United States v. Seton

CourtUnited States Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 2014
DocketACM 2013-27
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Seton (United States v. Seton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Air Force 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. Seton, (afcca 2014).

Opinion

UNITED STATES AIR FORCE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS

UNITED STATES, ) Misc. Dkt. No. 2013-27 Appellant ) ) v. ) ) ORDER Airman First Class (E-3) ) STEVEN E. SETON, ) USAF, ) Appellee ) Panel No. 2

WEBER, Judge:

The Government filed an interlocutory appeal under Article 62, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 862, in this matter. The Government alleges the military judge abused his discretion in dismissing with prejudice the sole Charge and Specification based on his finding that the Government violated Rule for Courts-Martial (R.C.M.) 703(f) by failing to preserve video taken in dormitory hallways. Specifically, the Government contends: 1) The evidence was not of such central importance to an issue as to be essential to a fair trial; 2) There was an adequate substitute for the lost evidence; and 3) The military judge abused his discretion in his choice of remedy (dismissing the Charge and Specification with prejudice) without finding the Government acted in bad faith. We disagree. We find the military judge acted within his discretion in finding an R.C.M. 703 violation and in dismissing the Charge and Specification with prejudice.

Background

The Government referred one charge and specification of sexual assault under Article 120, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 920, alleging the appellee caused bodily harm to Airman First Class (A1C) BB through nonconsensual vaginal intercourse. A1C BB celebrated her birthday with her boyfriend, A1C DB, on 9 September 2012. They consumed alcohol and engaged in casual activities in her dormitory room during the afternoon and evening. A1C BB sent the appellee electronic messages throughout the evening, and at 2349 hours, she messaged the appellee that A1C DB had left and she was depressed. She asked the appellee to come to her room. When he did not immediately respond, A1C BB went to see the appellee in his dormitory room in the same building.

In the weeks leading up to her birthday, A1C BB and the appellee engaged in some amorous activity short of intercourse on more than one occasion. The night of her birthday, A1C BB entered the appellee’s room and they talked for a short period. They progressed to kissing and then sexual intercourse, which A1C BB agreed was initially consensual. A few minutes after the intercourse began, however, she told the appellee “we shouldn’t be doing this,” because she had a boyfriend, and she wanted to stop, or words to that effect. She later reported that, in her mind, the intercourse (which she said lasted a total of five to ten minutes) was nonconsensual starting when she made these statements. According to A1C BB, the appellee continued for another 30 to 90 seconds past that point before intercourse concluded. Shortly after this incident, A1C BB reported it to her friend and then her boyfriend before making a formal report alleging the intercourse (or some portion thereof) constituted a sexual assault.

Agents from the Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI) investigated this matter. The appellee waived his rights under Article 31, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 831, and provided detailed verbal and written statements about the incident. He told agents he believed the intercourse was fully consensual. He agreed that at one point, A1C BB told him she wanted to stop because this was not fair to her boyfriend, or words to that effect. The appellee stated he promptly ceased intercourse, but then twice resumed when A1C BB expressed a desire to re-engage in intercourse. Eventually, according to the appellee, intercourse ceased for good when A1C BB again expressed a desire to stop because she needed to retrieve her cell phone. The appellee also told AFOSI agents a video surveillance system in the dormitories would confirm certain aspects of his account about their interaction before and after the alleged sexual assault, and he voiced support for agents to retrieve the video.

On 10 September 2012, AFOSI agents contacted Technical Sergeant (TSgt) MS, a dormitory leader for the building where the appellee and A1C BB resided. TSgt MS showed AFOSI agents video taken from cameras in dormitory hallways the previous night starting at about 1700 hours. At the agents’ request, TSgt MS focused on portions of the video demonstrating interaction between the appellee and A1C BB both before and after the alleged sexual assault. The agents were unable to make a copy of the video, but told TSgt MS another agent would return to make the copy. The AFOSI agents knew the video would normally be overwritten after about 14 days, but they mistakenly believed TSgt MS would secure the video.

Another AFOSI agent, Special Agent (SA) JT, took over as the investigation’s lead agent four days later. SA JT intended to go to the dormitory to retrieve the video, but was delayed for a number of reasons, including in-processing to the base, workload, and typhoons that struck the installation. SA JT knew of the video’s existence, but not its substance or importance to the investigation, and he erroneously believed TSgt MS had secured the video. He finally arrived at the dormitory to retrieve the video on 25 September 2012, 15 to 16 days after the video was recorded. By that time, the video was unrecoverable, both because it would have been overwritten by this time and because a typhoon had caused the video surveillance system to be reset.

2 Misc. Dkt. No. 2013-27 As the investigation under Article 32, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 832, was pending, defense counsel submitted a discovery request for “[a]ll video recorded or recovered from the dorm building where the alleged sexual assault occurred.” Trial counsel erroneously responded “the video cameras at the dorm were not working that night due to typhoon damage.” However, several months later, defense counsel procured an affidavit from TSgt MS attesting that video had once existed. Defense counsel then moved the military judge to dismiss the Charge and Specification with prejudice, alleging a violation of either Article 46, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 846, or R.C.M. 703.

TSgt MS testified during a motions hearing as to his memory of the video. He stated in the evening leading up to the alleged sexual assault, A1C BB and the appellee were recorded two to four times interacting in a “semi-flirtatious” manner, chasing each other down the hallways, hitting one another with an inflatable hammer, and at one point hugging each other for 5 to 10 seconds. He also testified that around midnight, the video showed A1C BB entering the appellee’s room and departing about 60 to 90 minutes later. Finally, he testified the video showed A1C BB departing the appellee’s room walking crooked and bumping into a door, followed thereafter by the appellee looking “distraught.” The appellee and A1C BB then talked outside A1C BB’s dormitory room for a few minutes, according to TSgt MS. TSgt MS testified that because more than a year had passed since he watched the video with AFOSI agents, he could only remember “big details” about the video, not “little intricate details.” Two AFOSI agents who watched the video with TSgt MS both testified they remembered very little about the substance of the video.

The portions of the video TSgt MS remembered contradicted A1C BB’s previous statements in at least three respects.

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United States v. Seton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-seton-afcca-2014.