United States v. Leonard

63 M.J. 398, 2006 CAAF LEXIS 1057, 2006 WL 2333018
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Armed Forces
DecidedAugust 9, 2006
Docket05-0445/AF
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 63 M.J. 398 (United States v. Leonard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Leonard, 63 M.J. 398, 2006 CAAF LEXIS 1057, 2006 WL 2333018 (Ark. 2006).

Opinion

Chief Judge GIERKE

delivered the opinion of the Court. 1

A servicemember does not have a Sixth Amendment right to trial by jury. 2 However, “Congress has established the court-martial as the institution to provide military justice to service members.” 3 Congress has also afforded every servicemember the right to have a court-martial of panel members for both a general and a special court-martial. 4

This Court has stated that the “cornerstone of the military justice system” is the “right to members who are fair and impartial.” 5 Indeed, this right to fair and impartial members is so important that the process of selecting a court-martial panel enjoys protections under the Constitution, 6 statute, 7 regulations, 8 and case law. 9

The present case requires this Court to address two issues related to the member selection process. 10 First, whether Appellant *400 preserved any issue related to the denial of his challenge in light of the waiver provision of R.C.M. 912(f)(4). Second, if an appellate issue is preserved, whether the military judge erred in denying a defense causal challenge based on either actual or implied bias.

We hold that Appellant waived review of the issue related to the military judge’s denial of a causal challenge of one member but preserved a similar issue as to another member. Also we hold that the military judge abused his discretion and violated the liberal grant mandate as to a causal challenge and improperly denied Appellant’s causal challenge of the second panel member based on implied bias.

Factual Background

A. General Background of the Alleged Rape

Appellant and a female servieemember, Airman First Class (A1C) CH, engaged in a social evening of drinking with friends and acquaintances at an on-base club. Although Appellant and CH knew each other, they were not close friends. Appellant drank heavily and became intoxicated. CH had only one drink.

Appellant asked CH to take care of him. CH agreed and took the intoxicated Appellant to her dorm room where they both fell asleep on her bed. That evening Appellant engaged in sexual intercourse with CH. The following day, CH accused Appellant of raping her while she was sleeping. Appellant was charged with rape in violation of Article 120, UCMJ, 11 and the case was referred to a general court-martial.

B. Trial Developments Related to Selection of the Two Panel Members

As Appellant elected a court-martial consisting of officer and enlisted members, the court-martial proceeded, through the voir dire process, to screen the panel members and to identify and provide the parties a fair and impartial panel. During voir dire, Lieutenant Colonel (LTC) D disclosed that his daughter had been “raped by a friend of hers” while she was in high school. He stated that the incident occurred five years prior to this court-martial. He further ex *401 plained that he and his wife had urged their daughter to press charges but she had refused to do so. LTC D also stated that he was a neighbor of the staff judge advocate involved in this case.

Captain (CPT) P, a pilot, disclosed that he worked with CH in the same unit. CPT P stated that he and CH only exchanged pleasantries in the hallway. He also revealed that CH was responsible for his flight equipment and was entrusted to pack his parachute. Over a period of six to twelve months, he would bring his “professional flying gear,” that is, his flight helmet or parachute, to her for servicing. However, CPT P claimed that he had not formed an opinion as to her credibility.

After voir dire was complete, trial defense counsel challenged LTC D for actual and implied bias. Trial defense counsel supported his challenge with the following argument:

[O]ne can almost not envision a more traumatic psychological effect than having one of your children victimized of the same serious crime that Airman Leonard is accused of. What’s noteworthy here too, is he tried to get his daughter to pursue prosecuting that particular crime, and she didn’t want to. If I was in [Lieutenant] Colonel [D’s] position I don’t know how I would go home at the end of the day and never be able to tell my daughter that I sat on a rape case and acquitted the individual, and I don’t know that—that anyone viewing this trial could possibly believe considering what Lieutenant Colonel [D] and his family have gone through that Airman Leonard is getting a fair trial.

As to CPT P, trial defense counsel challenged him based on implied bias and made the following argument to support this challenge:

[CPT P] knows [CH], the victim in this case. He has contact with her on a weekly basis. Again, the mere fact that he knows her. They work together, he has contact with her, and that she is the critical witness in this case against Airman Leonard, we believe would raise eyebrows and would—would cause a third party looking on this trial to wonder with a juror like that if Airman Leonard is getting the fair and impartial panel he’s entitled to, sir.

The military judge denied both challenges. As to LTC D, the military judge explained that his ruling was based on the fact that the rape of LTC D’s daughter occurred five years ago and his view that the unemotional demeanor LTC D displayed in discussing the matter demonstrated LTC D’s fairness. Regarding CPT P, the military judge opined that the interaction of the member with the victim was infrequent, even as it related to obtaining life-support gear, and that CPT P had not formed an opinion as to the credibility of the victim.

Trial defense counsel then used his sole peremptory challenge to remove LTC D, but did not state that he would have used his peremptory challenge against any other member or CPT P. 12 Appellant pleaded not guilty, and the trial proceeded on the merits. The panel convicted Appellant of the rape offense and sentenced him. 13

Discussion

R.C.M. 912(f)(l)(N) provides that a member “[s]hould not sit” where his service would raise “substantial doubt as to [the] legality, fairness, and impartiality” of the proceedings. “This rule includes challenges based on actual bias as well as implied bias.” 14 Recognizing the distinction between these two concepts, this Court has stated:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 M.J. 398, 2006 CAAF LEXIS 1057, 2006 WL 2333018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-leonard-armfor-2006.