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United States v. Fierro, ACM 39193 (2018)

Court: United States Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals Number: ACM 39193 Visitors: 25
Filed: Jun. 06, 2018
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: , A [Col MM]. The military judge erred by admitting the evidence, of the relationship between Appellant and the front-seat passenger, particu-, larly in light of Col MMs presence on the panel, and the error allowed the, debate about abortion into Appellants sentencing. The sentence is SET ASIDE.
              U NITED S TATES AIR F ORCE
             C OURT OF C RIMINAL APPEALS
                          ________________________

                               No. ACM 39193
                          ________________________

                            UNITED STATES
                                Appellee
                                      v.
                         William T. FIERRO
             Staff Sergeant (E-5), U.S. Air Force, Appellant
                          ________________________

        Appeal from the United States Air Force Trial Judiciary
                            Decided 6 June 2018
                          ________________________

Military Judge: Vance H. Spath.
Approved sentence: Bad-conduct discharge and confinement for 3
months. Sentence adjudged 1 September 2016 by GCM at Peterson
Air Force Base, Colorado.
For Appellant: Major Mark. C. Bruegger, USAF; Major Patrick A.
Clary, USAF; Major Jarett F. Merk, USAF.
For Appellee: Lieutenant Colonel Joseph J. Kubler, USAF; Major Mary
Ellen Payne, USAF; Major J. Ronald Steelman III, USAF.
Before HARDING, SPERANZA, and HUYGEN, Appellate Military
Judges.
Judge HUYGEN delivered the opinion of the court, in which Senior
Judge HARDING and Judge SPERANZA joined.
                          ________________________

    This is an unpublished opinion and, as such, does not serve as
    precedent under AFCCA Rule of Practice and Procedure 18.4.
                          ________________________

HUYGEN, Judge:
    Appellant pleaded guilty to one specification each of attempted distribu-
tion of cocaine on divers occasions, reckless driving, use of cocaine, and pos-
                   United States v. Fierro, No. ACM 39193


session of cocaine on divers occasions, in violation of Articles 80, 111, and
112a, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), 10 U.S.C. §§ 880, 911, 912a.
A general court-martial composed of officer members sentenced Appellant to
a bad-conduct discharge and confinement for three months. The convening
authority approved the sentence as adjudged.
    Appellant raises on appeal the following five issues, all related to the
presentencing hearing and none to the findings of guilt: (1) whether the mili-
tary judge erred by allowing trial counsel to elicit testimony as rebuttal and
argue in sentencing the circumstances of Appellant’s presence at the Planned
Parenthood clinic where he was shot; (2) whether the military judge erred by
denying one of Appellant’s challenges for cause; (3) whether the military
judge erred by instructing the panel members to disregard as a collateral
consequence Appellant’s loss of medical care and eligibility for Veterans Af-
fairs healthcare benefits as a result of a punitive discharge; (4) whether the
military judge erred by excluding two attachments to Appellant’s written un-
sworn statement; and (5) whether trial counsel’s sentencing argument that
Appellant’s status as a security forces member and his possession of drugs in
a military chapel were aggravating factors was improper. We decide this case
on the first issue, discuss the second issue in that context, and do not address
the remaining three issues. On the first issue, we find error that materially
prejudiced a substantial right of Appellant and thus set aside the sentence
and authorize a sentence rehearing.

                               I. BACKGROUND
A. Charged Offenses
    Appellant pleaded guilty to the following four charged offenses, all of
which occurred before the shooting discussed below: (1) attempted distribu-
tion of cocaine on divers occasions between 1 January and 17 July 2015, some
incidents of which involved Appellant offering cocaine to junior Airmen while
all were on duty as security forces; (2) possession of cocaine on divers occa-
sions because he showed the cocaine when he offered it; (3) reckless driving at
an excessive speed while impaired by cocaine and alcohol on 17 July 2015;
and (4) cocaine use on 16 July 2015.
B. Shooting at Planned Parenthood Clinic
   On 27 November 2015, Appellant and two women drove to the Planned
Parenthood clinic in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Appellant parked his vehicle
next to the vehicle of the shooter (RD). After saying to Appellant and his pas-
sengers “you chose a bad day to come here,” or words to that effect, RD began
shooting at Appellant’s vehicle with an AK-47 rifle. The female passenger in
the front seat of Appellant’s vehicle was shot and seriously injured; the fe-


