United States v. Perkins ( 2018 )


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  •           U NITED S TATES N AVY –M ARINE C ORPS
    C OURT OF C RIMINAL A PPEALS
    _________________________
    No. 201700077
    _________________________
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    Appellee
    v.
    CALVIN E. PERKINS, JR.
    Sergeant (E-5), U.S. Marine Corps
    Appellant
    _________________________
    Appeal from the United States Navy-Marine Corps Trial Judiciary
    Military Judges: Col J.K. Carberry, USMC; Major M.D. Zimmerman,
    USMC.
    Convening Authority: Commanding Officer, Marine Corps Air
    Station Yuma, Yuma, AZ.
    Staff Judge Advocate’s Recommendat ion: Lieutenant Colonel
    Jennifer S. Parker, USMC.
    For Appellant: Lieutenant Commander William L. Geraty, JAGC,
    USN.
    For Appellee: Lieutenant Kurt W. Siegal, JAGC, USN; Captain Sean
    M. Monks, USMC.
    _________________________
    Decided 12 July 2018
    _________________________
    Before HUTCHISON, FULTON, AND SAYEGH, Appellate Military Judges
    _________________________
    PUBLISHED OPINION OF THE COURT
    _________________________
    FULTON, Senior Judge:
    A panel of officer and enlisted members, sitting as a general court-
    martial, convicted the appellant, contrary to his pleas, of one specification of
    conspiracy to commit larceny and one specification of violating a lawful
    general order in violation of Articles 81 and 92, Uniform Code of Military
    Rereleased on 13 July 2018 as a Published Opinion
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    Justice (UCMJ).1 The convening authority approved the adjudged sentence of
    reduction to paygrade E-1 and a bad-conduct discharge. The appellant
    assigns three errors:
    (1) the military judge should have suppressed evidence discovered during
    a search of the appellant’s house because the search authorization was not
    supported by probable cause;
    (2) the military judge erred by taking judicial notice that an order
    requiring the appellant to register his personal firearms was a lawful general
    order; and
    (3) the appellant’s conviction for violating a lawful general order is legally
    and factually insufficient because the government failed to prove that the
    relevant order was a lawful general order.
    We conclude that the findings and sentence are correct in law and fact
    and that no error materially prejudiced the substantial rights of the
    appellant.2
    I. BACKGROUND
    The appellant was an active duty Marine stationed on board Marine
    Corps Air Station Yuma, Arizona. MI, a woman with whom the appellant had
    been romantically involved, complained to Naval Criminal Investigative
    Service (NCIS) Special Agent JJ that the appellant had committed extortion
    by threatening to make public nude pictures and videos that the appellant
    had taken of her without her consent. During the investigation that followed,
    NCIS agents searched the appellant’s on-base residence for digital media and
    found what they believed to be stolen military property. Before trial, the
    appellant moved to suppress military property NCIS discovered while
    searching the appellant’s home. The appellant contended that the search
    authorization was not supported by probable cause. The military judge
    denied the motion, and the appellant argues that the military judge erred.
    During a brief hearing on the motion to suppress, the government
    presented the telephonic testimony of Special Agent JJ and an affidavit from
    the base commanding officer (CO) who had verbally issued the search
    authorization. Special Agent JJ testified to the information she received from
    MI, whom Special Agent JJ had interviewed at a victim advocate center.
    Questioning by the military judge revealed that the interview had been
    recorded, but the record does not indicate that the CO heard the recording
    before authorizing the search. MI’s account was not under oath.
    1   10 U.S.C. §§ 881 and 892.
    2   Arts. 59(a) and 66(c), UCMJ.
    2
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    MI told Special Agent JJ that the appellant had threatened to release
    nude pictures and videos of her unless she agreed to purchase items for him.
    MI denied ever seeing any such pictures or video and did not specifically
    claim to have seen the appellant take any. But she did recall the appellant
    “using his cell phone while they [were] having sexual relations.”3 MI did not
    say where she thought the recordings might have happened, nor did she
    suggest that the appellant kept any cameras in his home that could have
    been used to make these recordings.
    According to Special Agent JJ, MI said that the appellant “possibly was
    storing electronic media containing all these videos and footage of them
    having sex,”4 and she “did [al]lude to the potential of him using other devices
    . . . in his house, electronic devices capable of storing such media.”5 MI also
    said that the appellant “may have extorted other individuals, that he might
    possess unregistered firearms, and was possibly storing illegally obtained
    items in his storage unit that he had off base.”6
    Besides speaking to NCIS, MI told the sergeant major of the appellant’s
    squadron that the appellant had been stalking her, and that she was in fear
    for her life for having made the report to NCIS. At MI’s request, the
    appellant’s squadron drafted a military protective order and contacted the
    appellant, who was out of state on leave, and directed that he return to base
    that night to acknowledge receipt of the order. MI did not speak to the base
    CO.
    Since the appellant’s squadron had directed the appellant to come back to
    Yuma that night, Special Agent JJ decided to ask the base CO for “a
    command authorized search and seizure under exigent circum[stances]
    because of the possibility of him destroying evidence.”7 Before approaching
    the base CO, Special Agent JJ consulted with trial counsel and the base staff
    judge advocate, who agreed that a command authorized search of the
    appellant’s home “under exigent circumstances” was appropriate.8 Then she
    called the base CO. She told him “all [the] known facts at the time[.]”9 When
    the CO responded by asking Special Agent JJ to “explain all the facts in
    3   Record at 14.
    4   
    Id. at 11.
       5   
    Id. at 14.
       6   
    Id. at 11.
       7   
    Id. at 12.
       8   Appellate Exhibit (AE) III at 5; see also Record at 14.
    9   Record at 14.
    3
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    detail,” she told him that she had consulted the staff judge advocate and the
    trial counsel, and “explained the residence, where it was located, the impact
    it could have on the community on Marine Corps Air Station Yuma.”10
    Special Agent JJ testified that, based on this information, the CO “agreed
    to issue a verbal command authorized search and seizure under exigent
    circumstances . . . .”11 The authorization covered the entire residence.
    Because Special Agent JJ thought that the evidence she sought could have
    been stored on a cell phone’s memory, or “SD” card, and that the SD card
    might have been removed from the cell phone, she understood the
    authorization to extend to “anything that was small enough to contain . . . a
    very, very small media storage device . . . it can be something as small as a
    nail.”12
    At the hearing on the motion, the government also provided an affidavit
    signed by the base CO explaining his probable cause determination. The
    relevant portion of the affidavit is short:
    [JJ] informed me that a female civilian, [MI], reported earlier
    that day that Sgt Perkins was extorting her by threatening to
    reveal personal nude videos and photographs if she did not
    purchase him goods. Agent [JJ] informed me that the videos
    and pictures were likely contained inside of Sgt Perkins’ home,
    and due to an earlier conversation with [the appellant’s
    sergeant major], she believed Sgt Perkins was returning to the
    home that very evening. I determined that there was probable
    cause for a search . . . .13
    The government presented no other evidence supporting the CO’s
    probable cause determination.
