United States v. Hills , 2016 CAAF LEXIS 512 ( 2016 )


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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.
    Kendell HILLS, Sergeant
    United States Army, Appellant
    No. 15-0767
    Crim. App. No. 20130833
    Argued May 10, 2016—Decided June 27, 2016
    Military Judges: James Herring, Gregory Bockin, and Steven E.
    Walburn
    For Appellant: Captain Heather L. Tregle (argued); Lieu-
    tenant Colonel Charles D. Lozano and Lieutenant Colonel
    Jonathan F. Potter (on brief).
    For Appellee: Captain Carling M. Dunham (argued); Colo-
    nel Mark H. Sydenham and Captain Jihan Walker (on
    brief); Major Steven J. Collins.
    Judge RYAN delivered the opinion of the Court, in
    which Chief Judge ERDMANN, and Judges STUCKY,
    OHLSON, and SPARKS, joined.
    _______________
    Judge RYAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
    A panel of officer and enlisted members sitting as a gen-
    eral court-martial convicted Appellant, contrary to his pleas,
    of one specification of abusive sexual contact in violation of
    Article 120, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), 10
    U.S.C. § 920 (2012), and acquitted Appellant of two specifi-
    cations of sexual assault in violation of Article 120, UCMJ.
    Appellant was sentenced to confinement for six months, re-
    duction to pay grade of E-1, and a bad-conduct discharge.
    The convening authority approved the sentence as adjudged.
    The United States Army Court of Criminal Appeals (ACCA)
    affirmed the findings and the sentence. United States v.
    Hills, No. ARMY 20130833, 2015 CCA LEXIS 268, at *2,
    
    2015 WL 3940965
    , at *1 (A. Ct. Crim. App. June 25, 2015)
    United States v. Hills, No. 15-0767/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    (unpublished). We granted Appellant’s petition to review the
    following issue:
    Whether the military judge abused his discre-
    tion by granting the Government’s motion to
    use the charged sexual misconduct for Military
    Rule of Evidence 413 purposes to prove pro-
    pensity to commit the charged sexual miscon-
    duct.
    We hold that because the evidence of the charged sexual
    misconduct was already admissible in order to prove the of-
    fenses at issue, the application of Military Rule of Evidence
    (M.R.E.) 413 — a rule of admissibility for evidence that
    would otherwise not be admissible — was error. Neither the
    text of M.R.E. 413 nor the legislative history of its federal
    counterpart suggests that the rule was intended to permit
    the government to show propensity by relying on the very
    acts the government needs to prove beyond a reasonable
    doubt in the same case. Moreover, Appellant pleaded not
    guilty to the Charge and specifications, and the instructions
    that the military judge provided both undermined the pre-
    sumption of innocence and created a tangible risk that Ap-
    pellant was convicted based on evidence that did not estab-
    lish his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
    I.     FACTS
    On November 24, 2012, Appellant hosted a house party,
    which his accuser, SPC PV, attended. SPC PV became visi-
    bly intoxicated. After falling off a couch and stumbling, she
    was helped onto a mattress in a bedroom. After sleeping for
    a while, SPC PV went to the bathroom to vomit, after which
    an unknown person carried her into a different bedroom
    where she fell back asleep. SPC PV alleged that when she
    awoke, Appellant was standing behind her and penetrating
    her vagina with his penis while she was on her stomach.
    SPC PV testified that she was able to identify Appellant by
    his white sweatpants because “there was light somewhere
    and white shows up a bit brighter,” and Appellant was the
    only individual wearing white sweatpants at the party. SPC
    PV then passed out again. SPC PV alleged that when she
    awoke some time later, Appellant was penetrating her anus
    with his penis. SPC PV then passed out again. SPC PV fur-
    ther claimed that when she awoke again, Appellant was us-
    2
    United States v. Hills, No. 15-0767/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    ing her hand to touch his penis. SPC PV then got up and
    went to the bathroom to vomit. SPC PV alleged that when
    she got out of the bed, she saw Appellant’s face.
