United States v. Rosario , 2017 CAAF LEXIS 125 ( 2017 )


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  •          This opinion is subject to revision before publication
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE    ARMED FORCES
    _______________
    UNITED STATES
    Appellee
    v.
    Mark J. ROSARIO, Sergeant
    U.S. Marine Corps, Appellant
    No. 16-0424
    Crim. App. No. 201500251
    Argued December 6, 2016—Decided February 22, 2017
    Military Judge: Michael D. Libretto
    For Appellant: Lieutenant Doug Ottenwess, JAGC, USN
    (argued).
    For Appellee: Lieutenant Robert J. Miller, JAGC, USN (ar-
    gued); Captain Matthew M. Harris, USMC, and Brian K.
    Keller, Esq. (on brief); Colonel Valerie C. Danyluk, USMC,
    Major Suzanne Dempsey, USMC, and Lieutenant James M.
    Belforti, JAGC, USN.
    Judge SPARKS delivered the opinion of the Court, in
    which Chief Judge ERDMANN, and Judges STUCKY,
    RYAN, and OHLSON, joined.
    _______________
    Judge SPARKS delivered the opinion of the Court.
    Contrary to his pleas, Appellant was convicted by a spe-
    cial court-martial with members of one specification of vio-
    lating a general order (Marine Corps Order 1000.9A) by sex-
    ually harassing Lance Corporal (LCpl) B.A. on divers
    occasions, in violation of Article 92, Uniform Code of Mili-
    tary Justice (UCMJ), 10 U.S.C. § 892 (2012). 1 The members
    1   Marine Corps Order 1000.9A defines sexual harassment as:
    (1) [A] form of discrimination that involves unwel-
    come sexual advances, requests for sexual favors,
    and other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual na-
    ture when:
    (a) Submission to such conduct is made either
    explicitly or implicitly a term or condition of a
    person’s job, pay, or career, or
    United States v. Rosario, No. 16-0424/MC
    Opinion of the Court
    acquitted Appellant of two specifications of abusive sexual
    contact in violation of Article 120, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 920
    (2012), and one specification of assault consummated by a
    battery in violation of Article 128, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 928
    (2012). Appellant was sentenced to a bad-conduct discharge
    and reduction to grade E-1. The sentence was approved and
    the United States Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal
    Appeals affirmed the findings and sentence. Appellant filed
    a petition with this Court and we granted review on the fol-
    lowing issue:
    Whether the lower court erred in conducting its Ar-
    ticle 66(c), UCMJ, review by finding as fact allega-
    tions that supported charges of which Appellant
    was acquitted to affirm the findings and sentence.
    We conclude that, in accordance with Article 66(c), UCMJ,
    the lower court properly considered evidence relevant to the
    specification of which Appellant was convicted in conducting
    its factual sufficiency review. We therefore affirm the deci-
    sion of the Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals.
    Background
    Appellant served as platoon sergeant for LCpl B.A. be-
    ginning in September 2013. Over the following months, LCpl
    B.A. alleged that Appellant made numerous inappropriate
    workplace comments to her including, “te quiero” (Spanish
    for “I want you”), “you’re too pretty to be a Marine,” and “I
    really missed your face . . . I missed you, having you
    around.” LCpl B.A. responded by expressing her disapproval
    of these comments and attempting to turn conversation to
    more professional matters. When LCpl B.A. returned from
    taking Thanksgiving leave to visit her husband, Appellant
    asked her how many times she and her husband had sex,
    (b) Submission to or rejection of such conduct by
    a person is used as a basis for career or em-
    ployment decisions affecting that person, or
    (c) Such conduct has the purpose or effect of un-
    reasonably interfering with an individual’s
    work performance or creates an intimidating,
    hostile, offensive working environment . . . .
    Dep’t of the Navy, Commandant of the Marine Corps, Ma-
    rine Corps Order 1000.9A, Sexual Harassment para. 4.c.(1)
    (May 30, 2006).
