveillance—an African American male

wearing white shoes. The detectives were also told that the Malibu Absolu rented

was fitted with a global positioning system, or GPS, device that was programmed to

record the vehicle’s location every 12 hours and could also be activated, or “pinged,”

to locate the vehicle in real time.

[¶6.] Detectives learned more about Absolu from interviews with Red

Willow’s associates. Red Willow was a known heroin dealer in the area, and the

detectives quickly concluded that the common link between Red Willow, Nagy, and

Absolu was the local drug trade. Interviews with Red Willow’s associates revealed

that Absolu was from New York and came to Rapid City to sell fentanyl-laced

-2- #30353

heroin, known as “China White,” using local dealers. Red Willow had a reputation

for not paying his debts, and it was rumored that he owed Absolu a substantial

amount of money for drugs and that Absolu had threatened Red Willow because of

the debt.

[¶7.] Shortly after the shootings, it appeared that Absolu had traveled back

to New York in the rented Malibu based upon information relayed by the car’s GPS

tracker. Detectives continued to monitor Absolu’s location along the east coast as

they continued their investigation, which ultimately led them to conclude that

Absolu had murdered Red Willow and Nagy. With the assistance of the New York

City Police Department (NYPD), Absolu was arrested on September 9, 2020, and

transported back to South Dakota by Rapid City Police Department detectives.

[¶8.] In Absolu’s rented Malibu, NYPD officers found a 9mm black semi-

automatic pistol, heroin, and Absolu’s cell phone. Text messages found on Absolu’s

phone revealed he had negotiated for the purchase of the 9mm gun and also a .40

caliber black and silver Smith & Wesson pistol that resembled a handgun later

discovered by a South Dakota School of Mines student in a creek near the Rapid

City fairgrounds. Officers also observed damage to the undercarriage of the rented

Malibu.

The murder of Dakota Zaiser

[¶9.] Detectives believed that the Caucasian male depicted in the park

surveillance footage from the night of the park shootings resembled a man named

Dakota Zaiser. The detectives were familiar with Zaiser and knew that he had been

released from the Pennington County Jail wearing a red Nike t-shirt just hours

-3- #30353

before the shootings. Phone records also showed that Zaiser had made multiple

calls to Red Willow between the time Zaiser was released from jail and when the

shootings occurred.

[¶10.] Zaiser’s mother became concerned about her son’s whereabouts the day

after the shootings and contacted the Rapid City Police Department to report him

missing. She explained that Zaiser maintained daily contact with her, but she had

not heard from him and had been unable to reach him by phone.

[¶11.] During their initial interviews, detectives learned from one of Absolu’s

dealers, Breeze Stock, 2 that around 2 a.m. on August 25, a frantic and sweaty

Absolu FaceTimed her, told her he had hurt somebody, and was cleaning

something. Later that morning, Absolu drove the Malibu to Stock’s apartment to

collect money she owed him for drugs. When she went out to meet Absolu in the

apartment complex parking lot, the trunk of his vehicle was open, and she saw a

blue tub inside. Absolu closed the trunk and asked Stock where he could get some

shovels to bury something. She told detectives that she refused to help Absolu.

[¶12.] Based on this information, detectives obtained surveillance footage of

the parking lot at Stock’s apartment complex. The video confirmed that on the

morning of August 25, Absolu arrived at the apartment complex and parked the

Malibu which remained in the parking lot through the day. In the early morning

hours of August 26, the video showed a man identified as Shamar Bennett arriving

at the complex. He and Absolu looked into the trunk of the Malibu and appeared to

2.

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Related

State v. Antuna
2024 S.D. 78 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2024)

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Bluebook (online)
2024 S.D. 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-absolu-sd-2024.