State v. Nathan Thomas Veesenmeyer ( 2024 )


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  •        COURT OF APPEALS
    DECISION                                                NOTICE
    DATED AND FILED                            This opinion is subject to further editing. If
    published, the official version will appear in
    the bound volume of the Official Reports.
    February 29, 2024
    A party may file with the Supreme Court a
    Samuel A. Christensen                  petition to review an adverse decision by the
    Clerk of Court of Appeals               Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10
    and RULE 809.62.
    Appeal No.        2023AP1352-CR                                                   Cir. Ct. No. 2021CF64
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                                             IN COURT OF APPEALS
    DISTRICT IV
    STATE OF WISCONSIN,
    PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,
    V.
    NATHAN THOMAS VEESENMEYER,
    DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the circuit court for Grant County:
    LYNN M. RIDER, Judge. Reversed and cause remanded with directions.
    Before Kloppenburg, P.J., Graham, and Taylor, JJ.
    Per curiam opinions may not be cited in any court of this state as precedent
    or authority, except for the limited purposes specified in WIS. STAT. RULE 809.23(3).
    No. 2023AP1352-CR
    ¶1      PER CURIAM. Nathan Thomas Veesenmeyer appeals a judgment
    of conviction for theft as a party to a crime. Veesenmeyer argues that the evidence
    presented at his jury trial was insufficient to support his conviction. We agree and,
    therefore, reverse and remand to the circuit court to vacate the judgment of
    conviction and dismiss the case.1
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2      On November 2, 2020, a dealership in Grant County brought a utility
    task vehicle (UTV) to a nearby service center to repair the air conditioning unit.
    Between 4:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m. on November 3, 2020, a mechanic at the service
    center parked the UTV outside the service center with the keys in it and left a
    voicemail for the dealership saying that the UTV repair was complete.                        On
    November 4, 2020, the mechanic returned to the service center at 7:30 a.m. and
    did not see the UTV. The manager of the service center informed the dealership
    that the UTV had been taken, and the dealership called law enforcement.
    ¶3      The State charged Veesenmeyer with theft of the UTV as a party to a
    crime. The case proceeded to a jury trial on August 29 and 30, 2022. The jury
    found Veesenmeyer guilty as charged. The circuit court sentenced Veesenmeyer
    to five years of initial confinement and five years of extended supervision.
    1
    Veesenmeyer requests that we remand for a new trial. The State does not respond to
    Veesenmeyer’s request for relief. However, “double jeopardy principles prevent a defendant
    from being retried when a court overturns [the defendant’s] conviction due to insufficient
    evidence …. Where the evidence is found insufficient to convict the defendant at trial, the
    defendant cannot again be prosecuted.” State v. Henning, 
    2004 WI 89
    , ¶22, 
    273 Wis. 2d 352
    ,
    
    681 N.W.2d 871
     (citing Burks v. United States, 
    437 U.S. 1
    , 11 (1978)); see also State v. Ivy, 
    119 Wis. 2d 591
    , 608-09, 
    350 N.W.2d 62
     (1984) (explaining that when an appellate court determines
    that the evidence was insufficient to support a conviction the remedy is to order a judgment of
    acquittal, citing Burks, 
    437 U.S. at 18
    ).
    2
    No. 2023AP1352-CR
    ¶4     Veesenmeyer appeals.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶5     In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction,
    we may not substitute our judgment for that of the jury “unless the evidence,
    viewed most favorably to the [S]tate and the conviction, is so lacking in probative
    value and force that no trier of fact, acting reasonably, could have found guilt
    beyond a reasonable doubt.” State v. Poellinger, 
    153 Wis. 2d 493
    , 507, 
    451 N.W.2d 752
     (1990).
    ¶6     The parties agree that the State’s case comprised solely
    circumstantial evidence. The jury was instructed that, “Circumstantial evidence is
    evidence from which a jury may logically find other facts according to common
    knowledge and experience. Circumstantial evidence is not necessarily better or
    worse than direct evidence. Either type of evidence can prove a fact.”
    ¶7    The sufficiency of the evidence test is the same regardless of
    whether the evidence is direct or circumstantial. 
    Id. at 501
    . If any possibility
    exists that the trier of fact could have drawn the appropriate inferences from the
    evidence adduced at trial to find the requisite guilt, an appellate court may not
    overturn a verdict even if it believes that the trier of fact should not have found
    guilt based on the evidence before it. 
