United States v. Specialist GERALD D. ARNO ( 2019 )


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  • UNITED STATES ARMY COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    Before
    WOLFE, SALUSSOLIA, and ALDYKIEWICZ
    Appellate Military Judges
    UNITED STATES, Appellant
    v.
    Specialist GERALD D. ARNO
    United States Army, Appellee
    ARMY MISC 20180699
    Headquarters, Fort Drum
    Teresa Raymond., Military Judge
    Lieutenant Colonel Jennifer A. Neuhauser, Staff Judge Advocate
    For Appellee: Lieutenant Colonel Tiffany D. Pond, JA; Major Jack D. Einhorn, JA;
    Captain Benjamin J. Wetherell, JA; Captain Benjamin A. Accinelli, JA (on brief).
    For Appellant: Colonel Steven P. Haight, JA; Lieutenant Colonel Eric K. Stafford,
    JA; Captain Allison L. Rowley, JA; Captain Catharine M. Parnell, JA (on brief).
    26 February 2019
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    SUMMARY DISPOSITION AND ACTION ON APPEAL
    BY THE UNITED STATES FILED PUSUANT TO
    ARTICLE 62, UNIFORM CODE OF MILITARY JUSTICE
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    Per Curiam:
    Today we determine that the military judge erred as a matter of law when she
    suppressed statements made by the accused for lack of corroboration. Accordingly,
    we grant the government’s appeal pursuant to Article 62, Uniform Code of Military
    Justice [UCMJ]. 1
    1
    On 23 May 2018, the convening authority referred the following specifications
    against the accused to a general court-martial: two specifications of sexual assault;
    two specifications of abusive sexual contact; and, one specification of indecent
    conduct in violation of Articles 120 and 134, UCMJ, 
    10 U.S.C. §§ 920
     and 934
    (2012). All of the charged offenses are alleged to have occurred on one occasion in
    September 2015 involving the same alleged victim.
    ARNO—ARMY MISC 20180699
    BACKGROUND
    The accused and the alleged victim were both soldiers who had deployed
    together to Honduras from April 2015 until April 2016. After the deployment, they
    continued to occasionally text each other. On 15 June 2017, in the midst of a text-
    message conversation, and apropos of nothing, the accused sent the alleged victim
    the following text:
    Well damn lol. Is it crazy that even though we never had
    sex I still remember what your pussy feels, smells, and
    tastes.
    The text conversation continued without the alleged victim directly addressing
    what appellant had said. The accused then brought it up again:
    Well all I can say is one regret that I don’t have is that I
    played with your pussy and tasted it while you were
    passed out[,] not the right answer but it happened.
    After the subsequent involvement of law enforcement, the accused admitted to
    a U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command (CID), special agent that he had
    digitally penetrated the alleged victim while she was asleep.
    The defense moved to suppress the accused’s statements for lack of
    corroboration under Military Rule of Evidence [Mil. R. Evid.] 304(c).
    To corroborate the accused’s statements, the government introduced evidence
    that the accused and alleged victim were both deployed together in Honduras, had
    hung out with each other and would get intoxicated together, and would both be in
    her room. There was also evidence the accused was sexually interested in the
    alleged victim and would make sexually suggestive comments to her. The alleged
    victim took a combination of medications that made her sleep heavily during the
    deployment.
    The government also provided the court with a text message exchange from
    the Honduras deployment that begins with the accused asking, “We are good right?”
    The alleged victim responds by stating that she has no memory of the previous
    night’s events, and asks the accused if she had remained clothed. After discussing
    whether or not she had vomited, and after she complains of a severe hangover, the
    accused stated, “I’d be [sic] lying if I said I didn’t want to sleep with you last
    night.”
    2
    ARNO—ARMY MISC 20180699
    The alleged victim had no memory of having any sexual contact with the
    accused. The government proffered no physical evidence to support that a sex act
    had happened.
    The military judge granted the accused’s motion to suppress the accused’s
    statements. The military judge rejected the government’s argument that the
    statements were corroborated. 2 The military judge found as follows:
    The Government produced only evidence confirming
    issues tangential to the subject matter of the confessions
    and admissions made by the Accused. None of the
    corroborating evidence produced had anything to do with
    the criminal conduct to which the Accused had confessed
