IN THE CASE OF
UNITED STATES, Appellee
v.
Michael L. BAKER, Staff Sergeant
U.S. Army, Appellant
No. 02-0334
Crim. App. No. 9800743
United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces
Argued April 1, 2003
Decided July 1, 2003
EFFRON, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
GIERKE, BAKER, and ERDMANN, JJ., joined. CRAWFORD, C.J., filed
a separate dissenting opinion.
Counsel
For Appellant: Captain Craig A. Harbaugh (argued); Colonel
Robert E. Teetsel, Lieutenant Colonel E. Allen Chandler,
Jr., Major Imogene M. Jamison (on brief); Colonel Adele H.
Odegard, Captain Brian S. Heslin and Captain Sean S. Park.
For Appellee: Captain Christopher Graveline (argued); Colonel
Lauren B. Leeker, Lieutenant Colonel Margaret B. Baines and
Major Jennifer H. McGee (on brief).
Military Judge: Donna M. Wright
THIS OPINION IS SUBJECT TO EDITORIAL CORRECTION BEFORE FINAL PUBLICATION.
United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
Judge EFFRON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The charges against Appellant included 12 separate
specifications: one each of attempted larceny, dereliction of
duty, and larceny under Articles 80, 92, and 121, Uniform Code
of Military Justice [hereinafter UCMJ], 10 U.S.C. §§ 880, 882,
and 921 (2000); four involving failure to go to or absenting
himself from his appointed place of duty under Article 86, UCMJ,
10 U.S.C. § 886 (2000); three specifications of willful
disobedience of a commissioned officer under Article 90, UCMJ,
10 U.S.C. § 890 (2000); and two of willful disobedience of a
non-commissioned officer under Article 91, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 891
(2000). Appellant contested each of the charges before a
special court-martial composed of officer members. The military
judge dismissed one of the specifications and the court-martial
panel returned findings of not guilty on seven of the remaining
eleven specifications. The panel convicted Appellant of one
specification of attempted larceny, one specification of absence
from his appointed place of duty, and two specifications of
willful disobedience of a superior commissioned officer.
The panel sentenced Appellant to a bad-conduct discharge and
reduction to the grade of Private E-1. The convening authority
approved the sentence and the Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed
in an unpublished opinion.
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
On Appellant's petition, we granted review and specified
the following issues:∗
I. WHETHER APPELLANT RECEIVED INEFFECTIVE
ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL WHEN HIS TWO DEFENSE
COUNSEL ATTEMPTED TO WITHDREAW FROM THE CASE
FOR ETHICAL REASONS, WERE UNABLE TO
WITHDRAW, AND THEN PROVIDED NO ASSISTANCE
DURING HIS TESTIMONY?
II. WHETHER THE MILITARY JUDGE ERRED BY
FAILING TO DETERMINE WHETHER THERE WAS A
FACTUAL BASIS FOR DEFENSE COUNSEL’S BELIEF
APPELLANT WOULD TESTIFY FALSELY BEFORE
DEPRIVING APPELLANT OF HIS RIGHT TO COUNSEL
DURING HIS TESTIFYING ON THE MERITS?
III. WHETHER APPELLANT RECEIVED INEFFECTIVE
ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL WHEN TRIAL DEFENSE
COUNSEL REMAINED HIS COUNSEL DURING POST-
TRIAL PROCEEDINGS AFTER APPELLANT IN HIS
CLEMENCY PETITION ASSERTED THAT HIS COUNSEL
HAD ABANDONED HIM DURING THE TRIAL?
For the reasons set forth below, we remand for a fact-
finding hearing pursuant to United States v. DuBay, 17 C.M.A.
147, 37 C.M.R. 411 (1967).
I. BACKGROUND
At the close of the prosecution's case, defense counsel
made a series of motions for findings of not guilty on nine of
the twelve specifications. The military judge dismissed one
specification involving willful disobedience of a non-
∗
Argument was heard in this case at the Suffolk University School of Law,
Boston, Mass., as part of this Court's Project Outreach. See United States
v. Mahoney, __ M.J. __, __ n.1.(C.A.A.F. 2003).
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
commissioned officer, and permitted the trial to proceed with
respect to the remainder of the charged offenses. See Rule for
Courts-Martial 917 [hereinafter R.C.M.].
The defense began its case-in-chief with courtroom
testimony by two witnesses. Following their testimony, the
defense presented stipulated testimony from four other
witnesses, as well as eight exhibits.