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                    United States v. Fierro, No. ACM 39193


male passenger in the back seat was shot and killed. 1 Appellant, who had
been driving, was on the opposite side of his vehicle from RD and fled on foot
across the parking lot. RD walked towards the clinic, shot and killed a man
outside the building, and entered the building through the outer door but was
stopped from going further by the locked inner door.
    When RD entered the clinic building, Appellant ran back to his vehicle,
got in, and pulled out of the parking space. As Appellant was driving away,
the body of the back-seat passenger, which was partially in the vehicle, fell
out. RD exited the building and began shooting at the driver’s side of Appel-
lant’s vehicle and another parked vehicle. One bullet disabled Appellant’s ve-
hicle; two bullets penetrated the vehicle door and struck Appellant in his left
elbow and leg. Appellant’s vehicle rolled out of the parking lot, across an ac-
cess road, and to a stop in front of a nearby building. Appellant told the front-
seat passenger to get help; tried to exit the vehicle; and immediately col-
lapsed on the ground because of his injuries. After lying on the ground for
some time, Appellant was pulled by a civilian bystander behind another vehi-
cle for cover. Almost 30 minutes passed before a police officer dragged Appel-
lant into the nearby building, which housed a doctor’s office where he re-
ceived basic medical care. An hour passed from the time Appellant was shot
until he was transported by ambulance to a hospital.
    At the time of trial, Appellant had undergone nine surgeries with addi-
tional surgeries expected and ongoing medical treatment necessary.
C. Voir Dire
    Appellant chose a panel of officers to adjudge his sentence. As voir dire
began, there were 13 court members, all of whom participated in group and
individual voir dire. The military judge granted trial counsel’s sole challenge
for cause and one of the two Defense challenges for cause as well as the De-
fense peremptory challenge. The military judge denied the Defense challenge
for cause of Colonel (Col) MM. Thus, a panel of ten officers, with Col MM as
its president, adjudged Appellant’s sentence.
     During group voir dire, the Defense informed the then-13 court members
that they would “hear more about how [Appellant] became one of the first vic-
tims of the Colorado Springs Planned Parenthood shooting,” descriptions of
the shooting, and the effects of Appellant’s injury from the shooting on his
life. Asked if anyone had “personal feelings for or against Planned


1The record of trial does not provide the first and last names of either passenger.
This opinion refers to the two women as the front-seat and back-seat passengers.




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                    United States v. Fierro, No. ACM 39193


Parenthood,” Col MM and two other members were the only members to indi-
cate they did. After voir dire, the other two members, Lieutenant Colonel (Lt
Col) DMC and First Lieutenant (1st Lt) JHS, were excused as a result of the
granted challenges for cause.
    On individual voir dire, the military judge asked Col MM about Planned
Parenthood. 2 Specifically, when asked about his feelings about Planned
Parenthood, Col MM answered that he was “firmly against everything that
they stand for and do.” The military judge then asked Col MM, “But hypo-
thetically you find out that you [and Appellant] share a different view [about
Planned Parenthood], is that going to cause you to enhance his punishment
for the offenses that you see here? . . . And then vice versa if you happen to
agree on your views of Planned Parenthood, that’s not going to cause you to
decrease an appropriate punishment?” Col MM answered both questions “no.”
    The only other questions for Col MM about Planned Parenthood went as
follows:
       Q [Defense Counsel]. I’m wondering if your position being firm-
       ly against what it is that they [Planned Parenthood] do, does
       that impact how you feel about those that use or support their
       services?
       A [Col MM]. I -- let me try to answer accurately, but it’s hard to
       answer directly. I do not believe that there is a justifiable case
       to be made for abortion in any case, including rape, incest, or
       other. Those who choose to go that route, I believe are making
       a severe moral error. That does not equate to criminal activity
       in my view, but I have a significant religious and moral objec-
       tion to anyone who would choose that route in any case.
       Q. So are those people committing sin?
       A. Absolutely.
       Q. And does that affect your judgment of their moral character?
       A. I will say no because you used the word “character.” Their
       moral compass perhaps, or they haven’t received the right
       guidance. We are all sinners and what sin we commit is our



2 In the record, “Planned Parenthood” is used interchangeably to reference the organ-
ization and the 27 November 2015 shooting. Generally, the context makes clear
whether the speaker is referring to the organization or the shooting.




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                  United States v. Fierro, No. ACM 39193


