Court Opinion

ID: 9394704
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-05-16 13:06:24.354276+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:19:01.790839
License: Public Domain

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

               MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL
                        (Memorandum Web Opinion)

                                          STATE V. BROWN

  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.

                                   BILLY J. BROWN, APPELLANT.

                               Filed May 16, 2023.     No. A-22-658.

       Appeal from the District Court for Lancaster County: LORI A. MARET, Judge. Affirmed.
       Joe Nigro, Lancaster County Public Defender, and Sarah J. Safarik for appellant.
       Michael T. Hilgers, Attorney General, and George C. Welch for appellee.

       RIEDMANN, BISHOP, and WELCH, Judges.
       BISHOP, Judge.
                                         INTRODUCTION
        Following a jury trial in the Lancaster County District Court, Billy J. Brown was convicted
of third degree domestic assault and sentenced to serve 365 days’ imprisonment in the Lancaster
County Department of Corrections. Brown appeals his conviction and sentence, claiming there
was insufficient evidence to support his conviction and that his sentence was excessive. We affirm.
                                          BACKGROUND
        Shortly after Brown’s wife, Jennifer Brown (Jennifer), filed for divorce, an incident
occurred in the family home on November 16, 2020, which resulted in criminal charges being filed
against Brown. An information, as amended, charged Brown with second degree domestic assault,
a Class IIIA felony; terroristic threats, a Class IIIA felony; first degree false imprisonment, a Class
IIIA felony; and child abuse, a Class I misdemeanor.

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       A jury trial was held over the course of four days in July 2022. Evidence was presented
through witness testimony, photographs, text messages, and voice recordings. A summary of the
evidence follows.
                                      JENNIFER’S TESTIMONY
        Jennifer testified that she and Brown were married in September 2007; they had two
children: a son, T.B., age 14, and a daughter, R.B., age 9. In July 2019, Jennifer and Brown
physically separated and Jennifer moved out of the family home; the children remained living with
Brown. On October 20, 2020, Jennifer filed for divorce.
        At the time of the November 16, 2020, incident, Jennifer was staying with a friend and the
children were living with Brown. At 8 p.m. that day, Jennifer went to Brown’s house to spend time
with the children. Jennifer spent an hour with the children and then went to Brown’s bedroom to
speak with him. Jennifer was “trying to keep it brief” and at “a quarter” after 9 p.m., she informed
Brown that she intended to leave. He told her that he did not want her to leave. When Jennifer
attempted to leave, Brown “tackled [her] onto the bed,” “twisted [her] up,” and “put[] his body
weight on [her].” As Brown held Jennifer in this position, he told her again that he “didn’t want
[her] to go.”
        After a few minutes, Brown let Jennifer go and brought up the topic of sex. When Jennifer
told Brown that she was not going to have sex with him, he “grabbed [her] and pulled [her] pants
down and pushed [her] down on the bed. And had his way.” When asked whether she “fe[lt] like
[she] consented to that,” Jennifer responded, “No.” Afterwards, Jennifer went to the bathroom.
When she returned, she asked Brown where her pants were. After initially refusing to tell her, he
informed her that they were between the box spring and the mattress. Jennifer retrieved her pants
and again informed Brown that she intended to leave. As Jennifer was putting her pants back on,
Brown took her phone and keys and put them in his bedside drawer.
        When Jennifer attempted to retrieve her items, Brown “block[ed] [her]” and began
“screaming at [her]” and “[t]elling her [she] wasn’t going to leave.” Brown then hit her “in the
chest and the back.” Jennifer stated that it was “very painful” and “made it hard to breathe.” In an
attempt to protect herself, she “slid[] down to the floor” and “cower[ed] away from [Brown].”
Brown then repeatedly hit her with a belt on her “hip and thigh area,” called her names, spat on
her, and told her that “he wanted [her] to hurt the way [she] had hurt him when [she] left.”
According to Jennifer, Brown was mostly hitting her with “the actual belt end” but at “one point
[she] put her arm down to block the blows” and the buckle hit her wrist. Brown struck her with the
belt “probably 15 to 20” times for “a good minute or so.”
        Jennifer “tried to scoot away,” but while she was “still on the ground and [Brown was]
over [her] . . . he produce[d] duct tape from somewhere and start[ed] to tape up [her] legs together.”
She was “begging and pleading . . . asking him to stop.” Jennifer described Brown as “enraged”
during this incident and he told her that “he was going to take [her] downstairs and tie [her] up and
possibly kill [her] and himself before morning.” Jennifer felt terrified because she knew he had
firearms in the house.
        Jennifer apologized to Brown and said “whatever [she] could to . . . get him to stop.” Once
she did this, “his whole demeanor changed.” Brown then removed the duct tape from her legs but
kept her phone and keys in his bedside table. Jennifer felt she could not leave, so she turned on the