Following these presentations, the defense requested “a
short recess” and the military judge announced that the court
would be “in recess for five minutes.” Forty minutes later, the
proceedings resumed for a session without the presence of the
members under Article 39(a), UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 839(a). After an
additional two-minute recess, the military judge, trial counsel,
and defense counsel addressed the potential use of a prior
civilian conviction:
Military Judge: The court's called to
order.
All parties present when the court recessed
are again present except the members.
I have before me what's Prosecution Exhibit
18 for identification which is a copy of a
civilian conviction, and this is from 1986;
is that correct, government?
Trial Counsel: Yes, ma'am.
Military Judge: And you agree, as it's over
10 years old, that unless -- that under 609
it would not be admissible unless the
requirements of 609(b) were met; is that
correct?
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
Trial Counsel: Yes, Ma'am, that's correct.
Military Judge: Okay. Which is basically
that a conviction over 10 years old is not
admissible unless the court determines, in
the interest of justice, that the probative
value of the conviction substantially
outweigh[s] its prejudicial effect.
If and when the accused testifies, then at
that time you would have to offer it and
argue that that rule has been met; right?
Trial Counsel: Yes, ma'am.
Military Judge: I just want to make that
clear, that even if the accused testifies,
it may or may not come in, and whether it
comes in or not depends in large part on
what the accused says.
Defense, do you understand?
Defense Counsel: Yes, ma'am.
Immediately following the defense counsel’s response, the
military judge raised a new topic, advising Appellant that his
lawyers wanted to be relieved of their responsibility to
represent him:
Military Judge: All right. Now, Sergeant
Baker, your attorneys have basically come to
me and said that based on what they think
your testimony is going to be, they want off
your case. Okay?
Accused: Yes, ma'am.
The military judge did not indicate when she had engaged in
a discussion with defense counsel regarding their desire to be
“off” the case. The defense brief states that Appellant was not
present for the discussion between defense counsel and the
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
military judge, and the Government has not challenged that
statement.
After advising Appellant that his counsel no longer wished
to represent him, the military judge engaged in a further
interchange with Appellant and his counsel regarding the
military judge’s assumptions about counsel’s request to withdraw
from representation:
Military Judge: Now, they haven't told me
anything more than that, but what I read
into that -- and this is what I'm reading
into it -- is that they expect or they're
thinking that you are going to testify
inconsistently with what you have said
before. Okay?
Accused: Yes, ma'am.
Military Judge: Just based on the fact that
they want off the case, that's the reason I
think it is.
What I'm telling you is this, that --
Captain [B], am I right? Is the court right
that you do not even feel that you can
ethically put your client on the stand and
not even ask him any questions, and just --?
Cpt [B]: That's correct, ma'am.
Military Judge: Captain [M], is the same
true for you?
Cpt [M]: Yes, ma'am.
After defense counsel responded, the military judge told
Appellant how the court-martial would proceed if he desired to
testify:
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
What I am telling you, Sergeant Baker, is if
you persist in this wish to testify, I can't
tell you that you can't testify. But your
attorneys don't have to basically go along
with offering your testimony and they're not
going to cooperate in offering what they
believe might be perjured testimony to the
panel.
So if you want to do this, if you want to
testify without the assistance of counsel,
you can do that. But what that means is
when the members come back, I'm going to say
-- I'm going to say the defense calls
Sergeant Baker to the stand. The trial
counsel is going to swear you in. And then
you're going to testify all by yourself.
Now one of the dangers there is, when you do
that, you don't have the assistance of a
lawyer who has been trained to keep you away
from certain areas of testimony that might
not be helpful to yourself. One of those
areas is that threat of this prior
conviction, which at this point is not
admissible on the merits of the case; but,
depending on what you say, it may come in on
cross examination, because you are going to
be cross examined. So that means the
government's side, with the two lawyers they
have there, are going to be able to go at
you and, basically, your defense counsel
aren't going to do anything to help you.
Do you understand that?
Accused: Yes, ma'am.
Military Judge: Do you understand the risk
you run when you get on the stand and you
don't have the help of a lawyer helping you
through your testimony?
Accused: Yes.
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
Appellant asked the military judge if, during his
testimony, he could refer to notes that he had prepared prior to
trial. The military judge advised him that he could do so, that
the notes would be marked as an exhibit, that the government
would have the opportunity to review the notes, and that he
could be cross-examined on the notes. The military judge
returned to the subject of testifying without the benefit of
counsel:
Military Judge: And the other thing I want
to say -- I want to say a couple of other
things -- like I said, when you do this, you
know, we have lawyers represent people for a
purpose, and they know what things to avoid
and what things to emphasize. And when you
take the stand like this, you're not going
to have the assistance of counsel, and
you're going to be cross-examined, and if
the members have questions they're going to
be able to ask you, and you're not going to
have a lawyer there to talk to about whether
or not you should answer, or how you should
answer it.