    The search of the appellant’s home did not reveal any nude photos or
    videos of MI. It did, however, result in NCIS’s discovery of government
    property in the appellant’s garage. NCIS obtained a second search
    authorization allowing agents to seize this property as evidence. This
    evidence led to the appellant’s conviction for conspiracy.
    Ruling from the bench, the military judge denied the motion to suppress.
    The military judge found that the CO’s probable cause determination was
    based on the information he received from Special Agent JJ. The military
    10   
    Id. 11 Id.
       12   
    Id. at 16.
       13   AE IV at 7.
    4
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    judge found that this information constituted probable cause to believe that
    agents would find digital media in the appellant’s home containing evidence
    of the extortion.
    We address the facts relevant to the other two assignments of error in the
    discussion section.
    II. DISCUSSION
    The appellant contends that the military judge abused his discretion by
    finding that the CO had probable cause to authorize the search of his home.
    Although we agree that the CO lacked probable cause, we find that the
    resulting evidence was admissible under the good faith exception to the
    exclusionary rule.
    A. Probable cause to authorize search
    1. Applicable law
    We review a military judge’s denial of a motion to suppress for an abuse of
    discretion.14 We reverse for an abuse of discretion if the military judge’s
    findings of fact are clearly erroneous or if his or her decision is influenced by
    an erroneous view of the law.15 We consider the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the prevailing party, in this case the government.16
    Courts are not to conduct a de novo review of a commander’s probable
    cause determination. Rather, we give great deference to that determination
    and examine whether a commander had a substantial basis for concluding
    that probable cause existed.17 A substantial basis exists “when, based on the
    totality of the circumstances, a common-sense judgment would lead to the
    conclusion that there is a fair probability that evidence of a crime will be
    found at the identified location.”18 Although we consider the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the prevailing party,19 deference to the commander’s
    determination is not boundless, and we may conclude that the commander’s
    probable cause determination “reflected an improper analysis of the totality
    of the circumstances[.]”20 Although a person authorizing a search may rely in
    14   United States v. Hoffmann, 
    75 M.J. 120
    , 124 (C.A.A.F. 2016).
    15   United States v. Owens, 
    51 M.J. 204
    , 209 (C.A.A.F. 1999).
    16   United States v. Macomber, 
    67 M.J. 214
    , 219 (C.A.A.F. 2009).
    17   United States v. Rogers, 
    67 M.J. 162
    , 164-65 (C.A.A.F. 2009).
    18   
    Id. at 165
    (citing Illinois v. Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    , 238 (1983)).
    19  United States v. Carter, 
    54 M.J. 414
    , 418 (C.A.A.F. 2001) (citing United States
    v. Reister, 
    44 M.J. 409
    , 413 (C.A.A.F. 1996)).
    20   United States v. Leon, 
    468 U.S. 897
    , 915 (1984) (citation omitted).
    5
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    part on the expertise and experience of a law enforcement officer, “[s]ufficient
    information must be presented to the magistrate to allow that official to
    determine probable cause; his action cannot be a mere ratification of the bare
    conclusions of others.”21
    The Military Rules of Evidence provide that when a seizure is made
    pursuant to a search authorization, the search authorization must be based
    upon probable cause.22 Probable cause “is a fluid concept—turning on the
    assessment of probabilities in particular factual contexts[.]”23 A commander
    considering a request for a search authorization must “make a practical,
    common-sense decision whether, given all the circumstances set forth in the
    affidavit before him, including the ‘veracity’ and ‘basis of knowledge’ of
    persons supplying hearsay information, there is a fair probability that
    contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place.”24
    Probable cause requires not just that the sources of information be
    sufficiently reliable, but also a sufficient nexus between the alleged crime and
    the specific place to be searched or item to be seized.25
    Reviewing courts may read the matters supporting the probable cause
    determination to include inferences the issuing officer reasonably could have
    made and consider whether that officer might have made these inferences in
    reaching a probable cause determination.26
    2. Analysis of probable cause determination
    We are working with a limited factual record. As this was a telephonic
    request for a search authorization, Special Agent JJ did not create an
    affidavit in support of her request to the CO. Special Agent JJ’s testimony in
    support of the government’s opposition to the motion is vague. And the CO’s
    affidavit, prepared for the purpose of supporting his probable cause
    determination at the motion hearing, contains little more than a recital of the
    allegation against the appellant and the fact that Special Agent JJ told him
    that she thought it likely that NCIS would find the nude pictures and videos
    21   
    Id. (citations and
    internal quotation marks omitted).
    See MILITARY RULE OF EVIDENCE (MIL. R. EVID.) 315(f)(1); SUPPLEMENT TO
    22
    MANUAL FOR COURTS-MARTIAL, UNITED STATES (2012 ed.) (MCM).
    23   
    Gates, 462 U.S. at 232
    .
    24 
    Id. at 238;
    see also Ornelas v. United States, 
    517 U.S. 690
    , 696 (1996) (probable
    cause to search “exist[s] where the known facts and circumstances are sufficient to
    warrant a man of reasonable prudence in the belief that contraband or evidence of a
    crime will be found” in a particular place (citation omitted)).
    25   See United States v. Nieto, 
    76 M.J. 101
    , 106 (C.A.A.F. 2017).
    26   See United States v. Eppes, 
    77 M.J. 339
    , 345 (C.A.A.F. 2018).
    6
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    of MI in the appellant’s home. After considering the evidence of record and
    granting the CO’s determination the deference it is due, we find that the
    government did not carry its burden on the motion of demonstrating that the
    base CO had a substantial basis for issuing the search authorization.
    First, the record does not include any evidence addressing MI’s veracity or
    provide any reason for the CO to have found MI’s account credible. MI’s
    account to Special Agent JJ was, so far as we can tell, unsupported by any
    corroborating evidence.
    Even if we were to take MI’s account at face value and allow for every
    reasonable inference the CO could have drawn, MI’s account did not provide
    probable cause to search the appellant’s home. No one explicitly claimed to
    have seen the appellant create any illicit media of MI—she merely said he
    had used his cell phone while they were engaged in sexual activity and that
    later he threatened to reveal pictures and videos. There was no reason to
    believe the appellant’s cell phone was anywhere except with the appellant,
    who was out of the state. There is no evidence that MI claimed that these
    alleged images were created in the appellant’s home or with a device likely to
    be found in the appellant’s home. No one identified any particular device in
    the appellant’s home that would have been a likely place for the appellant to
    have stored any such videos or images. In short, there was no substantial
    basis for the CO to conclude there was a fair probability that NCIS would
    find illicit images or videos of MI in the appellant’s house.
    During the hearing on the motion, trial counsel attempted to justify the
    search of the appellant’s home at a time when there was no reason to believe
    that the appellant’s cell phone was in the home:
    TC: Special Agent [JJ], you asked for—even though it was—the
    information you had was that these photos were taken with a
    cell phone. Why did you ask for the search to [sic] broader than
    just cell phones?