    Id. at 507
    ; see State v. Toliver, 
    104 Wis. 2d 289
    , 293-94, 
    311 N.W.2d 591
     (1981) (“[T]he jury verdict must be upheld” where
    there “was sufficient evidence and reasonable inferences which could be drawn
    therefrom to justify a rational jury in finding the defendant guilty beyond a
    reasonable doubt on all the elements of [a] crime.”). “If more than one reasonable
    inference can be drawn from the evidence,” we will “adopt the inference that
    supports the verdict.” State v. Mertes, 
    2008 WI App 179
    , ¶10, 
    315 Wis. 2d 756
    ,
    3
    No. 2023AP1352-CR
    
    762 N.W.2d 813
    . We consider the totality of the evidence when conducting a
    sufficiency of the evidence review. State v. Smith, 
    2012 WI 91
    , ¶36, 
    342 Wis. 2d 710
    , 
    817 N.W.2d 410
     (A jury is not required to “ignore the larger picture so as to
    focus on each piece in a vacuum and ask whether that piece standing alone
    supports a finding of guilt.”).
    ¶8       Whether the evidence is sufficient to support a conviction beyond a
    reasonable doubt is a question of law that we review de novo. State v. Booker,
    
    2006 WI 79
    , ¶12, 
    292 Wis. 2d 43
    , 
    717 N.W.2d 676
    .
    ¶9       Before the jury could find Veesenmeyer guilty, the State was
    required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Veesenmeyer committed theft as
    a party to a crime, in violation of WIS. STAT. § 943.20(1)(a) (2021-22).2 The
    instruction presented to the jury defines the elements of “theft” as:
    1. The defendant intentionally took and carried away
    movable property of another ….
    2. The owner of the property did not consent to taking and
    carrying away the property.
    3. The defendant knew that the owner did not consent.
    4. The defendant intended to deprive the                owner
    permanently of the possession of the property.
    WIS JI—CRIMINAL 1441 (citing § 943.20(1)(a)).
    ¶10      WISCONSIN STAT. § 939.05 provides that whoever is concerned in
    the commission of a crime is a party to that crime and may be convicted of that
    2
    All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2021-22 version unless otherwise
    noted.
    4
    No. 2023AP1352-CR
    crime although that person did not directly commit it. Sec. 939.05. The jury was
    instructed that:
    A person intentionally aids and abets the
    commission of a crime when, acting with knowledge or
    belief that another person is committing or intends to
    commit a crime, knowingly either assists the person who
    commits the crime; or is ready and willing to assist and the
    person who commits the crime knows of the willingness to
    assist.
    To intentionally aid and abet theft, the Defendant
    must know that another person is committing or intends to
    commit the crime of theft and have the purpose to assist the
    commission of that crime.
    A person intentionally aids and abets the commission of a crime by (1) engaging
    in “some conduct (either verbal or overt), which as a matter of objective fact aids
    another person in the execution of a crime,” and (2) by having a “conscious desire
    or intent ‘that the conduct will in fact yield such assistance.’” State v. Martinez,
    
    150 Wis. 2d 47
    , 52, 
    441 N.W.2d 690
     (1989) (quoted source omitted).
    ¶11    To sustain Veesenmeyer’s conviction, the record must contain
    evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the State, that would allow a
    reasonable jury to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that Veesenmeyer directly
    committed or intentionally aided and abetted the UTV theft. See Poellinger, 
    153 Wis. 2d at 507
    .
    ¶12    The State presented the following pertinent evidence.
    ¶13    The Grant County deputy sheriff who responded to the report of a
    stolen UTV testified that she received video from November 3, 2020, from the
    UTV dealership’s surveillance cameras and still photos taken from the video. The
    State played portions of the video to the jury. The video showed a truck with a
    trailer hitched to it driving through the dealership’s parking lot around 8:47 p.m.
    5
    No. 2023AP1352-CR
    and driving near the service center around 10:47 p.m. From the photos, the deputy
    deciphered the license plate number of the trailer and ran a vehicle registration
    query which identified the trailer as being registered to Brittany McKinnon. The
    deputy searched McKinnon on Facebook and “found a picture with a man and in
    the comments of that picture, she stated that his name was Nathan and it was her
    boyfriend.”
    ¶14    A sergeant with the Grant County Sheriff’s office testified that he
    received surveillance videos from November 3, 2020, from a business near the
    dealership and service center. The State played portions of the videos to the jury.
    The videos showed a truck with a trailer hitched to it pull into the service center
    parking lot, the truck’s driver’s side door open, and a person whose gender and
    identity could not be ascertained from the low quality footage, walk from the
    truck’s driver’s side door away from the truck. The videos showed the UTV being
    driven in front of the truck and around to the back of the truck where the back of
    the trailer would be. The videos showed the truck and trailer then leave the
    parking lot and drive towards the on-ramp to Highway 151 towards Dubuque.