      own business, but certainly I would agree it is a sin and would
      disagree with those who pursue that route.
The Defense challenged Col MM for cause, arguing, inter alia, Col MM’s
views on Planned Parenthood manifested implied bias.
   Ultimately, the military judge “did not detect any implied bias” for Col
MM and concluded, “I believe anyone in the general public who watched [Col
MM] and is not connected to this case would have no questions about why he
would stay on this court considering the liberal grant mandate.” The military
judge then denied the Defense’s challenge for cause of Col MM.
D. Matters in Mitigation
   In Appellant’s written unsworn statement, his description of the Planned
Parenthood clinic shooting included the following:
      In November 2015, I escorted two women to Planned
      Parenthood for an appointment. . . . I ducked and ran and
      managed to escape unhurt from the initial burst. But then I
      heard my friend [the front-seat passenger] screaming, and I
      had to run back to help her. When I got back to the car, I told
      her to be quiet and attempted to escape with her. . . . I knew
      she [the back-seat passenger] wasn’t going to make it, and I
      was forced to make the horrible decision to leave her behind in
      order to try to save my friend and myself. . . . I pumped the
      brakes to stop and angled the car so that I would be the one to
      get shot if [the shooter] was still there, shielding my friend. I
      told my friend to be quiet, not argue, run toward the building,
      and she did. . . . I dragged myself to the entrance of the door to
      a nearby building, about 80-100 feet away. My friend was al-
      ready inside . . . I know I managed to get my friend to safety. I
      believe I saved her life. I hope that my actions helped save oth-
      ers as well, although I don’t know if it did. . . . I would ask the
      court to take into account my actions as a demonstration of my
      potential for redemption. That’s not to say “look how heroic I
      am”, but rather “look what I’m capable of” if given the chance.
    Also in Appellant’s written unsworn statement, he cited the shooting and
his resulting injuries as a reason for the court members to grant “leniency,”
lessen his punishment, and not adjudge a punitive discharge, which would
deprive him of military medical care.
    The first sentencing witness called by the Defense was Detective (Det.)
JS, Colorado Springs (Colorado) Police Department, who was the lead detec-
tive for the Planned Parenthood clinic shooting. He responded to the incident
and later interviewed the shooter (RD) and victims of the shooting, including

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                    United States v. Fierro, No. ACM 39193


Appellant. During direct examination, Det. JS described the shooting in the
context of what happened to Appellant and the two passengers in his vehicle.
The defense counsel and Det. JS referred to the two women with Appellant
initially as Appellant’s “friends” and then as his “passengers.” Neither the
defense counsel nor Det. JS made any reference to why Appellant and the
two women were at the Planned Parenthood clinic on the day of the shooting.
     Trial counsel initially referred to the two women as “friends” during the
cross-examination of Det. JS. After having Det. JS describe what he saw in
the surveillance video of the shooting, trial counsel elicited from Det. JS that
he saw nothing that indicated Appellant “returned to the car with the pur-
pose of saving his friend’s life.” Trial counsel then asked Det. JS, “What was
the nature of the relationship with the people in the car?” The Defense ob-
jected, citing Rule for Courts-Martial (R.C.M.) 1001. Trial counsel responded,
“It’s rebuttal to mitigation and extenuation.” 3
    During the Article 39(a), UCMJ, session that followed, the military judge
and trial counsel elicited from Det. JS that the front-seat passenger was
pregnant with Appellant’s child and married to someone other than Appel-
lant. Trial counsel then argued that the nature of the relationship was proper
rebuttal because the Defense characterized the relationship as “friends,”
which was “not a full and accurate and complete characterization.” Trial
counsel contended that the Defense “opened the door to these types of ques-
tions” and that the Government could argue the nature of the relationship,
not as aggravation, but as “rebuttal to mitigation extenuation [sic].”
   Trial counsel answered “yes” to the military judge’s question of “Were you
planning on asking [Det. JS] about why [Appellant and the front-seat pas-
senger] were [at the clinic] based on his investigation?” The military judge
then turned to Det. JS,
       MJ [Military Judge]: Can you tell me what the answer to that
       would be?
       WIT [Det. JS]: She was scheduled to have an abortion.
       MJ: Okay. That part’s easy for me. That 403, what I don’t want
       to do is make this a debate about abortion because [it] is not.


3 Trial counsel and the military judge and, eventually, defense counsel use the term
“extenuation,” but the Defense introduced evidence about the Planned Parenthood
clinic shooting only for mitigation. There is no connection between the shooting and
the charged drug and driving offenses, which all occurred at least four months before
the shooting.




                                         6
                     United States v. Fierro, No. ACM 39193


       And we already know that some of the court members, as you
       would find in any society, have strong feelings about abortion.
    The Defense still objected to the evidence about the relationship between
Appellant and the front-seat passenger, in part because the Defense had not
“opened the door” and in part because the relationship evidence was “highly
inflammatory” and thus more prejudicial than probative. The military judge
explained that he would instruct the court-martial members who, he was con-
fident, would put the evidence “in the right context” and overruled the objec-
tion. 4
    After the members returned, the military judge explained to them,
       I’ve overruled the objection but I’m allowing the testimony for a
       very limited purpose. It is -- and you haven’t been instructed
       yet; I recognize that. Ultimately, I’m going to instruct you on
       your need to consider all matters in extenuation and mitiga-
       tion, and aggravation. Extenuation are things not connected to
       the crime itself. For example, somebody’s upbringing, be it dif-
       ficult or hard as they were coming along, that’s extenuation.
       It’s an example of extenuation. Difficult life experiences dis-
       connected from the crime.
       Mitigation has to do with the crime itself and why it is less se-
       rious or more serious -- less serious for mitigating, but I know
       you understand that. 5
       So this relates solely to extenuation. A proper matter in exten-
       uation certainly is the act of which the accused was a victim. I

