United States v. Maresca

26 M.J. 910, 1988 CMR LEXIS 417, 1988 WL 75252
CourtU.S. Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review
DecidedJune 21, 1988
DocketNMCM 87 0006
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 26 M.J. 910 (United States v. Maresca) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Navy-Marine Corps 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. Maresca, 26 M.J. 910, 1988 CMR LEXIS 417, 1988 WL 75252 (usnmcmilrev 1988).

Opinions

CASSEL, Judge:

Contrary to his pleas, appellant was convicted by a General Court-Martial of larceny of a wallet and an American Express card, the property of one LT Johanesmeier, stealing $20.00, the property of the United States, and, in a shop in Spain, forging a credit card purchase slip on 20 December 1985 in violation of Articles 121 and 123, respectively, of the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ). He was sentenced to five months confinement, forfeiture of $400.00 pay per month for five months, and dismissal from the Naval Service. Appellant requested deferment of the confinement portion of his sentence. This request [912]*912was denied by the convening authority on 17 October 1986. There was later a Rule for Courts-Martial (R.C.M.) 1105 submission which, along with the staff judge advocate’s recommendation, was considered by the convening authority before he approved the sentence on 12 December 1986.

Before us appellant has raised three issues.

I.
APPELLANT WAS DENIED HIS RIGHT TO A SPEEDY TRIAL AS GUARANTEED BY THE MANUAL FOR COURTS-MARTIAL.
II.
THE ACCUSED’S GUILT AS TO SPECIFICATION 5 OF CHARGE I AND THE SPECIFICATION OF CHARGE II WAS NOT PROVEN BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT.
III.
THE MILITARY JUDGE ERRED TO THE SUBSTANTIAL PREJUDICE OF THE ACCUSED WHEN HE DENIED THE DEFENSE MOTION TO SUPPRESS A CONFESSION OBTAINED FOLLOWING THE APPREHENSION AND A TWENTY DOLLAR BILL (PROSECUTION EXHIBIT 17) SEIZED INCIDENT TO THE APPREHENSION.

We find no merit in the appellant’s assignments of error. We will, however, discuss the assignments seriatim.

I.

With respect to appellant’s first assignment of error, the military judge made the following findings of fact:

25 January 1986 — The accused was apprehended and questioned by Naval Investigative Service.
26 January 1986 — The accused was released from custody following interrogation.
14 April 1986 — The Commanding Officer, Naval Communication Station, Rota, requested trial team for pretrial investigation.
21 April 1986 — Lieutenant J. Soukup appointed as Investigating Officer, Lieutenant T. Algiers appointed as Government counsel, and Lieutenant A. Avila appointed as defense counsel.
13 May 1986 — Lieutenant J. Soukup relieved, and Lieutenant P. A. McTaggert appointed as Investigating Officer.
23 May 1986 — Lieutenant T. Algiers relieved, and Lieutenant M.F. Lundberg appointed as Government counsel.
27 May 1986 — Charges are sworn and preferred, defense counsel receives copy of preferred charges from Lieutenant M.F. Lundberg, Government counsel. Accused meets with Lieutenant Avila and discusses preferred charges. Lieutenant Lundberg did not intend that by providing a copy to the defense counsel that the accused be notified.
12 June 1986 — Pretrial investigation, first pretrial investigation begins. Accused is-notified of the preferred charges by the Investigating Officer.
18 June 1986 — Defense counsel submitted a discovery request to Government counsel.
21 July 1986 — The staff judge advocate, COMNAVACT, Spain, submitted pretrial advice per Article 34, U.C.M.J., 10 U.S.C. § 834, to the general court-martial convening authority.
29 July 1986 — Charges are preferred to a general court-martial — referred, excuse me, to a general court-martial.
7 August 1986 — an oral deposition taken of Ms. Concepcion Jimenez Diaz.
21 August 1986 — Lieutenant M.F. Lundberg withdraws as Government counsel, Lieutenant D. Gonzalez is appointed it.
1 September 1986 — Lieutenant Avila provides trial counsel with a copy of a motion to invalidate the Article 32 Investigation and the deposition of Ms. Jimenz Diaz because of the participation of Lieutenant Lundberg in those proceedings.
3 September 1986 — Charges are withdrawn without prejudice, and a new pretrial investigation ordered for original charges and an additional charge. Addi[913]*913tional charge preferred. Lieutenant D. Kennebrew appointed as Investigating Officer.
5 September 1986 — The accused informed of the Additional Charge by Lieutenant D. Gonzalez. Pretrial investigation conducted.
6 September 1986 — Second pretrial investigation conducted.
10 September — and completed. That should read on 6 September 1986, second pretrial investigation conducted and completed.
10 September 1986 — Investigating Officer, Lieutenant Kennebrew submits Article 32 Investigation Report to convening authority.
11 September 1986 — Second pretrial advice submitted to general court-martial convening authority by staff judge advocate, pursuant to Article 34 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
12 September 1986 — Original charges re-referred to a general court-martial, additional charges referred to general court-martial. Accused receives a copy of the pretrial investigative report, officer’s report, and the accused is served with charges.
16 September 1986 — The accused submits a request for speedy trial. Accused submits, also, objections to pretrial investigating officer’s report.
17 September 1986 — The accused notifies trial counsel of proposed objections to the charge sheet.
18 September 1986 — The convening authority advises defense counsel that all matters contained in letter of objections, dated 16 September 1986, had been considered.
19 September 1986 — A 39(a) session to consider objections to errors on the charge sheet held, military judge determined that charges were preferred on 27 May 1986 vice 26 May 1986, and that the date of notice to the accused of preferred charges, was the date of the initial pretrial investigation on 12 June 1986. And, on that date also, 19 September 1986, the Government withdraws the Additional Charge.
20 September 1986 — A 39(a) session is held on pretrial motions.
21 September 1986 — The military judge deliberates on the motions, counsel submit proposed findings of fact to the military judge in chambers.
22 September 1986 — The military judge enters findings of fact on the motions. Accused enters pleas of not guilty. The military judge granted the government counsel’s request for a continuance over the defense objection.
6 October 1986 — The accused presents a motion to dismiss for lack of speedy trial.

Appellant raises two issues regarding his claimed lack of a speedy trial. The first issue concerns when the speedy trial clock began to run.

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Related

United States v. Leamer
29 M.J. 616 (U S Coast Guard Court of Military Review, 1989)
United States v. Maresca
28 M.J. 328 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1989)
United States v. Angel
28 M.J. 600 (U.S. Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review, 1989)

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Bluebook (online)
26 M.J. 910, 1988 CMR LEXIS 417, 1988 WL 75252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-maresca-usnmcmilrev-1988.