United States v. Schultz

19 C.M.A. 311, 19 USCMA 311, 41 C.M.R. 311, 1970 CMA LEXIS 930, 1970 WL 7335
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedMarch 13, 1970
DocketNo. 22,353
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 19 C.M.A. 311 (United States v. Schultz) 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. Schultz, 19 C.M.A. 311, 19 USCMA 311, 41 C.M.R. 311, 1970 CMA LEXIS 930, 1970 WL 7335 (cma 1970).

Opinions

[313]*313Opinion

Darden, Judge:

Contrary to his plea, the appellant was convicted by a general court-martial in Wurzburg, Germany, for the premeditated murder of Specialist Four Eobert G. Montpas. He was sentenced to a dishonorable discharge, total forfeitures, confinement at hard labor for life, and reduction to the grade of E-l. A board of review, however, reduced the finding to unpremeditated murder and the confinement period to forty-five years. The Court has the ease to consider two questions:

Whether Prosecution Exhibits 2 and 3 were improperly admitted into evidence.
Whether evidence that appellant was identified at a lineup was erroneously admitted to his substantial prejudice.

The record shows that the victim, Montpas, was asleep in his bunk during the early morning hours of June 15, 1968, and that at about 2:50 a.m., he was stabbed four times — twice in the head and once in both the right shoulder and the neck — with a sharp, knife-like instrument. The victim’s shout and the sound of gushing blood from the neck wound awakened roommates, who saw a figure walk across the room and out the door. Montpas was able to pursue his assailant a short distance out of the room and down the hallway before he collapsed and died in a pool of blood. Cribbs, one of the awakened room occupants, was clearly heard by others in the room to yell “Schultz” as the murderer crossed the room. He did not later recall uttering the name out loud, although he recalled “thinking” Schultz. When the duty officer arrived at the scene Cribbs told this officer that the person seen in the room reminded him of the appellant. To others, he said, “I think it was Schultz.” At trial, he could not make a more positive identification. The intruder was described as a Caucasian, wearing dark clothes, of about the same height and physique as Schultz.

While the authorities were looking for the appellant, he appeared in the orderly room and inquired about what was going on. An hour or two before the incident Schultz had been carried in jest out of the victim’s room by two of its occupants and had not been let back in. The victim was not involved, and Schultz seemed to have accepted the event in good humor.

The appellant was interrogated by Criminal Investigations Detachment agents about 4:30 a.m., June 15, 1968. He was advised of his rights under Article 31, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 831, and was told also that he could have the assistance of counsel if he so desired. Schultz responded that he didn’t need a “lawyer” at that time. He informed his interrogators that he had recently been transferred from Company A to Headquarters Company and that at about 6:00 o’clock the previous evening he had returned to Company A to check on his mail. He then went to the enlisted men’s club, where he remained until about 10:00 p.m. He related that he returned to Company A and visited in the victim’s room for a short while, leaving the building near 10:30 p.m. He returned to his own billet and went to sleep, awakening at about 2:50 a.m. He secured keys to the motor pool from the charge of quarters of Headquarters Company but found they were the wrong set, so he had to return to get others. At the motor pool he secured a jeep that he drove back to the company. He there met military police. Following this interview he was released.

Between 10:00 and 11:00 a.m. the same day, CID agents spoke to the appellant’s commanding officer to secure authority for a search of the appellant’s wall locker. They were looking for anything that might have blood on it, “any type of weapon, sharp instrument, particularly a knife.” They described to this officer the information that had been given them regarding the murderer’s looking and having a physique like Schultz. The officer was told that Cribbs had specifically mentioned the appellant’s name. Although he had also ordered a battalion “shakedown,” the [314]*314company commander specifically declared that he had authorized the search on the basis of the information given him by CID agents connecting the appellant to the crime. With this authorization, the appellant’s wall locker was searched, and, among other things, a wet towel was seized. At the same time the appellant was asked what clothes he had worn the night before. When he replied that he was then wearing the same clothes, this clothing was also seized.

Laboratory analysis revealed blood of an unidentifiable type in the towel. Blood, Type A, was found on the trousers. This garment had twenty or thirty spots of blood. It had not been “brushed” on but was “fluid” when it hit the trousers. Montpas had blood of this type; Schultz had Type 0. The trousers were later admitted into evidence as Prosecution Exhibit 2, and the towel was admitted as Prosecution Exhibit 3. Schultz was interviewed again after this. His story was substantially the same as that given before.

This search was followed by a battalion lineup. All the participants were advised of their rights to counsel beforehand. The witnesses were positioned so that they might watch each participant walking past a window. The “walk by” was performed first by the entire battalion and then by a group of fifteen to twenty men. Because the appellant was one of two who had been picked out the first time as having the general characteristics as the assailant, he became a participant in the second lineup. He was again picked out.

After the lineup, the appellant was interrogated between 3:30 and 4:30 p.m. He again told substantially the same story. The interrogator noted at this time, however, that Schultz had washed his hands — although he first denied having done so — and that his fingernails had been cleaned, contrary to the requests of authorities. Earlier in the day he had been taken to the dispensary for fingernail scrapings, but this could not be accomplished at the time because a physician was not present. A second visit to the dispensary had been planned.

On June 18, 1968, the appellant was interviewed by the CID agents once again. Told that other witnesses had disagreed with a portion of his story, Schultz this time related that on the night of the murder he had first visited in Montpas’s room and that he then put on civilian clothes and left the post through a hole in the fence, returning a short time before 3:00 a.m. He refused to identify seven people he had been with. According to one witness, Schultz had been seen in Niederwerrn until 1:45 a.m.

Appellate defense counsel object to the admissibility of Prosecution Exhibits 2 and 3 — the trousers and the towel —on several grounds: that probable cause for the search and seizure was lacking; that the search was, in reality, a part of a battalion shakedown; that the search was not limited to a specific thing to be seized; that an affidavit and a warrant were missing prerequisites; and that Schultz was not properly warned before being questioned during the search.

I am satisfied that the search of appellant’s locker and seizure of the towel exceeded permissible limits. Hence the other contentions require no exploration.

When asked what he and his companions were intending to look for, Agent Wasielewski replied, “We told him [Lieutenant Rock] that we were looking for anything that may have blood on it; any type of weapon, sharp instrument, particularly a knife.” The descriptive phrase clearly limits and gives meaning to the preceding portion of the quoted sentence. A request had been made and permission granted on the basis of a search for the murder weapon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 C.M.A. 311, 19 USCMA 311, 41 C.M.R. 311, 1970 CMA LEXIS 930, 1970 WL 7335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-schultz-cma-1970.