United States v. Hayes

40 M.J. 813, 1994 CMR LEXIS 250, 1994 WL 463477
CourtU S Coast Guard Court of Military Review
DecidedAugust 25, 1994
DocketCGCM 0067; No. 1006
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 40 M.J. 813 (United States v. Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U S Coast Guard Court of Military Review primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Hayes, 40 M.J. 813, 1994 CMR LEXIS 250, 1994 WL 463477 (cgcomilrev 1994).

Opinions

O’HARA, Judge:

On Saturday morning, 29 February 1992, Seaman (SN) A complained to authorities that the Appellant had taken advantage of her in her BEQ room at Coast Guard Base Honolulu, Hawaii, the night before. When the Appellant was voluntarily interviewed by special agents that same day, he eventually admitted to having engaged in sex with SN A that previous evening, but insisted that it was consensual. Then in early April, SN B came forward and stated that the Appellant had raped her in her BEQ room during the early morning hours of 22 February, a week before the incident with SN A. However, when interviewed by special agents a month earlier on 3 March as part of the investigation into allegations by SN A, SN B said nothing about having been raped, but admitted, with some reluctance, that she had sexual relations once with the Appellant in November 1991. She was recently married on 4 December and said she had not had any sexual relations with Appellant since then. When the accused was confronted by special agents on 8 April with SN B’s charges, he became visibly agitated and, denying the charges, [814]*814terminated the interview with, “This is bullshit. I want a lawyer.”1

Appellant’s general court-martial was held on 31. August through 4 September 1992. He was tried before officer members on three offenses: the rapes of both SN A and SN B in violation of Article 120, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 920, and committing adultery with SN B in violation of Article 134, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 934. Appellant pled not guilty to all charges and specifications.

As with the special agents’ report and the Article 32 investigation, the vast majority of the evidence adduced at the trial related to the events surrounding SN A’s allegations. From the record emerges a clear picture of the lives, loves and other interactions of the Appellant and the other occupants of the BEQ on the night of 28-29 February, and it provided a comprehensive context in which to evaluate the sexual incident that both the accused and SN A agreed took place, with differences only as to certain critical specifies.

The evidence supporting the earlier incident with SN B was murkier. The facts about the incident came solely from SN B. There was no agreement that sexual activity took place on 22 February; the accused adamantly denying any sexual relations with SN B after January. The other goings-on in the BEQ that night were not recounted. Except for SN A and SN B, that night apparently did not evoke many vivid memories for the Appellant or other witnesses; it was a night like any other night. SN B did not scream or call for help. The commotion of the alleged incident went unnoticed by others in the BEQ. According to SN B, following the incident she and the accused left the room, but a little later after returning to the room, she allowed him back into the room when, according to her, he began pounding on the door just before she had to depart for galley duty. Later on in the day, SN B said she called a close friend, Fireman (FN) X, at another Coast Guard unit on Oahu, and told her about the rape. FN X recalled a telephone conversation but not with any precision as to when it took place. SN B said she had decided to otherwise keep silent about the incident out of concern about how her husband might react to the news; her newlywed spouse supposedly had a reputation for being jealous and mercurial. It wasn’t until she confided in another friend, a Health Services Technician Third Class (HS3), weeks later in early April; that the incident eame to-the command’s attention. This was prompted when the HS3 supposedly noticed a sudden change in attitude by SN B towards the accused and the HS3 pressed her about it. SN B said that she felt then the need to tell because the accused appeared to be getting too friendly with her best friend who was in town and she didn’t want the accused to do to her best friend what he had done to her.

In addition to FN X’s evidence in corroboration, SN A testified that she remembered encountering SN B on the morning of 22 February walking around the barracks halls upset, tears coming down her face, carrying her big teddy bear. When asked if she was all right, SN B simply replied, “yes.” However, SN B never mentioned any such encounter or even wandering the halls, much less carrying a teddy bear around after the alleged rape. She did say that following her rape she quickly departed the room and went and sat on the lanai; where, she said, that the accused eventually joined her carrying some pills and made a suicidal gesture before she chided him and returned to her room to get ready to go on duty. Later in the morning, she told SN A to check on the accused because he mentioned killing himself. SN A eventually advised the command of this which resulted in the Appellant being sent for a psychological examination on 29 February, the day SN A reported her rape. The Appellant’s explanation for why he was sent for the examination was that SN B must [815]*815have misconstrued an overheard remark while he was talking to his ex-wife on the telephone during the early evening of Friday, 21 February, but he did not acknowledge any other contact with SN B during the rest of the night.

Unlike SN B’s portrait of only a single prior sexual encounter with the accused prior to her marriage, the Appellant claimed there were several relations, some adulterous, with SN B, lasting into the beginning of January. He denied ever raping SN B. Although FN X felt that SN B became uncomfortable around the Appellant, other witnesses testified that they noticed no change in SN B and that she and the Appellant remained friends after the rape supposedly occurred. She had even allowed him to sleep in her room on the night of the alleged rape of SN A, a week after her claimed rape by the accused, an event upon which both the accused and SN B agree.

Both SN B and the accused testified under oath in open court and were subject to extensive cross-examination. Both SN B’s and the accused’s testimony were elicited principally through leading questions; neither was permitted to provide their own narrative of the incident. Neither witness’s credibility was significantly impeached during the trial.

To assist in clarifying the situation, expert testimony was brought in. The Government’s expert was a social worker at a sex abuse treatment center with a master’s degree in social work who was working on her doctorate in psychology. She testified that it was very uncommon for victims of acquaintance rape to fight back or to exhibit physical injuries and that after the fact some responded in a very calm, matter-of-fact fashion, while others expressed their emotions. She posited that victims may or may not avoid contact with the person who date raped them. And, other traumas can produce similar symptoms. The Defense’s expert had his doctorate in psychology and was also involved with sexual counseling. He opined that primary symptoms displayed by rape victims are avoidance of bringing the event to mind and becoming socially withdrawn. In that light, he felt that victims typically stay away from persons who had anything to do with the event. But, both experts agreed that each victim is unique and the reactions to the event can vary widely. Therefore, SN B’s reactions in this case could be indicative of both a rape having occurred or the fact that nothing happened.

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Related

United States v. Matthews
55 M.J. 600 (U S Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals, 2001)
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54 M.J. 37 (Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, 2000)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 M.J. 813, 1994 CMR LEXIS 250, 1994 WL 463477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hayes-cgcomilrev-1994.