The other thing is --
Accused: Does -- does -- is the same
procedure going to be followed? I mean,
will they go through you?
Military Judge: The panel questions? Yes.
And I will decide whether or not they're
asked.
But your counsel aren't going to get a
chance to say objection because they're not
going to participate in any way with your
testifying.
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
Recognizing the potential for appellate litigation of this
matter, the military judge directed defense counsel to prepare a
memorandum for the record:
Military Judge: The other thing is I will
instruct them to prepare for their records a
memorandum for record basically outlining
the situation as it exists now, and then
after you testify the situation that existed
after that. Now that document is going to
remain in their files, but that's to protect
them in case you say anything later down the
road about what your defense counsel would
do or not do, or whether you didn't have
effective assistance of counsel.
And, at a later date, if their
representation of you is brought into
question or challenge, then they're going to
have those documents in their file and
they're going to be able to present them to
the appropriate authorities to defend
themselves against ineffective assistance of
counsel claims.
Do you understand that?
Accused: Yes, ma'am.
Military Judge: And you understand the risk
you run if you testify without the benefit
of counsel?
Accused: Yes.
The military judge also told Appellant that his lawyers
would not be able to discuss his testimony during defense
counsel’s argument to the members:
Military Judge: The other thing is that
counsel will not argue what you said,
because they don't feel that they can
ethically do that, and the court is not
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
going to require them to do that. Now
they've asked off the case. I'm not going
to allow them to get off the case. I'm not
going to release them. Okay? The court has
the power to do that, and at this late
juncture, I'm not going to let you frustrate
the process and I'm not going to make you go
through the rest of this trial without the
benefit of counsel. So I'm not going to
permit them off the case.
But when they go to do their closing
argument, they're not going to refer to
things you said. They're going to attack in
other ways, they're going to attack the
government's case I'm sure, but they're
going to do it with the evidence that's been
presented so far.
Do you understand that?
Accused: Yes, ma'am.
The military judge asked Appellant if he would like to
discuss the matter further with his counsel. When he said that
he would like to do so and refer to the notes prepared prior to
trial, the military judge provided him with further advice
regarding prosecution access to the materials. After a fifteen-
minute recess, the military judge confirmed that Appellant
wanted to testify, marked Appellant’s notes as an exhibit, and
recalled the members to the courtroom. At that point, the
military judge announced:
Let the record reflect that the members have
reentered the courtroom.
Members, the defense calls Staff Sergeant
Baker, the accused, to the stand.
10
United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
Without the assistance of counsel while he was on the
witness stand, Appellant testified at length in narrative form,
responded to the prosecution’s detailed cross-examination, and
answered a series of questions posed by the military judge. At
the conclusion of his testimony, the defense rested its case,
and the prosecution offered brief testimony in rebuttal.
As anticipated by the military judge, appellate review has
focused on the actions of both defense counsel. Contrary to the
expectation of the military judge, counsel did not take the
steps necessary to ensure that explanatory memoranda were
available for review during this appeal. During the present
appeal, we noted that the military judge directed each defense
counsel to prepare and retain explanatory memoranda, and we
ordered counsel to file the pertinent documents under seal.
United States v. Baker, 58 M.J. 242, 243 (C.A.A.F. 2003). Both
defense counsel, however, have informed the Court in separate
affidavits that they were unable to comply with the order
because they do not possess the requested documents. The
affidavits filed by trial defense counsel do not indicate that
such documents are otherwise available, and no such
representation has been made by appellate counsel for either
party.
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II. DISCUSSION
This appeal concerns the Sixth Amendment right to the
effective assistance of counsel. U.S. Const. amend. VI;
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984). Appellant
contends that the actions of his defense counsel at trial, who
sought to withdraw from the case and who did not provide
assistance during Appellant’s testimony, deprived him of the
effective assistance of counsel. As outlined in the previous
section, the record indicates that the actions by defense
counsel at trial may have been prompted by concern about the
veracity of Appellant’s proposed testimony.
1. Competing interests
When circumstances indicate that an accused may commit
perjury at trial, counsel for the accused is placed at the
intersection of competing and sometimes conflicting interests.
See generally John Wesley Hall, Jr., Professional Responsibility
of the Criminal Lawyer 809-15 (2d ed. 1996); Terence F.
