United States v. Warner , 73 M.J. 1 ( 2013 )


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  •                          UNITED STATES, Appellee
    v.
    Gary D. WARNER, Private
    U.S. Army, Appellant
    No. 13-0435
    Crim. App. No. 20120499
    United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces
    Argued September 18, 2013
    Decided December 6, 2013
    STUCKY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ERDMANN
    and RYAN, JJ., and EFFRON, S.J., joined. BAKER, C.J., filed a
    separate dissenting opinion.
    Counsel
    For Appellant: Major Jacob D. Bashore (argued); Colonel Kevin
    M. Boyle, Lieutenant Colonel Peter Kageleiry, Jr., Lieutenant
    Colonel Jonathan F. Potter, and Captain Susrut A. Carpenter (on
    brief); Lieutenant Colonel Imogene M. Jamison.
    For Appellee: Captain Kenneth W. Borgnino (argued); Lieutenant
    Colonel James L. Varley (on brief); Lieutenant Colonel Amber J.
    Roach.
    Military Judge:    Jeffery R. Nance
    THIS OPINION IS SUBJECT TO REVISION BEFORE FINAL PUBLICATION.
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    Judge STUCKY delivered the opinion of the Court.
    Appellant was convicted, inter alia, of possessing images
    “that depict minors as sexual objects or in a sexually
    suggestive way,” in violation of Article 134, Uniform Code of
    Military Justice (UCMJ), 10 U.S.C. § 934 (2012).   We granted
    review to determine (1) whether Appellant had fair notice that
    the charged conduct was prohibited and subject to criminal
    sanction and (2) whether the evidence of the charged conduct was
    legally sufficient.   We hold that Appellant was not provided
    fair notice that his conduct was subject to criminal sanction.
    We therefore need not and do not reach the second issue.
    I.   Posture of the Case
    Contrary to his pleas, Appellant was convicted by a
    military judge sitting alone as a general court-martial of one
    specification each of possession of child pornography,
    possession of images “that depict minors as sexual objects or in
    a sexually suggestive way,” obstruction of justice, and
    possession of drug paraphernalia, all in violation of Article
    134, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 934 (2012).    He was sentenced to a bad-
    conduct discharge and one hundred days of confinement.    The
    convening authority approved the adjudged sentence and the
    United States Army Court of Criminal Appeals (CCA) affirmed in a
    per curiam opinion.   United States v. Warner, No. 20120499 (A.
    Ct. Crim. App. Feb. 14, 2013) (per curiam).
    2
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    II.   Background
    With respect to the granted issues, Appellant was charged
    with the following specifications related to images seized from
    certain digital media:
    Specification 2: In that [Appellant] did, at or near Fort
    Riley, Kansas, between on or about 6 April 2009 and on or
    about 17 November 2010, knowingly possess a Western Digital
    hard drive bearing serial number WCASU4440064, containing
    some images of child pornography, such conduct being
    prejudicial to good order and discipline in the armed
    forces and being of a nature to bring discredit upon the
    armed forces.
    Specification 3: In that [Appellant] did, at or near Fort
    Riley, Kansas, between on or about 6 April 2009 and on or
    about 17 November 2010, knowingly possess a Western Digital
    hard drive bearing serial number WCASU4440064, containing
    some images that depict minors as sexual objects or in a
    sexually suggestive way, such conduct being prejudicial to
    good order and discipline in the armed forces and being of
    a nature to bring discredit upon the armed forces.
    To prove these specifications at trial, the Government
    introduced the charged images into evidence as Prosecution
    Exhibit 7.   Prosecution Exhibit 7 contains folders of images
    specific to each specification.   The folder for Specification 3
    contains twenty unique images1 of minor girls, none of which
    depicts nudity.   Rather, these images depict minor girls posing
    provocatively in revealing clothing, with highly distasteful
    captions superimposed on the images.
    1
    The folder contains twenty-three total images, but three are
    duplicates.
    3
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    While the military judge (MJ) took judicial notice of the
    federal definition of child pornography found in 18 U.S.C. §
    2252A (2006), for Specification 2, the record contains no
    definitions for “sexual objects” or “sexually suggestive.”      The
    only mention at trial of the conduct charged in Specification 3
    occurred during closing arguments, where the Government argued:
    And, Your Honor, Specification 3 is child erotica, which
    minors portrayed [sic] in sexually suggestive ways, or as
    sexual objects, but they may be fully clothed. The photos
    on that disc, Prosecution Exhibit 7, contain several images
    of child erotica. This is also prejudicial to good order
    and discipline, and service discrediting.
