United States v. Private First Class NATHAN G. LEESE

CourtArmy Court of Criminal Appeals
DecidedAugust 29, 2024
Docket20230250
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Private First Class NATHAN G. LEESE (United States v. Private First Class NATHAN G. LEESE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Army Court of Criminal 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. Private First Class NATHAN G. LEESE, (acca 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES ARMY COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS

Before POND, WALKER, and PARKER Appellate Military Judges

UNITED STATES, Appellee v. Private First Class NATHAN G. LEESE United States Army, Appellant

ARMY 20230250

Headquarters, 82nd Airborne Division J. Harper Cook, Military Judge Lieutenant Colonel David J. Krynicki, Staff Judge Advocate

For Appellant: Major Mitchell D. Herniak, JA; Major Amanda Williams, JA (on brief); Colonel Philip M. Staten, JA; Major Mitchell D. Herniak, JA; Major Amanda Williams, JA (on brief on specified issue and reply brief on specified issue).

For Appellee: Colonel Christopher B. Burgess, JA; Major Chase C. Cleveland, JA (on brief on specified issue).

29 August 2024

POND, Chief Judge:

This case presents the novel issue of how to apply confinement credit under United States v. Pierce, 27 M.J. 367 (C.M.A. 1989) in the new landscape of segmented sentencing. Pierce requires an accused receive credit for offenses previously subject to nonjudicial punishment imposed under Article 15, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. § 815 (2018) [UCMJ].! Here, appellant pleaded guilty to three offenses, including two specifications of willfully disobeying a

! Under Article 15, UCMJ, a commanding officer may, in addition to or in lieu of admonition or reprimand, impose one or more disciplinary punishments for minor offenses without the intervention of a court-martial, such as forfeiture of pay, restriction to certain specified limits, or extra duty. LEESE—ARMY 20230520

superior commissioned officer for which he had previously received two Article 15s. At trial, the Government argued Pierce credit should only apply to the segmented sentences for the offenses previously punished under Article 15. The defense objected, arguing Pierce credit should apply to the sentence for all charges. The military judge agreed with the government and awarded appellant confinement credit only against the segmented sentences for offenses for which he previously received nonjudicial punishment.

On appeal, this court specified an issue of whether the military judge correctly applied Pierce. We find that he did and hold in cases with segmented sentencing, confinement credit under Pierce applies only to the term of confinement for the offenses previously punished under Article 15, UCMJ.

BACKGROUND

The gravamen of the charged offenses is appellant’s assault of the victim, a female servicemember. Following the assault, the appellant’s company commander ordered appellant not to contact the victim. Appellant disobeyed this order twice — once on 13 November 2021 and again on 14 January 2022. For the first violation, appellant’s company commander gave appellant, who was a Specialist (E-4) at the time, an Article 15, imposing punishment of reduction to E-3; forfeiture of $521 pay for two months; and fourteen days of extra duty and restriction. The commander suspended all punishments, to be automatically remitted if not vacated on or before 9 June 2022. Following appellant’s second violation on 14 January 2022, the company commander vacated the suspension, executing all the previously suspended punishments from the first Article 15, and administered a new Article 15, imposing punishment of fourteen days of extra duty and fourteen days of restriction. The government then preferred charges against appellant including the offenses from the two Article 15s as Specifications 1 and 2 of Charge I.”

A military judge sitting as a general court-martial convicted appellant, pursuant to his pleas, of two specifications of willfully disobeying a superior commissioned officer — the subject of the two Article 15s — and one specification of assault in violation of Articles 90 and 128, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. §§ 890 and 928 (2018).

? The government also charged appellant in Charge II with two specifications of abusive sexual contact of the victim in violation of Article 120, UCMJ. At trial, appellant pleaded guilty to one specification by exceptions and substitutions of an assault consummated by a battery in violation of Article 128, UCMJ. Under the terms of the plea agreement, the government moved to dismiss the remaining Article 120 specification. LEESE—ARMY 20230520

During presentencing, the military judge and the parties discussed the applicable Pierce credit. First, the parties agreed the Article 90 offenses from the two Article 15s were the same Article 90 offenses on the charge sheet.? The parties also agreed appellant should receive fourteen of days confinement credit for each Article 15 — or twenty-eight days total — but disagreed over how the military judge should apply the confinement credit under Pierce. The government argued the confinement credit should apply only to the sentences for the two Article 90 specifications: fourteen days credit applied to any sentence to confinement for the first Article 90 offense and fourteen days credit applied to any sentence to confinement for the second Article 90 offense. The defense argued the Pierce credit should apply to the sentence as a whole, which would include the term of confinement for the Article 128 offense as well. The plea agreement required all sentences to run concurrently. The plea agreement also required the military judge to adjudge between no confinement and, at most, three months of confinement for both Article 90 offenses and between three to six months of confinement for the Article 128 offense. Thus, any term of confinement adjudged for the Article 90 offenses would be subsumed by any term of confinement adjudged for the Article 128 offense.

After a recess, the military judge came back on the record:

Rarely have I found myself in a position where I have no guidance whatsoever. On whether to blindly follow Pierce with a disregard to segmented sentencing and, frankly, with a disregard to the nature of the Article 15s themselves. If I were to do that, the argument would be the accused is getting credit where credit is not due. After all, if he received Article 15s for disobedience, he should get credit for the disobedience offenses. That’s the one hand.

On the other hand, if I’m going to follow the government’s proposed solution, I’m in uncharted waters having to apply what used to be black-and-white sentencing credit principles . . . . But the appeal of the government’s argument is that there’s no danger of either over crediting the accused or under [ ]crediting . . . the accused with what he’s entitled to.

3 The charge sheet and the Article 15s name different superior commissioned officers who gave appellant the order, but the parties at trial agreed the charged offenses and the Article 15s referred to the same misconduct and Pierce applied. LEESE—ARMY 20230520

The court finds the government’s argument more appealing and is where the court lands today. Because these Article 15s are so specific and are basically lifted from the Article 15s themselves to this charge sheet, the court can and does find as fact that the Article 15 punishments relate only to Specifications 1 and 2 of Charge I and not to the assault consummated by a battery offense.

The military judge confirmed appellant still wished to plead guilty and to be bound by the terms of his plea agreement in light of his ruling.

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United States v. Pierce
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United States v. Private First Class NATHAN G. LEESE, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-private-first-class-nathan-g-leese-acca-2024.