State v. Price

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 30, 2023
DocketA-22-687
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Price (State v. Price) 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. Price, (Neb. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

STATE V. PRICE

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.

JAMES S. PRICE, APPELLANT.

Filed May 30, 2023. No. A-22-687.

Appeal from the District Court for Lancaster County: ANDREW R. JACOBSEN, Judge. Affirmed. Mark E. Rappl, of Naylor & Rappl Law Office, for appellant. Michael T. Hilgers, Attorney General, and Austin N. Relph for appellee.

RIEDMANN, BISHOP, and WELCH, Judges. BISHOP, Judge. I. INTRODUCTION James S. Price appeals from the order of the Lancaster County District Court denying his motion for postconviction relief without holding an evidentiary hearing. We affirm. II. BACKGROUND 1. CONVICTIONS AND DIRECT APPEAL Price was charged with one count of aiding and abetting robbery and one count of aiding and abetting first degree assault as a result of events occurring on October 3, 2014. See State v. Price, 306 Neb. 38, 944 N.W.2d 279 (2020) (Price I). In December 2016, his first trial ended in a deadlocked jury and the court declared a mistrial. See id. Following a second jury trial in June 2018, Price was convicted of both counts and sentenced to concurrent terms of 25 to 40 years’ imprisonment. See id. On direct appeal, the

-1- Nebraska Supreme Court affirmed Price’s convictions and sentences. See id. The court set forth the evidence as follows: Patrick Pantoja testified that at around 2:45 a.m. on October 3, 2014, he and a friend, Emmanuel Nartey, were walking north on 14th Street toward downtown Lincoln. As they passed by the Nebraska State Capitol Building, walking toward K Street, a group of three men approached and asked them if they had money. Pantoja said they did not, and he and Nartey continued walking north. Seconds later, Pantoja felt a hit to the back of his head; his memories after that became spotty, and his next clear memory was waking in a hospital room. Pantoja was able to describe the three men in general terms of race and clothing, but at trial, he did not identify Price or any other person as an assailant. Pantoja further testified regarding items of value that he had on his person immediately prior to the incident and that he did not have afterward. Pantoja testified regarding the injuries he received and the effects of such injuries. The doctor who treated Pantoja also testified at trial and stated that when Pantoja arrived at the hospital, he was in a coma and required both a breathing tube and a feeding tube. Pantoja was diagnosed with severe traumatic brain injury; the doctor testified that such injury was consistent with being repeatedly punched and kicked in the head and that without medical intervention, his injuries could have been life threatening. Nartey also testified, and he was able to provide more details regarding the incident. When the three men initially approached Nartey and Pantoja, one of the men told them to empty their pockets. Nartey and Pantoja ignored the men and continued walking; one of the men then hit Pantoja “from the back.” At trial, Nartey described the three men as “[o]ne black guy and two white guys.” He further described one of the “white guys” as having a “bald head” and wearing a “white shirt . . . with black markings on the shirt,” and he testified that this man was the man who first hit Pantoja. Nartey testified that after the man first hit Pantoja, the second white man asked, “What are you guys doing?” and suggested they leave. The second white man either left or was otherwise not involved in what occurred after the first hit. Pantoja fell to the ground after being hit the first time. When Nartey “went in to separate” the white man from Pantoja, “the black guy came on to [Nartey] to push [him] away.” Pantoja had stood up, and so both the white man and the black man “went onto him to just hit him back to the ground . . . just punching him.” When Nartey “went in again to separate them,” the black man hit Nartey in the face and tried to empty Nartey’s pocket. Nartey decided to run, and when he ran, both men stopped hitting Pantoja and chased after Nartey. After Nartey got about a block away, he turned around and saw the two men had stopped chasing him. Nartey stopped and watched as the two men walked back toward Pantoja, who had stood up again; the two men knocked Pantoja to the ground again, and they “started kicking him in the face, in the head, anywhere”, and Nartey “saw them empty [Pantoja’s] pocket.” “[A]fter hitting [Pantoja] for several times, [the two men] just left.” After the two men left, Nartey ran to Pantoja and saw that “he had blood all over his face.” Nartey also saw that Pantoja’s “pocket was empty” and had apparently been searched. He also saw certain of Pantoja’s belongings, including a wallet and credit cards, “scattered

-2- around his body.” Nartey looked for and found his cell phone, which he had dropped while running from the men. As he called for emergency assistance, an officer in a police car arrived. The State asked Nartey at trial whether he saw “the white guy in court that [he] saw kicking and punching [Pantoja],” and Nartey identified Price. The State asked Nartey about his testimony that the “white guy . . . had a bald head.” Nartey testified that Price had “very short hair at the time,” but Nartey noted that at the time of the trial, Price’s hair had grown and was “longer now than it was then.” On cross-examination, Price asked Nartey about his testimony in this case and his statements prior to trial describing the white man who hit Pantoja as being “bald” or having “no hair whatsoever.” Price also cross-examined Nartey with a deposition in which Nartey described the man as wearing a “white shirt” but did not describe the shirt as having black lettering. Price also asked Nartey about being shown “six photographs of the white suspects” and whether he would agree that he was “unable to identify any one in that photo lineup . . . as being the white man who assaulted . . . Pantoja.” The court sustained the State’s hearsay objection before Nartey could answer. Jerad McBride testified that he was the police officer who stopped upon seeing Pantoja on the ground with Nartey standing next to him, trying to wave McBride down. McBride observed that Pantoja was unconscious and “gasping for air” and had sustained injuries to his face and trauma to his head. McBride testified that Nartey described to him what had occurred when Nartey and Pantoja were approached by the three men. McBride asked Nartey for descriptions of the men; McBride testified that Nartey described the white man as having “a slim build with like a shaved head, short hair” and wearing “a white shirt.” A patrol officer who had arrived on the scene drove around the nearby area looking for men matching the description given by Nartey but did not find anyone. As part of their investigation of this case, McBride and other officers requested video surveillance from security employees at the Nebraska State Capitol, who provided video that they thought might be relevant. McBride watched one surveillance video that was taken at around 2:44 a.m. on October 3, 2014, and depicted a portion of the Governor’s residence located near the Capitol building. McBride was attempting to determine whether persons depicted in the video matched the descriptions given of the suspects in this case. McBride asked another officer, Andrew Vocasek, to watch the video because he had been in the area on the night of the incident. Vocasek testified at trial that in the early hours of October 3, 2014, he was working foot patrol in the area of 14th and O Streets in downtown Lincoln. Vocasek remembered talking to Price “sometime before 2 a.m.” on October 3.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Price, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-price-nebctapp-2023.