    The MJ convicted Appellant of both specifications, excepting the
    words “being prejudicial to good order and discipline in the
    armed forces”; thus the Appellant was convicted of service-
    discrediting conduct.
    III.       Law
    Appellant did not object to Specification 3 at trial.
    Rather, he first presented the arguments set out in the granted
    issues in a motion for reconsideration before the CCA, which was
    summarily denied.   When not objected to at trial, defects in an
    indictment are reviewed for plain error. See United States v.
    Cotton, 
    535 U.S. 625
    , 631 (2002).       Under plain error review,
    “Appellant has the burden of demonstrating that: (1) there was
    error; (2) the error was plain or obvious; and (3) the error
    materially prejudiced a substantial right of the accused.”
    4
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    United States v. Wilkins, 
    71 M.J. 410
    , 412 (C.A.A.F. 2012)
    (citation and quotation marks omitted).
    IV.    Discussion
    A.   Error
    The first and second clauses of Article 134, UCMJ, permit
    the criminalization of certain conduct not otherwise prohibited
    that is either prejudicial to good order and discipline or
    service discrediting.    Article 134, UCMJ.         It is settled that a
    servicemember may be prosecuted for service-discrediting conduct
    even if the conduct is not specifically listed in the Manual for
    Courts-Martial.     United States v. Saunders, 
    59 M.J. 1
    , 6
    (C.A.A.F. 2003) (citing United States v. Vaughan, 
    58 M.J. 29
    , 31
    (C.A.A.F. 2003)).    However, due process requires that a
    servicemember “have ‘fair notice’ that his conduct [is]
    punishable before he can be charged under Article 134 with a
    service discrediting offense.”         
    Vaughan, 58 M.J. at 31
    (quoting
    United States v. Bivins, 
    49 M.J. 328
    , 330 (C.A.A.F. 1998)
    (brackets in original), and citing Parker v. Levy, 
    417 U.S. 733
    ,
    756 (1974)).   Potential sources of fair notice may include
    federal law, state law, military case law, military custom and
    usage, and military regulations.           
    Vaughan, 58 M.J. at 31
    .2   The
    2
    Appellant also contends that the specification is void for
    vagueness. While the due process concepts of fair notice and
    vagueness are related, see Parker v. Levy, 
    417 U.S. 733
    , 757
    (1974), we need not decide whether a specification is
    5
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    test for constitutional notice that conduct is subject to
    criminal sanction is one of law.       It does not turn on whether we
    approve or disapprove of the conduct in question.
    None of the potential sources identified in Vaughan
    provided notice to Appellant that possession of images that
    depict minors “as sexual objects or in a sexually suggestive
    way” was subject to sanction under Article 134.      Although Title
    18 of the United States Code addresses at length and in
    considerable detail the myriad of potential crimes related to
    child pornography, these sections provide no notice that
    possession of images of minors that depict no nudity, let alone
    sexually explicit conduct, could be subject to criminal
    liability.   See generally 18 U.S.C. ch. 110 (2012); see also
    United States v. Vosburgh, 
    602 F.3d 512
    , 538 (3d Cir. 2010)
    (noting, in a prosecution for possessing child pornography, that
    images of “child erotica” were legal to possess, and admitted
    only to show intent to commit the charged offense); United
    States v. Gourde, 
    440 F.3d 1065
    , 1070 (9th Cir. 2006)
    (recognizing that adult pornography and child erotica constitute
    “legal content”).   Similarly, the Government has identified no
    state law that reaches Appellant’s conduct; on the contrary,
    each state law identified by the Government requires at least
    unconstitutionally vague where, as here, Appellant lacked fair
    notice that the alleged conduct was forbidden.
