United States v. Ellis

CourtNavy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals
DecidedAugust 30, 2016
Docket201500163
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Ellis (United States v. Ellis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Navy-Marine Corps 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. Ellis, (N.M. 2016).

Opinion

U NITED S TATES N AVY –M ARINE C ORPS C OURT OF C RIMINAL A PPEALS _________________________

No. 201500163 _________________________

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Appellee v.

MICHAEL K. ELLIS Chief Information Systems Technician (E-7), U.S. Navy Appellant _________________________

Appeal from the United States Navy-Marine Corps Trial Judiciary

Military Judge: Captain Robert D. Blazewick, JAGC, USN. For Appellant: Gary Myers, Esq.; Lieutenant Christopher C. McMahon, JAGC, USN. For Appellee: Lieutenant Commander Jeremy R. Brooks, JAGC, USN; Major Suzanne M. Dempsey, USMC. _________________________

Decided 30 August 2016 _________________________

Before BRUBAKER, 1 M ARKS , and F ULTON , Appellate Military Judges _________________________

This opinion does not serve as binding precedent, but may be cited as persuasive authority under NMCCA Rule of Practice and Procedure 18.2. _________________________

MARKS, Senior Judge: A panel of members with enlisted representation, sitting as a general court-martial, convicted Chief Information Systems Technician (Chief) Michael K. Ellis, contrary to his pleas, of two specifications of sexual assault, three specifications of abusive sexual contact, and two specifications of assault consummated by battery in violation of Articles 120 and 128, Uniform

1Chief Judge BRUBAKER participated in the decision of this case prior to commencing terminal leave. United States v. Ellis, No. 201500163

Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), 10 U.S.C. §§ 920 and 928. The members sentenced Chief Ellis to two years’ confinement, reduction to pay grade E-1, and a dishonorable discharge. The convening authority (CA) approved the sentence as adjudged. Chief Ellis assigns the following as error: (1) The military judge erred in denying Chief Ellis his right to confront his accusers about victim-victim advocate discussions pursuant to the Sixth Amendment, U.S. Constitution, Military Rules of Evidence 608(c) and 514(d)(6). (2) The evidence is legally and factually insufficient. (3) Chief Ellis was subjected to unlawful pretrial punishment under Article 13, UCMJ, when the Government denied him privileges it provided to other court-martial participants. (4) Allowing the Government to use charged sexual misconduct as propensity evidence for other charged sexual misconduct in the same trial violated Chief Ellis’s rights to a presumption of innocence and due process. In light of the United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces’ (CAAF) recent decision in United States v. Hills, __ M.J. __, No. 15-0767, 2016 CAAF LEXIS 512 (C.A.A.F. Jun. 27, 2016), we find prejudicial error with regard to the use of charged misconduct as propensity evidence. We have considered the second assignment of error, regarding legal and factual sufficiency, but decline to grant relief. The remaining two assignments of error are moot. I. BACKGROUND This case presents two incidents separated by nine months in time but otherwise inextricably linked. Chief Ellis and the two women he was convicted of assaulting worked together in the same department of the same command and socialized in the same circle. Social gatherings at the same sports bar preceded both incidents, which occurred after Chief Ellis returned to the victims’ homes. The first victim, Chief TA, accused Chief Ellis of sexually assaulting her in her bathroom, kitchen, and bedroom while friends were gathered at her home after the Army-Navy football game on 8 December 2012. The second victim, Ms. LW, alleged that Chief Ellis raped her in her bedroom on 21 September 2013. Days after her incident, Ms. LW sought information and advice from the command sexual assault victim advocate, Chief TA. Five weeks later, Ms. LW reported her sexual assault, accompanied by Chief TA. Chief TA then came forward to report her nearly 11-month-old sexual assault a week later.