    about which he felt guilty or incriminated himself.
    Essential to the military judge’s ruling was that the corroborating evidence
    must directly address the part of the accused’s statement that admits guilt. The
    corroboration, the military judge ruled, “needs to address the ‘acknowledgement of
    guilt’ or ‘incriminating statement.’” Here, as the accused admitted to sexual
    conduct with a passed out person, the military judge’s ruling required the
    government to corroborate that the victim was passed out and that the sexual act
    occurred. 3
    The military judge therefore found that the government’s proffered
    corroboration had “no relevance specifically to the confessions and admissions at
    all.” 4
    2
    The military judge also rejected the government’s arguments that the text messages
    were separately admissible as a present sense impression and as residual hearsay.
    3
    Immediately after professing a lack of memory of the night before, the alleged
    victim asks the accused, “What happened?” and “Did I keep my clothes on?” While
    other interpretations are possible given the record, one interpretation is that the
    alleged victim was expressing a concern that she had engaged in sexual conduct that
    she could not recall.
    4
    In her initial ruling on the motion to suppress the military judge concluded her
    ruling by stating:
    The sending of sexually suggestive or explicit texts is not
    sufficiently indicative of sexual assault. To conclude
    otherwise would be to indict an entire generation in our
    current sexting-heavy society.
    (continued . . .)
    3
    ARNO—ARMY MISC 20180699
    LAW AND DISCUSSION
    We conclude the military judge misapplied the law. Military Rule of
    Evidence 304(c) requires that the government introduce evidence that would “tend”
    to establish the trustworthiness of the admission. The quantum of the evidence
    required is “slight.” See Mil. R. Evid. 304(c)(4) (“The independent evidence need
    raise only an inference of the truth of the admission or confession.”); see also
    United States v. Jones, 
    78 M.J. 37
    , 42 (C.A.A.F. 2018) (“[The CAAF has]
    traditionally [] described the quantum of evidence needed as being ‘slight.’”) (citing
    United States v. Adams, 
    74 M.J. 137
    , 140 (C.A.A.F. 2015)).
    Nothing in the rule requires that the evidence tending to establish
    trustworthiness is limited to the criminal act itself. When an accused confesses to
    committing a certain crime in a certain place in a certain manner, evidence that the
    accused was actually at that place, and had the specific motive to commit that crime,
    can be considered when determining whether the confession is trustworthy. Motive
    and opportunity are not irrelevant considerations.
    Instead, the military judge required that the corroboration evidence come only
    from evidence corroborating the “criminal conduct to which the Accused had
    confessed . . . .” There is not much daylight between the standard articulated by the
    military judge, and a requirement that the government corroborate the corpus delicti
    of the offense; a standard which courts at all levels have rejected. See, e.g., Opper
    v. United States, 
    348 U.S. 84
     (1954); United States v. Seay, 
    60 M.J. 73
     (C.A.A.F.
    2004); United States v. Egan, 
    53 M.J. 570
     (Army Ct. Crim. App. 2000).
    Now, to be sure, just because there is evidence that tends to establish the
    trustworthiness of an accused’s confession does not mean that the truth of the
    confession has been determined. An accused is free to attack the admissibility of the
    evidence on other grounds or may seek to undermine the weight the factfinder
    should give the evidence.
    (. . . continued)
    The text messages in question are not merely “sexually suggestive” or “explicit.”
    The messages admit to “tasting” and “play[ing] with” the genitals of a woman who is
    “passed out.” A person who is asleep or unconscious is incapable of giving consent
    as a matter of law. See UCMJ art. 120(b)(2). To conclude that the messages are not
    “indicative of sexual assault” is grossly inconsistent with the UCMJ. However, this
    language was not included in the military judge’s final ruling, which is the focus of
    this court’s opinion.
    4
    ARNO—ARMY MISC 20180699
    CONCLUSION
    The military judge’s ruling suppressing the accused’s statements is SET
    ASIDE, the government appeal is GRANTED, and the case is returned to the
    military judge for action consistent with this opinion.
    FOR THE COURT:
    MALCOLM H.
    MALCOLM     H. SQUIRES,
    SQUIRES, JR.
    JR.
    Clerk of Court
    Clerk of Court
    5
    

Document Info

Docket Number: ARMY MISC 20180699

Filed Date: 2/26/2019

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 8/20/2019