United States v. Berry , 2005 CAAF LEXIS 474 ( 2005 )


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  •                               IN THE CASE OF
    UNITED STATES, Appellee
    v.
    Bartholomew M. BERRY, Sergeant
    U.S. Army, Appellant
    No. 04-0240
    Crim. App. No. 20000960
    United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces
    Argued October 20, 2004
    Decided May 10, 2005
    ERDMANN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which
    GIERKE, C.J., and EFFRON and BAKER, JJ., joined. CRAWFORD, J.,
    filed a separate opinion concurring in the result.
    Counsel
    For Appellant: Captain Charles A. Kuhfahl Jr. (argued); Colonel
    Robert D. Teetsel, Lieutenant Colonel Mark Tellitocci, and Major
    Sean S. Park (on brief); Colonel Mark Cremin.
    For Appellee: Captain Michael D. Wallace (argued); Colonel
    Steven T. Salata and Major Natalie A. Kolb (on brief).
    Military Judge:    William T. Barto
    This opinion is subject to editorial correction before final publication.
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    Judge ERDMANN delivered the opinion of the court.
    After entering a guilty plea to the lesser included offense
    of sodomy, Sergeant (SGT) Bartholomew M. Berry was tried by a
    general court-martial on a number of offenses.   Berry was
    convicted of the greater offense of committing sodomy by force
    and without consent, making a false official statement,
    committing an indecent act with another, and fraternization, in
    violation of Articles 125, 107, and 134, Uniform Code of
    Military Justice (UCMJ), 
    10 U.S.C. §§ 907
    , 925, 934 (2000),
    respectively.   Berry’s sentence, which was approved by the
    convening authority, included a bad-conduct discharge,
    confinement for twelve months, and forfeiture of all pay and
    allowances.
    The sole issue before this court involves the admission of
    evidence of a prior sexual assault under Military Rule of
    Evidence (M.R.E.) 413.   At trial, Berry’s defense to the charge
    of forcible sodomy was that Sergeant T (SGT T) had consented to
    the oral sex incident that was the basis for the charge.     To
    counter this defense the Government sought to introduce
    testimony from LS, who testified he had been the victim of a
    similar act by Berry eight years earlier.   The military judge
    found that the testimony was relevant and admissible under
    M.R.E. 413 and that ruling was affirmed by the United States
    2
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    Army Court of Criminal Appeals in an unpublished opinion.
    United States v. Berry, ARMY 20000960 (A. Ct. Crim. App. Dec.
    18, 2003).
    We granted review of the Army court’s decision to determine
    whether the military judge erred in admitting LS’s testimony
    under M.R.E. 413.   We find that although the testimony was
    relevant, the military judge erred in admitting it because he
    failed to do an adequate balancing test under M.R.E. 403 and
    that under a proper M.R.E. 403 balancing test, the testimony was
    inadmissible.   We also find the error to be prejudicial.
    BACKGROUND
    Berry’s conviction flows from events that occurred after a
    barbecue at his residence attended by Berry, SGT T, and Private
    First Class (PFC) H.   They drank a few beers at the barbecue and
    then went to a bar in town where they continued drinking.     After
    they had been at the bar a few hours, SGT T fell out of his
    chair while reaching for a cigarette and the three decided to
    return to Berry’s residence.   SGT T became sick when they
    arrived at Berry’s residence and he threw up several times.    The
    evidence at trial gave two different versions of the events that
    followed.
    In Berry’s sworn statement, in which he admitted to
    consensual sodomy with SGT T, Berry said that he helped SGT T
    clean himself up and helped him into Berry’s bed.   He then
    3
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    stated that he and SGT T began kissing and Berry “brought [SGT
    T’s] pants down, and that’s when [the oral sex] happened.”     SGT
    T did not tell Berry to stop, and Berry claimed that SGT T was
    awake at the time although “he was going in and out, he was
    pretty drunk.”   After the oral sex, Berry went to sleep and woke
    up later to drive SGT T to pick up his daughter from day care.
    SGT T testified to a different version of events.    He
    stated that he felt very dizzy and very sick when they left the
    bar and that he threw up a number of times when they got back to
    Berry’s residence.   After lying on Berry’s bed to sleep it off,
    the next thing he remembered was looking up and seeing Berry on
    top of him and kissing him.   He testified that he tried to stop
    Berry, but that he could not move.    Berry then asked him if he
    “wanted to f[---],” and he said no.   Berry told SGT T that he
    had some condoms, and SGT T again said no.
    The next thing he remembered was that Berry’s “head started
    moving down towards my genital area.”    Again SGT T “tried to
    move and tried to push him off, but I couldn’t . . . . I felt
    like I was paralyzed and I just could not move.”   The last thing
    he remembered was “a warm sensation on my genital area, but I am
    not sure because I don’t remember seeing him being on it . . .
    I just remember him going down towards that area, and then a
    sensation there of feeling that he was putting his mouth on my
    genital area.”   SGT T also remembered someone trying to get his
    4
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    underwear back on him and that Berry then woke him up to pick up
    his daughter.
