United States v. Shea ( 2015 )


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  •           UNITED STATES AIR FORCE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    UNITED STATES
    v.
    Senior Airman PATRICK A. SHEA
    United States Air Force
    ACM S32225
    21 May 2015
    Sentence adjudged 26 February 2014 by SPCM convened at Scott
    Air Force Base, Illinois. Military Judge: Joshua E. Kastenberg (sitting
    alone).
    Approved Sentence: Bad-conduct discharge, confinement for 4 months,
    reduction to E-1, and a reprimand.
    Appellate Counsel for the Appellant:                Colonel Randall G. Snow and
    Major Isaac C. Kennen.
    Appellate Counsel for the United States: Major Meredith L. Steer and
    Gerald R. Bruce, Esquire.
    Before
    ALLRED, HECKER, and TELLER
    Appellate Military Judges
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    This opinion is issued as an unpublished opinion and, as such, does not serve as precedent
    under AFCCA Rule of Practice and Procedure 18.4.
    TELLER, Judge:
    The appellant was convicted, in accordance with his pleas, by a military judge
    sitting alone of one specification of disobeying a superior commissioned officer and two
    specifications of assault consummated by a battery in violation of Articles 90 and 128,
    UCMJ, 
    10 U.S.C. §§ 890
    , 928. He was also convicted, contrary to his pleas, of one
    specification of assault consummated by a battery and one specification of
    communicating a threat in violation of Articles 128 and 134, UCMJ, 
    10 U.S.C. §§ 928
    ,
    934.
    The court sentenced him to a bad-conduct discharge, 4 months of confinement,
    forfeiture of $750.00 pay per month for 4 months, reduction to E-1, and a reprimand.
    The convening authority approved the bad-conduct discharge, confinement, reduction,
    and reprimand. He did not approve the adjudged forfeitures, and he waived the
    mandatory forfeitures under Article 58b, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 858b, for the benefit of the
    appellant’s dependent spouse and children.
    The appellant argues that the government failed to disclose certain statements in
    the victim’s medical records that were favorable to the defense.1 We find that the failure
    to produce the records was prejudicial error as regards Specification 3 of Charge I. We
    set aside the conviction on that specification and reassess the sentence. We affirm the
    remainder of the findings.
    Background
    The charges in this case arose out of an abusive relationship between the appellant
    and his wife. The appellant was arrested in November 2013 after striking his wife and
    threatening her with a knife. For this incident, the appellant was found guilty of assault
    consummated by a battery and communicating a threat. In addition to the November
    2013 incident, the appellant was also convicted of assaulting his wife twice during the
    fall of 2011. He was acquitted of an additional assault alleged to have occurred during
    that period.
    Prior to trial, defense counsel sought production of the victim’s mental health
    records. The government asserted the victim’s privilege under Mil. R. Evid. 513 and
    provided the military judge a sealed package of records for in camera review. Although
    the military judge’s ruling described the records as the victim’s mental health records, the
    package was actually comprised of a mixture of medical and mental health records.
    Included in the medical records were treatment notes related to the victim’s obstetrics
    examinations between 31 May 2012 and 25 October 2012 while she was pregnant with
    the couple’s second child and a 29 October 2013 visit for routine care. Nine of these
    records included an annotation reflecting the absence of any history of abuse. Some
    explicitly indicated that the victim denied any such history while others simply stated
    there was no such history. These annotations were not provided to the defense by the
    military judge.
    1
    This case was originally submitted to the court for review under Article 66(c), UCMJ, 
    10 U.S.C. § 866
    , on its
    merits. The court specified the following issue for briefing: “Whether the annotation in the alleged victim’s medical
    records ‛Pt states no hx of abuse/neglect’” constituted a matter favorable to the defense that should have been
    disclosed either by the government or by the military judge.” The appellant subsequently filed a supplemental
    assignment of errors addressing similar annotations in other medical records contained in Appellate Exhibit XII.
    2                                             ACM S32225
    The annotations in the medical records are inconsistent with other evidence in the
    case, specifically the testimony of the appellant’s wife. She testified at trial to three
    separate assaults that occurred prior to her 31 May 2012 appointment. In addition, the
    appellant received nonjudicial punishment on 23 September 2013 for three other assaults
    on his wife, one in June 2013, one sometime between 1 April and 31 May 2013, and a
    third sometime between 1 January 2013 and 24 June 2013. All three of these assaults, in
    addition to the alleged assaults in the fall of 2011, happened prior to her routine
    appointment on 29 October 2013.
