United States v. Collins ( 2018 )


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  •                  U NITED S TATES AIR F ORCE
    C OURT OF C RIMINAL APPEALS
    ________________________
    No. ACM 39296
    ________________________
    UNITED STATES
    Appellee
    v.
    Richard D. COLLINS
    Master Sergeant (E-7), U.S. Air Force, Appellant
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States Air Force Trial Judiciary
    Decided 23 July 2018 1
    ________________________
    Military Judge: Tiffany M. Wagner.
    Approved sentence: Dishonorable discharge, confinement for 198
    months, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, and reduction to E-1. Sen-
    tence adjudged 26 February 2017 by GCM convened at Eglin Air Force
    Base, Florida.
    For Appellant: William E. Cassara, Esquire (argued); Captain Dustin J.
    Weisman, USAF.
    For Appellee: Captain Michael T. Bunnell, USAF (argued); Lieutenant
    Colonel Joseph J. Kubler, USAF; Mary Ellen Payne, Esquire.
    Before JOHNSON, MINK, and DENNIS, Appellate Military Judges.
    Senior Judge JOHNSON delivered the opinion of the court, in which
    Judge MINK and Judge DENNIS joined.
    ________________________
    PUBLISHED OPINION OF THE COURT
    ________________________
    1   We heard oral argument in this case on 28 June 2018.
    United States v. Collins, No. ACM 39296
    JOHNSON, Senior Judge:
    Appellant was found guilty, contrary to his pleas, of one specification of
    rape in violation of Article 120, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), 
    10 U.S.C. § 920
    . A general court-martial composed of officer and enlisted members
    sentenced Appellant to a dishonorable discharge, confinement for 198 months,
    forfeiture of all pay and allowances, and reduction to the grade of E-1. The
    convening authority approved the adjudged sentence.
    Appellant raises seven issues on appeal: (1) whether the statute of limita-
    tions had run on the alleged offense of rape; (2) whether the evidence is factu-
    ally insufficient to support the conviction; (3) whether Appellant was denied
    effective assistance of counsel guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment 2 where his
    trial defense counsel failed to present evidence of an alternative suspect; (4)
    whether Appellant was subjected to unreasonable search and seizure in viola-
    tion of the Fourth Amendment; 3 (5) whether Appellant was denied his Sixth
    Amendment right to confrontation where the military judge permitted a pros-
    ecution witness to testify by remote means; (6) whether Appellant’s Fifth
    Amendment 4 due process rights were violated by the loss of exculpatory evi-
    dence in the 15 years between the alleged offense and the court-martial; and
    (7) whether the convening authority committed unlawful command influence. 5
    Because, as to the first issue, our superior court’s holding in United States v.
    Mangahas, 
    77 M.J. 220
    , 225 (C.A.A.F. 2018), compels us to set aside the find-
    ings and sentence and to dismiss the charge and specification, we do not ad-
    dress the remaining issues.
    I. BACKGROUND
    In August 2000, HA was a young Airman attending her initial training as
    a radiology technician at Sheppard Air Force Base (AFB), Texas. Appellant
    was one of her course instructors. At trial, HA testified that on Friday, 25 Au-
    gust 2000, she encountered Appellant when she was eating dinner alone at a
    club on base. Appellant appeared to be intoxicated. After Appellant declined
    HA’s suggestion that he take a taxi or shuttle home, HA drove Appellant to his
    on-base residence. HA helped Appellant out of the vehicle and to his front door
    due to his apparently impaired condition. However, once inside the door, Ap-
    pellant suddenly pushed HA against the wall and then threw her onto the floor.
    2   U.S. CONST. amend. VI.
    3   U.S. CONST. amend. IV.
    4   U.S. CONST. amend. V.
    5Appellant personally asserts issues (6) and (7) pursuant to United States v. Grostefon,
    
    12 M.J. 431
     (C.M.A. 1982).
    2
    United States v. Collins, No. ACM 39296
    HA initially resisted until Appellant struck her in the face. Appellant then
    raped HA.
