United States v. Lemaster

40 M.J. 178, 1994 CMA LEXIS 221, 1994 WL 455649
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedAugust 23, 1994
DocketNo. 93-1059; CMR No. 29531
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 40 M.J. 178 (United States v. Lemaster) 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. Lemaster, 40 M.J. 178, 1994 CMA LEXIS 221, 1994 WL 455649 (cma 1994).

Opinions

Opinion

COX, Judge:

In this case we are asked to determine whether appellant was entrapped by agents of the Air Force Office of Special Investigations (OSI) into committing the offense of attempted possession of cocaine.1 We con-[179]*179elude that the Government did not satisfy its burden of proving that appellant was not entrapped. United States v. Vanzandt, 14 MJ 332 (CMA 1982). Accordingly, we set aside the conviction for that offense.

At the time of the offense at issue, “appellant was a 24-year-old, emotionally unstable, alcoholic, assigned to Malmstrom Air Force Base, Montana, whose husband and two small children had [just] left her and were living in West Virginia.” She was suffering from severe depression when she became involved with Staff Sergeant (SSgt) Munger. CMR unpub. op. at 1-2 (March 26, 1993).

SSgt Munger met Jennifer Lemaster at the Beacon, a local bar, in October 1990. They talked at the bar, and after it closed, they went to breakfast at JB’s Restaurant. On the way to the restaurant, appellant asked Munger if he “wanted to get high,” but Munger declined. The OSI learned of appellant’s inquiry and contacted SSgt Munger to begin working for them as an informant. Munger agreed to continue his relationship with appellant and work for the OSI. At that time, he had known appellant for less than a week, and she had spent the night with him once.

The OSI agents’ instructions to SSgt Munger were “real vague.” SSgt Munger admitted that, during his relationship with appellant, their conversations regarding drugs were “few and far between.” On one occasion, he had asked appellant to buy some marijuana for him, but she had refused. In January of 1991, Munger eventually asked the OSI “to speed things up” because he was planning to go to a party and wanted to “hit on” another girl. A sting operation was planned.

The night before the sting, SSgt Munger met with an OSI Special Agent (SA) James Siler, who was to pose as Munger’s old friend “Stumpy” in the sting operation. The next night, Munger took appellant on a date for the first time in their 4-month relationship; the two went to a bar in a nearby town. At the bar, they ran into SA Siler, and Munger introduced him as his old friend, “Stumpy.” The three had drinks and started playing pool.

On the side of the pool table was a sign instructing anyone who “knock[ed] a ball off the table ... to put a quarter in the pot” for “a pot party” at the end of the year. SSgt Munger and Stumpy laughed about the sign, and the conversation turned to a discussion of drugs. The men discussed the drugs they did when stationed together in the Philippines and how Stumpy got kicked out of the Air Force for doing drugs.

Munger asked Stumpy if he “was still partying,” and Stumpy said that he was. Then Stumpy said that he had “party favors.” When he said he had marijuana, appellant showed no reaction. Stumpy then said he also had cocaine. Appellant had mentioned to Munger some time earlier that she wanted to try cocaine with him because it was a “good high.” Appellant and Munger agreed to buy some cocaine, but appellant did not have any money. Appellant was going to cash a $30 check at the bar, but Stumpy said he would take a check from her. She handed Stumpy the check so he could fill in his name since she did not know it, and Stumpy filled in his name and handed the check back to appellant. He told appellant “to put a ‘C’ in the memo” space “so she would remember what” her cheek “was for.” Appellant put a “C” on the memo line and attempted to give the check back to Stumpy. He would not take the check inside the bar and asked her to wait and give it to him when they were in his vehicle.

After finishing their game of pool, the three went to Stumpy’s car. Appellant got in the front seat with Stumpy, and Munger got in the back seat. Appellant gave Stumpy the check for $30, and Munger gave him $20 cash for the cocaine. Stumpy asked appellant if she wanted to see the cocaine but she declined. He gave her the “bindle”2 of some [180]*180substance, representing it to be cocaine, then promptly signaled the other agents. The agents pulled appellant, Munger, and Stumpy out of the car and handcuffed them as if they were all being apprehended.

After appellant spoke with the OSI, she had a friend pick her up and take her to SSgt Munger’s house where a party was going on. Appellant went to Munger’s bedroom and passed out wearing one of his t-shirts. She awoke later to find SSgt Munger “having sex with” her.

Appellant “was in love with” SSgt Munger, and Munger knew that appellant “had feelings for” him. SA Siler testified that on the night of the sting, appellant and Munger acted affectionately toward each other, as boyfriend and girlfriend. Munger considered appellant “edgy,” “psychotic,” “emotionally a wreck,” and an alcoholic. When Munger told the OSI of appellant’s problems, they responded by saying appellant was “just a f---ing wasteoid.” Munger continued to have intercourse with appellant during his work as an OSI informant, even though he claims he did not enjoy it and considered appellant to be “one night stand material.” Munger had oral and anal sex with appellant, and he joked with OSI agents about having oral sex with her despite the fact that he thought she was “so stupid [he] felt sorry for her.”

At trial, appellant moved to have the cocaine charge dismissed on the basis that the government agents had entrapped her. The military judge denied the motion, stating:

Okay, on the motion to dismiss Specification 2, I find that, first of all, that there has been evidence that the accused was predisposed to use and possess contraband drugs.
Secondly, I find the government did not induce the accused to commit the offense alleged, but rather provided the opportunity for her to do so.
Third, I find that the conduct by the government, its agents, and source, including the sexual relationship and contacts between Sergeant Munger and the accused, and the knowledge thereof by OSI agents, was not so egregious and outrageous [as] to warrant dismissal of Specification 2 as a matter of law based on a denial of due process.

Military law recognizes the entrapment defense. United States v. Whittle, 34 MJ 206 (CMA 1992); United States v. Vanzandt, 14 MJ 332 (CMA 1982). But an accused has a tough row to hoe to secure acquittal by virtue of entrapment because “[a] law-abiding person is one who resists the temptations, which abound in our society today, to commit crimes.” United States v. Whittle, supra at 208, quoting United States v. Evans, 924 F.2d 714, 717 (7th Cir.1991).

Appellant asks us to dismiss specification 2 because in this case the conduct of the government agent, Munger, was “so outrageous, fundamentally unfair, and shocking to the universal sense of justice that prosecution is proscribed by the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.” Final Brief at 7, citing United States v. Russell, 411 U.S. 423, 431, 93 S.Ct. 1637, 1643, 36 L.Ed.2d 366 (1973); and United States v. Hampton, 425 U.S. 484, 96 S.Ct. 1646, 48 L.Ed.2d 113 (1976). See also United States v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 M.J. 178, 1994 CMA LEXIS 221, 1994 WL 455649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-lemaster-cma-1994.