State v. Lewis

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 27, 2018
DocketA-17-583, A-17-584
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Lewis (State v. Lewis) 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. Lewis, (Neb. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

STATE V. LEWIS

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.

ROBERT S. LEWIS, APPELLANT.

Filed March 27, 2018. Nos. A-17-583, A-17-584.

Appeals from the District Court for Platte County: ROBERT R. STEINKE, Judge. Affirmed. Timothy P. Matas, Platte County Public Defender, for appellant. Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, and Joe Meyer for appellee.

RIEDMANN and BISHOP, Judges, and INBODY, Judge, Retired. BISHOP, Judge. INTRODUCTION Robert S. Lewis was convicted by a jury in two separate cases of operating a motor vehicle during license revocation in the district court for Platte County. Lewis was sentenced to 2 years’ imprisonment and 9 months’ postrelease supervision in each case, with the two sentences to be served concurrently. Lewis appeals, claiming that the court erred by not giving a jury instruction on entrapment by estoppel and by imposing excessive sentences. We affirm. BACKGROUND Lewis was pulled over in Columbus, Nebraska, on August 25, 2016, because he was driving a pickup with a trailer that did not have any license plates or in-transit details. Lewis had only an expired paper copy of a Nebraska operator’s license at the time of the stop, and claimed he had not yet received the hard copy from the Nebraska Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV). The officer conducting the stop believed Lewis’ license had previously been revoked as the result

-1- of a conviction for driving under the influence (DUI). However, Lewis was allowed to leave, despite the paper copy being expired, after police dispatch confirmed the license number was still valid. After the stop, the officer investigated further based on his suspicion that Lewis’ license had been revoked. He discovered the DMV had already initiated its own investigation into Lewis’ license, and learned that Lewis had been issued a second license using a different social security number and date of birth than was associated with his first license, which had been revoked as a result of a conviction for DUI, fifth offense. On December 2, after driving away from his residence, Lewis was arrested pursuant to a warrant issued as a result of Lewis driving with a revoked license on August 25. Lewis was charged in two separate cases, CR 16-197 (now appellate case No. A-17-583) for the driving incident on December 2, 2016, and CR 16-198 (now appellate case No. A-17-584) for the driving incident on August 25. Both cases were joined for trial. In each case, Lewis was charged with a single count of operating a motor vehicle during a 15-year revocation. The information in CR 16-198 also contained a charge for obtaining an operator’s license by fraud, but as noted below, it appears that charge was no longer at issue at the time of trial. A jury trial commenced on April 3, 2017. At the outset of the trial, the jury was only informed of the two charges against Lewis for operating a motor vehicle during revocation, and the jury only returned a verdict on those two charges. Our record contains the original information for CR 16-198, and nothing in the record explains the disposition of the charge against Lewis for obtaining an operator’s license by fraud in that case. Nevertheless, only the two charges for operating a motor vehicle during revocation were at issue at trial, and they are the only convictions and sentences relevant to this appeal. We now summarize the evidence relevant to the errors assigned by Lewis. Marlene Vetick, the clerk of the district court for Platte County, testified as follows. Exhibit 2 is the transcript from Platte County District Court case No. CR 10-140, in which Lewis was convicted of “DWI-Fifth Offense” and sentenced on January 12, 2011. Part of that sentence was a 15-year driver’s license revocation, beginning on January 12. Vetick testified that the records regarding the revocation were provided via an electronic information system to several agencies across Nebraska, including the DMV. Officer Troy Urkoski, a police officer for the City of Columbus, testified he worked on that case (CR 10-140), and he identified Lewis as the individual convicted in that case. Officer Dale Ciboron, a police officer for the City of Columbus, testified he was on duty on August 25, 2016. During his shift that day, he observed a pickup pulling a trailer that did not have any license plates or in-transit details. He conducted a traffic stop of that vehicle. Lewis, the driver of the pickup, gave Ciboron a vehicle registration and an expired paper copy of a Nebraska driver’s license; the name on the license was “Robert Scott Lewis” and the birth date was in October 1962. The paper copy was the type drivers are given for a 30-day period until a hard copy of the license is sent by the DMV. The paper copy was issued on February 19, 2016, and expired on March 20. The license number began with the letter “H” (H license). Ciboron asked Lewis where the hard copy of his license was, and Lewis informed him that he had not yet received it from the DMV. Ciboron testified he relayed the information from the paper license to the police dispatcher, who ran it through the “state files” and found the license was valid. Ciboron issued Lewis a

-2- “correction card for [a] registration violation” and allowed Lewis to leave. Ciboron testified he did not issue Lewis a citation for not having a current license because dispatch had informed him the license was valid. Ciboron stated that after the traffic stop, he conducted an investigation into the validity of the license Lewis had shown him. Ciboron was “trying to find a reason for why [the license] was valid,” because he was aware of Lewis’ past DUI conviction “which would have revoked his license for 15 years.” Ciboron used the Nebraska Criminal Justice Information System (NCJIS) and found there were two entries for “Robert Lewis”; “[b]oth were black males, both living here in Columbus.” The first license was for “Robert S. Lewis,” also listed as “Bobby Lewis,” with a birth date in October 1959, and an address on 25th Avenue in Columbus; that license number began with a “V” (V license) and was revoked for 15 years because of a DUI, 5th offense. The second license was for “Robert Scott Lewis,” with a birth date in October 1962, and an address on 5th Street in Columbus; that was the H license that was listed as valid. Ciboron was also able to view the signatures and photographs from both licenses. He stated the signatures “looked similar, if not the same,” and the pictures “could be the same person, just at different points in time in their [sic] life.” Ciboron testified that after conducting his investigation, he contacted Lisa Banks, a crime analyst supervisor on the DMV’s “Fraud Unit.” Banks informed him she was aware of the two licenses because the DMV’s facial recognition system had “red-flagged” the picture on the second license as the same person in the first license. Banks informed him that the social security numbers (which do not appear directly on the license, but are part of the DMV’s record for each license) and birth dates for the licenses did not match, and she was investigating to see if there was a fraud issue. Ciboron testified that when he did not hear back again from Banks regarding the conclusion of her investigation, he proceeded to seek an arrest warrant based on Lewis driving with a revoked license on August 25, 2016, when Ciboron conducted the traffic stop. Santiago Velasquez, a police officer for the City of Columbus, testified he was on duty on December 2, 2016.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Lewis, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lewis-nebctapp-2018.