State v. Zemunski

423 N.W.2d 443, 228 Neb. 536, 1988 Neb. LEXIS 172
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1988
Docket88-149, 88-150
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 423 N.W.2d 443 (State v. Zemunski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Zemunski, 423 N.W.2d 443, 228 Neb. 536, 1988 Neb. LEXIS 172 (Neb. 1988).

Opinion

Caporale, J.

In case No. 88-149 the State charged defendant-appellee, Michael Zemunski, with the felony of burglarizing the “Holdrege Coop” on March 20,1987, in violation of Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-507 (Reissue 1985). Defendant-appellee, Mitchell Whiteley, was charged with the same crime in case No. 88-150. The district court sustained a portion of the motion filed by each defendant to suppress the evidence obtained by the police. In these consolidated interlocutory appeals to a single judge of this court, taken pursuant to the provisions of Neb. Rev. Stat. § 29-824 (Reissue 1985), the State claims the district court erred in finding that the arrest of each defendant “was not based upon probable cause and was therefore unlawful requiring the suppression of all evidence seized from the motor vehicle.” The decisions of the district court are affirmed.

*537 THE SETTING

On March 24,1987, a police task force was formed by about 20 southeast Nebraska law enforcement agencies to investigate a series of seemingly related burglaries. Investigator Ronald Osborne of the Nebraska State Patrol participated in this task force, as did Lancaster County Sheriff’s Det. Sgt. Robert Marker. According to Osborne, the general modus operandi entailed gaining entry to the burglarized premises by the use of a bar or a screwdriver to spread the doorjamb. When safes were involved, they were “peeled” from top left to bottom right. Most of the time the burglaries occurred late at night or early in the morning, and there was generally more than one burglary in a particular town or general area. Usually, only money was taken.

In the course of the task force investigation, Osborne concluded that 117 burglaries which had occurred in 17 Nebraska counties on 35 separate days between July 1, 1986, and April 1, 1987, fit this pattern. Vehicles in defendant Zemunski’s possession had been seen in the vicinity of three of these burglaries. Osborne thus had come to suspect that defendant Zemunski and his friend, defendant Whiteley, were involved in all of the burglaries.

Osborne had become acquainted with defendant Zemunski in February of 1987 in connection with an investigation into an earlier attempted burglary. In the course of this prior investigation, Osborne kept Zemunski under surveillance on February 22,23,24, and 25, and on March 1,2,4, and 11,1987. During this time, Osborne observed only that defendants attended the dograces at Council Bluffs, Iowa, together. However, Osborne had been told that defendant Zemunski had been arrested as the result of a Lancaster County burglary and was out on bond and that he was suspected of burglary by the Auburn Police Department and the Otoe County sheriff’s office.

At about 2 a.m. on April 2, 1987, Fillmore County Sheriff’s Deputy Jeff Brandi, on routine patrol in Grafton, noticed lights on at the town’s grain elevator, indicating a possible illegal entry. Brandi notified his office by telephone that a burglary might be in progress at the grain elevator; his office in turn *538 notified sheriffs’ offices in surrounding counties of the possible break-in. However, subsequent investigation disclosed that no entry or burglary had in fact occurred.

The Fillmore County sheriff’s office informed Osborne at about 2:20 a.m. that a burglar alarm had been triggered in Grafton. Osborne then called the Lancaster County sheriff’s office, arranged to meet Marker at the Pleasant Dale Interstate 80 interchange, and left his home at about 3 a.m. Acting in accordance with Osborne’s requests, two additional State Patrol investigators traveled from Lincoln to Grafton on U.S. Highway 6 as Osborne and Marker drove on 1-80 toward Grafton, these being the two main routes between Lincoln and Grafton. As noted in the suppression hearing below, “All of this was done in connection with the report that [Osborne] received from the Fillmore County Sheriff in regard to the alarm going off in Grafton.”

As Osborne, Marker, and the other police officers traveled to Grafton, they watched for one of the vehicles in defendant Zemunski’s possession, a silver Chevrolet station wagon, Nebraska license No. 2-A9185, registered to Micho Investments, an entity owned by defendant Zemunski’s father. While still on 1-80 looking for the silver Chevrolet, Osborne and Marker received word that no break-in had occurred in Grafton; Osborne testified that he recalled no other radio messages regarding possible burglaries before he and Marker later encountered the silver Chevrolet.

THE STOP

At about 4:50 a.m., upon leaving 1-80 at the U.S. Highway 81 interchange, Osborne and Marker observed the silver Chevrolet in the parking lot of a cafe at that location. Osborne and Marker parked nearby and watched the vehicle until “5:20 to 5:30.” Shortly after stopping to watch the silver Chevrolet, at around 5 a.m., Osborne received a request “to call the . . . Aurora Police Department.” Responding to this request, Osborne placed a phone call to the State Patrol dispatcher in Grand Island, later determined to be one Katherine Engle, from the lobby of the establishment where he and Marker were parked; Engle patched Osborne through to a police official in Aurora, and this official told Osborne about several burglaries *539 in Aurora. Osborne apparently was not in direct radio contact with Aurora.

According to Osborne, in this phone conversation he learned that a farmers’ cooperative, a grocery store, and a lumberyard had been burglarized in Aurora, that a safe in the cooperative had been “peeled,” and that money was missing from it. This conversation was hastily terminated when Marker saw the silver Chevrolet leave the cafe parking lot and pull onto the Interstate heading east. Osborne and Marker followed. According to Osborne, he had to vary the speed at which he drove from 40 to 70 miles per hour in order to keep up with the silver Chevrolet.

Osborne testified that he and Marker periodically received radio transmissions from Engle giving them additional information regarding the Aurora burglaries as they followed the suspect vehicle on 1-80; however, Osborne admitted that this assertion is not supported by any of the communications records kept by the various police agencies that morning.

Engle noted in her personal log that a Hamilton County sheriff’s deputy reported a grocery store and a lumberyard in Aurora had been burglarized. She also noted that Osborne was then in his vehicle near York, “watching a suspect vehicle . . . they had word there may possibly be a break-in at Grafton.” Engle eventually contacted Osborne and patched him through to Aurora, but did not monitor the entire conversation between Osborne and the Aurora police. Sometime later, Engle was asked to pass on a description of some evidence from Aurora to Osborne; as she recalled at the suppression hearing below, Aurora police officials asked her to tell Osborne about “some foot prints on a bank bag.” Engle identified the source of this information as a police officer in Aurora whose badge number was 4283.

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Bluebook (online)
423 N.W.2d 443, 228 Neb. 536, 1988 Neb. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-zemunski-neb-1988.