United States v. Gebert

CourtNavy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals
DecidedNovember 15, 2016
Docket201500381
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Gebert (United States v. Gebert) 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. Gebert, (N.M. 2016).

Opinion

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

No. 201500381 _________________________

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Appellee v.

ALEXEY N. GEBERT Seaman (E-3), U.S. Navy Appellant _________________________

Appeal from the United States Navy-Marine Corps Trial Judiciary

Military Judge: Commander Arthur L. Gaston III, JAGC, USN. For Appellant: Samuel C. Moore, Civilian Appellate Counsel; Lieutenant Rachel E. Weidemann, JAGC USN. For Appellee: Captain Cory A. Carver, USMC; Lieutenant Robert J. Miller, JAGC, USN. _________________________

Decided 15 November 2016 _________________________

Before C AMPBELL , R UGH , and H UTCHISON , 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. _________________________

RUGH, Judge:

A military judge sitting as a general court-martial convicted the appellant contrary to his plea of one specification of communicating a bomb threat,1 in violation of Article 134, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. § 934 (2012). The military judge sentenced the

1 MANUAL FOR COURTS-MARTIAL, UNITED STATES (2012 ed.), Part IV, ¶ 109 is formally titled Threat or hoax designed or intended to cause panic or public fear. For ease of reference, we will refer to ¶ 109(b)(1) as Communicating a Bomb Threat. appellant to seven months’ confinement, reduction to pay grade E-1, and a bad-conduct discharge. The convening authority (CA) approved the sentence as adjudged. The appellant now raises five assignments of error (AOE): (1) that the military judge erred by requiring the government prove only a mens rea standard of recklessness for the offense of communicating a bomb threat; (2) that the evidence was legally and factually insufficient; (3) that the charge and specification were improperly referred to general court-martial; (4) that the military judge abused his discretion by admitting certain prosecution exhibits; and (5) that the military judge abused his discretion in crafting his remedy to a government violation of an evidentiary notice requirement.2 Having carefully considered the record of trial, the pleadings, and the oral argument on the first and second AOE, we find no error materially prejudicial to a substantial right of the appellant. I. BACKGROUND In the spring of 2015, the appellant was assigned to the Engineering Repair Division (ER09) on board USS PORT ROYAL (CG 73) home ported at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. ER09 maintained the ship’s many damage control systems, which included fire extinguishers, water-tight doors, and ventilations systems, but was more infamously referred to as “the island of misfit toys.” Similarly disparaged, USS PORT ROYAL was an aging cruiser that seldom deployed and was often in need of repair—always a bridesmaid, yet never the bride when it came time for early decommissioning. As a result, morale onboard was low, and crew members often wished the ship would sink, run aground, or otherwise stop working. Nestled within this doubly-troubled environment, the appellant—a young, Russian emigrant with career aspirations that included the Explosive Ordinance Disposal (EOD) program—became disenchanted with his life on the ship. On 29 April 2015, the appellant, Petty Officer Third Class (PO3) Sierra,3 and PO3 Lima were working in the ER09 work center when they heard that a barracks room inspection was underway. Based on

2 AOE (5) was raised pursuant to United States v. Grostefon, 12 M.J. 431 (C.M.A. 1982). 3 Pseudonyms have replaced all surnames referenced in the opinion.

2 prior interactions with the appellant, PO3 Sierra asked him “[d]o you have any bomb-making materials in [your] room?”4 The appellant responded, “No, they’re far, far away[.]”5 PO3 Sierra then turned to PO3 Lima and intoned in a “dead serious” manner that appellant was “building a bomb.”6 The appellant, within earshot, did not respond. The next day, PO3 Lima asked PO3 Sierra if he knew where the appellant intended to use the bomb he was building. PO3 Sierra replied that he believed the appellant “intend[ed] to use it on the ship.”7 PO3 Sierra also stated that the appellant kept the bomb in a Pelican case, a specific brand of molded-plastic case that the appellant retrieved several days earlier from the ship’s refuse.8 Concerned, PO3 Lima reported this information to his chain of command that day. The next morning, 1 May 2015, PO3 Lima was alone with the appellant during cleaning stations. PO3 Lima raised the topic of the Pelican case and asked if the case was safe. The appellant replied that it was “hidden.”9 PO3 Lima then asked “what [the appellant’s] purpose behind it was,” and the appellant responded, “it was to cripple or damage” or sink the ship to prevent it from getting underway.10 PO3 Lima asked where the appellant planned to use it, and the appellant responded “possibly the main reduction gear on board or the sonar dome,” despite recognizing that human casualties would be inevitable.11 Referring to the items held in the Pelican case, the appellant said that if an explosion occurred, he would blame it on civilian contractors.

4 Record at 295, 307. 5 Id. at 295. 6 Id. at 220-21, 233, 236. 7 Id. at 221. 8 At the time it was retrieved, PO3 Sierra inquired into what the appellant planned to do with the Pelican case, to which the appellant casually responded, “[i]t’s the case I’m going to build a bomb in.” Id. at 296, 310-11. PO3 Sierra was unconcerned with this comment at the time, thinking this was just “Gebert being Gebert.” Id. at 309-11. 9 Id. at 223, 228, 239. 10 Id. at 224, 228, 251. 11 Id. at 224-25, 228-29, 240-41.

3 During this conversation, the appellant’s apparent mood was humorless—“there was no laughing about it, no joking about it, all very serious;”12 his tone was “very serious;”13 and he was “very serious in everything he said.”14 He did not laugh. “[W]henever people would pass by doing their roves” or walk in or out of the ER09 work center, the appellant “would stop talking about it and [only] continue on once they were out of earshot[,]” as if the conversation was a secret.15 However, during this conversation the appellant never used the words “bomb” or “explosive” or stated the exact contents of the case. The appellant also never stated when, if at all, he would plant the case and its contents on the ship. Before the conversation was over, both the appellant and PO3 Lima were interrupted by authorities and escorted away for interviews based on PO3 Lima’s report the evening before. By noon the ship was evacuated, but authorities did not find the Pelican case or a bomb onboard. In his interview with investigators, the appellant admitted that he was attempting to build a bomb from ammonium nitrate, something he had successfully accomplished twice before joining the Navy, for detonation at a deserted location somewhere on the island of Oahu. Shipmates also reported that the appellant often made comments about “blowing up” the ship and discussed using metal plates and copper wiring to construct an armor-piercing bomb that could penetrate the ship’s hull. A search of the appellant’s barracks room resulted in the seizure of a bag and several bundles of copper wiring, pliers and wire stripping tools, a metal plate, and a plastic baggie of fertilizer.16 The search also uncovered printed instructions on manufacturing ammonium nitrate explosives, on the production of chlorine and hydrogen gas, and on the structure of clandestine terrorist cells. Authorities also retrieved the

12 Id. at 226. 13 Id. 14 Id. at 225. 15 Id. at 225-26. 16 The appellant claimed that he originally purchased the fertilizer for use in a

terrarium.

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