4 The Defense did not renew its challenge for cause of Col MM, and the military judge
did not sua sponte re-open voir dire of Col MM or reconsider the denial of the chal-
lenge.
5 This incorrect explanation of extenuation and mitigation is the only explanation of
the terms by the military judge to the court members in the record. This explanation
may have complicated matters if a member knew and applied the correct definitions
of the terms and therefore believed that Appellant’s relationship with the front-seat
passenger and their presence at the Planned Parenthood clinic were somehow con-
nected to Appellant’s charged and convicted drug and driving offenses, which was not
the case. While the “extenuation” mistake was repeated throughout the proceeding,
including in the presence of the members, we did not accord it the significance sought
by Appellant. The mistake was consistent, at least when the military judge and trial
counsel were talking to the members about the Planned Parenthood clinic shooting
as a matter in “extenuation” but meaning mitigation. The consistency of the mistake
nullified its impact.




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                   United States v. Fierro, No. ACM 39193


       don’t think there’s any argument about that. It is going to be
       up to you to put it in the proper context, and then, ultimately,
       despite all matters in extenuation mitigation, or aggravation,
       to assess an appropriate sentence only for the offense of which
       the accused has been convicted. So you will get all those in-
       struction[s] later. I just want to be really clear as to why this
       next question and answer are coming, and that it is solely for
       how you consider it as you find this matter -- the shooting -- ex-
       tenuating. It is what weight you put to that, and that is it. It is
       not a matter in aggravation. It is not a matter really of any-
       thing else except for that limited context.
   Trial counsel then asked Det. JS about “the nature of the relationship”
between Appellant and the front-seat passenger.
       A [Det. JS]. [Appellant] and the front seat passenger were in a
       relationship and she was pregnant with his child.
       Q [Trial Counsel]. Was she married?
       A. Yes,
       Q. To [Appellant]?
       A. No.
       Q. What about the young woman in the back seat?
       A. She was friends [with] the front seat passenger.
There were no further questions for Det. JS.
    After Det. JS and two other defense witnesses testified, Appellant made a
verbal unsworn statement, during which he referenced but did not describe
the Planned Parenthood clinic shooting. His only mention of the front-seat
passenger came at the end of his statement: “On a side note, the Planned
Parenthood I can honestly say that I did not know that my friend was mar-
ried until after-the-fact, which was very pleasant to explain to my parents.
That is the truth, believe it or not.”
    During sentencing argument, trial counsel discussed Appellant’s offenses,
the principles of sentencing, the aggravating circumstances of Appellant’s
misconduct, and Appellant’s unsworn statements. Talking about the shoot-
ing, trial counsel ended, “you can consider was it really that extenuating. He
was there after having committed an affair with a married woman who was
pregnant with his child. You can absolutely consider that as you are consider-
ing the extenuation . . .” Trial counsel requested a sentence of a bad-conduct
discharge and confinement of two or three months.



                                       8
                   United States v. Fierro, No. ACM 39193


    Discussing the shooting during closing argument, the Defense referred to
both passengers as Appellant’s “friends” and described Appellant’s actions as
being taken “in the hopes of saving both [him and the front-seat passenger] of
their lives and “so that [Appellant] will take any remaining fire and his
friend would be able to get out to safety.” The Defense asked the members not
to adjudge a punitive discharge but to consider reduction in rank and con-
finement, with additional confinement instead of a punitive discharge.
    After a review of the instructions and minor changes by the military
judge, neither counsel objected to the instructions or requested additional in-
structions. When the military judge instructed the court members, he did not
define mitigation or extenuation but said only,
       Although you must give due consideration to all matters in mit-
       igation and extenuation, as well as to those in aggravation, you
       must bear in mind the accused is to be sentenced only for the
       offenses of which he has been found guilty.
       ...
       In determining the sentence, you should consider all the facts
       and circumstances of the offenses of which the accused has
       been convicted and all matters concerning the accused. Thus,
       you should consider the accused’s background, his character,
       his service record, his overseas service, all matters in extenua-
       tion and mitigation, and any other evidence he presented. You
       should also consider any matters in aggravation.
   The court members adjudged a sentence of confinement for three months
and a bad-conduct discharge.

                               II. DISCUSSION
   Appellant contends that the military judge abused his discretion by ad-
mitting as “rebuttal” evidence details about the relationship between Appel-
lant and the front-seat passenger in Appellant’s vehicle during the Planned
Parenthood clinic shooting. We agree and conclude the improper rebuttal evi-
dence influenced the adjudged sentence and materially prejudiced Appel-
lant’s substantial rights.
A. Rebuttal Evidence
   Trial counsel argued that the nature of the relationship between Appel-
lant and the front-seat passenger—she was pregnant with Appellant’s child
and married to someone other than Appellant—rebutted two claims of the
Defense: (1) that she was Appellant’s “friend” and he was “escorting” her and
another “friend” to the Planned Parenthood clinic “for an appointment” and