    In addition to the two conflicting accounts of the evening,
    LS testified at trial over the objections of Berry’s defense
    counsel.   LS was fifteen at the time of his testimony and he
    testified regarding an encounter he had with Berry eight years
    earlier when he was six and Berry was thirteen.   He and Berry
    both resided in military housing in Hawaii.    According to LS,
    one day they were playing with a group of children and Berry
    called him over behind a tree.   Berry pulled his own pants down,
    and “tried to get me to such [sic] on his penis.”   When LS said
    no, Berry reached over and pulled his pants down and “said he’d
    do it to me first.”   LS hesitated, but Berry convinced him and
    then proceeded to suck on his penis.   Berry then said it was his
    turn, and LS began to suck on Berry’s penis.   They were
    interrupted when “a guy ran out,” and both of them ran away.      On
    cross examination, LS admitted that there was no force used by
    Berry but that Berry talked him into participating.
    The prosecution sought to have LS’s testimony admitted
    under M.R.E. 413, stating that “it is relevant to Sergeant
    Berry’s propensity to sexually assault those who are in a
    position of vulnerability.”   Trial counsel also stated that the
    evidence satisfied the M.R.E. 403 balancing test established by
    5
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    this court in United States v. Wright, 
    53 M.J. 476
     (C.A.A.F.
    2000), and therefore was not overly prejudicial.
    Berry’s defense counsel objected to the admission of this
    testimony on the basis that it was “extremely distracting, and
    . . . extremely prejudicial.”   The defense argued that LS’s
    memory of the event, on a scale of one to ten (with ten being
    very clear), was only about a six.   With regard to the probative
    value of the evidence, the defense counsel argued that it was
    childhood sexual experimentation and that it took place eight
    years prior to the event in question with no evidence that
    anything of the kind happened in between.   He further argued
    that there was no evidence of physical force or lack of consent.
    The military judge found the testimony to be relevant and
    admissible under M.R.E. 413.
    The military judge denied Berry’s motion to exclude LS’s
    testimony as follows:
    The accused is charged with an offense of
    sexual assault . . . . The proffered
    evidence is evidence that the accused
    committed another act of or offense of
    sexual assault, and the evidence is
    relevant, under Military Rule of Evidence
    401 and 402. The proffered evidence involves
    conduct that occurred over eight years ago.
    The proffered evidence is similar to
    the charged misconduct because it involves
    taking advantage of a vulnerable victim.
    [LS] was, approximately, 6[]years old at the
    time of the alleged sexual assault by the
    accused, who, despite his own youth, is
    considered by the court to have acted upon
    6
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    someone of tender years who was unable to
    consent at the time.
    [SGT T] was also, apparently,
    vulnerable in that he was apparently
    unconscious or sleep [sic], or experiencing
    periods of partial consciousness, based on
    the government’s proffered [sic] at the time
    of the alleged assault by the accused.
    Both offenses involve homosexual
    fellatio performed by the accused on
    another; and this proffered evidence
    involves only a single act, potentially,
    established by a single witness. As such,
    the defense motion to exclude the testimony
    of [LS] is denied.
    In both his opening and closing statements, trial counsel
    referred to Berry’s acts with LS and reminded the members that
    the encounter could be considered relevant “because [Berry] took
    advantage of a person in a vulnerable position just like he did
    here in the case that you’re deciding.”   The military judge’s
    instruction to the members with regard to LS’s testimony stated
    that it could be considered “for the purpose of its tendency, if
    any, to show that the accused has a propensity to commit
    nonconsensual sexual acts against unusually vulnerable persons.”
    The Army court affirmed the ruling of the military judge
    that LS’s testimony was relevant under M.R.E. 401 and 402.
    Although the military judge did not articulate an M.R.E. 403
    balancing test on the record, the Army court found that the
    military judge had conducted a balancing test.   That conclusion
    was based on the factual findings made by the military judge and
    the arguments raised by the trial counsel regarding the factors
    7
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    that must be considered in an M.R.E. 403 balancing test.
    Because it found that the military judge had conducted the
    required balancing test, the Army court reviewed his ruling for
    abuse of discretion and found that he had not abused his
    discretion in admitting the testimony of LS under M.R.E. 413.
    On appeal before this court, Berry argues that LS’s
    testimony does not meet the threshold test for admissibility
    because it is not logically relevant.    Berry further argues that
    even if LS’s testimony is relevant, neither the military judge
    nor the Army court did a proper balancing test as required by
    M.R.E. 403 and by this court’s decision in Wright.    He suggests
    that had they done so they would have concluded that the
    testimony should not be admitted.    Berry concludes by arguing
    that he was prejudiced by the erroneous admission of this
    testimony.   In response, the Government argues that the
    testimony is relevant and the military judge conducted the
    required balancing test under M.R.E. 403 and properly concluded
    that LS’s testimony should be admitted.
