United States v. McLendon
This text of 41 M.J. 882 (United States v. McLendon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U S Air Force Court of Military Review primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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OPINION OF THE COURT
Sergeant McLendon pled guilty before a general court-martial, with officer members, to two offenses of wrongfully using cocaine, both based on positive urinalysis test results. The members sentenced her to a bad-conduct discharge, 12 months confinement, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, and reduction to airman basic, which the convening authority approved as adjudged. On appeal, she contends the military judge erred in not suppressing the urinalysis results supporting the second specification to which she entered a conditional guilty plea (specification of the Additional Charge). We disagree and affirm.
FACTS
Sergeant McLendon, a 29-year-old C-5 loadmaster with over 5 years service, snorted cocaine at a party on August 4, 1991. The next morning, she provided a urine specimen for a base-wide random urinalysis. Shortly thereafter, she departed on terminal leave incident to separating from active duty. Her specimen tested positive for the cocaine metabolite. As a result, her commander recalled her to the base and preferred one specification under Article 112a, UCMJ, on September 12, 1991, alleging cocaine use between July 29 and August 4, 1991.
On October 18,1991, Sergeant McLendon’s first sergeant called her to his office to administer a reprimand after she missed an appointment while awaiting trial. At the office, he found Sergeant McLendon spinning around in a chair. He thought she appeared a “little on the dizzy side, kind of glassy-eyed” and “acting on the goofy side.” He took his suspicions of drug use to the Dover Air Force Base “JAG office.” One of the base lawyers advised him to ask her for a consensual urine specimen, and if she refused, to have her commander order a command-directed test. The first sergeant agreed and briefed the commander who also concurred in the planned course.
Dover Air Force Base used one form to cover all the various ways a member could provide a urine specimen, including by consent and by command-direction. The first [883]*883sergeant completed one form in advance for Sergeant McLendon’s consent and another ordering a command-directed test if she refused. Dover Form 1 provided the following guidance on consent:
I voluntarily give my consent to provide a urine specimen to be tested for illegal drugs, including cocaine and marijuana. I understand that I do not have to consent. I understand that the urinalysis test results, if positive for illegal drugs, may be used against me in criminal and administrative proceedings. I have not been forced by anyone to give consent.
Armed with the paperwork, the first sergeant went calling on Sergeant McLendon at her dormitory shortly after noon on the 18th. She answered his knock on the door dressed in civilian clothing. He immediately asked whether she would consent to providing a urinalysis and she indicated her willingness by responding “Sure.” The first sergeant then gave her the prepared consent form to read and sign. He did not advise her that he suspected her of an offense nor did he inform her of her rights under Article 31, UCMJ. He watched as her fingers moved down the applicable section on the form that would provide for consent urinalysis. When her fingers reached the end of the consent portion, he indicated the remainder of the form did not apply. As she turned to get a pen to sign the form, she asked when she would provide the sample. The first sergeant indicated he had already sent an observer over to the hospital so they should proceed immediately. Appellant responded, “Great, I just went.” and signed the form indicating her consent to the urinalysis.
As the first sergeant and Sergeant McLendon were leaving her room to go to the hospital laboratory, she asked what would have happened if she had not consented to the urinalysis. He informed her that she would have been directed to do so had she not consented. Her response to that was “Oh.” They then proceeded to the hospital in separate vehicles. At the laboratory, she told an individual assisting in the urinalysis that she had been wanting to “give a random or a voluntary urinalysis ever since she came back to the base.” Approximately one and one-half hours were spent in the hospital before the urine sample was completed. At no time did she suggest she wanted to consult with her counsel, express a desire to use the telephone, or indicate, by her behavior or any words, that she was wavering or hesitant about providing the urine sample. Both the first sergeant and the assistant found Sergeant McLendon to be calm and cooperative throughout the procedure.
APPELLANT’S TESTIMONY
Sergeant McLendon elected to testify on the search issue. She testified she did not read the Dover urinalysis form before she signed it, did not know she could refuse to consent, and felt she would be ordered to provide a specimen if she did not consent.
She explained that something was “voluntary” when she initiated it and not when a superior “requested” it. She also said she did not know the difference between a consent test and a command-directed test, and her attorney, the trial defense counsel, had not explained the difference before 18 October. On cross-examination, Sergeant McLendon conceded she thought any traces of cocaine would be out of her system on the 18th after last using it on the 15th.
MILITARY JUDGE’S RULING
The military judge rejected portions of Sergeant McLendon’s testimony that contradicted the sequence of events set out in the Facts section above. The military judge found Sergeant McLendon freely and voluntarily consented and never attempted to withdraw that consent. As for the “What would happen” question, the military judge concluded the first sergeant did not have to explain the difference in the two tests because all of the behavior of the accused indicated this was a question in passing. In his extensive findings, the military judge stated “it’s abundantly clear that her question was not an indication of a wavering on her part of a desire to cooperate or give consent”. In support of his ruling he stated:
I further find and conclude that at no time did the accused withdraw or even imply a withdrawal of her consent for the urinalysis, but, indeed, to the contrary, all of her [884]*884actions point in the opposite direction, that her voluntariness and consent remained intact throughout the entire process.
CONCLUSION
We conclude the military judge’s ruling admitting the results of the second urinalysis to be correct. Reviewing the decision de novo, we find the evidence establishing appellant’s consent is clear and convincing. Mil.R.Evid. 314(e)(5). United States v. Goudy, 32 M.J. 88 (C.M.A.1991); United States v. Murphy, 36 M.J. 732 (A.F.C.M.R.1992). This is not a case of mere submission to the color of authority or acquiescence in an announced or indicated purpose to search. Mil. R.Evid. 314(e)(4), Cf. United States v. White, 27 M.J. 264 (C.M.A.1988). There is nothing which suggests any hesitancy on the part of appellant to submit to the urinalysis and nothing which shows any desire on her part to reconsider her initial decision to consent. United States v. Stoecker, 17 M.J. 158 (C.M.A.1984). Under cross-examination, she admitted she never considered contacting her defense counsel before submitting to the test. Her statement she believed the test would be negative provides additional insight into what she was thinking.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
41 M.J. 882, 1994 CMR LEXIS 105, 1994 WL 777144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mclendon-usafctmilrev-1994.