    The Article 32, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 832 (2012), investigat-
    ing officer recommended against pursuing a court-martial
    against Appellant. She found SPC PV’s testimony to be con-
    tradictory and noted that the DNA evidence was inconclu-
    sive. Nevertheless, the case proceeded to court-martial.
    Prior to trial and over defense counsel’s objections, the
    military judge granted the Government’s motion under
    M.R.E. 413 to admit all of Appellant’s charged conduct as
    evidence of Appellant’s propensity to commit the sexual as-
    saults with which he was charged. The military judge made
    threshold findings for admission of M.R.E. 413 evidence and
    conducted an M.R.E. 403 balancing test.
    In his propensity instruction, the military judge included
    the standard spillover instruction, stating:
    Each offense must stand on its own, and you
    must keep the evidence of each offense sepa-
    rate….
    The burden is on the prosecution to prove
    each and every element of each offense beyond
    a reasonable doubt. Proof of one offense carries
    with it no inference that the accused is guilty
    of any other offense.
    … Specifically, evidence that the accused
    committed the sexual assault offense alleged in
    Specification 2 of The Charge, or the sexual
    contact offense alleged in Specification 3 of The
    Charge has no bearing on your deliberations in
    relation to any other charged offenses.
    (Emphasis added.) However, the military judge also in-
    structed the panel, based on his M.R.E. 413 ruling, that if
    the panel “determine[s] by a preponderance of evidence that
    it is more likely than not that the sexual offenses occurred”:
    evidence that the accused committed a sexual
    assault offense … may have a bearing on your
    deliberations in relation to the other charged
    sexual assault offenses .…
    3
    United States v. Hills, No. 15-0767/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    [This may include] its tendency, if any, to
    show the accused’s propensity or predisposition
    to engage in sexual assault.
    (Emphasis added.) Subsequently, the panel found Appellant
    guilty of abusive sexual contact and not guilty of two specifi-
    cations of sexual assault.
    II.    ACCA DECISION
    On appeal, Appellant argued that the military judge
    abused his discretion by granting the Government’s M.R.E.
    413 motion to use the charged sexual misconduct to show
    Appellant’s propensity to commit the same charged sexual
    misconduct. Hills, 2015 CCA LEXIS 268, at *2, 
    2015 WL 3940965
    , at *1. The ACCA held that, while the military
    judge properly found that the charged offenses satisfied the
    threshold requirements for admission as M.R.E. 413 evi-
    dence, the military judge possibly erred in his application of
    the M.R.E. 403 balancing test. Hills, 2015 CCA LEXIS 268,
    at *19–25, 
    2015 WL 3940965
    , at *7–9. Because the events
    happened within a two-hour period, the conduct had little
    probative value in demonstrating propensity. Hills, 2015
    CCA LEXIS 268, at *22–23, 
    2015 WL 3940965
    , at *8. The
    court held that because of the evidence’s low probative val-
    ue, “the risk of unfair prejudice does not have to be high to
    substantially outweigh the probative value.” Hills, 2015
    CCA LEXIS 268, at *24, 
    2015 WL 3940965
    , at *9. However,
    the ACCA determined that the military judge’s conclusion
    under the M.R.E. 403 balancing test did not have a substan-
    tial influence on the findings and that, therefore, it need not
    decide whether there was an abuse of discretion. Hills, 2015
    CCA LEXIS 268, at *24–25, 
    2015 WL 3940965
    , at *9–10.
    The ACCA concluded that there was no prejudice because
    the evidence used to prove the abusive sexual contact speci-
    fication, which Appellant was convicted of, was stronger
    than the evidence involving the two sexual assault specifica-
    tions, Hills, 2015 CCA LEXIS 268, at *27, 
    2015 WL 3940965
    , at *10, and that all of the evidence was already be-
    fore the panel. Hills, 2015 CCA LEXIS 268, at *28, 
    2015 WL 3940965
    , at *10. It also held that there was no prejudice be-
    cause the propensity issue only arose during the military
    judge’s instructions, and neither party discussed propensity
    4
    United States v. Hills, No. 15-0767/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    in their closing arguments. Hills, 2015 CCA LEXIS 268, at
    *28–29, 
    2015 WL 3940965
    , at *10.