MacCarthy & Carol A. Brook, Anticipated Client Perjury: Truth or
Dare Comes to Court, in Ethical Problems Facing the Criminal
Defense Lawyer (Rodney J. Uphoff ed., 1995). In addition to the
constitutional right to the effective assistance of counsel,
these interests include:
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
(1) The constitutional right of an accused to testify in
his or her own defense. Rock v. Arkansas, 483 U.S. 44, 51
(1987); Nix v. Whiteside, 475 U.S. 157 (1986); Harris v. New
York, 401 U.S. 222, 225 (1971).
(2) The ethical obligation of defense counsel to provide
legal representation that is both competent and diligent. See,
e.g., Dep't of the Army, Regulation 27-26, Rules of Professional
Conduct for Lawyers Rules 1.1, 1.3 (May 1, 1992) [hereinafter AR
27-26]; American Bar Association Model Rules of Prof'l
Responsibility Rules 1.1, 1.3 (1983) [hereinafter ABA Model
Rule].
(3) The general prohibition against disclosure of
communications between a client and an attorney, subject to
limited exceptions. Military Rule of Evidence 502 [hereinafter
M.R.E.]; AR 27-26, Rule 1.6; ABA Model Rule 1.6.
(4) The criminal prohibitions concerning false testimony on
a material matter. See, e.g., Articles 98, 131, 134, UCMJ, 10
U.S.C. §§ 898, 931, 934 (2000) (noncompliance with procedural
rules, perjury, and subornation of perjury, respectively). See
Nix 475 U.S. at 173.
(5) The ethical duty of an attorney to not offer or assist
in offering material evidence that an attorney knows to be
false. See AR 27-26, Rule 3.3(a) (duty of candor toward the
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
court); Rule 3.4 (obligation of fairness to opposing party and
counsel); ABA Model Rules 3.3(a), 3.4.
(6) The ethical duty of an attorney who knows that a client
is contemplating a criminal act to counsel the client against
doing so. See AR 27-26, Rule 2.1, 3.3, cmt.; ABA Model Rule
2.1.
(7) The related ethical duty of an attorney to withdraw if
a client persists in a fraudulent or criminal course of conduct.
See AR 27-26, Rule 1.16, 3.3, cmt.; ABA Model Rule 1.16.
(8) The rules governing impeachment and rebuttal. See,
e.g., M.R.E. 608, 609, 613; Nix, 475 U.S. at 173; United States
v. Havens, 446 U.S. 620 (1980); Harris, 401 U.S. at 225-26.
2. Procedural considerations
The initial actions taken by a competent defense counsel in
preparing diligently for trial are relatively non-controversial.
At the outset, the attorney will discuss with the client the
relative benefits of testifying versus relying on the privilege
to remain silent. In the course of such a discussion, the
attorney will ascertain from the client the nature of any
proposed testimony. The attorney will then conduct a reasonable
investigation to identify potential areas of vulnerability to
cross-examination or rebuttal. See American Bar Ass’n,
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
Standards for Criminal Justice, The Defense Function Std. 4-4.1
(2001).
In the course of such trial preparation, the attorney may
identify conflicts between the proposed testimony and other
evidence, including prior statements to the attorney by the
client. Such conflicts do not necessarily mean that the
proposed testimony is false. See Hall, supra, at 828-29 n.5.
It may well be that the client was reluctant to be candid with
the attorney until a degree of comfort was established in the
relationship. Under the ethical obligations of competence,
diligence, fairness, and candor, the attorney cannot close his
or her eyes to the possibility that the proposed testimony is
false. See Brian Slipakoff & Roshini Thayaparan, Current
Development 2001: The Criminal Defense Attorney Facing
Prospective Client Perjury, 15 Geo. J. Legal Ethics 935, 942-43
(2000). The attorney must conduct an appropriate investigation
to ascertain whether the proposed testimony is false. See Hall,
supra, at 827-28 n.4. Even if the client asserts that he or she
wants to present false testimony to the court, a diligent
attorney will recognize that such a statement may reflect the
pressures of a looming trial, and will not accept it at face
value without making a reasonable inquiry.