    2
    United States v. Rosario, No. 16-0424/MC
    Opinion of the Court
    and he later joked that he was going to keep the spare key
    her houseguest had left with him “for when [he was going to]
    come over.”
    LCpl B.A. also testified at trial regarding nonverbal-
    advances, including Appellant placing his hand over hers
    and kissing her cheek while they worked on a refrigeration
    unit and on another occasion placing his hand on her neck
    and sticking his tongue in her ear. When LCpl B.A. con-
    fronted Appellant about his behavior after the second physi-
    cal incident, in January, 2014, he told her that he had feel-
    ings for her and that “people do this all of the time in the
    Marine Corps.” At trial, the Government characterized Ap-
    pellant’s behavior towards LCpl B.A. as progressing from
    inappropriate comments to physical contact. The military
    judge defined sexual harassment to the members as “a form
    of discrimination that involves unwelcome sexual advances,
    requests for sexual favors, and other verbal or physical con-
    duct of a sexual nature.”
    Appellant was convicted of one specification of sexual
    harassment, occurring on divers occasions. The members ac-
    quitted Appellant of two incidents of abusive sexual contact,
    based on Appellant’s touching LCpl B.A.’s cheek with his
    mouth and touching her ear with his tongue; and acquitted
    him of one specification of assault consummated by battery
    based on Appellant’s touching LCpl B.A.’s hand with his
    own.
    Appellant raised several assignments of error before the
    Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals including un-
    constitutional vagueness of the Marine Corps’s sexual har-
    assment policy and a challenge to the legal and factual suffi-
    ciency of his convictions. United States v. Rosario, No.
    NMCCA 201500251, 2016 CCA LEXIS 32, at *1, 
    2015 WL 9942096
    , at *1 (N-M. Ct. Crim. App. Feb. 27, 2015). Appel-
    lant argued that, in reviewing the legal and factual suffi-
    ciency, the lower court could not consider evidence of physi-
    cal contact because the court members had acquitted him of
    the physical contact offenses. 2016 CCA LEXIS 32, at *4-5,
    
    2015 WL 9942096
    , at *2-3. In the section of its opinion con-
    taining the background facts of the case, the lower court in-
    cluded the nonverbal advances that formed the basis for the
    abusive sexual contact and assault consummated by battery
    charges. 2016 CCA LEXIS 32, at *3, 
    2015 WL 9942096
    , at
    *1. Then, in rejecting Appellant’s vagueness challenge, the
    lower court stated that “when the same evidence is offered
    3
    United States v. Rosario, No. 16-0424/MC
    Opinion of the Court
    in support of two separately charged offenses, as the physi-
    cal encounters were here,” the court was entitled to consider
    the facts that formed both the basis for the abusive sexual
    contact and assault consummated by battery charges and
    the sexual harassment charge. 2016 CCA LEXIS 32, at *6,
    
    2015 WL 9942096
    , at *2. In making its legal and factual suf-
    ficiency determination, the lower court stated:
    LCpl B.A.’s testimony that the appellant made un-
    wanted sexual advances—touching her hand and
    kissing her cheek during the October 2013 incident,
    touching her neck and sticking his tongue in her
    ear during the January 2014 incident, and making
    numerous comments about his attraction to and
    desire for her throughout the course of several
    months—also clearly conveyed that she felt har-
    assed.
    2016 CCA LEXIS 32, at *8-9, 
    2015 WL 9942096
    , at *3.
    Discussion
    The question presented is whether the lower court erred
    by considering the factual allegations supporting the offens-
    es of which Appellant was acquitted to affirm the finding of
    guilt on the Article 92, UCMJ, offense. Article 66, UCMJ,
    sets out the role and responsibilities of the Courts of Crimi-
    nal Appeals. It states in relevant part that:
    (c) In a case referred to it, the Court of Criminal
    Appeals may act only with respect to the findings
    and sentence as approved by the convening author-
    ity. It may affirm only such findings of guilty and
    the sentence or such part or amount of the sen-
    tence, as it finds correct in law and fact and deter-
    mines, on the basis of the entire record, should be
    approved. In considering the record, it may weigh
    the evidence, judge the credibility of witnesses, and
    determine controverted questions of fact, recogniz-
    ing that the trial court saw and heard the witness-
    es.