    8
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    DISCUSSION
    The granted issue1 asks whether the military judge erred in
    admitting evidence of uncharged sexual acts between Berry and LS
    that occurred eight years earlier when Berry was thirteen and LS
    was six.   This court has noted that inherent in M.R.E. 413 is a
    general presumption in favor of admission.    See Wright, 53 M.J.
    at 482-83.    However, we have also noted that it is a
    “constitutional requirement that evidence offered under Rule 413
    be subjected to a thorough balancing test” under M.R.E. 403.
    United States v. Dewrell, 
    55 M.J. 131
    , 138 (C.A.A.F. 2001).
    Where that balancing test requires exclusion of the evidence,
    the presumption of admissibility is overcome.    See Wright, 53
    M.J. at 482-83.
    M.R.E. 413 Threshold Requirements
    This court has held that to admit evidence under M.R.E.
    413, three threshold determinations must be made:
    1.   The accused is charged with an offense
    of sexual assault -– [M.R.E.] 413(a);
    2.   “The evidence proffered is ‘evidence of
    the defendant’s commission of another
    offense of . . . sexual assault’”; and
    3.   The evidence is relevant under [M.R.E.]
    401 and 402. United States v. Guardia,
    
    135 F.3d 1326
    , 1328 (10th Cir. 1998).
    1
    WHETHER THE MILITARY JUDGE ERRED IN ADMITTING
    EVIDENCE   OF   UNCHARGED   HOMOSEXUAL    ACTS BETWEEN
    APPELLANT WHEN HE WAS THIRTEEN YEARS OLD, AND A SIX-
    YEAR-OLD BOY, EIGHT YEARS BEFORE THE CHARGED OFFENSE
    OF FORCIBLE SODOMY WITH AN ADULT SOLDIER.
    9
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    Wright, 53 M.J. at 482.
    As the military judge noted, the first and second threshold
    requirements were met because Berry was charged with forcible
    sodomy without consent, which is an offense of sexual assault
    under the UCMJ, and Berry’s conduct with LS falls under that
    same definition.   See M.R.E. 413(d)(1) (defining “sexual
    assault”).   Moving to the third threshold requirement, we must
    determine whether the military judge abused his discretion in
    finding LS’s testimony relevant under M.R.E. 401.   See United
    States v. Gilbride, 
    56 M.J. 428
    , 430 (C.A.A.F. 2002) (citing
    United States v. Ayala, 
    43 M.J. 296
     (C.A.A.F. 1995)).    A
    military judge abuses his discretion “if his application of the
    correct legal principles to the facts . . . is clearly
    unreasonable.”   United States v. Williams, 
    37 M.J. 352
    , 356
    (C.M.A. 1993).
    Relevant evidence under M.R.E. 401 is “evidence having any
    tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of
    consequence to the determination of the action more probable or
    less probable than it would be without the evidence.”    The
    military judge found that “[t]he proffered evidence is similar
    to the charged misconduct because it involves taking advantage
    of a vulnerable victim.”   From strictly a propensity viewpoint,
    the evidence does show that Berry had participated in similar
    conduct in the past.   This evidence, therefore, does have some
    10
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    tendency to make it more probable that Berry committed a
    nonconsensual act against a vulnerable person and we conclude
    that the military judge did not abuse his discretion in finding
    the testimony to be relevant.   See Wright, 53 M.J. at 480
    (noting legislative history shows that Federal Rule of Evidence
    (F.R.E.) 4132 creates an exception to M.R.E. 404(b)’s general
    prohibition against the use of a defendant’s propensity to
    commit crimes).
    M.R.E. 403 Balancing Test
    Once the evidence meets these threshold requirements, a
    military judge must apply the balancing test of M.R.E. 403 under
    which the testimony may be excluded if its “probative value is
    substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice,
    confusion of the issues, or misleading the members.”   M.R.E.
    403.   In conducting the M.R.E. 403 balancing test a military
    judge should consider the following factors:   the strength of
    the proof of the prior act; the probative weight of the
    evidence; the potential to present less prejudicial evidence;
    the possible distraction of the fact-finder; the time needed to
    prove the prior conduct; the temporal proximity of the prior
    2
    M.R.E. 413 was adopted from F.R.E. 413, and the analysis of
    M.R.E. 413 in the Manual for Courts-Martial, United States (2002
    ed.)(MCM), references the legislative history of F.R.E. 413
    regarding congressional intent for the rule. MCM, Analysis of
    the Military Rules of Evidence A22-37.
    11
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    event; the frequency of the acts; the presence of any
    intervening circumstances; and the relationship between the
    parties.   Wright, 53 M.J. at 482.
    The military judge made minimal findings relating to the
    Wright factors and did not articulate any balancing of those
    factors on the record.   Where the military judge is required to
    do a balancing test under M.R.E. 403 and does not sufficiently
    articulate his balancing on the record, his evidentiary ruling
    will receive less deference from this court.   See Dewrell, 55
    M.J. at 138 (citing United States v. Manns, 
    54 M.J. 164
    , 166
    (C.A.A.F. 2000)); United States v. Bailey, 
    55 M.J. 38
    , 41
    (C.A.A.F. 2000) (citing Manns, 54 M.J. at 166).