    6
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    that nudity be depicted.   This assumes, without deciding, that
    state statutes could provide meaningful notice under Article 134
    in the face of extremely detailed regulation of this area by
    Congress.   Finally, nowhere does our case law, customs of the
    services, or usage provide notice of criminality with respect to
    such material.   Cf.   United States v. Barberi, 
    71 M.J. 127
    , 130
    (C.A.A.F. 2012) (holding that images that do not depict a
    lascivious exhibition of the genitals or pubic area cannot
    constitute child pornography as defined by the federal statute).3
    Simply put, although child pornography is a highly regulated
    area of criminal law, no prohibition against possession of
    images of minors that are sexually suggestive but do not depict
    nudity or otherwise reach the federal definition of child
    pornography exists in any of the potential sources of fair
    notice set out in Vaughan and available to Appellant.   It
    follows that the Appellant received no such notice.
    3
    The Government argues that Appellant should have had notice
    that his conduct was subject to punishment under Article 134,
    UCMJ, based on this Court’s decision in United States v. Mason,
    
    60 M.J. 15
    (C.A.A.F. 2004). However, Mason was a case about
    plea providence which involved child pornography; notice was
    never discussed. There was no question in Mason that the
    accused was on notice that the charged conduct was subject to
    criminal sanction; he was charged with receipt of child
    pornography as defined by the Child Pornography Prevention Act
    of 1996, 18 U.S.C. § 2252A (2000). 
    Id. at 17.
    7
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    B.   Obvious and Prejudicial
    At a minimum, an error is “plain” when it is “obvious” or
    “clear under current law.”    United States v. Olano, 
    507 U.S. 725
    , 734 (1993) (quotation marks omitted); see also Henderson v.
    United States, 
    133 S. Ct. 1121
    , 1130 (2013) (holding that
    “whether a legal question was settled or unsettled at the time
    of trial, it is enough that an error be plain at the time of
    appellate consideration” (quotation marks omitted)).   Here, the
    due process error -- charging Appellant with conduct which he
    lacked fair notice was subject to criminal sanction -- is
    obvious under current law:    It is well settled, and was well
    settled at the time of Appellant’s court-martial, that a
    servicemember must have fair notice that an act is criminal
    before being prosecuted.   See 
    Saunders, 59 M.J. at 6
    ; 
    Vaughan, 58 M.J. at 31
    .   Appellant has further suffered material
    prejudice to his substantial rights, as he stands convicted of
    the conduct as to which he lacked notice.
    V.   Decision
    The judgment of the United States Army Court of Criminal
    Appeals is reversed as to Specification 3 of Charge I and the
    sentence.   The finding of guilty to Specification 3 of Charge I
    is set aside and the specification is dismissed.   The judgment
    as to the remaining findings is affirmed.    The record of trial
    8
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    is returned to the Judge Advocate General of the Army for remand
    to the Court of Criminal Appeals to reassess the sentence.
    9
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    BAKER, Chief Judge (dissenting):
    The question presented by this case is whether a reasonable
    member of the armed forces would have fair notice that
    possession of images charged under Specification 3 were of a
    nature to bring discredit upon the armed forces and thus subject
    to Article 134 sanction.    Article 134, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 934
    (2012).    Specification 3 charged Appellant with possession of
    “some images that depict minors as sexual objects or in a
    sexually suggestive way.”   The images depict young prepubescent
    and pubescent girls in sexually suggestive positions.    In
    several of these images, girls are dressed as prostitutes in G-
    strings; one such image even exposes pubic hair, though not the
    private parts.   Superimposed on these images are aggressive
    commands such as “POUND HER PUSSY!” and “MAKE THIS BITCH GIVE
    HEAD UNTIL HER FACE TURNS RED!”
    The majority concludes that Appellant was not on fair
    notice that possession of these pictures would bring discredit
    upon the armed forces.   United States v. Warner, __ M.J. __ (2,
    8) (C.A.A.F. 2013).   I disagree.   Any reasonable member of the
    armed forces (in fact any member of the armed forces) of any
    grade or service would know that these pictures were service
    discrediting, based on the elements of Article 134, UCMJ, and
    common sense.    Therefore, I respectfully dissent.   My analysis
    follows.
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    Section I describes the pictures at issue.   Section II
    demonstrates that the additional forms of notice discussed in
    Vaughan and Saunders are not required because Article 134, UCMJ,
    elements provide fair notice where common sense makes their
    reach obvious as recognized by the extensive case law of
    military courts.    United States v. Vaughan, 
    58 M.J. 29
    (C.A.A.F.
