Scott v. United States

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedDecember 18, 2018
DocketCivil Action No. 2017-2301
StatusPublished

This text of Scott v. United States (Scott v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. United States, (D.D.C. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

DARYL SCOTT,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 1:17-cv-02301 (TNM)

UNITED STATES,

Defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The plaintiff in this case seeks to overturn his court-martial conviction of rape based on

misfeasance by the DNA analyst in unrelated cases.

Daryl Scott was a hospital corpsman at the U.S. Naval Hospital in Okinawa, Japan. One

night after work in 2001, he met up with a few of his friends to go out drinking. He returned to

the naval barracks later that evening with three servicemembers, including a woman who was so

intoxicated that she could not walk unassisted. The group helped her to her room before

disbanding. Mr. Scott remained behind and saw the woman lay down on her bed. He noticed

that she was incoherent and passing in and out of consciousness. So he got in the bed and began

kissing her.

Mr. Scott claims that he does not remember what happened next. When the woman woke

up in the morning, she was covered in blood. She was wearing a pair of white boxers that were

not hers. The tampon she had been using the night before was lying on the floor. The sheets on

her bed were missing. Feeling scared and confused, she reported the incident to her chain of

command. An investigation by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (“NCIS”) found a stain

on the woman’s mattress that contained a mixture of her and Mr. Scott’s DNA. Based on these facts, Mr. Scott pled guilty to raping the woman. He told a military judge

he had no reason to believe that the victim and witnesses were mistaken about his actions, and

that he was convinced of his guilt. After inquiring into its factual basis, the military judge

accepted Mr. Scott’s plea. He was discharged from the Navy and sentenced to seven years’

incarceration. Under a pretrial agreement, the confinement was reduced to four years. He served

this sentence and currently lives in Pine Ridge, South Dakota.

Mr. Scott now collaterally attacks his court-martial conviction. He contends that an

NCIS analyst fabricated the DNA evidence brought against him. He also believes that the

military courts violated the U.S. Constitution and the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”) by

refusing to adequately re-consider his case.

The Court disagrees. It finds that Mr. Scott has not adduced facts sufficient to support his

claim of falsified evidence. Even if he could present such facts, his guilty plea was based on

much more than just the results of DNA testing. His allegations were fully and fairly considered

by the military tribunals. And the statutory scheme created by Congress precludes an APA

review of Mr. Scott’s case. The Court will thus grant the Government summary judgment on

Mr. Scott’s constitutional claims and will dismiss his APA claims.

I.

Before accepting a guilty plea, “a military judge must conduct a thorough inquiry to

insure the accused understands the meaning and effect of the plea, that he enters it voluntarily,

and that he in fact is guilty of the offense.” United States v. Roane, 43 M.J. 93, 98 (C.A.A.F.

1995) (discussing Art. 45(a), Uniform Code of Military Justice). The purpose of this

“providence inquiry” is to establish a sufficient basis in law and fact for accepting an accused

party’s guilt. See United States v. O’Connor, 58 M.J. 450, 453 (C.A.A.F. 2003). “In this

2 respect, military practice differs from that in other federal courts that permit the accused to plead

guilty even though the defendant personally professes innocence—a so-called ‘Alford plea.’”

Roane, 43 M.J. at 98 (citing North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25 (1970)).

Consistent with this requirement, a military judge conducted an extensive providence

inquiry before accepting Mr. Scott’s guilty plea. A.R. 9-25. During the inquiry, Mr. Scott

conveyed that he had read, understood, and agreed with a stipulation of facts concerning his

conduct. A.R. 13. The stipulation stated that:

• “At no time that evening did [the woman] give [Mr. Scott] any indication that she was

interested in [him] sexually or romantically;”

• The woman “was highly intoxicated as a result of drinking alcoholic beverages that

evening and could not walk by herself to her barracks room;”

• Mr. Scott “knew that [the woman] was intoxicated . . . because [he] had seen her

consume many beers throughout the late evening and early morning;”

• Mr. Scott saw that the woman “was not coherent and passed in and out of

consciousness;”

• Mr. Scott “remember[s] lying side by side with her and kissing her;” and

• The next morning, Mr. Scott “returned to [the woman’s] room and realized that [he]

had committed a sexual act with someone who was unable to give her consent

because she was too intoxicated. [He] was scared that someone might see [him]

leaving the room, so [he] locked [her] door from the inside and left through her

window.” A.R. 34-35.

3 The military judge also asked Mr. Scott to describe, in his own words, what happened

that night. A.R. 21. He did so. He also confirmed his belief that he “completed this act of

sexual intercourse and without the consent of” the woman. A.R. 23.

Though Mr. Scott claimed not to remember the details of the assault, he believed the

NCIS investigation was “accurate and reliable.” A.R. 20. He said he had no reason to doubt the

accounts of the victim and witnesses. A.R. 20-21. And he confirmed that “despite the fact that

[he] cannot remember what happened . . . [he is] still guilty of raping” the woman. A.R. 21.

Contrary to the normal procedure in federal court guilty pleas, the judge also heard

testimony from the victim. She described waking up covered in blood, wearing boxer shorts that

did not belong to her, and seeing her tampon lying on the floor. A.R. 29. Her bed sheets were

missing, and her curtain was pulled aside. This was something she never did “because [she]

live[d] on the first deck.” Id. After considering her testimony, the NCIS investigative report,

and Mr. Scott’s admissions, the military judge found him guilty of rape. A.R. 36.

Roughly two years later, Mr. Scott filed the first of several appeals contesting his

conviction. A.R. 38-46. He argued that he had “pled guilty to a rape that was alleged by nobody

and that may have never occurred,” as neither he nor the woman “remember[ed] whether he had

intercourse with her.” A.R. 39. He attacked the DNA evidence against him, suggesting that the

mixture of his semen and her blood found by NCIS “could have just have [sic] easily occurred

outside the vagina.” A.R. 42. Thus, he insisted, the military judge’s providence inquiry was

deficient, as he “failed in his duty to ask the difficult questions, the ones that would have caused

him to reject the [guilty] plea.” A.R. 44.

The Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals (“Navy Appeals Court”) rejected

these arguments. It found that he “indicated an understanding of the elements of the offense . . .

4 and stated that the elements correctly described the offense he committed.” A.R. 60. Mr. Scott

also “clearly stated, in his own words, the circumstances surrounding the rape.” Id. The Navy

Appeals Court concluded that “[a]lthough the appellant was unable to remember having engaged

in intercourse with the victim, his inability to remember does not invalidate the plea where the

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