United States v. Tucker

17 C.M.A. 551, 17 USCMA 551, 38 C.M.R. 349, 1968 CMA LEXIS 250, 1968 WL 5418
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedMay 24, 1968
DocketNo. 20,640
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 17 C.M.A. 551 (United States v. Tucker) 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. Tucker, 17 C.M.A. 551, 17 USCMA 551, 38 C.M.R. 349, 1968 CMA LEXIS 250, 1968 WL 5418 (cma 1968).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

Ferguson, Judge:

A general court-martial convened at Fort Carson, Colorado, convicted the accused of assault with a dangerous weapon in violation of Uniform Code of Military Justice, Article 128, 10 USC § 928, and failure to obey a general regulation governing the registration of firearms, in violation of Code, supra, Article 92, 10 USC § 892. It sentenced him to bad-conduct discharge; forfeiture of all pay and allowances, and confinement at hard labor for one year. Intermediate appellate authorities affirmed. We granted accused’s petition for review on the issues whether the law officer erred prejudi-cially in failing to instruct on the affirmative defense of accident, as pertains to the specification of Charge I; whether his instructions on the other Charge were vague and misleading; whether the law officer should have tailored the instructions presented to the defense theory that the accused was guilty of no offense if the victim seized the gun from his hand, thereby causing it to discharge; whether his deliberate use of the weapon must be established in order also to prove a violation of the regulation alleged in Charge II; and whether the law officer also erred to accused’s prejudice in failing to instruct on the limited effect of evidence of misconduct not charged.

I

On Saturday, January 14, 1967, the accused accepted an invitation from a Sergeant Clark to drive downtown with him and Private First Class Johnson. He and Clark were close friends and, on a prior occasion, Clark had accompanied him, to purchase a revolver so that he .might have his own weapon when they went rabbit hunting. After the accused purchased the revolver, identical to one owned by the Sergeant, Clark supplied him with some ammunition.

On this occasion, however, the trip downtown was to purchase whiskey. The accused and Private First Class Johnson declared the group bought a fifth, while Sergeant Clark testified it was either a half-pint or pint. On returning, they finished consuming the beverage and parked in front of the barracks. The accused further testified that Sergeant Clark then smoked a marihuana cigarette. He was partly corroborated by Private First Class Johnson, although the incident was [553]*553denied by Clark and the soldier who allegedly offered it to him. In any event, Sergeant Clark stated that, after their return, he went directly to his room, thence to the first floor of the barracks, where he began to watch television. After explaining that to “[h]at up means run, move out,” Sergeant Clark described the alleged assault as follows:

“Sir, I walked into the barracks, sat down and watched TV, and I was watching TV and I heard Private Tucker say, T ought to make both of them hat up,’ and I turned around and looked to see who he was talking to, and he was looking directly at me, and I asked him who he was talking to, and he said, ‘I’m talking to you,’ and at that time I got up and I walked back, over in front of him, and I said, — I told him I wasn’t hatting up, and he said, ‘I’ll make you hat up,’ and I said I wasn’t going anywhere, and he said, ‘You are going to hat up,’ and he pulled the gun out of his pocket and fired it.”

Clark testified the accused then ran out the north end of the barracks and he ran out the front, suffering from an arm wound. Private First Class Johnson’s testimony corroborated the “hat up” remark by the accused, and Sergeant Clark taking issue with the comment. He testified the pistol was fired while Clark was “discussing something” with the accused.

Specialist Fourth Class Woodard declared he was present when the accused said he was going to make Sergeant Clark move. He saw the accused pull a pistol and fire at Clark when they were approximately five feet apart.

Another eyewitness, Private First Class Cockrell, corroborated Clark’s version of the shooting incident. He also testified that, just before the shooting the accused asked him what he knew about his, Tucker’s, girl friend staying at Sergeant Clark’s girl friend’s house. Cockrell also stated that, after he denied any knowledge of the matter, Tucker “put his left hand in his left field jacket pocket and he pointed the revolver at me from the pocket, and he told me to go back and sit down.” He heard the weapon click when the accused cocked it. Cockrell then described the assault on Clark as follows:

“He [the accused] told me to go sit where I were. Once I sit back to my position, Sergeant Clark went back and PFC Tucker says, ‘Sergeant Clark,’ Sergeant Clark was facing him, what was Gloria doing staying over at Ruby’s house, and he said she was just staying over there, and PFC Tucker said- ‘I’ll make you both hat up,’ and Sergeant Clark replied that he wasn’t going to hat up, and PFC Tucker pulled out a pistol and he fired one shot, and Sergeant Clark went out the front door; PFC Tucker went out the back.”

Various witnesses testified to accused’s reputation for peaceableness. His version of the preliminary events followed the pattern already set by prosecution witnesses of being at once corroborative of, and contradictory to, testimony previously presented. However, it is the accused’s description of the shooting itself which is critical to the issues. This is in sharp conflict with that given by the prosecution witnesses. The accused describes the events in the barracks, as follows:

“. . . and so he came and told me later on, ‘Why don’t you go and get your weapon and we’ll go out the back gate after chow and shoot some rabbits,’ so I went and got the pistol and loaded my pistol and put it in my left-hand coat pocket, came back, I laid on my — PFC McIntosh’s bunk, and some guys were getting ready to go to Vietnam, PFC Cruis-ner and PFC McCoy, and he asked me, he came over and was laying on my bunk and he asked me could he see the weapon. First I told him no, Sergeant Clark, then I got up off the bunk and I walked toward the footlocker, I got up on the front of the two footlocker’s [sic]. He came and asked me, ‘Could I see the weapon? I want to show it to PFC Cruisner and McCoy.’ So I handed him the weapon, sir, and as I handed [554]*554him the weapon he snatched the weapon, like he was grabbing something, and the weapon went off.”

The accused denied having pointed his weapon at Private First Class Cockrell. He testified that he neither pulled nor did he have his hand on the trigger when the weapon discharged. He testified that the pistol was loaded with a bullet in every chamber except the one beneath the hammer and that it was not cocked. He described Sergeant Clark as “a little high” and “acting kind of silly” before the shooting incident. After the weapon fired, he panicked and ran but, about two hours later, turned himself in.

Specialist Seven John W. Alden, a firearms examiner, declared he had tested the German-made revolver with which Sergeant Clark had been shot. He described the weapon as having no safety features comparable to an American-made pistol. Thus, it could be fired without pulling the trigger, simply by exerting an outside force on the hammer. This made it possible for the hammer to rotate the cylinder if the weapon was pulled from another person’s tight grip; and, upon the hammer’s falling, the revolver would fire without use of the trigger. A gun powder pattern test was made with the weapon, and he concluded there would be no powder marks found on a target at a distance of greater than forty inches.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 C.M.A. 551, 17 USCMA 551, 38 C.M.R. 349, 1968 CMA LEXIS 250, 1968 WL 5418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-tucker-cma-1968.