United States v. Stricklin

20 C.M.A. 609, 20 USCMA 609, 44 C.M.R. 39, 1971 CMA LEXIS 624, 1971 WL 12440
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedJune 22, 1971
DocketNo. 23,728
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 C.M.A. 609 (United States v. Stricklin) 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. Stricklin, 20 C.M.A. 609, 20 USCMA 609, 44 C.M.R. 39, 1971 CMA LEXIS 624, 1971 WL 12440 (cma 1971).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

Quinn, Chief Judge:

A military judge, sitting as a special court-martial without court members, convicted the accused of three of the eight specifications involving wrongful transactions in marihuana on which he [610]*610was brought to trial. The findings of guilty of specification 1, which concerns wrongful possession of marihuana on April 15, 1970, are unchallenged. However, the validity of those of the other offenses (specification 2, which alleges wrongful possession of ten ounces of marihuana aboard the U.S.S. WICHITA on April 14, 1970, and specification 5, alleging the sale of marihuana aboard the ship on the same day to Quartermaster Second Class Burnett) is contested. The accused contends certain evidence was improperly admitted against him and that the evidence is insufficient to corroborate his pretrial confession of these offenses.

Quartermaster Burnett’s efforts to sell marihuana aboard the U.S.S. WICHITA, on April 14th, led to an investigation by agents of the Naval Investigating Service. The accused was one of those questioned. After full and proper advice as to the right to remain silent and the right to counsel, the accused confessed that, while on leave several weeks earlier, he had purchased thirty “lids” of marihuana at the cost of five dollars a lid. A lid is approximately one ounce. The lids were concealed in a large can and later were stored in the accused’s locker in a “civilian locker club” ashore, while the accused “eontemplat[ed] selling them.” On April 14th, he agreed to sell ten lids at ten dollars each to Burnett. About 4:00 p.m. on April 14th, he removed the ten lids from the locker club, and turned them over to Burnett aboard the ship. Sometime after the crew was paid on April 15th, Burnett gave him one hundred dollars, but did not “identify to whom he had sold the marihuana.” The accused indicated that the remaining lids were still in his locker. He consented to a search and, accompanied by two agents, went to the locker club. He opened the locker and pointed out the container. Twenty-one cellophane bags of material, later identified as marihuana, were found in the container. Each bag was “tightly rolled” into a cylindrical shape and “sealed with scotch tape.”

At trial, no objection was made to the admission into evidence of the confession and the twenty-one bags of marihuana. However, objection was made to evidence offered to corroborate the accused’s confession that he brought ten bags of marihuana aboard the WICHITA and sold them to Burnett. Defense counsel contended the corroborative evidence was irrelevant. Later, in final argument, he maintained that all the independent evidence was insufficient to corroborate the accused’s confession to these two charges. Both objections were overruled.

Burnett was called as a Government witness. Other than admitting that he knew the accused, he invoked his right against self-incrimination and refused to testify whether he had even seen the accused on April 14th. As a result, the Government resorted to the evidence calculated to show that Burnett had ten lids of marihuana aboard the ship and that he sold a sufficient number between April 14th and payday of April 15th and collected enough money in that period to be in a position to pay the accused the amount the accused said he had been paid.

Seaman Blanchard testified that on the night of April 14th Burnett asked him whether he desired to buy marihuana. Blanchard refused. Later, he was questioned about Burnett’s offer by the executive officer of the ship and Naval Investigating Service agents. Pursuant to instruction, Blanchard went to Burnett to ask if he “could get some stuff.” Burnett replied affirmatively, and told Blanchard he would give it to him the next morning, which was payday, and that Blanchard could give him the purchase price after he had been paid. The purchase price was fifteen dollars. As agreed, Blanchard received a cellophane bag from Burnett about 8:80 or 9:00 a.m., and sometime between 10:00 and 11:00 a.m., Burnett “was waiting outside the payline” in the “hallway.” After Blanchard was paid, he gave Burnett fifteen dollars; he saw Burnett “mark . . . [his] name off” in a “green book.” Blanchard also observed two other seamen, Lucas and Bugnaski, give money to Burnett. In each instance, Burnett made an entry [611]*611in his green book. The book was identified by Blanchard, and was admitted into evidence without defense objection.

Seven names were listed in the green book on a single page. Each had the number fifteen written after it. Blanchard identified his name. It was written “BLANCH.” Also in the book, crossed out, were the names “LUCA” and “HEND.” Three other entries in the book were “DAR-15,” “McCAR-15,” and “BUG-15.” The latter two names were also crossed out. Other testimony indicated that Seaman Brown was searched aboard the WICHITA. On his person was a cellophane bag of marihuana “secured with scotch tape,” “tightly rolled,” and “identical in appearance” with the cellophane bags of marihuana taken from the accused’s locker. Seaman Bugnaski’s locker aboard the ship was searched and a cellophane bag of marihuana “identical in appearance to that . . . found on BROWN earlier” was discovered. The effects of Seaman Hendricks were searched and a cellophane bag “identical in appearance to that previously stated” was found; it, too, contained marihuana. Lucas’ locker aboard the ship was searched, and a cellophane bag of marihuana was discovered; a photograph of the bag, admitted as a prosecution exhibit, indicates a striking similarity to the bags taken from the accused. “[A] cellophane bag [of marihuana] identical ... to the other” bags discovered in the investigation was found in a search of Seaman McCarrick’s locker. Burnett’s locker aboard the WICHITA was also searched. Four cellophane bags of marihuana “similar to the other items” were discovered.

Defense counsel objected to the admission in evidence of the bags of marihuana obtained from the other members of the WICHITA crew. He contended that this evidence was irrelevant to the accused’s offenses. Subsequently, arguing the sufficiency of the evidence to corroborate the accused’s confession, he maintained that it indicated only that “some men purchased” marihuana from Burnett, but Burnett, counsel insisted, could have gotten “his marihuana from another source.” Trial counsel argued that the evidence indicated that Burnett had a total of ten cellophane bags of marihuana, the four taken from his locker and the six sold to others, as established by the crossed-out names in the green book, and that all these bags were identical in appearance to those taken from the accused. As trial counsel viewed the evidence, it specifically and directly corroborated the accused’s confession that he had ten bags of marihuana aboard ship and he sold them to Burnett. Essentially, the same arguments are advanced on this appeal.

Absent a charge of conspiracy or joint action, it is certainly arguable that possession of contraband by one person is irrelevant to a charge of possession or wrongful disposition of the same kind of contraband by another. However, evidence which is otherwise inadmissible against a particular accused can be pertinent to corroborate his confession. Hagan v United States, 245 F2d 556 (CA5th Cir) (1957). This concept has had specific application to a situation like that present here. Perhaps the leading case on the subject is Wong Sun v United States, 371 US 471, 9 L Ed 2d 441, 83 S Ct 407 (1963).

In Wong Sun, the defendant was charged with the knowing transportation and concealment of heroin illegally imported into the country.

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Related

United States v. Baker
33 M.J. 788 (U S Air Force Court of Military Review, 1991)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 C.M.A. 609, 20 USCMA 609, 44 C.M.R. 39, 1971 CMA LEXIS 624, 1971 WL 12440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-stricklin-cma-1971.