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television and sat on the opposite side of the bed. While Jennifer and Brown watched television,
Brown flicked Jennifer’s face, “and ended up catching his nail on the edge of [her] nose[,] taking
a chunk out” and causing her nostril to bleed. Jennifer wiped the blood from her nose on the bed
sheet. Brown also “stuck his hand on [her] head and . . . scratched at [her] scalp.” Jennifer said that
“he seemed like he was trying to be playful” but “it wasn’t funny.” Jennifer “focused on the tv
[sic] just to try to ignore him.” Brown fell asleep at 11 p.m., at which point Jennifer retrieved her
phone and keys from the bedside table, checked on the children, and left Brown’s house.
        The following morning, Jennifer attended an appointment with her divorce attorney, where
she informed her attorney about the events of the prior evening. Jennifer’s attorney urged her to
speak with law enforcement. When asked why she did not speak with law enforcement before her
attorney suggested it, Jennifer responded, “Because I was terrified. I didn’t know if . . . he would
find out[,] if he would come after me.” She further stated that she “had never . . . reported anything
like that before” and she “was just scared.”
        Jennifer’s attorney contacted law enforcement and Jennifer went to the police station where
she spoke with law enforcement for 6 hours about the events that took place on the night of
November 16, 2020. Well into the interview, she mentioned the sexual encounter. When asked
why she did not inform law enforcement about it earlier in the interview, she stated that she “was
so used to [Brown] taking what he wanted, taking sex . . . it was just easier for [her] to just lay
there and not move and let him . . . get it done with.” She also stated that she was “more worried
about the . . . beating and the . . . threats” at that time. On cross-examination, Jennifer
acknowledged that she told law enforcement that she did not believe the sexual encounter was “a
sexual assault, or rape, or anything.”
                                    TEXT AND VOICE MESSAGES
        Jennifer testified that on November 17, 2020, Brown sent her numerous text messages and
that she was with law enforcement when some of the text messages between her and Brown were
exchanged. Law enforcement assisted Jennifer in drafting some of the messages she sent to Brown.
In one message, Brown stated, “Please excuse my horrible conduct last night. I will continue to
get better with practice.” He then asked Jennifer to call him. Jennifer responded that she could not
speak on the phone. She also wrote, “I have a huge bruise on my hip from where you hit me with
your belt last night and my chest is still in a lot of pain. It is not ok for you to ever treat me like
that.” Brown responded, “You are right. I am an idiot. I do not deserve you . . . . I’m sorry.”
        In another message, Jennifer asked Brown, “Why did you hit me with your belt? Did you
not think it would bruise that bad or what?” Brown responded:
        I didn’t even think about what the belt would do. All I thought was my dad used it on me
        so it must not be terrible . . . . I did not intend any bodily harm[,] my [i]ntention was to
        scare you a bit so you could understand how afraid the kids are to confront you and also to
        make you feel helpless as I do every moment I am awake.

In another message, Brown wrote, “The belt was to scare. It was not supposed to cause pain. It is
still my fault and I cannot expect you to forgive me.”
        Brown left Jennifer a voice message the day after the incident, in which Brown stated:

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       [L]ast night’s little ordeal was between you and I. I don’t regret one bit of a damn thing.
       You deserve everything you got out of it the way you’ve been treating us. I bet you don’t
       even . . . learn a damn thing about it. I bet everything went through one ear and right out
       the other. Everything I talked to you about, you didn’t soak in one bit of it. That’s what
       pisses me off in the world.