    III.   DISCUSSION
    Though a question of first impression, it seems obvious
    that it is impermissible to utilize M.R.E. 413 to show that
    charged conduct demonstrates an accused’s propensity to
    commit … the charged conduct. We thus part ways with the
    ACCA’s characterization of the mode and import of the error
    in this case as well as with its approach to how such error
    should be analyzed and weighted. While we hold that admit-
    ting charged conduct as M.R.E. 413 evidence was an abuse
    of discretion, we also hold that the instructions that accom-
    panied the so-called propensity evidence in this case consti-
    tuted constitutional error that was not harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt.
    A.
    A military judge’s decision to admit evidence is reviewed
    for an abuse of discretion. United States v. Solomon, 
    72 M.J. 176
    , 179 (C.A.A.F. 2013). The meaning and scope of M.R.E.
    413 is a question of law that we review de novo. LRM v.
    Kastenberg, 
    72 M.J. 364
    , 369 (C.A.A.F. 2013). We thus first
    review de novo the meaning and scope of M.R.E. 413 to de-
    termine whether the military judge’s admission of charged
    conduct under M.R.E. 413 was “guided by erroneous legal
    conclusions,” Koon v. United States, 
    518 U.S. 81
    , 100 (1996),
    before determining whether the military judge abused his
    discretion in admitting the M.R.E. 413 evidence as propensi-
    ty evidence, see United States v. Clayton, 
    67 M.J. 283
    , 286
    (C.A.A.F. 2009).
    M.R.E. 413 is based on Federal Rule of Evidence (Fed. R.
    Evid.) 413. United States v. Berry, 
    61 M.J. 91
    , 95 n.2
    (C.A.A.F. 2005). M.R.E. 413 is an exception to the ordinary
    rule that evidence of uncharged misconduct or prior convic-
    tions is generally inadmissible and may not be used to show
    an accused’s propensity or predisposition to commit charged
    conduct. See M.R.E. 404(b); 
    Berry, 61 M.J. at 95
    ; United
    States v. Wright, 
    53 M.J. 476
    , 480 (C.A.A.F. 2000). M.R.E.
    413(a) provides that “[i]n a court-martial in which the ac-
    cused is charged with an offense of sexual assault, evidence
    of the accused’s commission of one or more offenses of sexual
    5
    United States v. Hills, No. 15-0767/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    assault is admissible and may be considered for its bearing
    on any manner to which it is relevant.” This includes using
    evidence of either a prior sexual assault conviction or un-
    charged sexual assaults to prove that an accused has a pro-
    pensity to commit sexual assault. United States v. James, 
    63 M.J. 217
    , 220–22 (C.A.A.F. 2006). In other words, despite
    the ordinary rule prohibiting the use of propensity evidence,
    members are permitted to consider testimony of past victims
    alleging that an accused perpetrated a sex offense upon
    them in order to infer that an accused has the propensity to
    commit the charged sex offense. See 
    Wright, 53 M.J. at 480
    .
    We have already held that M.R.E. 413, subject to the
    M.R.E. 403 balancing test and proper instructions, is consti-
    tutional, 
    Wright, 53 M.J. at 482
    –83; that an offense to which
    an accused has pleaded guilty or been found guilty can be
    admitted and considered under M.R.E. 413 to show propen-
    sity to commit the sexual assaults to which he pleaded not
    guilty, 
    id. at 479;
    and that uncharged sexual assaults that
    occurred subsequent to the charged offenses are not barred
    from being admitted under M.R.E. 413, 
    James, 63 M.J. at 218
    . However, none of these holdings answer the question
    whether M.R.E. 413 may be used as it was in this case.
    We hold that it may not. Neither this Court nor any fed-
    eral circuit court1 has permitted the use of M.R.E. 413 or
    Fed. R. Evid. 413 as a mechanism for admitting evidence of
    charged conduct to which an accused has pleaded not guilty
    in order to show a propensity to commit the very same
    charged conduct.