When an attorney perceives that a client’s prospective
testimony may be false, the attorney will face conflicting
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
pressures in terms of the client’s constitutional right to the
effective assistance of counsel, ethical duties toward the
client, ethical duties toward the court, and applicable
statutory and regulatory procedures. Despite substantial
attention to this problem by scholars, practitioners, and
judges, there is considerable disagreement as to the steps that
should be taken by counsel and judges to reconcile these
competing interests. The Supreme Court, in its leading decision
on these issues, declined to provide detailed guidance with
respect to “the weight to be given to recognized canons of
ethics, the standards established . . . in statutes or
professional codes, and the Sixth Amendment.” Nix 475 U.S. at
165. See generally Slipakoff & Thayaparan, at 935 (summarizing
recent ethical standards, model rules, disciplinary rulings,
statutes, and judicial decisions). Although we have touched
upon these matters in earlier cases, we have not issued
definitive holdings regarding the propriety of any particular
approach. See United States v. Winchester, 12 C.M.A. 74, 30
C.M.R. 74 (1961); United States v. Radford, 14 M.J. 322 (C.M.A.
1982).
There are two matters of particular importance to the
present appeal. The first area of concern is the standard an
attorney should apply in determining whether the proposed
testimony is false for purposes of triggering any ethical
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
obligations. See Hall, supra, at 827-29; Slipakoff &
Thayaparan, supra, at 942-47. Compare United States ex rel.
Wilcox v. Johnson, 555 F.2d 115, 122 (3d Cir. 1977) (an attorney
must possess “a firm factual basis” that the client will commit
perjury before bringing the matter to the attention of the
court), with Shockley v. State, 565 A.2d 1373 (Del. 1989) (the
attorney must be convinced that the statement is false beyond a
reasonable doubt). Because the “firm factual basis” standard is
sufficient to ensure that counsel has conducted an adequate
inquiry prior to initiating any action under the ethical
standards, we shall not require a higher standard than that
applied by the Third Circuit.
The second area of concern is the question of what actions,
if any, an attorney must take if the client persists in a desire
to provide what the attorney has determined to be false
testimony. See Hall, supra, at 830-35; Slipakoff & Thayaparan,
supra, at 947-54. One view is that the attorney should not have
any involvement with a client who intends to taint the
proceeding through the presentation of false testimony. Under
this view, if the client persists in the desire to testify
falsely, the attorney should ask the court for permission to
withdraw from the representation. See AR 27-26, Rule 3.3 cmt.
A second view is that withdrawal is too disruptive and
simply foists the issue on the next attorney. Therefore, the
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relationship should not be severed completely, but the client
should not have the assistance of counsel during the
presentation of testimony. Under this approach, the attorney
provides non-specific notice to the court that the client will
testify in free narrative form without the benefit of questions
from defense counsel, and counsel does not refer to the
testimony during closing argument. See, e.g., Restatement
(Third) of The Law Governing Lawyers § 120 cmt i (2000); cf. AR
27-26, Rule 3.3 cmt. (if withdrawal is not permitted, counsel
should not “lend aid to the perjury or use the perjured
testimony”); Lowrey v. Cardwell, 575 F.2d 727 (9th Cir. 1978).
The free narrative approach has been accepted by some courts and
rejected by others. See Nix, 475 U.S. at 170 n.6; United States
v. Long, 857 F.2d 436, 446 n.7 (8th Cir. 1988); Hall, supra, at
835.
A third view is that the free narrative approach violates
attorney-client confidentiality because the unusual format of
the testimony signals to the judge or jury that the client is
not telling the truth. This third view focuses on the
confidentiality of the attorney-client relationship, the
client’s right to assistance of counsel, and the client’s right
to testify. Under this approach, if the client persists in the
desire to testify, the attorney should provide unqualified
assistance, treat the matter in the same fashion as any other
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
evidence, and give no indication of concerns about perjury to
the court or opposing counsel. See Hall, supra, at 832 (citing
Monroe H. Freedman, Perjury: The Criminal Defense Lawyer’s
Trilemma, in Lawyers’ Ethics in an Adversary System Ch.3
(1975)).
The first and third options – withdrawal of counsel and
disregard of the perjury -- each attempt to address the issue by
giving primacy to one set of interests. The second approach –
testimony without the assistance of counsel – attempts to
balance the competing interests. Given the conflicting
interests at stake, none of the alternatives is completely
satisfactory, but the free narrative approach offers a
reasonable opportunity to achieve a fair balance.
3. The record in the present case
In the present case, the record reveals that there was an
off-the-record discussion between defense counsel and the
military judge from which Appellant was excluded. The details
of this conversation were not revealed on the record, and it is
not clear whether Appellant was aware of all the details.
Although we may speculate as to the reasons which led defense
counsel to request withdrawal – a request that ultimately
resulted in Appellant testifying without the benefit of counsel
-- the record in the present case provides no direct evidence of
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
the circumstances that led counsel to make such a request.
