IN THE CASE OF
UNITED STATES, Appellee
v.
Anson D. BENTON, Specialist
U.S. Army, Appellant
No. 01-0289
Crim. App. No. 9800862
United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces
Argued October 24, 2001
Decided July 5, 2002
SULLIVAN, S.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
GIERKE and BAKER, JJ., joined. CRAWFORD, C.J., filed an opinion
concurring in the result. EFFRON, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
Counsel
For Appellant: Captain Terri J. Erisman (argued); Colonel Adele
H. Odegard, Lieutenant Colonel E. Allen Chandler, Jr., and
Major Imogene M. Jamison (on brief); Major Scott R. Morris,
Major Jonathan F. Potter, and Captain Steven P. Haight.
For Appellee: Captain Janine P. Felsman (argued); Colonel Steven
T. Salata, Lieutenant Colonel Denise R. Lind, and Major
Margaret B. Baines (on brief); Captain Paul T. Cygnarowicz.
Military Judges: Lawrence M. Cuculic, Debra L. Boudreau, and
Stephen V. Saynisch
THIS OPINION IS SUBJECT TO EDITORIAL CORRECTION BEFORE FINAL PUBLICATION.
United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
Senior Judge SULLIVAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
During the Spring of 1998, appellant was tried by a general
court-martial composed of officer and enlisted members at Fort
Lewis, Washington. Contrary to his pleas, he was found guilty of
kidnapping and forcibly sodomizing CM, in violation of Articles
134 and 125, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC §§ 934 and
925. On June 19, 1998, he was sentenced to a bad-conduct
discharge, confinement for two years and six months, total
forfeitures, and reduction to pay grade E-1. The convening
authority approved this sentence on November 16, 1998. The Army
Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed on January 22, 2001. 54 MJ
717.
This Court on June 25, 2001, granted the following two issues
for review:
I. WHETHER THE ARMY COURT OF CRIMINAL
APPEALS ERRED BY FINDING NO PREJUDICE TO
APPELLANT, DESPITE FINDING THE MILITARY
JUDGE ABUSED HIS DISCRETION IN REFUSING TO
PERMIT THE DEFENSE TO ELICIT THE
EXCULPATORY PORTIONS OF A GOVERNMENT
INTRODUCED CONFESSION.
II. WHETHER THE ARMY COURT OF CRIMINAL
APPEALS ERRED BY CONCLUDING THAT A CO-
ACCUSED’S ADMISSION TO A CELLMATE THAT HE
THREATENED APPELLANT WITH A GUN AT THE
TIME OF THE OFFENSES WAS NEITHER AGAINST
THE DECLARANT’S PENAL INTEREST NOR
SUFFICIENTLY TRUSTWORTHY.
We hold that the military judge’s refusal to admit hearsay
evidence of appellant’s out-of-court pretrial statement
exculpating himself was harmless error. See United States v.
Levy-Cordero, 156 F.2d 244, 247 (1st Cir. 1998). We further hold
that the trial judge did not err when he refused to admit
2
United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
additional hearsay testimony that appellant’s co-accused
purportedly exonerated appellant of the charged offenses. See
United States v. Seabolt, 958 F.2d 231, 233 (8th Cir. 1992).
The Court of Criminal Appeals, in a detailed opinion,
delineated the facts in this case and the evidence profferred by
the Government concerning appellant’s liability for the
kidnapping and sodomy of CM. It said:
On the evening of 17 October 1997, the
appellant and his alleged accomplice,
Private First Class (PFC) Taori Ransom,
spent several hours driving around in the
vicinity of Lakewood, Washington, an area
near Fort Lewis. The appellant, who was
driving PFC Ransom’s car, stopped the car
at PFC Ransom’s direction near two young
women, CM and her cousin, PFC Ruiz. Much
of CM’s chilling account of her
kidnapping, rape, and forcible sodomy by
PFC Ransom that evening was unchallenged
at trial, although the appellant
vigorously contested his criminal
liability for what transpired. Some of
the evidence surrounding the offenses of
which the appellant was acquitted places
the challenged evidentiary rulings in
context and is thus included in our
discussion of the facts.
A. The Government’s Case
CM and PFC Ruiz both testified that they
were talking outside the home of PFC Ruiz’
boyfriend when they heard a car pull up.
They saw a man leave the car and walk
toward them, brandishing a 9 mm semi-
automatic pistol. He grabbed CM’s hair
and dragged her, screaming and struggling,
into his car. When PFC Ruiz attempted to
aid her cousin, the man struck PFC Ruiz
across the forehead with the pistol. The
appellant then drove off with the man in
the back seat with CM.
