United States v. Curry

31 M.J. 359, 1990 CMA LEXIS 1087, 1990 WL 159758
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedSeptember 28, 1990
DocketNo. 63,522; CM 8800581
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 31 M.J. 359 (United States v. Curry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Military 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. Curry, 31 M.J. 359, 1990 CMA LEXIS 1087, 1990 WL 159758 (cma 1990).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

COX, Judge:

Appellant was tried at Kaiserslautern, Federal Republic of Germany, by a general court-martial comprised of officer members. Contrary to his pleas, he was convicted of 2 specifications of premeditated murder, in violation of Article 118, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 918. He was sentenced to a dishonorable discharge, confinement for life, total forfeitures, and reduction to E-1. The convening [361]*361authority approved the sentence; the Court of Military Review affirmed in a short-form opinion.

We granted review of these issues:

I
WHETHER THE MILITARY JUDGE IMPROPERLY DENIED A DEFENSE MOTION TO SEVER ADDITIONAL CHARGE I AND ITS SPECIFICATION (PREMEDITATED MURDER) FROM APPELLANT’S TRIAL.
II
WHETHER THE EVIDENCE IS SUFFICIENT AS A MATTER OF LAW TO SUPPORT THE FINDINGS OF PREMEDITATION TO CHARGE I AND ITS SPECIFICATION (PREMEDITATED MURDER).
Ill
WHETHER THE EVIDENCE IS SUFFICIENT AS A MATTER OF LAW TO SUPPORT THE FINDINGS OF GUILTY TO ADDITIONAL CHARGE I AND ITS SPECIFICATION.
IV
WHETHER THE MILITARY JUDGE’S FAILURE TO GRANT APPELLANT’S MOTION FOR MISTRIAL, FOR CUMULATIVE ERRORS, DEPRIVED HIM OF A FAIR AND IMPARTIAL PROCEEDING.
V
WHETHER APPELLANT WAS DENIED THE EFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL WHEN HIS ATTORNEY FAILED TO PRESENT ANY POST-TRIAL MATTERS ON CLEMENCY DESPITE APPELLANT’S SIXTEEN YEARS OF VALUABLE MILITARY SERVICE.

Sufficiency of Evidence

A

The charges in this case involve the tragic and senseless deaths of appellant’s two infant sons, Erik Lee Curry (14 weeks) and Kirklan Lee Curry (lOVa months). Before proceeding to the severance question, it is first necessary to review the legal sufficiency of the evidence regarding each specification (granted issues II and III). The story unfolded in the following manner:

Erik Lee Curry

On May 12, 1987, Dr. (Captain) Kirin Marie Russell was on duty as Chief of Emergency Medical Services, Landstuhl Hospital. According to the doctor’s testimony:

I was sitting at the nurse’s station and it was fairly quiet, and I was alone. And I saw a man walk in and he had not stopped at the receptionist desk, so I wondered what he wanted, and I just looked up at him. And he kept approaching me but didn’t say anything. And as I was watching him, I noticed that he was carrying something, looked like a blanket. And I thought, well maybe there’s something in this blanket. So I stood up, and as I did, I saw that there was a blue infant in the blanket, and the man just handed this baby across the counter to me. And I then took the baby and ran with it into the trauma room, called for a nurse, called for pediatrics— you know, said, someone please call pediatrics. And he followed us in there and stood there as we were attempting to resuscitate the infant. And I asked him to please leave and he didn’t respond. Well, I said, if you’re not going to leave, just sit on the floor. And then, sometime later, he left the room.

A team of physicians was quickly assembled; massive medical efforts were commenced; and a weak heart beat was restored. However, notwithstanding heroic measures throughout, the baby died 2 days later. In retrospect, the doctors assumed the baby was brain dead when he was brought in.

[362]*362The man who brought in the baby was appellant; the baby was his 14-week-old son, Erik Lee Curry. Due to the crisis circumstances, Dr. Russell had little opportunity to communicate with appellant. Asked if she “notice[d] the demeanor of the person who brought in the child?,” she responded:

Yeah. He just walked in very slowly. There didn’t appear to be anything urgent that was going on. He was very quiet, staring, responded very little to my questioning, and that’s pretty much describing his demeanor.

In her experience in emergency medicine, she had “never seen anyone act this way.”

Dr. (Captain) Paul John Evans, Staff Pediatrician, Landstuhl Hospital, was one of the first of the doctors responding to thé emergency. He discovered “a lot of blood in the back of the eye.” X-rays and CAT scans taken the next day “showed some old healing rib fractures” and “a lot of blood accumulated between the skull and the brain.”

When asked what the symptoms indicated, Dr. Evans testified:

In this case, since there was no history of a major motor vehicle accident, there was no outward signs of bruises, and the combination of old rib fractures, the blood we saw on that part of the brain or in between the skull and the brain, and the blood in the eyes, is what we call the “Shaken Baby Syndrome.” In other words, the baby had been very violently shaken back and forth causing shearing forces that the brain separates from the skull and causes a lot of blood to accumulate there — shears off of the veins.

With respect to the “retinal hemorrhaging,” the doctor explained:

Basically, it’s a similar mechanism of injury, in that the — there are arteries and blood vessels that enter into your eyeballs, and with vigorous shaking those can shear and break, and the inside of your eyeball can fill up with blood. And, it also is a very common finding in child abuse. In fact, it is a finding that is very heavily suggestive of child abuse.

During the first day at the hospital, Dr. Evans had several occasions to update the parents on Erik’s condition. By this time the mother, Mrs. Denise Brangasitis,1 was present. The doctor noticed that Mrs. Brangasitis “seemed to be angry” at appellant, and the doctor “had the feeling that she was maybe hiding something or not being upfront.” But he “had the same impression from the father.”

The parents told the doctor the following:

[T]he baby had been basically normal the night before, had fed well around 11:30 that night, had slept the night through, and the mother had checked on the baby at 5 to 7 when she left that morning. Things were fine. The father said the baby woke up, acted normally, and he’d brought the baby out and sat the baby I think on the living room couch while he went into the kitchen to get something, some formula, to drink, and heard some funny noises; went back, the baby was making gurgling noises, and he picked the baby up, baby cried, and then kind of went limp. At that point he said he shook the baby and started basic cardiopulmonary resuscitation from breath to the mouth and some feeling for the heart rate, and maybe some cardiac massage.
* * * * * *
[H]e did know that the heart was slow and at that point decided to wrap the baby up and drive from his place in Kaiserslautern to our hospital in Landstuhl.

In the doctor’s opinion, “the story that was being given me made no sense medically.” The doctors “looked at certain studies, and given the history and the lab studies, we had no — we found no evidence that [363]*363the baby had any underlying predisposition to easily bleeding.”

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Bluebook (online)
31 M.J. 359, 1990 CMA LEXIS 1087, 1990 WL 159758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-curry-cma-1990.