State v. Betancourt-Garcia , 299 Neb. 775 ( 2018 )


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  • Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library
    www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/
    07/06/2018 01:11 AM CDT
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    Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets
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    STATE v. BETANCOURT-GARCIA
    Cite as 
    299 Neb. 775
    State of Nebraska, appellee, v.
    Rosario Betancourt-Garcia, appellant.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed April 26, 2018.    No. S-17-690.
    1.	 DNA Testing: Appeal and Error. A motion for DNA testing is addressed
    to the discretion of the trial court, and unless an abuse of discretion is
    shown, the trial court’s determination will not be disturbed.
    2.	 ``____: ____. An appellate court will uphold a trial court’s findings
    of fact related to a motion for DNA testing unless such findings are
    clearly erroneous.
    3.	 DNA Testing. The DNA Testing Act is a limited remedy providing
    inmates an opportunity to obtain DNA testing in order to establish inno-
    cence after a conviction.
    4.	 ____. Under 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 29-4120
    (1)(b) (Reissue 2016), biologi-
    cal material does not fall within the purview of the DNA Testing Act
    unless it is in the actual or constructive possession or control of the State
    or others.
    5.	 Constitutional Law: DNA Testing. A constitutional challenge to the
    destruction of evidence is outside the purview of the DNA Testing Act.
    Appeal from the District Court for Madison County: M ark
    A. Johnson, Judge. Affirmed.
    Danielle L. Myers-Noelle, of Jewell & Collins, and Brad J.
    Montag, of Egley, Fullner, Montag & Hockabout, for appellant.
    Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, and Austin N. Relph
    for appellee.
    Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, and Stacy, JJ.,
    and Moore, Chief Judge, and A rterburn, Judge, and Doyle,
    District Judge.
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    STATE v. BETANCOURT-GARCIA
    Cite as 
    299 Neb. 775
    Stacy, J.
    Rosario Betancourt-Garcia (Betancourt) was convicted in
    2015 of kidnapping, use of a firearm to commit kidnapping,
    and conspiracy to commit kidnapping. We affirmed all of
    his convictions and two of his sentences on direct appeal.1
    In 2017, Betancourt filed a motion for forensic DNA testing
    pursuant to Nebraska’s DNA Testing Act.2 After conducting a
    hearing, the district court denied the motion, finding the items
    Betancourt wanted to test were no longer in the possession of
    the State and had been destroyed before the motion for DNA
    testing was filed.3 Betancourt appeals, and we affirm.
    FACTS
    Background
    On November 15, 2003, officers of the Madison Police
    Department responded to a call and found Pedro Jesus Rayon-
    Piza (Pedro) bound and gagged. Duct tape was wrapped around
    Pedro’s face, ankles, and wrists.4 A “‘shoestring type cord’”
    was tied around his ankles and wrists. Pedro appeared “‘ter-
    rified’” and told officers that Betancourt and another man had
    kidnapped him and threatened to kill him.5 The two men left
    Pedro bound and gagged in a shed, telling him they were going
    to return with Pedro’s brother and then kill them both. Pedro
    managed to escape and seek help before Betancourt and the
    other man returned.
    The Madison Police Department conducted an immedi-
    ate search for Betancourt, but did not find him. Two days
    later, arrest warrants were issued for Betancourt and the other
    suspect, and the State filed an information in county court,
    1
    State v. Betancourt-Garcia, 
    295 Neb. 170
    , 
    887 N.W.2d 296
     (2016).
    2
    
    Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 29-4116
     to 29-4125 (Reissue 2016).
    3
    See § 29-4120(1)(b), (3), and (4).
    4
    State v. Betancourt-Garcia, supra note 1, 
    295 Neb. at 176
    , 887 N.W.2d at
    304.
    5
    Id.
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    STATE v. BETANCOURT-GARCIA
    Cite as 
    299 Neb. 775
    charging Betancourt with kidnapping and use of a deadly
    weapon to commit a felony.
    Approximately 6 months later, in May 2004, Texas authori-
    ties arrested Betancourt in Plano, Texas, based on the Nebraska
    warrant. Betancourt signed a waiver of extradition, and the
    Madison County sheriff’s office dispatched transport person-
    nel to bring Betancourt back to Nebraska. While the transport
    personnel were en route to Texas, they learned Betancourt
    had mistakenly been transferred by authorities in Texas to the
    custody of federal “‘immigration services.’”6 Betancourt was
    subsequently deported to Mexico.
    Roughly 9 years later, on July 1, 2013, Texas authorities
    arrested Betancourt again, and he was extradited to Nebraska.
    The case against Betancourt was bound over to district court,
    and the State ultimately filed an amended information charg-
    ing Betancourt with kidnapping, use of a deadly weapon
    to commit a felony, and conspiracy to commit kidnapping.
    Betancourt pled not guilty to all three counts, and a jury trial
    was held.
    At trial, Pedro testified that Betancourt was one of the two
    men who had kidnapped him, threatened to kill him, and left
    him bound and gagged in the shed. The other man involved in
    the kidnapping also testified at trial and admitted that he and
    Betancourt threatened Pedro with guns, took him to the shed,
    and left him there while they looked for Pedro’s brother.
