United States v. Bradley

48 M.J. 777, 1998 CCA LEXIS 275, 1998 WL 400377
CourtUnited States Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals
DecidedJune 30, 1998
DocketACM 32387 FREV
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 48 M.J. 777 (United States v. Bradley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Air Force Court of Criminal 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. Bradley, 48 M.J. 777, 1998 CCA LEXIS 275, 1998 WL 400377 (afcca 1998).

Opinion

UPON FURTHER REVIEW

MORGAN, Judge:

Appellant was convicted by officer and enlisted court members, contrary to his pleas, of rape and indecent assault and sentenced to a dishonorable discharge, 3 years confinement, total forfeitures and reduction to E-l. In our earlier consideration of this case, we resolved three of appellant’s assigned errors against him, but withheld our decision on appellant’s claims of factual insufficiency and unlawful command influence until we received the result of a post-trial hearing we directed in accordance with United States v. DuBay, 37 C.M.R. 411, 1967 WL 4276 (C.M.A.1967). United States v. Bradley, 47 M.J. 715 (A.F.Ct.Crim.App.1997). Having now reviewed the results of that hearing, we conclude that appellant is entitled to no relief on either remaining issue.

POSSIBLE UNLAWFUL COMMAND INFLUENCE

We review the alleged unlawful command influence de novo. United States v. Wallace, 39 M.J. 284 (C.M.A.1994). To prevail, appellant must

(1) “allege [ ] sufficient facts which, if true, constitute unlawful command influence”; (2) show that the proceedings were unfair; and (3) show that the unlawful command influence was the proximate cause of that unfairness ... The same three-pronged analysis would apply to an allegation of unlawful interference with access to witnesses.

United States v. Newbold, 45 M.J. 109, 111 (1996).

Appellant’s claim of unlawful command influence is laid out in detail in our original opinion. Bradley, 47 M.J. at 719-23. In summary, the issue which necessitated the DuBay hearing was whether the base staff judge advocate (SJA), Lieutenant Colonel (Lt Col) Joseph F. Dent, had improperly attempted to convince a defense witness not to testify or acted in any other manner which amounted to unlawful command influence. This issue was raised primarily by the post-trial affidavit of Master Sergeant (MSgt) Lisa M. Becker. At the time we wrote our original opinion, the government had not submitted an affidavit from Lt Col Dent, and we were left to either accept MSgt Becker’s allegations as true or order a post-trial hearing to resolve the issue.

The results of the DuBay hearing were enlightening and satisfy us that Lt Col Dent did not act improperly. Suffice it to say that, if the government had presented a post-trial affidavit from Lt Col Dent at the [779]*779time we originally considered this case, we might well have approached the case from an entirely different perspective. Rather than suggesting in our opinion that there appeared to be possible command influence, we would have noted the conflicting versions of the conversation which occurred between Lt Col Dent and MSgt Becker and still sent the ease back for a DuBay hearing. See United States v. Ginn, 47 M.J. 236 (1997). However, we would not have suggested in our original opinion that things did not look good for Lt Col Dent. The government’s failure to provide Lt Col Dent’s version of events at the earlier stage of this appeal potentially left the impression that he had acted improperly.

The military judge heard the testimony of both Lt Col Dent and MSgt Becker during the DuBay hearing. While concluding the alleged conversation between the two occurred, the military judge found Lt Col Dent’s version of the events more credible. Specifically, the judge found that MSgt Becker had called the legal office to ask about the location of the trial. Lt Col Dent was alone in the office, answered the phone, and properly identified himself. Since MSgt Becker identified herself as a former first sergeant and a possible witness in the case, Lt Col Dent asked her questions to clarify her status. MSgt Becker began to ask him various questions about appellant’s case and how the decision was made to send it to trial. Eventually he explained much of the government evidence to her including the fact that appellant had made various inconsistent statements and certain admissions regarding sexual contacts with the victim, and that DNA evidence linked appellant to the crimes. Lt Col Dent also told MSgt Becker, in response to her inquiry, that appellant had refused to take a polygraph exam. He also explained to her the court-martial process and how various decisions concerning a case were made. When MSgt Becker mentioned her negative opinion of the victim’s reputation, Lt Col Dent explained to her that such evidence was not normally permissible at trial because of Military Rule of Evidence 412, but that the military judge would be deciding if any such evidence was admissible.1

Because Lt Col Dent was responding to questions from MSgt Becker, whom at the time he considered a former first sergeant with an official interest in the case, nothing he told her was improper. After hearing about the facts of the case, MSgt Becker indicated to Lt Col Dent that she might not want to testify. While he was not sure at first whether she might be a government or defense witness, when he eventually realized from their conversation that she was a potential defense witness, he informed her that she had no choice and had to testify if she was called by either side. Additionally, once he realized she was a potential defense witness, Lt Col Dent told her that if anything he had told her had discouraged or dissuaded her from testifying, that was not his intention and, in fact, he repeated this caution to her. He also directed her to contact appellant’s defense counsel and informed her how to reach them. We agree with the military judge that his actions neither indicated bias towards appellant nor amounted to unlawful command influence.

Although MSgt Becker’s testimony conflicted in part with Lt Col Dent’s, she admitted that although she did think about not testifying after their conversation, she nonetheless decided to testify for the appellant both on the merits and during sentencing. We note from the record that, in addition to testifying about the victim’s demeanor at the hospital, she also provided strong character and truthfulness testimony on behalf of appellant. However, at the post-trial hearing she had apparently forgotten giving this latter testimony and claimed to have withheld it [780]*780because of her conversation with Lt Col Dent. Having carefully reviewed the DuBay hearing record, we agree with the military judge that any significant discrepancies between the two versions of events must be resolved in favor of Lt Col Dent. As the judge pointed out, MSgt Becker had clearly become a zealous advocate for appellant, both during and after the trial, which may well have colored her memory. Her negative outburst immediately following appellant’s conviction in which she was heard to refer to the victim as “that fucking, lying bitch” whom she hoped “rots in hell” is evidence of her bias in the case.

We also agree with the military judge that the article concerning appellant’s conviction in “The Eagle,” a 694th Intelligence Group publication, was in no way improper command influence. It merely informed the local community of the results of appellant’s trial. The reference to the Navy’s Tailhook incident in that article was apparently to emphasize that all military members should be on notice about the possible consequences of sexual misconduct, not to directly liken appellant’s crimes to Tailhook. In any ease, it was written by Lt Col Dent, the special court-martial convening authority’s SJA, who was stationed in Maryland.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. Bradley
51 M.J. 437 (Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 M.J. 777, 1998 CCA LEXIS 275, 1998 WL 400377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-bradley-afcca-1998.