    Discovery of Medical Record Annotations
    The appellant asserts that the annotations in the medical records constituted
    evidence favorable to the defense that should have been disclosed.
    We review a military judge’s decision on a request for discovery for abuse of
    discretion, which occurs when his findings of fact are clearly erroneous, when he is
    incorrect about the applicable law, or when he improperly applies that law. United States
    v. Roberts, 
    59 M.J. 323
    , 326 (C.A.A.F. 2004). The military judge issued a written ruling
    on the defense motion for production of the mental health records. He made limited
    findings of fact, including a determination that “[t]here were no statements of an
    exculpatory nature maintained in the mental health [or] medical records.” He then
    applied Mil. R. Evid. 513 (which covers psychotherapist records) to the records as a
    whole. Noting there were eight codified exceptions to Mil. R. Evid. 513, he found the
    only applicable exception was for records that were constitutionally required to be
    disclosed. He found that none of the records met this exception and did not disclose any
    of the records to the defense.
    Whether information in the records was “material to the preparation of the
    defense” under R.C.M. 701(a)(2)(B) is a question of law that we review de novo. 
    Id.
     “A
    military accused . . . has the right to obtain favorable evidence under Article 46, UCMJ . .
    . as implemented by R.C.M. 701-703 . . . [which] provide greater statutory discovery
    rights to an accused than does his constitutional right to due process.”
    United States v. Coleman, 
    72 M.J. 184
    , 186–87 (C.A.A.F. 2013). Roberts established a
    two-step analysis for claims of nondisclosure of evidence potentially favorable to the
    defense. Roberts, 
    59 M.J. at 325
    . We first determine whether the information or
    evidence at issue was subject to disclosure or discovery and, if so, we then test the effect
    of the nondisclosure on the appellant’s trial. 
    Id.
    Our superior court has created two categories of disclosure error with different
    standards for assessing the effect of nondisclosure of information favorable to the
    defense. Coleman, 72 M.J. at 187. If the defense made a specific request for the
    undisclosed information and it is favorable to the defense, the appellant will be entitled to
    relief unless the government can show that nondisclosure was harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt. Id.; Roberts, 
    59 M.J. at 327
    . If the defense either made only a general
    3                                  ACM S32225
    request for discovery or made no discovery request at all, we apply the harmless error
    standard, and the appellant will be entitled to relief only by showing that “there is a
    ‘reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed, the result of the proceeding
    would have been different.’” Coleman, 72 M.J. at 186 (citing Smith v. Cain, 
    132 S. Ct. 627
    , 628 (2012); see also Roberts, 
    59 M.J. at 327
    . These determinations must be made in
    light of the entire record. United States v. Morris, 
    52 M.J. 193
    , 197 (C.A.A.F. 1999).
    We find that the annotations in the records were subject to discovery. Such
    medical records are covered by the disclosure requirements of R.C.M. 701(a)(2)(B) when
    they are material to the defense. See United States v. Stewart, 
    62 M.J. 668
    , 671
    (A.F. Ct. Crim. App. 2006). Referring to the military judge’s pretrial ruling, the
    government argues that “the alleged statements appear to be [the victim’s] answers to the
    standard questionnaire asked at military medical appointments. The statements do not
    ‘contradict her testimony, contain evidence of malfeasance towards Appellant, or reveal a
    reason to fabricate.’” We disagree. Although that context may offer the government
    potential avenues to argue the statements should be accorded little weight, there is no
    question that the annotations are evidence of prior inconsistent statements by the
    prosecution’s primary witness. The annotations were material to the defense for the
    purposes of R.C.M. 701(a)(2)(B).
    We acknowledge that the records in question were submitted under seal, and were
    not subject to trial counsel review.2 However, in light of the government’s intended use
    at trial of photographs of the victim’s injuries, medical records that might reference those
    injuries are no less an obvious source of potential exculpatory information than
    investigative files. Those records should have been reviewed by the trial counsel in the
    exercise of due diligence. See, e.g., United States v. Jackson, 
    59 M.J. 330
    , 334
    (C.A.A.F. 2004).
    While we recognize that the military judge’s knowledge of the case was more
    limited than that of trial counsel, we nonetheless find that his decision not to disclose the
    medical record annotations was also error. By applying the heightened “constitutionally
    required” disclosure standard for mental health records to the medical records, he was
    influenced by a mistaken view of the law. His finding of fact that there were no
    contradictory statements by the victim in the records was also clearly erroneous.