                                          PHOTOGRAPHS
         Numerous photographs of Jennifer’s injuries were taken by law enforcement at the police
station the day after the incident and two days after that.
         Jennifer testified about the photographs, several of which depicted a large, dark bruise on
her left hip. She stated that the location of the bruise was where Brown repeatedly hit her with the
belt. Multiple photographs depicted redness and swelling on Jennifer’s left wrist, where she stated
Brown hit her with the belt buckle. There were also photographs depicting very light bruising on
Jennifer’s chest and back. The law enforcement officer who took the photographs the day after the
incident testified that she did not see visible injuries on Jennifer’s chest and back. However, the
officer who photographed Jennifer’s injuries a couple days afterwards testified that she observed
faint, “[s]mall dots of bruising” on Jennifer’s chest and back. There were also photographs
depicting a scratch on Jennifer’s nose, where Jennifer stated “a chunk of skin came out” when
Brown was flicking her face. Jennifer testified that she sustained the injuries depicted in the
photographs on the night of November 16, 2020.
         On cross-examination, Jennifer said that an hour before going to Brown’s house, she was
at the grocery store and “went to bend over and grab something and went down on [her] knees,
and . . . couldn’t get back up.” However, she stated that she “didn’t fall, get stuck, or sustain any
injuries” as a result.
         Law enforcement testified that on November 17, 2020, officers arrested Brown and
conducted a search of his house. During the search, officers photographed and seized numerous
items in Brown’s house. Among the items seized were multiple leather belts located in Brown’s
bedroom, as well as a piece of used duct tape found on the dresser and a roll of duct tape found in
the dresser. The used duct tape was not tested for the presence of DNA. There were also
photographs of a red substance on the bed sheet, which a law enforcement officer testified was
presumed to be blood, but no forensic testing was conducted to confirm that.
                                     PHONE CONVERSATIONS
        Numerous recordings of jail phone calls were received into evidence, including calls
between Brown and his mother and a call between Brown and his friend.
        During the phone conversations between Brown and his mother, Brown generally denied
Jennifer’s characterization of the assault but admitted multiple times that he and Jennifer argued
and that he “spanked” her. During one phone call, he told his mother that he “chewed [Jennifer’s]
butt about not talking to the kids and [he] spanked her butt.” He also said that he took Jennifer’s
“keys, thr[ew] them in the drawer,” and told Jennifer that she was “gonna listen to [him] for a
minute.” In one call he said, “Yes, I did wrong. But not to the extent and way it sounds.”

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       In a phone call between Brown and his friend, Brown said “I spanked [Jennifer’s] ass for
fucking not listening to the kids.” He also told his friend,
       I didn’t hold her against her goddamn will. I grabbed her keys and said “you’re gonna listen
       to me while I tell you . . . your kids are scared to death.” They won’t talk to her because
       they’re afraid they’re going to chase her further away . . . . So I fricken talked to her and
       she didn’t want to listen to what I had to say. And I said, “Listen Jen. Your keys are staying
       in the drawer,” and I said . . . “you gotta listen and sit down.” I said, “These kids need a
       mother.” . . . And I picked up my belt and I whooped her a couple times . . . I come from
       old school, you know? My grandpa whooped my grandma when she was being a little brat.
       . . . But I didn’t take my hand and open it and fucking hit her, you know?

Brown also stated that “there’s no law saying you can’t spank a kid for being a brat. And that’s
what she was doing.”
                                     CHILDREN’S TESTIMONY
        T.B. testified that he recalled Jennifer coming to Brown’s house after school the day before
Brown was arrested. As he was getting ready for bed, T.B. heard Jennifer and Brown “arguing”
and “yelling” in Brown’s bedroom. T.B. stated that the arguing started shortly after Jennifer and
Brown went into Brown’s room, but he did not know how long it lasted because he “went to bed
before it stopped.”
        R.B. testified that she recalled the day that law enforcement arrested Brown and the night
before when Jennifer came over and spoke with T.B. and her. She testified that when Jennifer and
Brown went into Brown’s bedroom, T.B. and R.B. were getting ready for bed. R.B. “heard
[Jennifer] screaming” and she could hear Brown’s voice, which “sounded kind of mean.” She said
that Jennifer sounded “[s]cared” and “hurt.” When asked whether this went on for more than 5
minutes, R.B. responded, “Probably.” R.B. said that while this was happening, she felt scared and
she got out of bed and went to the hallway upstairs, where she could hear better. She was there for
“[a]t least up to 10 minutes.” She then went back to bed in her room and struggled to fall asleep
because there were “lots of noises” coming from Brown’s bedroom. The following morning,
Jennifer was gone but Brown was still at the house.
                                          JURY VERDICT
        After deliberation, the jury found Brown guilty of the lesser-included offense of third
degree domestic assault and not guilty of the remaining charges. The district court accepted the
jury’s verdict. On August 24, 2022, the court sentenced Brown to a year of imprisonment with 35
days’ credit for time served.
                                  ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
        Brown assigns that (1) the evidence adduced at trial was insufficient to convict him of third
degree domestic assault and (2) the sentence imposed by the district court was excessive and
constituted an abuse of discretion.