    The Wright elements addressed by the military judge tend to
    support admission of the testimony:   the proof of the prior
    similar act was strong because it involved the testimony of the
    only witness who had first-hand knowledge about the event; there
    was only one prior act which, as noted, could be established by
    a single witness and would not take an inordinate amount of
    time; and the act occurred eight years ago between acquaintances
    where the victim was in a vulnerable position.
    12
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    The military judge failed to address the relevant remaining
    Wright factors:3 the probative weight of the evidence, the
    frequency of the acts, the temporal proximity of the prior act
    and the presence of intervening circumstances, and the
    distraction of the fact-finder.
    While the military judge noted that the prior incident
    occurred eight years earlier where the victim was in a
    vulnerable position, he failed to analyze further the
    circumstances of the two incidents with regard to the probative
    weight of the previous incident.       The incident with LS occurred
    outside during the day between children, while the incident with
    SGT T occurred at night in private quarters between two adults
    after an evening of drinking.
    3
    We note that one of those factors not considered by the
    military judge is whether it would have been possible to admit,
    for the same purpose, evidence that was less prejudicial than
    LS’s testimony. The defense argued on appeal before the Court
    of Criminal Appeals and before this court that a statement by
    Berry admitting to the encounter with LS was available for that
    purpose and should have been considered by the military judge.
    However, the issue of whether less prejudicial evidence was
    available was not raised by the defense at trial and Berry’s
    statement was not admitted by the Court of Criminal Appeals. We
    make no decision as to whether this statement would have been
    admissible at the trial level, we simply note that the statement
    is not part of the record on appeal. We must evaluate the
    military judge’s ruling based on what was known to him at the
    time of trial. Accordingly, we have denied Berry’s “Motion to
    Attach Defense Appellate Exhibit A,” filed with this court on
    October 18, 2004, and will not consider the substance of Berry’s
    statement concerning the prior event.
    13
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    The incident with LS occurred only once, eight years prior
    to Berry’s encounter with SGT T, when Berry was thirteen years
    old.   The length of time between the events alone is generally
    not enough to make a determination as to the admissibility of
    the testimony.   The circumstances surrounding the individual and
    the events that transpired in the intervening period must be
    taken into consideration.   Where a defendant was an adult at the
    time he committed the prior sexual assault, this court has found
    incidents occurring more than eight years prior to the charged
    incident to be relevant under M.R.E. 413.   See Dewrell, 55 M.J.
    at 137-38 (finding incidents occurring approximately seven to
    ten years earlier admissible); Bailey, 55 M.J. at 41 (finding
    incidents occurring three and one-half and ten years prior
    admissible).   A similar finding is not readily made where a
    prior incident is between children or adolescents.
    In United States v. McDonald, 
    59 M.J. 426
     (C.A.A.F. 2004),
    we evaluated whether evidence of sexual acts that occurred
    twenty years prior to the charged act, when the defendant was
    thirteen, was erroneously admitted for the purpose of showing
    intent or a common plan under M.R.E. 404(b).   We concluded that
    the evidence was not relevant under that rule, and in so doing
    we noted the absence of “evidence of that 13-year-old
    adolescent’s mental and emotional state, sufficient to permit
    14
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    meaningful comparison with Appellant’s state of mind as an adult
    20 years later.”   
    Id. at 430
    .
    During the eight years between the two incidents Berry grew
    from a child of thirteen to an adult of twenty-one.   There was
    no evidence introduced to show that Berry engaged in similar
    acts between the time he was thirteen and the time of the
    incident with SGT T eight years later.   Consistent with
    McDonald, we also note here that there is no evidence suggesting
    that Berry’s mens rea at twenty-one was the same as it was when
    he was a child of thirteen.   As one scholar has stated:
    Between the ages of twelve and seventeen,
    adolescents undergo a critical period of
    transition during which they experience
    rapid transformations in emotional,
    intellectual, physical, and social
    capacities. Even older adolescents, whose
    raw intellectual capacities may rival those
    of adults, have less experience on which to
    draw in making and evaluating choices. In
    short, adolescents are not simply miniature
    adults.
    Kim Taylor-Thompson, States of Mind/States of Development, 14
    Stan. L. & Pol’y Rev. 143, 152-53 (2003) (footnotes omitted).
    When projecting on a child the mens rea of an adult or
    extrapolating an adult mens rea from the acts of a child,
    military judges must take care to meaningfully analyze the
    different phases of the accused’s development rather than treat
    those phases as being unaffected by time, experience, and
    maturity.   Where a military judge finds that the prior “sexual
    15
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    assault” acts of a child or adolescent are probative to an act
    later committed as an adult, such a determination must be
    supported in the record by competent evidence.   Consequently the
    passage of eight years in this case constitutes a notable
    intervening circumstance between the two events at issue when
    coupled with Berry’s growth from childhood to adulthood during
    that time.
    We then turn to another of the Wright factors not addressed
    by the military judge -- the possible distraction of the fact-
    finder that could result from admission of the testimony.     In
    Bailey we noted that the danger considered by this factor is
    that admission of the evidence may “result in a distracting
    mini-trial on a collateral issue.”   Bailey, 55 M.J. at 41.