    On the morning of Monday, 28 August 2000, HA arrived for class with a
    black eye and scratches on her face and knuckles. HA reluctantly admitted to
    a female instructor that she had been raped. As a result, HA was transported
    to a hospital where she underwent a sexual assault forensic exam (SAFE), and
    the Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI) and civilian police initi-
    ated investigations.
    Initially, HA told AFOSI she was assaulted by an unknown male who dig-
    itally penetrated her in an off-base store parking lot the preceding weekend.
    When security camera video from the store HA identified failed to corroborate
    HA’s statements, AFOSI agents confronted her. HA admitted her account of
    the assault was not true. She told the agents she made it up because she did
    not want to identify the attacker, but she had been pressured at the hospital
    to say what had happened. HA admitted she knew who the assailant was, but
    she said she did not want to “ruin a family.” She denied that it had been one of
    her course instructors. Because HA refused to identify the perpetrator, AFOSI
    and the civilian police eventually dropped their investigations. Civilian author-
    ities destroyed the SAFE kit in 2002.
    HA separated from the military in 2003 and then later returned to active
    duty in 2007. In April 2011, HA made a restricted sexual assault report to an
    Air Force mental health provider, stating that she had previously been physi-
    cally and sexually assaulted by an instructor but “did not want to be involved.”
    The provider referred HA to a Sexual Assault Response Coordinator, to whom
    HA also made a restricted report that she had been sexually assaulted by an
    active duty Air Force member at Sheppard AFB, but she did not identify the
    assailant. These restricted reports were not referred to law enforcement or in-
    vestigated. HA separated from the Air Force again in 2011.
    In March 2014, HA made an unrestricted report to the Chief of Military
    Justice at Sheppard AFB, this time identifying Appellant as having raped her
    at Sheppard AFB in 2000. This report led AFOSI to reinitiate the investiga-
    tion. A single charge and specification of rape were preferred against Appellant
    and received by the summary court-martial convening authority on 17 March
    2016. On 6 September 2016, the charge and specification were referred for trial
    by a general court-martial. Appellant’s court-martial took place at Hurlburt
    Field, Florida, on 17 November 2016, and at Eglin AFB, Florida, on 21–26 Feb-
    ruary 2017. At trial, Appellant pleaded not guilty and the Defense vigorously
    contested the charge and specification. However, the Defense did not object or
    move to dismiss the charge and specification on the grounds that they were
    barred by the statute of limitations in effect at the time of the alleged offense.
    3
    United States v. Collins, No. ACM 39296
    II. DISCUSSION
    A. Law
    The applicable statute of limitations is a question of law that we review de
    novo. Mangahas, 77 M.J. at 222 (citing United States v. Lopez de Victoria, 
    66 M.J. 67
    , 73 (C.A.A.F. 2008)). “An accused is subject to the statute of limitations
    in force at the time of the offense.” 
    Id.
     (citing Toussie v. United States, 
    397 U.S. 112
    , 115 (1970)). However, “failure to make the timely assertion of a right”
    constitutes forfeiture, whereas the “intentional relinquishment or abandon-
    ment of a known right” constitutes waiver. United States v. Ahern, 
    76 M.J. 194
    ,
    197 (C.A.A.F. 2017). Where an appellant forfeits a right by failing to make a
    timely assertion at trial, appellate courts will review the forfeited issue for
    plain error. 
    Id.
     (citing United States v. Gladue, 
    67 M.J. 311
    , 313 (C.A.A.F.
    2009)). In a plain error analysis the appellant “has the burden of demonstrat-
    ing that: (1) there was error; (2) the error was plain or obvious; and (3) the
    error materially prejudiced a substantial right of the accused.” United States
    v. Girouard, 
    70 M.J. 5
    , 11 (C.A.A.F. 2011). Waiver, by contrast, “leaves no error
    to correct on appeal.” Ahern, 76 M.J. at 197 (citing United States v. Campos,
    
    67 M.J. 330
    , 332 (C.A.A.F. 2009)).