    2003); United States v. Saunders, 
    59 M.J. 1
    (C.A.A.F. 2003).      In
    Section III, I discuss the repercussions of this Court’s
    adoption of a literal and mechanistic interpretation of Article
    134, UCMJ, notice.
    I.   The Pictures
    The questions we need to answer are not whether “child
    erotica” is constitutionally protected, whether it is an offense
    under Title 18, or whether Appellant was on fair notice that
    “child erotica” was service discrediting.1    That is not this
    case.    Rather, this case is about a specific defendant
    possessing specific pictures depicting specific children as
    1
    Courts examining these questions have struggled to define the
    term “child erotica” as well as to define the reach of the law
    in civilian context with respect to “child erotica.” I would
    too. However distasteful the concept of “child erotica,” the
    term covers such a wide range of possible images that it would
    be hard to pinpoint just what is included. Moreover, in the
    context of the broader child pornography field that is both
    highly regulated and nuanced as a result of Supreme Court case
    law, it would be hard to determine in the abstract what “child
    erotica” would violate Title 18, or for that matter Article 134,
    UCMJ, even if one could agree on what the term meant. But that
    is not this case.
    2
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    charged in a particular specification under Article 134(2),
    UCMJ.
    Here, Appellant was charged with the possession of twenty-
    three specific pictures that depict minor children as sexual
    objects or in a sexually suggestive way.2    The majority of these
    images feature young girls with barely developed breasts wearing
    flimsy G-strings in blatantly sexual poses, often lying atop a
    bed, straddling a chair, or pushing up against the floor or
    wall.    In one such image, a prepubescent girl is shown in split
    panels wearing high-heeled red patent leather boots that are
    laced to her knees.    On the right-hand side panel, she is
    standing atop a red, white, and blue-colored banner,
    provocatively tugging on a skimpy, flag-themed G-string.      Her
    legs are slightly bent, and she has hyperextended her torso.        On
    the left-hand panel of the same image, the girl is shown in a
    side-profile bending over with her hands on her knees, glancing
    provocatively at the viewer.    The following captions are
    superimposed on the images, respectively:    “YOU WANT SOME PUSSY,
    HUH?!” and “WHITE BITCHES GIVE HEAD!”
    Another split-image shows a young girl draped across a bed,
    her hand resting on her exposed buttocks, and pubic hair visible
    through the G-string.    To the left of this image, the same girl
    is shown in a short skirt and top standing with her legs parted
    2
    Three images were duplicates.
    3
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    and her hands are on her hips edging up her skirt.    The
    superimposed captions say:    “GET SOME PUSSY!” and “WHITE GIRLS
    GIVE HEAD!,” respectively.
    Indeed, most of the images include aggressive, graphic
    commands like “POUND HER PUSSY!,” “100% PUSSY PLUNGING FUN!,”
    “PLOW HER PUSSY!!,” “MAKE THIS BITCH GIVE HEAD UNTIL HER FACE
    TURNS RED!,” and “THIS GIRL LOVES SUCKING COCK!”    The folder and
    file names for these images are equally graphic and sexually
    charged, consisting of a series of keywords such as “STUPID
    YOUNG GIRLS IN THONGS,” “9yo 10yo 11yo,” “White Girl Jailbait
    BANG,” “Ass in a THONG,” “kdquality pedo,” and “preteen pussy.”
    The question is:    would a reasonable servicemember have
    fair notice that possession of these images was of a nature to
    discredit the armed forces?   Answer:   Yes.
    II.   Fair Notice
    The majority and the dissent agree that “conduct that is
    not specifically listed in the [Manual for Courts-Martial] may
    be prosecuted under Article 134.”     
    Saunders, 59 M.J. at 6
    (citing 
    Vaughan, 58 M.J. at 31
    ; see Manual for Courts-Martial,
    United States pt. IV, para. 60.c(6)(c) (2012 ed.) (MCM)
    (permitting the use of specifications not listed in the MCM to
    allege offenses not listed in paras. 61–113 as offenses under
    clause 1 or 2 of Article 134, UCMJ)).    Moreover, “Manual
    provisions describing offenses cognizable under Article 134 are
    4
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    merely illustrative.”   United States v. Johnson, 
    14 M.J. 1029
    ,
    1031 (A.C.M.R. 1982), aff’d, 
    17 M.J. 251
    (C.M.A. 1984) (citing
    United States v. McCormick, 
    12 C.M.A. 26
    , 28, 
    30 C.M.R. 26
    , 28
    (1960)).