Although the military judge directed defense counsel to prepare
a memorandum that might have addressed those issues, counsel
either failed to do so or failed to preserve the memorandum.
With the record in this posture, we cannot determine
whether the actions of trial defense counsel resulted in a
denial of Appellant’s Sixth Amendment right to the effective
assistance of counsel. Accordingly, we remand the case with
direction for a hearing pursuant to Dubay, before a military
judge other than the Judge who presided at Appellant’s court-
martial, to address the following questions: (1) What
information, if any, led defense counsel to perceive that
testimony by Appellant would present an ethical problem? (2)
What inquiry, if any, did defense counsel make? (3) What facts
were revealed by the inquiry? (4) What standard, if any, did
defense counsel apply in evaluating those facts? (5) What
determination, if any, did defense counsel make with respect to
prospective testimony by Appellant in light of those facts? (6)
After making any such determination, what information and
advice, if any, did counsel provide to the Appellant? (7) What
response, if any, did Appellant make? (8) What information was
disclosed by the two defense counsel during their off-the-record
conversation with the military judge?
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
The military judge conducting the Dubay hearing shall make
findings of facts on the foregoing questions and such other
matters as may be pertinent to the issues specified in our grant
of review. The military judge shall also reach conclusions of
law on the specified issues.
4. Future cases
Given the state of the record in this case, we do not view
the present appeal as the appropriate vehicle for prescribing
detailed standards by which we will judge the constitutional
effectiveness of counsel in situations involving potential
client perjury. The present case, however, illustrates the need
for a greater degree of guidance than provided by the present
rules. See McCarthy & Brook, supra, at 148-53 (describing the
problems facing counsel and courts and the need for greater
clarity). We have identified a number of steps that counsel and
military judges may consider taking to reduce the potential for
confusion and error.
At the outset, the defense counsel should conduct an
appropriate investigation into the validity of evidence that is
likely to be offered at trial, including prospective testimony
by the accused. If such an investigation provides the attorney
with a firm factual basis for determining that that the
prospective testimony is false, the attorney should have a
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
discussion with the client that reviews the facts, the basis for
the attorney’s concern, and the potential consequences for the
accused if the client persists in a desire to provide the
testimony. The advice should cover consequences in terms of the
obligation to tell the truth, pertinent criminal sanctions,
tactical considerations at trial, and the effect of testimony in
a free narrative form. If the accused persists, the attorney
should request an on-the-record ex parte proceeding before the
military judge, which would be attended by the accused. A motion
to withdraw should not be made or granted in any case unless the
circumstances as a whole have produced such an irreconcilable
conflict between counsel and the accused that effective
representation no longer is possible. At the ex parte
proceeding, the attorney should advise the military judge that
the client wishes to testify and that the client will testify in
free narrative form. The military judge should not inquire into
the reasons, but should: (1) remind the attorney of the
obligation to conduct an appropriate investigation that
demonstrates the basis for the concern; (2) ensure that the
accused understands the consequences of testifying in free
narrative form; (3) ask the attorney and the client to have a
further conversation during a recess prior to making a final
decision as to how to proceed; and (4) direct the attorney to
prepare a memorandum describing the attorney’s investigation,
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factual concerns, and advice provided to the accused. If, after
such a recess, the accused decides to proceed with the
testimony, the attorney and the accused should notify the
military judge of that decision in an ex parte proceeding.
Prior to the conclusion of the trial, the military judge should
ensure that defense counsel submits a copy of the memorandum
under seal. The document should be attached to the record as a
sealed exhibit and should remain sealed, except to the extent
release is directed during appellate review upon an appropriate
showing and subject to appropriate protective orders. See,
e.g., United States v. Dorman, 58 M.J. 295 (C.A.A.F.
2003)(concerning access by appellate defense counsel).
Because the actual circumstances – including service
regulations and potentially applicable state bar ethical rules -
- may require counsel to consider variations in the suggested
standards for assessing whether the evidence is false and
related procedures for addressing the matter at trial, we
emphasize that these are available measures that may prove
useful at trial, and that we are not establishing mandatory
requirements at this time. In the course of adapting these
measures to the needs of a particular case, the military judge
and counsel for the parties should keep in mind their respective
responsibilities with regard to the truth-seeking purposes of a
23
United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
trial, consistent with applicable constitutional, statutory, and
ethical considerations.
