United States v. Albright

9 C.M.A. 628, 9 USCMA 628, 26 C.M.R. 408, 1958 CMA LEXIS 444, 1958 WL 3393
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedSeptember 26, 1958
DocketNo. 10,495
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 9 C.M.A. 628 (United States v. Albright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Military Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Albright, 9 C.M.A. 628, 9 USCMA 628, 26 C.M.R. 408, 1958 CMA LEXIS 444, 1958 WL 3393 (cma 1958).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

Homer Ferguson, Judge:

The accused was charged and convicted by a court-martial for rape and sodomy, in violation of Article 120, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 920, and Article 125, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 925, respectively. He was sentenced to dishonorable discharge, total forfeitures, and confinement for the term of his natural life.

The convening authority affirmed the sentence. The board of review modified the term of confinement to twenty-five years but otherwise approved the remainder of the sentence.

The defense requested review of six issues upon an open grant of which the first is one of factual sufficiency.

The accused in the company of three soldiers terminated their evening’s liberty on July 8, 1956, with forced carnal copulation and sodomy on a young farm girl.

The victim testified as follows: During the evening of July 8, 1956, she was cycling to her home in the village of Alletsried from Roetz, Germany. She was traveling alone and upon coming to an incline in the road too steep for pedaling, got off her bicycle prior to passing four soldiers. After passing the soldiers, they called to her but she refrained from replying. The soldiers ran after her, took the bicycle from her and forcibly carried her into an adjoining oat field in spite of her protests and screams. She was violated sexually by each of the four soldiers. Upon the completion of these acts they returned with the victim to the road. After walking a short distance she was again taken into the woods, thrown to the ground and violated again by two of the soldiers simultaneously, one having sexual intercourse and the other committing an act of anal sodomy upon her. The two remaining soldiers did not participate in this act. They again led the victim from the woods and walked with her a distance. She managed to loosen a restricting wristhold and to flag a motorcyclist coming from the direction of Roetz, whereupon the soldiers released her and she was allowed to accompany the motorcyclist to the summit of the hill. She proceeded alone from there to her home.

The defense admitted the fact of rape and sodomy but denied the accused’s complicity in it. The accused entered a plea of not guilty to the crime. He chose to testify and related his activities of the evening in question. His testimony revealed he left the border camp around 6:30 in the evening in the company of Cates, Costa, and Clinton. They stopped at a shop for gin and visited a place called “The House of Five Sisters.” While walking back to camp, a girl approached them on a bicycle. The accused alleged Costa hailed the girl and engaged her in conversation. The accused related then that he discovered the loss of his duffel bag keys and told the group he was going back toward the town of Roetz to look for them. He walked toward the bridge located on the road. There, he began looking for his keys at the same point where he thought they had dropped from his pocket. He found his keys and double-timed back to catch [631]*631up with his companions. They were waiting at the border camp gate. He affirmatively stated he did not participate in the rape or sodomy.

The prosecution relied for conviction upon the testimony of the prosecution’s witness, Cates, one of the co-conspirators who had been convicted in an earlier trial. Cates testified that not only had the accused been a participant but an instigator, that he had been the one who had captured the victim. He stated it was the accused who had suggested the act be repeated, and that he, Cates, had had intercourse with the girl a second time while the accused had performed the act of sodomy upon her.

The prosecution also called a Frau Dambrowsky as a witness, who testified that she was returning to her home after attending the movies and had passed the girl on her bicycle and shortly thereafter had heard a scream. She also testified to the fact that she had passed no one else on the road. The accused testified he passed no one on the road when he sought his lost keys. Karl Hahn, a German barber for Company D, testified that the accused during the investigation had asked him to negotiate a money settlement with the victim’s parents. He stated that the accused at that time had professed his innocence.

The defense relies upon appeal on the doubtful identification of the accused by the victim. She testified on the stand that the accused was one of the four attackers. However, the defense pointed out that the victim, from a police line-up of eight, had identified three who had victimized her but had failed to pick the accused from the lineup. Additionally, it was brought out that it was only after a German police officer had indicated to her that the accused was one of them did she become certain of his identity. While testifying on the stand, the victim stated she lost consciousness during the two periods of her attack, but positively identified the accused as one of the men.

The defense urges the lack of credibility of the main prosecution’s witness, Cates, a convicted rapist, and that therefore his testimony lacked credence as a matter of law to support the accused’s conviction. Another plea was that the witness, Cates, had on July 10, 1956, two days after the incident, signed a statement relieving the accused of any responsibility for the crimes. However, he recanted the truthfulness of the prior statement while on the stand. He stated' it had been agreed among the four that if anyone was caught he would not involve the others.

We do not agree with the defense that the prosecution’s evidence was insufficient to sustain the findings of guilt as a matter of law. The members heard the testimony of the witnesses, observed the personal demeanor of each witness, and were in a superior position to judge the credibility of their testimony and to accept or reject it according to their judgment as to its truthfulness. In the absence of any evidence that the accused’s conviction rests upon a showing of insufficiency as a matter of law, the findings of the court will remain undisturbed. We have long adhered to the judicial principle of appellate review that it is not our proper function to reweigh the credibility of a witness and to determine independently the credence to be afforded the testimony of each witness. United States v Taylor, 5 USCMA 775, 19 CMR 71. It is apparent the court members chose to believe the witness, Cates, when he implicated the accused-in the acts. It was additionally argued that some pressure was exercised against Cates in the form of a promise of a lighter sentence in return for his testimony against the accused. We have no doubt such a promise would influence a prospective witness to speak out, but that is not to say the testimony of the witness would completely lack truthfulness as a matter of law. United States v Taylor, supra. This information was placed before the court and was part of the evidence.to be taken into considera-i tion by it in judging his credibility. The court chose to believe the account of the evening given by the prosecution’s witnesses and it therefore found [632]*632adversely to the accused. We will not disturb that finding.

The following two assigned errors allege that the interpreter utilized at the trial was not sworn prior to his translation of the testimony of the witness, and that the board of review.erred in rejecting the accused’s affidavits pertaining to the accuracy of the record of trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 C.M.A. 628, 9 USCMA 628, 26 C.M.R. 408, 1958 CMA LEXIS 444, 1958 WL 3393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-albright-cma-1958.