Filed: Aug. 03, 2004
Latest Update: Feb. 12, 2020
Summary: WHETHER APPELLANTS PLEAS OF GUILTY TO BRIBERY AS, CHARGED IN SPECIFICATION 7-9 OF CHARGE IV WERE, PROVIDENT WHERE APPELLANTS STATEMENTS DURING THE, PROVIDENCY INQUIRY DEMONSTRATED THAT HE DID NOT HAVE, THE REQUISITE INTENT TO HAVE HIS ACTIONS INFLUENCED, IN EXCHANGE FOR SOMETHING OF VALUE.
IN THE CASE OF
UNITED STATES, Appellee
v.
Wilson L. McCRIMMON, Staff Sergeant
U.S. Army, Appellant
No. 02-0941
Crim. App. No. 20000075
United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces
Argued October 7, 2003
Decided August 3, 2004
GIERKE, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
CRAWFORD, C.J. and BAKER, J. joined. ERDMANN, J. filed a
separate dissenting opinion in which EFFRON, J., joined.
Counsel
For Appellant: Captain Terri J. Erisman (argued); Colonel
Robert D. Teetsel, Lieutenant Colonel E. Allen Chandler, Jr.,
and Major Imogene M. Jamison (on brief); Captain Mary E. Card.
For Appellee: Captain Janine P. Felsman (argued); Lieutenant
Colonel Margaret B. Baines, Major Mark L. Johnson, Captain
Charles C. Choi, and Captain Tami L. Dillahunt (on brief);
Captain Charles C. Choi.
Military Judge: T. E. Dixon
This opinion is subject to editorial correction before final publication.
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
Judge GIERKE delivered the opinion of the Court.
A military judge sitting as a general court-martial
convicted Appellant, pursuant to his pleas, of six
specifications of larceny, five specifications of violation of a
lawful order, and eight specifications of bribery, in violation
of Articles 121, 92, and 134, Uniform Code of Military Justice
[hereinafter UCMJ], 10 U.S.C. §§ 921, 892, and 934 (2000),
respectively. The adjudged and approved sentence provides for a
bad-conduct discharge, reduction to the lowest enlisted grade,
and confinement for 40 months. The Army Court of Criminal
Appeals affirmed the findings and sentence in an unpublished
opinion. United States v. McCrimmon, A. 20000075 (Army Ct.
Crim. App. August 27, 2002).
This Court granted review of the following issue:
WHETHER APPELLANT’S PLEAS OF GUILTY TO BRIBERY AS
CHARGED IN SPECIFICATION 7-9 OF CHARGE IV WERE
PROVIDENT WHERE APPELLANT’S STATEMENTS DURING THE
PROVIDENCY INQUIRY DEMONSTRATED THAT HE DID NOT HAVE
THE REQUISITE INTENT TO HAVE HIS ACTIONS INFLUENCED
IN EXCHANGE FOR SOMETHING OF VALUE.
For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the decision of
the Court of Criminal Appeals.
Factual Background
The charges against Appellant arose from Appellant’s abuse
of his position as a drill instructor at Fort Sill, Oklahoma,
during the summer and fall of 1998. At the time of his
offenses, a Brigade Policy Memorandum prohibited all personnel
2
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
assigned to the training center from engaging in financial
transactions with trainees. Appellant repeatedly violated this
order, stole money from his trainees, and engaged in a pattern
of requesting and receiving bribes from them.
As a drill instructor, Appellant’s job was to train
recruits to become soldiers. In the training program, Appellant
tried to instill Army values in the trainees. He initially
fostered unit cohesion, individual pride, and personal loyalty
both to the unit and to himself. Eventually, Appellant
exploited these facets of training for his own financial benefit
and manipulated the enlisted leadership of his unit and trainees
in a complex web of larceny and bribery offenses.
Appellant’s violations of the Brigade Policy Memorandum and
larceny offenses included the following misconduct. Appellant
collected $610.00 from trainees to purchase platoon t-shirts,
but Appellant never purchased the t-shirts and kept the money.