    For example, in Wright, the accused had already pleaded
    guilty to the misconduct that was being admitted as M.R.E.
    1 Contrary to what the Government argues, the United States
    Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit did not hold in United
    States v. Rogers – a non-precedential disposition – that charged
    conduct may be admitted as propensity evidence under M.R.E.
    413. 474 F. App’x 463, 473–74 (7th Cir. 2012). While Fed. R. Evid.
    413 was the direct issue in the prior decision, one involving un-
    charged conduct, United States v. Rogers, 
    587 F.3d 816
    , 818 (7th
    Cir. 2009), the latter decision addressed severance, not Fed. R.
    Evid. 413 admissibility, 474 F. App’x at 464–65, and made no
    holding with respect to using charged conduct as propensity evi-
    dence.
    6
    United States v. Hills, No. 15-0767/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    413 evidence to bolster another charge, so it was no longer
    an offense on which the members had to 
    deliberate. 53 M.J. at 479
    . In United States v. Burton, the appellant alleged im-
    proper argument based on trial counsel’s statements during
    closing arguments that suggested that all of the charged
    sexual assaults showed the accused’s propensity to commit
    sexual assaults. See 
    67 M.J. 150
    , 152 (C.A.A.F. 2009). Alt-
    hough this Court held that “evidence of the charged offenses
    was properly admitted,” because the evidence “was primary
    proof of the charged offense,” it also held that evidence of the
    charged offenses did not constitute M.R.E. 413 evidence, as
    the military judge never admitted the charged conduct as
    propensity evidence under M.R.E. 413. 
    Id. at 152–53.
        Moreover, neither the structure of M.R.E. 413 and its re-
    lationship to M.R.E. 404(b) nor the legislative history of the
    federal rule upon which it is based suggests that M.R.E. 413
    and its attendant instructions may be applied to evidence of
    charged misconduct.
    First, the structure of the rule suggests that it was aimed
    at conduct other than charged offenses. The notice provision
    in M.R.E. 413(b), which requires the government to disclose
    the proposed M.R.E. 413 evidence to the accused five days
    before trial, logically implies that only evidence of uncharged
    offenses (of which the accused would not otherwise be aware
    absent disclosure) are contemplated by the rule. See also 139
    Cong. Rec. S15073 (daily ed. Nov. 4, 1993) (statement of Sen.
    Dole) (Fed. R. Evid. 413 “require[s] the Government to dis-
    close the evidence to the defendant, including a statement of
    witnesses or a summary of the substance of any testimony
    expected to be offered at least 15 days before the scheduled
    date of trial.”).
    Second, as we recognized in Wright, the effect of M.R.E.
    413 was “‘to put evidence of uncharged offenses in sexual
    assault … cases on the same footing as other types of evi-
    dence that are not subject to a special exclusionary rule.’”
    
    Wright, 53 M.J. at 480
    (alteration in the original) (quoting
    140 Cong. Rec. H8991 (daily ed. Aug. 21, 1994) (statement of
    Rep. Molinari)). Charged misconduct is already admissible
    at trial under M.R.E. 401 and 402, and it is not subject to
    exclusion under M.R.E. 404(b). Thus, as a matter of logic, it
    does not fall under M.R.E. 413, which serves as an exception
    7
    United States v. Hills, No. 15-0767/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    to M.R.E. 404(b). See 
    Berry, 61 M.J. at 95
    ; 
    Wright, 53 M.J. at 480
    ; see also 140 Cong. Rec. H8991 (daily ed. Aug. 21, 1994)
    (statement of principal House sponsor Rep. Molinari) (“The
    new rules will supersede in sex offense cases the restrictive
    aspects of Federal [R]ule of [E]vidence 404(b).”).
    Further, the legislative history of the federal counter-
    part, Fed. R. Evid. 413, also suggests that M.R.E. 413 was
    not designed to apply to charged misconduct. See David J.