    Because the records should have been disclosed either as a result of trial counsel’s
    independent examination of the medical records or as a result of the in camera review, we
    proceed to the second phase of the analysis, testing for harm. The record in this case is
    silent on whether medical records, as opposed to mental health records, were specifically
    2
    This case illustrates the importance of trial counsel involvement with, and advice to, personnel screening medical
    and mental health records so that records subject to privilege under Mil. R. Evid. 513 are properly segregated. Had
    the medical records not been included with mental health records provided under seal, trial counsel may have
    identified the inconsistent annotations prior to trial.
    4                                            ACM S32225
    requested by the defense during the discovery process. We may still resolve the issue,
    however, if we find that the outcome of our prejudice analysis would be the same under
    both standards.
    1. Effect on the Findings Phase of Trial
    If the defense did not specifically request the medical records of the victim’s wife,
    the appellant is only entitled to relief if there was a “reasonable probability” that, had the
    evidence been disclosed, the result of the findings phase would have been different.
    Coleman, 72 M.J. at 186–87. The appellant pled guilty unconditionally to two
    specifications of assault consummated by a battery for striking his wife during the fall of
    2011 and in November 2013. The appellant concedes that the failure to disclose the
    records does not affect the findings as to those specifications.
    The appellant pled not guilty to assaulting his wife during the fall of 2011 by
    striking her on the hip with a baby bottle. We find there was a reasonable probability
    that, had the evidence been disclosed, the result as to this specification would have been
    different. The evidence on that specification was comprised solely of the victim’s
    testimony and was remarkably brief, as noted by trial defense counsel’s argument:
    There is very little evidence before this Court with
    respect to that specification and the government has not met
    their burden with respect to that specification. There is no
    evidence before this Court about whether she got hit with the
    bottle by accident, whether it was intentional, nothing along
    those lines. We don’t know when it happened. There was
    literally one or two sentences, if even that, said in passing
    about that by [the victim] on direct examination and no
    further evidence was offered on that specification.
    Moreover, the military judge found the appellant not guilty of another alleged assault
    during that same timeframe when the victim’s similarly brief testimony was challenged
    through cross-examination of a third witness present during that altercation. This finding
    indicates that the military judge viewed the victim’s testimony regarding the fall 2011
    allegations with some skepticism.
    It is possible that, as the government suggests, the military judge would have
    discounted the denials as insubstantial replies to routine medical questions. We find it
    more likely that the military judge would have found the denials of the precise conduct
    alleged in the specification substantially undermined the victim’s testimony at trial. It
    could reasonably have caused him to doubt whether any harmful or offensive contact was
    intentional, or caused him to question whether the contact occurred at all. Either
    conclusion by the military judge would have resulted in a different outcome. We
    5                                   ACM S32225
    therefore find a “reasonable probability” that the findings for this specification would
    have been different if this information had been disclosed.
    We next turn to the question of whether the government has demonstrated that the
    nondisclosure was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, the heightened standard of
    prejudice for specifically requested records. “Failing to disclose requested material
    favorable to the defense is not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt if the undisclosed
    evidence might have affected the outcome of the trial.” Coleman, 72 M.J. at 187.
    Having found the lack of disclosure raised a reasonable probability of a different result,
    we necessarily find that the result might have been different. We are not satisfied beyond
    a reasonable doubt that the nondisclosure was harmless as to this specification.
    Because we find that failure to disclose the annotations affected the outcome as to
    Specification 3 under both standards, we accordingly set aside that conviction.
    2. Effect on the Presentencing Phase of Trial
    The appellant also argues that the failure to disclose the annotations was not
    harmless in sentencing for the assaults he pled guilty to, and asks that we reassess his
    sentence accordingly. Specifically, the appellant argues that disclosure would have
    allowed him to provide testimony “to show that [the victim] did not initially believe [the
    a]ppellant’s conduct constituted ‘abuse’ or ‘neglect’ and did not make her feel unsafe or
    threatened.”
    Although the appellant asks only for a reassessment of sentence, we have an
    Article 66(c), UCMJ, duty to approve only so much of the sentence as we find “correct in
    law” and which “should be approved.” Accordingly, we must also examine whether the
    failure to disclose the annotation so affected the sentence as to require a rehearing.
    We first consider whether the government has established, beyond a reasonable
    doubt, that the failure to disclose the annotations in the medical records did not affect the
    sentence. See Coleman, 72 M.J. at 187.
