United States v. Morris

20 C.M.A. 446, 20 USCMA 446, 43 C.M.R. 286, 1971 CMA LEXIS 694, 1971 WL 12778
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 1971
DocketNo. 23,473
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 20 C.M.A. 446 (United States v. Morris) 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. Morris, 20 C.M.A. 446, 20 USCMA 446, 43 C.M.R. 286, 1971 CMA LEXIS 694, 1971 WL 12778 (cma 1971).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

Ferguson, Judge:

The accused was convicted of one specification each of robbery, assault with a dangerous weapon, and being absent without leave, in violation of Articles 122, 128, and 86, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC §§ 922, 928, and 886, respectively. His [447]*447sentence to a bad-conduct discharge, total forfeitures, confinement at hard labor for two years, and reduction to the grade of E-l, has remained unchanged through appellate review to this level. One member of the Court of Military Review would have reversed the accused’s conviction of robbery and assault with a dangerous weapon (Charges I and II) and ordered the charges dismissed, on the ground that the prosecution failed to meet its burden when the question of insanity was raised.

We granted review on two assigned issues. In light of our holding in this case, we need only consider the single question of:

Whether the evidence of record is legally sufficient to support the convictions under Charges I and II.

The facts of the case are not disputed, defense counsel relying, as he announced he would at the outset of trial, on the defense of insanity. The Government’s entire case consisted of the testimony of the two victims of the charged offenses, Lieutenant (junior grade) Mary A. Buck1 and Lieutenant (junior grade) Mary Ann Small. The offenses occurred on base in the Bachelor Officers Quarters, Naval Training Center, San Diego, California.

At about 10:15 p.m., on July 7, 1969, as Lieutenant Small entered the darkened living room of the quarters of Lieutenant Buck, the accused emerged from behind the door, placed one arm around her shoulder, and held a knife at her throat. He then maneuvered her into the lighted bedroom where Lieutenant Buck was standing, apparently unaware, until that moment, of his presence. The accused asked the two women if they had any money and Lieutenant Buck reached into her purse and handed him two dollars. He then ordered Lieutenant Buck to remove her clothing. When she did not comply, he repeated the order. At this point, Lieutenant Small suggested that they go to her room where she had a check which she would endorse over to him. The accused rejected the suggestion about the check, arguing that if he took the check he could be traced. Eventually agreeing to leave with Lieutenant Small, he first checked to determine whether there was a telephone in the quarters. When the accused and Lieutenant Small left Lieutenant Buck’s quarters, he warned her not to follow or interfere. They walked down the passageway, passing the staircase to Lieutenant Small’s room and turned down another passageway, which terminated at a set of stairs. At the end of this passageway, Lieutenant Small broke from the accused’s hold, turned and faced him and said:

“. . . ‘Wait a minute, this is a ridiculous situation. You don’t mean to be doing this to us, do you ? You haven’t hurt us yet; and if you leave us now, then it will be just as if it had never happened.’ He said —he asked me if I was a Christian. I said, T believe so.’ He said, ‘Do you swear to God that you will not tell on me?’ And I swore, and he still did not make any moves to go or to drop the knife or to do anything to me at that point. He stood there, looking remorseful. I repeated my argument and added that he could not go away with the knife because he might hurt someone and he might hurt himself. He then, still looking remorseful with his head bent down, reached into his pocket and handed me some bills. I believe the bills he took from Mary. I accepted them from him, said, ‘Thank you’ and smiled and kissed him on the left cheek and said ‘Goodbye.’ And at that point he turned to go down the stairway at the same time that I turned to go down the passageway to return to Mary’s room; but I did not see if he dropped the knife. I did not see him drop the knife at that point.”

Lieutenant Buck, in general, corroborated the testimony of Lieutenant Small as to the accused’s sudden ap[448]*448pearance in her quarters. She first saw the accused when he was holding a knife to Lieutenant Small’s throat. They were then approaching the doorway from the living to the bedroom. When he asked for money, she gave him two dollars from her change purse which was in the desk in the bedroom. She offered him the change but he told her to keep it. When the accused asked about the telephone she told him that she didn’t have one. She did nothing when he twice ordered her to remove the pajama outfit she was then wearing. When the accused and Lieutenant Small left her quarters, she secured the door. After putting on some additional clothing, she went to the office and notified the manager.

Lieutenant Commander Koshkarian, a Navy psychiatrist, was the only witness for the defense. His testimony at the trial was extensive, accounting for almost one-half of the record. Doctor Koshkarian testified that at the time of the alleged offense, the accused “was acting upon an impulse,” while apparently retaining “some ability to distinguish between right and wrong, he was unable to act upon that judgment.” He replied in the affirmative when asked, “Well, is it your conclusion, then, that he was unable at the time to adhere to the right in the sense of that phrase.”

According to the psychiatrist, the accused was suffering from “a sexual perversion, which is a type of compulsive neurosis, ... he was also having a disassociative reaction,” at the time of the events in question. His explanation was lengthy. Stripped to its essentials, the psychiatrist’s testimony reflected that the accused was, unknowingly, suffering from a form of sexual perversion — fetishism—he received orgastic pleasure from the handling of women’s clothing. His request for money was simply an unconscious means of concealing even from himself the true nature of his desire, so that he would not have to face the implications of what he was doing. Doctor Koshkarian testified:

“. . . At that time of that event, all he was aware of was that he had had a feeling or a need, an impulse, to go up into a room and take money. At the time he did it, it didn’t make sense to him. He didn’t need money. There is no background of any previous theft in his background, stealing even minor things, but at the time he had, as I said, the feeling of a need to go up into a room, take money, without an awareness of why. He had some vague sense that it was not right, some sense that perhaps it could even get him in trouble if he were apprehended, but it made no difference. It was like it didn’t matter. It was something that would be all right, nobody would really mind, and that is the sense I meant when I said a disasso-ciative reaction, in that one part of his personality, or one part of his function was split off.”

Subsequent to these events, the accused allegedly entered some female locker rooms, “going to the clothes, still in his own mind feeling that he was looking for money.” When he realized the true nature of his acts, the accused panicked and unlawfully absented himself for twenty-two days. He returned voluntarily and presented himself first to a general medical officer. He asked to see a psychiatrist before actually turning himself in.

On cross-examination by trial counsel, the psychiatrist stated that the accused’s act was “an impulse which he had a compulsion to perform, which he tried to fight against. If I recall this was something he thought about for days before he did it, tried to prevent himself from doing it, and finally acted upon it.”

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Bluebook (online)
20 C.M.A. 446, 20 USCMA 446, 43 C.M.R. 286, 1971 CMA LEXIS 694, 1971 WL 12778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-morris-cma-1971.