    Karp, Evidence of Propensity and Probability in Sex Offense
    Cases and Other Cases, 70 Chi.-Kent L. Rev. 15, 22 (1994)
    (“Rather, the effect of the new rules is to put evidence of un-
    charged offenses in sexual assault and child molestation
    cases on the same footing as other types of evidence that are
    not subject to a special exclusionary rule.” (emphasis add-
    ed));2 140 Cong. Rec. H8991 (daily ed. Aug. 21, 1994) (state-
    ment of Rep. Molinari) (“No time limit is imposed on the un-
    charged offenses for which evidence may be admitted.…”)
    (emphasis added).
    The rule was intended to address recidivism, cf. 
    Wright, 53 M.J. at 481
    , and it permits bolstering the credibility of a
    victim because “[k]nowledge that the defendant has commit-
    ted rapes on other occasions is frequently critical in as-
    sessing the relative plausibility of [the victim’s] claims,”
    
    Karp, supra, at 21
    . While M.R.E. 413 was intended to permit
    the members to consider the testimony of other victims with
    respect to an accused’s past sexual offenses, see 
    Karp, supra, at 21
    , there is no indication that M.R.E. 413 was intended to
    bolster the credibility of the named victim through infer-
    ences drawn from the same allegations of the same named
    victim.
    Accordingly, for the reasons stated above, the military
    judge operated under an erroneous view of the law when he
    admitted the charged offenses as M.R.E. 413 evidence to
    2  Mr. Karp was one of the original drafters of Fed. R. Evid.
    413, and Representative Susan Molinari stated in a speech to the
    House that his address, which was reprinted as a law review arti-
    cle, “should … be considered an authoritative part of [Fed. R.
    Evid. 413’s] legislative history.” 140 Cong. Rec. H8991 (daily ed.
    Aug. 21, 1994) (statement of Rep. Molinari).
    8
    United States v. Hills, No. 15-0767/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    show Appellant’s propensity to commit the charged offenses,
    and thus abused his discretion.
    B.
    Moreover, the Government’s position that the charged
    conduct to which Appellant pleaded not guilty was properly
    admitted under M.R.E. 413 raises serious constitutional
    concerns with respect to the fundamental fairness of the tri-
    al because of the instructions that accompany such propensi-
    ty evidence. While an error in deciding that M.R.E. 413 evi-
    dence of uncharged misconduct or prior convictions for
    sexual assaults meets the balancing test under M.R.E. 403
    and is admissible is usually nonconstitutional in nature,
    
    Solomon, 72 M.J. at 182
    , here, the error involved using
    charged misconduct as M.R.E. 413 evidence, which permeat-
    ed the military judge’s instructions to the members and vio-
    lated Appellant’s presumption of innocence and right to have
    all findings made clearly beyond a reasonable doubt, result-
    ing in constitutional error.
    A foundational tenet of the Due Process Clause, U.S.
    Const. amend. V., is that an accused is presumed innocent
    until proven guilty. In re Winship, 
    397 U.S. 358
    , 363 (1970);
    see also Coffin v. United States, 
    156 U.S. 432
    , 453–54 (1895)
    (“The principle that there is a presumption of innocence in
    favor of the accused is the undoubted law, axiomatic and el-
    ementary, and its enforcement lies at the foundation of the
    administration of our criminal law.”). An accused has an ab-
    solute right to the presumption of innocence until the gov-
    ernment has proven every element of every offense “beyond
    a reasonable doubt,” and members may only determine that
    the accused is guilty if the government has met that burden.
    In re 
    Winship, 397 U.S. at 364
    .
    This Court has held that, in general, M.R.E. 413 does not
    violate an accused’s right to a presumption of innocence. See
    
    Wright, 53 M.J. at 483
    . We continue to hold that proper
    M.R.E. 413 evidence is not fundamentally unfair; is admis-
    sible on any matter to which it is relevant; and that, subject
    to M.R.E. 403, the presumption is in favor of admissibility.
