United States v. Womack

27 M.J. 630, 1988 WL 120196
CourtU S Air Force Court of Military Review
DecidedOctober 27, 1988
DocketACM 26660
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 27 M.J. 630 (United States v. Womack) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U S Air Force 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. Womack, 27 M.J. 630, 1988 WL 120196 (usafctmilrev 1988).

Opinion

DECISION

LEWIS, Senior Judge:

The appellant pleaded guilty to willful disobedience of a lawful order and forcible sodomy of an airman. His plea of guilty to the offense of willful disobedience of an order was conditional. The conditional plea preserves for appellate review the issue of the lawfulness of the order, a matter unsuccessfully litigated by the appellant at trial. R.C.M. 910(a)(2). The appellant’s sentence is a dishonorable discharge, confinement for five years, forfeiture of all pay and allowances and reduction to airman basic.

A discussion of the circumstances leading to the commission of the offenses is necessary. While the appellant was assigned in Korea he was diagnosed as being infected with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). This viral condition is described through expert testimony in the record as the progenitor to the Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) disease. Although the appellant had not developed the AIDS symptomatology at the time of trial, there was a reasonable likelihood, based upon available statistical evidence, that he would develop the disease at some future time. It is undisputed that he, as others infected with the virus, is capable of communicating the infection to others, particularly through intimate physical contacts involving the transmission of bodily fluids. Those who become infected through such a transmission are, similarly, likely to develop AIDS.

As is apparent standard procedure, the appellant was placed under close medical supervision at the Wilford Hall Medical Center, the centralized Air Force location for treatment and counselling of those infected with the HIV virus. A major portion of the counselling received by the appellant, as with others having the same condition, related to “safe sex” practices. This counselling is designed to educate each HIV patient as to the precautions to be observed to minimize the chances of passing the virus to others. The appellant was eventually determined to be medically fit for duty and was assigned to Homestead Air Force Base, Florida.

Acting on coordinated command-wide guidance, the appellant’s commander at Homestead issued a six part written order to him on 15 October 1987. This order directed that the appellant refrain from the use of illegal drugs, enunciated limitations on his ability to donate blood or other bodily fluids, and required him to notify health care providers of his condition. He was not charged with disobedience of these three portions of the order. The three remaining portions of the order detailed safe sex practices, and served to synthesize the counselling he had received at Wilford Hall. The appellant was ordered to inform [632]*632all present and future sexual partners of his condition, to insure that sexual partners were protected from contact with certain of his bodily fluids and excretions, and to refrain from acts of sodomy or homosexuality.

Several weeks later, on 4 December 1987, Airman T. accepted an invitation to sleep in the appellant’s room in the dormitory. Airman T.’s roommate had requested the private use of their room while he entertained a visiting girlfriend. Airman T. had been drinking heavily and was, by his testimony, somewhat intoxicated. After accepting the appellant’s invitation he fell asleep on the floor near the appellant’s bed. Airman T. experienced an erotic dream. He became quite restless and suddenly awoke to find that his penis was in the appellant’s mouth. The appellant was performing an act of fellatio on him. Airman T. fled from the room. The matter was reported to appropriate authorities in very short order.

As a result of the incident described above the appellant was charged with forcible sodomy and willful disobedience of his commander’s order. The willful disobedience specification reads as follows:

In that STAFF SERGEANT AMOS A. WOMACK, [jurisdictional information omitted] having received a lawful command from ... his superior commissioned officer, then known by the said Staff Sergeant Amos A. Womack to be his superior commissioned officer, to inform all present and future sexual partners of his Human Immunodeficiency Virus infection, to avoid transmitting the infection to other persons by taking affirmative steps during any sexual activity to protect his sexual partner from coming in contact with his blood, semen, urine, feces, or saliva, and to refrain from any acts of sodomy or homosexuality as prescribed by the Uniform Code of Military Justice, regardless of whether or not his partner consents to such acts, or words to that effect, did, at Homestead Air Force Base, Florida, on or about 4 December 1987, willfully disobey the same.

The order was attacked at trial and is now challenged on appeal as being overly intrusive and, therefore, not “lawful.”

An order, to be lawful, must relate to a military purpose. An order may not, without such a valid military purpose, interfere with personal rights or private affairs. MCM, Part IV, paragraph 14c(2)(a)(iii) (1984). The appellant, in effect, claims that the safe sex order intruded into the area of his interpersonal relations without a corresponding showing of valid military necessity. In this context the appellant also questions the constitutional validity of the order. See MCM, Part IV, paragraph 14c(2)(a)(iv) (1984).

While an overreaching by military order into a private area of one’s life may raise an issue having a constitutional dimension, we note that the nature of the disobedience in this case does not represent a promising basis for a constitutional challenge. The charged act of disobedience was homosexual sodomy. This is not a constitutionally protected activity. Bowers v. Hardwick, 478 U.S. 186, 106 S.Ct. 2841, 92 L.Ed.2d 140 (1986). If one considers the constitutional question in terms of the reasonableness of the order rather than the nature of the disobedience, one has to evaluate the vital public health interests sought to be protected. Obviously, we are viewing a problem about which the law is likely to develop rapidly in the months ahead. At this early juncture one state appellate court has suggested, albeit in a narrowly drawn factual situation, that even certain heterosexual marital contacts might constitutionally be limited to avoid transmission of the HIV virus from one partner to another. Doe v. Coughlin, 71 N.Y.2d 48, 518 N.E.2d 536, 523 N.Y.S.2d 782 (1987). We shall, for this moment, explore the more basic question of whether the order was a lawful exercise of command authority. The related constitutional issue of whether the order was such as to unreasonably deprive the recipient of certain basic liberties is an inherently interwoven concern. See United States v. Young, 1 M.J. 433, 435 (C.M.A.1976).

[633]*633We recognize that “[t]he regulatory authority of a commander is not unlimited ... Orders and directives which only tangentially further a military objective, are excessively broad in scope, are arbitrary and capricious, or needlessly abridge a personal right are subject to close scrutiny and may be invalid and unenforceable.” United States v. Green, 22 M.J. 711, 716 (A.C.M.R.1986). See also United States v. Young, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
27 M.J. 630, 1988 WL 120196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-womack-usafctmilrev-1988.