United States v. Wright

42 M.J. 163, 1995 CAAF LEXIS 65, 1995 WL 352817
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Armed Forces
DecidedJune 12, 1995
DocketNo. 93-1482; CMR No. 90 2544
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 42 M.J. 163 (United States v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Wright, 42 M.J. 163, 1995 CAAF LEXIS 65, 1995 WL 352817 (Ark. 1995).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

WISS, Judge:

1. In a contested trial, a general court-martial composed of a military judge alone convicted appellant of a single specification of conspiracy to commit premeditated murder and larceny (he was acquitted of language that included desertion within the conspiracy), in violation of Article 81, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 881. The judge sentenced appellant to a dishonorable discharge, confinement for 25 years, total forfeitures, and reduction to the lowest enlisted grade. The convening authority suspended confinement exceeding 6 years for the period actually served and otherwise approved these results. The Court of Military Review1 affirmed in an unpublished opinion, one judge vigorously dissenting.

2. In turn, we granted appellant’s petition for review (39 MJ 378) in order to consider the state of the evidence that appellant had entertained the specific intent required of conspiracy to commit premeditated murder.2 Particularly, our inquiry focuses on a search for evidence that appellant joined in an agreement to kill, as opposed to having a more passive state of mind.

3. The majority opinion below did not particularly address this issue, but a lengthy dissenting opinion by Judge Freyer (unpub. op. at 2-6) concluded with an expression of reasonable doubt as to whether appellant or his alleged co-conspirator had intended to murder. Restricted as this Court is, however, to questions of law, not fact, compare Art. 66(c), UCMJ, 10 USC § 866(c), with Art. [164]*16467(c), UCMJ, 10 USC § 867(e) (1989), we conclude that the evidence is legally sufficient, so we affirm. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 2789, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979).

I

4. The prosecution’s principal witness was a former Marine named Hohnwald. A few days after Hohnwald was administratively discharged on June 22, 1989, a Marine named Trahan told him that his roommates, appellant and another Marine named Cooper, “wanted to talk” to him. Hohnwald met with appellant and Cooper at his trailer on Tuesday, June 27, at which time Cooper “told” Hohnwald “about the plan to kill Lance Corporal Meyer____” Cooper told Hohnwald that he wanted to quiet Meyer because he knew of Cooper’s allegedly stabbing some person in New York City in April who had “ripped [Cooper] off’ when Cooper had tried to buy a silencer for a handgun. In his pretrial statement, however, appellant indicated that the real motivation was that Cooper “did not like MEYER over and [sic] incident where a Mend of ours named TRA-HAN was court-martialed over something that happened between him and MEYER and we felt MEYER back-stabbed TRA-HAN.”

5. Hohnwald was asked about appellant’s apparent role at this early point, and replied as follows:

Q. Was he [appellant] going to be a part of this?
A. Not in the killing itself.
Q. What did he say he was going to be a part of?
A. Just there to help him [Cooper] in ease anything happened.
Q. Well, was he going to do anything else?
A. Not that I—nothing else was stated as to what anyone was going to do.
Q. But he stated he was going to be present?
A. That he was going to be there if they needed him, but he didn’t say he was going to do anything.

6. The next day, Wednesday evening, the three met and “talked about it again,” this time at Cooper’s trailer. The deed was scheduled for Thursday night. When asked about appellant’s involvement at that point, Hohnwald testified as follows:

Q. What was the conversation like in the trailer that night?
A. Well, again, Sergeant Cooper did the majority of the talking in that he said that he wanted to kill Lance Corporal Meyer and that he was going to slice his throat in the kitchen.
Q. Why in the kitchen?
A. Easier to clean up.
Q. What else was discussed?
A. At that time, it was decided that the truck would be taken to Tennessee by Lance Corporal [sic] Wright, and that Sergeant Cooper was going to kill PFC [sic] Meyer, and that they would both leave on Friday, which would have been the next— day after he was supposed to be killed.
Q. Now, did PFC Wright say that he was going to go along with this?
A. He never said he was going to kill Meyer. He just said about the truck—he just talked about the truck [Meyer’s truck].
Q. What did he say specifically about the truck?
A. That it was being brought up to Tennessee to a chop shop in Nashville.
Q. He said he was going to do that? A. Right.
Q. Did he say he was going to help do anything with the body?
A. Get rid of it that night.
Q. Did they say where?
A. At the county dump, I believe.
Q. So, as far as you know, PFC Wright wasn’t actually going to do the killing of Meyer, right?
A. Right.
Q. But he was going to be there?
A. Right.

[165]*1657. Hohnwald explained that Cooper was going to lure Meyer to Cooper’s trailer the next evening at 8:00 on the ruse of offering to repay money that he owed Meyer, “and that would be the time that Sergeant Cooper would kill him, was when he came over to pick his money up.” While, earlier, all this had seemed more like a “joke” to Hohnwald, he became “convinced” Wednesday night that they were serious. He said that what convinced him were “the details that were being brought out more as to how it was going to be done and what was going to be done with his body.”

8. Realizing that “it was getting too out of hand” and that “it wasn’t a joke any more,” Hohnwald went to the county sheriffs office on Thursday afternoon and reported the plan. They, in turn, handed Hohnwald over to the Naval Investigative Service (NIS), who made arrangements to secrete Meyer and for Hohnwald to go to Cooper’s trailer that night, as scheduled.

9. Hohnwald arrived between 7:00 and 7:80 p.m. The three talked about “what was going to go on” once Meyer arrived. Appellant was “still a part of the agreement to do this.” At some point, Cooper “brought out two weapons that we—he stated that we could use if anything got out of hand.” Appellant and Hohnwald each picked up a weapon—which was a stick with a spike nail on it—and they “play[ed] with them.”

10. Meyer, of course, never showed up. Hohnwald suggested that he and appellant try to find Meyer, so the two drove around to several bars, looking unsuccessfully.

11.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. McCALL
Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals, 2021
United States v. Scheurer
62 M.J. 100 (Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, 2005)
United States v. Curry
46 M.J. 733 (Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals, 1997)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 M.J. 163, 1995 CAAF LEXIS 65, 1995 WL 352817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-wright-armfor-1995.