United States v. Brown

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Armed Forces
DecidedMay 12, 2026
Docket25-0181/AR
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Brown (United States v. Brown) 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. Brown, (Ark. 2026).

Opinion

This opinion is subject to revision before publication.

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ARMED FORCES _______________

UNITED STATES Appellee

v.

Donte M. BROWN, Private First Class United States Army, Appellant

No. 25-0181 Crim. App. No. 20230168

Argued February 10, 2026—Decided May 12, 2026

Military Judge: Steven C. Henricks

For Appellant: Lieutenant Colonel Robert D. Luyties (argued); Colonel Frank E. Kostik Jr. and Major Pe- ter Ellis (on brief).

For Appellee: Captain Matthew C. Whear (argued); Colonel Richard E. Gorini, Lieutenant Colonel Marc B. Sawyer, and Major Stephen L. Harmel (on brief).

Judge MAGGS delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Judge SPARKS, Judge HARDY, and Judge JOHNSON joined. Chief Judge OHLSON filed a sep- arate opinion concurring in the judgment. _______________ United States v. Brown, No. 25-0181/AR Opinion of the Court

Judge MAGGS delivered the opinion of the Court. This appeal requires the Court to address the admissi- bility of prior consistent statements under Military Rule of Evidence (M.R.E.) 801(d)(1)(B)(i) [hereinafter subpara- graph (B)(i)] and M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B)(ii) [hereinafter sub- paragraph (B)(ii)], a subject which the Court also recently addressed in United States v. Ayala, 81 M.J. 25 (C.A.A.F. 2021), United States v. Finch, 79 M.J. 389 (C.A.A.F. 2020), and United States v. Frost, 79 M.J. 104 (C.A.A.F. 2019). The granted issues are: I. Whether the military judge abused his discre- tion when he incorrectly admitted two supposed prior consistent statements by misstating the law, applying both [subparagraphs of M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B)] in violation of Ayala/Finch, and fail- ing to identify a statement that predated the clear and persistent motive to fabricate pursued by Ap- pellant. II. Whether the Army Court erred when it disre- garded this Court’s plain language in Ayala/Finch and failed to explain how the prior consistent statements were relevant to rehabilitate the wit- ness under [subparagraph (B)(ii)] beyond mere repetition. III. Whether this Court should adopt the Pierre standard from federal courts for prior consistent statements defining “relevant to rehabilitate.” 1 For reasons that we explain below, we answer all three questions in the negative. We hold that the military judge did not abuse his discretion in admitting the prior con- sistent statements under the exception in subparagraph (B)(ii). We do not decide whether the statements were ad- missible under subparagraph (B)(i). We affirm the judg- ment of the United States Army Court of Criminal Appeals (ACCA). United States v. Brown, No. ARMY 20230168, 2025 CCA LEXIS 213, 2025 WL 1368171 (A. Ct. Crim. App. May 9, 2025) (unpublished).

1 The question refers to United States v. Pierre, 781 F.2d 329

(2d Cir. 1986).

2 United States v. Brown, No. 25-0181/AR Opinion of the Court

I. Background Appellant was charged with two specifications of do- mestic violence in violation of Article 128b, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), 10 U.S.C. § 928b (2018). Spec- ification 1 alleged that Appellant committed a violent of- fense against his wife, K.B., “by stabbing her in the back and shoulder with a knife.” Specification 2 alleged that he committed a violent offense against K.B. by “grabbing her neck with his hands.” These specifications alleged that both incidents occurred on or about July 2, 2022. In re- sponse to these allegations, the defense theory was that Appellant had acted in self-defense after K.B. pointed a pis- tol at him during an argument. In their opening statements at the court-martial, coun- sel for both sides informed the members that a key issue in the case would be whether K.B. had in fact pointed a pistol at Appellant before he stabbed her. Trial counsel acknowl- edged that K.B. had access to a pistol at the time of the argument but told the members that he expected K.B. to testify that “[K.B.]’s pistol was sitting unloaded on her bed when the accused stabbed her in the back” and that “[K.B.]’s pistol was sitting unloaded on her bed when the accused stabbed her the second time in the shoulder.” Defense counsel responded in his opening statement by saying: “[B]ased on what I expect [K.B.] to tell you, based on what I just heard from the government’s opening state- ment, the defense stands ready to dispute her version of events because [Appellant] did, in fact, act in self-defense.” He suggested that K.B. might have a motive to deny that she pointed a pistol at Appellant because she was worried about losing custody of her children, explaining: “[A]s long as [K.B.] is the victim in this case, she gets to see her chil- dren. As long as [Appellant] is the aggressor, he doesn’t get to see their children.” Defense counsel then told the members that they would hear that K.B. made statements to an emergency medical technician (EMT), to a paramedic, to medical staff at the Irwin Army Community Hospital (IACH), and to an agent

3 United States v. Brown, No. 25-0181/AR Opinion of the Court

of the Army Criminal Investigation Division (CID). He said: Now, after this incident occurred, [K.B.] pro- vided a number of statements to people who needed to know details about what happened in the house. She spoke to an EMT and a paramedic who arrived pretty soon after the incident to pro- vide emergency medical care. She spoke to medi- cal professionals at IACH who gave her initial treatment as well. CID conducted a formal inter- view with [K.B.] after she had been released from the hospital a couple of days later, and you’re go- ing to hear about all of those statements. Defense counsel finally told the members that they should consider several questions: Is the story that [K.B.] tells you in this courtroom consistent with all of the other stories that she just told the EMT, the paramedic, medical profes- sionals at IACH, CID? Or has the story changed? And if it did change, did it change in small ways, as the government would like you to believe, or has it changed in ways that are significant? And if it did change, why? The Government called K.B. as a witness. On direct ex- amination, K.B. testified that she and Appellant were ar- guing in their bedroom. K.B. testified that she retrieved her pistol from the top drawer of her dresser, dropped the magazine onto the bed, cleared a round from the chamber and dropped it onto the bed, and then placed the unloaded pistol onto the bed. K.B. testified that as she was facing her bed, she “happened to look back and that’s when [Appel- lant] stabbed” her in the back. K.B. testified that Appellant then stabbed her again, this time in her left shoulder. K.B. testified that her pistol was unloaded on the bed when the stabbings occurred. On cross-examination, K.B. agreed that her children “are the most important thing in this world” to her and that she “would do anything for them.” K.B. agreed that her tes- timony was that she did not point the pistol at Appellant

4 United States v. Brown, No. 25-0181/AR Opinion of the Court

intentionally or “flag[]” Appellant. 2 Defense counsel asked K.B. whether the EMT and a paramedic who attended her in an ambulance “would be wrong” if they thought K.B. pointed her pistol at Appellant’s face. K.B. replied in the affirmative. K.B. also testified that she filed for divorce about a month after the incident and that she opposed Ap- pellant’s petition for custody of their children. K.B. denied pointing her pistol at Appellant’s face. The Government called a neighbor who aided K.B. after the stabbings. Trial counsel asked the neighbor what hap- pened. The neighbor testified that K.B.’s children were screaming at her front door, so she went next door to check on K.B.

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