United States v. Gunkle

55 M.J. 26, 2001 CAAF LEXIS 560, 2001 WL 543370
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Armed Forces
DecidedMay 21, 2001
Docket00-0092/AR
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 55 M.J. 26 (United States v. Gunkle) 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. Gunkle, 55 M.J. 26, 2001 CAAF LEXIS 560, 2001 WL 543370 (Ark. 2001).

Opinions

Judge GIERKE

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A military judge sitting as a general court-martial convicted appellant, contrary to his pleas, of two specifications each of indecent liberties and indecent acts, and one specification of cross-dressing in a woman’s clothing under circumstances that were service-discrediting and prejudicial to good order and discipline, in violation of Article 134, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 934. The adjudged and approved sentence provides for a dishonorable discharge, confine[28]*28ment for 2 years, total forfeitures, and reduction to the lowest enlisted grade. The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the findings and sentence in an unpublished opinion. This Court granted review of the following issues:

I
WHETHER THE ARMY COURT ERRED IN FINDING THAT THE MILITARY JUDGE’S ABUSE OF DISCRETION WAS HARMLESS WHEN HE ADMITTED IN REBUTTAL EXCERPTS FROM AN OUT-OF-COURT INTERVIEW OF [DG], ONE OF THE ALLEGED CHILD VICTIMS, AND ALLOWED A SOCIAL WORKER TO TESTIFY AS TO STATEMENTS MADE BY [LA], THE OTHER ALLEGED CHILD VICTIM, DURING AN OUT-OF-COURT INTERVIEW, EVEN THOUGH THE ALLEGED VICTIMS TESTIFIED.
II
WHETHER THE MILITARY JUDGE ABUSED HIS DISCRETION IN DENYING THE DEFENSE AN EXPERT THAT THE MILITARY JUDGE DETERMINED WAS NECESSARY TO EVALUATE THE TECHNIQUES USED BY THE SOCIAL WORKERS WHEN THEY INTERVIEWED THE ALLEGED VICTIMS, DESPITE THE FACT THAT THE MILITARY JUDGE ALLOWED INTO EVIDENCE EXCERPTS OF [DG’S] INTERVIEW AND ALLOWED ONE SOCIAL WORKER TO TESTIFY AS TO STATEMENTS MADE BY [LA] DURING AN OUT-OF-COURT INTERVIEW.
Ill
WHETHER THE STAFF JUDGE ADVOCATE’S RECOMMENDATION, WHICH INCORRECTLY REFLECTED THAT APPELLANT HAD BEEN FOUND GUILTY OF CERTAIN TYPES OF EGREGIOUS CHILD MOLESTATION, PREJUDICED APPELLANT WHEN THE CONVENING AUTHORITY CONSIDERED CLEMENCY.

For the reasons set out below, we affirm.

ISSUE I: HARMLESS ERROR

A. Factual Background

The prosecution theory was that appellant surreptitiously molested the two 5-year-old victims for sexual gratification. The Court of Criminal Appeals, 53 MJ 224, summarized the prosecution evidence as follows:

On three occasions over the course of several months, the appellant appeared in the presence of his five-year-old daughter, DG, and her five-year-old friend, LA, while dressed in female attire consisting of thigh-high stockings, a bra, panties, and a slip. He exposed his penis to both girls, and allowed his daughter to fondle it.
At trial, both girls described the above encounters. LA testified that DG played with the appellant’s penis by holding it and moving it. She stated that the appellant’s penis was “big,” and that “pee” came out of it on one occasion, although she gave contradictory accounts of whether the appellant’s penis was pointing upwards or down to the floor. DG then explained that she played games with the appellant’s penis by taking turns with LA pulling down the appellant’s underwear, and that she held the appellant’s penis on three occasions, while LA touched it on one occasion. Both girls denied that the appellant ever pushed their hands away or otherwise told them to stop.

Unpub. op. at 2 (footnote omitted).

The prosecution introduced appellant’s written statement, which he gave to agents of the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command (CID). In this statement, appellant admitted that he had been cross-dressing for sexual gratification since he was about 13 years old. He stated that in September or October of 1996, DG and LA discovered him dressed in female clothing. The girls giggled, and appellant told them he was trying on a costume. He stated that in November 1996, DG and LA again discovered him in female clothing. On this occasion, DG pulled up his slip, grabbed his penis, and said, “I [29]*29see your wee wee.” He said that he brushed DG’s hand away, the girls giggled, and he walked to his bedroom to change clothes.

Appellant told the CID that on March 12, 1997, DG and LA again surprised him when he walked from his bedroom to the kitchen in female clothing. He said that DG pulled up his slip, and he felt someone tugging on his penis and pulling down his panties. He admitted having an erection during this third episode. Finally, appellant told the CID that DG grabbed his penis on two other occasions, once while he was urinating and once as he was coming out of the shower. He told the CID that during the three encounters with DG and LA, he was not looking for sexual gratification.

The theory of the defense was that appellant cross-dressed in female clothing for sexual stimulation, that his encounters with DG and LA were inadvertent, that DG’s touching was uninvited and innocent, and that appellant did not seek sexual gratification from his encounters with DG and LA. The Court of Criminal Appeals summarized appellant’s in-court testimony as follows:

The appellant testified in his defense consistent with his previously admitted confession, describing in more detail the three separate encounters which he characterized as unplanned and inadvertent. He denied that the girls touched him at all during the first episode, which occurred in DG’s bedroom; claimed that DG merely poked at his covered genitals during the second, which occurred in the hallway near the bathroom; and admitted only that DG had pulled up his slip and tugged at his underwear during the third, again in the hallway. He stated that he slapped or pushed DG’s hand away both times she tried to touch him. He agreed that his penis was “semi-erect” during one encounter, but averred that his arousal stemmed solely from the titillation of cross-dressing, not from the contact with the young girls.

Id. at 2. Appellant concluded his in-court testimony by unequivocally denying that he solicited or allowed the girls to touch him and denying that the touching sexually aroused him.

Over defense objection, the military judge permitted the prosecution to present rebuttal testimony from the two social services forensic interviewers who conducted videotaped interviews of DG and LA. The videotapes themselves were not offered in evidence. Ms. Regina Downum remembered interviewing DG but could not remember what she said. She identified an extract from the transcript of the interview, and she testified that it “appear[ed] to be” an accurate reflection of the interview. The transcript was admitted in evidence as past recollection recorded. The transcript reflects that DG told Ms. Downum that she, LA, and appellant played a game where appellant would lie down, DG would pull up appellant’s skirt, LA would pull down his underwear, and then DG would feel his “wee-wee.” DG stated that “it felt like it had pee in it.”

Ms. Peg Sneller-Hamilton testified that she interviewed LA. Trial counsel asked what LA said, and Ms. Sneller-Hamilton testified as follows:

That [LA] said that she and [DG] would play with [DG’s] dad — as I think she called it a “wee-wee,” and that they pulled down his pants — and she demonstrated, I think the words were like “swishing it back and forth and pulling on it,” and she demonstrated doing that. I think they touched it when it was in the underwear too, and also when it was out of the underwear.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 M.J. 26, 2001 CAAF LEXIS 560, 2001 WL 543370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-gunkle-armfor-2001.