    The prosecution’s opening statement did not begin with a
    reference to the facts of the present case but rather with a
    reference to the earlier incident:   “[I]n 1992, the accused was
    a 13-year old living in Hawaii on a military installation.    He
    called a neighborhood child, a six-year old boy behind a tree,
    he pulled down the little boy’s pants and he convinced him to
    allow him to suc[k] on the child’s penis.”
    In his closing statement the prosecutor reminded the
    members that Berry “convinced [a] little boy to try to suck on
    his penis[]” even though “the little boy said, no.”   He noted
    that the encounter with LS could be considered relevant “because
    16
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    [Berry] took advantage of a person in a vulnerable position just
    like he did here in the case that you’re deciding.”
    Under these circumstances it is evident that a “distracting
    mini-trial” on the collateral issue of the LS incident resulted
    from the admission of LS’s testimony and the prosecution’s
    pointed references.   The emphasis on “a neighborhood child,” “a
    little boy,” and “a six year-old boy” all characterized Berry in
    the eyes of the members as a child molester, one of the most
    unsympathetic characterizations that can be made.
    Considering the already limited probative value of LS’s
    testimony, that value clearly was outweighed by the danger that
    the members were distracted from considering his testimony for
    its proper purpose.   Applying the appropriate deference to the
    ruling of the military judge, we find that LS’s testimony fails
    the M.R.E. 403 balancing test and that the military judge’s
    decision to admit LS’s testimony was in error.
    Prejudice
    “A finding or sentence of court-martial may not be held
    incorrect on the ground of an error of law unless the error
    materially prejudices the substantial rights of the accused.”
    Article 59(a), UCMJ, 
    10 U.S.C. § 859
    (a) (2000).   For a
    nonconstitutional error such as this one, the Government has the
    burden of demonstrating that “the error did not have a
    substantial influence on the findings.”   United States v.
    17
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    McCollum, 
    58 M.J. 323
    , 342 (C.A.A.F. 2003); see also United
    States v. Gunkle, 
    55 M.J. 26
    , 30 (C.A.A.F. 2001).
    In evaluating whether erroneous admission of Government
    evidence is harmless, this court uses a four-part test,
    weighing:   (1) the strength of the Government’s case, (2) the
    strength of the defense case, (3) the materiality of the
    evidence in question, and (4) the quality of the evidence in
    question.   See McDonald, 
    59 M.J. at
    430 (citing United States v.
    Kerr, 
    51 M.J. 401
    , 405 (C.A.A.F. 1999)).
    The central question with regard to this specification was
    whether SGT T had in fact consented to the sodomy or whether
    Berry had taken advantage of him when he was in a vulnerable
    drunken state.   The Government evidence on this issue consisted
    of expert testimony speculating that SGT T had been drugged and
    SGT T’s vague testimony regarding the incident.   The defense
    submitted no evidence, but set forth Berry’s version of events
    through cross-examination of the witnesses and his sworn
    statement in which he admitted to consensual sodomy.   The result
    was a “he said/he said” case, where SGT T’s credibility and the
    effectiveness of the defense cross-examination were all that the
    members had to rely upon.
    LS’s testimony added the first-hand account by a fifteen-
    year-old boy that he was sodomized at the age of six by Berry.
    Even though the testimony was admitted for the limited purpose
    18
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    of showing that Berry had a propensity to commit nonconsensual
    sexual acts against unusually vulnerable persons, due to the
    inflammatory nature of the testimony and the emphasis given the
    testimony by the Government, it was likely considered by the
    members as much more than propensity evidence.   Berry became not
    just a soldier who stood accused of forcible sodomy, but rather
    a child molester who was charged with the offense of forcible
    sodomy.   Based upon our review of the record, it appears that
    LS’s testimony improperly tipped the balance of the evidence and
    the Government has not met its burden of demonstrating that this
    improperly admitted evidence “did not have a substantial
    influence on the findings.”   McCollum, 58 M.J. at 342.
    Finding that Berry was prejudiced by the military judge’s
    error we turn to whether, if a rehearing on the affected
    findings is deemed impracticable, reassessment would be
    appropriate.   We find that, considering the inflammatory nature
    of the evidence to which the members were erroneously exposed,
    it would not be possible to “reliably determine what sentence
    would have been imposed at the trial level if the error had not
    occurred.”   United States v. Sales, 
    22 M.J. 305
    , 307 (C.M.A.
    1986).    Reassessment, therefore, is not appropriate.
    19
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    DECISION
    The decision of the United States Army Court of Criminal
    Appeals is reversed.   That part of the finding of the
    specification of Charge II stating “by force and without the
    consent of the said Sergeant [T]” and the sentence are set
    aside.   The remainder of the specification of Charge II and the
    remaining findings of guilty are affirmed.   The record of trial
    is returned to the Judge Advocate General of the Army.   A
    rehearing on the affected finding and sentence is authorized.