    Wit: Because cell phones are known to contain media cards
    capable of storing information and data on them. These media
    cards can be removed from the cell phone at any time, and they
    can be stored in a residence anywhere virtually.27
    Taking this testimony to be true, we find that it does not constitute a
    substantial basis to find probable cause. It is possible that the appellant
    could have made illicit pictures and videos on a cell phone in such a way that
    they were stored on the phone’s SD card. It is also possible that the appellant
    took the SD card out of his phone for some reason. It is possible that the
    27   Record at 16.
    7
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    appellant then stored this SD card somewhere in his home. But probable
    cause requires more than an assessment that something is possible. It
    requires a fair probability that evidence will be found in a particular place.
    Nothing in Special Agent JJ’s speculation about what the appellant might
    have done with his phone’s SD card supported a probable cause
    determination.
    The recent Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces (CAAF) case United
    States v. Nieto provides a useful comparison to our case.28 Specialist Nieto
    was suspected of using his cell phone to photograph other soldiers while they
    were using the latrine.29 Acting on a tip that someone had seen a cell phone
    and a laptop on Nieto’s bunk, a Criminal Investigative Division special agent
    sought authorization to seize and search the two items.30 The agent did not
    have any direct evidence that any files had been transferred to the laptop or
    even evidence that they could be.31 The agent supported his request by
    informing the magistrate that he knew that soldiers used their cell phones to
    take pictures, and that they normally downloaded those photos to their
    laptops.32 The magistrate authorized the agent’s search of the laptop on this
    information, and the military judge denied a motion to suppress.33
    The CAAF held that the magistrate did not have a substantial basis for
    his probable cause determination because “there was an insufficient
    particularized nexus linking Appellant’s misconduct to his laptop.”34 The
    CAAF found that “[Nieto’s] cell phone, by itself, had the ability to serve both
    as the instrumentality of the crime and as a storage device for the fruit of
    that crime.”35 Therefore, the agent’s rationale for searching the laptop was
    “technologically outdated and was of little value in making a probable cause
    determination.”36 There was no direct evidence that Nieto had transferred
    any images to the laptop, and nothing supported a reasonable inference on
    the magistrate’s part that he had.37 The agent’s generalizations about what
    28   See generally Nieto, 
    76 M.J. 101
    .
    29   
    Id. at 103.
       30   
    Id. 31 Id.
    at 103-04.
    32   
    Id. at 104.
       33   
    Id. at 105.
       34   
    Id. at 103.
       35   
    Id. at 107.
       36   
    Id. 37 Id.
    8
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    people did with the pictures on their cell phones did not provide a substantial
    basis for concluding that probable cause existed to seize Nieto’s laptop.38
    The authorization in the appellant’s case is not as well supported as the
    one in Nieto. Unlike the agent in Nieto, Special Agent JJ could not even
    identify a particular device that was the proper subject of the search or a
    reason why such a device would be in the appellant’s house. MI had made a
    generalized contention that the appellant had “other devices in his house,
    electronic devices capable of storing such media,” but this tells us almost
    nothing about what they might be or why incriminating images might be on
    them.39 The most concrete nexus between the requested authorization and
    potential evidence is the possibility that the appellant removed the SD card
    from his phone and stored it in his house while he (and his cell phone) were
    out of state. Special Agent JJ, however, did not provide the CO with any
    reason to think that was at all probable. The case for probable cause in this
    case is weaker than the one in Nieto.
    We have made allowances for the proposition, reinforced recently by the
    CAAF in United States v. Eppes, that a nexus between the alleged criminal
    activity and a proposed search “may be inferred from the facts and
    circumstances of a particular case, including the type of crime, the nature of
    the items sought, and reasonable inferences about where evidence is likely to
    be kept.”40 We acknowledge that the record may not reflect everything that
    the CO might have been told. But it is the paucity of the record and the
    absence of evidence supporting the CO’s determination and the military
    judge’s ruling that drive our analysis. Completion of the probable cause
    picture would require speculation, not reasonable inferences. Even if we
    credit the CO with every reasonable inference he might have drawn from the
    information the record shows he had, we still find that there was no
    substantial basis for his probable cause determination. We find that the
    military judge abused his discretion by finding otherwise.
    B. Good faith exception
    Even though the government failed to show that the CO had probable
    cause to issue the search authorization, the resulting evidence is still
    admissible if the government can establish by a preponderance of the
    evidence that the evidence was subject to the good faith exception to the
    exclusionary rule.
    38   
    Id. at 108.
       39   Record at 14.
    40   
    Eppes, 77 M.J. at 345
    (quoting 
    Nieto, 76 M.J. at 106
    ).
    9
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    The good faith exception is governed by MIL. R. EVID. 311(c)(3), which
    provides as follows:
    (3) Good Faith Execution of a Warrant or Search Authorization.
    Evidence that was obtained as a result of an unlawful search or
    seizure may be used if:
    (A) the search or seizure resulted from an authorization
    to search, seize or apprehend issued by an individual
    competent to issue the authorization under MIL. R. EVID.
    315(d) or from a search warrant or arrest warrant issued by
    competent civilian authority;
    (B) the individual issuing the authorization or warrant
    had a substantial basis for determining the existence of
    probable cause; and
    (C) the officials seeking and executing the authorization
    or warrant reasonably and with good faith relied on the
    issuance of the authorization or warrant. Good faith is to be
    determined using an objective standard.41
    The CAAF recently acknowledged “tension between [its] discussion of the
    good-faith doctrine” in its case law interpreting this rule.42 We discern two
    apparently distinct lines of precedent in the CAAF’s case law relevant to
    determining whether the good faith exception applies. Both lines of precedent
    have a claim on our statement of the applicable law. The difference between
    precedents concerns how we interpret MIL. R. EVID. 311(c)(3)(B), which
    requires the individual issuing the authorization or warrant to have had a
    substantial basis for determining the existence of probable cause. One
    precedent, United States v. Hoffmann, applies the plain language of the
    rule.43 The other, the CAAF’s earlier decision in United States v. Carter,
    recasts this prong to ask whether the law enforcement official executing the
    search believed the person issuing the authorization had a substantial basis
    to find probable cause.44 We find that our choice of authorities determines the
    outcome of this issue. We will address both precedents in our analysis.
    41   MIL. R. EVID. 311(b)(2)(A)-(C), SUPPLEMENT TO MCM (2012 ed.).
    42 
    Nieto, 76 M.J. at 108
    n.6 (citing 
    Hoffmann, 75 M.J. at 127-28
    , and 
    Carter, 54 M.J. at 419-22
    ).
    43   
    Hoffmann, 75 M.J. at 128
    .
    44   
    Carter, 54 M.J. at 422
    .
    10
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    1. United States v. Hoffmann
    In Hoffmann, the CAAF applied the plain language of MIL. R. EVID.
