United States v. Cobia

53 M.J. 305, 2000 CAAF LEXIS 896, 2000 WL 1206041
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Armed Forces
DecidedAugust 24, 2000
Docket99-0073/AR
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 53 M.J. 305 (United States v. Cobia) 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. Cobia, 53 M.J. 305, 2000 CAAF LEXIS 896, 2000 WL 1206041 (Ark. 2000).

Opinions

Chief Judge CRAWFORD

announced the judgment of the Court and delivered an opinion in which Senior Judge COX joined.

Contrary to his pleas, appellant was convicted by a military judge of two specifications of rape, two specifications of forceful sodomy with a child, indecent acts with a child, and .adultery, in violation of Articles 120, 125, and 134, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC §§ 920, 925, and 934, respectively. The convening authority approved the sentence of a dishonorable discharge, 20 years’ confinement, total forfeitures, and reduction to the lowest enlisted grade. The Court of Criminal Appeals found the evidence to be insufficient'to convict appellant of either specification of forceful sodomy, but approved both of the lesser included offenses of attempted sodomy. It then reassessed and affirmed the findings and sentence. We granted review of the following issues:

I. WHETHER THE MILITARY JUDGE ABUSED HIS DISCRETION AND COMMITTED PLAIN ERROR WHEN HE REFUSED TO GRANT DEFENSE COUNSEL’S MOTION TO PROHIBIT USE OF APPELLANT’S CIVILIAN CONVICTION FOR AN IDENTICAL OFFENSE,. WHICH FORMED THE BASIS FOR TWO OF THE SIX SPECIFICATIONS AT THE COURT-MARTIAL.
II. WHETHER THE EVIDENCE ADDUCED AT TRIAL IS LEGALLY SUFFICIENT TO SUPPORT FINDINGS OF GUILTY FOR THE OFFENSES OF RAPE AND ATTEMPTED SODOMY.

For the reasons set forth herein, we affirm the decision of the court below.

FACTS

A.

On July 19, 1995, appellant’s 13-year-old stepdaughter, C, told her mother that appel[307]*307lant had engaged in sexual intercourse with her 1 day earlier. This prompted appellant’s wife to notify the military authorities, who, in turn, contacted the civilian child welfare authorities in Fayetteville, North Carolina. Appellant was arrested and charged with sexual offenses and incarcerated pending trial. He pled guilty in March 1996 in the North Carolina state court to five felony counts, including incest, indecent liberties with a child, child abuse, and sex acts with a minor by a parental substitute.

Two (rape and sodomy) of the six specifications in this ease relate to events that occurred on July 18, 1995. Both appellant and the Government agree that appellant was tried at court-martial for the same offenses he pled guilty to in state court.

At trial, C testified that she had known appellant since 1993, when they were living in Germany. C testified that appellant began sexually abusing her by touching her breasts and bottom, but eventually advanced to digital vaginal penetration that was so painful she would tell appellant to stop. Despite C’s request, appellant continued the abuse. According to C’s testimony, within a matter of days, the abuse had progressed from digital penetration to appellant’s attempted, and ultimately successful, penile penetration. Over a period of time, appellant was able to stretch her vagina so that digital and penile penetration could be accomplished more easily. On many of these occasions, appellant would kiss C’s breast and vagina both before and after sex, although there was never any kissing on the lips. C testified that after a time, she started to enjoy the sexual activity and even initiated the contact with appellant on some occasions.

C testified that on July 18, 1995, she approached appellant, who was lying on the couch, and laid across his stomach. Appellant began taking off C’s shorts and underwear and then began undressing himself. He requested that C sit atop him in a straddle position to allow penile penetration. After a few moments, appellant carried C upstairs and engaged in sexual intercourse with her.

C’s testimony was corroborated by C’s mother, who was also appellant’s wife. Mrs. Cobia, who was a Specialist in the Army at that time, testified that a few months before the events of July 18th, she whipped C with a belt for repeatedly missing the school bus. After the whipping, Mrs. Cobia asked C if her “husband [had] been having sex with [C].” Mrs. Cobia testified that she had suspected abuse because C had been behaving in “suspicious” ways. C admitted appellant had been abusing her. When Mrs. Cobia confronted appellant with C’s revelation, he “[broke] down crying and he was telling me — you know — basically why he did it or what happened — what led up to it, as far as me rejecting him and not wanting to have sex with him, and just not wanting to talk to him.” Unsure of what to do, Mrs. Cobia waited for 2 weeks and then reported the incident to Specialist Elam, and later to her First Sergeant. The First Sergeant told her that bringing charges against appellant would delay shipping her vehicle and household goods back to the United States and suggested she wait to pursue this matter until she had returned stateside. Mrs. Cobia testified that for these reasons, she did not act on C’s allegations. On July 10, 1995, she started working at her new assignment in Fayetteville, North Carolina, but had not yet made a report of the abuse to authorities.

Mrs. Cobia also testified as to the events leading up to her report of appellant for sexually abusing C on July 18, 1995. Mrs. Cobia stated that when appellant and C picked her up from work on July 18, the expression on their faces told her something was wrong. After finding C’s bath towel in the bathroom still wet in the middle of the day (one of the odd behaviors that had aroused her suspicions of abuse in the first place), she confronted C, who broke down and started crying. C admitted that appellant had engaged in sexual intercourse with her earlier that morning. When Mrs. Cobia again confronted appellant and ordered him to leave the house, he began blaming the abuse on C, telling his wife “that she went to him — she came to him.” Mrs. Cobia reported the incident to her supervisor and her [308]*308Command Sergeant Major and then took C to the hospital for an examination.

C was examined by Colonel (Dr.) Sharon Cooper, who testified that C told her appellant had started touching her breast and bottom at age 11. Colonel Cooper testified that C admitted appellant had sex with her and that, for several months, sexual intercourse with appellant was very painful. Colonel Cooper also testified that such pain during intercourse is “very characteristic of [prepubertal] children who do not have estrogen and vaginal mucosa.”

A physical examination of C revealed an old tear wound in the hymenal tissue and internal vaginal tissues that resembled those of a very sexually active woman. Colonel Cooper testified that this finding in a 12-to-14-year-old is “extremely abnormal,” and usually means the patient has suffered “significant, repetitive, penetrating injuries.” Dr. Cooper testified as to the question of physical force as follows:

What this child describes is sexual abuse that begins first with touching, and then gradually becomes more and more detailed and finally culminates in full sexual intercourse which, after a while, becomes initi-' ated by the child victim, is a — is right out of a textbook. That’s very classic, for a child who has not been dramatically traumatized by what has happened to them, but who has been groomed. The term that the literature used is — uses is groomed. Children, in this age group — as a matter of fact, in my experience, I have never heard a child say to me, in an intrafamilial case, that, “He forced me to do this.” It’s more common to see that term “forcing” used when the perpetrator is outside of the family, as compared to in the family.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 M.J. 305, 2000 CAAF LEXIS 896, 2000 WL 1206041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-cobia-armfor-2000.