State v. Lloyd

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 6, 2016
DocketA-16-521
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Lloyd (State v. Lloyd) 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. Lloyd, (Neb. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

STATE V. LOYD

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.

DONTEVOUS D. LOYD, APPELLANT.

Filed December 6, 2016. No. A-16-521.

Appeal from the District Court for Douglas County: GREGORY M. SCHATZ, Judge. Affirmed. Thomas C. Riley, Douglas County Public Defender, Natalie M. Andrews, and Cindy A. Tate for appellant. Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, and George R. Love for appellee.

MOORE, Chief Judge, and RIEDMANN and BISHOP, Judges. BISHOP, Judge. INTRODUCTION A Douglas County District Court jury found Dontevous D. Loyd guilty of burglary, a Class III felony at the time of Loyd’s offense. The district court sentenced Loyd to no less than 14 nor more than 18 years’ imprisonment. Loyd appeals the sufficiency of the evidence and the sentence imposed. We affirm. BACKGROUND Following jury selection, trial commenced March 15, 2016, and finished the following day. The testimony of witnesses and other evidence received revealed the following. On March 31, 2015, Officers Scott Zymball, Jaime Desautels, and Nathan Buresh, all from the Omaha Police Department, responded to a dispatch received at 4:39 a.m. regarding a burglary

-1- in progress at a residence on Crown Point Avenue in Omaha, Nebraska. Zymball and Buresh were together in one vehicle, and Desautels in another; both vehicles arrived simultaneously at about 4:41 a.m. without lights and sirens activated to avoid alerting any suspects. The officers took up positions around the house. While outside the house, Zymball heard noises from within the house and saw a man, later identified as Loyd, exit through the front door. Zymball ordered Loyd to lay on the ground and Loyd complied. Zymball handcuffed Loyd, and a pat-down revealed no weapons. While Zymball and Buresh secured Loyd, Desautels saw another person, later identified as Eljuan Daniel, attempt to leave the house from a back door. Desautels described two back doors on this ranch level home, one at the top of some stairs which led to the main level of the home, the other that led to a walkout basement. Daniel was exiting the door at the main level of the home. Desautels told Daniel to stop, but Daniel fled back inside the house. Desautels radioed that there was at least one suspect in the house and requested assistance. When Desautels heard there was a party in custody at the front of the house, he returned to the front and saw that the party in custody was not the same male he saw flee back inside the house. Officer Brian Dembinski arrived while Loyd was being removed from the front of the residence; he was told another person might be inside. Loyd began having respiratory distress, so an ambulance was requested to transport Loyd to a hospital for treatment. (Buresh drove behind the ambulance and once Loyd was medically cleared, Buresh assisted in transporting Loyd to jail.) Dembinski went to the backyard to make sure no one escaped out the back. Dembinski saw that a back door had been kicked in, and he could hear somebody running up some stairs inside the house and then to the far side of the house. Numerous officers arrived at the scene and a request was also made for a canine to assist with a search. When a Douglas County canine officer arrived at the scene, commands were made for anyone inside to “sound off” or the dog would be released into the residence. After the dog barked for a little while, Daniel announced he was coming out, and he surrendered himself into custody. Officers then swept the house for additional people and inspected for damage and evidence of a crime. According to Dembinski, the back door appeared to have been forced open; the hinges of the door had been removed from the wooden door frame and the dead bolt was still locked and exposed. The door was propped open, “but it wasn’t propped open on the door handle side, it was the hinges pushed in.” Dembinski described these details while reviewing photos of the door taken at the scene, which were received into evidence. Dembinski said the basement entry door was secure and he described it as having a bracket system and being “extremely fortified to where you couldn’t get into it.” While looking through the house, the officers found copper pipes piled in the bottom-half of a shop vacuum in the basement. Desautels testified that his report indicated there were approximately 7 pieces of pipe in the shop vac container. The copper pipes had not been cut with a saw or cutting tool because the ends were bent and not circular at the edges. Zymball testified that “the pieces seem[ed] to be damaged by being bent and folded, not by being cut.” To clarify a description in his report stating the pipes were bent and cut, Desautels testified that the “pipe looked like it was bent over and over again to the point where it just breaks off . . . if you take, like, copper pipe, you bend it, re-bend it, bend it, re-bend it, it eventually crimps and breaks.”

-2- Zymball observed what appeared to be pipes broken off of the hot water heater and the furnace, and some water on the floor; he discussed photographs received into evidence which were taken of the basement area, particularly around the furnace and hot water heater. Zymball acknowledged that the report about the incident drafted by Buresh did not say anything about there being water on the floor in the basement. However, Dembinski also testified about seeing numerous pieces of copper pipe in the shop vac bucket and that there was a very small amount of water leaking from somewhere on the floor. Dembinski described the piping as “kind of old” and “bent and kind of damaged, like it’s been pulled . . . like somebody was trying to bend it to pull it from something.” The officers found no hacksaws or other cutting tools, nor did they find any other equipment that could have been used to force open the back door of the house. Finally, the officers found no signs of squatters or trespassers living in the house, no food, perishables, or bedding. No vehicles were located nearby that belonged to either Loyd or Daniel. Maggie Horan, a crime lab technician with the Omaha Police Department, testified that upon her arrival to the scene of this incident, she first met with Dembinski, Desautels, and a Sergeant Christensen, and she was told that suspects had been caught inside the house. Horan then photographed the scene but did not dust for fingerprints or swab for DNA because when suspects are arrested inside a house or are seen running from a house, as in this case, she does not normally process for fingerprints or swab for DNA. On cross-examination, Horan acknowledged that the door to the house could have been broken days before it was ever called in to the police and that the tub of pipes could have been sitting for days prior to Loyd ever entering the property. During the investigation, William Mora, the owner of the house, was contacted by a 911 operator about the incident and told his presence was needed at the scene. Mora renovates homes in the north Omaha area and rents them out. Mora had owned the subject property since 2008 and was remodeling to expand an entranceway and to move the laundry room from an existing bathroom to the furnace and water heater area. Mora was last at the house about five days prior when he had dropped off flooring tiles for the bathroom still being remodeled. He had already had the water connections for the washer and dryer moved to the furnace area where they were reconnected and installed; this plumbing work had been done in February at a cost of about $500.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Lloyd, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lloyd-nebctapp-2016.