State v. Burdette

611 N.W.2d 615, 259 Neb. 679, 2000 Neb. LEXIS 135
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 2000
DocketS-99-1210
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 611 N.W.2d 615 (State v. Burdette) 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. Burdette, 611 N.W.2d 615, 259 Neb. 679, 2000 Neb. LEXIS 135 (Neb. 2000).

Opinion

Miller-Lerman, J.

I. NATURE OF CASE

David E. Burdette was convicted by a jury in the district court for Douglas County on August 20, 1999, of first degree sexual assault, second offense; attempted first degree sexual assault; robbery; and two counts of burglary. Burdette was found to be a habitual criminal and on September 22, was sentenced to 115 to 220 years’ imprisonment. Burdette appeals his convictions and sentences. We affirm.

*682 II. STATEMENT OF FACTS

In 1982, Burdette was convicted of two counts of first degree forcible sexual assault and one count of attempted first degree forcible sexual assault. On March 31, 1982, an intruder entered the home of C.P. through a back window after pulling a screen off the window. As C.P. was going to bed, the intruder grabbed her from behind and threw her on the bed. He bound her arms and mouth with duct tape and blindfolded her. He then sexually assaulted her both anally and vaginally and took some money from her billfold before leaving the house. C.P. had recently been featured in a local magazine in a list of the 10 most eligible women in Omaha.

On April 19, 1982, P.G. was awakened by an intruder who tied her hands behind her back and blindfolded her before sexually assaulting her anally and vaginally. Before leaving the house, the intruder asked P.G. where her money was located.

On April 25, 1982, an intruder gained entry to the home of J.B. through a sliding glass door. J.B. was awakened in her bedroom by the intruder, who tied her hands with duct tape, blindfolded and gagged her, and then sexually assaulted her anally and vaginally. The intruder went through her billfold and drawers before leaving the house. At one point, the intruder told J.B. he had seen her picture in a magazine article featuring Omaha’s 10 most eligible women. In describing the intruder, J.B. told investigators she thought that he was white but that his voice “sounded black.” Burdette is white.

In May 1982, Lynn Mason was a deputy sheriff in Douglas County and a member of a task force investigating sexual assaults of women who had been featured in the local magazine article listing the 10 most eligible women in Omaha. Mason was assigned to guard P.M., one of the women featured in the article. On May 10, Mason was inside P.M.’s house at around 2 a.m. when Burdette attempted to cut the screen on a sliding glass door of the house. While attempting to gain access to RM.’s house, Burdette saw Mason, and Burdette fled. Burdette was later found hiding in the area of RM.’s house and was arrested.

Burdette pled guilty to the assaults of C.P. and P.G. Burdette was convicted of the attempted first degree sexual assault of P.M.

*683 On December 1, 1982, Burdette received consecutive sentences of 11 to 15 years’ imprisonment for each of the sexual assaults and a concurrent sentence of 3 to 5 years’ imprisonment for the attempted sexual assault. Burdette served his sentences at the Omaha Correctional Center and was released on April 30, 1998. Upon his release, Burdette registered with the Douglas County sheriff’s office pursuant to the Sex Offender Registration Act, Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 29-4001 to 29-4013 (Cum. Supp. 1998). On June 2, he informed the sheriff’s office of a change of address.

In the early morning hours of October 14, 1998, an intruder broke into the rural Douglas County home of A.B. and her two daughters. A.B.’s husband had died in a motorcycle accident on September 30, and October 13 was the first night she and her daughters had stayed by themselves overnight in their home since his death. A.B. had gone to bed with her two daughters at around 10:30 p.m. on October 13. Some time after midnight, A.B. was awakened when the intruder placed his hand, covered in a latex glove, over her mouth. The intruder asked A.B. for her purse and then got A.B. and her daughters out of the bed and led them to the hallway. When A.B. told the intruder her purse was downstairs, the intruder returned A.B. and her daughters to the bed, tied A.B. to her daughters with plastic flexible cuffs, and ordered them to lie face down on the bed.

A.B. then heard the intruder going through the bedroom and other rooms of the house. He subsequently returned to the bedroom, blindfolded and gagged A.B., and tied her legs apart with some ripped sheets. The intruder digitally penetrated A.B. both anally and vaginally and fondled her breasts. A.B. then heard the intruder take off his pants, and he penetrated her with his penis. As he was assaulting A.B., the intruder told her daughters he was not hurting their mother and that “mommy liked this.” After 5 to 10 minutes, A.B. heard the intruder say he was not “going to waste the bucket.” He then withdrew and put his pants back on. The intruder went downstairs, searched for A.B.’s purse, then returned upstairs before leaving to hit A.B. and her daughters on the buttocks and to tell them not to call the police or he would kill them.

*684 After the intruder left, A.B. freed herself and called her brother-in-law at approximately 2 a.m. She then called the 911 emergency dispatch service. A.B.’s brother-in-law and a deputy sheriff arrived shortly thereafter. A.B. was unable to identify the intruder because she never got a good look at him, but based on the sound of his voice, she thought he might be a black male. She also noted that he smelled of cigarette smoke. A.B. determined that some money and a gun were taken from her home. Investigators determined that the home had been entered through a window in the living room where a screen had been ripped off the frame.

The following day, after hearing about the break-in and assault, Jane Frost, a neighbor of A.B.’s, reported to the sheriff’s office that she was driving home at around 12:30 a.m. on October 14, 1998, and noticed a black Ford Bronco with a red stripe parked on the side of the road by the driveway to A.B.’s home. Frost reported that she slowed down and read the license plate number which she thought to be “1-H8 ... [a]nd . .. possibly a seven.”

On October 17, 1998, a deputy sheriff saw a black Ford Bronco with a red stripe and a license plate number of 1-HH87 heading west on Maple Street. The deputy pulled the vehicle over because of a traffic violation and because the vehicle matched the description of the vehicle observed by Frost. The driver of the vehicle was Burdette, and Burdette identified himself to the deputy as a registered sex offender. The deputy passed the information on to investigators in the sheriff’s department.

When that information reached investigators, Burdette became a suspect in the assault of A.B. Investigators began a 24-hour surveillance on Burdette on October 22, 1998, and obtained a court order from the district court for Douglas County on October 24 to install a tracking device on Burdette’s vehicle. Investigators learned that subsequent to the time Burdette had completed his sex offender registration, he had changed his employer and his vehicle. In order to gain access to Burdette’s vehicle to install the tracking device, investigators put out a “locate” to have Burdette stopped in his vehicle and to have investigators notified when he was stopped.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
611 N.W.2d 615, 259 Neb. 679, 2000 Neb. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-burdette-neb-2000.