    We also agree that it is an elemental principle of due
    process that a defendant charged with an Article 134, UCMJ,
    service-discrediting offense must have fair notice that his
    conduct was punishable.   
    Vaughan, 58 M.J. at 31
    (citing United
    States v. Bivins, 
    49 M.J. 328
    , 330 (C.A.A.F. 1998)).      Fair
    notice can be actual notice, as in the case of a highway speed
    limit sign.   It can also be constructive in nature.     As
    reflected in the truism that “ignorance of the law is no
    defense,” fair notice and actual notice are not coterminous.
    The law provides fair notice where a reasonable person reading
    the law and any supporting sources would have knowledge that the
    conduct was prohibited.
    Notice derives primarily from the elements of the offense
    itself.    For Article 134(2), UCMJ, the elements are:
    (1)    That the accused did or failed to do certain
    acts; and
    (2)    That, under the circumstances, the accused’s
    conduct was . . . of a nature to bring discredit
    upon the armed forces.
    MCM pt. IV, para. 60.b.
    “Discredit” is defined in the MCM as “to injure the
    reputation of.”   
    Id. at para.
    60.c(3).   The MCM further
    5
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    explains, “[t]his clause of Article 134 makes punishable conduct
    which has a tendency to bring the service into disrepute or
    which tends to lower it in public esteem.”     
    Id. At the
    same time, it is well settled at this Court and the
    service appellate courts that one can apply common sense to
    determine whether a reasonable military member had fair notice
    that conduct fell within the reach of Article 134, UCMJ.     One
    such court held that, “[c]ommon sense, if nothing else, tells us
    that appellant’s conduct constitutes a violation of Article 134,
    notwithstanding the fact that paragraph 213f of the MCM does not
    describe the [specific] offense.”      United States v. Gipson, 
    16 M.J. 839
    , 841 (N.M.C.M.R. 1983).
    Likewise, and most recently, in United States v. Ashby,
    this Court held that “common sense supports the conclusion that
    [Appellant] was on notice that his conduct violated the UCMJ”
    and that there was “no doubt that [Appellant], as a seasoned
    officer and aircraft pilot, understood that under the
    circumstances his actions would reflect poorly upon him as an
    officer and would discredit the service.”     United States v.
    Ashby, 
    68 M.J. 108
    , 119 (C.A.A.F. 2009).     In that case, this
    Court held that the Appellant -- who was the pilot of an EA–6B
    Prowler aircraft that struck weight-bearing cables of a cable
    car killing twenty people -- had reasonable notice that taking a
    videotape from the aircraft, hiding it in his quarters, and
    6
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    eventually providing the tape to a colleague to “get rid of it”
    was both service discrediting and conduct unbecoming an officer
    and a gentleman.    
    Id. at 118.
      In fact, this Court determined
    that Appellant’s conduct in “failing to hand over a videotape
    that he knew would have evidentiary value in an Italian
    investigation violated his official duties.”    
    Id. at 119.
         Thus,
    this Court held that the Appellant could not claim that “he
    lacked notice of the criminality of his conduct by virtue of the
    absence of the inclusion of foreign criminal proceedings in the
    MCM.”    
    Id. at 118.
    Similarly, in Anderson, the Air Force Court of Criminal
    Appeals held:
    In all these instances, before a military member can
    be charged with an offense under Article 133 or
    Article 134, due process requires that the member have
    ‘fair notice’ that the conduct at issue is forbidden
    and subject to criminal sanction. . . . Put another
    way, in the context of Article 134, the issue is
    whether a reasonable military member would know that
    his or her conduct was service-discrediting (and,
    therefore, punishable under the Article).
    United States v. Anderson, 
    60 M.J. 548
    , 554 (A.F. Ct. Crim. App.
    2004) (emphasis added), review denied, 
    60 M.J. 403
    (C.A.A.F.
    2004).
    Moreover, there is extensive case law supporting common
    sense and reasonableness as grounds for fair notice.    See United
    States v. Sullivan, 
    42 M.J. 360
    , 366 (C.A.A.F. 1995) (“Finally,
    we turn to appellant’s claim that he was not on fair notice that
    7
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    the conduct alleged in the amended specification was criminal.
