United States v. Means

10 M.J. 162, 1981 CMA LEXIS 16886
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedJanuary 12, 1981
DocketDkt. No. 38154/AF; CMR No. 22494/S
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 10 M.J. 162 (United States v. Means) 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. Means, 10 M.J. 162, 1981 CMA LEXIS 16886 (cma 1981).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

EVERETT, Chief Judge:

A general court-martial convened in Germany convicted the appellant of wrongful possession of .02 grams of amphetamines and of 10.08 grams of marihuana, in violation of Articles 92 and 134, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. §§ 892 and 934, respectively. Thereafter, the appellant was sentenced to be dismissed from the service and to forfeit $250.00 pay per month for 2 months. The convening authority approved, and the United States Air Force Court of Military Review affirmed, the trial results.

In this Court, the appellant challenges whether the convening authority properly exercised his discretion in referring the charges for trial by general court-martial. (8 M.J. 219). Means claims undue weight was given to his status as an officer in the decision that his case be tried by general [163]*163court-martial and that similar charges against an enlisted man would have been tried by special court-martial.1 Furthermore, appellant now complains that by prohibiting special courts-martial from sentencing officers to confinement, paragraph 126d of the Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1969 (Revised edition), unduly restricts the punishments available to a special court-martial in officer cases. Thus, it improperly compels convening authorities-as in the case at bar-to refer for trial by general court-martial cases which might otherwise be disposed of by a special court-martial. We reject these claims.

I

On April 15, 1978, the appellant’s vehicle was searched by a German customs official at an autobahn border crossing between the Netherlands and Germany near Emmerich, Germany. During the course of the customs search, the official found a pipe, 10.08 grams of marihuana in the hashish form, and approximately .02 grams of amphetamines. By the time of his trial, appellant had completed a decade of service in the Air Force-4V2 years as an enlisted man and 5V2 years as an officer. He had no prior court-martial convictions, nor had he ever received nonjudicial punishment under Article 15, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 815.

Prior to the entry of pleas, trial defense counsel moved unsuccessfully to dismiss the charges and specifications on the ground that Means had been denied equal protection of the law. Specifically, he charged that the appellant’s case had been referred to a general court-martial primarily because of his officer status-that if the appellant had been an enlisted man, the overwhelming statistical odds were that these charges would have been disposed of under the provisions of Article 15 or, at worst, by a special court-martial.

The genesis of the appellant’s motion is found in the recommendation section of the staff judge advocate’s pretrial advice to the general court-martial convening authority. There it was pointed out that the Article 32 investigating officer had recommended trial by special court-martial, but that the appellant’s unit commander and the special court-martial convening authority both had recommended trial by general court-martial. Then it concluded that “in view of Means’ status as a [sic] officer and the serious nature of the charges and specifications, I recommend that all charges and specifications set out above be referred to trial by general court-martial.” The convening authority concurred in the recommendation.

To support this claim derived from the pretrial advice, defense counsel called as a witness the author of that advice, Captain Fiscus.2 When asked what role the appellant’s officer status had played in the advice’s recommendation, Fiscus indicated that he had considered “the fact that officer status incurs certain benefits and obligations to a person, that it is an office of the United States and one to which certain responsibilities are owed above and beyond perhaps what normal, everyday citizens of the government owe.” However, he responded in the negative when asked if he believed that an officer had a higher duty than an enlisted man to obey the law or that an officer should incur a higher penal[164]*164ty than his enlisted counterpart if he violates the law. According to the applicable statistics, it appeared to Fiscus that had these charges been preferred against an enlisted man, they probably would have been disposed of either by Article 15 or by special court-martial. However, he stated that, under precisely the same facts as those surrounding appellant’s case, “I would have recommended a general court-martial.” These facts included the forwarding recommendations from the unit commander and special convening authority and the increased emphasis in that command on combating drug use and possession.

On appeal to this Court, the appellant has attempted to bolster his trial claim by submitting for our consideration statistics on the dispositions that have been made Air-Force-wide of what he terms “minor drug possessions,”3 as well as statistics on the frequency of court-martial for officers who have been involved in drug offenses.4 However, from these statistics we are unable to infer that in appellant’s case-or in the others for which statistics have been provided by appellate defense counsel-status as an officer or as an enlisted man was decisive as to choice of the forum in which prosecution would proceed.

Certainly in the case at hand, appellant’s status as an officer does not appear to have governed the reference of the case to a general court-martial. The recommendation by the staff judge advocate read (emphasis supplied):

In accordance with the foregoing discussion, and in view of Means’ status as a [sic] officer and the serious nature of the charges and specifications, I recommend that all charges and specifications as set out above be referred to trial by general court-martial.

The “foregoing discussion” to which reference is made included recommendations by appellant’s unit commander and by the special court-martial convening authority' that the charges be referred for trial by general court-martial. Also, the “discussion” had quoted these comments made by the unit commander in forwarding the charges (emphasis supplied):

Based on information provided to me by Lt Means’ former commander he possessed a positive attitude and was striving to constantly better himself in July 1977. Based on this potential he was awarded a “2” on his OER. Following the OER it gradually became apparent that although Lt Means possessed the job knowledge to perform various taskings, the jobs were not getting done. He was consequently moved into the maintenance supervisor’s officer [sic] for closer supervision with the thought in mind of arresting and subsequently improving his declining performance. From August 1977 thru January 1978 he was counseled three times for financial irresponsibility. He was given a Letter of Reprimand in January 1978 for financial irresponsibility. He continued to be fiscally irresponsible up to the time of his apprehension for possession of drugs. Since March 1978 his performance has rapidly declined. His rehabilitation potential is considered to be nil.

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Bluebook (online)
10 M.J. 162, 1981 CMA LEXIS 16886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-means-cma-1981.