State v. Avina-Murillo

301 Neb. 185, 917 N.W.2d 865
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 2018
DocketS-17-1302.
StatusPublished
Cited by318 cases

This text of 301 Neb. 185 (State v. Avina-Murillo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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. Avina-Murillo, 301 Neb. 185, 917 N.W.2d 865 (Neb. 2018).

Opinion

Cassel, J.

**187 *869 INTRODUCTION

After being convicted by a jury and sentenced in a criminal case, Veronica P. Avina-Murillo brings this direct appeal. We cannot review the denial of her motion for new trial, because the motion was not timely. We review her ineffective assistance claims, stemming from her initial trial counsel's allegedly unethical conduct-which she characterizes as a conflict of interest. A central question is whether the Strickland v. Washington 1 standard applies or whether prejudice should be presumed. On these facts, we conclude that Strickland applies and that the record is insufficient to resolve her claims. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

The State charged Avina-Murillo with negligent child abuse resulting in serious bodily injury based on events occurring on April 2, 2015. On that day, J.P.'s mother took 6-month-old J.P. to Avina-Murillo's house to be watched. While there, J.P. began to act abnormally. A doctor later diagnosed J.P. with abusive head trauma.

The district court conducted a jury trial. Prior to the introduction of evidence, the court sustained the State's motion to sequester all of the witnesses.

During opening statements, Avina-Murillo's counsel advised the jury that it would hear from J.P.'s parents. Counsel outlined the parents' testimonies:

**188 [The parents] are going to testify that their child was not fine the morning that she was dropped off. The parents are going to tell you that they took their child to the hospital multiple times and were given different answers by different individuals at the hospitals weeks prior to April 2nd[, 2015].
....
The parents will testify that ... Avina[-Murillo] was not with the child seconds to minutes before. ... The parents will testify that their child was not with ... Avina[-Murillo] during that time.
The parents will testify contrary to what you just heard, actually. The parents will testify that when mother came to pick child up, child was sleeping like any other time. Mom-Mother spoke to [Avina-Murillo] for some time, 10, 15 minutes, nothing, child's sleeping. Mom then drives to house. ... [S]he will tell you 10 to 15 minutes more driving. We're not at 30 minutes.
She will then testify that when she walked into the house, Dad wasn't there. Dad came in shortly thereafter, but some more time passed, ten minutes. They then talked about their day and about whatever else. They'll both tell you this. More time passes.
Approximately-approximately, 45 minutes to an hour later, the baby wakes up. They notice baby is not as they would expect at that point. They go to-well, to see their-wasn't the ER, *870 but it was to see a physician before they were transferred. The evidence you will hear is not like the preview you were just given.

According to the evidence, at approximately 8 a.m. on April 2, 2015, J.P.'s mother took J.P. to Avina-Murillo's house. J.P., who is Avina-Murillo's niece, appeared to be fine. But at approximately 10 a.m., Avina-Murillo noticed that J.P. looked listless, that "her eyes did not look normal," and that "[s]he was touching her right ear quite a bit." A detective testified that Avina-Murillo told him J.P. "became lethargic, moaning, and **189 ... the eyes would move in opposite directions." According to the detective, Avina-Murillo indicated to him that she knew there was something wrong with J.P. at that point in time. But she did not believe it was anything serious or grave.

According to Avina-Murillo, J.P. had exhibited similar behavior "[d]ays before." In mid-March 2015, J.P. experienced vomiting and diarrhea. J.P.'s parents took her to the emergency room two or three times, and J.P. was diagnosed with a viral illness. But during a followup visit 2 to 3 days prior to April 2, J.P. looked well and was no longer vomiting.

Avina-Murillo called J.P.'s mother to let her know that J.P. "was not acting right." She told J.P.'s mother that she believed J.P. was sick like J.P. had been earlier and that J.P. might have "gotten some air in her ear." In response, J.P.'s mother told Avina-Murillo to administer Tylenol for ear pain and to put cotton in J.P.'s ear with a little bit of "vapor rub." After Avina-Murillo did so, J.P. drank her bottle and fell asleep. After noon, J.P.'s mother arrived to take J.P. home.

At approximately 4:50 p.m., J.P.'s parents took J.P. to a doctor. At that time, J.P. was lethargic, crying, and inconsolable. She had symptoms indicating increased pressure in the brain. Intracranial pressure can cause brain damage and is a potentially life-threatening injury. A CT scan revealed a subdural hematoma, i.e., bleeding on the inside of the brain. The CT scan showed both newer and older bleeding. Newer bleeding is bleeding typically within the past 24 hours, while older bleeding is generally 48 to 72 hours old or older.

A child abuse pediatrician believed that J.P. most likely suffered a rotational or shaking injury. A different doctor testified that the injury revealed on the CT scan would have required significant force and that symptoms would have appeared "fairly shortly after onset of this type of bleeding." The defense's expert opined that it was not possible to determine the specific time that an acute subdural hematoma occurred.

During the trial, the district court made a record after an issue arose. The court recounted that there was a no contact **190 order prohibiting Avina-Murillo from communicating with J.P., that there was an order of sequestration as to any witnesses, and that the State had listed J.P.'s parents as witnesses. The prosecutor then stated that over the lunch hour, Avina-Murillo and her counsel were observed having lunch together with J.P. and J.P.'s parents.

Avina-Murillo's counsel offered a different version of events. He explained that at some point while he, his assistant, Avina-Murillo, and Avina-Murillo's husband were having lunch, J.P.'s parents entered the restaurant. According to counsel, "Nothing between them was discussed." But counsel stated that after talking to Avina-Murillo and in order "to essentially keep this clean," the defense would not call either parent to testify.

The court and Avina-Murillo's counsel then engaged in a colloquy regarding the voluntariness of the decision not to call the parents as witnesses. Avina-Murillo's counsel *871 informed the court that he had spoken to Avina-Murillo "before Your Honor came out" and that the decision not to call J.P.'s parents as witnesses was Avina-Murillo's free and voluntary act.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
301 Neb. 185, 917 N.W.2d 865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-avina-murillo-neb-2018.