United States v. Carroll

BAUM, Chief Judge

(concurring in part and dissenting in part).

I concur with the majority’s rejection of the assigned errors and join in affirming the findings of guilty. I part company with respect to the sentence, however.

The offenses on their face may appear to be serious enough to warrant the approved sentence but when balanced against the highly favorable evidence in extenuation and mitigation, I see the resultant punishment as excessive, particularly the bad conduct discharge.

Significantly, the evidence reveals that appellant is a highly regarded Coast Guardsman, a hard worker with an excellent reputation aboard his ship, — not the kind of person deserving a bad conduct discharge — unless the very nature of the offenses demand punitive separation. Witnesses from appellant’s command did not view the offenses in that light. They saw the incident as less serious than might otherwise appear — not justifying the level of interest and treatment received.

These witnesses believed the incident warranted no more than non-judicial punishment for all participants, based, in part, on their evaluation of the complainant and her initial reaction to what had transpired. Some saw the event escalating to a general court-martial due to her actions once she realized it provided an effective means for her transfer from a ship where she was not happy or well thought of by her superiors. It was conceded by the Government during oral argument that if the commanding officer’s wishes had prevailed the appellant would not have been before a general court-martial. That outlook was also reflected in the testimony of the ship’s executive officer, the appellant’s department head, and the ship’s radioman chief, Joseph Cipollo.

Both the accused and Chief Cipollo were ship plankowners, having served together in the pre-commissioning detail. Chief Cipollo had been senior enlisted man of that pre-corn unit and for a long time on board USCGC TAHOMA he was the Chief Master-at-Arms. He also filled in periodically as the ship’s Boatswain’s Mate Chief. In these various capacities, all junior enlisted personnel had worked for him at one time or another. As a result, he knew those involved in the instant offenses very well. Furthermore, he was the person to whom the offenses were initially reported, since he was the Officer of the Deck the night they were committed. He, therefore, had a first hand knowledge of pertinent facts as well as personnel. He had the following to say with respect to the complainant, the offenses and the case disposition:

Q. During that period of time have you worked with Seaman Carroll?
Q. And H [the alleged victim]?
A. Yes, I've had contact with Seaman H also.
Q. In what capacity, Chief?
A. Seaman H arrived after we’d already gotten the ship. She wasn’t there from the days of the pre-corn. She arrived at some point during the yard period, I believe, in Baltimore. I had her as a mess cook. When I was the Chief Master-at-Arms ... all of the mess cooks work[ed] directly for me and I had Seaman H workpng] for me in that capacity.
Q. Do you have — Have you formed an opinion concerning H’s reputation for truthfulness?
A. Yes, I have.
Q. Could you tell us what it is please? A. I think she’s a liar.
Q. Is that based on her reputation on the ship?
A. It’s based on her reputation on the ship and my dealings with her. I don’t think she’s ever been truthful to me. She’s not outright lied but she’s skirted the truth.
Q. Okay. Is she — In your dealings with H, is she an assertive person?
A. [Sarcastically.] Seaman H will use anything in her bag of tricks to do whatever she can to get whatever she wants. [Brackets in original Record of Trial.]
*602A. People do not believe it [the offense], including the women on the ship. So we’re saying that the system has failed. That one 18 year old seaman has played havoc and hell with the system and gotten away with it.

Record of Trial at 111, 112 and 118.

Chief Cipollo expanded on this last conclusion in a colloquy with the trial judge in which he expressed the belief that pleas of guilty were driven by the accused’s fear of the consequences of trial at the general court-martial level and that such pleas did not necessarily reflect the true events:

Q. Chief, ... Seaman Carroll ... pled guilty to indecent assault. He pled guilty to communicating a threat. He pled guilty to an attempted indecent assault by Petty Officer K on Seaman Apprentice H. Do you understand that?
A. Can I — Before I answer that question, was that a plea bargain plea? Did he plead guilty because of a plea bargain?
Q. There is a plea bargain involved in this particular case, Chief, but it’s my responsibility to make sure that somebody doesn’t plead guilty if they’re — if they are not, in fact, guilty of what they pled to. Not that I’m infallible and not that another court might review what has transpired over the last couple of days here and disagree, but basically my responsibility is to ensure that Carroll isn’t — didn’t plead guilty to something he wasn’t guilty of.
A. Captain, with all due respect to your judgment, I think if someone plea bargains — if we held up a carrot [motioning] and this is the lesser of the evils, it’s there, and this is the unknown if you don’t plea bargain. I think he was a frightened young man and ran for the carrot and said, this is a known if I plea bargain for this.
Q. I appreciate your testimony and I give it great weight, you having been his supervisor, as to his performance. But he pled guilty to an indecent assault on a fellow Coast Guardsman — woman in the Coast Guard so — I take it, is it your view
that he should suffer no punishment at all?
A. My personal view is that all three of them should be punished. My personal view is they were all three drunk out there raising hell. I don’t think at this point, to be honest with you, and I’m not being — trying to be disrespectful to your court Captain, that anybody will ever get the total one-hundred per cent truth. My experience dealing with drunks, having been intoxicated myself, is that things slip then, you know, it gets so confusing I don’t know who can sort it out at this point. If there was one sober person there, maybe we’d have all the facts and I think at this point also it’s easy for me to say, well, you know, he should do this, he should do that but if I was in his shoes I wonder if I would not say — just to end it all and to know that it won’t be as severe — I think I would have plea bargained to[o], to be completely honest with you. I don’t think justice is being served that way while the truth is being guarded.