Appellant received approximately $100.00 from 16 trainees in his
platoon to have their boots “dipped” to make them look shiny for
the inspection. Appellant returned the boots to the trainees,
without getting them dipped, and kept the money for himself.
Appellant collected approximately $300.00 from his platoon under
the pretense of providing a donation to assist the family of one
of their members who was hospitalized. Appellant delivered only
some of the money to the family in need and kept the remainder
3
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
of the money for his personal use. Appellant solicited and
received nearly $100.00 from his trainees to purchase a cleaner
to make their weapons look more presentable for an inspection.
Appellant purchased only a small quantity of the cleaner and
kept the remaining money. Finally, Appellant solicited money
from trainees to assist his mother because her home had been
destroyed by fire. Appellant informed the trainees that his
mother had no place to stay and that he needed the money to
purchase a plane ticket for his mother. The platoon collected
$250.00 and gave it to Appellant. Actually, Appellant’s mother
was well taken care of by Appellant’s sister and Appellant had
no intention of purchasing airfare for his mother, and in fact
kept the money for himself. In each of these offenses,
Appellant used his subordinates, the platoon enlisted
leadership, to collect money from his trainees.
In addition to these larceny offenses, Appellant’s
misconduct included another dimension as Appellant committed
multiple bribery offenses. Appellant wrongfully asked for and
received money from trainees with the intent to influence his
decisions and actions regarding his performance of official
duties. Appellant asked for and received approximately $100.00
from three trainees to ensure that they would receive a passing
score on their Physical Fitness Test (PFT) and would graduate
with their class. When one of the trainees actually failed this
4
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
test, Appellant intervened and passed the trainee, who
eventually graduated on time. On another occasion shortly
before the trainees graduated, Appellant asked for payments of
$60.00 and $100.00 from two trainees to grant them unauthorized
liberty to spend extra time with their families and girlfriends.
The granted issue in the present case relates to three
alleged bribery offenses (specifications 7 through 9 of Charge
IV) that have their genesis in a single incident of trainee
misconduct. In early November 1998, three trainees in
Appellant’s platoon were caught going to the post shoppette
without authorization. The first sergeant threatened the
trainees with punishment pursuant to Article 15, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C.
§815 (2000). In a conversation with the first sergeant,
Appellant learned that the Article 15 punishment was a scare
tactic to keep the trainees “on that straight and narrow path
until they graduated.” Taking advantage of this situation,
Appellant asked each trainee for money in exchange for Appellant
protecting them from Article 15 punishment, thereby permitting
the trainees to graduate on time. Two of the trainees paid
Appellant amounts less than $100.00, and one trainee paid an
amount more than $100.00.
Based on these facts, Appellant was charged in
specifications 7 through 9 of Charge IV with bribery. Each of
these specifications alleged that Appellant “asked” for money
5
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
from a trainee “with the intent to have his action influenced
with respect to an official matter in which the United States
was and is interested, to wit: whether or not to recommend
Article 15 punishment against [a certain trainee].” In contrast
to the three other bribery offenses in specifications 2 through
4 of Charge IV, Appellant was not charged with actually
receiving the money for these three bribes. Appellant pleaded
guilty to these offenses by exceptions and substitutions -
simply excepting greater dollar amounts for the bribe and
substituting lesser figures. The focus of our concern is the
issue before us relating to the providency of his pleas.
Guilty Plea Developments
The initial portion of the providency inquiry is both
simple and straightforward. The main task for the military
judge was to address the factual predicate for each of
Appellant’s several offenses.
Before accepting Appellant’s guilty pleas, the military
judge advised Appellant that he would discuss with him the
guilty plea and would not accept it unless Appellant understood
its meaning and affect. Appellant indicated he understood the
military judge’s instructions. The judge continued stating that
a “plea of guilty is equivalent to a conviction, and it’s the
strongest form of proof known to the law.” The judge explained,
“[you must admit every act or omission, and element, of the
6
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
offenses to which you have pled guilty, and that you are
pleading guilty because you are, in fact, guilty.” Appellant
again indicated that he understood the military judge’s
directions.
