United States v. Baier

60 M.J. 382, 2005 CAAF LEXIS 1, 2005 WL 17765
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Armed Forces
DecidedJanuary 3, 2005
Docket04-0340/MC
StatusPublished
Cited by204 cases

This text of 60 M.J. 382 (United States v. Baier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Baier, 60 M.J. 382, 2005 CAAF LEXIS 1, 2005 WL 17765 (Ark. 2005).

Opinion

Chief Judge GIERKE

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case concerns the legal standard that the Courts of Criminal Appeals use when carrying out their responsibility under Article 66(e) of the Uniform Code of Military Justice 1 (UCMJ), 10 U.S.C. § 866(c), to ensure that a sentence is appropriate. The lower court’s opinion quotes an incorrect standard for determining sentence appropri *383 ateness. In using that language, however, the lower court cited a 19-year-old summary disposition of this Court that was marred by a mistaken and misleading citation. That mistake is a weed in the garden of our jurisprudence. We will now pull it up by the roots. More importantly, we will also discuss the appropriate standard of review that the Courts of Criminal Appeals must apply in fulfilling their statutory obligation to ensure sentence appropriateness.

Background

In a trial before a military judge alone, Appellant pleaded guilty to and was found guilty of conspiracy to wrongfully distribute LSD, ecstasy, and cocaine; wrongful use of LSD; wrongful distribution of LSD, ecstasy, and cocaine; and breaking restriction in violation of Articles 81, 112a, and 134 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. 2 The military judge sentenced Appellant to confinement for 30 months, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, reduction to pay grade E-l, and a dishonorable discharge. The convening authority approved the sentence as adjudged and, in accordance with the pretrial agreement, suspended confinement in excess of 24 months for 12 months from the date of trial.

When his ease was before the Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals, Appellant raised an assignment of error asserting that a dishonorable discharge was inappropriately severe for his offenses. Appellant urged the lower court to affirm a bad-eon-duct discharge in its place. In an unpublished per curiam opinion, the lower court rejected Appellant’s request and affirmed the sentence as adjudged. We granted Appellant’s petition to determine whether the lower court used the correct legal standard when determining the appropriateness of Appellant’s sentence. 3

Discussion

In its opinion affirming Appellant’s sentence, the lower court quoted Article 66(c) and noted that its task was to determine “whether the accused received the punishment he deserved.” Citing our opinion in United States v. Healy 4 the lower court properly distinguished its sentence appropriateness role from the convening authority’s power to grant clemency. The lower court then cited our decision in United States v. Lanford 5 for the proposition that it had the authority to “disapprove any portion of a sentence that it deems inappropriately severe.”

The issue in this case arises from the next passage in the lower court’s opinion:

An appropriate sentence results from an “individualized consideration of the particular accused on the basis of the nature and seriousness of the offense and the character of the offender.” United States v. Rojas, 15 M.J. 902, 919 (N.M.C.M.R.1983) (citing United States v. Snelling, 14 M.J. 267 (C.M.A.1982)), aff'd, 20 M.J. 330 (C.M.A.1985). When reviewing a sentence it is important to consider the sense of justice of the community where the crime was committed which should not be disturbed unless “the harshness of the sentence is so disproportionate to the crime as to cry out for equalization.” Rojas, 15 M.J. at 919.

After discussing the facts of Appellant’s case, the lower court concluded its sentence appropriateness analysis with another citation to Rojas: “The appellant received the individual consideration required based on the seriousness of his offenses and his own character, which is all the law requires. Rojas, 15 M.J. at 919. As such, we decline to grant relief.”

Based on that language, it is impossible for us to determine whether the lower court conducted an independent assessment of the appropriateness of Appellant’s sentence or merely deferred to the “individual consideration” Appellant had previously received from the military judge and the convening authority. Nor can we determine whether the lower court independently assessed the sentence’s appropriateness for this particular *384 offender or merely determined that the sentence was not “so disproportionate to the crime as to cry out for equalization.”

The lower court’s reliance on its 1983 Rojas decision leads to this confusion. In 1981, Lance Corporal Armando Rojas was sentenced to death for the premeditated murder of another Marine. 6 The Navy-Marine Corps Court affirmed the findings and death sentence in February 1983. 7 Eight months later, this Court issued its opinion in United States v. Matthews, 8 which invalidated the death penalty system under which Rojas had been tried and condemned. In January 1984, we set aside the Navy-Marine Corps Court’s Rojas decision and remanded the case “for a de novo review by a new panel containing no members of the panel which originally reviewed the case.” 9 This disposition was designed not only to allow the lower court to apply Matthews to the ease, but also to moot an issue concerning alleged judicial impropriety when the Navy-Marine Corps Court originally considered the Rojas case. 10 The lower court’s opinion in this case failed to note that Rojas decision.

In August 1984, consistent with our decision in Rojas, a new three-judge panel of the Navy-Marine Corps Court set aside Rojas’s death sentence and instead affirmed a sentence including confinement for life. 11 In June 1985, we issued an order that simply affirmed “the decision of the United States Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review.” 12 Unfortunately, the published version of this order contained something that the original order did not: a citation to “15 M.J. 902.” 13 That is the citation for the Navy-Marine Corps Court’s original February 1983 decision that we set aside in January 1984. This citation was obviously incorrect because we were affirming the Navy-Marine Corps Court’s August 23, 1984 opinion issued by the new panel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 M.J. 382, 2005 CAAF LEXIS 1, 2005 WL 17765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-baier-armfor-2005.