    At trial, the court received without objection several pho-
    tographs of the crime scene, including the shed from which
    Pedro had escaped. Some of the photographs depicted items
    in the shed, including a pair of black tennis shoes with white
    laces. There were also photographs of Pedro after the duct tape
    had been removed, and adhesive residue was visible on his
    face, wrists, and ankles. The police chief testified that some
    of the duct tape had been collected at the scene and kept in
    the evidence room for several years. But sometime prior to
    6
    Id. at 174, 887 N.W.2d at 303.
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    STATE v. BETANCOURT-GARCIA
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    299 Neb. 775
    Betancourt’s rearrest in 2013, the mayor of Madison, Nebraska,
    wanted the evidence room cleaned, so officers checked to
    “verify where this case was” and then “disposed of” the physi-
    cal evidence in Betancourt’s case.
    The jury convicted Betancourt on all charges. In December
    2016, we affirmed his convictions on direct appeal, but
    remanded for resentencing on the conspiracy conviction.7
    Motion for DNA Testing
    On February 27, 2017, Betancourt filed a motion for foren-
    sic DNA testing, seeking to have items of physical evidence,
    including the duct tape, the black tennis shoes, and the shoe
    laces, tested for DNA evidence. The motion alleged Pedro had
    falsely, or mistakenly, identified Betancourt as the perpetrator
    and further alleged that DNA testing could result in exculpa-
    tory evidence if Betancourt’s DNA was not found on any of
    the physical evidence.
    The district court held a hearing on the motion June 16,
    2017. Both the police chief for the city of Madison and a
    deputy sheriff for Madison County testified that the physi-
    cal evidence related to Betancourt’s case had been destroyed
    before trial.
    The police chief testified that sometime in 2010, he
    destroyed all the physical evidence related to Betancourt’s
    case as part of an initiative to clean out the evidence locker
    and get rid of evidence from “old cases.” At the time the
    evidence was destroyed, Betancourt had been deported, the
    charges against him had been pending for 7 years, and his
    whereabouts were unknown. According to the police chief, the
    destruction of evidence was not done to frustrate Betancourt’s
    defense.
    The deputy sheriff testified that after Betancourt was
    ­rearrested in 2013 and extradited to Nebraska, he attempted
    to locate the physical evidence related to Betancourt’s case.
    He located a compact disc that contained various photographs
    7
    State v. Betancourt-Garcia, supra note 1.
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    STATE v. BETANCOURT-GARCIA
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    299 Neb. 775
    of the physical evidence, but otherwise determined the physi-
    cal evidence had been destroyed. Like the police chief, he
    testified that the evidence was not destroyed in an effort to
    harm or frustrate Betancourt’s defense.
    During the evidentiary hearing on Betancourt’s motion for
    DNA testing, Betancourt argued, among other things, that his
    due process rights had been violated by the State’s destruction
    of the evidence. The district court asked Betancourt why due
    process was a relevant issue under the DNA Testing Act, but
    Betancourt did not directly answer that question. At the end of
    the hearing, the court announced from the bench that it was
    basing its decision on “the evidence and the narrow scope of
    the statute regarding DNA testing.” It overruled the motion for
    DNA testing, finding that the physical evidence Betancourt
    wanted to test had been destroyed before the motion for testing
    had been filed. Betancourt filed this timely appeal.
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Betancourt assigns the district court erred in finding the
    State did not destroy evidence in bad faith and in violation of
    his due process rights under the U.S. Constitution.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1,2] A motion for DNA testing is addressed to the discre-
    tion of the trial court, and unless an abuse of discretion is
    shown, the trial court’s determination will not be disturbed.8
    An appellate court will uphold a trial court’s findings of fact
    related to a motion for DNA testing unless such findings are
    clearly erroneous.9
    ANALYSIS
    DNA Testing Act
    [3] Nebraska enacted the DNA Testing Act in 2001. It is
    a limited remedy providing inmates an opportunity to obtain
    8
    State v. Robbins, 
    297 Neb. 503
    , 
    900 N.W.2d 745
     (2017).
    9
    See 
    id.
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    STATE v. BETANCOURT-GARCIA
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    DNA testing in order to establish innocence after a convic-
    tion.10 Pursuant to the act, a person in custody takes the first
    step toward obtaining possible relief by filing a motion in the
    court that entered the judgment requesting forensic DNA test-
    ing of biological material.11 The type of biological material
    subject to testing under the act is identified in § 29-4120(1).
    A person in custody can only request forensic DNA testing of
    biological material that
    (a) Is related to the investigation or prosecution that
    resulted in such judgment;
    (b) Is in the actual or constructive possession or con-
    trol of the state or is in the possession or control of oth-
    ers under circumstances likely to safeguard the integrity
    of the biological material’s original physical composi-
    tion; and
    (c) Was not previously subjected to DNA testing or
    can be subjected to retesting with more current DNA
    techniques that provide a reasonable likelihood of more
    accurate and probative results.12
    Here, Betancourt’s motion identified the following material
    he wanted to have tested: two black shoes with white laces,
    two pieces of duct tape, two pieces of “shoe lace type cord,”
    saliva from the duct tape, and all clothing of Pedro taken into
    evidence. The motion did not indicate that the evidence at issue
    had been destroyed before trial. To the contrary, the motion
    specifically stated that “police reports show this evidence still
    exist[s] in Madison County.” The motion also alleged that
    the evidence had been “collected by law enforcement as part
    of the investig[a]tion” and had “remained in State custody
    ever since.”
