United States v. Fisher

45 M.J. 159, 1996 CAAF LEXIS 73, 1996 WL 779804
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Armed Forces
DecidedSeptember 27, 1996
DocketNo. 95-0918; Crim.App. No. 94 0497
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 45 M.J. 159 (United States v. Fisher) 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. Fisher, 45 M.J. 159, 1996 CAAF LEXIS 73, 1996 WL 779804 (Ark. 1996).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

EVERETT, Senior Judge:

Appellant unconditionally pleaded guilty at her special court-martial to a single specification of wrongful use of cocaine, in violation of Article 112a, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 912a. After a full and adequate providence inquiry, the military judge accepted her pleas, convicted her, and sentenced her to a bad-conduct discharge and reduction in grade to E-3. The convening authority approved these results, and the Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed them in an unpublished opinion.

Thereafter, appellant petitioned this Court for further review, which we granted on the following issue:

WHETHER THE NAVY-MARINE CORPS COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS ERRED IN FINDING THAT CAPTAIN MAJOR HAD NOT DISQUALIFIED HIMSELF FROM CON[160]*160TINUED SERVICE AS THE CONVENING AUTHORITY AFTER HE CHALLENGED, IN VIOLATION OF UCMJ ARTICLE 37(a)’S PROHIBITION AGAINST CENSURE, REPRIMAND, OR ADMONISHMENT OF COUNSEL, THE TRIAL DEFENSE COUNSEL’S ETHICS FOR RAISING A MOTION TO SUPPRESS THE RESULTS OF A URINALYSIS TEST.

Now, after a full hearing of the parties and consideration of this question, we agree with appellant that the court below did err and that a new action by a different convening authority is necessary.

I

Prior to entering her pleas, appellant’s counsel moved to suppress the results of her urinalysis, which was the core of the Government’s case against her. The defense did not quarrel with the lawfulness of the command’s original order to appellant on July 19, 1993, to provide a urine sample. It argued, however, that the subsequent order on the following day to produce another sample was based only on the command’s suspicion that she had tampered with her earlier one; as such, it was a subterfuge search, not an inspection, and was done without probable cause. See United States v. Bickel, 30 MJ 277 (CMA 1990).

During the hearing on this motion, Captain Major, USN, the convening authority in this court-martial, testified for the prosecution. After his direct examination but before cross-examination, the military judge called a recess. In a post-trial affidavit submitted for the first time to the Court of Criminal Appeals, defense counsel describes what happened during that 13-minute pause in the trial:

During a break in the proceedings on the motion, Captain Major, Commanding Officer of the NAS Alameda at the time and the convening authority in this case, told me that any lawyer that would try to get the results of the urinalysis suppressed was unethical. As I was the only lawyer in the room at the time, I concluded that he was clearly referring to me.

When the proceedings resumed, defense counsel cross-examined Captain Major — from all appearances, aggressively and effectively. From the record, however, we see that he did not disclose to the military judge Captain Major’s recess comment or make any reference to it during his cross-examination of Captain Major.

Ultimately, the military judge denied the motion, and appellant entered her unconditional guilty pleas. In his affidavit, defense counsel explains this decision:

Upon losing the motion, BM1 Fisher entered a guilty plea to the charge and single specification. Although I attempted to negotiate a pretrial agreement (asking only for a cap of 60 days confinement as insurance, though I believed the awarded confinement would be closer to 30 days), I was informed the convening authority refused to “deal” because of the fact that BM1 Fisher had been acquitted months earlier at a previous court-martial for an earlier positive urinalysis.
Based on the convening authority’s refusal to enter into a pretrial agreement and because of his comments during the suppression motion, I concluded that the convening authority would not consent to a conditional plea.
The morning after the trial, I was informed that the convening authority was very disappointed that BM1 Fisher had not received confinement.

Inexplicably, as earlier implied, defense counsel said nothing about this matter even prior to Captain Major’s taking his final action on the case as the convening authority. Instead, as we have said, it came to light for the first time in his affidavit submitted to the lower appellate court. That court held that appellant’s unconditional and provident guilty pleas waived her complaint as to the lawfulness of obtaining the second urine sample and, further, that “the convening authority’s purported comment to the trial defense counsel during a recess” did not violate Article 37, UCMJ, 10 USC § 837. On this latter point, the court wrote:

This encounter is not “enough evidence to show an appearance of unlawful command [161]*161influence affecting the case to raise the issue and trigger the rebuttable presumption” regarding unlawful command influence. United States v. Lawson, 38 MJ 946, 961 (NMCMR 1991), aff'd, 36 MJ 415 (CMA 1993).

Unpub. op. at 3. Finally, the Court of Criminal Appeals held that “[a]ny accuser or disqualification issue that might be perceived is waived. United States v. Hamilton, 41 MJ 32 (CMA 1994); United States v. Shiner, 40 MJ 155 (CMA 1994).” Unpub. op. at 2, 3.

II

As the granted issue makes clear, this Court agreed to consider appellant’s claim that Captain Major’s comment to defense counsel violated Article 37 and that, by virtue of this violation, he disqualified himself from any further service as the convening authority in the case. The logical relief from this wrong, if meritorious, would seem to be limited to a new post-trial action by a different convening authority.

In her brief and in oral argument in this Court, however, appellant extends her grievance all the way back to the point where Captain Major made his offending remark. Thereupon, while asking for the new action just mentioned, she also advances two other contentions, each with a proposed remedy. First, on some rationale that is not at once apparent to us, she makes the naked request that we “set aside the findings and sentence, on the premise that the convening authority disqualified himself during his conversation with trial defense counsel.” Final Brief at 8.

Second, she urges that she should have had the benefit of an objective convening authority to approach for consent to her entering a conditional guilty plea, which would have preserved appellate review of her suppression motion. See RCM 910(a)(2), Manual for Courts-Martial, United States (1995 ed.). She points out that trial defense counsel declined to seek the convening authority’s consent, in part, because Captain Major already had shown his bias against the defense. As relief, she asks us to direct the Court of Criminal Appeals to consider the merits of the suppression motion as though she had entered her pleas conditionally.

Although these latter two arguments might seem to be outside the scope of the granted issue, we will pause briefly to address each one. As to the first, the requested relief is a non sequitur.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 M.J. 159, 1996 CAAF LEXIS 73, 1996 WL 779804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-fisher-armfor-1996.