United States v. Credit

2 M.J. 631, 1976 CMR LEXIS 803
CourtU S Air Force Court of Military Review
DecidedJuly 1, 1976
DocketACM 21959
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 2 M.J. 631 (United States v. Credit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U S Air Force Court of Military Review primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Credit, 2 M.J. 631, 1976 CMR LEXIS 803 (usafctmilrev 1976).

Opinion

DECISION

ROBERTS, Senior Judge:

Tried by a general court-martial which included members, the accused stands convicted, contrary to his pleas of not guilty, of the crime of rape, in violation of Article 120, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. § 920. The charges were referred to the court-martial as a noncapital ease, and the maximum authorized punishment included confinement at hard labor for life. The court-martial imposed, and the convening authority approved, a sentence of a dishonorable discharge, confinement at [635]*635hard labor for three years, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, and reduction to the grade of airman basic.

Appellate defense counsel have asserted several errors dealing in the main with military due process, many of which are in amplification of issues ably litigated at trial. For a better understanding of the issues, and the context in which they arose, we will first briefly summarize the evidence contained in the record of trial.

At about a half an hour before midnight, the victim, a woman in the United States Air Force, was walking along a dimly lit sidewalk toward her barracks at Kadena Air Base, Okinawa, Japan. The evidence in the record overwhelmingly establishes, and the accused admits, that as she was doing so, the accused rushed upon her from behind, threw a coat over her head, and violently dragged her to a wooded area some distance away. After she had fallen to the ground while struggling to get away, he stripped the clothing from her pudenda. Within a few minutes a noncommissioned officer who was a stranger to both of them walked nearby, observed what he thought to be a fight, and turned their way to render assistance. The accused jumped up and ran away. The victim claimed then and persisted in her testimony at trial that she had been raped. She was unable to see what had happened, because the accused kept her head covered with his coat throughout the assault. But she was absolutely certain that the accused had forced his penis into her vagina and had sexual intercourse with her against her will.

In a pretrial oral statement, the voluntariness of which is not contested, the accused admitted that he had attacked and partially stripped the victim as she claimed. He denied, however, that he had raped her or that he had even so much as exposed himself during the encounter. In explanation of his conduct, the accused said he had mistaken the victim for another girl who made a vicious racial slur against him earlier in the evening. He felt that appropriate vengeance for the remark would be for him to make her “run naked in the woods” as she had told him to do. After he realized he had the wrong girl, he decided to take off her- clothing, nonetheless, in order to delay her in reporting the incident. He admitted that during the struggle he “may have” inserted his finger into her vagina.

The question of the victim’s prior chastity was dwelled upon at length during her testimony. She admitted that she had frequently had sexual intercourse with her fiance. She acknowledged that her fiance was already married, although separated from his wife. She had become pregnant and had undergone a therapeutic abortion several months before she was assaulted by the accused. She said, however, that she had not had sexual relations with her fiance in the prior two weeks as their conflicting duty shifts prevented it, and because her menstrual period had started approximately a week before the attack.

The sexual delicts of the victim were only weakly exploited by the defense to insinuate that she might have consented to sexual intercourse. Under the brutal and fearful circumstances of the offense any suggestion of consent is untenable, and we dismiss it out of hand, as apparently did the court below. What the defense sought to do with the evidence was to raise a reasonable doubt that immotile spermatozoa found in the victim’s vagina had been deposited there by her fiance, rather than by the accused, and that therefore the victim was mistaken or untruthful in her assertion she had been raped. Before discussing the scientific evidence pertaining to the spermatozoa found, we note in passing the obvious incongruity in the position that the victim was sexually promiscuous but still was unable to know whether her vagina had been violated by the accused’s finger or by his penis.

The real and circumstantial evidence in the record of trial effectively resolves this factual issue adversely to the accused and proves beyond question that the victim’s assertion that she had been raped is truthful and correct. Within an hour and a half after the attack, she was seen by a well qualified gynecologist who examined her [636]*636thoroughly and took specimens from her vagina and the opening of her cervix for several basic clinical tests. His examination did not reveal any injuries, but he observed that she was agitated, angry, and extremely cooperative in the examination. He could observe that she had recently ended a menstrual period, as there was still a bloody tinge to her vaginal fluids. While he was conducting his examination he was informed that one of the laboratory technicians had found immotile spermatozoa in a specimen the gynecologist had taken from her vagina. The circumstances and admissibility of this particular test will be treated at greater length below, but it was a significant factor in the examining gynecologist’s conclusion that the victim had recently had sexual intercourse. He would not commit himself as to the exact time this occurred, but he did say the results of his examination would be consistent with intercourse within the previous two to forty-eight hours. He opined that spermatozoa would not be found in the vagina for a much greater period and that in any event any spermatozoa deposited in the victim’s vagina earlier would have been washed away by her recent menstrual period.

One of the specimens of the vaginal fluids taken from the victim was delivered immediately to the laboratory of the hospital where she was being examined. This was the “wet mount” test for the determination of the motility of any spermatozoa that might be found. The remaining specimens were prepared in different manners for four other complementary tests. The following morning the pathologist in charge of the laboratory personally conducted a Pap smear test and also participated in the calculations of the spectrometer measurements of an acid phosphatase test. In the Pap smear test he observed the presence of spermatozoa. As that test involves the mounting of the specimen on a glass slide and fixing it with an alcohol based stain, the sperm he saw were necessarily immotile. The level of acid phosphatase found in the vaginal specimen established the presence of seminal fluid, as acid phosphatase is produced by the male prostate gland. The one specimen which had been delivered directly to the laboratory the night before was not seen by the pathologist. This was the “wet mount” test in which the vaginal specimen was prepared in a saline solution, and according to laboratory protocol, was to be microscopically observed as soon as possible in order to determine whether any spermatozoa found was motile. This test was done during the night by the technician then on duty, Specialist Fourth Class Garcia. Garcia’s determination that immotile sperm were present was recorded on a laboratory slip, time stamped “0116”, and was available to the pathologist before the other tests were done.

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2 M.J. 631, 1976 CMR LEXIS 803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-credit-usafctmilrev-1976.