    In our view, any reasonable officer would know that asking
    strangers of the opposite sex intimate questions about their
    sexual activities, using a false name and a bogus publishing
    company as a cover, is service-discrediting conduct under
    Article 134.”); United States v. Hartwig, 
    39 M.J. 125
    , 130
    (C.M.A. 1994) (“Any reasonable officer would recognize that
    sending sexual overtures to a stranger . . . risk[s] bringing
    disrepute upon himself and his profession.”); United States v.
    Frazier, 
    34 M.J. 194
    , 198-99 (C.M.A. 1992) (“Accordingly, we
    conclude that a reasonable military officer would have no doubt
    that the activities charged in this case constituted conduct
    unbecoming an officer.”).   See also United States v. Weller, No.
    NMCCA 201100043, 2012 CCA LEXIS 154, 
    2012 WL 1514821
    (N-M. Ct.
    Crim. App. Apr. 30, 2012), review denied, 
    71 M.J. 380
    (C.A.A.F.
    2012) (“The crime of negligent discharge of a firearm is meant
    to address a failure to follow well-established safety
    precautions as well as common sense, the result being a weapons
    discharge that threatens good order and discipline or tends to
    discredit the armed forces.”); United States v. McCreight, 
    39 M.J. 530
    , 533–34 (A.F.C.M.R. 1994), aff’d, 
    43 M.J. 483
    (C.A.A.F.
    1996) (“Customs of the service provide notice to an officer of
    what limits exist on relationships with enlisted subordinates
    when other regulatory or statutory guidance does not.    Customs
    8
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    of the service also provide notice to officers of what behavior
    is unbecoming an officer and gentleman, prejudicial to good
    order and discipline, and service discrediting.”); United States
    v. Johnson, 
    39 M.J. 1033
    , 1037–38 (A.C.M.R. 1994) (“Some acts
    are inherently prejudicial to good order and discipline or
    discrediting to the service.   Others require an assessment of
    the circumstances surrounding the commission of the offense in
    making the determination.   Generally, offenses involving moral
    turpitude are inherently prejudicial or discrediting.” (internal
    citations omitted)).   United States v. Guerrero, 
    33 M.J. 295
    ,
    297 (C.M.A. 1991) (agreeing with the appellate court that “it is
    reasonable to assume that [Appellant] was well aware that there
    were appropriate standards of civilian attire to which sailors
    must adhere” and that the “UCMJ had been explained to appellant,
    so that he had ‘fair notice’ that conduct prejudicial to good
    order and discipline in the armed forces and all conduct of a
    nature to bring discredit upon the armed forces were
    punishable”).
    Where, however, the elements and common sense would not put
    a reasonable person on notice as to what is proscribed, some
    additional source of notice is required before a person can be
    said to be on fair notice that conduct is subject to criminal
    sanction.   In the context of Article 134, UCMJ, this is of
    particular concern given its potential breadth and indeterminate
    9
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    nature.   On this basis, this Court looked to additional sources
    of notice beyond the elements in two recent cases -- Vaughan and
    Saunders -- because it was not obvious and apparent from the
    elements of Article 134, UCMJ, alone whether the conduct was
    prohibited.
    In Vaughan, the defendant was charged with leaving her
    forty-seven-day-old baby unattended in a crib at an off-base
    residence while she spent nearly six hours at a night club
    located ninety minutes away.   
    Vaughan, 58 M.J. at 30
    .    This
    Court affirmed the accused’s conviction of child neglect despite
    her claim that she did not have fair notice that her conduct [of
    child neglect] was subject to criminal sanction under Article
    134, UCMJ, and that she did not receive proper notice as to the
    specific elements of the offense.     
    Id. at 35–36.
      In holding
    there was sufficient notice, we identified additional potential
    sources of notice beyond the elements including the “MCM,
    federal law, state law, military case law, military custom and
    usage, and military regulations.”     
    Id. at 31.
      Writing for the
    majority, I drew upon Department of Defense (DOD) regulations to
    give contextual support for “military custom and usage”
    involving the care of dependents.     
    Id. However, Vaughan
    also
    noted with care that these were potential sources of notice, not
    required sources of notice.    
    Id. at 33.