According to CM, once she was in the
car, the man, later identified as PFC
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United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
Ransom, pointed his gun at her and told
her to undress and then ordered her to
perform oral sodomy upon him. CM did so.
He thereafter climbed on top of her and
raped her. While PFC Ransom was sexually
assaulting her, she saw the appellant look
back and grin or smile at her. When the
car stopped at a dead end in a wooded
area, the appellant announced that it was
“his turn.”
CM testified that PFC Ransom pulled her
by her hair through a barbed wire fence
and led her into the woods, and the
appellant followed them. She did not see
the gun after they left the car, but was
fearful that PFC Ransom was still armed.
Private First Class Ransom ordered her to
get on her knees to perform oral sodomy on
the appellant, who had already removed his
erect penis from his pants. She complied,
placing her mouth on his penis. The
appellant thereafter left the area to move
the car and did not return.
Meanwhile, local police were looking for
the appellant, PFC Ransom, and CM. Based
on descriptions provided by PFC Ruiz and
additional assistance from her boyfriend,
the police stopped the appellant while he
was driving PFC Ransom’s car along an
interstate highway several miles from the
scene of the abduction. The appellant was
the only occupant, and, just before he
emerged from the car, the arresting
officers observed him reach down under the
front of the driver’s seat. A later
search of the vehicle disclosed a 9 mm
semi-automatic pistol under the driver’s
seat and clothes (jeans, sweater, and
underwear) belonging to CM in the back and
front seats.
When questioned by one of the arresting
officers, the appellant first claimed that
he had borrowed the car from a friend and
was taking some other friends to a club in
Seattle. He then stated that he had
dropped the friends off at Fort Lewis and
was going on to the club by himself, but
could not explain why. He made no mention
of CM’s abduction.
4
United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
In a taped statement made to police
detectives in the early morning hours of
18 October, the appellant admitted that he
and PFC Ransom had been driving around in
the early evening of 17 October. In the
statement, the appellant asserted that as
they neared the appellant’s house, PFC
Ransom told him to stop. He did not know
what PFC Ransom was doing until he heard
“the scream and holler.” He saw CM forced
into the car, and then PFC Ransom told him
to drive. He said that he did as he was
told, stopping the car in a wooded area
and entering the woods with PFC Ransom and
CM. He indicated that PFC Ransom told CM
to “give me [the appellant] some” but
denied that CM actually performed oral sex
on him. He stated that CM grabbed his
genitals through his clothing. The
appellant then returned to the car because
he was scared. The tape of this
interrogation was played for the court
members, and a transcript was introduced
as a prosecution exhibit.
54 MJ at 719-20 (footnote omitted).
The Court of Criminal Appeals then fully delineated the
proffered defense evidence, which was rejected by the military
judge.
B. The Testimony of Private New
The challenged evidentiary rulings
stemmed from the testimony of Private
(PV2) New, a pretrial confinee at the
regional confinement facility where the
appellant and PFC Ransom were also being
held in pretrial confinement. Testifying
under a grant of leniency,2/ PV2 New
recounted certain statements that the
appellant made while they were cellmates.
Private New’s testimony on direct
examination tracked fairly closely with
the appellant’s taped statement to the
local police. According to PV2 New, the
appellant said that he and PFC Ransom had
been driving around for some time when PFC
Ransom told the appellant to stop near two
women, and that the appellant had no idea
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United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
that PFC Ransom was going to abduct one of
them until PFC Ransom dragged CM into the
car.
Private New recounted the appellant’s
observations of PFC Ransom sodomizing and
raping CM in the back seat of the car
while the appellant drove around. He
testified that the appellant described
stopping the car in a wooded area, and
that PFC Ransom directed CM to perform
oral sodomy on the appellant. The
appellant told PV2 New that he left the
area before any sodomy occurred.
On cross-examination, the defense
counsel challenged PV2 New’s credibility
by exploring the grant of leniency, PV2
New’s Canadian conviction for vehicular
homicide, his stint in an Arkansas mental
hospital as the result of a suicide
attempt, his false claims to medical
authorities that he was a Special Forces
sergeant, and his possible access to
transcripts of the appellant’s and PFC
Ransom’s Article 32, UCMJ, hearings while
he was their cellmate.
Switching tactics, the defense then
sought to elicit additional statements
that the appellant made to PV2 New.