    Article 43, UCMJ, 
    10 U.S.C. § 843
    , provides the statute of limitations for
    offenses under the Code. The version of Article 43 in effect in August 2000
    stated, inter alia, “A person charged with absence without leave or missing
    movement in time of war, or with any offense punishable by death, may be
    tried and punished at any time without limitation.” 
    10 U.S.C. § 843
    (a) (2000).
    Otherwise, the general rule was that “a person charged with an offense is not
    liable to be tried by court-martial if the offense was committed more than five
    years before the receipt of sworn charges” by a summary court-martial conven-
    ing authority. 
    10 U.S.C. § 843
    (b)(1) (2000).
    In Coker v. Georgia, 
    433 U.S. 584
    , 592 (1977), the United States Supreme
    Court held that the Eighth Amendment 6 forbids imposing the death penalty
    for the crime of rape of an adult woman. Coker is binding precedent for Air
    Force courts-martial. United States v. McReynolds, 
    9 M.J. 881
    , 882 (A.F.C.M.R.
    1980) (per curiam); see Mangahas, 77 M.J. at 223; see also United States v.
    Hickson, 
    22 M.J. 146
    , 154 n.10 (C.M.A. 1986) (stating that in light of Coker,
    the death penalty for rape may not be constitutionally inflicted in absence of
    aggravating circumstances). However, in August 2000, the Manual for Courts-
    Martial continued to provide that death was an authorized punishment for the
    crime of rape under Article 120, UCMJ. Manual for Court-Martial, United
    States (2000 ed.), pt. IV, ¶ 45.e.(1).
    6   U.S. CONST. amend. VIII.
    4
    United States v. Collins, No. ACM 39296
    In Willenbring v. Neurauter, 
    48 M.J. 152
    , 180 (C.A.A.F. 1998), the United
    States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces (CAAF) unanimously held that,
    Coker notwithstanding, as a matter of statutory interpretation “rape is an ‘of-
    fense punishable by death’ for purposes of exempting it from the 5-year statute
    of limitations of Article 43(b)(1).” See also United States v. Stebbins, 
    61 M.J. 366
    , 369 (C.A.A.F. 2005) (quoting Willenbring, 48 M.J. at 178) (“[T]he question
    of whether the death penalty may be imposed, given the facts and circum-
    stances of any particular case, does not control the statute of limitations is-
    sue.”)
    In 2006, Congress amended Article 43, UCMJ, to provide that “[a] person
    charged with . . . rape or rape of a child . . . may be tried or punished at any
    time without limitation.” 
    10 U.S.C. § 843
    (a) (2006). 7
    However, the CAAF’s recent decision in Mangahas explicitly overruled its
    holding in Willenbring that under the pre-2006 version of Article 43, UCMJ,
    the offense of rape was exempt from the general five-year statute of limitations.
    77 M.J. at 223–25. Finding that Willenbring was “badly-reasoned” and risked
    “‘undermining public confidence in the law,’” the CAAF unanimously held
    “where the death penalty could never be imposed for the offense charged, the
    offense is not punishable by death for purposes of Article 43, UCMJ.” Id. at
    224–25 (quoting United States v. Quick, 
    74 M.J. 332
    , 336 (C.A.A.F. 2015)).
    Therefore, because the alleged rape of an adult woman in Mangahas occurred
    in 1997, 18 years before the charge and specification were received by the sum-
    mary court-martial convening authority, the CAAF dismissed the charge and
    specification. 
    Id. at 225
    .
    Rule for Courts-Martial (R.C.M.) 907 provides that the running of the stat-
    ute of limitations under Article 43, UCMJ, is waivable grounds for a motion to
    dismiss a charge and specification without trial. R.C.M. 907(b)(2)(B) further
    provides “that, if it appears that the accused is unaware of the right to assert
    the statute of limitations in bar of trial, the military judge shall inform the
    accused of this right.” “‘[W]henever it appears that the statute of limitations
    has run against an offense,’ that fact will be brought to the attention of the
    accused by the court.” United States v. Salter, 
    20 M.J. 116
    , 117 (C.M.A. 1985)
    (quoting United States v. Rodgers, 
    24 C.M.R. 36
    , 38 (C.M.A. 1957)).
