United States v. Hannan

17 M.J. 115, 1984 CMA LEXIS 23137
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedJanuary 16, 1984
DocketNo. 42,988; CM 438946
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 17 M.J. 115 (United States v. Hannan) 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. Hannan, 17 M.J. 115, 1984 CMA LEXIS 23137 (cma 1984).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

EVERETT, Chief Judge:

Usually, we are confronted with cases in which an appellant contends that his sentence is too long. Hannan, on the other hand, complains that the sentence he received should not have been reduced by the convening authority. This seemingly paradoxical complaint does not result from masochism on appellant’s part. Instead, it reflects the reality that, where court-martial sentences are concerned, sometimes more is less in terms of practical effect because of the way in which good-conduct time and parole eligibility are computed. See, e.g., United States v. Larner, 1 M.J. 371, 372-73 (C.M.A.1976).

Specifically, Hannan urges that if his sentence had remained at a year and a day, rather than being reduced to only a year, he probably would have been paroled and released from confinement earlier than the date on which he was released. While we conclude that errors occurred in connection with appellant’s case, we perceive no basis for giving him any further relief than he has already received.

I. THE FACTS

The Commanding General of the 82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg, North [117]*117Carolina, referred for trial by general court-martial these charges against Han-nan: (a) Charge I: specification 1 — failure to go to his place of duty on January 3, 1979; and specification 2 — unauthorized absence from March 12 to May 19, 19791; (b) Charge II: specification 1 — larceny of a wallet of Captain Ben R. Cabell containing $80 in currency and a military identification card issued to Captain Cabell; and specification 2 — larceny of ten parachutes belonging to the United States Government and having a value in excess of $2,500.002; (c) Charge III: conduct unbecoming an officer in that Hannan on January 15, 1979, “attempted] to induce Staff Sergeant E-6 Charles Johnson ... to submit a false statement ... to conceal ... [appellant’s] unauthorized absence from his place of duty”3; (d) Charge IV: specification 1 — uttering a check for $100.00 with the forged signature of Ben R. Cabell; specification 2— uttering a check for $1,000.00 with Ca-bell’s forged signature; and specification 3— uttering a saving account withdrawal slip for $4,000.00 with Cabell’s forged signature 4.

Hannan — who was represented by both military and civilian counsel — was arraigned at an Article 39(a)5 session on August 30, 1979; and hearings on various defense motions extended through September 1st. Then, after the judge had ruled on the motions adversely to appellant6, pleas of not guilty to all charges and specifications were entered; and the judge scheduled September 11 as the first day of trial.

When proceedings resumed on that date, Hannan, who previously had indicated his desire to be tried by a court with members, submitted a request for trial by judge alone, which he had signed on September 2nd. After the judge accepted this request, appellant then changed his pleas to guilty of specification 2, Charge I, and specification 1, Charge II; and guilty of the lesser included offense of wrongful appropriation under specification 2, Charge II. As to the other offenses charged, Hannan maintained his not-guilty pleas.

A providence inquiry ensued, during which the judge explained appellant’s rights and the elements of the offenses and obtained Hannan’s version of the offenses to which he pleaded guilty. The judge ascertained that all the parties believed that dismissal, confinement for 2Vi years, and total forfeitures was the maximum punishment for the offenses to which appellant pleaded guilty. In response to questions from the judge, appellant affirmed that the adverse rulings on defense motions had not caused the change in his pleas, but that “a number of factors contributed to the decision to tender a guilty plea to the Charges and Specifications. As I have pleaded guilty, certainly there were other factors— not serious factors — the maximum punishments specified by the Charges — the trial — a number of factors entered into the decision to tender a plea of guilty.” Han-nan further explained “that there were a number of things that were considered when I determined that it was in my best interest to plead guilty to what I pled guilty to. I believe that I am guilty and I want to see this thing through to the conclusion.”

Then the judge reviewed with appellant the pretrial agreement into which he had entered. This agreement arose out of an offer to plead guilty which Hannan had signed on September 2. This offer called for him to plead guilty to the offenses to which he later entered such pleas and specified that the Government would present no evidence as to the other offenses listed on the charge sheet. The convening authori[118]*118ty’s obligation under the pretrial agreement was set forth in a separate document, which provided a punishment ceiling of “confinement at hard labor for a period of one year, dismissal, and total forfeiture of pay and allowances for a period of one year.” The judge stated expressly that he had not seen this “sentence portion” of the pretrial agreement and that he did not “intend to do so until after sentence is announced in this case.”

Appellant assured the court that the pretrial agreement had been made freely and voluntarily; that he believed that he understood it fully; and that he had no questions thereon. Appellant also stated that his counsel had mentioned the possibility of a pretrial agreement “as one of the number of options available to me in terms of the totality of this case.” Ultimately, he had decided to make an offer to plead guilty and then had related this decision to his military and civilian counsel. Hannan was unaware of any overtures by the Government for a pretrial agreement. Moreover, appellant, trial counsel, and both the civilian and military defense counsel assured the judge that they were unaware of any sub rosa agreements or additional terms in the agreement. Appellant acknowledged that his military and civilian counsel had explained to him “the intricacies of military punishments and what that means in plain language.” Ultimately, the judge determined the guilty pleas were provident and accepted them. Then he entered findings of guilty based thereon and found the accused not guilty of the remaining charges and specifications.

During the sentencing proceedings, the judge discussed with counsel the pretrial restraints to which appellant had been subjected and stated that he would “consider that in my deliberation on the sentence.” No evidence in extenuation and mitigation was presented by the defense, but Hannan made an unsworn statement through his civilian defense counsel. The Government offered no rebuttal evidence. Then, after arguments, the judge closed court for almost an hour to deliberate on the sentence. Ultimately, he announced that appellant was sentenced to dismissal, forfeiture of $1100.00 pay per month for 2 years, and confinement at hard labor for 1 year and 1 day. Then the judge reviewed the pretrial agreement further with appellant and, among other things, remarked that Han-nan’s sentence called for confinement for a period of 1 year and 1 day, while the pretrial agreement bound the convening authority “to approve no more than one year’s confinement.” The court-martial was then adjourned.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 M.J. 115, 1984 CMA LEXIS 23137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hannan-cma-1984.