    311(c)(3) to determine if otherwise excludable evidence qualified for the good
    faith exception.45 The CAAF concluded that since “the individual issuing the
    authorization did not have a substantial basis for determining the existence
    of probable cause, a requirement for application of the good-faith exception
    [and thus] the military judge abused her discretion in admitting the fruits of
    the search of Appellant’s digital media.”46 Applying the plain language of the
    rule to this case as the CAAF did in Hoffman is straightforward. Subsection
    (B) of the rule requires the person who authorized the search to have had a
    substantial basis for finding probable cause. We have found that the CO did
    not have a substantial basis for finding probable cause to authorize the initial
    search of the appellant’s home. Therefore, under Hoffman, the evidence does
    not qualify for the exception.
    2. United States v. Carter
    Carter purports to apply the Supreme Court’s seminal good faith case,
    United States v. Leon, to courts-martial.47 In the civilian context, both the
    exclusionary rule and the good faith exception to the rule are creations of
    Supreme Court case law. In Leon, the Supreme Court considered the
    suppression of evidence police gathered while executing a search warrant.48
    Although the warrant was facially valid, the trial court found that its
    issuance was not supported by probable cause and suppressed the affected
    evidence.49 The issue in Leon was whether evidence obtained in good faith
    reliance on a facially valid warrant should be suppressed.
    The Court began its analysis expressing a strong preference for—and a
    resulting deference to—search warrants.50 A warrant ‘“provides the detached
    scrutiny of a neutral magistrate, which is a more reliable safeguard against
    improper searches than the hurried judgment of a law enforcement officer
    engaged in the often competitive enterprise of ferreting out crime.”’51 The
    45   
    Hoffmann, 75 M.J. at 128
    .
    46   
    Id. 47 Carter,
    54 M.J. at 421.
    48   
    Leon, 468 U.S. at 900-05
    .
    49   
    Id. at 902-04.
       50   
    Id. at 913-14.
       51   
    Id. (quoting United
    States v. Chadwick, 
    433 U.S. 1
    , 9 (1977)).
    11
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    Court’s preference for the protections warrants provide “is most appropriately
    effectuated by according ‘great deference’ to a magistrate’s determination.”52
    Having expressed its preference for search warrants, Leon held that, in
    general, evidence obtained in good faith reliance on a search warrant would
    not be suppressed. But, as explained by the CAAF in Carter, Leon listed four
    circumstances in which the good faith exception was not available to the
    government:
    (1) False or reckless affidavit—Where the magistrate “was
    misled by information in an affidavit that the affiant knew was
    false or would have known was false except for his reckless
    disregard of the truth”;
    (2) Lack of judicial review—Where the magistrate “wholly
    abandoned his judicial role” or was a mere rubber stamp for the
    police;
    (3) Facially deficient affidavit—Where the warrant was based
    on an affidavit “so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to
    render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable”;
    and
    (4) Facially deficient warrant—Where the warrant is “so
    facially deficient—i.e., in failing to particularize the place to be
    searched or the things to be seized—that the executing officers
    cannot reasonably presume it to be valid.53
    Leon’s good faith exception to the exclusionary rule (and the four
    exceptions to the exception) reflect the Court’s determination that police—not
    magistrates—are the proper objects of suppression’s deterrence.54 The Court
    reasoned that magistrates, as neutral and detached judicial officers, “have no
    stake in the outcome of particular criminal prosecutions.”55 Suppression,
    then, would not deter a magistrate from making future errors or motivate
    compliance with the Fourth Amendment.56 Because the focus is on the police,
    “evidence obtained from a search should be suppressed only if it can be said
    that the law enforcement officer had knowledge, or may properly be charged
    52 
    Id. at 914
    (citing Spinelli v. United States, 
    393 U.S. 410
    (1969)) (additional
    citations omitted).
    53   
    Carter, 54 M.J. at 419-20
    (citation omitted).
    54   
    Leon, 468 U.S. at 916
    .
    55   
    Id. at 917.
       56   
    Id. 12 United
    States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    with knowledge, that the search was unconstitutional under the Fourth
    Amendment.”57
    In Carter, the CAAF attempted to reconcile MIL. R. EVID. 311(c)(3)’s
    three-pronged good faith test with Leon. But this is not easily done. In order
    for a search to qualify for the good faith exception under the plain language of
    the rule’s second prong, the person issuing the authorization must have had a
    substantial basis for finding probable cause. This is inconsistent with Leon,
    which held that a search might qualify for the good faith exception even if the
    magistrate did not have a substantial basis for his determination, so long as
    the police executing the warrant themselves acted in good faith.58
    The difference could not be elegantly harmonized. To make it work, the
    Carter court recast the rule’s second prong. Where the rule asks whether the
    person issuing the authorization had a substantial basis for finding probable
    cause, Carter changes the question to ask whether the police executing the
    search reasonably believed that the magistrate had a substantial basis for
    finding probable cause.59
    In considering MIL. R. EVID. 311(c)(3), Hoffmann, and Carter, we
    recognize that we should “exhaust all possibilities of reconciling the two
    decisions” before committing to one and disregarding the other.60 But as we
    have seen, Carter’s approach to MIL. R. EVID. 311(c)(3) is inconsistent with
    the rule’s plain language, and Hoffmann’s plain-language approach is
    therefore inconsistent with Carter. We have considered whether Carter or the
    CAAF’s later decision in Hoffmann represents the precedent binding upon
    this court.61 Although Hoffman is the more recent of the two decisions, the
    CAAF has cited Carter favorably as recently as last year in United States v.
    57   
    Id. at 919.
       58   
    Id. 59 Compare
    MIL. R. EVID. 311(c)(3)(B) (“[T]he individual issuing the authorization
    or warrant had a substantial basis for determining probable cause . . .”) with 
    Carter, 54 M.J. at 422
    (“‘Substantial basis’ as an element of good faith examines the affidavit
    and search authorization through the eyes of a reasonable law enforcement official
    executing the search authorization. In this context, the second prong of MIL. R. EVID.
    311(c)(3) is satisfied if the law enforcement official had an objectively reasonable
    belief that the magistrate had a ‘substantial basis’ for determining the existence of
    probable cause.”).
    60   BRYAN A. GARNER, ET AL., THE LAW OF JUDICIAL PRECEDENT 301-02 (2016).
    61   
    Id. at 302.
    13
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    Darnall, though it did not perform any analysis of the issue and did not
    address Hoffmann.62
    We conclude that we are still bound by Carter. We are reluctant to
    assume that the CAAF has tacitly reversed its own precedent. Hoffmann
    made no mention of Carter and did not purport to change any precedents
    binding on this court. The absence of language explicitly overruling Carter
    and the CAAF’s recent re-articulation of Carter’s good faith test in Darnall
    convince us that we may not disregard this precedent.