Appellant was then placed under oath and the providency
inquiry continued. First, the military judge established that
the Appellant voluntarily entered into a Stipulation of Fact
wherein Appellant admitted the truth of certain facts relating
to his offenses. Appellant expressly acknowledged that the
military judge could use the stipulation of fact to determine if
Appellant was guilty of the offenses to which he had pleaded
guilty. After both Appellant and the judge read the
stipulation, the military judge admitted it into evidence.
Before reading the elements and charges to Appellant, the
military judge explained what the term “elements” meant. He
then told Appellant to ask himself, “First, is the element true;
and Second, whether you wish to admit that it is true. After I
list the elements for you, be prepared to talk to me about the
offenses.”
The military judge then informed Appellant that he would
discuss the offenses “a bit out of order” and immediately
focused the providency inquiry on Appellant’s several bribery
offenses. Starting with Appellant’s offense of accepting a
bribe to alter a trainee’s score on the PFT, the judge then
7
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
explained in detail to Appellant the elements of the offense of
bribery including the following: (1) that Appellant “wrongfully
and unlawfully asked for and received” money from a trainee; (2)
that at the time Appellant had official duties as drill sergeant
for his unit; (3) that Appellant “asked for and received this
sum with the intent to have [his] actions influenced with
respect to altering the score” of the trainee on the PFT; and
(4) that the PFT was an official matter in which the United
States was and is interested in; and (5) that Appellant’s
conduct was to the prejudice of good order and discipline in the
armed forces.
The military judge then repeated the elements of bribery
for each of the other seven bribery specifications of Charge IV.
Regarding the elements of specifications 5 through 9, the
military judge erroneously advised Appellant both his actions
and intent related to asking for and receiving a bribe. This
statement was overbroad, as Appellant was charged in these
offenses only with asking for the bribe. Regarding
specifications 7 through 9, the military judge explained that
the intent element of these offenses was “that you asked for and
received this sum with intent to have your actions influenced
with respect to whether or not to recommend Article 15
punishment against [a designated trainee].”
8
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
Next the judge explained the elements of the alleged orders
violations in Charge II and finally the larceny offenses in
Charge I. The providency inquiry did not address the offenses
in Charge III and Charge IV of specification 1 as Appellant
pleaded not guilty to these offenses that were eventually
dismissed under the terms of Appellant’s pretrial agreement.
At this point the military judge began to address the
factual predicate for each bribery offense in Charge IV.
Regarding the offenses that related to Appellant’s accepting
money to influence the PFT scores, Appellant explained, “I
conjured up in my brain to come up with a plan to assist the
soldier in the graduating, and at the same time, gain money for
my own personal use.” The military judge asked Appellant, “Was
it your intent to insure that, for this sum of money, Private
[W]’s score would reflect that he passed?” Appellant responded,
“Yes, Sir.” Appellant explained to the military judge that the
other two offenses relating to his accepting money to influence
the PFT scores were “pretty much the same circumstances” and the
“same basic fact pattern.”
The military judge turned next to the Appellant’s bribery
offenses that related to Appellant’s accepting money to permit
trainees to spend extra time with their families and
girlfriends. Appellant explained that he “preyed” on trainees
who desired to spend time with their families. He stated that
9
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
he both asked for and accepted money in exchange for granting
the trainees extra liberty.
The judge next began an inquiry into Appellant’s offenses
at issue in this appeal. The following dialogue between the
military judge and Appellant is relevant:
MJ: Let's do take a look at Specifications 7, 8 and 9 of
Charge IV. Tell me why you're guilty of those
offenses.
ACC: Pretty much the same reasons, sir, just different
circumstances. In this particular instance, we're
talking about Article 15 punishments. Each of the
soldiers were threatened by the First Sergeant to
receive an Article 15 punishment. It was just - with
being so close to graduation, it was pretty much,
after I later conversed with the First Sergeant - a
scare tactic, to get them [to] stay on that straight
and [n]arrow path until they graduated. After
conversing with the First Sergeant and realizing that
it was just a scare tactic, I took advantage of that
situation also and took it a step further, as far as
the scare tactic. I had them thinking that had they
gotten an Article 15, it would have an effect on them
not graduating from basic training. So at that
moment, I took advantage of them and accepted money
from them. I explained to them that if they paid me
money, they wouldn't get the Article 15 that was
promised to them by the First Sergeant, and they'd be
allowed to go ahead on and graduate.