                                      9
                    United States v. Fierro, No. ACM 39193


(2) that the shooting and Appellant’s resulting injuries constituted pure miti-
gation. The military judge agreed that the relationship rebutted “the picture
that the members have is basically he’s a driver for some friends.” We also
agree but only by applying a non-standard meaning of “rebuttal.”
    Rule for Courts-Martial 1001 provides for the defense to present, for sen-
tencing, “evidence in extenuation or mitigation or both.” R.C.M. 1001(a)(1)(C).
A matter in extenuation explains “the circumstances surrounding the com-
mission of an offense, including those reasons for committing the offense.”
R.C.M. 1001(c)(1)(A). A matter in mitigation “is introduced to lessen the pun-
ishment to be adjudged by the court-martial, or to furnish grounds for a rec-
ommendation of clemency. It includes . . . particular acts of good conduct or
bravery and evidence of the reputation or record of the accused in the service
for . . . courage, or any other trait that is desirable in a servicemember.”
R.C.M. 1001(c)(1)(B). “The prosecution may rebut matters presented by the
defense.” R.C.M. 1001(d).
    The function of rebuttal evidence is “to explain, repel, counteract or dis-
prove the evidence introduced by the opposing party,” and its scope is “de-
fined by evidence introduced by the other party.” United States v. Saferite, 
59 M.J. 270
, 274 (C.A.A.F. 2004) (quoting United States v. Banks, 
36 M.J. 150
,
166 (C.M.A. 1992)) (citation omitted). “Rebuttal evidence, like all other evi-
dence, may be excluded pursuant to [Military Rule of Evidence] 403 if its pro-
bative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.”
Id. (citation omitted).
     Arguably, the Defense’s characterization of the front-seat passenger as
Appellant’s “friend” was not “evidence,” 6 and, even if it was, it could have
been properly rebutted—in the typical sense of “rebut”—only by evidence that
she was not his friend. Similarly, the Defense’s characterization that Appel-
lant was “escorting” two friends to the Planned Parenthood clinic “for an ap-
pointment,” if “evidence,” could have been rebutted only by evidence that Ap-
pellant was doing something other than what he claimed to be doing. The fact
that Appellant and the front-seat passenger had at some point engaged in a
sexual, possibly adulterous relationship that resulted in pregnancy does not
repel, counteract, or disprove—in short, rebut—the fact that Appellant was
friends with both passengers or that Appellant was escorting both to the clin-
ic for an appointment.


6 One could contend that the “nature of the relationship” evidence was not only not
rebuttal but also not relevant “evidence” as defined by Mil. R. Evid. 401 because it
did not make a fact of consequence more or less probable.




                                        10
                     United States v. Fierro, No. ACM 39193


    Furthermore, the Defense never introduced specific evidence why Appel-
lant and his two passengers were at the clinic at the time of the shooting oth-
er than that one or both passengers had an appointment there. Appellant in
his written unsworn statement and Det. JS during the Defense’s direct exam-
ination declared only that Appellant and two passengers drove to the clinic
and parked next to the shooter. The Defense also never falsely claimed or im-
plied a purpose unrelated to Planned Parenthood for Appellant to be with ei-
ther passenger or at the clinic.
    In addition to rebutting the “friend” characterization, trial counsel main-
tained during the Article 39(a) session that the “nature of the relationship”
was rebuttal because the shooting and Appellant’s resulting injuries were
“not quite as extenuating. He’s committing a crime, and that’s -- you know,
he’s there and that might be part of it.” We presume that trial counsel was
referring to the crime of adultery under Article 134, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 934.
The record lacks sufficient information to conclude that Appellant’s sexual
relationship with the front-seat passenger constituted a violation of Article
134 or any article of the UCMJ. The record is also devoid of any reference to
the relationship as uncharged misconduct subject to Military Rule of Evi-
dence (Mil. R. Evid.) 404(b).
    During sentencing argument to the members, trial counsel omitted any
reference to Appellant’s relationship with the front-seat passenger involving
a “crime” and instead said to the court members about the shooting, “you can
consider was it really that extenuating. He was there after having committed
an affair with a married woman who was pregnant with his child.” The glar-
ing disconnect between the matter in mitigation introduced by the Defense
(that Appellant and a friend were shot and another friend killed in the
Planned Parenthood clinic shooting and that Appellant continued to suffer
from his serious injuries) and the purported “rebuttal” evidence presented by
the Government (that Appellant and one of the two friends had had an ex-
tramarital affair that resulted in a pregnancy) begs the question of how the
latter rebuts the former. We find it does but only by defining “rebut” to mean
“explain.” 
Saferite, 59 M.J. at 274
. As a result, we conclude that, at least min-
imally, Appellant’s relationship with the front-seat passenger explains the
Appellant escorting both passengers to the clinic on the day of the shooting. 7


7 We contrast the “nature of the relationship” evidence with the evidence of Appel-
lant’s actions during the shooting and his reasons for taking them. In Appellant’s
written unsworn statement, he claimed that he ran back to his car to help his friend
and that he angled his car to shield his friend. During cross-examination, trial coun-
sel had Det. JS confirm that (1) nothing indicated to Det. JS that Appellant returned
(Footnote continues on next page)


