United States v. Roman

2 M.J. 1189, 1976 CMR LEXIS 929
CourtU.S. Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review
DecidedJanuary 26, 1976
DocketNCM 74 0296
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 M.J. 1189 (United States v. Roman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Roman, 2 M.J. 1189, 1976 CMR LEXIS 929 (usnmcmilrev 1976).

Opinion

DECISION

WRAY, Judge:

In a contested general court-martial to a panel of commissioned officer members, appellant, Private Alfredo H. Roman, U. S. Marine Corps, was convicted of the premeditated murder of Private First Class James C. McCrory, U. S. Marine Corps, alleged to have occurred in the vicinity of the U. S. Naval Air Station, Cubi Point, the Republic of the Philippines on 22 September 1972, in violation of Article 118, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. § 918. On 13 April 1973 the court members sentenced appellant to confinement at hard labor for the length of his natural life, dishonorable discharge, and forfeiture of all pay and allowances. On 18 October 1973 the convening authority, Commander, U. S. Naval Base, Subic Bay, Republic of the Philippines, approved the sentence.

At trial the issue of appellant’s mental responsibility at the time of the alleged murder was litigated and a considerable amount of psychiatric testimony adduced. After the record was initially received by this Court, the defense moved for a stay in the appellate proceedings and for further psychiatric examination and evaluation.

On 28 May 1974 this Court granted the motion by interlocutory order. A medical board was convened and its report, which states appellant possessed: the necessary mental responsibility to understand the difference between right and wrong and to adhere to the right at the time of the alleged murder; and sufficient mental capacity to understand the nature of the proceedings and to conduct and cooperate intelligently in his own defense, now augments the record.

More recently appellant has filed a lengthy brief in which he asserts a number of errors. We need only discuss one. It concerns his contention that he was arbi[1191]*1191trarily denied the services of one of his military counsel.

The alleged victim, PFC McCrory, and appellant were members of the Marine Barracks at the U. S. Naval Base, Subic Bay. After McCrory failed to show up at his unit he was considered an unauthorized absentee commencing 25 September 1972. Nine days later, on 4 October, his skeletal remains, clothed in U. S. Marine Corps utilities, were recovered from a heavy jungle area of the Naval Air Station at Cubi Point. The degree of soft tissue decomposition of his body due to humidity, insects, and perhaps carnivorous wild hogs, was extensive. Positive identification of his remains was established by dental examination. Death was attributed to massive cranic cerebral trauma caused by repeated blows to PFC McCrory’s head from a blunt instrument identified during the trial as a large wrench recovered from the jungle area near the remains.

Strong suspicion focused on appellant, who had been transferred to the continental United States, as one of the individuals criminally responsible for McCrory’s death.

On 13 October appellant was apprehended in Burley, Idaho and returned to Subic Bay in a custodial status. He arrived at Subic Bay on 25 October after spending the transient period 14-23 October confined at the U. S. Naval Base, Treasure Island, San Francisco. While at Treasure Island he conferred with Lieutenant Barry M. Johnson, JAGC, U. S. Naval Reserve.

Before appellant arrived at Subic Bay a decision had been made that Captain James D. Bunting, U. S. Marine Corps Reserve, a Marine Corps Judge Advocate, would be detailed as appellant’s defense counsel. But, two days before appellant’s arrival, Captain Bunting had been sent from Subic Bay to Saigon for temporary additional duty. Captain Bunting was therefore not available to consult with his prospective client when appellant arrived at Subic Bay and was confined.

Apparently aware of appellant’s imminent arrival at Subic Bay while he would be in Saigon, Captain Bunting had conferred with Commander Marvin J. Cowell, Jr., JAGC, U. S. Navy, whose position of authority is described in the record as that of staff judge advocate for military law. Captain Bunting requested that Lieutenant Peter R. Cherneff, JAGC, U. S. Naval Reserve be designated as assistant defense counsel.

Commander Cowell approved this request and informed Lieutenant M. Wischkaemper, JAGC, U. S. Naval Reserve, then acting as senior military defense counsel, that Lieutenant Cherneff was assigned to represent appellant. On 25 October Lieutenant Wischkaemper informed Lieutenant Cherneff of this assignment and Lieutenant Cherneff immediately proceeded to the local correctional facility where appellant was confined and established an attorney-client relationship with him.

Charges against appellant were sworn to the following day, appellant was immediately advised of those charges and a pretrial investigation pursuant to Article 32, UCMJ, was ordered.

The rapidity of these pretrial events was commendable and although Captain Bunting was still in Saigon on 26 October, Lieutenant Cherneff consulted with appellant as the case moved expeditiously toward trial.

Captain Bunting returned from Saigon on 27 October. Five days later, on 1 November, the initial Article 32 investigative session was conducted and on that date, pursuant to Article 38(b), UCMJ, and the Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1969 (Revised edition), paragraph 48b, appellant submitted a written request to the Commandant, Twelfth Naval District for the services of Lieutenant Johnson as individual counsel. This request was approved and on 11 November Lieutenant Johnson arrived at Subic Bay.

From then until judicial proceedings commenced on 8 January 1973 with an Article 39(a) session before the military judge, the defense team included appellant’s three military lawyers, Captain Bunting, Lieutenant Johnson and Lieutenant Cherneff.

Individual counsel, Lieutenant Johnson, did not remain at Subic Bay after comple[1192]*1192tion of the Article 32 investigation; he participated fully, however, in the subsequent judicial proceedings before the court members and he also participated in some of the preceding Article 39(a) sessions before the military judge.

On 27 December the charge of premeditated murder was referred to trial by general court-martial. The appointing order detained Captain Bunting as defense counsel but failed to mention Lieutenant Cherneff.

On 8 January appellant submitted a written request addressed to the convening authority. He asked that Lieutenant Cherneff be detailed as assistant defense counsel, accurately stating that the Lieutenant had been previously assigned as his counsel and had formed an attorney-client relationship with him. Moreover, the request indicated that Lieutenant Cherneff had “. . . actively participated in the preparation of [appellant’s] case, and it [was appellant’s] wish to have him formally detailed as assistant defense counsel so that he may continue to so participate.”

On 22 January, at the second Article 39(a) session before the judge, the matter of Lieutenant Cherneff’s status was brought to the judge’s attention. Trial counsel stated that appellant’s written request had been orally denied by the convening authority. The defense desired a written decision and the judge directed that trial counsel obtain a decision in writing which would be appended to the record.

At the time of the third Article 39(a) session, conducted on 29 January, appellant’s request of 8 January had not yet been answered in writing.

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Related

United States v. Garcia
12 M.J. 703 (U.S. Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review, 1981)

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2 M.J. 1189, 1976 CMR LEXIS 929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-roman-usnmcmilrev-1976.