      Six months after
    Vaughan, this Court elaborated in Saunders that it “did not
    10
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    require notice of specific elements set down in writing before
    the offense is committed, only ‘fair notice’ that conduct was
    criminal. . . . [s]uch notice could arise from military custom
    and usage, which is clearly not defined by elements or with mens
    rea 
    specificity.” 59 M.J. at 8
    .
    In the present case -- in addition to fair notice through
    the elements and common sense -- we are also able to infer
    Appellant had notice through his conduct.   Specifically, after
    he was reported by a friend and member of the unit, Appellant
    contacted a friend and member of his unit to request that he
    destroy these images along with others in his collection.
    Appellant attempted to destroy the evidence not once, but twice.
    The second time was while he was in custody.   Finally, he did
    not raise the issue of notice until he sought reconsideration
    before the CCA.   In other words, he was on fair notice until
    this Court’s decision in Barberi raised for the first time the
    possibility that possession of these types of images did not
    meet the definition of pornography under the Child Pornography
    Prevention Act (CPPA).3
    3
    In Barberi -- before the MCM codified the definition -- the
    majority qualified its holding by conceding that, “[c]harges for
    the possession of child pornography could be brought pursuant to
    clauses (1) or (2) of Article 134 without reference to the
    definitions laid out in the CPPA, thereby creating a completely
    different set of elements required for conviction.” United
    States v. Barberi, 
    71 M.J. 127
    , 131 (C.A.A.F. 2012).
    11
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    Accordingly, the fair notice question in this case is as
    follows:    Is it obvious and apparent based on the elements and
    common sense whether Article 134, UCMJ, would apply to the
    charge and images?   Or are the charge and images of a sort
    requiring some additional source of fair notice?    I take the
    former position based on the nature of the images described
    above.   The majority takes the latter position.
    III.    Implications
    The majority’s rigid and formalistic approach to fair
    notice in the context of Article 134, UCMJ, if sustained, is
    problematic for three reasons.
    First, it transforms the test for fair notice by focusing
    exclusively on the words contained in a specification rather
    than the underlying conduct they describe.   Thus, the majority
    does not address the pictures in this case at all, but looks
    only to the specification’s use of the term “sexually
    suggestive” to determine that Appellant was not on fair notice
    that his conduct was of a nature to discredit the armed forces.
    However, notice is a question that can only be answered by
    considering Appellant’s conduct in the context of the
    specification; that is, by looking at the images.   In short, the
    question is not whether an accused is on fair notice that
    possession of sexually suggestive pictures is an offense.     After
    all, much if not most advertising -- including advertising
    12
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    geared towards children -- might fall into this description.
    The question is whether the possession of these images as
    described in the specification as sexually suggestive is an
    offense.    Yet there is no analysis of the pictures by the
    majority.
    Second, the majority fails to consider whether and how the
    elements of the offense and common sense as applied to these
    images would or would not have placed a reasonable member of the
    armed forces on notice that his conduct was service
    discrediting.   Indeed, the elements of the offense and common
    sense are the threshold sources of fair notice, before one turns
    to the additional sources of notice described in Vaughan and
    Saunders.    These cases provide a possible reference point to
    other sources such as military custom and usage; they do not
    artificially curtail all future considerations of custom and
    usage to a prefabricated set of formalized, regulatory guidance.
    To emphasize, the list in Vaughan and Saunders was inclusive and
    not collectively exhaustive such that no other source might
    exist, including -- most significantly -- plain English
    understanding of the elements of the offense and common sense.
    However, the majority appears to require a specific
    reference in a specific regulation to the specific conduct --
    here, a graphic description of which sexually suggestive images
    are prohibited and which portray children as sexual objects.
    13
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    That is not what Vaughan and Saunders -- or the extensive
    history of Article 134, UCMJ, case law, for that matter --
    require.   In short, an accused is entitled to “fair notice” of
    the criminality of conduct charged as service discrediting under
    Article 134, UCMJ, but this does not require published notice of
    the precise wording of the elements as applied in each and every
    context.   
    Saunders, 59 M.J. at 9
    .     “Such a view is consistent
    with Article 134’s purpose of capturing service discrediting
    conduct that might not have been foreseen by the drafters of the
    UCMJ or those charged with its subsequent implementation in
    changing and complex military circumstances.”     
    Id. More fundamentally,
    however, such a view defeats the
    disciplinary purpose of Article 134, UCMJ.     The Supreme Court
    “has long recognized that the military is, by necessity, a
    specialized society separate from civilian society.”     Parker v.