MJ: So you knew the First Sergeant was bluffing?
ACC: Yes, sir, I did.
MJ: You capitalized on the First Sergeant's bluff by
indicating to these three soldiers that you could
influence whether they received this Article 15 or
not?
ACC: Yes, sir, I did.
MJ: And you solicited money from them in each case?
10
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
ACC: Yes, sir, I did.
MJ: How much money did you get from Specialist [C] for
this recommendation of yours?
ACC: I don’t know the exact sum, but it was over $100.00,
sir.
MJ: Did you have input into whether individuals got
Article 15s or not?
ACC: Very much so, sir.
MJ: The bottom line is that you told them you had input,
correct?
ACC: Very much so, sir. In that environment, I pretty
much had say-so on whether or not they received an
Article 15 or not, sir.
Appellant also admitted that he engaged in the two
additional bribery offenses(alleged in specifications 8 and 9)
by asking for and receiving less than $100.00 from two other
trainees for misconduct related to this same situation. The
military judge then continued examining Appellant and elicited
Appellant’s admission that Article 15 punishment was a matter in
which the United States had an official interest and his conduct
was to the prejudice of good order and discipline or was of a
nature to bring discredit upon the armed forces.
Summing up his actions in these bribery offenses, Appellant
stated, “[I]t wasn’t my duty to take their money from them. It
wasn’t my duty to offer them bribes. My duty was to train them,
but I took it a step further and went into bribery and accepting
money from them, sir.”
11
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
Before this Court and the Court of Criminal Appeals,
Appellant asserts that the military judge erred in accepting his
guilty pleas to specifications 7 through 9 of Charge IV. The
Court of Criminal Appeals summarily affirmed Appellant’s
conviction. Appellant argues that his pleas to those
specifications were improvident because the providency inquiry
demonstrated that he lacked the specific intent to have his
actions or decisions influenced with respect to an official
matter, Article 15 punishment. The gravamen of Appellant’s
argument is the following:
While [A]ppellant did tell the military judge that he
generally had input on whether soldiers got Article 15
punishment, [A]ppellant stated that he told the three
soldiers listed in specifications 7, 8, and 9 of Charge IV
that he would specifically recommend against the Article 15
the [first sergeant] threatened them with. . . . Since he
knew that the [first sergeant] had already decided there
would be no Article 15, [A]ppellant knew there would be no
opportunity for him to provide input. Therefore, it was
impossible for him to have possessed the requisite intent
to have his actions influenced.
The Government argues that Appellant’s pleas were provident
because it was Appellant’s intent to influence his own action,
not the action of the first sergeant, that is necessary to
satisfy the elements of bribery.
Discussion
The Distinction Between Bribery and Graft
At the outset, it is important to appreciate the nature of
the criminal offense of bribery punishable under Article 134 and
12
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
second to distinguish it from the closely related offense of
graft.
At common law the offense of bribery was “the giving
of any valuable consideration or benefit to the holder of
a public office, or to a person performing a public duty,
or the acceptance thereof by such person, with the corrupt
intention that he be influenced thereby in the discharge
of his legal duty.” Rollin M. Perkins & Ronald N. Boyce,
Criminal Law 527 (3d ed. 1982). Simply stated, “bribery
is the corrupt payment or receipt of a private price for
official action.”
Id. at 528. The focus of the offense
is to punish public corruption, and both the reciprocal
acts of giving and receiving the bribe are punishable.
Id. at 527-28. While a common law misdemeanor, bribery
“has very commonly been made a felony by statute.”
Id. at
537. The statutory plan to punish bribery and the scope
of the punishable offense spring from the precise
authority that defines the offense.
Bribery is not specifically enumerated in the UCMJ as
a criminal offense, but is punishable under Article 134,
UCMJ. See Manual for Courts-Martial, United States (2002
ed.)[hereinafter MCM], Part IV, para. 66.b. From the
language of this MCM provision, it is clear that
“‘bribery’ is employed as a generic term to cover two
13
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
different offenses: (1) giving or offering a bribe, and
(2) receiving or soliciting a bribe.” Perkins &
Boyce,
supra, at 537. Paragraph 66.b. states the elements of the
two offenses of bribery as follows:
(1) Asking, accepting, or receiving.
