United States v. Hawes

18 C.M.A. 464, 18 USCMA 464, 40 C.M.R. 176, 1969 CMA LEXIS 759, 1969 WL 6039
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedAugust 8, 1969
DocketNo. 21,883
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 18 C.M.A. 464 (United States v. Hawes) 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. Hawes, 18 C.M.A. 464, 18 USCMA 464, 40 C.M.R. 176, 1969 CMA LEXIS 759, 1969 WL 6039 (cma 1969).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

Quinn, Chief Judge:

Before entering a plea of guilty to unauthorized absence from his unit at Camp Pendleton, California, for approximately eleven months, the accused moved to dismiss the charge because he was denied a speedy trial. The motion was denied, and the correctness of the ruling is the subject of this appeal.

At the hearing on the motion, the parties stipulated to a chronology of the proceedings in the case. The chronology, supplemented by other matters included in the evidence before the law officer, is set out in the Appendix to this opinion.

No useful purpose will be served by review of the numerous cases dealing with speedy trial. Each case necessarily depends upon its own facts. United States v Goode, 17 17 USCMA 584, 586, 38 CMR 382. The interval of time between initial confinement in connection with the charge and the date of trial is not the sole determinant of the issue, but only one of the factors to be considered. Compare United States v Parish, 17 USCMA 411, 38 CMR 209, with United States v Callahan, 10 USCMA 156, 27 CMR 230.

Appellate defense counsel describe unauthorized absence as “the easiest military offense to process” and contend that an interval of one hundred and six days between confinement and trial “cannot be condoned.” Viewed grossly, the period appears extended for the nature of the offense, but considering the proceedings had, and allowing for the vagaries of variables in fluid situations, we are satisfied the accused was not denied a speedy trial.

The initial period of thirty-four days from December 20, 1967, to January 22, 1968, which includes the accused’s apprehension by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Fallon, Nevada, his transfer to Camp Pendle-ton, and preparation and submission of the Article 32 investigation report, does not impress us as being inordinately or unjustifiably prolonged. Similarly, the various proceedings in the case during the thirty-seven-day period from February 27 to April 3, the date of trial, were timely and reasonably expeditious. That leaves the middle period of thirty-five days between January 23 and February 26, for consideration. Apparently, the case file was lost or misplaced in that period.

Losing or misplacing a case file is always cause for judicial and administrative concern. It is especially intolerable if it may result in unnecessary pretrial confinement of the accused. We are not inclined to excuse or minimize the event. However, we are not persuaded by defense counsel’s postulate that the “durance vile” of accused’s confinement during this period constituted Government oppression or resulted in prejudice to the accused. See Solomon v Mancusi, — F2d — (CA 2d Cir), 5 Criminal [466]*466Law Reporter 2226, decided May 5, 1969.

The record leaves no doubt that the pause in the proceedings was not the result of indifference or disregard of the obligation to process the charges as speedily as possible, but rather to the tactical operations of the accused’s battalion. Indeed efforts were made to locate the papers. These were not successful, but they indicate the case was not forgotten or ignored. The accused suggests other measures that could have been taken to find the misplaced or lost papers. Had some of these measures been utilized, it is possible the papers might have been located sooner, but, as the accused’s March 5 offer to plead guilty indicates, earlier recovery of the papers would not necessarily have brought the case to trial much before the day it was actually tried. On the contrary, the offer implies that the accused was not ready for trial unless his proposed limitation on the sentence was accepted by the convening authority.

A reading of the transcript of the Article 32 investigation leaves the distinct impression that the accused was not anxious to return to duty. It is fairly inferable that he preferred confinement to release to his unit during either its training exercise or its transfer to Vietnam. Throughout the period in issue, the accused was represented by counsel, but there is no indication he or his counsel made application for his release from confinement so that he might rejoin his organization. The March 5 offer to go to trial “immediately” is far removed from a protest against continued confinement or a plea for speedy disposition of the case. It is noteworthy that notwithstanding the certainty of conviction, which is presented as one of the reasons for the unreasonableness of the period of preparation, the accused did not submit the offer to plead guilty until his unit was transferred to Vietnam and he was assigned to the Military Police Company.

On the record before us, we are satisfied there was no oppressive or unreasonable delay in prosecution. We are also satisfied the accused was not prejudiced by reason of the time taken to bring the charge against him to trial.

Part of the accused’s argument on the motion to dismiss adverted to alleged violations of Articles 10 and 33, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC §§ 810 and 833, respectively. Article 10 requires that on arrest or confinement “immediate steps” be taken to inform the accused of the “specific wrong of which he is accused and to try him or to dismiss the charges and release him.” We have already indicated that satisfactory steps were taken to bring the accused to trial, and that none of the intervals of time between the various steps was so inordinately long or oppressive as to justify dismissal of the charge. The record, however, does not indicate that the accused was directly informed of the offense for which he was confined. An omission of that kind is not ground for reversal of an otherwise valid conviction if the accused is'not prejudiced.

In United States v Tibbs, 15 USCMA 350, 354, 35 CMR 322, we pointed out that the purpose of the notification provision of Article 10 was to enable the accused to “consider his defense and apprise his family, friends, or counsel of his predicament to enable them to assist him by whatever means available.” The Government contends that purpose was satisfied because it can be inferred from the accused’s apprehension by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and transfer to the Camp Pendleton brig that he knew the reason for his confinement. The board of review drew that inference. We need not, however, determine whether the circumstances justify the inference. We perceive no prejudice to the accused.

[467]*467The record demonstrates the accused never contemplated a defense to the charge, and before and at trial he affirmatively opposed the presentation of mitigating matter that might have resulted in his retention in the service. The record further indicates he was specifically advised to notify relatives of his predicament and that counsel was appointed for him to assist him while the charge was still under investigation. In these circumstances, we cannot regard “a departure from the strict letter of the law” as a denial of due process. Tibbs, supra, at pages 354, 355.

As to Article 33, we may, as we did in the Tibbs case, assume the Article requires that within eight days of the time the accused is placed in confinement a report be made to the general court-martial authority as to the status of the charge.' The Article does not prescribe dismissal of the charge for failure to submit the report. United States v Callahan, supra, at page 158. It certainly does not mandate reversal of conviction in the absence of prejudice for failure to submit the report. Here, as in Tibbs,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 C.M.A. 464, 18 USCMA 464, 40 C.M.R. 176, 1969 CMA LEXIS 759, 1969 WL 6039, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hawes-cma-1969.