    See 
    id. As we
    noted in Wright, however, M.R.E. 413 “would be
    fundamentally unfair if it undermines the presumption of
    9
    United States v. Hills, No. 15-0767/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    innocence and the requirement that the prosecution prove
    guilt beyond a reasonable 
    doubt.” 53 M.J. at 481
    . In Wright,
    the appellant had already pleaded guilty to the offense used
    as propensity evidence, so he was no longer presumed inno-
    cent of that offense. See 
    id. at 479.
    Here, Appellant pleaded
    not guilty to the charges, so he still enjoyed the presumption
    of innocence with respect to all offenses.
    It is antithetical to the presumption of innocence to sug-
    gest that conduct of which an accused is presumed innocent
    may be used to show a propensity to have committed other
    conduct of which he is presumed innocent.3
    In this case, after the military judge granted the Gov-
    ernment’s M.R.E. 413 motion, the members were instructed
    that evidence that Appellant committed one of the charged
    sexual assaults:
    may have a bearing on your deliberations in
    relation to the other charged sexual assault of-
    fenses … only under the circumstances I am
    about to describe:
    First, you must determine by a preponderance
    of evidence that it is more likely than not that
    the sexual assault offense occurred;
    If you determine by a preponderance of the ev-
    idence that one or more of the offenses alleged
    in Specifications 1, 2, or 3 of the Charge oc-
    curred, even if you are not convinced beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the accused is guilty of
    one or more of those offenses, you may none-
    theless consider the evidence of such offenses,
    or its bearing on any matter to which it is rele-
    vant in relation to the other sexual assault of-
    fenses;
    You may also consider the evidence of such
    other acts of sexual assault for its tendency, if
    any, to show the accused’s propensity to en-
    gage in sexual assault.
    3  The fact that no presumption of innocence attaches to un-
    charged conduct is why the use of charged conduct as propensity
    evidence is analytically distinct from uncharged conduct. That the
    Government cannot use M.R.E. 413 if it elects to join multiple sex
    offenses in a single trial is irrelevant to our analysis.
    10
    United States v. Hills, No. 15-0767/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    Ellipsis in original.
    It is true that the military judge went on to tell the
    members that the Government had to prove each element
    beyond a reasonable doubt and that “one offense carries no
    inference that the accused is guilty of another offense.” But
    the military judge concluded the spillover instruction by re-
    iterating, “However, [the Government] may demonstrate
    that the accused has a propensity to commit that type of of-
    fense.”
    Instructional errors are reviewed de novo. United States
    v. Killion, 
    75 M.J. 209
    , 214 (C.A.A.F. 2016). We evaluate a
    military judge’s instructions “in the context of the overall
    message conveyed” to the members. See United States v.
    Prather, 
    69 M.J. 338
    , 344 (C.A.A.F. 2011) (internal quotation
    marks omitted) (quoting Humanik v. Beyer, 
    871 F.2d 432
    ,
    441 (3d Cir. 1989)). The instructions in this case provided
    the members with directly contradictory statements about
    the bearing that one charged offense could have on another,
    one of which required the members to discard the accused’s
    presumption of innocence, and with two different burdens of
    proof — preponderance of the evidence and beyond a rea-
    sonable doubt. Evaluating the instructions in toto, we cannot
    say that Appellant’s right to a presumption of innocence and
    to be convicted only by proof beyond a reasonable doubt was
    not seriously muddled and compromised by the instructions
    as a whole.
    While, in People v. Villatoro, 
    281 P.3d 390
    , 400 (Cal.
    2012), the California Supreme Court did not consider the
    issue of the accused’s right to be presumed innocent of all
    charges, the court highlighted the issue of conflicting bur-
    dens of proof. In Villatoro, the judge admitted five instances
    of rape against five separate victims with similar modus op-
    erandi as propensity evidence under Cal. Evid. Code § 1108
    (2009).4 
    Villatoro, 281 P.3d at 394
    –95. But that decision
    turned in part on the fact that “the modified instruction did
    not provide that the charged offenses used to prove propen-
    4  The issue before us has no bearing on our jurisprudence with
    respect to joinder, severance, or the use of multiple offenses with
    similar facts to argue identity, absence of mistake, modus operan-
    di, etc.