    Applying Carter’s harmonization of Leon and MIL. R. EVID. 311(c)(3) to
    our admittedly limited factual record, we conclude that the initial search of
    the appellant’s residence was done in good faith. There is no question that
    the rule’s first prong is met. The CO had the authority to authorize Special
    Agent JJ’s search of the appellant’s on-base residence. The second prong, as
    modified by Carter, asks whether Special Agent JJ reasonably believed that
    the magistrate had a substantial basis for finding probable cause. We find
    that she did. Special Agent JJ provided enough specific information to the CO
    to meet this low standard. She was investigating a specific allegation and
    was able to articulate reasons why evidence might be found in the appellant’s
    house. We found that this information did not constitute probable cause or
    even a substantial basis on which to find probable cause. But the case for
    probable cause is not “so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render
    official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable[.]”63
    Special Agent JJ’s communication with and apparent reliance on the
    advice of the appropriate attorneys is an important factor in our resolution of
    this prong. The CO’s probable cause determination would have seemed to be
    a ratification of what trial counsel and the staff judge advocate had already
    told Special Agent JJ: probable cause existed to search the appellant’s home.
    The fact that Special Agent JJ knew that the CO, trial counsel, and the staff
    judge advocate all came to the same conclusion is a compelling reason to find
    that she reasonably believed that the CO had a substantial basis for that
    conclusion.
    Turning to the third prong, we find that Special Agent JJ reasonably and
    with good faith relied on the issuance of the authorization. Special Agent JJ
    did not procure the authorization through the use of any intentionally or
    62  See United States v. Darnall, 
    76 M.J. 326
    , 332 (C.A.A.F. 2017) (“The ‘good faith’
    exception to the exclusionary rule [applies] in cases where the official executing the
    warrant relied on the magistrate’s probable cause determination and the technical
    sufficiency of the warrant, and that reliance was ‘objectively reasonable.’”) (quoting
    
    Carter, 54 M.J. at 419
    (citing 
    Leon, 468 U.S. at 922
    )).
    63   
    Carter, 54 M.J. at 419
    .
    14
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    recklessly false information. The authorization was sufficiently particular,
    and Special Agent JJ had articulated a basis for the scope of the search.
    Again, her request had been vetted by the very lawyers who were responsible
    for providing her and the CO with legal advice concerning her request. The
    record contains no evidence of bad faith on the part of Special Agent JJ. We
    also find no evidence that Special Agent JJ acted with “deliberate, reckless,
    or grossly negligent disregard” for the appellant’s Fourth Amendment
    rights.64 We find her reliance on the erroneously granted authorization to be
    objectively reasonable. All three prongs of MIL. R. EVID. 311(c)(3) having been
    met, we find that the evidence derived from the initial search of the
    appellant’s home to be admissible under the good faith exception to the
    suppression rule.
    We pause here to discuss the admittedly inconvenient fact that the CAAF
    found that the search in Nieto—a search with a more robust factual predicate
    than ours—failed the good faith test under both Hoffmann and Carter. In
    Nieto the CAAF went to some lengths to discuss the deficiencies in the
    probable cause determination. The court did not, however, explain why it did
    not find that the agent in that case was acting in good faith reliance on the
    magistrate’s authorization. Was the factual basis for the authorization so
    poor that the agent could not have relied in good faith on the issuance of the
    authorization? Should we conclude that the CAAF found that the factual
    basis for probable cause was so weak that the agent could not have
    reasonably believed that the magistrate had a substantial basis for finding
    probable cause? The CAAF does not tell us, and we decline to rely on
    speculation. Instead, we have applied the rule as interpreted by Carter,
    mindful that the agent—not lawyers or commanders—is the proper subject of
    our inquiry. In this case the agent took the information she had to the very
    attorneys she should consult, then to the CO. Her actions in this regard were
    reasonable, and she reasonably relied on the attorney’s legal advice and the
    CO’s authorization.
    As the CAAF recently recognized in Eppes, the exclusionary rule is
    “drastic and socially costly” and “should only be applied where needed to
    deter police from violations of constitutional and statutory protections.”65
    Courts, therefore, limit its application “to situations in which this purpose is
    thought most efficaciously served.”66 Here, excluding the evidence obtained
    from the search of the appellant’s home would provide no deterrent effect on
    64  Davis v. United States, 
    564 U.S. 229
    , 238 (2011) (citing Herring v. United
    States, 
    555 U.S. 135
    , 144 (2009)).
    65   
    Eppes, 77 M.J. at 349
    (citations and internal quotation marks).
    66   
    Davis, 564 U.S. at 237
    (citations and internal quotation marks).
    15
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    police. The record does not demonstrate falsity or recklessness on the part of
    Special Agent JJ leading up to the issuance of the authorization. And, “[o]nce
    the warrant issues, there is literally nothing more the policeman can do in
    seeking to comply with the law . . . [.]”67 We find that although the military
    judge erred by finding that the CO had a substantial basis for his probable
    cause determination, the evidence in question was nevertheless admissible
    under the good faith exception.
    3. Should the CAAF reconsider Carter?
    The CAAF has recently reminded the service courts of criminal appeals
    that “it is simply not for the [service courts] to act on the assumption that an
    opinion of [the CAAF] has been implicitly overruled.”68 If we believe that a
    later decision has called a precedent into question, our role is “to express that
    viewpoint and to urge [the CAAF’s] reconsideration of [its] precedent[.]69 The
    question of Carter’s continued application after Hoffmann is a close one. We
    have concluded that we continue to be bound by Carter. Having heeded the
    CAAF’s admonition to adhere to its precedent until that court overrules it, we
    likewise accept the CAAF’s invitation to suggest that a questioned precedent
    be revisited. We respectfully suggest that Carter should be reconsidered.
    We make this suggestion for several reasons. In our view, Carter
    represents an unwarranted departure from the rule’s plain language. We also
    believe Carter misapprehends the Drafters’ Analysis and ignores the case law
    the drafters relied on when they adapted the good faith exception to military
    practice.
    Our understanding of MIL. R. EVID. 311(c)(3) starts with the rule’s text.
    Military courts “use well-established principles of statutory construction to
    construe provisions in the Manual for Courts-Martial.”70 Statutory
    construction begins—and often ends—with the plain language of a rule.71 The
    plain language controls unless its use would lead to an absurd result.72
    The relevant language of the rule is clear: the good faith exception applies
    if “the individual issuing the authorization or warrant had a substantial
    basis for determining the existence of probable cause[.]”73 The language does
    67   Stone v. Powell, 
    428 U.S. 465
    , 498 (1976) (Burger, C.J., concurring).
    68   United States v. Davis, 
    76 M.J. 224
    , 228 n.2 (C.A.A.F. 2017).
    69   
    Id. 70 United
    States v. Lewis, 
    65 M.J. 85
    , 88 (C.A.A.F. 2007).
    71   See Connecticut Nat’l Bank v. Germain, 
    503 U.S. 249
    , 254 (1992).
    72   
    Id. 73 MIL.
    R. EVID. 311(c)(3)(B).
    16
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    not provide for the exception’s application in cases where the issuing person
    did not have a substantial basis as long as the police were unaware of the
    deficiency. Nor is this an absurd result that requires judicial correction. As
    the rule’s meaning is plain and the result is not absurd, this would normally
    be the end of the analysis. But it is worth addressing the reasons Carter gives
    for its re-write of the rule.
