United States v. Mahloch

29 M.J. 1080, 1990 CMR LEXIS 240, 1990 WL 15952
CourtU S Coast Guard Court of Military Review
DecidedFebruary 21, 1990
DocketCGCM 0023; Docket No. 927
StatusPublished

This text of 29 M.J. 1080 (United States v. Mahloch) 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. Mahloch, 29 M.J. 1080, 1990 CMR LEXIS 240, 1990 WL 15952 (cgcomilrev 1990).

Opinion

GRACE, Judge:

Appellant was convicted pursuant to his pleas of 15 specifications of making false official statements, 11 specifications of larceny, one specification of dereliction of duty and seven specifications of submitting false claims in violation of Articles 107, 121, 92 and 132, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. §§ 907, 921, 892, 932.

The Court, sitting as judge alone, sentenced the appellant to be confined for nine months, reduced to pay grade E-3 and discharged from the service with a Bad Conduct Discharge. The Convening Authority approved the sentence and ordered it executed (with the exception of the BCD). The execution of that part of the sentence adjudging confinement in excess of three months was suspended for six months in accordance with a pretrial agreement.

Before this Court, the appellant originally submitted two assignments of error. During oral argument appellant raised an additional error related to his first assigned error. He was given leave to file a supplemental brief fully discussing this additional assignment of error and the government filed an opposing brief. The additional assignment of error was designated “Assignment of Error III.” Since Assignments I and III are related, they will be discussed first in that order.

Assignment of Error I

APPELLANT WAS DENIED A FAIR TRIAL WHERE THE MILITARY JUDGE IN THIS CASE WAS NOT IMPARTIAL AS A RESULT OF WRITING THE OFFICER EVALUATION REPORT OF THE INDIVIDUAL THE MILITARY JUDGE PERSONALLY SELECTED TO SUBSTITUTE FOR HIM IN MILITARY JUSTICE MATTERS WHILE REMAINING THE CONVENING AUTHORITY’S DISTRICT LEGAL OFFICER DURING THE PERIOD IN WHICH THE SUBSTITUTE OFFICER RECOMMENDED TO THE CONVENING AUTHORITY THAT APPELLANT BE BROUGHT TO TRIAL AT GENERAL COURT-MARTIAL

At the onset of the trial on 23 August 1988, the military judge, sua sponte, disclosed that the trial counsel, Lieutenant Commander Devine, had worked for him, that they had both been transferred during the summer, and that he had written Lieutenant Commander Devine’s most recent Officer Evaluation Report (OER). He further disclosed that he had transferred his military justice functions as Staff Judge Advocate (SJA) to Commander John Unzicker.

During voir dire of the military judge by the defense counsel, the following additional facts were developed. Before this case arose, Captain Snook was serving as the District Legal Officer (SJA) to the Eighth District Commander (who eventually became the Convening Authority in this case). Upon learning of his pending new assignment as Chief Trial Judge for the Coast Guard in April 1988, he disassociated himself from any military justice matters. As stated previously, he transferred all of his staff judge advocate functions in military justice to Commander Unzicker, a subordinate attorney on his staff at the Eighth District legal office. Prior to his being detailed as the military judge, Captain Snook had nothing to do with this case. He did not draft or sign the SJA’s Article 34, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 834, advice nor did he discuss the case with anyone. He played no part in drafting the charges, provided no assistance to the trial counsel and, in fact, never saw the charges until after his transfer in late June 1988. He did not assign trial counsel. He had no conversations with anyone on the Eighth District staff concerning this case. Because he knew that he might eventually be called upon to judge this case, he was particularly circumspect to avoid any involvement with it. He provided no advice to the convening authority. The record is clear that Commander Unzicker, not Captain Snook, was the staff judge advocate in this case.

The military judge was open in his attempt to disclose any possible ground for his disqualification. However, he did not disclose on the record that he had written Commander Unzicker’s final OER for the period ending with the military judge’s [1082]*1082transfer. His failure to specifically state that he wrote the OER on Commander Unzicker may be attributed to an oversight on his part. As Commander Unzicker’s superior, he would normally write the OER. There is no suggestion that he was purposely hiding that information from the defense.

We begin our analysis of this argument by examining it in two aspects: whether the military judge’s impartiality was affected by his writing an OER on the SJA who wrote the Article 34 pretrial advice, and whether the failure by the defense counsel to challenge the military judge waives the issue.

We will first address the issue of waiver. From the information disclosed by the military judge it should have been obvious to the defense counsel that the military judge would normally be writing an OER on Commander Unzicker for his performance as the assistant in the legal office which Captain Snook ran before being transferred. Unfortunately, the defense counsel asked no questions of the military judge concerning his relationship to Commander Unzicker or the writing of his OER. The defense knew that Commander Unzicker was Captain Snook’s subordinate and, despite full knowledge that Captain Snook had taken steps to insulate himself from military justice matters, failed to explore whether Captain Snook continued to evaluate Commander Unzicker for the performance of these or other functions. It may be that the defense chose not to explore this issue because it did not perceive this to be a problem and therefore waived the issue on appeal. We do not have to decide this issue now. There are other grounds for rejecting the appellant’s first assignment of error.

There are two ways that Captain Snook’s writing of Commander Unzicker’s OER could have unfairly impacted on the appellant’s trial raised by appellant’s Assignment of Error I. The first would have been through the Article 34 pretrial advice.

As soon as the military judge became aware of his new assignment he immediately removed himself from any further duties having to do with military justice in the Eighth District; Commander Unzicker took over all of those duties. Commander Unzicker drafted (or caused to be drafted) and signed the Article 34 pretrial advice to the convening authority. The military judge took no part in the drafting of the pretrial advice and there is no suggestion that the military judge in any way tried to influence the outcome of the pretrial advice or the decision of the convening authority to convene a general court-martial.

We can find no evidence or inference that the fact that the Military Judge wrote Commander Unzicker’s OER had any impact on the pretrial advice signed by Commander Unzicker, the decision of the convening authority to convene a general court-martial, or the outcome of the trial. The Article 34 advice was not challenged during the trial and there has been no suggestion that it was improper or legally deficient.

The other possible prejudice to the appellant suggested by his assignment of error would have been if the military judge was not fair or impartial. After our careful review of the whole record, we find that the military judge took particular care to be fair and impartial. For instance, he made a very favorable ruling for the defense in a difficult area of military law— multiplicity. By applying the option discussed in our opinion in U.S. v. Howard, 24 M.J.

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Related

United States v. Moorehead
20 C.M.A. 574 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1971)
United States v. Howard
24 M.J. 897 (U S Coast Guard Court of Military Review, 1987)
United States v. Beckermann
27 M.J. 334 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 M.J. 1080, 1990 CMR LEXIS 240, 1990 WL 15952, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mahloch-cgcomilrev-1990.