    If a rehearing on the affected finding is deemed impracticable,
    a rehearing may be held on the sentence alone.
    20
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    CRAWFORD, Judge (concurring in the result).
    I agree that the military judge abused his discretion by
    conducting a flawed analysis under Military Rule of Evidence
    (M.R.E.) 403, and would reverse on that ground.    However, I
    cannot join in the majority’s reasoning because the judge also
    abused his discretion by determining evidence of Appellant’s
    childhood act to be logically relevant under M.R.E. 401.
    To be legally relevant, evidence must first be logically
    relevant.    If Appellant’s childhood sexual act is not legally
    relevant to show his propensity to commit similar acts as an
    adult because “there is no evidence suggesting that Berry’s mens
    rea at twenty-one was the same as it was when he was a child of
    thirteen,”   __ M.J. (15), then it was not logically relevant to
    show his propensity to commit similar acts in the first place.
    Relevant evidence under M.R.E. 401 is “evidence having any
    tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of
    consequence to the determination of the action more probable or
    less probable than it would be without the evidence.”   In this
    case, the military judge found that “[t]he proffered evidence is
    similar to the charged misconduct because it involves taking
    advantage of a vulnerable victim.”   Without elaboration, the
    majority accepts that similarity of conduct as sufficient to
    establish logical relevance.   Given the facts of this case,
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    however, and considering the purpose for which the evidence was
    offered, logical relevance requires more.
    The Government offered Appellant’s childhood act under
    M.R.E. 413, which permits introduction of so-called “propensity
    evidence,” i.e., “[t]he rule permits the prosecution to use
    evidence of the accused's uncharged past sexual assaults for the
    purpose of demonstrating his propensity to commit the charged
    offenses.”   United States   v. Parker, 
    59 M.J. 195
    , 198 (C.A.A.F.
    2003)(citation and internal quotation marks omitted).       The
    military judge denied the defense’s motion to exclude LS’s
    testimony and instructed the members that they may consider LS’s
    testimony “for the purpose of its tendency, if any, to show that
    the accused has a propensity to commit nonconsensual sexual acts
    against vulnerable persons.”   To be logically relevant to this
    purpose, the evidence must have some “tendency to make the
    existence of” appellant’s propensity “more probable . . . than
    it would be without the evidence.”    M.R.E. 401.   As we
    recognized in United States v. Wright, 
    53 M.J. 476
     (C.A.A.F.
    2000), M.R.E. 413 opens with a reminder that, while generally
    admissible, evidence must first be “relevant”:
    In a court-martial in which the accused is charged
    with an offense of sexual assault, evidence of the
    accused’s commission of one or more offenses of sexual
    assault is admissible, and may be considered for its
    bearing on any matter to which it is relevant.
    2
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    M.R.E. 413(a)(emphasis added);
    1 Wright, 53
     M.J. at 480.
    Conceding that the military judge did not cite propensity
    as the “fact” to which this evidence was relevant, the majority
    then concludes that “[f]rom strictly a propensity viewpoint, the
    evidence does show that Berry had participated in similar
    conduct in the past.    This evidence, therefore, does have some
    tendency to make it more probable that Berry committed a
    nonconsensual act against a vulnerable person[.]” __ M.J. (10-
    11).    This statement is particularly troubling in light of the
    later conclusion that “there is no evidence suggesting that
    Berry’s mens rea at twenty-one was the same as it was when he
    was a child of thirteen.” __ M.J. (15).    From these statements,
    one must conclude that the mere happenstance of a similar,
    earlier act demonstrates per se relevance to propensity, even
    1
    We noted in Wright that M.R.E. 413 and Fed. R. Evid. 413 “are
    virtually the same.” Wright, 53 M.J. at 480 n.4. Accordingly,
    analysis of Fed. R. Evid. 413 also illuminates M.R.E. 413. In
    a discussion of Fed. R. Evid. 413, two scholars commented:
    The evidence permitted is broadly defined as any act
    that would be either a state or federal crime related
    to either sexual assault or child molestation. The
    limitations appear to be only relevance and the
    requirement that the prosecution provide fifteen days
    notice of its intent to use evidence pursuant to
    these rules.” 1 Barbara E. Bergman and Nancy
    Hollander, Wharton’s Criminal Evidence (15th ed.
    1997)(footnotes omitted)(commenting on the nearly
    identical text of Fed. R. Evid. 413 and 414).
    § 4.42 at 458-59.
    3
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    absent evidence or presumption of a similarity of mens rea,2 or,
    presumably, character.   Such a conclusion strongly suggests that
    even differences in mental competence (and certainly differences
    in cognitive and emotional development) are inapplicable to a
    threshold analysis under M.R.E. 401 -- a departure from the
    application of that rule that I cannot embrace, for it leads to
    the conclusion that the mindless act of an infant is per se
    logically relevant to prove the state of mind or character of
    that infant as an adult and would be admissible unless excluded
    for some other reason.   “[Evidence] may also be inadmissible as
    irrelevant because a link in the chain of facts is missing that
    is required to give probative value to the evidence.”   1
    Wharton’s Criminal Evidence § 4-5 at 298-99 (footnote omitted);
    see also M.R.E. 104(b); c.f.   Johnson v. Elk Lake School
    District, 
    283 F.3d 138
    , 154-55 (3d Cir. 2002)(applying Fed. R.