    First, the Carter court suggested that its alteration of Rule 311(c)(3)(B)
    was necessary because “[t]o do otherwise would effectively abolish the good
    faith exception in military practice.”74 The Carter court reasoned that since
    Gates required judges to review magistrates’ probable cause determinations
    using the substantial basis test in the first place, the rule’s second
    application of that standard was redundant, and served only to eviscerate the
    good faith exception. The trial judge considering the good faith exception
    would necessarily have already found that the probable cause determination
    lacked a substantial basis, or else the court would not be considering the good
    faith exception in the first place. If both the probable cause determination
    and the good faith exception used the same substantial basis test, then no
    search would ever qualify for the exception.75 One of the reasons the Carter
    court recast MIL. R. EVID. 311(c)(3)(B), then, was to avoid this superfluous
    reading of the rule.
    Although the CAAF approach is consistent with “the canon against
    interpreting any statutory provision in a manner that would render another
    provision superfluous[,]”76 we do not believe that this canon of construction
    represents a helpful approach to the rule’s text. First, the rule itself is
    internally consistent. Nothing in any Military Rule of Evidence requires
    military judges to use the substantial basis test as a standard of review for
    assessing probable cause determinations. The CAAF’s case law,
    implementing Gates, requires military judges to use this standard when
    reviewing a probable cause determination.77 But the plain language of Rule
    74   
    Carter, 54 M.J. at 421
    .
    75 
    Id. (“Any search
    that failed the Gates test for reviewing probable cause
    determinations (‘a ‘substantial basis for . . . concluding’ that probable cause existed’)
    would also fail the test for good faith in Mil. R. Evid. 311(b)(3), because the second
    prong (‘a substantial basis for determining the existence of probable cause’) would
    not be satisfied. If we were to interpret the ‘substantial basis’ language in Mil. R.
    Evid. 311(b)(3)(B) as an additional requirement beyond the requirements of Leon, the
    good-faith exception would not be an exception at all, and the language would serve
    no purpose.”).
    76   See Bilski v. Kappos, 
    561 U.S. 593
    , 607-08 (2010).
    77   See 
    Rogers, 67 M.J. at 164-65
    .
    17
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    311(c)(3)(B) does not obviate—and is not obviated by—any other rule or part
    of a rule.
    Not only was the rule’s language not superfluous with any other rule of
    evidence, it was not superfluous with the Court of Military Appeals’ case law
    when it went into effect in 1986. The substantial basis test made only
    sporadic appearances both in the service courts of appeals and the Court of
    Military Appeals in pre-good faith rule cases.78 Even after 1983, when the
    Supreme Court “reaffirm[ed]” the substantial basis test in the context of
    civilian magistrates in Gates,79 the Court of Military Appeals did not
    consistently use the substantial basis test to review probable cause
    determinations until 1992.80 We conclude from this that the drafters would
    not have understood their rule to operate in an environment where the
    military judge had already asked the substantial basis question. The drafters
    were familiar with Gates, but intended for the Gates substantial basis
    question to be part of the new good faith test.
    Carter’s second objection to a plain-language understanding of the rule is
    that the Drafters’ Analysis of the rule indicates that the rule’s purpose is to
    incorporate Leon’s good faith exception into court-martial practice.81 Since
    Leon makes the good faith exception available in cases where the magistrate
    78 See e.g. United States v. Walters, 
    48 C.M.R. 1
    , 3 (C.M.A. 1973) (“If there is a
    substantial basis in the affidavit to support Colonel Maline's determination that such
    probability existed, we will not overrule his judgment.”) (citations and internal
    quotation marks omitted)); United States v. Bradley, 
    50 C.M.R. 608
    , 614 (N.C.M.R.
    1975) (“[W]here a search for contraband or evidence of a crime is authorized by a
    commanding officer, appellate courts will sustain his determination to authorize the
    search so long as there was in the information presented to him a substantial basis
    for him to conclude that contraband or evidence of a crime was probably present on
    the person or at the place to be searched.”) (citations omitted)). But see e.g. United
    States v. Hood, 
    7 M.J. 128
    , 129-30, (C.M.A. 1979); United States v. Gill, 
    48 C.M.R. 792
    , 794 (C.M.A. 1974) (de novo reviews of probable cause determination).
    79   
    Gates, 462 U.S. at 237
    ,
    80 Compare United States v. Moore, 
    23 M.J. 295
    , 297-99 (C.M.A. 1987) and United
    States v. Queen, 
    26 M.J. 136
    , 139 (C.M.A. 1988) (conducting apparent de novo review
    of commander’s probable cause determination) with United States v. Figueroa, 
    35 M.J. 54
    , 56 (C.M.A. 1992) (applying substantial basis test to commander’s probable
    cause determination); accord United States v. Thompson, 
    30 M.J. 577
    , 579 (A.C.M.R.
    1990) (“The standard of review of the ‘substantial basis’ determination has not been
    addressed before by us.”).
    81   
    Carter, 54 M.J. at 420
    .
    18
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    lacked a substantial basis for finding probable cause, the rule must mean
    that as well.82
    We respectfully suggest two answers to this second objection. First, since
    the language of the rule is plain, there is no need to resort to the Drafters’
    Analysis to inquire into the President’s intent. In the words of Chief Justice
    Marshall, “a law is the best expositor of itself[.]”83 And while the Drafters’
    Analysis presents the intent of the drafting committee, it is not part of the
    Manual for Courts-Martial. “[T]he Drafters’ Analysis, when it does not
    corroborate the plain language of the rule, is of questionable precedential
    weight.”84
    The second (and longer) response is that even if we were to take the
    Drafters’ Analysis as binding, the purported intent of the drafters is not so
    irreconcilable with the plain language of the rule as to require that the rule
    be judicially altered as it was in Carter. The relevant portion of the Drafters’
    Analysis states: “[Rule 311(c)(3)] was added in 1986 to incorporate the ‘good
    faith’ exception to the exclusionary rule based on United States v. Leon . . .
    and Massachusetts v. Sheppard . . . [.]”85 The good faith exception is a judicial
    creation, and Leon is the case that created it. (Sheppard, decided the same
    day as Leon, does not add substantially to the doctrine announced in Leon).86
    It is reasonable to accept that any subsequent codification of the exception—
    even one that differs from Leon in some particular—is based on Leon. We
    think it is fair to say that the plain-language understanding of the rule
    endorsed by the CAAF in Hoffmann is based on—though not identical to—
    Leon.
    More compellingly, a closer look at the Drafters’ Analysis reveals the
    drafters’ rationale for the rule as it is written. The analysis begins by stating
    that Leon’s determination “that the deterrence basis of the exclusionary rule
    does not apply to magistrates extends with equal force to search or seizure
    authorizations issued by commanders who are neutral and detached . . . .”87
    But not all commanders are neutral and detached. The analysis, and the case
    law it cites, correctly notes that commanders “cannot be equated
    constitutionally to magistrates. As a result, commanders’ authorizations may
    be closely scrutinized for evidence of neutrality in deciding whether this
    82   
    Id. 83 Pennington
    v. Coxe, 
    6 U.S. 33
    , 52, (1804).