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                                    STANDARD OF REVIEW
        In reviewing a criminal conviction for a sufficiency of the evidence claim, whether the
evidence is direct, circumstantial, or a combination thereof, the standard is the same: An appellate
court does not resolve conflicts in the evidence, pass on the credibility of witnesses, or reweigh
the evidence, and such matters are for the finder of fact. State v. Figures, 308 Neb. 801, 957
N.W.2d 161 (2021). The relevant question for an appellate court is whether, after viewing the
evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found
the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. Id.
        An appellate court will not disturb a sentence imposed within the statutory limits absent an
abuse of discretion by the trial court. State v. Lierman, 305 Neb. 289, 940 N.W.2d 529 (2020).
                                            ANALYSIS
                                    SUFFICIENCY OF EVIDENCE
        Brown claims that the evidence adduced at trial was insufficient to sustain his conviction
of third degree domestic assault. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-323 (Reissue 2016) provides in relevant part:
                (1) A person commits the offense of domestic assault in the third degree if he or
        she:
                (a) Intentionally and knowingly causes bodily injury to his or her intimate partner;
                (b) Threatens an intimate partner with imminent bodily injury; or
                (c) Threatens an intimate partner in a menacing manner.

         Brown does not dispute that Jennifer was his intimate partner. Brown claims the evidence
was insufficient to prove that he intentionally and knowingly caused Jennifer bodily injury,
threatened her with bodily injury, or threatened her in a menacing manner.
         The evidence at trial included Jennifer’s testimony that Brown repeatedly hit her with a
belt, hit her with his hand on her back and chest, and forcibly had sex with her. She also testified
that Brown duct taped her legs together and told her that “he was going to take [her] downstairs
and tie [her] up and possibly kill [her] and himself before morning.” She further testified that
Brown flicked her in the nose and scratched her nostril. There was also photographic evidence of
a large, dark bruise on Jennifer’s hip, light bruising on her chest and back, redness and swelling
on her wrist, and a scab on her nose. The law enforcement officer who took the second set of
photographs on November 19, 2020, testified that there was very light bruising on Jennifer’s chest
and back which looked like faint, “[s]mall dots of bruising.”
         Brown asks us to reassess the credibility of Jennifer’s testimony, arguing that “the injuries
law enforcement observed on [Jennifer’s] body were not consistent with the way [Jennifer]
described the abuse occurred.” Brief for appellant at 15. However, the credibility and weight of
witness testimony are for the jury to determine, and witness credibility is not to be reassessed on
appellate review. See State v. Wheeler, 308 Neb. 708, 956 N.W.2d 708 (2021).
         The evidence also included numerous admissions made by Brown through text messages,
voicemail, and during jail phone calls. In a text message exchange between Jennifer and Brown
which took place the day after the incident, Jennifer confronted Brown for hitting her with his belt
on her hip. Brown did not deny that he hit her with his belt. He stated that he “didn’t even think