    Evid. 104(b) to Fed. R. Evid. 413(d)).   In applying M.R.E. 413,
    I believe the majority has confused evidence relevant to state
    of mind and character3 with evidence relevant to happenstance,
    and in so doing, has departed from our recently announced
    analysis in United States v. McDonald, 
    59 M.J. 426
     (C.A.A.F.
    2
    Of course, mens rea and character are not congruent concepts,
    but in the context of this evidence and the purpose for which it
    was offered, the two are logically indistinguishable.
    3
    “Propensity evidence” is a form of character evidence. See 2
    Stephen A. Salzburg et al., Federal Rules of Evidence Manual §
    413.02[2] (8th ed. 2001).
    4
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    2004),4 rejecting evidence for its failure to satisfy M.R.E. 401.
    In McDonald, this Court stated:
    The military judge found, and the court below agreed,
    that the evidence was logically relevant both as to
    “common plan” and “intent.” We disagree. Applying
    the second prong of Reynolds, we hold that the
    evidence of Appellant's uncharged acts was not
    logically relevant to show either a common plan or
    Appellant's intent.
    59 M.J. at 429-30 (internal citation omitted).
    Because M.R.E. 413, as employed in this case, demands
    logical relevance to a character trait –- propensity to commit
    sexual acts with vulnerable persons –– I would again conclude
    that evidence of sexual acts that occurred when the defendant
    was thirteen is not logically relevant to prove character or
    cognition of that child as an adult, absent “evidence of that
    13-year-old adolescent’s mental and emotional state, sufficient
    to permit meaningful comparison with Appellant’s character as an
    adult.”   McDonald,   59 M.J. at 430.     While Appellant’s case
    presents a gap of only eight years between the acts, as opposed
    to the twenty years in McDonald, those intervening years share
    the same evidentiary deficiency:       failure to account for the
    effects of puberty and adolescence on either cognitive
    development or character.   In McDonald, we required the
    4
    Although McDonald addressed M.R.E. 404(b), the concept of legal
    and logical relevance runs through the military evidentiary
    rules, including M.R.E. 401, 402, 403, 404(b), 413, and 14,
    along with the other § IV rules.
    5
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    appellant to establish the logical relevance of a thirteen-year-
    old’s “mental and emotional state” to the state of mind of that
    child as an adult.   In this case, we examine the logical
    relevance of a thirteen-year-old’s acts to the “propensity” of
    that child as an adult to engage in similar acts.    I recognize
    that there is no meaningful distinction between the relevance we
    required in McDonald and the relevance we should require here.
    Happenstance vs. character and state of mind.    In our
    practice, as in the federal district courts, the undertaking of
    an act is frequently relevant in and of itself, without regard
    to the state of mind of the actor in performing the act.    See,
    e.g., M.R.E. 304 (confessions and admissions), M.R.E. 321
    (eyewitness identification), and M.R.E. 406 (habit and routine).
    In the course of a trial, innumerable other contexts arise in
    which proof of an act is relevant merely to show that the act
    occurred (e.g., facts establishing nonvolitional elements of
    offenses).   In other contexts, relevance requires that
    happenstance be paired with a specific purpose (e.g., M.R.E.
    608(b)(evidence of prior conduct must be probative of
    truthfulness or untruthfulness); M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B)(prior
    consistent statement must precede motive to fabricate).
    Character or state of mind evidence.   When intent, plan,
    purpose, or character are involved -- when the fact made more or
    less probable is a quality of cognition -- mere happenstance may
    6
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    not be sufficient to establish logical relevance.   McDonald, 
    59 M.J. at 430
    ; United States v. Humpherys, 
    57 M.J. 83
    , 89-90
    (C.A.A.F. 2002); United States v. Tanksley, 
    54 M.J. 169
    , 175
    (C.A.A.F. 2000); United States v. Matthews, 
    53 M.J. 465
    , 473
    (C.A.A.F. 2000).   M.R.E. 413 and 414 freed prosecutors from the
    restraints of M.R.E. 404(b) and for the first time permitted
    evidence of an accused’s past acts to demonstrate the propensity
    of the accused to commit other such acts.   Although “propensity”
    has been defined in slightly differing terms by various sources,
    the common theme is the focus on “nature” as the source of the
    inclination,5 reinforcing the classification of such evidence as
    “character evidence.”   In short, the evidence is offered to show
    that the character or nature of the accused is such that he or
    she is predisposed to commit the charged offense, based on
    similar conduct undertaken by the accused in the past.   As I see
    it, in the context of any comparative “state of mind” or
    character evidence, there is a roughly graduated scale -- with
    mere unity of identity at one end and absolute identity of
    cognitive state at the other -- along which such evidence will
    generally fall.    While I agree that mere unity of identity may
    5
    Webster’s Third New International Dictionary of the English
    Language (1961)(“a natural inclination”). See, e.g., Merriam
    Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (11th ed. 2003)(defining
    propensity as “an often intense natural inclination or
    preference); Webster’s New Word College Dictionary (4th ed.