    Under the DNA Testing Act, notice of a motion seeking
    forensic DNA testing must be served on the county attorney of
    10
    See, § 29-4117; State v. Pratt, 
    287 Neb. 455
    , 
    842 N.W.2d 800
     (2014).
    11
    State v. Pratt, supra note 10.
    12
    § 29-4120(1).
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    STATE v. BETANCOURT-GARCIA
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    the county in which the prosecution was held.13 Upon receiving
    notice, the county attorney must take steps to ensure that any
    “remaining biological material that was secured by the state
    or a political subdivision in connection with the case” is pre-
    served pending completion of any proceedings under the act.14
    The county attorney also is required to submit an inventory of
    all evidence that was secured by the State or a political subdi-
    vision in connection with the case.15 If evidence is intentionally
    destroyed after notice of a motion for DNA testing is received,
    a court may impose appropriate sanctions, including criminal
    contempt.16 The record before us does not contain the inven-
    tory of evidence prepared by the county attorney, but neither
    party suggests there was a failure to submit such a document in
    response to Betancourt’s motion.
    Under the DNA Testing Act, the court has discretion to
    either consider the motion on affidavits or hold a hearing,17
    after which it “shall order DNA testing” upon a determina-
    tion that
    (a)(i) the biological material was not previously subjected
    to DNA testing or (ii) the biological material was tested
    previously, but current technology could provide a rea-
    sonable likelihood of more accurate and probative results,
    (b) the biological material has been retained under cir-
    cumstances likely to safeguard the integrity of its original
    physical composition, and (c) such testing may produce
    noncumulative, exculpatory evidence relevant to the claim
    that the person was wrongfully convicted or sentenced.18
    In this case, the district court held a hearing, and the uncon-
    troverted testimony established that the biological material
    13
    § 29-4120(2).
    14
    § 29-4120(3).
    15
    § 29-4120(4).
    16
    Id.
    17
    § 29-4120(5).
    18
    Id.
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    STATE v. BETANCOURT-GARCIA
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    Betancourt wanted to have tested was not in the actual or
    constructive possession or control of the state when Betancourt
    filed his motion. The police chief had disposed of the mate-
    rial while cleaning out the evidence room several years
    before Betancourt’s convictions, and at a point in time when
    Betancourt was absconded from Nebraska and not incarcerated
    in connection with this case.
    Based on this evidence, we find no error in the district
    court’s factual findings that the biological material Betancourt
    wanted tested no longer existed and the related finding that no
    evidence had been destroyed after Betancourt’s motion was
    filed. And given these factual findings, we find no abuse of
    discretion in denying relief under the DNA Testing Act.
    [4] At the time Betancourt filed his motion, the material
    sought to be tested did not fall within the purview of the DNA
    Testing Act, because it was not in the actual or constructive
    possession or control of the State or others, as required by
    § 29-4120(1)(b). And although the DNA Testing Act provides
    that “state agencies and political subdivisions shall preserve
    any biological material secured in connection with a criminal
    case for such period of time as any person remains incarcer-
    ated in connection with that case,”19 the evidence was uncon-
    troverted that the biological material at issue was destroyed
    before Betancourt’s trial and convictions and during a time
    period in which Betancourt was absconded from Nebraska and
    not incarcerated in connection with the case.
    The district court correctly overruled Betancourt’s motion
    for DNA testing. To the extent Betancourt assigns error to the
    contrary, the assignment is without merit.
    Due Process Claim
    Betancourt assigns and argues on appeal that the evidence
    destroyed before his trial was “materially exculpatory”20 and
    19
    § 29-4125(1).
    20
    Brief for appellant at 11.
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    that therefore, the State’s destruction of it violated his right to
    due process of law.21 The district court’s ruling did not address
    Betancourt’s due process argument, and for good reason. It was
    not properly before the court.
    [5] Betancourt limited his motion to requesting DNA testing
    under the DNA Testing Act. His motion did not challenge the
    destruction of evidence at all and, instead, affirmatively alleged
    the evidence he wanted tested was still in the State’s custody.
    The motion did not raise any sort of constitutional due process
    challenge based on the destruction of evidence. And in any
    event, a constitutional challenge to the destruction of evidence
    is outside the purview of the DNA Testing Act. On this record,
    the district court correctly declined to address Betancourt’s due
    process arguments.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the order of the district court
    overruling the motion for DNA testing is affirmed.
    A ffirmed.
    Wright and Funke, JJ., not participating.
    21
    See California v. Trombetta, 
    467 U.S. 479
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2528
    , 
    81 L. Ed. 2d 413
     (1984).