United States v. Gilpin

CourtNavy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals
DecidedDecember 30, 2019
Docket201900033
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Gilpin (United States v. Gilpin) 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. Gilpin, (N.M. 2019).

Opinion

This opinion is subject to administrative correction before final disposition.

Before TANG, LAWRENCE, and STEPHENS, Appellate Military Judges

_________________________

UNITED STATES Appellee

v.

Mason W. GILPIN Midshipman, U.S. Navy Appellant

No. 201900033

Decided: 30 December 2019.

Appeal from the United States Navy-Marine Corps Trial Judiciary, Military Judges: Commander William H. Weiland, JAGC, USN (arraignment); Commander Arthur C. Gaston, JAGC, USN (motions and trial). Sentence adjudged 31 August 2018 by a general court- martial convened at Region Legal Service Office Naval District Washington consisting of a military judge sitting alone. Sentence approved by the convening authority: confinement for 30 months, and a dismissal.

For Appellant: Carol Thompson, Esq., Eric S. Montalvo, Esq., Captain Nick S. Mote, USMC.

For Appellee: Captain Brian L. Farrell, USMC; Lieutenant Kurt W. Siegal, JAGC, USN.

This opinion does not serve as binding precedent, but may be cited as persuasive authority under NMCCA Rule of Appellate Procedure 30.2. United States v. Gilpin, NMCCA No. 201900033

STEPHENS, Judge: A general court-martial convicted Appellant, U.S. Naval Academy Mid- shipman (MIDN) Mason W. Gilpin, contrary to his pleas, of violating Article 120, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ). 1 The charge arose when Ap- pellant and another midshipman, KS, had an alcohol-fueled sexual encounter in the early hours of a Sunday morning in her room at Bancroft Hall. 2 MIDN KS did not remember any of the encounter other than being on top of MIDN Gilpin. A couple of weeks later, she alleged he had sexually assaulted her. After a bench trial, the military judge acquitted MIDN Gilpin of sexually assaulting MIDN KS when she was incapable of consenting due to her intoxi- cation (Specification 1), but found him guilty of sexually assaulting her when she was “asleep” and “otherwise unaware” (Specification 2). Appellant asserts four assignments of error (AOE): (1) the military judge misapplied United States v. Sager 3 by convicting MIDN Gilpin on theories of MIDN KS being asleep and otherwise unaware, (2) the evidence is legally and factually insufficient, (3) the Government lost jurisdiction to try MIDN Gilpin when it separated him from the Naval Academy, and (4) the trial counsel committed prosecutorial misconduct. We find the jurisdictional AOE to be without merit, but find the evidence to be factually insufficient, rendering the remaining two AOEs moot.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Midshipman KS Texts Midshipman Gilpin That He Had Sexually Assaulted Her On 13 December 2016, MIDN Gilpin was with a friend in his room at Bancroft Hall when MIDN KS texted him. About three weeks before, he had, in his words, “hooked up” with her in her room in Bancroft Hall. People were

1 10 U.S.C. § 920 (2016). 2 Bancroft Hall serves as the on-base residence facility for all midshipmen attend- ing the Naval Academy. 3 76 M.J. 158, 162 (C.A.A.F. 2017) (analyzing Article 120(d), UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 920(d) (2012), and holding that “asleep,” “unconscious,” and “otherwise unaware” constitute three separate theories of liability and that “otherwise unaware” means “unaware in a manner different from asleep and different from unconsciousness”).

2 United States v. Gilpin, NMCCA No. 201900033

talking about it, and it was a serious offense that could get both of them kicked out of the Academy. The day before he received MIDN KS’s text, her doctor told her she had chlamydia. The text she sent read: Good evening Mason, I’m sending this to you as a courtesy. I wanted to let you know that what happened was wrong. I want to let you know that we are not ok. I’m going to give you the heads up now to let you know that you gave me chlamydia. Therefore, you should get that checked out. Lastly, I want to give you a heads up before this comes as a surprise that I will be filing an unrestricted report. From now on I believe it would be best and I would appreciate if you did not text or communi- cate with me in person. 4 But MIDN KS must have gotten chlamydia from someone else, because MIDN Gilpin did not have it. MIDN Gilpin’s friend described him as “shocked” and “confused.” 5 He texted her back. He told her he did not have chlamydia, that he did not know what he did wrong, and wondered if this was even MIDN KS texting him. She ordered him to stop texting her. His last message to her was: [KS] we have to talk about this in person, you can’t just do this. What are you blaming me for doing? I don’t understand, it was consensual. We joked about doing it again the next morning, you literally said you liked it on top the next day. I did my best to handle it the next day with the plan B. 6

B. The Evening of Saturday, 19 November 2016

1. Midshipman KS attends a party MIDN KS was a second-year student at the Naval Academy. One of her midshipman friends had a small twenty-first birthday party at her sponsor’s home in Annapolis. 7 A total of six midshipmen were there, and the sponsor- parents took them out to a restaurant. Among the midshipmen, there was moderate drinking that night.

4 Defense Exhibit J at 5. 5 Record at 1505. 6 Defense Exhibit J at 8. 7Families living around the Naval Academy may “sponsor” midshipmen to allow them a “home away from home” during authorized liberty periods.

3 United States v. Gilpin, NMCCA No. 201900033

MIDN KS arrived at the party between five and six o’clock in the evening. Having recently turned 21, she had a glass of wine and some beer and then another glass of wine with dinner. After coming back to the sponsor’s house, she had a few drinks while she was in the hot tub—including one where she had several ounces of rum in a glass and “took it back like a shot.” 8 About an hour before midnight, MIDN KS vomited in the bathroom. During the evening, MIDN KS was upset about the end of a long-distance relationship with a young man in her hometown. She was very emotional during the evening and was texting back and forth with the ex-boyfriend. It was disputed whether she was also communicating with MIDN Gilpin that evening using a multimedia messaging application that allows users to ex- change messages, photos, and videos. MIDN KS left the party sometime before midnight because she was required to be back on board the Academy for “Taps”; her privileges were restricted because she had low grades and had failed her physical readiness test. Just five days earlier, one of her room- mates wrote in her journal that MIDN KS told her “nothing in her life is going well.” 9 Another midshipman at the party, MIDN Collins, drove MIDN KS home. Because MIDN Collins was a second-year student, she was not allowed to operate a vehicle on Academy grounds, so she planned to park at nearby St. John’s College and walk the approximately half-mile to the Academy and Bancroft Hall. MIDN KS realized she left her wallet and military identifica- tion card at the party. With no time to turn around, MIDN Collins parked at St. John’s and called “Shipmate,” an Academy van service run by midship- men that gives classmates a no-questions-asked safe ride back to the Naval Academy. This would allow MIDN KS to get back to Bancroft Hall on time, as she would not need her military identification to enter the Academy if she was on the Shipmate van. Two midshipmen, a driver and a navigator, were operating the Shipmate van that night. The van crew had some difficulty locating the pair, but even- tually picked them up and dropped them off outside Bancroft Hall.

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