    ¶15    An Iowa State Patrol trooper testified as follows. On November 10,
    2020, the trooper responded to an accident involving a truck pulling a trailer that
    occurred in northeast Iowa.     “The trailer was on its side … jackknifed” and
    sustained damage to its side, and the truck also sustained damage to the rear
    driver’s side. The trooper identified McKinnon as the driver of the truck using her
    Minnesota Tribal ID card, identified the trailer as being registered to McKinnon
    based on the trailer’s license plate number, and identified the truck as a rental.
    McKinnon was with a male passenger whom the trooper did not identify at the
    time. The passenger used a grinder to cut the safety chains to restore the trailer to
    an upright position.     On November 24, 2020, the trooper “went through
    6
    No. 2023AP1352-CR
    Ms. McKinnon’s public Facebook page,” found a picture of a man holding two
    children, and identified that man as the person who had been McKinnon’s
    passenger.
    ¶16    An officer with the City of Saint Paul, Minnesota testified as
    follows. On November 24, 2020, the officer was dispatched to an address where
    the truck and trailer might be located. While driving to the address, the officer
    saw in the oncoming traffic lane the truck and trailer matching the description she
    was given. The officer followed the truck and trailer which made several turns
    before suddenly pulling over and parking. The officer drove past the truck and
    trailer and pulled over “probably about two to three houses up” the street. The
    officer observed the truck and trailer in her rearview mirror, saw “what appeared
    to be a gentlemen [get] out of the vehicle,” and then “lost sight of the gentleman.”
    The officer seized the truck and trailer, towed them to an impound lot, and placed
    them on hold for Grant County.
    ¶17    The sergeant with the Grant County Sheriff’s Office who had
    reviewed some of the videos of the service center parking lot continued to testify
    as follows. After the truck and trailer were impounded, the sergeant received a
    voicemail from “a male voice saying that this call was in regard to a trailer that
    was in the Saint Paul Police Department impound yard” from a phone number
    ending in 4795. The sergeant received another call from the same number from an
    individual who “sounded like the very same male” who had called previously and
    was again inquiring about the impounded trailer. The sergeant did not return
    either call. On December 2, 2020, the sergeant received another voicemail from
    the same number from a female who identified herself as McKinnon and inquired
    about the impounded truck and trailer and “wanting to know what they needed to
    do to get it.” The sergeant requested records from the cell phone service provider
    7
    No. 2023AP1352-CR
    for the number ending in 4795.            The records identified McKinnon as the
    accountholder for both that number and a second number associated with it,
    ending in 6564.
    ¶18    On December 4, 2020, the sergeant went to St. Paul and searched the
    truck and trailer pursuant to a search warrant. The sergeant found hand tools and
    power tools, clothing, and W2G slips with the name Nathan Veesenmeyer on them
    in the truck, as well as tools, a pallet jack, a floor jack, and a Bobcat Toolcat UTV
    in the trailer.   The sergeant learned that the Bobcat Toolcat UTV had been
    reported stolen from a dealership in Albert Lea, Minnesota. The sergeant also
    obtained a copy of the rental agreement for the truck which showed that the truck
    had been rented on October 26, 2020, by Denise Veesenmeyer, whom the sergeant
    found out was the mother of Nathan Veesenmeyer.
    ¶19    The sergeant collected samples to test for DNA on the truck’s
    driver’s side and passenger’s side front interior door handles. The sergeant also
    collected DNA from McKinnon and Veesenmeyer and submitted all samples to
    the Wisconsin State Crime Lab. A DNA analyst at the Wisconsin State Crime Lab
    testified that there was “strong support for inclusion” of both McKinnon’s and
    Veesenmeyer’s DNA on both the truck’s driver’s side and passenger’s side
    interior door handles. An unknown individual’s DNA was also found on the
    passenger’s side interior door handles.
    ¶20    An employee from the Mid-States Organized Crime Information
    Center testified as follows. The employee used the records from the two cell
    phone numbers ending in 4795 and 6564 to generate maps of the locations of the
    cell phones, and the maps were shown to the jury. One map showed the location
    data for the number ending in 4795 on November 3, 2020, near the following
    8
    No. 2023AP1352-CR
    locations at the following times: Minneapolis, Minnesota at 4:56 a.m., Black
    River Falls at 12:23 p.m., Madison at 6:12 p.m., Dodgeville at 6:25 p.m., and
    Dyersville, Iowa at 11:52 p.m. The second map showed the location data for the
    number ending in 6564 which followed a similar route as the number ending in
    4795.