Specifically, the defense asked PV2 New if
the appellant also stated that, at the
time of the kidnapping, PFC Ransom pointed
a gun at him in the car and ordered him to
drive. The military judge sustained a
hearsay objection to this testimony,
although the defense counsel argued that
the “rule of completeness” made the
additional statements admissible. This
ruling and the military judge’s response
to subsequent attempts to introduce the
same evidence form the basis for the
appellant’s first assignment of error.
Later in the cross-examination, the
defense counsel asked PV2 New if, during a
separate conversation with PFC Ransom, PFC
Ransom admitted pointing a gun at the
appellant. The military judge again
sustained a hearsay objection, with
comments suggesting that he considered
this as the same question the defense had
asked earlier. The defense counsel
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United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
pointed out that he was trying to elicit
statements of PFC Ransom to PV2 New, not
statements of the appellant to PV2 New,
and that the penal interest exception to
the hearsay rule applied. In an Article
39(a), UCMJ, session, the defense made a
more complete proffer of the out-of-court
statement of PFC Ransom that he intended
to elicit, but the military judge
sustained the prosecution’s hearsay
objection. This ruling is the basis of
the appellant’s second assignment of
error.
At the conclusion of the government’s
case, the defense counsel asked the
military judge to reconsider his rulings
on the admissibility of the statements
that the appellant and PFC Ransom had made
to PV2 New. As a proffer of what PV2 New
would say, the defense asked that PV2
New’s sworn statement, previously marked
as a defense exhibit but not admitted, be
made an appellate exhibit. The military
judge indicated that remarking the
statement was not necessary, and adhered
to his earlier rulings.
____________
2/
Private New disclosed that he was
facing trial by court-martial himself for
manslaughter, absence without leave, and
other military offenses. Canadian
authorities had already tried him for
dangerous driving that had caused the
death of his best friend, another soldier.
The military manslaughter charge
apparently involved the same death. In
exchange for delaying his own trial until
he testified against the appellant and PFC
Ransom, the grant of leniency involved
dropping the manslaughter charge and
limiting any sentence on the other
offenses to time served in pretrial
confinement.
Id. at 720-21 (emphasis added).
Finally, the appellate court below delineated the remainder
of the defense evidence at this court-martial.
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United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
C. The Appellant’s Testimony
The appellant testified on the merits,
and in general, his testimony was
consistent with his pretrial statement to
the police. He testified that he and PFC
Ransom were riding around and listening to
music, as they had done many times before.
Because PFC Ransom liked to drink (and had
drunk to the point of vomiting earlier
that evening), the appellant was driving
PFC Ransom’s car. Although the appellant
had consumed some beer himself, he
testified that he was not drunk. He
indicated that on previous occasions when
he and PFC Ransom had gone out, PFC Ransom
flirted with women he met.
The appellant testified that he was
driving in the general area of his home
when PFC Ransom told him to stop near two
young women and then left the car. The
appellant was collecting his compact disks
from the floor of the car and did not hear
or see what went on after he stopped the
car. When he looked up again, CM was
climbing into the car’s rear seat with PFC
Ransom, apparently willingly. The
appellant denied hearing any screaming or
crying, but on cross-examination, admitted
that he heard some screaming and yelling
when the back door was opened.
In details not included in his taped or
oral statements to the police, the
appellant testified that after PFC Ransom
entered the car, PFC Ransom put a gun to
the appellant’s face and ordered him to
drive away. He was scared because PFC
Ransom was drunk, so he complied. While
driving, the appellant looked into the
back seat and saw PFC Ransom on top of CM.
He began hitting PFC Ransom in the side
repeatedly with his fist in an effort to
get his attention.
The appellant testified that he stopped
the car at a dead end in a wooded area
pursuant to PFC Ransom’s instructions. He
exited the car with PFC Ransom and CM. He
initially denied noticing that CM was
nearly naked, but admitted during recross-
examination that she was naked from the
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United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
waist down when they went through the
barbed wire fence into the woods. He
again denied that CM performed oral sodomy
on him. He testified that when PFC Ransom
told CM to perform oral sodomy on him, the
appellant gave PFC Ransom “a look,” and
PFC Ransom responded by telling him to
move the car. The appellant then left the
area because he did not want to have
anything to do with what he expected was
going to happen; that PFC Ransom was going
to rape CM. When he got back to the car,
he drove off, leaving CM and PFC Ransom in
the woods.
The appellant testified that after being
stopped, he lied to the police officers
about being on his way to a club in
Seattle because things "looked bad" for
him.