    Article 66, UCMJ. In essence, in contrast to most civilian
    appellate courts, the Courts of Criminal Appeals have a
    statutory mandate to “conduct a de novo review of both the
    legal and factual sufficiency of a conviction.” United States v.
    Walters, 
    58 M.J. 391
    , 395 (C.A.A.F. 2003). “The test for legal
    sufficiency is whether, after viewing the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of
    fact could have found the essential elements of the crime be-
    4
    United States v. Rosario, No. 16-0424/MC
    Opinion of the Court
    yond a reasonable doubt.” United States v. Gutierrez, 
    73 M.J. 172
    , 175 (C.A.A.F. 2014) (quoting United States v. Bennitt,
    
    72 M.J. 266
    , 268 (C.A.A.F. 2013)). The appellate question for
    this legal sufficiency test is whether “a reasonable factfinder
    reading the evidence one way could have found all the ele-
    ments of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id. (quot- ing
    United States v. Oliver, 
    70 M.J. 64
    , 68 (C.A.A.F. 2011)).
    The test for a factual sufficiency review by the lower courts
    is “whether, after weighing the evidence in the record of trial
    and making allowances for not having personally observed
    the witnesses, the members of the service court are them-
    selves convinced of appellant's guilt beyond a reasonable
    doubt.” 
    Oliver, 70 M.J. at 68
    .
    This Court has held that a military court of criminal ap-
    peals, in the course of its review process, cannot find as fact
    any allegations of which the accused was found not guilty at
    trial. “The CCA . . . cannot find as fact any allegation in a
    specification for which the fact-finder below has found the
    accused not guilty.” United States v. 
    Bennitt, 74 M.J. at 129
    (quoting 
    Walters, 58 M.J. at 395
    ); see also United States v.
    Smith, 
    39 M.J. 448
    , 451-52 (C.M.A. 1994) (overruled on oth-
    er grounds).
    However, in United States v. Gutierrez, this Court de-
    termined that the members are permitted to independently
    consider evidence supporting a charge of which an appellant
    is acquitted while deliberating on other 
    charges. 73 M.J. at 176
    . In Gutierrez, this Court concluded that the members
    could consider evidence contributing to a rape charge of
    which the accused was acquitted in convicting him of stalk-
    ing, given that the events surrounding the alleged rape were
    also part of a course of conduct that contributed to the stalk-
    ing charge. 
    Id. Similarly, a
    reviewing court may consider
    facts underlying an acquitted charge in considering whether
    the facts support a separate charge.
    Based on the above case law, we hold as follows:
    When the same evidence is offered at trial to support two
    different offenses, a Court of Criminal Appeals is not neces-
    sarily precluded from considering the evidence that was in-
    troduced in support of the charge for which the appellant
    was acquitted when conducting its Article 66(c), UCMJ, le-
    gal and factual sufficiency review of the charge for which the
    appellant was convicted. Defendants are generally acquitted
    of offenses, not of specific facts, and thus to the extent facts
    5
    United States v. Rosario, No. 16-0424/MC
    Opinion of the Court
    form the basis for other offenses, they remain permissible
    for appellate review.
    In this case, the lower court cited Dunn v. United States,
    
    284 U.S. 390
    (1932), and United States v. Jackson, 
    7 C.M.A. 67
    , 
    21 C.M.R. 193
    (1956), in support of its conclusion that
    the evidence supporting the abusive sexual contact and as-
    sault and battery charges could also be considered in as-
    sessing the sexual harassment charge. Both these cases in-
    volve inconsistent verdicts. Though we agree with the lower
    court’s conclusion that the facts supporting the acquitted of-
    fenses can be considered, we do not see this as an incon-
    sistent verdicts case. The evidence supports no obvious in-
    consistency in Appellant’s conviction of sexual harassment
    and his acquittal of the more serious offenses of abusive
    sexual contact and assault consummated by a battery.
