United States v. Le

59 M.J. 859, 2004 CCA LEXIS 88, 2004 WL 782624
CourtArmy Court of Criminal Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 2004
DocketARMY 20020298
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 59 M.J. 859 (United States v. Le) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Army Court of Criminal 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. Le, 59 M.J. 859, 2004 CCA LEXIS 88, 2004 WL 782624 (acca 2004).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

SCHENCK, Judge:

A military judge sitting as a general court-martial convicted appellant, in accordance with his pleas, of desertion and failure to obey a lawful general order (two specifications), in violation of Articles 85 and 92, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. §§ 885 and 892 [hereinafter UCMJ]. The convening authority approved the adjudged sentence to a bad-conduct discharge, confinement for seven months, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, and reduction to Private El.

In response to this court’s specified issues, appellate defense counsel assert that the providence inquiry failed to establish whether the duress defense was available to appellant when appellant stated that he left his unit for nearly fourteen months because he was afraid a gang member would kill or harm [860]*860him. Appellate government counsel counter, inter alia, that appellant’s guilty plea was provident because appellant did not fear immediate injury or death and, in any event, appellant’s fear did not continue throughout his absence.

We find that appellant’s asserted fear of immediate death or serious bodily injury rendered his guilty plea to Charge I and its Specification improvident for the first four days of his absence. Thereafter, any fear was unreasonable because after four days appellant was no longer near the source of the threat. As such, we hold that appellant’s guilty plea is provident to desertion for the remainder of his absence. We will modify Charge I and its Specification to more accurately reflect appellant’s culpability and reassess the sentence in our decretal paragraph.

FACTS

Appellant entered a guilty plea to desertion from on or about 15 September 2000 until apprehension on or about 4 November 2001, as alleged in Charge I and its Specification. During the providence inquiry, appellant stated that his girlfriend’s former boyfriend did not want her to date appellant. Her former boyfriend was a gang member who threatened appellant around July or August of 2000 and possibly later. According to appellant, the former boyfriend was “like a gangster” and he “was kind of like going after [appellant].”

Appellant took the threats seriously because he was raised in Los Angeles and saw “a lot of things happen with the gangster people.” Moreover, the former boyfriend followed appellant and appellant’s girlfriend to various locations, such as the mall and on the freeway. Appellant was afraid of the former boyfriend and told the military judge that his girlfriend was also fearful. On 15 September 2000, appellant packed all his belongings “[b]ecause [he] wasn’t planning to come back.” He left Fort Lewis, drove to San Diego, California, and was apprehended 415 days later (on 4 November 2001) while crossing the international border at Tijuana, Mexico.

Appellant was informed that his commander was considering the imposition of nonjudicial punishment on the day before his desertion, but appellant said this was not one of the problems that led to his desertion. Instead, appellant twice told the military judge that he left his unit due to the former boyfriend’s threats. A short while later, appellant stated that the threats had a “[v]ery serious” impact on his decision to leave.

The military judge then explained the duress defense to appellant.1 He stated that appellant must have had a reasonable fear and that the “threat resulting in fear must have continued throughout the commission of the offense [ (appellant’s desertion) ].” After the military judge’s explanation, appellant’s trial defense counsel conceded that he had not discussed the duress defense with appellant prior to trial. The military judge, therefore, recessed the court for over twenty minutes to allow counsel time to confer with appellant.

After the recess, appellant answered the military judge’s questions, as follows:

MJ: Well, when you left on 15 September were you fearful that you were going to be immediately killed or would immediately suffer serious bodily injury?
ACC: To my knowledge, I was left pretty much on my own, so I — I don’t think it was immediate dangerous [sic] to myself.
MJ: Did you fear immediate danger to your person on September 15th, when you left?
ACC: Sir, I would say — I feared, but I don’t know exactly what they are going to do to me, so-
MJ: Well, were you fearful that you would be immediately killed?
ACC: No, sir.
MJ: Were you fearful that you would immediately suffer serious bodily injury? [Accused and defense counsel conferred.]
ACC: No, sir.

[861]*861Appellant then stated that he “would understand” that he could have reported the threats to the police or chain of command. He explained, however, that if he made a report he thought the former boyfriend and his friends “might com[e] back for [him] later on.” The military judge questioned, “Did they ever try to run you off the road with you driving?” Appellant answered, “It was close a couple times.” When the military judge asked if appellant had received any threats on 15 September 2000, appellant answered “no” after conferring with his counsel.

The military judge probed further with his questioning:

MJ: So it’s clear in my mind, why did you leave on September 15th of 2000?
ACC: Sir, because I don’t believe — know when- — -when they are going to come for me and I was under this stressful [sic] and all the trouble I got myself into because of that. And also, I’m about to leave this country to go to another duty station. I don’t have time to go back, see my family or my friends for almost two years. So I was under that stressful [sic] and — and confused and scared.
MJ: What were you scared about?
ACC: I was seared of her ex-boyfriend and the trouble I had gotten myself into.
MJ: What trouble you had gotten yourself into?
ACC: Like have over — guests overnight. All the trouble I got into. And all these things just pile on me at one time.
MJ: Where did your family and friends live, that you wanted to visit before you [transferred] to Korea?
ACC: LA, California, sir.
MJ: What was the primary reason why you left on September 15th of 2000?
ACC: I was scared and-
MJ: What were you scared about?
ACC: Scared I might get hurt or killed sometime before I go, because my report date [for port call to Korea] is October 20th.
MJ: You were scared that you would be hurt or killed; is that what you said?
ACC: Sir-
MJ: Hurt or killed by whom?
ACC: By the guy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 M.J. 859, 2004 CCA LEXIS 88, 2004 WL 782624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-le-acca-2004.