Based on the appellant’s testimony that
he was in fear of PFC Ransom because PFC
Ransom was drunk and had pointed a weapon
at his head in the car, the military judge
instructed the court members on the
defense of duress with regard to both
offenses of which the appellant was
convicted.
Id. at 721-22 (emphasis added).
___ ___ ___
Appellant makes two claims of evidentiary error in his case.
First, he contends that the military judge erred when he
suppressed testimony from a fellow pretrial confinee, PV2 New,
that appellant had said that his co-accused, PFC Ransom, pointed
a gun at him and ordered him to drive at the time of the alleged
kidnapping of CM. See generally Mil.R.Evid. 304(h)(2), Manual
for Courts-Martial, United States (1998 ed.).1
1 All Manual provisions are identical to the ones in effect at the time of
appellant’s court-martial.
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United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
Second, he asserts that the military judge erred when he excluded
profferred testimony, again from PV2 New, that PFC Ransom also
said that he pointed a gun at appellant at that time, probably
because he was drunk. (R. 423) See generally Mil.R.Evid. 804
(b)(3). On the basis of these evidentiary errors, appellant
asserts the “it can hardly be argued that [he] received the fair
trial to which he was entitled.” Final Brief at 24.
Appellant’s evidentiary claims arose in the context of a
contested trial, where he was ultimately found guilty of
kidnapping and sodomizing CM. He testified in his own defense to
the kidnapping charge that his alleged co-actor, PFC Ransom,
coerced him into committing this crime by threatening him with a
gun. See RCM 916(h), Manual, supra. He also testified in
defense to the sodomy charge that he refused to commit that
offense, although PFC Ransom tried to force him to do this act.
The alleged victim, however, testified that appellant was a
willing participant in committing the charged offenses and that
she did not see PFC Ransom threaten appellant with a gun at any
time. PFC Ransom did not testify at appellant’s trial. An
arresting officer and the investigating detective testified that
appellant gave different exculpatory stories, neither one
mentioning that he was threatened with a gun by PFC Ransom. The
Government finally called PV2 New, a fellow pretrial confinee of
appellant and PFC Ransom, to testify to various admissions made
by them prior to trial. The defense sought the excluded
10
United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
testimony on PFC Ransom’s purported threat on cross-examination
of PV2 New.
I
Appellant asserts that PV2 New’s proffered testimony that
appellant said he was threatened by PFC Ransom at the time of the
kidnapping was admissible under Mil.R.Evid. 304(h)(2). 2 He
asserts that this exculpatory statement was part of his purported
confession, otherwise evidenced on direct examination by the
Government’s witness, PV2 New. The appellate court below held
that the trial judge erred in excluding this testimony, but it
was harmless. It conducted a detailed analysis of this purported
error in the context of appellant’s court-martial and said:
Had the appellant’s statement to PV2 New
been admitted, we are confident that the
credibility assessment would still have
heavily favored CM’s recitation of events.
Having no “grave doubts” about the impact
of the excluded evidence on the results
obtained at trial, we conclude that the
appellant suffered no material prejudice
from the erroneous exclusion of PV2 New’s
testimony. See UCMJ art. 59(a), 10 USC
§ 859(a); United States v. Pollard, 38 MJ
41, 52 (CMA 1993) (quoting Kotteakos v.
United States, 328 U.S. 750, 765 . . .
(1946)).
54 MJ at 725.
We agree with the appellate court below for several reasons.
First, appellant himself was allowed to testify that his
2 It states: “Completeness. If only part of an alleged
admission or confession is introduced against the accused, the
defense, by cross-examination or otherwise, may introduce the
remaining portions of the statement.”
11
United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
participation in CM’s kidnapping was coerced by PFC Ransom’s
threatening conduct with a gun and that he did not sodomize her.
See United States v. Scheffer, 523 U.S. 303 (1998) (holding no
violation of constitutional right of defense where accused
allowed to substantially present his defense through other
evidence); United States v. Lea, 249 F.3d 632, 642 n.8 (7th Cir.
2001). Second, the corroborative value of the excluded evidence
that appellant told a fellow pretrial confinee sometime after the
crime the same exculpatory story was not great. See generally
United States v. Mathis, 264 F.3d 321, 342-44 (3rd Cir. 2001) (in
context of record as a whole, excluded testimony was highly
unlikely to have caused a different result). Finally, any
corrective value which the excluded evidence might have had to
prevent the members from thinking appellant had confessed to PV2
New was largely minimized by appellant’s own testimony in this
case. 3
On this last point, we note the telling words of the
appellate court below:
More significantly, during direct
examination, the appellant denied having
the conversation in question with PV2 New.
