United States v. Turner

11 M.J. 784, 1981 CMR LEXIS 740
CourtU.S. Army Court of Military Review
DecidedMay 13, 1981
DocketSPCM 15590
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 11 M.J. 784 (United States v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Army Court of Military Review primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Turner, 11 M.J. 784, 1981 CMR LEXIS 740 (usarmymilrev 1981).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

CARNE, Senior Judge:

In consonance with his pleas the appellant was convicted by a military judge sitting as a special court-martial of three specifications of unlawful entry, one specification of assault consummated by a battery upon a military policeman in the execution of his duties and two specifications of larceny in violation of Articles 134,128, and 121, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. §§ 934, 928 and 921, respectively.1 The appellant’s sentence as adjudged and approved by the convening authority provides for a bad-conduct discharge, confinement at hard labor for four months and forfeiture of $334.00 pay per month for four months.

The appellant now asserts that his plea of guilty to the offense of assault consummated by a battery was improvident because of an inconsistent statement he made during the sentencing proceedings. We do not agree.

During the Care2 inquiry the military judge correctly advised the appellant as to the elements of the offense in question, explained the meaning of the term “in the execution of military police duties” and explained that an assault is an attempt or offer with unlawful force or violence to do bodily harm to another and that an assault in which bodily harm is inflicted is called a battery. The appellant expressly acknowledged that he understood all of the foregoing. Thereafter, in order to establish the factual basis for the plea the following dialogue took place:

MJ: Do you understand that that act must be done without legal justification or excuse and without the lawful consent of the victim, is that clear to you?

ACC: Yes, Your Honor.

MJ: Did PFC Gillespie consent to you striking him with the rake? .

ACC: Did he consent, Your Honor?

MJ: Yes.

ACC: No, Your Honor.

MJ: Now, tell me, where did this incident occur on the eighth of August?

ACC: At Apartment 1, Building 339, at apartment IB.

MJ: Okay. And did PFC Gillespie discover you then outside the window of that apartment?

MJ: And what happened at that time?

ACC: At the time, Your Honor, I was at the air conditioner, putting it back in the window and he came around and he told me to halt and he said he was an MP and so—

MJ: He told you he was an MP?

MJ: And he told you to halt, you heard him tell—

ACC: No, no he said come out, excuse me, Your Honor, he said come out of the bushes, that was his exact words, come out of the bushes.

MJ: Okay. Now did you hear him say that he was an MP?

MJ: How was he dressed?

ACC: He was in civilian clothes, I think, Your Honor, I’m not sure.

MJ: Okay. Was he carrying a weapon of any kind?

ACC: I can’t recall, Your Honor.

MJ: He wasn’t in a regular MP uniform then?

MJ: Did you know that he was an MP?

ACC: Before he told me?

[786]*786MJ: No, in other words at the time that he told you to come out of the bushes, did he also tell you that he was an MP?

MJ: Okay. And you heard him tell you that?

MJ: You don’t recall if he had any weapon or anything?

MJ: Did he say that you were apprehended?

ACC: No, Your Honor, he just said, come out of the bushes that he wanted to talk to me.

MJ: Okay, and was that when you threw, or hit him with the rake?

ACC: No, Your Honor, I hit him with the rake after he told me he wanted to talk to me and that’s when I started to run and I just kind of tossed the rake.

MJ: Okay. Now did you toss the rake in his direction?

MJ: Okay. Did he see the rake coming, do you think, do you believe?

ACC: I, I don’t know, Your Honor.

MJ: But you agree that the rake did hit him?

ACC: Yes, Your Honor, it hit him.

MJ: Okay. Do you recall if it struck him on the arm?

MJ: Now, what happened after that. Did he catch you, when you ran away did he catch you?

ACC: No, Your Honor, I proceeded to run into the parking lot and then around the building. Then I ran across the street and I ran into the woods and by that time, by the time I had got out of the woods, the, on the other street, the MPs had surrounded me and apprehended me.

MJ: Okay. Do you admit then that on the eighth of August 1980, at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, that you did bodily harm to Private First Class Gillespie?

MJ: And do you admit that you did so by striking him on the arm with a rake?

MJ: And do you admit that that was done with unlawful force or violence?

MJ: Now, with regard to that matter, was he coming at you at the time you threw the rake?

ACC: Yes, Your Honor, he was in front of me and there was another one behind me, I can’t recall his name, they was trying to cut off my route of retreat.

MJ: Are you satisfied then that you did not throw the rake in self defense?

MJ: Now are you satisfied that Private First Class Gillespie was a person who then had and was in the execution of military police duties?

MJ: And, did you know at the time you threw the rake that he had and was in the execution of such duties?

In addition, in order to establish that there was a knowing, intelligent, and conscious waiver before accepting the pleas the following colloquy is set forth in the record: MJ: Now, do you have any questions about any of the offenses that we have discussed?

ACC: No, I don’t, Your Honor.

MJ: Do you feel that you have had enough time and opportunity to discuss your case with Captain Davis?

MJ: And, Captain Davis, are you satisfied that you have had enough time with your client?

DC: Yes, Your Honor.

MJ: Private Turner, are you satisfied that Captain Davis’s advice is in your best interest?

[787]*787MJ: And after discussing the matter with him and having his personal and professional opinion in the matter, did you conclude in your mind that the best course of action for you to follow was to plead guilty to these offenses?

MJ: Is your plea of guilty voluntary? By that I mean, are you pleading guilty of your own free will?

MJ: Has anyone tried to force you to plead guilty?

MJ: Is there a pretrial agreement in this case?

DC: There is none, Your Honor.

MJ: I would say at this point that based upon my discussion with the accused, I believe that a plea of guilty would be provident as to all of the Charges and Specifications except for Charge II and its Specification.

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Bluebook (online)
11 M.J. 784, 1981 CMR LEXIS 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-turner-usarmymilrev-1981.