United States v. Gaines

21 C.M.A. 236, 21 USCMA 236, 45 C.M.R. 10, 1972 CMA LEXIS 815, 1972 WL 14108
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedMarch 10, 1972
DocketNo. 24,385
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 C.M.A. 236 (United States v. Gaines) 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. Gaines, 21 C.M.A. 236, 21 USCMA 236, 45 C.M.R. 10, 1972 CMA LEXIS 815, 1972 WL 14108 (cma 1972).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

Quinn, Judge:

Brought to trial before a general court-martial, convened at Okinawa, the accused pleaded guilty to two specifications alleging robbery and not guilty to specifications alleging larceny and the murder of Sergeant Powers in the commission of a robbery. Convicted as charged, he was sentenced to a dishonorable discharge, confinement for life, and accessory penalties. On review, the United States Army Court of Military Review reduced the findings of guilty of felony murder to involuntary manslaughter, and modified the sentence by reducing the period of confinement approved by the convening authority from fifty years to twenty years. In this Court, the accused contends that two trial er[237]*237rors prejudiced him in regard to the homicide findings of guilty and the sentence.

First, the accused alleges that the trial judge erred in admitting into evidence a pretrial statement in which he acknowledged that while he was engaged in robbing Sergeant Powers, Powers was stabbed in the chest. Some of his testimony at trial, as well as argument in his appellate brief, indicates the accused was not properly advised of his right to counsel at the September 5th interrogation, 'but the question crucial to this appeal is whether certain events in the previous three-week period demonstrate, as a matter of law, that he did not voluntarily waive his right to counsel at the interrogation.1

Criminal Investigations Detachment Agents Bolton and Ballow became acquainted with the accused in May 1969, during an investigation into a reported larceny. Initially a suspect, the accused eventually “was cleared” of involvement. Thereafter, he had frequent meetings with the agents, reporting to them about the use and availability of marihuana in the area. The accused was “on the street almost as much as” Agent Ballow, and Ballow often met him; he spoke with the accused so “many times both officially and unofficially” that he came to know him “pretty well,” and “considered” him a friend. According to the accused, he similarly “considered” both agents his friends.

Powers was killed on July 1st. About August 1st, Ballow gave the accused some photographs of a man named Snead, whom he suspected of killing Powers, and asked the accused to help in locating him. On the morning of August 18th, the accused was •called to the CID offices to be questioned about an alleged robbery. He had been identified as one of two persons who had robbed a taxi driver in the area of the Awase golf course. Ballow testified that before questioning the accused he advised him of the right to remain silent and the right to counsel, and the accused had indicated he did not want counsel and was willing to make a statement. When the accused had made “a partial statement,” in which he denied participation in the robbery, he said he wanted to consult a lawyer. Immediately, the interrogation ended. An appointment was made by telephone for the accused to confer with a lawyer in the Judge Advocate Section. The accused was then “excused.” He testified that he went to the Judge Advocate Section and conferred with a lawyer, who advised him “not to sign any statements” and “not to make any statements.” Thereafter, he returned to the CID office. Coincidentally, Sergeant Reid, the victim of another robbery, was at the office; Reid saw the accused and immediately identified him as the person who had robbed him. According to Ballow, interrogation on the Awase robbery was discontinued; and later in the day, the accused was interrogated as to the Reid robbery.

Testimony by the agents and a certificate signed by the accused indicate the accused was fully informed of his right to counsel at the Reid robbery interrogation and that he did not desire counsel. The accused made two statements as to this robbery.2 Shortly thereafter, he was placed in pretrial confinement.

[238]*238Between August 18th, the date of confinement, and September 5th, the date the accused made an oral statement in connection with the Powers killing, the question of his representation by counsel came up in two different situations. One situation consisted of separate periods of questioning by Agents Bolton and Ballow; the other situation involved the accused’s representation in connection with the charges for which he had been confined-. At trial, the accused sought to merge the two into a single issue.

On August 27th, the accused gave a written statement to Ballow, “to change [his] previous statement” about the alleged robbery near the Awase golf course.3 The next day, he made a written statement in which he admitted a robbery committed on August 11th. According to Ballow and recitals in written waivers signed by the accused, each statement was made after the accused had first been fully warned as to his right to counsel and counsel’s presence at the interrogation. In his own testimony, the accused did not touch expressly upon these statements, but he admitted that “at times before” he was questioned on September 5th, he had been advised of his right to a lawyer before he made a statement. He said nothing to indicate that the waiver of his right to counsel in regard to each statement was the result of anything but his own free and voluntary choice. Finally, the accused referred to a visit to the CID office after his confinement. Without mentioning the circumstances of the discussion or whether he had been advised of his rights under Article 81, he testified he was informed that, as the result of a polygraph test, Snead had been cleared as a suspect in the Powers killing; he was asked whether he would take the same test in connection with the ease. At first he refused, but later, he said: “[I]f . . . my lawyer says to take it, I’ll take it.” The accused testified that the agents responded as follows: “They didn’t say anything except that my lawyer would say no,” and they “left it like that.”

Regarding representation in connection with the charges for which he had been confined, the accused testified that after he had been in confinement for about eleven days, he filed a formal request for an interview with a lawyer. At one point in his testimony he fixed the date of the request as August 22d; elsewhere, he maintained the request was filed a “couple of days” before he visited the CID office, an event which could not have occurred, according to other evidence, before August 27th. A security guard, testifying as a defense witness, indicated the request was filed “just prior to . . . [the accused’s] going to the hospital”; the transfer took place on August 29th. Whatever the precise date of the request, it is clear that it was made before the accused’s first visit to the CID office, which his statement indicates occurred on August 27th. According to Bolton, the accused told them no one had “contacted him” and he wanted to know “who was going to represent him in court.” Bal-low telephoned the Judge Advocate Section “twice”; apparently once during the August 27th visit, and again on the August 28th -visit. On the first call, he was informed that the “charge sheets had not been received”; on the second, he was advised “they didn’t know who the counsel would be.” After each call, Ballow apprised the accused of “exactly what” he had learned.

On August 29th, as a result of certain conduct in the stockade, the accused was transferred to the hospital for psychiatric evaluation. From about September 1st, he “repeatedly” telephoned Ballow. At trial, he gave two reasons for these calls.

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Related

United States v. Graham
21 C.M.A. 489 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1972)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 C.M.A. 236, 21 USCMA 236, 45 C.M.R. 10, 1972 CMA LEXIS 815, 1972 WL 14108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-gaines-cma-1972.