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about what the belt would do” and that he “did not intend any bodily harm” but intended “to scare
[Jennifer] a bit.” Brown also left Jennifer a voicemail that day, stating that he did not regret “last
night’s little ordeal” because she “deserve[d] everything [she] got out of it.” In a phone call
between Brown and his friend, Brown admitted to “spank[ing] [Jennifer’s] ass” and “pick[ing] up
[his] belt and . . . whoop[ing] her a couple times.” In a call between Brown and his mother, Brown
admitted to “spanking” Jennifer.
        Law enforcement testified that, when conducting a search of Brown’s bedroom, they found
a piece of duct tape on top of the dresser, as well as a roll of duct tape in the dresser drawer. There
were also leather belts located in the bedroom, and a red substance of what law enforcement
presumed to be blood on the bed sheet. Brown argues that there was “no forensic evidence to
corroborate [Jennifer’s] story.” Brief for appellant at 15. He points out that law enforcement “did
not submit the belts . . . for forensic testing,” nor was any “testing” completed on the red substance
on the bed sheet. Id. However, even without “forensic evidence,” there was ample other evidence
presented at trial from which a rational fact finder could conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that
Brown caused Jennifer bodily injury, threatened her with bodily injury, or threatened her in a
menacing manner.
        Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, we find the evidence was
sufficient to support the jury’s finding that Brown was guilty of third degree domestic assault.
                                       EXCESSIVE SENTENCE
        Brown also claims the district court imposed an excessive sentence. Brown was convicted
of third degree domestic assault, a Class I misdemeanor, pursuant to § 28-323. A Class I
misdemeanor is punishable by up to 1 year of imprisonment, a $1,000 fine, or both. See Neb. Rev.
Stat. § 28-106(1) (Reissue 2016). The district court sentenced Brown to 365 days’ imprisonment,
which is within the statutory range. As such, we review the district court’s sentencing
determination only for an abuse of discretion.
        When imposing a sentence, a sentencing judge should consider the defendant’s (1) age, (2)
mentality, (3) education and experience, (4) social and cultural background, (5) past criminal
record or record of law-abiding conduct, and (6) motivation for the offense, as well as (7) the
nature of the offense and (8) the violence involved in the commission of the crime. State v.
Lierman, supra. The appropriateness of a sentence is necessarily a subjective judgment and
includes the sentencing judge’s observation of the defendant’s demeanor and attitude and all the
facts and circumstances surrounding the defendant’s life. Id.
        Brown was 50 years old at the time of sentencing. According to the presentence
investigation report (PSR), Brown graduated from high school and completed some college
courses. Brown’s criminal history includes convictions for the following: “DUI” in 1992 (9
months’ probation, $300 fine, 60-day impoundment); “DUI-.15+ -1 Prior Conviction” in 2007
($500 fine, 15 months’ probation, 1 year impound license, 2 days’ house arrest); and “Child
Abuse” in 2019 ($1,000 fine). Brown also had convictions for multiple traffic offenses.
        Brown did not participate in the presentence investigation interview with the probation
officer for this case. However, attached to the current PSR was a prior PSR from 2021 related to
Brown’s conviction for child abuse. That conviction stemmed from an incident in November 2019
when Brown was found convulsing and unresponsive, apparently from drugs he had taken. The

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children were in his care at the time. The prior presentence investigation was ordered in November
2020 and Brown was interviewed in December. According to that PSR, Brown had been
self-employed for over 10 years at Brown Construction, and he had a history of drug use.
       Included in the PSR is the “Defendant’s Statement” for the current case. The handwritten
statement, dated “7/14/22,” reads in part,
       Arguments between parents got out of control . . . . Jenn had been gone up to 2 months at
       a time and in my opinion a [sic] lackadazical [sic] mother. She did not like the fact that I
       wanted her to answer for her unaccountability so she retaliated by presenting this case to
       her lawyer.

