United States v. Priest

21 C.M.A. 564, 21 USCMA 564, 45 C.M.R. 338, 1972 CMA LEXIS 661, 1972 WL 14190
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedAugust 4, 1972
DocketNo. 23,937
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 21 C.M.A. 564 (United States v. Priest) 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. Priest, 21 C.M.A. 564, 21 USCMA 564, 45 C.M.R. 338, 1972 CMA LEXIS 661, 1972 WL 14190 (cma 1972).

Opinion

Darden, Chief Judge:

The accused’s case has been here before. United States v Priest, 21 USCMA 64, 44 CMR 118 (1971). In that instance, we reversed the decision of the Court of Military Review because of instructional error and remanded the case for further consideration of other assignments. In its subsequent review, the court rejected accused’s claims of error, and affirmed. We granted his petition on the issues whether the military judge erred in excluding certain evidence at the trial and whether the evidence is sufficient to sustain his conviction of two specifications of printing and distributing, with intent to promote disloyalty and disaffection among members of the armed forces, issues of a publication which, in its entirety, contained statements disloyal to the United States. He presently stands sentenced to a bad-conduct discharge and reduction in grade.

I

While on active duty in the naval service, the accused edited, published, and distributed an “underground” newsletter entitled “OM.” Copies were left for free distribution to military personnel in the Navy Exchange, Washington Navy Yard, at a Pentagon newsstand, and were handed to individual members of the armed forces.

The accused does not contend that he was not responsible for the publication’s contents and for its circulation among military personnel. He conceived it as a means of protest against United States involvement in Vietnam and the military establishment. Its purpose was “to persuade people to change their minds to do something else.”

Accused declared that he considered his actions patriotic and loyal. Seeing many faults in our national and military behavior, as well as the supposed political ignorance of the average member of the armed services, he sought to agitate against the Vietnam war and those things he considered unjust in the armed forces. He apparently considered silence to be the equivalent of complicity in the injustices and illegalities that he condemned.

The two issues of the newsletter with which we are concerned were issued in May and June 1969. The lead article in the May issue is entitled “A CALL TO RESIST ILLEGITIMATE AUTHORITY AN INDICTMENT AGAINST. THE U. S. GOVERNMENT, THE ARMED SERVICES AND ITS INDUSTRIAL ALLIES.” This is specifically an attack on the United States for its involvement in Vietnam, in which the Government is accused of “waging aggressive war crimes against humanity, and with specific violations of the laws of war.” The article portrays the United States as an aggressor, committing a horrendous crime “against a peasant people fighting to expel foreign oppressors from their homeland.” It concludes with this statement:

“And to those who hold illegitimate power over our lives we say to you that we will not accept the continuation of this war. We will continue to resist; and encourage others to do the same. SILENCE IS COMPLICITY.”

The same issue contains antiwar poems and various quotations attributed to well-known persons and to members of antiwar groups. They uniformly indicate opposition to the Vietnam war and militarism in America. Many are intemperate, and one suggests the abolition of our society. Other comments and articles attack career military personnel (“the lifers”) and the trial of certain soldiers. Of the latter, one comment is that:

“. . . And if we do not get justice in the rigged courts of this land; then we shall turn to the streets. For the streets are the court of last resort in dealing with oppression. John F. Kennedy said, ‘Those who make nonviolent revolution impossible make violent revolution inevitable.’ [567]*567Shall we ask the Military-Industrial Complex which way they would like it?”

The May issue also sets forth explicit information on how servicemen wishing to desert the armed forces may enter Canada and receive assistance from such groups as the American Deserters Committee, Toronto Anti-Draft Programme, and Vancouver Committee to Aid War Objectors. Another article points out that 53,357 servicemen have deserted the armed services and notes that the accused would not himself desert but would stay and fight from within. He indicated, however, that he had not been subjected to the alleged sadism of military guards or other pressures that might bring him to a breaking point, and concluded with the thought:

“. . . And to those who make the decision to stay and fight or leave and (fight?) I wish you the best of luck. There are many ways of bringing this rotten system down to its knees. Perhaps a combination of the two might work?”

A final article calls attention to the American Servicemen’s Union, sets forth its program, and lists the organization’s address from which the article declared more information can be obtained.

The theme of the June issue is not unlike that of the May issue. Its language is somewhat more violent. For example, it suggests the velocity with which the Vice President would strike the pavement if he was pushed or fell from the Empire State Building. It quotes Che Guevara on the “ ‘futility of maintaining the fight for social goals within the framework of civil debate.’ ” It attributes to one Phil Ochs a statement that:

“Ah, but some time later
When I feel a little safer
We’ll assa[ss]inate the President
And take over the government
And then we’re going to fry them!”

The issue also demands that the former Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation cease investigating the accused and warns him that

“When the revolution comes, you will be the grass, and we will be the lawnmower. So, take care.” It then declares, “TODAY’S PIGS ARE TOMORROW’S BACON.”

The issue includes a formula for gunpowder, states “WE WILL USE VIOLENCE” to defend the people against suppression, and in various cartoons, slogans, and statements ridicules the armed forces and suggests means by which they may be weakened from within.

Other quotations indicative of the tenor of the June issue are:

“WE MUST STOP THE CAPITALIST CORPORATE POWER STRUCTURE FROM KILLING US, TAXING US, DIVIDING US AND RULING US. WHY DO WE HAVE CAPITALISM, IMPERIALISM AND AN ECONOMY BASED ON MILITARISM?”
“THE TIME HAS COME TO FAIL THE SYSTEM. IT ONLY USES US TO PERPETUATE ITSELF TO SERVE THE SYSTEM IS TREASON.”
“SMASH THE STATE POWER TO THE PEOPLE.”
“FREE US NOW GUNS BABY GUNS!”
“WE WILL STOP AT NOTHING TO STOP THE VIETNAM WAR, AND THE POWER ARRANGEMENTS THAT MADE IT POSSIBLE. WE TAKE THAT ‘NOTHING’ SERIOUSLY.”
“DESTROY THAT SACRED COW OF CAPITALISM — PROPERTY.”
“BOMB AMERICA. MAKE COCA-COLA SOMEPLACE ELSE.”
“OUR GOAL IS LIBERATION ... BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY.”

II

We consider first the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings of guilty. Appellate defense counsel contend that the evidence is inadequate in three ways: (1) that [568]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 C.M.A. 564, 21 USCMA 564, 45 C.M.R. 338, 1972 CMA LEXIS 661, 1972 WL 14190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-priest-cma-1972.