    84   United States v. Taylor, 
    64 M.J. 416
    , 422 (C.A.A.F. 2007) (Ryan, J., dissenting).
    85   MCM, App. 22, at A22-20.
    86   See generally Mass. v. Sheppard, 
    468 U.S. 981
    (1984).
    87   MCM, App. 22 at A22-20 (emphasis added).
    19
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    exception will apply.”88 In United States v. Stuckey,89 one of the cases the
    drafters rely on for this proposition, the Court of Military Appeals drew the
    magistrate-commander distinction even more sharply: commanders are not
    similarly situated with Leon’s neutral magistrates, uninvolved in “the often
    competitive enterprise of ferreting out crime.”90 Rather, “[a] military
    commander has responsibilities for investigation and for law enforcement
    that a magistrate does not possess.”91 Therefore, “the likelihood that a search
    and seizure will withstand subsequent attack in court is—and should be—
    greater when a judicial officer trained in the law has made the determination
    of probable cause than when a commander does so.”92
    Since the rule’s drafters and the cases they relied on acknowledge that
    commanders are not magistrates and that in some instances they deserve
    less deference, it would be surprising if the rule the drafters created for the
    military were exactly the same as the one announced in Leon. One would
    expect to find some scrutiny of the authorizing officer in the rule. And there
    we find it: a search based on a commander’s erroneous probable cause
    determination cannot qualify for the good faith exception if it was made
    without even a substantial basis for the finding.
    We find the plain language of the rule to be consistent with the Drafters’
    Analysis. The good faith rule is based on Leon but tweaked to account for the
    differences between commanders, who have substantial law enforcement
    responsibilities, and Leon’s neutral and detached magistrates. These
    differences had already been recognized by the Court of Military Appeals and
    were taken into account by the rule’s drafters. The differences are reflected in
    the second prong of the good faith test, which asks if there was even a
    substantial basis supporting the authorizing officer’s erroneous probable
    cause determination. If there was not, the exception does not apply. None of
    this requires Carter’s drastic re-interpretation of the rule’s plain language.
    Are we bending the Drafters’ Analysis to fit the plain language of the rule?
    We don’t think so. But even if our construal of the Drafters’ Analysis is
    wrong, we would still counsel adherence to the rule’s plain language.
    We respectfully suggest that the CAAF resolve the tension between
    Carter and Hoffmann in favor of Hoffmann and the plain language of MIL. R.
    EVID. 311(c)(3).
    88   
    Id. (emphasis added).
       89   
    10 M.J. 347
    (C.M.A. 1981).
    90   
    Leon, 468 U.S. at 914
    .
    91   
    Stuckey, 10 M.J. at 359
    .
    92   
    Id. at 365.
    20
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    C. Judicial notice of the status of Marine Corps Air Station Yuma
    Station Order P5510.8G as a lawful general order
    This assignment of error concerns the appellant’s conviction for violating
    Station Order P5510.8G, requiring all persons introducing firearms onto
    Marine Corps Air Station Yuma to register them with the base provost
    marshal. The appellant contends that the military judge erred by taking
    judicial notice of the relevant order’s status as a lawful general order. We
    disagree.
    Before trial, the military judge announced his intention to take judicial
    notice that the station order was a lawful general order applicable to the
    appellant.93 The civilian defense counsel said that he had no objection.94 At
    the end of the case, however, the civilian defense counsel told the military
    judge he did not believe that the evidence supported a conclusion that the
    order had been properly published. He explained his lack of objection to
    judicial notice by telling the military judge that he had listened carefully to
    the military judge’s description of the judicial notice and that the fact of the
    order’s publication was not part of what the military judge had judicially
    noticed.
    A military judge may take judicial notice of a fact if it is generally known
    universally, locally, or in the area pertinent to the event, or if it can be
    accurately and readily determined from sources whose accuracy cannot
    reasonably be questioned.95 As an initial matter, we disagree with the
    contention that Station Order P5510.8G had to have been published to
    qualify as a general order. The Manual for Courts-Martial requires that
    orders and regulations of the President, Secretary of Defense, Secretary of
    Homeland Security, and service secretaries be published in order to qualify
    as general orders or regulations. Orders and regulations of general court-
    martial convening authorities such as the one who signed this order must be
    “issued” in order to qualify as a general order or regulation.96 Having drawn
    this distinction, we note that the purpose of publication and issuance are the
    same: to provide those subject to the order with sufficient opportunity to
    93   Record at 333.
    94   
    Id. at 334.
       95   MIL. R. EVID. 201(b).
    96   See MCM, Part IV, ¶ 16c(1)(a).
    21
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    learn of it. Otherwise, service members do not have a fair opportunity to
    conform their conduct to the order.97
    Additionally, civilian defense counsel could not have agreed that the order
    was a general order while contending that it had not been properly issued.
    The Manual defines a general order as an order that has been issued by a
    general court-martial convening authority.98 By agreeing that the order was a
    general order, civilian defense counsel necessarily agreed that it had been
    issued.
    Civilian defense counsel arguably waived any objection to the military
    judge taking judicial notice that the order was a lawful general order.99 But
    because he may have been confused about what he was agreeing to when he
    did not object, we will treat the failure to object as forfeiture and test for
    plain error. The plain error standard is met when: (1) an error was
    committed; (2) the error was plain, or clear, or obvious; and (3) the error
    resulted in material prejudice to substantial rights.100 The plain error
    doctrine is “to be used sparingly, solely in those circumstances in which a
    miscarriage of justice would otherwise result.”101
    The appellant argues that the military judge erred by taking judicial
    notice because there was a reasonable dispute as to whether the order had
    been published, and the military judge lowered the government’s burden of
    proof by taking judicial notice. Assuming without deciding that there was a
    reasonable dispute over whether the order was properly issued, we find that
    any error was not plain or obvious. A general order is a proper subject of
    judicial notice.102 The order is facially valid and includes a reference to a
    distribution list. An order is entitled to a presumption of regularity if it
    appears regular on its face.103 Accepting the order as a lawful general order
    97 United States v. Tolkach, 
    14 M.J. 239
    , 242 (C.M.A. 1982) (“Obviously, a
    commander cannot sign a regulation, put it in his desk drawer, and then expect his
    subordinates to be presumed to have knowledge of it.”).
    98   See MCM, Part IV, ¶ 16c(1)(a).
    99   See United States v. Campos, 
    67 M.J. 330
    , 332-33 (C.A.A.F. 2009).
    100 United States v. Maynard, 
    66 M.J. 242
    , 244 (C.A.A.F. 2008). See also United
    States v. Sweeney, 
    70 M.J. 296
    (C.A.A.F. 2011) (admission of cover memorandum and
    specimen custody document certification from drug lab violated Confrontation clause;
    error was plain and obvious).
    101 United States v. Causey, 
    37 M.J. 308
    , 311 (C.M.A. 1993) (citations and internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    102   See United States v. Wales, 
    31 M.J. 301
    , 309 (C.M.A. 1990).