    Levy, 
    417 U.S. 733
    , 743 (1974).    At a basic level, this is
    because the purpose of the military is to fight the nation’s
    wars and “[n]o question can be left open as to the right to
    command in the officer.”   
    Id. at 744
    (quoting United States v.
    Grimley, 
    137 U.S. 147
    , 153 (1890)).     And “[w]hile the members of
    the military are not excluded from the protection granted by the
    First Amendment, the different character of the military
    community and of the military mission requires a different
    application of those protections.”     
    Id. at 758.
      Accordingly,
    14
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    “[s]peech that is protected in the civil population may
    nonetheless undermine the effectiveness of response to command.
    If it does, it is constitutionally unprotected.”   
    Id. at 759
    (citations omitted).
    This Court recently applied this rationale to an Article
    133, UCMJ, violation governing conduct unbecoming to an officer
    which functions as a companion to Article 134, UCMJ.4   In broadly
    interpreting Article 133, UCMJ, we held conduct that “disgraces
    [an officer] personally or brings dishonor to the military
    profession affects his fitness to command the obedience of his
    subordinates so as to successfully complete the military
    mission.”   United States v. Forney, 
    67 M.J. 271
    , 275 (C.A.A.F.
    2009).   Finding that conduct “need not be a violation of any
    other punitive article of the Code, or indeed a criminal offense
    at all, to constitute conduct unbecoming an officer,” this Court
    found the accused’s conduct of downloading virtual child
    pornography to be a violation of Article 133, UCMJ, even though
    “possession of virtual child pornography may be constitutionally
    4
    In fact, the drafters of the UCMJ noted that the clause
    “conduct of a nature to bring discredit upon the armed forces”
    was essentially added to the general articles after World War I
    by the Judge Advocate General of the Army who urged its
    inclusion so as to try noncommissioned officers and soldiers in
    the same manner as officers would be tried under Article 133,
    UCMJ, for conduct unbecoming an officer. Article 134, UCMJ;
    Charles L. Decker et al., Dep’t of Defense, Legal and
    Legislative Basis, Manual for Courts-Martial, United States 294-
    95 (1951).
    15
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    protected speech in civilian society.”    
    Id. I argue
    this
    approach is applicable to Article 134, UCMJ, as well.
    To be sure, Article 134, UCMJ, is not a “catchall as to
    make every irregular, mischievous, or improper act a court-
    martial offense.”   United States v. Sadinsky, 
    14 C.M.A. 563
    ,
    565, 
    34 C.M.R. 343
    , 345 (1964).    But it does serve to allow
    commanding officers the flexibility in dealing with improper
    behavior from subordinates.   For example, the accused in
    Sadinksy argued that he did not have fair notice that jumping
    from the ship into the sea was violative of Article 134, UCMJ.
    The majority of the board of review members agreed that the
    specification did not “allege facts bringing the accused’s act
    within the prohibition of some order, regulation, or statute
    limiting conduct or defining the offense sought to be charged”
    thus concluding the specification failed to allege a cognizable
    
    offense. 14 C.M.A. at 566
    , 34 C.M.R. at 346.    But this Court
    disagreed.   In doing so, we noted that “[t]o superimpose a
    requirement that conduct be prohibited by some order,
    regulation, or statute in order to fall within the proscription
    of the first category of Article 134 would be contrary to the
    clear and fair meaning of its terms.”     
    Id. (emphasis added).
    Moreover, “[i]f certain acts fell within other specific articles
    of the Code, they would, manifestly, be ‘specifically mentioned’
    elsewhere in the Code, and be outside the scope of the General
    16
    United States v. Warner, No. 13-0435/AR
    Article.”    
    Id. This Court
    concluded, “applying such a standard
    would effectively emasculate the very essence of Article 134.”
    
    Id. Nearly fifty
    years later, we are at risk of doing just
    that.    As such, I respectfully dissent.   There was sufficient
    notice using the elements and common sense for a reasonable
    member of the armed forces to understand such conduct to be
    service discrediting.
    17
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 13-0435-AR

Citation Numbers: 73 M.J. 1, 2013 WL 6410162, 2013 CAAF LEXIS 1397

Judges: Stucky, Erdmann, Ryan, Effron, Baker

Filed Date: 12/6/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024