2 United States v. Ellis, No. 201500163

II. DISCUSSION Chief Ellis challenges the military judge’s instruction to the members that they could consider charged sexual misconduct as propensity evidence, pursuant to MILITARY RULE OF EVIDENCE 413, MANUAL FOR COURTS- MARTIAL, UNITED STATES (2012).2 We review a military judge’s admission of evidence for an abuse of discretion. United States v. Solomon, 72 M.J. 176, 179 (C.A.A.F. 2013). We review instructional errors de novo and evaluate an allegedly erroneous instruction “‘in the context of the overall message conveyed’ to the members.” Hills, 2016 CAAF LEXIS 512 at *16 (quoting United States v. Prather, 69 M.J. 338, 344 (C.A.A.F. 2011)) (additional citation omitted). In sexual assault cases only, MIL. R. EVID. 413(a) permits a military judge to “admit evidence that the accused committed any other sexual offense. The evidence may be considered on any matter to which it is relevant.” The rule does not distinguish between charged and uncharged misconduct, and prosecutors have proffered both under it. The Military Judges’ Benchbook offers standardized instructions for both scenarios—when the other sexual offense is uncharged misconduct and when it is charged misconduct. Before the CAAF’s ruling in Hills, military judges instructed members how to consider multiple charged sexual offenses relative to each other, in accordance with MIL. R. EVID. 413, using the following instruction: (Further), evidence that the accused committed the (sexual) . . . offense(s) alleged in (state the appropriate Specification(s) and Charge(s)) may have no bearing on your deliberations in relation to (state the appropriate Specification(s) and Charge(s)), unless you first determine by a preponderance of the evidence, that is more likely than not, the offense(s) alleged in (state the appropriate Specification(s) and Charge(s)) occurred. If you determine by a preponderance of the evidence the offense(s) alleged in (state the appropriate Specification(s) and Charge(s)) occurred, even if you are not convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused is guilty of (that) (those) offense(s), you may nonetheless then consider the evidence of (that) (those) offense(s) for its bearing on any matter to which it is relevant in relation to (list the offense(s) for which the members may consider the evidence). . . . Military Judges’ Benchbook, Dept. of the Army Pamphlet 27-9 at 1105-06 (10 Sep. 2014) (emphasis added). Military judges then instructed the members that if they were convinced of one sexual offense by a preponderance of the

2 As amended by Exec. Order 13,643, 78 Fed. Reg. 29,559, 29,577 (15 May 2013).

3 United States v. Ellis, No. 201500163

evidence, they “may also consider the evidence of such other (sexual) . . . offense(s) for its tendency, if any, to show the accused’s propensity or predisposition to engage in (sexual) . . . offenses.” Id. at 1106. The CAAF examined MIL. R. EVID. 413 and these instructions in Hills nearly a year and a half after Chief Ellis’s court-martial. Despite MIL. R. EVID. 413’s silence as to charged or uncharged misconduct, the CAAF unequivocally held that the rule cannot be applied to evidence of a charged sexual offense. Hills, 2016 CAAF LEXIS 512, at *10 (“[N]either the structure of M.R.E. 413 and its relationship to M.R.E. 404(b) nor the legislative history of the federal rule upon which it is based suggests that M.R.E. 413 and its attendant instructions may be applied to evidence of charged misconduct.”) The opinion distinguished charged misconduct from prior sexual assault convictions and uncharged sexual offenses, which remain admissible under MIL. R. EVID. 413. Id. at *8. But using MIL. R. EVID.

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Related

United States v. Prather
69 M.J. 338 (Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, 2011)
United States v. Moran
65 M.J. 178 (Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, 2007)
United States v. Wolford
62 M.J. 418 (Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, 2006)
People v. Villatoro
281 P.3d 390 (California Supreme Court, 2012)
United States v. Solomon
72 M.J. 176 (Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, 2013)
United States v. Hills
75 M.J. 350 (Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, 2016)
United States v. Wright
53 M.J. 476 (Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, 2000)

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United States v. Ellis, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-ellis-nmcca-2016.