He suggested that PV2 New’s knowledge of
the events to which he testified derived
from reading the transcript of the Article
32(b), UCMJ, investigation that the
appellant kept in his cell. By denying
3 We reject the dissent’s additional assertion that the
military judge’s ruling excluding evidence of the remainder of
appellant’s statement to PV2 New prejudicially undercut
appellant’s trial testimony by showing it to be a recent
fabrication. The admission of appellant’s pretrial statements to
his arresting officer and, later, to an investigating detective
amply demonstrated that fact.
12
United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
that the conversation to which PV2 New
testified actually occurred, the appellant
impaled himself on the horns of a dilemma:
on the one hand arguing that his
statements to PV2 New were admissible
under the rule of completeness and on the
other hand arguing that there were no
statements to complete. He is now in no
position to claim that he was gored.
54 MJ at 725 (emphasis added); see United States v. Levy-
Cordero, 156 F.3d at 247 (holding that the erroneous exclusion of
evidence of facts which accused recanted certainly was harmless
error). We agree.
II
The second issue in this case is whether the Court of
Criminal Appeals prejudicially erred when it affirmed the
military judge’s refusal to admit additional testimony from PV2
New which purportedly exculpated appellant. In particular,
appellant asserts that the military judge erroneously prohibited
the defense from asking PV2 New whether PFC Ransom, admitted that
he pointed a gun at appellant during the incident with CM. (R.
420, 423) The record reflects that PV2 New would have testified
that he asked PFC Ransom,“Why’d you pull a gun at your boy?” and
he (Ransom) responded, “I don’t know. I guess because I was
drunk or something.” (R. 426)
Defense counsel asserted at trial that PV2 New’s testimony
concerning PFC Ransom’s out-of-court statement was admissible
hearsay under Mil.R.Evid. 804(b)(3), the declaration-against-
interest exception to the hearsay rule. (R. 422, 534-36) See
generally Williamson v. United States, 512 U.S. 594 (1994). The
13
United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
military judge sustained the Government’s objection to this
proffered defense evidence as hearsay, suggesting he considered
it untrustworthy. (R. 427) He was also asked at a later date to
reconsider his ruling and make specific findings of fact
pertaining to this motion, which he indicated he would do, but
which he failed to do. (R. 536) The Court of Criminal Appeals
held that the proffered evidence did not qualify as a declaration
against penal interest. 54 MJ at 727.
Mil.R.Evid. 804(b)(3) states:
(b) Hearsay Exceptions. The following
are not excluded by the hearsay rule if
the declarant is unavailable as a witness.
* * *
(3) Statement against interest. A
statement which was at the time of its
making so far contrary to the declarant’s
pecuniary or proprietary interest, or so
far tended to subject the declarant to
civil or criminal liability, or to render
invalid a claim by the declarant against
another, that a reasonable person in the
position of the declarant would not have
make the statement unless the person
believed it to be true. A statement
tending to expose the declarant to
criminal liability and offered to
exculpate the accused is not admissible
unless corroborating circumstances clearly
indicate the trustworthiness of the
statement.
(Emphasis added.)
To gain admission of PV2 New’s exculpatory hearsay testimony
under this rule, it was appellant’s burden to show, inter alia,
that (1) PFC Ransom was unavailable to testify at trial, (2) PFC
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United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
Ransom’s statement was against his penal interest, and (3)
corroborating circumstances clearly indicated the trustworthiness
of the statement. See United States v. Paguio, 114 F.3d 928, 932
(9th Cir. 1997); United States v. Bumpass, 60 F.3d 1099, 1102 (4th
Cir. 1995).
The Court of Criminal Appeals held, inter alia, that
appellant failed to show PFC Ransom’s out-of-court statement was
actually against his penal interests. (Requirement 2) See
generally United States v. Tropeano, 252 F.3d 653, 659 (2d Cir.
2001) (recognizing a “sufficiently self-inculpatory” standard for
determining whether out-of-court statements qualify as
declarations against penal interest). In this regard, we note
that PFC Ransom’s statement was evasive on its face and fell far
short of an unambiguous admission to coercing appellant to commit
a crime by pointing a gun at him. See United States v. Seabolt,
958 F.2d at 233; cf. United States v. Thomas, 571 F.2d 285, 288
(5th Cir. 1978) (direct confession not required, only disserving
statements which would have probative value against declarant).