    103   United States v. Ayers, 
    54 M.J. 85
    , 91, (C.A.A.F. 2000).
    22
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    applicable to the accused at the time of the offense was not plain or obvious
    error.
    Nor do we find that the military judge’s decision to judicially notice the
    nature of the order lowered the government’s burden of proof. The military
    judge correctly instructed the members on the burden of proof and told the
    members that they may, but need not, accept his judicial notice as adequate
    proof. We have no reason to doubt that the members followed the military
    judge’s instructions. This assignment of error is without merit.
    D. Legal and factual sufficiency
    The appellant argues that his conviction for failure to obey Station Order
    P5510.8G is legally and factually insufficient. We disagree.
    We review issues of legal and factual sufficiency de novo.104 The test for
    legal sufficiency is whether, considering the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the prosecution, a reasonable fact finder could have found all the
    essential elements beyond a reasonable doubt.105 In weighing questions of
    legal sufficiency, we draw every reasonable inference from the evidence in the
    record in favor of the prosecution.106 The test for factual sufficiency is
    whether, after weighing the evidence in the record of trial and making
    allowances for not having personally observed the witnesses, we are
    ourselves convinced of the accused’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.107
    In order to convict the appellant of failing to obey a lawful general order,
    the government had to prove: (1) that there was in effect a certain lawful
    general order; (2) that the accused had a duty to obey it; and (3) that the
    accused violated or failed to obey the order.108
    The government produced the order. Facially, it contained no
    irregularities. It contained a reference to a distribution list and was
    forwarded to the provost marshal, who maintained a copy of this order in his
    binder and incorporated it into the base indoctrination brief to new arrivals.
    The military judge took judicial notice of the order, its status as a lawful
    general order, and its application to the appellant. The government presented
    eyewitness testimony that the appellant possessed firearms at his on-base
    104 Art. 66(c), UCMJ; United States v. Washington, 
    57 M.J. 394
    , 399 (C.A.A.F.
    2002) (citing United States v. Cole, 
    31 M.J. 270
    , 272 (C.M.A. 1990)).
    105   United States v. Humphreys, 
    57 M.J. 83
    , 94 (C.A.A.F. 2002).
    106   See United States v. Barner, 
    56 M.J. 131
    , 134 (C.A.A.F. 2001).
    107   United States v. Turner, 
    25 M.J. 324
    , 325 (C.M.A. 1987).
    108   MCM, Part IV, ¶ 16b(1)(a)-(c).
    23
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    residence and that at least four of them were not registered during the
    charged time period.
    A reasonable trier of fact could find on this evidence that the appellant
    violated a lawful general order as charged. We have also considered the
    evidence, and we are convinced of the appellant’s guilt beyond a reasonable
    doubt. This assignment of error is without merit.
    III. CONCLUSION
    The findings and sentence are affirmed.
    Senior Judge HUTCHISON concurs.
    SAYEGH, Judge (concurring in part and dissenting in part):
    I concur with the opinion of the court as to its resolution of Assignments
    of Error II and III, the conclusion that United States v. Carter, 
    54 M.J. 414
    (C.A.A.F. 2001), continues to be binding precedent that the court must follow
    in this case, and with the majority’s suggestion that the Court of Appeals for
    the Armed Forces (CAAF) reexamine Carter in favor of following the plain
    language of MILITARY RULE OF EVIDENCE (MIL. R. EVID.) 311(c)(3),
    SUPPLEMENT TO MANUAL FOR COURTS-MARTIAL, UNITED STATES (2012 ed.).
    With respect to the court’s resolution of the good faith exception question, I
    would find that the government did not establish that the good faith
    exception applies, even under Carter’s more generous test for good faith.
    The government has the burden of establishing the good faith exception
    contained in MIL. R. EVID. 311(c)(3) by a preponderance of the evidence. See
    MIL. R. EVID. 311(d)(5)(A). MIL. R. EVID. 311(c)(3) establishes three prongs
    that must be met; one of which requires the individual who issues the search
    authorization to have a substantial basis for determining the existence of
    probable cause. Following the CAAF decision in Carter, when assessing for
    good faith, we instead look at the authorization “through the eyes of a
    reasonable law enforcement official executing the search authorization” to see
    if she “had an objectively reasonable belief that the [CO] had a ‘substantial
    basis’ for determining the existence of probable cause.” 
    Carter, 54 M.J. at 422
    .
    The agent claims she provided the commanding officer (CO) with all
    known facts, but the limited record available to us does not establish with
    any level of detail what information she passed.1 At trial, the agent admitted
    her memory of the phone conversation she had with the CO was hindered by
    1   Record at 12.
    24
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    the passage of time.2 The record contains no specific indication that the agent
    informed the CO that MI was unable to confirm whether the videos ever
    existed, or how the agent came to the conclusion that the videos would
    “likely” be found in the appellant’s home.3 The majority considered it an
    important factor that the agent had obtained and relied on legal advice of the
    appropriate attorneys. However, the only evidence of this advice on the
    record is through the agent testifying that she informed the CO that she
    “consulted” two judge advocates.4 We are thus left to presume what the legal
    advice to the agent was.
    Indeed, the most reliable evidence of what information was passed to the
    CO comes from the CO’s affidavit contained within Appellate Exhibit IV that
    was specifically prepared by the government to present as evidence during
    the suppression motion at trial. The affidavit suggests the agent provided
    nothing more than a “bare bones”5 recitation of MI’s allegations, which in
    turn the agent used to support her conclusion that the videos would likely be
    found in the appellant’s home. Had Special Agent JJ conveyed the extent to
    which MI’s allegations were uncorroborated, the CO would have been
    unlikely to grant the authorization. I conclude, therefore, that this tends to
    show that Special Agent JJ did not act in good faith when she briefed the CO.
    I am not persuaded that the agent did not withhold information that would
    have allowed the CO to make an independent decision based on the totality of
    the circumstances. United States v. Monroe, 
    52 M.J. 326
    , 331 (C.A.A.F. 2000)
    (citing Illinois v. Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    , 239 (1983)).
    If the agent recklessly provided only selective detail in obtaining the
    search authorization, this conduct is appropriately deterred by imposition of
    the exclusionary rule. Based on the limited facts available to us, I would find
    that the government has failed to establish by a preponderance of evidence
    that the good faith exception applies. The military judge therefore abused his
    discretion in denying the appellant’s motion to suppress.
    I would find that the requirements of MIL R. EVID. 311(c)(3) were not met,
    and I would set aside Additional Charge III and its sole specification and the
    sentence and return the case to the Judge Advocate General for remand to an
    appropriate convening authority with a rehearing authorized.
    2   
    Id. at 24.
       3   Appellate Exhibit IV at 7.
    4   Record at 14.
    5   
    Carter, 54 M.J. at 422
    .
    25
    United States v. Perkins, No. 201700077
    For the Court
    R.H. TROIDL
    Clerk of Court
    26