State v. Mullins

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 22, 2020
DocketA-19-854
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Mullins (State v. Mullins) 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. Mullins, (Neb. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

STATE V. MULLINS

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.

LARRY MULLINS, APPELLANT.

Filed September 22, 2020. No. A-19-854.

Appeal from the District Court for Otoe County: JULIE D. SMITH, Judge. Affirmed. Michael Ziskey, Otoe County Public Defender, for appellant. Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, and Matthew P.A. Lewis for appellee.

PIRTLE, RIEDMANN, and ARTERBURN, Judges. PIRTLE, Judge. I. INTRODUCTION Larry Mullins appeals his convictions and sentences in the district court for Otoe County for nine offenses related to the sexual assault and child abuse of his granddaughter. Mullins takes issue with the trial court allowing the State to present evidence of a prior sexual assault, finding that the evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s guilty verdicts, and imposing excessive sentences. Mullins also assigns that his trial counsel was ineffective in various ways. Based on the reasons that follow, we affirm. II. BACKGROUND On May 24, 2018, the State filed an information charging Mullins with nine offenses: count I, first degree sexual assault of a child; count II, third degree sexual assault of a child; count III, incest; count IV, first degree sexual assault of a child; count V, third degree sexual assault of a child; count VI, incest; count VII, third degree sexual assault of a child; count VIII, third degree

-1- sexual assault of a child; and count IX, intentional child abuse. The victim of the offenses was his granddaughter. The State filed a motion to present evidence at trial of a prior sexual assault committed against another granddaughter, K.M., pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. § 27-414 (Reissue 2016). Mullins is the paternal grandfather of K.M. and the victim in this case. K.M. and the victim have the same father but different mothers. A hearing was held on the State’s motion. At the hearing, K.M., who was 21 years old at the time, testified that when she was 5 or 6 years old, she was taking a nap on the floor in her grandparents’ bedroom and Mullins was napping on his bed. K.M. could not remember why, but she got in Mullins’ bed. Mullins subsequently put her on top of him, pulled down his pants, exposing his penis, and asked K.M. if she would “suck on it.” K.M. refused. K.M. testified that following the incident, Mullins told her not to tell anyone or she would never see him or other family members again. K.M. told her cousin what had happened, but told her not to tell anyone. She also told her grandmother and father shortly after the incident, but they did not believe her. K.M. testified that after she made the allegations against Mullins, she was told by family members that she was confused about what happened and that it was Mike, her stepfather at the time, who touched her. She testified that she did not want to talk about what had happened so she just went along with the allegations against Mike. She was then told by family members to write a letter stating that it was Mike who sexually assaulted her. She testified that Mike never touched her inappropriately. K.M. testified that when she was 10 years old, she told friends about the incident with Mullins, and the friends encouraged her to tell her mother. She then wrote out what happened to her and gave it to her mother. The letter to her mother stated that Mullins kissed her on the lips, took her hand and put it on his penis, told her to suck it, and stuck his penis in her butt. She also wrote that Mullins told her not to tell anyone. The letter was received into evidence. The evidence also showed that no criminal charges were filed against Mullins regarding the allegations by K.M. K.M. also testified that when she was 11 or 12 years old, her step dad at that time, Kenny Squire, touched her inappropriately and was subsequently convicted in Illinois. Following the hearing, the trial court sustained the State’s motion to present § 27-414 evidence at trial. Trial subsequently followed. Captain Lonnie Neeman of the Nebraska City Police Department testified that the police department received an intake from the Child Abuse Hotline on March 10, 2018, involving sexual assault of a child. The victim was a 10-year-old girl and the accused was Mullins. Neeman set up a forensic interview with the victim at the Child Advocacy Center (CAC) on March 13. Neeman viewed the interview through a closed-circuit television and heard the victim disclose sexual acts and physical abuse and she identified Mullins as the perpetrator. The victim disclosed that she had bruises on her thighs from the physical abuse, which Neeman subsequently observed and took photographs of for his investigation. The pictures were entered into evidence.

-2- The State’s next witness was Peg Sneller-Hamilton, the forensic interviewer at the CAC who interviewed the victim. Sneller-Hamilton testified that the victim disclosed sexual assaults during the interview, specifically: [p]enis in mouth, penis rubbing on vagina . . . put her hands on his penis; touched her under the clothes on her skin; touched her crotch with his hand and with his [penis] inside the part of her crotch, inside the line of her crotch; put his [penis] in her crotch; touched her on her breast inside her shirt rubbing her all over; touched her butt and squeezed her butt; touched her crotch over and under clothes rubbing and squeezing; put his tongue in her crotch; tried to stick his [penis] in her crotch two times; penis in her mouth; tongue in her mouth; his mouth on her vagina.

Sneller-Hamilton testified that the victim identified Mullins as the person who did these things to her. The victim’s mother, Brenna, testified that on March 9, 2018, the victim told her on the phone that she needed to talk with her about something. Brenna stated that the victim insisted that they speak in person. Once they were together, Brenna recalled that the victim was “unlike any time I’ve ever seen her before” and she “just started bawling hysterically, saying -- shaking and saying, ‘Mom, please don’t be mad. I’m so scared. Please don’t be mad. I’m so scared.’ just over and over again.” The victim then began to tell Brenna what happened to her earlier that day at Mullins’ house. Specifically, Brenna testified: [the victim] told me the day of the incident that she was over in [Mullins’] old chair, and he came over and rubbed her chest and her bottom. And she said that she tried to get away, and he grabbed her and slapped her and then he stopped when he heard [his wife] coming into the room. . . . And then [the victim] ran into the bathroom and locked the door when [Mullins’ wife] came into the room, and so he stopped.

Brenna stated that within a few days of the March 9, 2018, incident, she noticed bruises on the victim’s inner thighs. The victim told her that the bruises were from Mullins grabbing her so she could not get away. Brenna also testified that she asked her daughter if March 9 was the only time Mullins had touched her inappropriately and the victim responded that it was not. On cross-examination, Brenna stated that she never had any doubts as to the claims the victim made to her and that the victim “never wavered from her story one time when she’s talked to me.” Brenna also testified that the medical evaluation at the CAC revealed no signs of penetration. Kevin Mullins, the victim’s father, and Dale Burner, the victim’s uncle, testified about confronting Mullins after the March 9, 2018, incident. Mullins did not deny tickling the victim and swatting or patting her on the butt in a playful manner, but denied touching her in an inappropriate way.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

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