    11
    United States v. Hills, No. 15-0767/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    sity must be proven by a preponderance of the evidence.” 
    Id. at 400.
    The court observed, “[T]he instruction clearly told
    the jury that all offenses must be proven beyond a reasona-
    ble doubt, even those used to draw an inference of propensi-
    ty. Thus, there was no risk the jury would apply an imper-
    missibly low standard of proof.” 
    Id. In contrast,
    the instructions in this case invited the
    members to bootstrap their ultimate determination of the
    accused’s guilt with respect to one offense using the prepon-
    derance of the evidence burden of proof with respect to an-
    other offense. Quite simply, we hold not only that charged
    offenses are not properly admitted under M.R.E. 413 to
    prove a propensity to commit the charged offenses, but also
    that the muddled accompanying instructions implicate “fun-
    damental conceptions of justice” under the Due Process
    Clause by creating the risk that the members would apply
    an impermissibly low standard of proof, undermining both
    “the presumption of innocence and the requirement that the
    prosecution prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt,” 
    Wright, 53 M.J. at 481
    (internal quotation marks omitted) (citation
    omitted).
    C.
    “If instructional error is found [when] there are constitu-
    tional dimensions at play, [the appellant’s] claims ‘must be
    tested for prejudice under the standard of harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt.’” United States v. Wolford, 
    62 M.J. 418
    ,
    420 (C.A.A.F. 2006) (quoting United States v. Kreutzer, 
    61 M.J. 293
    , 298 (C.A.A.F. 2005)). “‘The inquiry for determining
    whether constitutional error is harmless beyond a reasona-
    ble doubt is whether, beyond a reasonable doubt, the error
    did not contribute to the defendant’s conviction or sentence.’”
    
    Id. (quoting Kreutzer,
    61 M.J. at 298). An error is not harm-
    less beyond a reasonable doubt when “there is a reasonable
    possibility that the [error] complained of might have con-
    tributed to the conviction.” United States v. Moran, 
    65 M.J. 178
    , 187 (C.A.A.F. 2007) (internal quotation marks omitted)
    (quoting Chapman v. California, 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24 (1967)).
    Given that we apply a different standard for as-
    sessing the error than the ACCA did, we also reach a differ-
    ent conclusion regarding the error’s import to the outcome of
    12
    United States v. Hills, No. 15-0767/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    the case. The juxtaposition of the preponderance of the evi-
    dence standard with the proof beyond a reasonable doubt
    standard with respect to the elements of the same offenses
    would tax the brain of even a trained lawyer. And, as the
    Supreme Court has observed, “Jurors do not sit in solitary
    isolation booths parsing instructions for subtle shades of
    meaning in the same way that lawyers might.” Boyde v. Cal-
    ifornia, 
    494 U.S. 370
    , 380 (1990).
    We are not convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that
    the conflicting standards of proof and directly contradictory
    statements about the bearing that one charged offense could
    have on another did not contribute to the verdict. United
    States v. Othuru, 
    65 M.J. 375
    , 377 (C.A.A.F. 2007) (“To say
    that an error did not contribute to the verdict is, rather, to
    find that error unimportant in relation to everything else
    the jury considered on the issue in question, as revealed in
    the record.”) (internal quotation marks omitted) (citation
    omitted). We note that the Government’s case was weak as
    there was no eyewitness testimony other than the allega-
    tions of the accuser, the members rejected the accuser’s oth-
    er allegations against the Appellant, and there was no con-
    clusive physical evidence. We cannot know whether the
    instructions may have tipped the balance in the members’
    ultimate determination. The instructions were, therefore,
    not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
    IV.    JUDGMENT
    The decision of the United States Army Court of Crimi-
    nal Appeals is reversed, and the findings and sentence are
    set aside. The record is returned to the Judge Advocate Gen-
    eral of the Army. A rehearing is authorized.
    13