State v. Lan

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 24, 2020
DocketA-20-115
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Lan (State v. Lan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Lan, (Neb. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

STATE V. LAN

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

STATE OF NEBRASKA, APPELLEE, V.

SHAWN LAN, APPELLANT.

Filed November 24, 2020. No. A-20-115.

Appeal from the District Court for Douglas County: GREGORY M. SCHATZ, Judge. Affirmed. Joshua W. Weir, of Black & Weir Law Offices, L.L.C., for appellant. Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, and Nathan A. Liss for appellee.

PIRTLE, Chief Judge, and MOORE and RIEDMANN, Judges. RIEDMANN, Judge. INTRODUCTION Shawn Lan appeals his convictions in the district court for Douglas County on one count of terroristic threats and one count of stalking while in possession of a deadly weapon, both Class IIIA felonies. On appeal, Lan asserts his convictions should be overturned because of the court’s error in denying a motion to suppress the evidence found in the search of Lan’s vehicle, the court’s failure to provide a limiting instruction, and insufficiency of the evidence to convict him. Finding no error by the trial court, we affirm. BACKGROUND On January 7, 2018, Sao Liu and his wife, Thuy Liu, attended a church service at the Omaha Chinese Christian Church. The couple drove separately, and Thuy arrived at the church before Sao. When Thuy exited her vehicle, an older man approached her and asked, “how are you?

-1- how’s your family?” in Chinese. Since Thuy was only able to speak minimal Chinese, she asked Lan, who was standing behind the older man, if Lan could help him. Lan responded that he could not help because he was ushering at the service, so Thuy walked inside. Lan and the older man were still standing outside the church when Sao arrived. While entering the church, Sao was approached by the older man, who asked Sao three times, “how are you, how’s your family?” Sao was “a little concerned” about the nature of the questioning but answered and entered the church nonetheless. Once seated in the church, Sao and Thuy noticed the older man sitting two rows directly in front of them. Sao testified that throughout the service, the older man repeatedly “would turn around and stare at me and kind of give a smirk” for approximately 15 seconds each time. Once the service ended, Sao and Thuy exited the chapel, and the older man repeated the same questions he had asked Sao prior to the service. After attending a deacons’ meeting in the church, Sao noticed Thuy trying to help the older man, who “looked a little lost.” When Sao approached the pair, the older man resumed asking Sao the same questions he had asked earlier. Lan himself did not have any other interactions with Sao that day. On the morning of January 8, 2018, Thuy drove into the parking garage located under the business at which she and Sao worked. On her way into the parking garage, she noticed Lan and the older man standing in front of the building. As the parking garage doors closed, she saw “a shadow” at the entrance to the parking garage. Later, while Thuy was in the basement of the building, she saw the pair in the basement hallway. Thuy testified she was “panicked” because “really now I really know that they specifically, you know, got at me and were interested in me” and that they “really start[ed] invading my privacy.” She reported them to the business’ accounting manager. When the accounting manager asked them why they were there, the pair left. Later that day, when Thuy returned home for lunch, she saw Lan and the older man standing in front of the entrance to the Lius’ neighborhood. She asked the two men to leave her alone and threatened to call the police. Rather than continuing to her home, she turned around because she “didn’t want to stay around anymore.” When asked at trial why she was scared, Thuy testified that “when you don’t know me, you show up two times at the private places that I am at, I really think I have the right to be scared.” Sao testified that he was fearful as a result of these incidents, stating that there must have been something Lan “[has] against us,” and “we don’t know what this is all about. We don’t know these individuals. We don’t know why they would be doing what they’re doing.” Sao reported the incidents to the church; subsequently, the church hired security around January 13, 2018. An off-duty police officer or sheriff was in uniform and provided protection at the church on Friday evenings and during Sunday services, along with any other time the church requested their presence. On March 16, 2018, Sao and Thuy received an email with the subject line “how are you” from Lan. The email stated in part, “God will punish you. There is an old Chinese saying, harming others is like harming yourself, those who harm others will get harmed themselves.” Lan also warned, “Don’t believe me? Keep trying.” Sao testified that the email “made [him] feel very fearful” because he did “not understand why [Lan was] escalating this and why he’s focused on [Sao’s] family.” Sao responded to the email and made a police report about the email from Lan.

-2- Juliet Liu, Sao and Thuy’s daughter, telephoned Sao on March 16, 2018, to tell him that Lan and his father had come to her home in Chicago. Lan told Juliet that Sao had been “persecuting my sister and I for the past five years and this needs to stop or else.” Sao and Thuy received subsequent emails from Lan on March 31, May 16, and June 10, 2018, each of them causing the Lius to feel “very frightened and concerned for [their] safety.” These emails were sent in Chinese and were later translated to English by an FBI language analyst. The first March 31 email stated in relevant part: God will definitely punish fake Christians like you. The brothers and sisters in the Omaha Chinese Church will see what kind of end will come to you. God will punish you as a wolf in sheep’s clothing. God will send evil people to hell. You are vicious. Do you have some new tricks that are even more evil? This is the second warning to you. We shall see. I am waiting.

A second email on March 31 stated in relevant part, “If you don’t stop, you will be the biggest losers. If you don’t believe it, please continue. I will have brothers and sisters at the Omaha Chinese Church to witness it.” The May 16, 2018, email stated in relevant part: This is the third warning. If you have the guts to do something more vicious than what you did in Philadelphia, we are waiting in Chicago. You guys wait for me in Omaha too. I will have the brothers and sisters at the Omaha Chinese Church to witness this. I will expose all the shady things prohibited by Christian doctrine that you have done over the past five years. If you guys have the guts to do it again. I will make newspaper headlines out of your household.

The Lius then filed a restraining order against Lan on May 24, 2018, although it was not served on Lan until June 17. Lan sent his final email on June 10, 2018, to the members of the Omaha Chinese Church and included a list of grievances and claims Lan had against Sao and Thuy. Lan claimed that since 2013, Sao and Thuy had been “hiring people to persecute” Lan and his sister. He claimed that the Lius hired people to kill Lan and his sister, deflate and over-inflate Lan’s car tires, harass the siblings “by making noise, such as to knock on the floor all day long and run the water in the bathtub at maximum flow every day,” “loudly curse outside of our window saying something like you will not live beyond Thanksgiving and Christmas,” and change his sister’s grades in school. He ended the email by writing, “God will punish the LIUs and we can all witness what kind of ending they will have.” After receiving the June 10, 2018, email, Sao and Thuy began arming the alarm system and motion-sensor cameras in their home.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Lan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lan-nebctapp-2020.