    ¶21   To summarize, the State submitted the following evidence in support
    of Veesenmeyer’s guilt: (1) a man named Nathan was McKinnon’s boyfriend;
    (2) the truck used for the UTV theft on November 3, 2020, was rented by
    Veesenmeyer’s mother on October 26, 2020, and the trailer used in that theft was
    owned by McKinnon; (3) two cell phones under McKinnon’s account were
    present near the relevant areas at the relevant times with respect to the UTV theft
    on November 3, 2020; (4) a man depicted on McKinnon’s Facebook page was
    with McKinnon on November 10, 2020, when the truck and trailer were in an
    accident in Iowa; (5) a man walked away from the driver’s side of the truck and
    trailer after parking the truck and trailer in Minnesota on November 24, 2020;
    (6) DNA with a “strong” likelihood of being Veesenmeyer’s DNA was found on
    the truck’s interior driver’s side and passenger’s side door handles; (7) the truck
    contained W2G slips with the name Nathan Veesenmeyer on them; (8) the trailer
    contained tools and equipment that could have been used in the theft of the UTV;
    and (9) a man inquired twice about retrieving the truck and trailer from the Saint
    9
    No. 2023AP1352-CR
    Paul impound lot.3 We consider this evidence in the light “most favorabl[e] to the
    [S]tate and the conviction.” 
    Id. at 507
    .
    ¶22     From the sergeant’s testimony that he took DNA samples from
    Veesenmeyer, a jury could reasonably infer beyond a reasonable doubt that he
    took those samples from the person in custody who was the defendant sitting in
    the courtroom. Thus, the jury could also reasonably infer that it was the DNA of
    the defendant sitting in the courtroom that was found in the truck. The jury could
    also infer from the sergeant’s testimony that Veesenmeyer’s mother rented the
    truck pulling the trailer owned by McKinnon that the renter was the mother of the
    defendant sitting in the courtroom.             The jury could similarly infer from the
    sergeant’s testimony that he found in the truck W2G forms with Nathan’s
    Veesenmeyer’s name on them that the sergeant was referring to the defendant
    sitting in the courtroom. These inferences could, in turn, connect the defendant
    sitting in the courtroom with both the truck and with McKinnon.
    ¶23     More specifically, given the totality of the evidence summarized
    above, a jury could reasonably infer beyond a reasonable doubt that Veesenmeyer
    was associated with McKinnon, had been driving with McKinnon in a truck rented
    by his mother that was used in the theft of the UTV, used some of the tools in the
    truck to turn upright McKinnon’s trailer in Iowa after it had jackknifed about one
    week after the theft, and called about the truck and trailer after it had been
    impounded.
    3
    We observe that none of the witnesses who testified at the trial identified the defendant
    sitting in the courtroom as the person they saw in the surveillance videos; as the man they saw on
    McKinnon’s Facebook page, as McKinnon’s male passenger in Iowa, or as the man who walked
    away in Minnesota; or as having a voice like the man who called the sergeant after the truck and
    trailer were impounded.
    10
    No. 2023AP1352-CR
    ¶24    However, it would be speculative to draw from these inferences that
    Veesenmeyer assisted in the theft of the UTV that had been left in the service
    center parking lot the night of November 3, 2020.               That is, none of the
    circumstantial evidence bridges the divide between the above inferences and the
    inference that Veesenmeyer participated in the UTV theft or engaged in conduct
    that aided or abetted in the UTV theft. “A jury may draw reasonable inferences
    from facts established by circumstantial evidence, but it may not indulge in
    inferences wholly unsupported by any evidence.”           State ex rel. Kanieski v.
    Gagnon, 
    54 Wis. 2d 108
    , 117, 
    194 N.W.2d 808
     (1972). Mere speculation is
    insufficient to support a conviction. See 
    id.
     (“[T]he defendant cannot be convicted
    on mere suspicion or conjecture.”).
    ¶25    In sum, we conclude that the evidence was so lacking in probative
    value and force that no jury, acting reasonably, could have found Veesenmeyer
    guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of theft as a party to a crime.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶26    For the reasons stated, we conclude that the evidence was
    insufficient to convict Veesenmeyer of theft as a party to a crime. Accordingly,
    we reverse and remand to the circuit court to vacate the judgment of conviction
    and dismiss the case.
    By the Court.—Judgment reversed and cause remanded with
    directions.
    This    opinion   will   not    be   published.      See     WIS. STAT.
    RULE 809.23(1)(b)5.
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2023AP001352-CR

Filed Date: 2/29/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/9/2024