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                     United States v. Fierro, No. ACM 39193


B. Military Rule of Evidence 403 Balancing Test
    While the evidence of Appellant’s relationship with the front-seat passen-
ger constituted rebuttal, albeit minimally, the evidence does not pass the bal-
ancing test of Mil. R. Evid. 403. Its marginal probative value was substantial-
ly outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice it presented under the unique
circumstances of Appellant’s case. As a result, we conclude that the military
judge abused his discretion by admitting the rebuttal evidence of the “nature
of the relationship” between Appellant and the front-seat passenger.
    Military Rule of Evidence 403 allows a military judge to exclude relevant
evidence “if its probative value is substantially outweighed by a danger of one
or more of [inter alia] unfair prejudice, confusing the issues, [or] misleading
the members, . . .” and applies to rebuttal evidence. 
Saferite, 59 M.J. at 274
.
A military judge’s decision to admit or exclude evidence is reviewed for an
abuse of discretion. United States v. Carter, 
74 M.J. 204
, 207 (C.A.A.F. 2015).
However, we review de novo any conclusions of law. United States v. Chat-
field, 
67 M.J. 432
, 437 (C.A.A.F. 2009).
    Sentencing evidence, like all other evidence, is subject to the balancing
test of Mil. R. Evid. 403. United States v. Manns, 
54 M.J. 164
, 166 (C.A.A.F.
2000). A military judge enjoys “wide discretion” in applying Mil. R. Evid. 403.
Id. When a
military judge conducts a proper balancing test under Mil. R.
Evid. 403, the ruling will not be overturned unless there is a “clear abuse of
discretion.” 
Id. A military
judge abuses his discretion when (1) the findings of
fact upon which he bases his ruling are not supported by the evidence of rec-
ord; (2) he uses incorrect legal principles; or (3) his application of the correct
legal principles to the facts is clearly unreasonable. United States v. Ellis, 
68 M.J. 341
, 344 (C.A.A.F. 2010) (citing United States v. Mackie, 
66 M.J. 198
,
199 (C.A.A.F. 2008)).
   In cross-examination of Det. JS, trial counsel intended to elicit first the
nature of the relationship between Appellant and the front-seat passenger
and then the reason why they were at the clinic at the time of the shooting—
he drove her to her appointment to abort his child. The military judge applied
the Mil. R. Evid. 403 balancing test and prohibited the Government from ask-


to the car to save his friend and (2) Det. JS determined that Appellant found himself
without cover and his car was his best chance for escape and cover. This testimony
clearly constituted rebuttal, particularly on the type of mitigation—a particular act of
bravery—that the Defense was claiming. (The Defense made no claim that Appellant
had a general reputation or service record for courage or any other desirable charac-
ter trait.)




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                    United States v. Fierro, No. ACM 39193


ing the ultimate question, explaining, “what I don’t want to do is make this a
debate about abortion because [it] is not. And we already know that some of
the court members, as you would find in any society, have strong feelings
about abortion.” Conversely, the military judge applied the Mil. R. Evid. 403
balancing test and allowed the Government to ask and Det. JS to answer the
three questions that informed the court members that the front-seat passen-
ger was pregnant with Appellant’s child and she was married but not to Ap-
pellant.
    The military judge required no input from either counsel to decide that
the evidence the Government intended to introduce about the front-seat pas-
senger’s scheduled abortion failed the Mil. R. Evid. 403 balancing test. While
the military judge did not initially use the words of the rule, it is clear to us
he found the probative value of the evidence substantially outweighed by a
danger of unfair prejudice. We concur. But we also agree with the Defense—
and disagree with the military judge—that the admitted evidence about Ap-
pellant’s extramarital relationship with the front-seat passenger and the re-
sulting pregnancy made the same point as the excluded evidence about the
scheduled abortion. To continue this analysis of “unfair prejudice,” we must
address the denied challenge for cause of Col MM.
    At the time of Col MM’s individual voir dire, the military judge and the
court members knew only what the Defense had said at the beginning of voir
dire—the court would hear about Appellant being a victim of the Planned
Parenthood clinic shooting and the effects of the injury. When the military
judge first asked Col MM about his “feelings one way or the other about
Planned Parenthood,” Col MM answered succinctly, “Just very firmly against
everything that they stand for and do.” 8 The military judge acknowledged
having “some recollection” of the shooting, but, not knowing how Appellant
“was involved” in the shooting or if the shooting “had anything to do with
Planned Parenthood,” 9 the military judge informed Col MM that he would be
instructed on and should consider all matters in mitigation and aggravation


8In Col MM’s answers to questions about Planned Parenthood, he equates “Planned
Parenthood” with abortion. Col MM was the first person to use the word “abortion”
on the record, and Col MM did not acknowledge that Planned Parenthood provides
health services other than abortion.
9 The shooting occurred on 27 November 2015 at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Col-
orado Springs, Colorado. Appellant’s trial began on 30 August 2016 at Peterson
Air Force Base, which is in Colorado Springs. It is a near certainty that the court
members had more than the military judge’s “some recollection” of the shooting and if
it “had anything to do with Planned Parenthood.”




