United States v. Specialist JAIMIN P. PRAJAPATI

CourtArmy Court of Criminal Appeals
DecidedJuly 2, 2026
Docket20250162
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Specialist JAIMIN P. PRAJAPATI (United States v. Specialist JAIMIN P. PRAJAPATI) 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. Specialist JAIMIN P. PRAJAPATI, (acca 2026).

Opinion

PRAJAPATI -AR MY 20250162

referred charge and specification that he had negotiated in lieu of the charges and specifications originally preferred against him. Appellant asks that we dismiss the case entirely. The government concedes that his plea was improvident but requests we return the case for a rehearing. We accept the government's concession, agree that the plea was improvident, set aside the findings, and authorize a rehearing.

BACKGROUND While on a forward operating base in a foreign country, appellant entered a female latrine and used a toilet. At some point while appellant was in the latrine, a shower began to run. Appellant left the stall, heard a scream, and ran out of the latrine. After a brief investigation, appellant was charged with six total specifications of four different charges. Appellant and the referral authority eventually entered into a plea agreement whereby appellant agreed to plead not guilty to the charges and specifications preferred against him. Instead, appellant would plead guilty to a single specification of sexual harassment for "knowingly engag[ing] in conduct of a sexual nature, to wit entering the female latrine while [the victim] was showering ...."

At trial, appellant pied not guilty to every charge and specification preferred against him and pied guilty to the sexual harassment specification that was constructively referred by operation of the plea agreement.2 He also entered a stipulation of fact in which he stated "When the [appellant] entered the female latrine, he intended to intrude upon the privacy of a female showering, who the [appellant] reasonably knew would have been nude." The military judge informed appellant of the elements of sexual harassment in violation of Article 134, UC MJ.3

20240538, 2026 CCA LEXIS 83, at *5 (Army Ct. Crim.App.12 Feb.2026 ) (summ. disp.) (citations omitted ). 2 A charge or specification that is "constructively referred "is one that is not properly preferred under Rule for Courts- Martial [R.C.M.] 307 or referred under R.C.M.601, but for which an accused nonetheless voluntarily submits to trial, usually as part of a plea agreement in lieu of other charges or specifications. See generally United States v. Vega, ARMY 20180467, 2019 C CA LEXIS 109, at *4 (Army Ct. Crim.App.8 Mar.2019 ) (summ.

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The subsequent providence inquiry into this single specification lasted for 152 minutes,punctuated by repeated recesses.

Appellant stated that he entered the latrine because he urgently needed to use the bathroom. At first,he said he did not know it was the female latrine,then later acknowledged that he had seen the sign. Repeatedly,when the military judge asked why he entered the latrine,he said that he entered because he urgently needed to use the bathroom. He then said he heard the shower come on,and "likely knew [the occupant] was a female because I realized it was a female latrine " (emphasis added). When he left the latrine stall,he heard a scream but did not see or make eye contact with anyone and ran out of the latrine building. When asked why his conduct was unwelcome,he said, "because males are not supposed to be in the female latrine." Notwithstanding the language of his stipulation,he repeatedly stated that he did not know there was a female in the latrine when he entered it.4 On multiple occasions, appellant stated, "I did intend to intrude on the privacy [of the female] by staying there,after realizing that it was a female latrine ... " or words to that effect.

Repeatedly,when asked what made his conduct sexual in nature,appellant only said that the victim "was showering and is like naked and ...that just intruded upon her privacy," though he also admitted he never actually saw the victim and only became aware of her presence after he had already entered the latrine. Appellant's defense counsel repeatedly interrupted the military judge's questioning to reframe or purport to clarify statements made by the appellant. Twice,trial defense counsel objected to the military judge's questioning as inquiring into "uncharged misconduct." The first objection came while the military judge attempted to probe a possible defense of mistake or accident. The second came more than two hours into the inquiry,after the military judge returned yet again to whether the appellant's conduct was sexual in nature,and appellant again answered only, "it was specifically me being in there because at that time she was showering and she became aware." This second objection precipitated a lengthy discussion between the military judge and defense counsel. Afterward,the trial defense counsel proposed,and trial counsel agreed,to change the word "entered " to "stayed " in the specification and corresponding portions of the stipulation of fact.

After granting the motion to amend the specification and stipulation,the military judge asked only a few terse questions of appellant. Pertinent to this appeal,the military judge asked, "Do you admit that this action was sexual in nature,

4 A stipulation of fact,if accepted into evidence,is binding on the court-martial and may not be contradicted. R.C.M.81 l(e); see also United States v. Fisher, 58 M.J. 300,303 ( C.A.A.F.2003).

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as I have defined that term for you?" to which appellant answered only, "Yes,Your Honor " without elaboration.5

The military judge found appellant provident and accepted his plea. Pursuant to the plea agreement,the trial counsel made,and the military judge granted,a motion to dismiss the original charges and specifications without prejudice,to ripen into prejudice upon completion of appellate review.

DISCUSSION

"We review a military judge's acceptance of a guilty plea for an abuse of discretion and questions of law arising from the guilty plea de novo." United States v. Tucker, 78 M.J.183,185 (C.A.A.F.2018) (citation omitted). "The test for an abuse of discretion in accepting a guilty plea is whether the record shows a substantial basis in law or fact for questioning the plea." United States v. Moon, 73 M.J.382,386 (C.A.A.F. 2014) (citation omitted). A military judge abuses his discretion "if he fails to obtain from the accused an adequate factual basis to support the plea." United States v. Inabinette, 66 M.J.320,322 (C.A.A.F.2008) (citation omitted).

In his brief to this court,appellant succinctly describes the extraordinarily protracted providence inquiry:

appellant's inability to articulate why any of this conduct was sexual in nature,including his decision to remain in the stall after he finished toileting,led the military judge to repeatedly admit that he struggled to understand how appellant's conduct satisfied the first element of the offense.... Accordingly,it is reasonable to conclude that the military judge determined that appellant's conduct of entering the latrine and staying there was not sexual in nature,otherwise the military judge would not have found it necessary to press appellant to explain what was sexual about his conduct.

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Related

United States v. Fisher
58 M.J. 300 (Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, 2003)
United States v. Outhier
45 M.J. 326 (Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, 1996)

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United States v. Specialist JAIMIN P. PRAJAPATI, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-specialist-jaimin-p-prajapati-acca-2026.