    7 In 2013, Congress again amended Article 43, UCMJ, to additionally exclude the of-
    fenses of sexual assault and sexual assault of a child from the five-year statute of lim-
    itations. National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014, Pub. L. No. 113–66,
    § 1703, 
    127 Stat. 672
    , 958 (2013) (codified as 
    10 U.S.C. § 843
    (a)).
    5
    United States v. Collins, No. ACM 39296
    “[O]n direct review, we apply the clear law at the time of appeal, not the
    time of trial.” United States v. Mullins, 
    69 M.J. 113
    , 116 (C.A.A.F. 2010) (citing
    United States v. Harcrow, 
    66 M.J. 154
    , 159 (C.A.A.F. 2008)).
    B. Analysis
    Appellant contends that in light of Mangahas, the military judge commit-
    ted plain error which requires this court to set aside the findings and sentence
    and to dismiss the charge and specification. We agree.
    Under Mullins and Harcrow, we must apply the clear law at the time of
    appeal to cases that, like Appellant’s, are pending direct review. Mullins, 69
    M.J. at 116. In light of Mangahas, the statute of limitations applicable to the
    charged offense of rape in violation of Article 120, UCMJ, committed on or
    about 25 August 2000 was five years. See Mangahas, 77 M.J. at 225. Therefore,
    the statute of limitations in Appellant’s case expired in August 2005, more
    than ten years before the charge and specification were preferred and delivered
    to the summary court-martial convening authority in March 2016. Accord-
    ingly, we must evaluate the events at trial in this light.
    R.C.M. 907(b)(2)(B) required the military judge to inform Appellant at trial
    of Appellant’s apparent right to assert the statute of limitations defense to bar
    the only charge and specification against him. See Salter, 20 M.J. at 117. The
    military judge’s failure to do so, like trial defense counsel’s failure to assert the
    defense, was understandable in light of the CAAF’s holding in Willenbring.
    Nevertheless, applying the CAAF’s clear holding in Mangahas that the five-
    year statute of limitations had long since run, the military judge’s failure to
    comply with R.C.M. 907(b)(2)(B) was an error that was plain and obvious. 8 See
    Girouard, 70 M.J. at 11. Moreover, the error was plainly materially prejudicial
    to Appellant’s substantial rights because the statute of limitations was a com-
    plete defense to the only charge and specification in the case. Id. Although the
    8 Appellant contends the applicable standard of review is plain error. This is the stand-
    ard the CAAF applied in both Mullins, 69 M.J. at 116, and Harcrow, 66 M.J. at 159.
    Each of those cases dealt with changes to applicable precedent arising after trial but
    during the course of direct appellate review, where the appellants had failed to make
    evidentiary objections at trial. Mullins, 69 M.J. at 116–17 (applying United States v.
    Brooks, 
    64 M.J. 325
     (C.A.A.F. 2007)); Harcrow, 66 M.J. at 159 (applying Crawford v.
    Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
     (2004)). Appellant’s case, in contrast, involves the military
    judge’s failure to perform an affirmative duty imposed by R.C.M. 907(b)(2)(B), regard-
    less of Appellant’s failure to raise the issue. It might be argued that the plain error
    standard applicable to forfeited issues is inapposite, and that de novo is the appropri-
    ate standard of review. However, we need not resolve this question because we agree
    with Appellant that the military judge committed plain error in light of Mangahas.
    6
    United States v. Collins, No. ACM 39296
    statute of limitations is waivable, at oral argument the Government conceded
    it could articulate no plausible reason why Appellant would have knowingly
    waived the defense had he understood it was available in this contested trial.
    Nor can we discern any such reason.