Moreover, to the extent he did so implicitly, he attempted
to diminish his culpability by blaming his conduct on
overindulgence in alcohol. See generally RCM 916(l)(2)
(evidence of voluntary intoxication may be introduced to
disprove specific intent offenses); see also United States v.
Jacobs, 44 MJ 301, 306 (1996); United States v. Fowlie, 24 F.3d
1059, 1068 (9th Cir. 1994) (statement not against interest where
it indicates that declarant thinks he would not be prosecuted
for admissions). We conclude that the appellate court below did
15
United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
not err in holding that PV2 Ransom’s statement did not
sufficiently expose him to criminal liability to the extent that
a reasonable person in the declarant’s position would not have
made the statement unless believing it to be true. Williamson
v. United States, 512 U.S. at 603-04.
Assuming error in this regard, we next turn to the question
of trustworthiness under Mil.R.Evid. 804(b)(3). (Requirement 3)
A preliminary decision must be made by the military judge whether
there exist “corroborating circumstances which clearly indicate
the trustworthiness” of the out-of-court statement. United
States v. Price, 134 F.3d 340, 347-48 (6th Cir. 1998)(emphasis
added). In United States v. Rasmussen, 790 F.2d 55, 56 (8th Cir.
1986), the Eighth Circuit delineated several circumstances which
bear on this question:
The trustworthiness of a statement
against the declarant’s penal interest is
determined by analysis of two elements:
“the probable veracity of the in-court
witness, and the reliability of the out-
of-court declarant.” Alvarez, supra, 584
F.2d at 701. Factors to be considered in
such an analysis include: (1) whether
there is any apparent motive for the out-
of-court declarant to misrepresent the
matter, (2) the general character of the
speaker, (3) whether other people heard
the out-of-court statement, (4) whether
the statement was made spontaneously, (5)
the timing of the declaration and the
relationship between the speaker and the
witness. Id. at 702 n.10.
The record before us in this case established several
circumstances relevant to this trustworthiness question. See
16
United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
United States v. Bumpass, 60 F.3d at 1102. First, PFC Ransom,
the out-of-court declarant, had a motive for misrepresentation in
this matter. PV2 New’s pretrial statement (Defense Exhibit A for
ID), which was before the military judge, asserts that “Benton
said he was going to testify against Ransom if Ransom wouldn’t
sign a paper saying Benton didn’t do anything.” (R. 417-18) See
United States v. Bumpass, 60 F.3d at 1103. Second, in view of
the numerous serious offenses charged against PFC Ransom
concerning CM, there was a low probability PFC Ransom would ever
be additionally charged or punished for aggravated assault on his
co-accused or perjury. See United States v. Silverstein, 732
F.2d 1338, 1346 (7th Cir. 1984). Third, nobody else heard the
statement purportedly made by PFC Ransom to PV2 New, a fellow
pretrial confinee, and it was made in circumstances suggesting
that it was mere jailhouse braggadocio. See United States v.
Sanchez-Satelo, 8 F.3d 202, 213 (5th Cir. 1993); United States v.
Seabolt, 958 F.2d at 233; cf. United States v. Hamilton, 19 F.3d
350, 357 (7th Cir. 1994). Finally, the purported statement was
not made spontaneously, but in response to a specific question
asked by a fellow pretrial confinee, who had previously discussed
this case in great detail with the subsequently exonerated co-
accused. Cf. United States v. Thomas, 571 F.2d 285, 290 (5th
Cir. 1978).
Appellant had a heavy burden to establish corroborating
circumstances clearly indicating the trustworthiness of PFC
Ransom’s out-of-court statement. See United States v. Bumpass,
17
United States v. Benton, 01-0289/AR
supra. The record before us, however, overwhelmingly supports
the conclusion of the judge that such circumstances did not exist
in this case. Cf. United States v. Paguio, 114 F.3d at 933
(where evidence cuts both ways on trustworthiness, statement
should be admitted for the jurors’ determination). Instead, the
circumstances in this case clearly show the exact type of
evidence that Mil.R.Evid. 804(b)(3) was designed to preclude.
See United States v. Silverstein, supra (the rule was designed to
circumvent fabrication by the defendant’s pals where there was
little chance that the pals would be prosecuted).
The decision of the United States Army Court of Criminal
Appeals is affirmed.
18
United States v. Benton, No 01-0289/AR
CRAWFORD, Chief Judge (concurring in the result):
Appellant seeks to overturn his conviction in this case by
claiming that the military judge erred in failing to admit two
statements by a pretrial confinee, PV2 New, that could have been
employed to exonerate appellant. First, appellant told PV2 New
that PFC Ransom pointed a gun at appellant; and second, Ransom
told New that Ransom pointed a gun at appellant. Both Ransom
and appellant were charged with numerous offenses, and appellant
was convicted of forcible sodomy and kidnapping of the victim.