    1999)(propensity is a natural inclination or tendency”).
    7
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    be sufficient to establish relevance when reasonable identity of
    cognitive state can be assumed (as in the acts of most adults),
    I do not believe we should apply that assumption to bridge the
    frequently vast chasm of puberty and adolescence.     With this in
    mind, I believe our logic in McDonald must control our
    examination of this even more powerful evidence.
    As the majority notes, children are not miniature adults.
    Evidence that an accused possessed some cognitive characteristic
    at age twenty-one might logically be presumed relevant to
    whether the accused had that same characteristic at age twenty-
    nine; however, consistent with our logic in McDonald, I cannot
    agree that evidence of a cognitive characteristic at age
    thirteen can be assumed to be logically relevant to whether the
    accused had that same cognitive characteristic at age twenty-
    one.
    For most teens, [risky or antisocial] behaviors are
    fleeting; they cease with maturity as individual
    identity becomes settled. Only a relatively small
    proportion of adolescents who experiment in risky or
    illegal activities develop entrenched patterns of
    problem behavior that persist into adulthood.
    Laurence Steinberg & Elizabeth Scott, Less Guilty by Reason of
    Adolescence:   Developmental Immaturity, Diminished
    Responsibility, and the Juvenile Death Penalty, 58 American
    Psychologist 1009, 1014 (2003).   Professors Steinberg and Scott
    also note that:
    8
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    studies of criminal careers indicate that the vast
    majority of adolescents who engage in criminal or
    delinquent behavior desist from crime as they mature
    into adulthood (Farrington, 1986). Thus the criminal
    choices of typical young offenders differ from those
    of adults not only because the choice, qua choice, is
    deficient as the product of immature judgment, but
    also because the adolescent’s criminal act does not
    express the actor’s bad character.
    
    Id. at 1015
    .
    In addition to the concerns we expressed in McDonald, we
    have also recognized that, even absent the complicating factors
    of puberty and adolescence, “[e]ven an individual with certain
    characteristics may have internal self-monitoring which may or
    may not cause them to act similarly in various situations.”
    United States v. Dimberio, 
    56 M.J. 20
    , 27 (C.A.A.F. 2001).
    While I agree that M.R.E. 413 has significantly reduced
    the analytical importance of temporal proximity between the
    charged acts and prior, similar acts introduced under that rule,
    I cannot agree that the rule creates a bypass around M.R.E. 401
    and 402 or creates a “happenstance equals relevance” equation.
    Discussing Fed. R. Evid. 413, which uses language similar to
    that of M.R.E. 413, the Eighth Circuit noted that:    “We have
    previously stated that this rule supersedes Rule 404's
    prohibition against character evidence, allowing testimony of
    prior bad acts in sexual assault cases, provided that it is
    relevant.”     United States v. Bird, 
    372 F.3d 989
    , 992 (8th Cir.
    2004).   In sexual assault and child molestation cases, evidence
    9
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    that the defendant committed a prior similar offense “may be
    considered for its bearing on any matter to which it is
    relevant,” including the defendant’s propensity to commit such
    offenses.    Fed. R. Evid. 413(a), 414(a).   “If relevant, such
    evidence is admissible unless its probative value is
    ‘substantially outweighed’ by one or more of the factors
    enumerated in Rule 403, including ‘the danger of unfair
    prejudice.’”   United States v. Gabe, 
    237 F.3d 954
    , 959 (8th Cir.
    2001)(quoting United States v. LeCompte, 
    131 F.3d, 769
     (8th Cir.
    1997).
    This is not to say here, nor did we so hold in McDonald,
    that the acts of a child cannot be relevant to determination of
    the state of mind of that child as an adult.    59 M.J. at 430.
    Rather, in this arena of great potential probity and great
    potential prejudice, we must follow the rule and require that
    threshold relevance to the specified “fact” be demonstrated with
    the same level of scrutiny we would apply to any other evidence
    offered for any other purpose.   Expressed another way, we should
    not be so confident in the crucible of M.R.E. 403 that we
    assume, for purposes of M.R.E. 413, that happenstance equals
    relevance.   This is particularly so, given that in Wright we
    emphasized the importance of M.R.E. 401 and 402, and in McDonald
    we denounced the assumption that happenstance equals relevance
    with regard to similar evidence offered under M.R.E. 404(b).
    10
    United States v. Berry, No. 04-0240/AR
    Because I am not convinced that the military judge made that
    critical comparison in this case, I cannot express confidence in
    the lower court’s conclusion that there was no abuse of
    discretion in this quarter.
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 04-0240-AR

Citation Numbers: 61 M.J. 91, 2005 CAAF LEXIS 474, 2005 WL 1115796

Judges: Erdmann, Gierke, Ef-Fron, Baker, Crawford

Filed Date: 5/10/2005

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/9/2024

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