                                         13
                    United States v. Fierro, No. ACM 39193


but that he should ultimately “just come to a sentence, based on the offense
or offenses of which somebody’s been convicted, that’s appropriate.” After Col
MM agreed that what the military judge said made sense, Col MM answered
“no” to the military judge’s next and final two Planned Parenthood questions:
whether having a different or similar “view” than Appellant would cause Col
MM to “enhance” or “decrease” punishment.
    The Defense asked Col MM if his position on Planned Parenthood impact-
ed his feelings about people who “use or support their services,” and he re-
sponded that he did not believe “there is a justifiable case to be made for
abortion in any case;” people “who choose to go that route . . . are making a
severe moral error;” and, while abortion “does not equate to criminal activi-
ty,” he had “a significant religious and moral objection to anyone who would
choose that route in any case.” Asked if those people are “committing sin,” Col
MM responded, “Absolutely.” Asked if people choosing “that route” and com-
mitting sin affected Col MM’s “judgment of their moral character,” Col MM
responded “no because you used the word ‘character.’ Their moral compass
perhaps, or they haven’t received the right guidance. We are all sinners and
what sin we commit is our own business, but certainly I would agree it is a
sin and would disagree with those who pursue that route.”
    We recognize that the military judge, not knowing during voir dire how
Planned Parenthood might or might not be an issue in Appellant’s case, spe-
cifically addressed actual bias and then implied bias, applied the objective
test, and considered the liberal grant mandate before denying the challenge
for cause of Col MM. While Appellant’s case is a very close one, we do not find
the military judge abused his discretion at the time of the Defense’s challenge,
particularly because the military judge indicated on the record his considera-
tion of the liberal grant mandate. 10 See United States v. Townsend, 
65 M.J. 460
, 464 (C.A.A.F. 2008) (“Where a military judge does not indicate on the
record that he has considered the liberal grant mandate in ruling on a chal-
lenge for implied bias, we will accord that decision less deference during our
review of the ruling.”) (citations omitted).



10We consider significant the word “liberal” in “liberal grant mandate” and point out
that “in close cases military judges are enjoined to liberally grant challenges for
cause.” 
Townsend, 65 M.J. at 465
(quoting United States v. Clay, 
64 M.J. 274
, 277
(C.A.A.F. 2007)). Still, we find ourselves in a similar position as Judge Baker in
Townsend: “I think it was an easy call at the trial level to dismiss [the challenged
member] from the member pool, but a harder call to do so on appeal as a matter of
law.” 
Townsend, 65 M.J. at 467
(Baker, J., dubitante).




                                         14
                   United States v. Fierro, No. ACM 39193


    However, Col MM’s presence on the panel effectively became the substan-
tial weight that tipped the scale to unfair prejudice when the military judge
applied the Mil. R. Evid. 403 balancing test to the rebuttal evidence of the
relationship between Appellant and the front-seat passenger. Compare
Manns, 54 M.J. at 167
(“Because this was a bench trial, the potential for un-
fair prejudice was substantially less than it would be in a trial with mem-
bers.”). The military judge said he had “no idea how the members are going to
feel” about the rebuttal evidence or how it was “going to play,” but Col MM
had already told him.
    Even if the military judge kept out the word “abortion” from Appellant’s
presentencing proceeding, voir dire made clear that Col MM equated
“Planned Parenthood” with abortion. Col MM considered abortion a sin and
people who choose abortion sinners. It was obvious Col MM would have “a
significant religious and moral objection” to Appellant. Col MM’s view that
people who choose abortion might not have “received the right guidance”
could work even further against Appellant. Col MM could well deduce that
Appellant was to blame for providing the wrong guidance to the married
woman Appellant first impregnated and then got shot when he escorted her
to the “Planned Parenthood,” or abortion, clinic.
    Moreover, trial counsel “played” to Col MM as a jury of one when counsel
told the members to consider whether the shooting was “really that extenuat-
ing” as Appellant was at the clinic on the fateful day “after having committed
an affair with a married woman who was pregnant with his child.” The pro-
bative value of the “nature of the relationship” between Appellant and the
front-seat passenger was substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair
prejudice of the inescapable inference, particularly by Col MM, that Appel-
lant escorted his married friend to the clinic for an appointment to abort his
child. As the military judge himself framed it, “Why she was going down
there, they have common sense. I’m sure they’re going to have some guesses.”
    When the military judge prohibited trial counsel from eliciting testimony
why the front-seat passenger was at the Planned Parenthood clinic on the
day of the shooting, the military judge explained that he did not want to
“make this a debate about abortion” and recognized “strong feelings about
abortion” of “some of the court members,” presumably referring to Col MM.
Applying similar rationale, we find the military judge’s application of the cor-
rect legal principles—whether the probative value of the evidence substan-
tially outweighed the danger of unfair prejudice—to be clearly unreasonable.
See 
Ellis, 68 M.J. at 344
. The military judge erred by admitting the evidence
of the relationship between Appellant and the front-seat passenger, particu-
larly in light of Col MM’s presence on the panel, and the error allowed the
“debate about abortion” into Appellant’s sentencing.