    The Government attempts to distinguish Mangahas on the basis that, in
    that case, the accused moved to dismiss the charge and specification of rape
    based on the statute of limitations in spite of Willenbring, whereas in the in-
    stant case Appellant did not. The Government relies heavily on the United
    States Supreme Court’s decision in Musacchio v. United States, 
    136 S. Ct. 709
    (2016). In Musacchio, the petitioner failed to invoke the statute of limitations
    bar in 
    18 U.S.C. § 3282
    (a) 9 at trial but attempted to do so on appeal. 
    Id. at 713
    .
    The Court first found the statute “provides a nonjurisdictional defense, not a
    jurisdictional limit” on prosecution. 
    Id. at 718
    . The Court then held:
    Because §3282(a) does not impose a jurisdictional limit, the fail-
    ure to raise it at or before trial means that it is reviewable on
    appeal—if at all—only for plain error. . . . We conclude, however,
    that a district court’s failure to enforce an unraised limitations
    defense under §3282(a) cannot be a plain error.
    ...
    When a defendant fails to press a limitations defense, the de-
    fense does not become part of the case and the Government does
    not otherwise have the burden of proving that it filed a timely
    indictment. When a defendant does not press the defense, then,
    there is no error for an appellate court to correct—and certainly
    no plain error.
    A defendant thus cannot successfully raise the statute-of-limita-
    tions defense in §3282(a) for the first time on appeal.
    Id. The Government contends the statute of limitations in Article 43, UCMJ,
    like that in 
    18 U.S.C. § 3282
    , is a nonjurisdictional, available defense that an
    accused must assert in order to make it part of the case. The Government ar-
    gues that, where an accused fails to assert the defense for any reason—includ-
    ing, as in Appellant’s case, the apparent unavailability of the defense in light
    of clear existing precedent—under Musacchio a plain error analysis is unnec-
    essary because the defense is simply not “part of the case.”
    9 
    18 U.S.C. § 3282
    (a) provides that “[e]xcept as otherwise expressly provided by law,
    no person shall be prosecuted, tried, or punished for any offense, not capital, unless
    the indictment is found or the information is instituted within five years next after
    such offense shall have been committed.”
    7
    United States v. Collins, No. ACM 39296
    The Government appears to essentially argue that Musacchio created a
    new standard of review, or rather a standard of non-review, apparently unique
    to statute of limitations jurisprudence. The Government does not argue Appel-
    lant waived the statute of limitation bar, which involves the “intentional relin-
    quishment or abandonment of a known right.” Ahern, 76 M.J. at 197. Indeed,
    it is apparent that Appellant, like the military judge and other trial partici-
    pants, was understandably unaware such a defense was available. See United
    States v. Hoffmann, ___ M.J. ___, No. 18–0002/AR, 
    2018 CAAF LEXIS 226
    (C.A.A.F. 7 May 2018) (mem.) (“[W]e do not construe the failure to object to
    what was the settled law at the time as an intentional relinquishment of a
    known right . . . .”) Similarly, the Government cannot prevail under the plain
    error standard of review applicable to forfeited issues because the combination
    of Mangahas, Mullins/Harcrow, R.C.M. 907(b)(2)(B), and Salter make it ap-
    parent the military judge plainly erred by failing to inform Appellant at trial
    that the statute had run on the charge of rape. However, the Government
    seizes on the strong language in Musacchio that an unraised statute of limita-
    tions defense does not become part of the case and cannot be successfully raised
    on appeal to mean some principle other than waiver or forfeiture is at work.
    We are not persuaded.
    To begin with, Musacchio may be distinguished from the instant case on
    multiple grounds. Musacchio did not interpret Article 43, UCMJ, which gov-
    erns trials by courts-martial; rather, it addressed the operation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 3282
    , applicable to civilian prosecutions. By design, the civilian and military
    justice systems employ different rules of procedure. In particular, our superior
    court has recognized “that Congress, in drafting Article 43, did not intend to
    create, in sections (b) and (c), a mirror image of the rule then and now extant
    in federal [civilian] law.” United States v. Tunnell, 
    23 M.J. 110
    , 113 (C.M.A.
