United States v. Gravitt

5 C.M.A. 249, 5 USCMA 249, 17 C.M.R. 249, 1954 CMA LEXIS 384, 1954 WL 2598
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedDecember 3, 1954
DocketNo. 4889
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 5 C.M.A. 249 (United States v. Gravitt) 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. Gravitt, 5 C.M.A. 249, 5 USCMA 249, 17 C.M.R. 249, 1954 CMA LEXIS 384, 1954 WL 2598 (cma 1954).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

ROBERT E. Quinn, Chief Judge:

This is a death case which is before us on mandatory review under Article 67(b) (1) of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, 50 USC § 654.

In addition to a charge of premeditated murder, the accused was tried on three specifications of assault with intent to kill and one alleging the theft of a carbine. He was convicted on all charges. Intermediate appellate authorities have affirmed the findings of guilty and the death sentence.

About 1:00 a.m. on July 28, 1953, Lieutenant B. Geller, the military police duty officer, was walking along a darkened street in the Peri-Ku area in the village of New Oroku, Okinawa. He had a .45 pistol in his hand. Accompanying him was Jiro Toguchi, a civilian policeman. They were investigating a shooting. As they walked, along, the beam of Toguchi’s torch fell, upon a taxicab. A man, carrying a carbine, got out of the cab. According to> Toguchi, he walked toward them. Lt. Geller called to him, “Hey, soldier,, come on.” For reply, the man fired at. them. Lt. Geller shot back. Again the-man fired. This time Lt. Geller felL to the ground. Having no gun himself, Toguchi turned and ran. A few minutes later he returned. Geller was dead. There was a bullet through his head.

There is no doubt that the accused killed Lt. Geller. In two pretrial oral statements, which were admitted in evidence without objection, and in his sworn testimony at the trial, the accused’s account of his activities estab[253]*253lishes his connection with the death of the lieutenant. However, his version of the encounter is directly opposed to Toguchi’s. He maintains that as he was sitting in the taxi, he saw a civilian policeman motion to him to come forward. As he got out of the taxi and walked toward him, the policeman started to run. He stopped, and was about to turn around when two shots were fired at him from the side. Instantaneously, he returned the fire. He shot twice. There being no further shooting, he waited about five minutes, then walked over to the place from which the shots had come. He found a fallen figure, with a pistol in its hand. He took the pistol, but made no effort to ascertain if the fallen man was alive or dead.

The accused admitted his participation in each of the other events which resulted in the filing of charges against him. In fact, on the larceny charge he entered a plea of guilty to wrongful appropriation; he also pleaded guilty to assault with intent to inflict grievous bodily harm on one of the three charges of assault with intent to murder. However, the accused’s version of these events and the picture developed by the Government’s witnesses are, to put it mildly, susceptible of different interpretations.

Military curfew in New Oroku was 11:00 p.m. At about 11:30 p.m. the accused was accosted by a military policeman and an air policeman who were on joint patrol. Earlier, he had escorted some Okinawan girls from a company party to their home in the village, and had remained for a drink. Purportedly, he heard the military policeman say that he was not going to give him “a break.” An argument developed. Its nature is typified by the following excerpt from the accused’s testimony:

“. . . Then he again asked for my pass and I told him I v/as not going to give it to him. In the meantime I put my hands in my pocket and the AP on duty told me to get my hands out of my pockets and I asked why. He said we don’t talk to an MP like that — you stand at attention and I asked when did that start. He said when you are talking to an MP you stand at attention and I asked when did that start so the MP again asked for my pass. I took it out, it was in my bill-fold. He wanted the pass and billfold and all the contents. I refused to give it to him.”

Eventually, the accused was taken in the patrol jeep to the Naha Air Base where his organization was located. At the base entrance, the argument was resumed. In his words, the accused “invited him [the MP] on the side where we could have a fight about it.” Both policemen and the guard at the gate testified to a further remark by the accused. The air policeman said that he heard the accused say, “He was going to get himself a bunch of MP’s and AP’s”; the military policeman testified that the accused said, “I am going to kill me some MP’s and AP’s”; the guard’s version was that the accused said he “would get the MP.” The accused denied making any such statement.

On leaving the gate, the accused proceeded to the orderly room to sign in. Entering that office, he noticed a carbine. Four such weapons had, in fact, been put there by persons coming off guard duty, in accordance with the squadron practice. The accused took one of these weapons. He then went to his barracks. A barracks-mate observed him taking some carbine shells from his field pack. The witness inquired whether there was any trouble. He was informed by the accused that it was “none of his business.” Armed with the carbine and ammunition, the accused went to the Navy area on the base. There, he appropriated a jeep and drove off the base without stopping at the gate. He was recognized by the guard.

The accused drove back to the village. He met a group of Okinawans in front of the Seaman’s Cafe. One of the group was Kinjo Shintaro, the proprietor of the Cafe. Shintaro and the accused were known to each other, but they had not met for about seven months. According to Shintaro’s testimony, the accused approached, pointed his rifle at him, and said, “I kill, I kill.” He asked [254]*254Shintaro if the mamasan was home. Receiving an affirmative reply, he ordered Shintaro to enter. Inside, the accused repeated his threat to kill. Shintaro turned and ran. As he reached the door, the accused shot him. The bullet hit Shintaro in the right shoulder, hut he continued running.

In his own testimony, the accused said that Shintaro asked him into the cafe. When they had entered, he questioned Shintaro as to why he had killed a certain girl. He told Shintaro that ■“somebody ought to kick his brains out so that he could ‘patai’ like Kilko did.” Kilko was a girl who had worked for Shintaro. She was “just a friend” of the accused. Suddenly Shintaro struck at him with a chair and, with the second swing, hit him in the shoulder. Shintaro ran toward the door, and the accused shot him.

Shintaro went to report the shooting to the Peri-Ku police. In the meantime, the accused remained in the general area of the cafe. According to his testimony, he hailed a taxi. He informed the driver that he was going to the base, but first he wanted some sake. The driver left on foot. He quickly returned to advise the accused that there was a military policeman or civilian policeman in the village. The accused insisted on his request, and the driver again left. The accused remained in the taxi. Then a civilian policeman approached, and motioned to him to come forward. He got out of the taxi, and there immediately began the exchange of gunfire which resulted in the death of Lt. Geller.

The gunfight between Lt. Geller and the accused was heard by Sergeant Hale and Corporals Frazier and Warren, three military policemen engaged in the investigation with Geller. With their weapons in their hands, they hurried to the area. They were approximately 20 to 25 feet apart with Hale in the lead. En route, Frazier turned up an alley. As Hale and Warren moved along, the accused entered the same street from an alley. He was between Hale and Warren. Warren saw the carbine in the accused’s left hand.

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Bluebook (online)
5 C.M.A. 249, 5 USCMA 249, 17 C.M.R. 249, 1954 CMA LEXIS 384, 1954 WL 2598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-gravitt-cma-1954.