Statements may be admitted under Mil. R. Evid. 804(b)(3),
Manual for Courts-Martial, United States (2000 ed.), to
exonerate the defendant or implicate the defendant. Rule
804(b)(3) demands corroboration only when the defense offers an
exonerating declaration against interest. There is no
requirement for corroboration when the prosecution seeks to
admit statements implicating the defendant. I would hold that
any error in this case is harmless and leave for another day the
constitutionality of Rule 804(b)(3).
The victim testified that appellant turned and looked at
her several times while she was being raped. The contention
that appellant was driving the car while Ransom, over an
extended period of time, was raping the victim, and at the same
time forcing appellant to drive the car, strains credulity.
New’s testimony that appellant said Ransom pointed a gun at him
United States v. Benton, No 01-0289/AR
was specifically denied by appellant during the trial.
Likewise, Ransom’s statement that he pointed a gun at appellant
is unclear and ambiguous. Additionally, as the majority
indicates, Ransom’s statement did not reasonably expose him to
any more criminal liability than he already faced. Because the
defense failed to establish the trustworthiness of Ransom’s
statement, the judge did not abuse his discretion in excluding
it.
United States v. Benton, No. 01-0289/AR
EFFRON, Judge (dissenting):
I agree with the majority opinion that the military judge
erred in excluding the exculpatory portions of Private (PV2)
New’s testimony about appellant’s admissions. I respectfully
dissent, however, from the majority opinion’s conclusion that
the error was harmless.
I. THE PRETRIAL STATEMENT AND EVIDENCE OF DURESS
Appellant was charged with participating with Private First
Class (PFC) Taori Ransom in a variety of crimes against Ms. CM,
including rape, kidnapping, and forcible sodomy. Appellant and
PFC Ransom were placed in pretrial confinement, where they met
PV2 New. Prior to appellant’s trial, PV2 New informed law
enforcement personnel that he and appellant had discussed the
charges against appellant. PV2 New provided a sworn, written
statement relating his conversation with appellant, which
includes the following:
Benton told me that he and Ransom were driving
around when they saw two girls in Woodbrook and they
were going to “mack on them.” I understood “mack” to
mean sex or something.... Ransom got out of the car,
and Benton said he saw Ransom hit one of the females
on the head with a gun. Ransom then pushed the girl
in the car. Benton said Ransom put the gun to his
(Benton's) head and said “drive, drive, go,” or words
to that effect.
United States v. Benton, No. 01-0289/AR
Benton said he pulled over to the side of the
road; Ransom did not tell him to stop. Benton said he
pulled into a dead end and turned the car around.
According to Benton all three people…got out of the
car. Ransom told the girl to “hook my boy up,” or
words to that effect. Benton told me that the female
victim began to undo his (Benton’s) pants and was
going to perform oral sex on him, then he changed his
mind and pulled his pants up.
According to New, Benton also told him he saw Ransom have oral
sex, sexual intercourse, and anal sex with the victim.
II. THE INCOMPLETE STATEMENT AND MISLEADING PRESENTATION
OF THE PRETRIAL STATEMENT AT TRIAL
At trial, PV2 New testified as a witness for the
prosecution. The prosecution used New’s testimony to introduce
appellant’s out-of-court statements as evidence of appellant’s
participation in the charged offenses. During the direct
examination, the prosecution elicited the substance of New’s
entire pretrial statement regarding his discussion with
appellant, with one major exception. Trial counsel carefully
avoided any questions about New’s pretrial assertion that,
according to his conversation with appellant, Ransom had placed
a gun to appellant’s head when Ransom returned to the car with
Ms. CM. Despite omitting that critical element of his pretrial
statement, PV2 New told the court-martial that appellant had
told him “everything” about the incident.
2
United States v. Benton, No. 01-0289/AR
On cross-examination, defense counsel sought to elicit that
portion of New's pretrial statement describing Ransom placing a
gun to appellant’s head. Trial counsel objected, asserting that
the question called for inadmissible hearsay. Defense counsel
countered that the statement was admissible under the rule of
completeness. The military judge sustained the objection and
precluded the testimony.
Appellant subsequently testified. The critical point of
his testimony was that he was coerced into committing the
offenses as a result of Ransom placing a gun to his head. He
also denied that he had made any statement to PV2 New. In light
of appellant's testimony that he was coerced by Ransom placing a
gun at his head, the military judge instructed the members on
the defense of duress. See RCM 916(h), Manual for Courts-
Martial, United States (1998 ed.).