III. DECISION
The decision of the United States Army Court of Criminal Appeals
is set aside. The record of trial is returned to the Judge Advocate
General of the Army for submission to a convening authority for a
hearing under pursuant to DuBay consistent with this opinion. The
military judge at such hearing shall make findings of fact and
conclusions of law and then return the record of trial to the Court
of Criminal Appeals for further review of the specified issues.
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CRAWFORD, Chief Judge (dissenting):
In keeping with Supreme Court precedent, and in the
interest of judicial economy, I would apply Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984), and employ a harmless error
analysis before returning the case for a DuBay hearing. See
United States v. DuBay, 17 C.M.A. 147, 37 C.M.R. 411 (1962).
Because counsel’s “ineffectiveness” had no impact on the
fairness of Appellant’s proceeding, I would find that the error
was harmless.
Both the Government and Appellant would benefit from a
Strickland analysis in this case. Appellant’s allegation of
ineffective assistance of counsel waives the attorney/client
privilege and the confidential communications that transpired
between Appellant and his counsel. United States v. McClain, 50
M.J. 483, 488 (C.A.A.F. 1999). Thus, Appellant would enter the
DuBay hearing without these safeguards and potentially subject
to a future perjury prosecution. Moreover, applying Strickland
avoids putting this Court into a speculative mode regarding how
these inquiries should be handled in the future.
It is important to recognize at the outset that the purpose
of the trial, as well as the roles of counsel, Appellant, and
the trial judge, vary depending on, among other things, who the
fact finder is in each case. I agree with the majority that the
purpose of a trial is truth seeking “consistent with applicable
United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
constitutional, statutory, and ethical considerations.” ___
M.J. (24).
The Supreme Court has long recognized that “[a]ll perjured
relevant testimony is at war with justice, since it may produce
a judgment not resting on truth. Therefore it cannot be denied
that it tends to defeat the sole ultimate objective of a trial.”
In re Michael, 326 U.S. 224, 227 (1945). A trial must rest upon
truth finding and a defendant does not have the right to present
perjuried testimony. Nix v. Whiteside, 475 U.S. 157, 175
(1986). When there is a trial by jury -- but a finding by a
trial judge of perjury beyond a reasonable doubt, or a firm
factual basis for such a finding -- the trial judge has the
right to preclude the defendant from testifying at all. This
purpose and its consequence must be recognized,1 even though
1
The full Article 39(a) transcript indicates that Appellant implicitly
admitted his testimony was inconsistent.
MILITARY JUDGE: Now, they [Appellant’s defense counsel] haven’t told
me anything more than that, but what I read into that -- and this is what I’m
reading into it -- is that they expect or they’re thinking that you are going
to testify inconsistently with what you have said before. Okay?
ACCUSED: Yes, ma’am.
MILITARY JUDGE: Just based on the fact that they want off the case,
that’s the reason I think it is.
What I’m tellin you is this, that --
Captain [B], am I right? Is the court right that you do not even feel
that you can ethically put your client on the stand and not even ask him any
questions, and just --?
CPT [B]: That’s correct, ma’am.
MILITARY JUDGE: Captain [M], is the same true for you?
2
United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
there is a dispute among the courts as to the roles of the
various participants depending on the factual scenario. Because
of this dispute, this Court should address each case on an
individual basis.
“The military, like the Federal and state systems, has
hierarchical sources of rights,” and chief among those sources
is the Constitution of the United States. United States v.
Lopez, 35 M.J. 35, 39 (C.M.A. 1992). In rendering our
decisions, we look to the highest source of authority, “unless a
lower source creates rules that are constitutional and provide
greater rights for the individual.” Id.
The Sixth Amendment to the Constitution provides: “In all
criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy . . . the
Assistance of Counsel for his defense.” In Strickland, the
Supreme Court outlined a two-prong test to determine if
counsel’s assistance to the accused was ineffective, and
therefore violated the Sixth Amendment.
First, the defendant must show that counsel’s
performance was deficient. This requires showing that
counsel made errors so serious that counsel was not
functioning as the "counsel" guaranteed the defendant
by the Sixth Amendment.
Second, the defendant must show that the deficient
performance prejudiced the defense. This requires
showing that counsel’s errors were so serious as to
CPT [M]: Yes, ma’am.
(Emphasis added.)
3
United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
deprive the defendant of a fair trial, a trial whose
result is reliable.
466 U.S. at 687 (emphasis added). The Court added that “if it
is easier to dispose of an ineffectiveness claim on the ground
of lack of sufficient prejudice, which we expect will often be
so, that course should be followed.” Id. at 697 (emphasis
added).
