United States v. Whitley

3 C.M.A. 639, 3 USCMA 639, 14 C.M.R. 57, 1954 CMA LEXIS 691, 1954 WL 2091
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedJanuary 22, 1954
DocketNo. 2624
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 3 C.M.A. 639 (United States v. Whitley) 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. Whitley, 3 C.M.A. 639, 3 USCMA 639, 14 C.M.R. 57, 1954 CMA LEXIS 691, 1954 WL 2091 (cma 1954).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

Robert E. Quinn, Chief Judge:

The accused was convicted of desertion in violation of Article of War 58, 10 USC § 1530. We granted his petition to review the record for sufficiency of evidence to support the findings of guilty.

This is an unusual desertion case. The initial unauthorized absence is alleged to have occurred in Korea, but the accused surrendered himself to the military police at the Union Station in Los Angeles. How he got from Korea to the continental United States is the principal question presented by appellate defense counsel.

A corrected morning report entry, dated October 1, 1951, shows the accused on November 30, 1950, to be absent without leave from his organization which was then in Korea. A second entry of the same date ■ indicates that accused was dropped from the rolls as of February 27, 1951. The accused dis[641]*641putes the validity of these entries. He maintains that he lost consciousness of events after an explosion about December 5, 1950, which blew up a truck in which he was riding as a passenger. He was then en route to his organization from an Army hospital where he had been treated for frostbite. The next awareness of his surroundings was in November 1951, when he awoke on board a hospital ship. He was in a bed in a compartment, and there was a bandage on his head. The accused says that the vessel docked in the San Francisco Bay area on November 16, 1951. He was then transported to the Letterman Army Hospital. However, instead of registering upon arrival, he left the hospital without authority. Two months later, he surrendered himself to the military police at the Union Station in Los Angeles.

Prosecution and defense agree that the accused was in Korea in the winter of 1950. They also agree that the accused incurred frostbitten feet sometime during that season. Beyond this, they are in complete disagreement.

The accused claims that he was evacuated from his organization to the 64th Field Hospital at Pyongyang for treatment. He fixes December 1, 1950, as the day he left his organization and December 3, as the time he arrived at the hospital. He maintains that on December 5, he was discharged from the hospital for return to his organization. He was sent to a replacement center near the hospital, and proceeded from there to his organization on the following day. En route, the truck, in which he and about twenty others were passengers, struck a mine, or was “blown up some way,” within a mile from the field artillery unit of his regiment.

The next conscious recollection acknowledged by the accused is his awakening on board a ship at sea. He was “down below in a bed.” He remained awake for an unspecified period of time after his return to consciousness, but then went to sleep. When he again awoke, the ship was “pulling in” at Fort Mason, California. This was on November 16, 1951.

When the vessel docked, the accused was transported in “a long bus with beds” to the Letterman Army Hospital. He got off the bus, entered the door at the Receiving Center, went into a latrine, “walked around back,” and then out again through the main gate. At that time, he fully realized he was in the Army, and that in leaving the hospital he was acting without authority. Outside, the accused met a person who identified himself to the accused as someone whom he had met at Camp Stoneman in 1948. The accused went with this friend to the latter’s home in San Francisco'. He obtained clothing from the friend, and stayed with him. After a time, he left his friend and went to Los Angeles. Several weeks later, he abruptly left a movie theatre, and proceeded to the Union Station where he turned himself in to the military police as being absent without leave from the Letterman Army Hospital.

The accused exhibited to the court several disfigurations on his forehead, over his right eye and just below the hairline. He attributed these to the fact that he must have received a head wound in the truck explosion in December 1950. In further support of his explanation of his absence, he introduced into evidence several entries from his soldier qualification card and service record which ostensibly conflict with the morning report entries.

Relevant entries on the qualification card show the accused as having left the United States on April 8, 1949, and a notation reflects his return from Far Eastern Command on April 1, 1951. It also appears therefrom that the accused had a physical fitness test on February 9, 1951. The pertinent service record entries show two endorsements, one by the accused’s organization on February 18, 1951, indicating a transfer on December 1, 1950, to an unknown hospital, and the second, dated April 17, 1951, by Camp Omiya Station Hospital of a transfer from the hospital to Japan Replacement Training Center on January 24, 1951, pursuant to the hospital’s Special Orders 8, paragraph 9.

Finally, the accused relies upon three reports of psychiatric examinations made on March 8, 1952, July 11, 1952, [642]*642and September 8, 1952. These recite accused’s personal statement of his amnesia and refer to certain tests taken by the accused. Each examination disclosed some indication of memory loss, but, as will appear more fully later, each of the psychiatrists had serious reservations as to the validity of the indication.

Rebuttal evidence by the prosecution may be grouped into four categories, as follows:

(a) A stipulation, joined in by the accused, to the effect that the latest medical card pertaining to the accused on file in the office of The Adjutant General shows that the accused was admitted to the 64th Field Hospital, APO 301, on November 29, 1950, for frostbite, foot, bilateral, moderate, and his return to duty on November 30, 1950, while a member of Company H, 24th Infantry Regiment.
(b) Testimony by the custodian and Officer-in-Charge of the Fort Mason, California, Personnel Movement Division, and a civilian employee of that office, which established that the division was required by regulation to maintain records of embarkation, and debarkation of all military personnel in the San Francisco Bay area. The unit was informed of the arrival and departure of all vessels carrying such passengers. A careful examination was made of the passenger list for all inbound vessels from the Far East, except Guam, which docked in the Bay area in October and November 1951. The search disclosed the names of two persons having the surname of Whitley but neither of these had the first name, serial number, or rank, of the accused. This testimony was corroborated by a stipulation, expressly assented to by the accused, to the effect that the passenger lists of vessels arriving at Fort Mason during November 1951, on file in the office of The Adjutant General, disclose no listing of a person with the name, rank, and serial number of the accused.
(c) Testimony by the Chief Clerk, Evacuation Section of Letterman Army Hospital regarding the practice of receiving patients from inbound vessels and the records of that office relating to patients returning from abroad. According to this testimony, personnel from the Evacuation Section meet all ships coming in with Army patients. These representatives go on board, receive the records, get the patients, and double check the records against the patients. All patients are then brought to the Letterman Army Hospital for further processing. No Army patients coming into the San Francisco Bay Area go to any hospital other than the Letterman Army Hospital.

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Bluebook (online)
3 C.M.A. 639, 3 USCMA 639, 14 C.M.R. 57, 1954 CMA LEXIS 691, 1954 WL 2091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-whitley-cma-1954.