Record of Trial at 119-120.

I, too, have concerns about the truth, making it essential for me that the pleas of guilty are fully supported by the record. Here, the judge’s correct and penetrating inquiry accomplished that result, accounting for my rejection of appellant’s assigned error of improvident pleas. I am still left with a nagging concern, however, as to the effect on the accused and the judge of charges carrying a heavy maximum sentence at a general court-martial. In this case, as in U.S. v. Roach, 26 M.J. 859, (C.G.C.M.R.1988), the accused was initially faced with charges that authorized life in prison. Judge Barry speaking for the majority in Roach, supra, addressed the effect of such a potential sentence:

[W]e are troubled with the result which is reached in a case such as this. Even when such a case is referred as non-capital, the accused is forced to defend against an offense carrying the maximum punishment short of death — life imprisonment. This fact will influence both the accused and his counsel in any ef*603forts to achieve a pre-trial agreement. The maximum sentence will also influence the finder of fact in reaching a sentence to award. In both aspects, the high maximum sentence works to the detriment of the accused. As Chief Judge Everett recently noted in a general court-martial where there was a pretrial agreement for a sentence which could have been awarded by a special court-martial:
In the first place, the very fact that a case has been referred to a general court-martial tends to elevate the sentence that will be imposed in the event of conviction, because logically the sentencing authority will consider the maximum punishment in deciding what sentence to adjudge. If the charges against Murray had been referred to a special court-martial, which could have imposed no more than a bad-conduct discharge, 6 months’ confinement, partial forfeitures, and reduction to pay grade E-1, the sentence adjudged might have been much less than was rendered by the general court-martial — where the maximum punishment authorized was a dishonorable discharge, 5 years’ confinement, total forfeitures, reduction to E-1, and a fine. In short, sentencing authorities— whether, as here, a military judge or, as in other cases, members — tend to take into account the maximum sentence imposable in deciding what sentence actually should be adjudged.
United States v. Murray, 25 M.J. 445, 455, 456 (C.M.A.1988) (Everett, C.J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (Footnote omitted).

U.S. v. Roach, supra, at 866.

Finally, the following evaluations of the accused by his department head, the executive officer and Chief Cippllo weigh heavily with me:

He’s a very good performer, sir. Leading seaman. I could easily give him a job and let him take care of it from— from start to finish. I didn’t have to worry about assigning anyone to supervise him. As a matter of fact, I could assign people to work with him ... as the leading seaman and the job — job results have always been good and he’s always taken good pride — a lot of pride in the work that he’s accomplished.

Testimony of the First Lieutenant, LTJG Rall. Record of Trial at 127.

Seaman Carroll’s always been a good and hard worker, probably one of the best we had in our entire deck force, if not on the whole ship. [Emphasis added.]

Testimony of the Executive Officer, LCDR Collier. Record of Trial at 136.

“He’s the epitome of what anybody’d want for a seaman or a BM3; outstanding in all respects.” [Emphasis added.]

Testimony of Chief Cipollo. Record of Trial at 112.

It is my view that in most cases the accused’s immediate superiors are likely to be the best judges of what is appropriate for a particular accused, the command and the Coast Guard in general, given their knowledge of that accused and the offenses committed. We have also come to expect the Government to put great stock in the observations of an accused’s superiors within the immediate command. Here, the opposite seems to be the case, with the Government minimizing the command’s views. Instead, the Government seems to be urging that the offenses alone cry out for a certain sentence and that the command’s contrary outlook, as reflected by the testimony from Chief Cipollo, LTJG Rail and LCDR Collier, are to be discounted as missing the big picture effect of the offenses on the Coast Guard in general. I am not persuaded by that argument.

I place great credence in the reactions of the witnesses from appellant’s command. While I am convinced that the findings of guilty must stand as provident, I am also convinced that the people who were closest to the parties and the events did not believe *604a punitive discharge was warranted for this accused and these offenses. I agree with that assessment. I would set aside the bad conduct discharge and affirm the remainder of the sentence,

Judge SHKOR did not participate in this case.