In Nix, the Court determined that counsel’s threat to
withdraw if the defendant perjured himself did not “establish
the prejudice required for relief under the second strand of the
Strickland inquiry.” Defense counsel is ethically obligated “to
take steps to persuade a criminal defendant to testify
truthfully, or to withdraw,” and in so doing does not deprive
the defendant of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel. Id. at
173-74.
In Lockhart v. Fretwell, 506 U.S. 364 (1993), the Court
again interpreted Strickland, opining that testing for prejudice
involves more than a determination that the outcome would have
been different. Rather, “[i]t focuses on the question whether a
counsel’s deficient performance renders the result of the trial
unreliable or the proceeding fundamentally unfair.” Id. at 372.
A proceeding is only unfair if counsel’s ineffectiveness
“deprive[d] the defendant of any substantive or procedural right
to which the law entitles him.” Id. “To set aside a conviction
or sentence solely because the outcome would have been different
4
United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
but for counsel’s error may grant the defendant a windfall to
which the law does not entitle him.” Id. at 369-70.
Applying this standard to the facts at hand, it is clear
that Appellant was not prejudiced by counsel’s actions, as there
was no impact at all on the fairness of the proceeding. As the
chart below indicates, although Appellant was charged with
twelve specifications, all of which he contested, he was found
guilty of only four.
Setting aside Appellant’s testimony, the documents admitted
at trial and the testimony from Appellant’s chain-of-command,
civilian supervisor and peers, prove his guilt of the guilty
findings below beyond a reasonable doubt of four of the twelve
specifications:
Charge Spec Plea Finding
I Attempted larceny only NG Guilty
II Absence from duty 1 NG NG
2 NG Guilty
3 NG NG
4 NG NG
III Willful disobedience 1 NG NG
2 NG Guilty
3 NG Guilty
IV Willful disobedience 1 NG NG
2 NG NG
V Dereliction of duty only NG NG
VI Larceny only NG NG
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United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
Charge I and its specification -- attempted larceny of over
$369 worth of ink cartridges. Often Appellant was seen carrying
his own personal computer but never a printer. When buying
supplies for the supply store, he bought several ink cartridges
costing more than $9 each that did not fit any of the units
printers. Master Sergeant (MSG) Randall Hyde told Appellant not
to buy these cartridges because they were useless. When these
cartridges were found to be missing, MSG Hyde asked Appellant
where they were and “he gave me a little smile on his face.
Okay? And I told him to get my toner cartridges now and bring
them back to the Supply Room.” The cost of these was
approximately $369. Later, even though Appellant had been told
not to buy any more, MSG Hyde noticed that three more cartridges
were bought.
Charge II, specification 2 -- absences. Appellant’s
supervisor noted Appellant’s lunch breaks between September 1st
and 17th, lasting more than an hour and a half without seeking
permission from the supervisor or giving an explanation for the
absence upon his return. Mrs. Sheila Speers McCaskill testified
he “never took the [normal] one hour lunch,” but, rather, three-
hour lunches. Nor did Appellant seek permission for these
extended breaks. Many times he was given several simple tasks
that would take 15 to 20 minutes, but he would be gone at least
6
United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
an hour. During some of these instances, he took a government
vehicle and Ms. McCaskill had no idea of his whereabouts.
Charge III, specification 2 and 3 -- haircut orders.
Brigadier General Lambert, Lieutenant Colonel (LTC) Kirk A.
Moeller’s supervisor, was disappointed with Appellant’s
appearance and haircut and told LTC Moeller to make sure that
Appellant got a haircut. Appellant did not, and was counseled
for unacceptable behavior by refusing to get a haircut. He was
given a second order which he again disobeyed. A third order
was given to him. This time to ensure he obtained a haircut,
the acting first sergeant agreed to accompany Appellant to the
barbershop. However, Appellant left the area after being told
to wait by the acting first sergeant. The acting first sergeant
checked the two barbershops at Patch Barracks and did not find
Appellant on either occasion. When he eventually saw Appellant,
he noted his haircut did not pass military standards. His
appearance was so poor he was told not to return to the office
until he had a proper haircut.
Moreover, given that Appellant was convicted of only four
specifications, far from harming Appellant, counsel’s remedial
actions, and the resultant sequence of proceedings, assisted in
a relatively successful defense.
7
United States v. Baker, No. 02-0334/AR
Given the absence of prejudice to Appellant, I would find
harmless error and affirm the decision below. Accordingly, I
dissent from the lead opinion.
8