                                      15
                     United States v. Fierro, No. ACM 39193


C. Prejudicial Error
    Having determined that the military judge abused his discretion by ad-
mitting the evidence of the “nature of the relationship” between Appellant
and the front-seat passenger as rebuttal to mitigation in sentencing, we con-
sider the impact.
       The question now becomes whether Appellant was prejudiced
       by this error. We test the erroneous admission or exclusion of
       evidence during the sentencing portion of a court-martial to de-
       termine if the error substantially influenced the adjudged sen-
       tence. If so, then the result is material prejudice to Appellant’s
       substantial rights.
United States v. Griggs, 
61 M.J. 402
, 410 (C.A.A.F. 2005) (citations omitted).
Further, we echo the view of our sister court that, “[w]hile we typically test
for prejudice using the factors set out in United States v. Kerr, 
51 M.J. 401
,
405 (C.A.A.F. 1999), 11 the analysis set out in United States v. Saferite is more
useful for sentencing errors.” United States v. Wagers, No. 201600180, 2017
CCA LEXIS 112, at *12 (N-M. Ct. Crim. App. 23 Feb. 2017) (unpub. op.) (cita-
tions omitted) (footnote inserted). In Saferite, the Court of Appeals for the
Armed Forces found the military judge’s abuse of discretion to be harmless
error because, inter alia, the rebuttal evidence at issue was already before
the members and the maximum possible confinement was 230 years, trial
counsel requested 16, and the members adjudged 6. 
Saferite, 59 M.J. at 274
-
5.
    Based strictly on the nature of the offenses to which Appellant pleaded
and was found guilty and their aggravating circumstances, particularly Ap-
pellant’s attempts to involve junior Airmen in his illegal drug use, the ad-
judged sentence of a bad-conduct discharge and three months of confinement
does not appear inappropriate or unduly severe. However, our consideration
of two factors leads us to conclude that the error of admitting the “nature of
the relationship” evidence prejudiced Appellant.
   First and unlike in Saferite, the rebuttal evidence at issue in Appellant’s
case—the “nature of the relationship” evidence—would not otherwise have
been before the members. Moreover, the panel, with Col MM as its president,

11 “We evaluate the harmlessness of an evidentiary ruling by weighing: ‘(1) the
strength of the Government’s case, (2) the strength of the defense case, (3) the mate-
riality of the evidence in question, and (4) the quality of the evidence in question.’
United States v. Kerr, 
51 M.J. 401
, 405 (C.A.A.F. 1999).” United States v. Bowen, 
76 M.J. 83
, 89 (C.A.A.F. 2017).




                                         16
                   United States v. Fierro, No. ACM 39193


adjudged the exact maximum sentence recommended by trial counsel: a bad-
conduct discharge and three months of confinement.
    Secondly, Appellant’s matters in mitigation, which made for a strong De-
fense sentencing case, mean the appropriate sentence is based on more than
just Appellant’s offenses and evidence in aggravation, which made for a
strong Government sentencing case. The military judge described himself as
having “great empathy” for Appellant because of the shooting and described
the shooting and Appellant’s resulting injuries as “powerful [mitigation] evi-
dence and that’s okay. It should be powerful.” We concur. By admitting the
“nature of the relationship” evidence, which was immaterial to the question
of a sentence for Appellant’s convicted offenses, the military judge allowed
the Government to present information of unrelated activity and possible
misconduct—irrelevant evidence in aggravation under the guise of rebuttal to
mitigation. Unlike in United States v. Eslinger, 
70 M.J. 193
, 201 (C.A.A.F.
2011), the possibility in the instant case that Appellant would have received
less confinement or avoided a punitive discharge absent the admitted “rebut-
tal” evidence was not remote. As a result, we conclude the error substantially
influenced the adjudged sentence and materially prejudiced Appellant’s sub-
stantial rights.

                              III. CONCLUSION
   The findings of guilt to the charges and specifications are AFFIRMED.
Article 66(c), UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 866(c). The sentence is SET ASIDE. The
record of trial is returned to The Judge Advocate General for remand to the
convening authority who may order a sentence rehearing. Article 66(e),
UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 866(e). Thereafter, Article 66(b), UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. §
866(b), will apply.


                    FOR THE COURT



                    CAROL K. JOYCE
                    Clerk of the Court




                                     17

Source:  CourtListener

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