    Though there may have been overlap in the facts the mem-
    bers considered, the elements were different and we have no
    indication to what extent – if at all – the members factored
    the sexual contact that formed the basis for the acquitted
    charges into convicting Appellant of sexual harassment. The
    fact pattern here does not present the clear inconsistency
    raised in a case like United States v. Powell, where the ac-
    cused was acquitted on charges of conspiracy to possess and
    possession of cocaine, but convicted of using a telephone to
    facilitate those offenses. 
    469 U.S. 57
    , 61, (1984).
    Appellant cites United States v. Smith as support for his
    challenge to the lower court’s fact-finding ability. In Smith,
    the military judge excepted specific language in returning
    his finding of guilty, and the lower court subsequently relied
    upon that excepted language to affirm the 
    findings. 39 M.J. at 449
    . This Court concluded that the lower court erroneous-
    ly made findings of fact which were in direct conflict with
    the specific factual allegations excepted by the military
    judge. 
    Id. The “direct
    conflict” language in Smith provides a
    useful dividing line between what the lower court is entitled
    to consider and what it should not. In the present case, un-
    like in Smith, the lower court did not consider any allega-
    tions explicitly excepted by the trier of fact so there is no di-
    rect conflict.
    Appellant also argues that the lower court’s findings vio-
    late the double jeopardy clause because, given their unique
    fact-finding powers, the lower court in essence convicted Ap-
    pellant based on facts of which he had been acquitted at the
    trial court level. We have stated that “[d]ouble jeopardy
    6
    United States v. Rosario, No. 16-0424/MC
    Opinion of the Court
    principles prohibit a reviewing court from rehearing any in-
    cidents for which the accused was found not guilty.” United
    States v. Wilson, 
    67 M.J. 423
    , 428 (C.A.A.F. 2009). However,
    unlike our decisions in Walters and United States v. Stewart,
    in the instant case the lower court’s consideration of facts
    underlying the assault and abusive sexual contact offenses
    in evaluating the sexual harassment offense did not violate
    double jeopardy principles because the offenses and ele-
    ments were, quite simply, not the same. 
    Walters, 58 M.J. at 397
    ; Stewart, 
    71 M.J. 38
    , 43 (C.A.A.F. 2012).
    We view this case as more akin to Gutierrez than Smith,
    in that the fact patterns of the convicted and acquitted be-
    haviors overlapped but were not identical. In Gutierrez, this
    Court stated that “[a]lthough Gutierrez was acquitted of the
    rape specification, the government is correct in noting that
    the panel could independently consider the evidence sup-
    porting that incident while deliberating on the stalking
    
    charge.” 73 M.J. at 175
    . Similarly, we suggested that a
    Court of Criminal Appeals could independently consider evi-
    dence supporting an offense for which an appellant was ac-
    quitted in evaluating whether evidence supported a different
    offense of which an appellant was convicted. We apply our
    conclusions in Gutierrez to the circumstances of this case
    and conclude that the lower court properly considered facts
    relevant to the abusive sexual contact and assault consum-
    mated by battery specifications of which Appellant was ac-
    quitted since those facts were also relevant to the sexual
    harassment specification of which he was convicted. 2
    Decision
    The decision of the United States Navy-Marine Corps
    Court of Criminal Appeals is affirmed.
    2   This Court also granted review on an additional issue. At
    trial, the military judge provided the following instruction to the
    members prior to deliberation: “If, based on your consideration of
    the evidence, you are firmly convinced that the accused is guilty of
    the crimes charged, you must find him guilty.” Appellant chal-
    lenges the use of the word “must” as improper. Because the in-
    struction was not objected to at the time of trial, the standard of
    review for this issue is plain error. In accordance with United
    States v. McClour, we find that the military judge’s use of the
    phrase “must find him guilty” does not amount to plain error. __
    M.J. __ (1-2) (C.A.A.F. 2017).
    7