The members returned a mixed verdict, convicting appellant
of several offenses and acquitting him of several offenses. On
direct review, the Court of Criminal Appeals held that the
military judge erred by precluding New from testifying as to
that portion of his statement recounting appellant's description
of Ransom placing a gun to his head. The court, however,
concluded that the error was harmless, a view that has been
adopted in the majority opinion.
3
United States v. Benton, No. 01-0289/AR
III. THE PREJUDICIAL IMPACT OF THE MILITARY JUDGE'S
ERRONEOUS RULING
The majority opinion offers three grounds in support of the
proposition that the error was harmless. First, the majority
opinion contends that the error was harmless because appellant
was allowed to present his defense -- duress -- through other
evidence. The purpose of the rule of completeness, however,
goes beyond allowing an accused to introduce exculpatory
statements. The purpose is to ensure that the factfinders are
not misled as to the nature and quality of the accused's
statement. Beech Aircraft Corp. v. Rainey, 488 U.S. 153, 171-72
n.14 (1988)
In the present case, the members were misled. The problem
with PV2 New's in-court testimony is that it created the
erroneous impression that appellant had told New "everything"
about the incident -- and that "everything" amounted to an
unqualified, inculpatory statement. In that form, New's
testimony undercut appellant's in-court testimony by making
appellant’s in-court statement regarding duress appear to be a
recent fabrication.
The essence of the defense contention on appeal is not that
New's complete testimony was needed to establish the defense of
duress. The issue raised by the defense is that the incomplete
nature of New's testimony contradicted appellant's in-court
4
United States v. Benton, No. 01-0289/AR
testimony. As the Supreme Court has emphasized, the rule of
completeness is designed to ensure "that the court not be misled
because portions of a statement are taken out of context" and to
avoid "the danger that an out-of-context statement may create
such prejudice that it is impossible to repair by a subsequent
presentation of additional material." Id.
The majority opinion also contends that the error was
harmless because there was not much corroborative value in the
fact that appellant's in-court testimony was the same as the
statement he made to another person in confinement shortly after
the crime. The critical problem, as noted above, was not the
absence of corroborative testimony. The problem was that
appellant's in-court testimony was undercut by the glaring
difference between his testimony at trial -- raising the defense
of duress -- and New's selective testimony about appellant's
pretrial statement -- leaving the impression that there was no
such coercion.
The majority opinion further contends that the error was
harmless because when appellant denied making any statement to
New, his position "largely minimized" any value of the excluded
testimony. __ MJ at (12). The majority opinion suggests that
appellant created a "dilemma" by arguing both that the evidence
was needed to complete his statement to New and that he made no
such statement. The problem in this case was not created by the
5
United States v. Benton, No. 01-0289/AR
defense, but by the prosecution’s misleading and incomplete
account of the pretrial statement.
This is not a case of the defense affirmatively seeking to
introduce an exculpatory pretrial statement into the trial as
part of the defense case-in-chief. New's testimony was
interjected into the trial by the prosecution, not the defense.
The decision to present New's recollection in a selective rather
than a comprehensive manner was made by the prosecution, not the
defense. The ruling of the military judge was prejudicial to
appellant's right to have the members assess the credibility of
appellant's duress. The ruling allowed the prosecution to
present an incomplete, misleading account of appellant’s
pretrial statement, an account which left the impression that
appellant had changed his story prior to trial.
It is also noteworthy that the prosecution's presentation
was far from compelling, as evidenced by the fact that the panel
members did not accept the prosecution's primary theory of the
case. The prosecution's theory was that appellant and Ransom
planned and executed the attack on CM. The members, however,
acquitted appellant of all the specifications involving
vicarious liability for the acts of PFC Ransom, as well as the
specification involving conspiracy. He was convicted only of
the offenses to which the duress defense was most directly
applicable -- kidnapping and forcible sodomy.
6
United States v. Benton, No. 01-0289/AR
The ruling of the military judge meant that the evidence
which the members took into the deliberation room consisted of
conflicting testimony between the victim and appellant, and what
appeared to be a complete and unqualified pretrial confession by
appellant to his cellmate. The members were left with the
impression that appellant had never told anyone prior to trial
that PFC Ransom had pointed the gun at him. The members easily
could have concluded that appellant concocted this story in
preparation for trial in order to create a defense. Under these
circumstances, the error was prejudicial.
7