    Because the victim’s statements in her medical records predated the
    November 2013 assault, these statements are only directly relevant to the two assaults
    which occurred in the fall of 2011. Neither incident was specifically mentioned in the
    victim’s sentencing testimony. Instead, the facts and circumstances related to one of the
    specifications were admitted through the appellant’s statements during the providence
    inquiry. For the baby bottle assault, the government was apparently also content to rely
    on the victim’s brief mention of the incident during her findings testimony to provide the
    facts and circumstances of that offense.
    The assertions attributed to the victim in the medical records would not have had a
    material impact on the victim’s general credibility during sentencing. One potential use
    6                                  ACM S32225
    of the evidence would have been to argue that the victim was exaggerating her sentencing
    testimony in light of her failure to mention the abuse during her medical visits. The
    victim’s testimony, however, was measured and composed, focusing on the effect of the
    November 2013 assault. Accordingly, we discern no reasonable grounds to find that she
    exaggerated the effect of the assaults that took place in 2011. She also testified in
    findings that she slapped the appellant, giving rise to an alternative explanation for her
    denials of abuse—that she wanted to avoid scrutiny of her own conduct. Finally, we note
    that during cross-examination of the victim in the presentencing phase, trial defense
    counsel elicited testimony that the victim had an “active social network,” implying even
    without the medical records that she could have sought help if the assaults made her feel
    unsafe or threatened.
    Given this, we find beyond a reasonable doubt that the failure to disclose the
    annotations—even considering that there was a reasonable probability that the appellant
    would have been acquitted on Specification 3 of Charge I—did not affect the overall
    sentence.3 Accordingly, we also find that there was no reasonable probability that the
    sentence would have been different. Because the result would not have been affected
    under either standard, we find that rehearing on the basis of the nondisclosure itself is not
    appropriate.
    Sentence Reassessment
    Despite our finding that a rehearing is not required specifically on the basis of the
    nondisclosure of evidence, before a sentence reassessment would be appropriate, further
    analysis must be done to determine whether or not the case must still be sent back for
    rehearing in light of our court setting aside Specification 3 of Charge I. In determining
    whether to reassess a sentence or order a rehearing, we consider the totality of the
    circumstances with the following as illustrative factors: (1) dramatic changes in the
    penalty landscape and exposure, (2) the forum, (3) whether the remaining offenses
    capture the gravamen of the criminal conduct, (4) whether significant or aggravating
    circumstances remain admissible and relevant, and (5) whether the remaining offenses
    are the type with which we as appellate judges have the experience and familiarity to
    reliably determine what sentence would have been imposed at trial. United States v.
    Winckelmann, 
    73 M.J. 11
    , 15–16 (C.A.A.F. 2013). This court has “broad discretion”
    when reassessing sentences. 
    Id. at 12
    .
    The preponderance of the factors weigh in favor of reassessment. There was no
    change to the penalty landscape. The maximum punishment remains capped at the
    jurisdictional maximum for a special court-martial and the type of offenses at issue
    remained unchanged. The trial was before a military judge alone, improving our ability
    to gauge how the change might have affected his sentencing deliberations. 
    Id. at 16
    .
    3
    Because of the special court-martial forum, there would have been no change in the maximum punishment had the
    military judge acquitted the appellant of Charge I, Specification 3.
    7                                         ACM S32225
    Most importantly, the record indicates that the baby bottle specification was not a
    significant factor in sentencing. It was not mentioned during the sentencing phase either
    in testimony or in argument. The government instead emphasized the victim’s injuries
    from assaults for which the appellant had been given nonjudicial punishment in 2013.
    Finally, the remaining offenses are ones which are routinely before courts-martial.
    In light of the complete absence of any reference to the specification in sentencing,
    and its relative lack of severity compared to the other offenses, we find that we can
    reliably reassess the appellant’s sentence and reassess it to be the same as the adjudged
    sentence.
    Conclusion
    The finding of guilty of Specification 3 of Charge I, is set aside. All other findings
    are affirmed. The findings, as modified, and the sentence, as reassessed, are correct in
    law and fact and no error materially prejudicial to the substantial rights of the appellant
    occurred. Articles 59(a) and 66(c), UCMJ, 
    10 U.S.C. §§ 859
    (a), 866(c). They are
    accordingly,
    AFFIRMED.
    FOR THE COURT
    LEAH M. CALAHAN
    Deputy Clerk of the Court
    8                                  ACM S32225
    

Document Info

Docket Number: ACM S32225

Filed Date: 5/21/2015

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021