    1986). In addition, Musacchio did not address a situation where the statute of
    limitations defense was apparently unavailable at the time of trial based on
    clear existing precedent that was subsequently overruled during the pendency
    of the appeal. It is not clear to us that the Court’s analysis would be the same
    in such a situation. Furthermore, Musacchio did not address the affirmative
    duty to bring the statutory bar to the attention of the accused imposed on the
    trial judge by R.C.M. 907(b)(2)(B), which has no civilian equivalent.
    Even setting these distinctions aside, the Government misconstrues the
    Court’s approach to the applicable standard of review in Musacchio. It is true
    that, as the Government states, the Court expressly did not decide whether
    Musacchio’s failure to raise the statute of limitations constituted waiver or for-
    feiture. Musacchio, 
    136 S. Ct. at
    718 n.3. However, this was not because it
    found neither applied; it was because, even assuming a plain error standard of
    review, the trial judge’s failure to raise 
    18 U.S.C. § 3282
     sua sponte in a civilian
    trial would never meet the criteria for relief under the plain error standard of
    8
    United States v. Collins, No. ACM 39296
    review. The Court found a defendant “cannot successfully raise the statute-of-
    limitations defense in §3282(a) for the first time on appeal” not because plain
    error was not the applicable standard of review, but by evaluating the alleged
    error in light of the plain error standard and finding it could never be met. Id.
    at 718.
    In light of the military judge’s affirmative obligation under R.C.M.
    907(b)(2)(B) to raise the statute of limitations issue, Appellant’s situation is
    clearly different. Again, there is no indication Appellant “intentionally relin-
    quished” an available statute of limitations defense, and therefore waiver is
    inapplicable. Ahern, 76 M.J. at 197. Under Mangahas, Mullins, R.C.M.
    907(b)(2)(B), and Salter, the military judge was required to inform Appellant
    the statutory bar was available, and she plainly erred to the material prejudice
    of Appellant’s substantial rights by failing to do so. See Girouard, 70 M.J. at
    11. Therefore, we cannot affirm the conviction.
    The Government advances a second argument, inspired by the CAAF’s re-
    cent decision in United States v. Williams, ___ M.J. ___, No. 17–0285, 
    2018 CAAF LEXIS 365
     (C.A.A.F. 27 Jun. 2018), to the effect that the 2006 amend-
    ment to Article 43, UCMJ, retroactively applied to the August 2000 rape
    charge, and therefore the statute of limitations never actually expired, Man-
    gahas notwithstanding. In Williams, the CAAF set aside findings of guilty with
    respect to four specifications of sexual offenses based upon an erroneous pro-
    pensity instruction that was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Wil-
    liams, 
    2018 CAAF LEXIS 365
    , at *7–14; see United States v. Hills, 
    75 M.J. 350
    ,
    356 (C.A.A.F. 2016). Apparently, one set-aside specification alleged rape on di-
    vers occasions between late 2000 and early 2003. Williams, 
    2018 CAAF LEXIS 365
    , at *3–4. In its decretal paragraph, the CAAF stated, inter alia:
    The record is returned to the Judge Advocate General of the
    Army with a rehearing as to the Specification of Charge I au-
    thorized to the extent that the charge and specification are not
    barred by the statute of limitations. See United States v. Man-
    gahas, 
    77 M.J. 220
     (C.A.A.F. 2018); United States v. Grimes, 
    142 F.3d 1342
    , 1351 (11th Cir. 1998) (recognizing that the federal
    circuits are in agreement “that extending a limitations period
    before the prosecution is barred does not violate the Ex Post
    Facto Clause”). But see United States v. Lopez de Victoria, 66
    9
    United States v. Collins, No. ACM 
    39296 M.J. 67
    , 73–74 (C.A.A.F. 2008) (holding that the 2003 amend-
    ment to Article 43, UCMJ, 
    10 U.S.C. § 843
    , 10 did not retroac-
    tively extend the statute of limitations due to statutory construc-
    tion).
    Williams, 
    2018 CAAF LEXIS 365
    , at *15 (footnote inserted). In a footnote, the
    CAAF commented “[t]he parties may address any potential retroactivity issues
    concerning the statute of limitations on remand or at the rehearing.” 