Brown further stated that his children’s grades were “suffering and their social skills [were]
diminishing” without him. He urged the court to “take into consideration tha[t] [his] children are
[his] life.”
         The current PSR included a victim impact statement from Jennifer. She stated that although
the November 16, 2020, incident “was not the first time [she] had experienced abuse from [Brown],
it was by far the worst and the first time [she] was brave enough to report the abuse.” She stated
that she and the children had “been experiencing nightmares, severe anxiety, depression and even
full-blown panic attacks.” She further stated that although she “had protection orders in place since
this incident,” Brown was granted supervised visitation in the divorce; he continually tried to make
contact with the children and made multiple threats about taking the children from her. This made
the children and Jennifer feel unsafe. Jennifer urged the court to impose “the maximum punishment
possible” so she and the children could “try to live a normal life.”
         The PSR also included victim impact statements from T.B. and R.B. In his victim impact
statement, T.B. stated that because of what happened, he had trouble with “stress, anxiety, looking
over [his] shoulder, and sleeping.” He further stated that “what happened that night has been going
on for years prior” but they “were too scared of [Brown] to” do anything. T.B. stated that he hoped
Brown would “learn he isn’t the ‘good guy’ he believes he is and that he can’t blame everyone for
his actions.” He thought Brown deserved a sentence of prison or jail time, a fine, and to see a
doctor or therapist for counseling or other treatment. In R.B.’s victim impact statement, R.B. drew
a picture, which she labeled “dad hitting mom.”
         At the sentencing hearing, defense counsel acknowledged that Brown had a prior
conviction for child abuse but noted that Brown “doesn’t have any prior felony convictions” or
“crimes of violence on his record.” Counsel pointed out that Brown previously successfully
completed probation on two separate occasions. Counsel asked that the court “not give[] any
weight to the allegations that underlie the felony charges that [Brown] originally faced” because
“[t]he jury acquitted him of all the more serious allegations.” Counsel further noted that the offense
took place 2 years prior to sentencing and Brown had not “gotten in legal trouble” in that time.
Counsel also noted that Brown had run a construction business for 22 years. Counsel requested
that the court impose “a sentence of time served with a . . . maximum fine of $1000” and, “[i]f the
Court believes additional jail time is necessary, . . . no more than 90 days.”
         The State pointed out that Brown did not participate in the presentence investigation
interview, nor did he “seem to take responsibility for [the] offense.” The State argued that Brown
“consistently downplay[ed] the seriousness” of his actions, and noted that in his written statement,

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Brown “talk[ed] about [Jennifer] and what he fe[lt] that she ha[d] done wrong.” The State urged
the court to consider the victim impact statements and requested that the court impose a “maximum
jail sentence of a year in jail.”
         The district court observed that it had “a front row seat to the jury trial . . . and although
the jury did find [Brown] guilty of the lesser included offense of 3rd Degree Domestic Violence, a
Class I Misdemeanor,” that does not “negate[] the severity of the assault and the injury” and “it’s
just as probable that [the jury] believed that it wasn’t a serious bodily injury.” The court considered
all the information contained in the PSR, including the indication that “during this time period . . .
Brown was involved with drugs,” including methamphetamine. The court placed “great weight
upon the victim impact statements of not only [Jennifer] but also of the children.” The court found
“that imprisonment . . . [was] necessary for the protection of the public” and “a lesser sentence
would depreciate the seriousness of the . . . crime and promote disrespect for the law.” The court
then sentenced Brown as previously set forth.
         In his brief on appeal, Brown claims the district court abused its discretion when it
improperly “gave weight to the allegations underlying the felony charges [Brown] originally
faced.” Brief for appellant at 19. As evidence of this, he points out the court’s comments during
sentencing set forth above. However, the court’s comments merely indicate that it considered the
circumstances surrounding the offense and the severity of the assault, both of which are relevant
to the factors of “the nature of the offense” and “the violence involved in the commission of the
crime.” See State v. Lierman, 305 Neb. 289, 940 N.W.2d 529 (2020).
         Brown also argues that the district court failed to “give adequate weight to . . . [Brown’s]
criminal record” and his “rehabilitative needs.” Brief for appellant at 18. Further, he claims the
court failed to “allocate proper weight to the circumstances of [Brown’s] life.” Id. Specifically, he
contends the court failed to consider that Brown has a construction company which employs others
“and has had a positive impact on the community.” Id. at 19. At the sentencing hearing, the court
expressly stated that, in crafting an appropriate sentence, it had considered the information
contained in the PSR. The PSR contains all the information regarding Brown’s individual
circumstances that he highlights in his brief on appeal.
         The district court appropriately considered the seriousness of Brown’s offense and his
individual circumstances. Because the appropriateness of a sentence is necessarily a subjective
judgment and includes the sentencing judge’s observation of the defendant’s demeanor and
attitude and all the facts and circumstances surrounding the defendant’s life, a sentencing court is
accorded very wide discretion in imposing a sentence. See State v. Rogers, 297 Neb. 265, 899
N.W.2d 626 (2017). Accordingly, we cannot say that the court abused its discretion in sentencing
Brown to serve 365 days’ imprisonment.
                                          CONCLUSION
        For the reasons set forth above, we affirm Brown’s conviction and the sentence imposed
by the district court.
                                                                                    AFFIRMED.

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