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State v. Salvador Rodriguez
296 Neb. 950
Neb.
2017
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Background

  • On July 23, 2014, Officer Wackler responded to a domestic disturbance involving Lori Ezell at a house rented by Salvador Rodriguez and Rosa Anguiano; Ezell had a key and stayed there intermittently with her children.
  • Later that day Ezell returned from a walk, reported lights on and someone in the garage, and asked police to check the house; officers found the front door unlocked/ajar and conducted a warrantless sweep of areas where a person could hide.
  • During the sweep officers observed two firearms in plain view; while checking the pistol for safety they discovered the serial number appeared defaced; photos of the home and a water bill later tied the house to Rodriguez.
  • Based on the defaced firearm, officers obtained a search warrant (July 30) and found large quantities of methamphetamine beneath a basement couch; a second warrant yielded additional methamphetamine.
  • At trial Ezell testified (without prior notice under Neb. Evid. R. 404) that she and Rodriguez used methamphetamine together and that drugs were kept under the basement couch; the defense objected but the court admitted the testimony and gave no limiting instruction.
  • Rodriguez was convicted of possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver; he appealed arguing (1) the initial warrantless entry/search was unconstitutional, (2) admission of drug-use testimony was improper other-acts evidence and no limiting instruction was given, and (3) prosecutor misstated ownership of the house during closing.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Whether warrantless entry/search was lawful under exigent/emergency doctrine Officers reasonably believed a burglary or intruder might be present based on Ezell’s report, lights on, and unlocked/ajar door Warrantless entry into a home absent a warrant was unreasonable; no exigency justified entry Held: Entry/search justified by exigent circumstances (possible burglary); suppression denied
Whether Ezell had authority to consent to the sweep (Alternate basis) Ezell had common authority as a resident/houseguest with a key Rodriguez argued consent was lacking or insufficient Court found reasonable basis to conclude Ezell had common authority but deemed exigency dispositive (no need to decide consent)
Whether testimony about Rodriguez’s drug use was inadmissible prior-bad-acts under Neb. Evid. R. 404(2) State: testimony was intrinsic to charged possession (continuing offense), not other-acts evidence Rodriguez: testimony showed prior bad acts and should have been excluded or limited; jury needed limiting instruction Held: Testimony was direct/intrinsic evidence of continuous possession around charged date; admission and lack of limiting instruction not reversible error
Whether prosecutor’s alleged closing remark that Rodriguez "owned" the house was prejudicial misconduct State: remark (if made) was not outcome-determinative; ownership not material to elements and any correction by defense mitigated harm Rodriguez: statement implied stronger connection to premises and ownership, prejudicing possession/ dominion analysis Held: Court declined to consider claim because closing argument is not in record; alternatively, any such remark was not prejudicial

Key Cases Cited

  • State v. McCumber, 295 Neb. 941 (standard of review for suppression rulings)
  • State v. Eberly, 271 Neb. 893 (elements and analysis under emergency doctrine/exigent circumstances)
  • Hill v. Commonwealth, 18 Va. App. 1 (warrantless entry reasonable where door ajar and burglary suspected) (441 S.E.2d 50)
  • United States v. Selberg, 630 F.2d 1292 (illustrative case finding insufficient facts to justify warrantless entry)
  • U.S. v. Towne, 870 F.2d 880 (possession as continuing offense; evidence across dates may be intrinsic, not Rule 404(b) other-acts evidence)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: State v. Salvador Rodriguez
Court Name: Nebraska Supreme Court
Date Published: Jun 16, 2017
Citation: 296 Neb. 950
Docket Number: S-16-563
Court Abbreviation: Neb.