    Id.
     at *15
    n.5.
    Taking its cue from Williams, the Government cites Grimes and a series of
    other federal circuit decisions for the principle that extending the applicable
    statute of limitations before the existing statute of limitations has expired on
    a particular offense does not violate the Ex Post Facto Clause. 11 Grimes, 
    142 F.3d at 1351
    ; see United States v. Taliaferro, 
    979 F.2d 1399
    , 1402 (10th Cir.
    1992); United States v. Knipp, 
    963 F.2d 839
    , 843–44 (6th Cir. 1992); United
    States v. Madia, 
    955 F.2d 538
    , 540 (8th Cir. 1992); United States v. Richardson,
    
    512 F.2d 105
    , 106 (3d Cir. 1975); Clements v. United States, 
    266 F.2d 397
    , 398–
    99 (9th Cir. 1959). The Government goes on to distinguish the 2003 amend-
    ment to Article 43 addressed in Lopez de Victoria from the 2006 amendment
    as a matter of statutory construction, and concludes the latter unlike the for-
    mer was intended to apply to earlier offenses for which the statutory period
    had not yet run.
    We acknowledge there is an unresolved question of whether and to what
    extent the 2006 amendment to Article 43 extended the statute of limitations
    period for rapes occurring within the five years preceding the amendment’s
    effective date. One day this court may be called upon to address that question.
    But today is not that day. It is unnecessary for us to reach those aspects of the
    Government’s argument because the five-year statute of limitations on the Au-
    gust 2000 rape charged in Appellant’s case did run before the 2006 amend-
    ment.
    The Government attempts to address this manifest flaw in its position by
    arguing that at the time of both the alleged offense in August 2000 and the
    2006 amendment to Article 43, there was no statute of limitations for rape
    under the existing precedent of Willenbring. The Government argues Man-
    gahas did “not reach the question of retroactivity,” and that “[e]ven if Man-
    gahas means that Willenbring is no longer good law in 2018, Willenbring was
    10This change to Article 43, UCMJ, modified the statute of limitations with respect to
    certain offenses against children and did not affect the statute of limitations applicable
    to Appellant’s case. See Lopez de Victoria, 66 M.J. at 71.
    11   U.S. CONST. art. I, § 9, cl. 3.
    10
    United States v. Collins, No. ACM 39296
    good law at the time of the 2006 amendment.” However, the Government fun-
    damentally misconceives the import of the CAAF’s decision in Mangahas. The
    meaning of Mangahas is that under Article 43, UCMJ, the statute of limita-
    tions for rape in 1997, as well as in August 2000, was and always has been five
    years. Any pronouncements to the contrary in Willenbring or elsewhere were
    simply wrong. See Mangahas, 77 M.J. at 223–25. As discussed above, there
    remains an open question as to whether rapes committed prior to but within
    five years of the 2006 amendment were taken out of the statute of limitations.
    However, the offense Appellant was charged with, unlike the specification at
    issue in Williams, is entirely outside that window. See Williams, 
    2018 CAAF LEXIS 365
    , at *3–4.
    If we were to accept the Government’s argument, the outcome of Mangahas
    would appear nonsensical. There, the CAAF interpreted identical language in
    Article 43, UCMJ, as applied in Appellant’s case. Finding Willenbring was
    “badly-reasoned” and explicitly overruling its interpretation of Article 43, the
    CAAF held the applicable statute of limitations for an alleged rape in 1997 was
    five years, and dismissed the charge and specification. Mangahas, 77 M.J. at
    223–25. The same reasoning applies to an alleged rape that occurred in August
    2000. We are compelled to follow our superior court’s precedent and take sim-
    ilar action.
    III. CONCLUSION
    The findings of guilt and the sentence are SET ASIDE. The Charge and its
    Specification are DISMISSED. Article 66(c), (d), UCMJ, 
    10 U.S.C. § 866
    (c),
    (d).
    FOR THE COURT
    CAROL K. JOYCE
    Clerk of the Court
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