State v. Bedolla

298 Neb. 736
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 2018
DocketS-16-1031
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 298 Neb. 736 (State v. Bedolla) 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. Bedolla, 298 Neb. 736 (Neb. 2018).

Opinion

Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/ 04/13/2018 08:38 AM CDT

- 736 - Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets 298 Nebraska R eports STATE v. BEDOLLA Cite as 298 Neb. 736

State of Nebraska, appellee, v. Luis Bedolla, appellant. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed January 19, 2018. No. S-16-1031.

1. Pleadings. Issues regarding the grant or denial of a plea in bar are ques- tions of law. 2. Evidence: Appeal and Error. On a question of law, an appellate court reaches a conclusion independent of the court below. 3. Motions for Mistrial: Pleadings: Prosecuting Attorneys: Intent: Appeal and Error. While the denial of a plea in bar generally involves a question of law, an appellate court reviews under a clearly erroneous standard a finding concerning the presence or absence of prosecutorial intent to provoke the defendant into moving for a mistrial. 4. Pleadings: Final Orders: Double Jeopardy: Jurisdiction: Appeal and Error. An order overruling a plea in bar is a final, appealable order that an appellate court has jurisdiction to review. Such appellate jurisdiction is based on the reasoning that under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1902 (Reissue 2016), a plea in bar is a “special proceeding,” and an order overruling a nonfrivolous double jeopardy claim affects a substantial right. 5. Double Jeopardy: Pleadings. A plea in bar may be used to raise a double jeopardy challenge to the State’s right to retry a defendant fol- lowing a mistrial. 6. Motions for Mistrial: Double Jeopardy. When a mistrial has been declared upon the defendant’s motion, the Double Jeopardy Clause generally does not bar retrial except when the conduct giving rise to the successful motion for a mistrial was intended to provoke the defendant into moving for a mistrial. 7. Constitutional Law: Double Jeopardy. The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Nebraska Constitution provides no greater protection than that of the U.S. Constitution.

Appeal from the District Court for Hall County: Teresa K. Luther, Judge. Affirmed. - 737 - Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets 298 Nebraska R eports STATE v. BEDOLLA Cite as 298 Neb. 736

Jim K. McGough, of McGough Law, P.C., L.L.O., for appellant. Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, and Siobhan E. Duffy for appellee. Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, K elch, and Funke, JJ. Miller-Lerman, J. NATURE OF CASE Luis Bedolla appeals the order of the district court for Hall County which denied his plea in bar to charges of sexual assault of a child. Although Bedolla had moved for a mistrial in the first trial, he contends that a new trial would subject him to double jeopardy because the State had created the need for a mistrial when it moved to amend the information and a jury instruction after the jury had begun deliberations. We conclude that the district court did not err when it denied Bedolla’s plea in bar. STATEMENT OF FACTS On August 4, 2015, the State filed an information charging Bedolla with seven counts of various degrees of sexual assault of a child. The offenses involved three different victims and were charged as having occurred on various dates ranging from June 2002 through May 2015. One of the counts was charged as first degree sexual assault of a child, in violation of Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-319.01 (Reissue 2016). With regard to that charge, the information stated that the victim was a person under 12 years of age identified as “C.Z-M.” and that the offense occurred “[o]n or between February 17, 2009 and February 17, 2011.” At Bedolla’s trial, C.Z-M., who was born in February 1999, testified that “[o]ver the span of roughly 12 years, [she] was abused by [Bedolla] in a sexual manner” and that the abuse had been occurring “from as young as [she could] remember.” She stated that in one of the first incidents she could remember, - 738 - Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets 298 Nebraska R eports STATE v. BEDOLLA Cite as 298 Neb. 736

Bedolla had “put his hand underneath [her] skirt and under- neath [her] underwear and he stuck a finger inside of [her].” When asked how old she was when this incident occurred, she responded, “Maybe before elementary school, so very young.” In a second incident that occurred when C.Z-M. “was older . . . maybe in the fifth, sixth grade, so around 10, 11,” Bedolla groped her breasts and he “went underneath [her] skirt, but not underneath [her] underwear” and “poke[d] with his hand.” In another incident, which occurred at C.Z-M.’s sister’s gradua- tion party in May 2011, Bedolla “started grasping [her] breast area and started touching [her].” C.Z-M. testified that the incidents she described were not the only incidents and that she could not remember all the occurrences, which she described as “a constant thing.” When asked again regarding the first incident described above, she stated that it occurred when she was “five or six.” She testi- fied that she remembered “three incidents” that occurred when she “was younger than 12” and that they were of “the same nature” as the first incident described above. She testified that one of these incidents occurred when she was “nine or ten” and that Bedolla “slid his hand down [her] pants underneath [her] underwear and he stuck a finger inside of [her].” On cross-examination, C.Z-M. admitted that in an interview at a child advocacy center, she had stated that Bedolla’s abuse of her had begun when she was “[f]our or five” and that it had stopped when she was “seven or eight.” When asked whether that was different from her testimony that he had abused her consistently for 12 years, she acknowledged that it was but she testified that the abuse “would stop and start and start and stop” and that she “would call that consistent.” On redirect, C.Z-M. testified that in the interview at the child advocacy center, after she stated that the abuse had stopped when she was 7 or 8, she disclosed to the interviewer “at least two more incidents that happened after” that time. At the jury instruction conference, neither party objected to the court’s proposed instruction regarding the crimes charged. With respect to the charge of first degree sexual assault of a - 739 - Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets 298 Nebraska R eports STATE v. BEDOLLA Cite as 298 Neb. 736

child, the court instructed the jury that the State alleged that Bedolla committed the assault “on or between February 17, 2009, and February 17, 2011.” This followed the language of the charge in the information. In its closing argument, the State said that with regard to the charge of first degree sexual assault of a child, it needed to prove to the jury that between the dates of February 17, 2009, and February 17, 2011, the defendant, . . . Bedolla, was an individual 19 years of age or older, and that the victim, [C.Z-M.], was a person 12 years of age or younger, and that dur- ing that time frame [Bedolla] subjected [C.Z-M.] to sex- ual penetration. In the closing argument for the defense, Bedolla’s counsel argued that there was “no evidence of any penetration between those dates, ’09 and 2011” and that, instead, C.Z-M. had testi- fied regarding penetration that occurred when she was “four or five.” He argued that given that C.Z-M. was born in 1999, “these events happened in 2003 or 2004.” Bedolla’s counsel further noted that C.Z-M. had testified that “it stopped when she was seven or eight,” which was before 2009. After the closing arguments and the instructions noted above, the jury began its deliberations.

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Bluebook (online)
298 Neb. 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bedolla-neb-2018.