United States v. Gleason

43 M.J. 69, 1995 CAAF LEXIS 120, 1995 WL 571731
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Armed Forces
DecidedSeptember 27, 1995
DocketNo. 94-1040; CMR No. 8803009
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 43 M.J. 69 (United States v. Gleason) 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. Gleason, 43 M.J. 69, 1995 CAAF LEXIS 120, 1995 WL 571731 (Ark. 1995).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

EVERETT, Senior Judge:

1. The “long and arduous journey [of this case] through the military justice system”1 began with Sergeant Major Gleason’s trial by a general court-martial with officer members sitting in Okinawa. The charges were violation of Army Regulation 600-50 by having a [71]*71financial conflict of interest, solicitation to commit murder, and communication of a threat, in violation of Articles 92 and 134, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC §§ 892 and 934, respectively. To the charge that he had solicited another to murder Captain Dumpson, Gleason pleaded not guilty but guilty of a lesser-included offense (requesting another to plant contraband on Dumpson in order to incriminate him falsely and ruin his military career).2 Appellant pleaded not guilty to the other charges.

2. The general court-martial convicted Gleason of the solicitation to murder and the violation of regulations, but acquitted him of communicating a threat. On October 21, 1988, appellant was sentenced to confinement for 7 years, total forfeitures, and reduction to Private E-l. However, because of an error in his sentencing instructions,3 the military judge held a rehearing4 on the sentence on December 1, 1988; and the court members reimposed the same sentence as before. In turn, on January 20, 1989, the convening authority approved the sentence.

I

3. After briefs had been filed in the Court of Military Review,5 that court ordered a DuBay6 hearing on the issue of unlawful command influence. Hearings were held in July and October 1991 and January 1992 before a military judge, Colonel Raymond Cole, who then issued his findings of fact and conclusions of law on July 22, 1992. After the parties had filed further briefs, the Court of Military Review heard argument on December 14, 1993, and rendered its decision 2 months later.

4. The court below ruled that the evidence was insufficient to sustain a conviction of violating AR 600-50, because it failed to establish that Gleason had a present financial interest in conflict with his military duties. Although the Court of Military Review did [72]*72find “unlawful command influence,” it was “absolutely convinced that [this influence] did not affect the findings of guilty”; so appellant’s conviction of soliciting murder was affirmed. Because the court below was “not convinced beyond a reasonable doubt, however, that the sentence was not affected by the unlawful command influence,” the sentence was reassessed; and only so much of the sentence was affirmed as provided for reduction to Private E-1. 39 MJ 776, 783 (1994). Appellant then petitioned this Court for review.

II

5. At one time Gleason was the company sergeant major of Company B, 1st Battalion, 1st Special Forces Group, which was stationed on Okinawa but frequently was deployed to Thailand on training exercises. Because its parent organization was located over 7000 miles away at Fort Lewis, Washington, the battalion enjoyed considerable autonomy, and its members, both officer and enlisted, worked and socialized closely together.

6. In December 1987, Lieutenant Colonel (LTC) Suchke became battalion commander; soon thereafter he received reports of gun and drug smuggling by Gleason and others in Company B. Moreover, Captain Dumpson, a detachment commander in that company, had told his superiors that appellant and some other members of the unit had filed false travel vouchers concerning deployments to Thailand.

7. Believing that Captain Dumpson was attempting to harm several members of Company B, Gleason contacted Mr. James Fowler, a retired soldier living in Okinawa. According to appellant, he solicited Fowler to “frame” Captain Dumpson for committing various crimes. Fowler’s version was that Gleason solicited him to hire some Thais to murder Dumpson.

8. Gleason and Fowler were to meet in Thailand in late July 1988 to work out details; but, for whatever reason, Fowler had a change of heart He informed Sergeant First Class Matías, another member of the 1st Special Forces Group, that he had agreed with Gleason to kill Captain Dumpson, and ultimately the Army Criminal Investigation Command (CID) was notified.7

9. The CID obtained authorization from the Army General Counsel to record surreptitiously an intended meeting between Fowler and appellant; and on July 21, 1988, this meeting was recorded by Fowler on a small tape recorder. As described by the court below:

In the approximately twenty-three-minute taped conversation, Mr. Fowler mentioned a number of times that he had hired the Thais to kill Captain Dumpson. The appellant acknowledged the plan but wanted it called off because he had been alerted by another Special Forces soldier that the CID may be aware of the plot. The soldier told the appellant that the CID was in Bangkok because an informer had told them that the appellant was attempting to arrange for CPT Dumpson to be killed.

39 MJ at 779.

10. After his tape-recorded meeting with Mr. Fowler, Gleason was apprehended in Bangkok; and, at the direction of LTC Suchke, the Battalion Commander, he was soon returned to Okinawa in leg irons and chains. Subsequently Suchke made clear to the members of his battalion that he believed Gleason to be guilty, that Gleason’s defense counsel was the “enemy,” and that testimony should not be offered on" behalf of the accused.

11. The Court of Military Review found that

there was no single act on which to hang the label of unlawful command influence. Rather, it was a command climate or atmosphere created by the action of LTC Suchke. His actions of relieving the command structure of Company B without explanation; the characterization of the defense counsel as the enemy; returning the appel[73]*73lant to Okinawa in chains and under guard and placing him in the brig and requiring unit members to receive command permission to visit him; the inspections and unit lock downs without explanation; adverse officer efficiency reports and reliefs of individual [sic] without explanation shortly after testifying for the appellant created, as Judge Cole found [at the DuBay hearing], a pervasive atmosphere in the battalion that bordered on paranoia. We find that the command climate, atmosphere, attitude, and actions had such a chilling effect on members of the command that there was a feeling that if you testified for the appellant your career was in jeopardy.[8]

39 MJ at 782.

Ill

12. In this case the actions of the battalion commander fall squarely within the prohibitions of Article 37(a), UCMJ, 10 USC § 837(a), that “[n]o person subject to this chapter may attempt to coerce or, by any unauthorized means, influence the action of a court-martial____” Cf. United States v. Stombaugh, 40 MJ 208 (CMA 1994). Moreover, acts of this type infringe upon important constitutional and statutory rights of servicemembers.

13. In Stombaugh, this Court reiterated that the “protection of the United States Constitution and Federal laws apply [sic] to members of the armed forces ‘except those [protections] which are expressly or by necessary implication inapplicable,’ United States v. Jacoby,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 M.J. 69, 1995 CAAF LEXIS 120, 1995 WL 571731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-gleason-armfor-1995.