(a) That the accused wrongfully asked, accepted, or
received a thing of value from a certain person
or organization;
(b) That the accused then occupied a certain official
position or had certain official duties;
(c) That the accused asked, accepted, or received
this thing of value (with the intent to have the
accused’s decision or action influenced with
respect to a certain matter);
(d) That this certain matter was an official matter
in which the United States was and is interested;
and
(e) That, under the circumstances, the conduct of the
accused was to the prejudice of good order and
discipline in the armed forces or was of a nature
to bring discredit upon the armed forces.
(2) Promising, offering, or giving.
(a) That the accused wrongfully promised, offered, or
gave a thing of value to a certain person;
(b) That the person then occupied a certain official
position or had certain official duties;
(c) That this thing of value was promised, offered,
or given (with the intent to influence the
decision or action of this person);
(d) That this matter was an official matter in which
the United States was and is interested; and
(e) That, under the circumstances, the conduct of the
accused was to the prejudice of good order and
discipline in the armed forces or was of a nature
to bring discredit upon the armed forces.
Two of the important facets of this bribery offense are
that both the giving and receiving of a bribe are equally
punishable and that a specific corrupt intent to influence an
14
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
official action is required. Focusing on the latter and
reflecting the common law roots of this offense, the MCM, Part
IV, para. 66.c. explains that “bribery requires an intent to
influence or be influenced in an official matter [.]” However,
for these two separate bribery offenses of giving and receiving
a bribe, there are different corrupt intents generally reflected
in the following statement:
On the part of the briber, this requires an intent to
subject the official action of the recipient to the
influence of personal gain or advantage rather than public
welfare. It does not require that the action sought to be
induced should benefit the briber or should actually be
detrimental to the public. The social interest demands
that official action should be free from improper motives
of personal advantage, and an intent to subject the action
to such motives is a corrupt intent. If money is paid for
such a purpose it is immaterial to the guilt of the briber
whether the officer’s official conduct was actually
influenced or not. On the part of the bribee, an intent to
use the opportunity to perform a public duty as a means of
acquiring an unlawful personal benefit or advantage, is a
corrupt intent. Hence it is no defense to a charge of
receiving a bribe that the recipient believed the action
requested would be for the best interest of the public, or
that he had determined upon that course of action before
the bribe was offered. An officer who has determined upon
a certain course of public action might change his mind if
free from corrupting influences. The social interest
requires that there should be no such conflict.
Perkins &
Boyce, supra, at 537.
While this general statement is helpful in understanding
what constitutes corrupt intent, it is not definitive. Where,
as here, an element of an offense states expressly the specific
intent, those words are controlling. See United States v.
Turkette,
452 U.S. 576 (1981); United States v. Guess,
48 M.J.
15
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
69 (C.A.A.F. 1998); United States v. Caballero,
37 M.J. 422
(C.M.A. 1993). Paragraph 66.b.(1)(c) states the specific intent
required to prove bribery by the bribee - “with the intent to
have the accused’s decision or action influenced with respect to
a certain matter.” The plain words in this provision require
that the bribee act with the intent to have the bribe impact on
and actually influence the decision or actions of the bribee.
This Court has long recognized the necessity of the intent
element to establish the offense of bribery -- that the bribee
must receive the money with intent to influence his official
action. United States v. Bey,
4 C.M.A. 665,
16 C.M.R. 239
(1954)(explaining that bribery was not alleged because intent
element was not stated, either directly or by necessary
implication, and failure to allege intent element precludes
conviction for that offense); United States v. Alexander,
3
C.M.A. 346,
12 C.M.R. 102 (1953)(stating that intent to
influence official action is a necessary element of bribery).
This construction is consistent with the federal bribery
statute that also requires a showing that the bribee had a
specific corrupt intent to have his decisions or actions
influenced by the bribe. See 18 U.S.C. 201(b)(2) (2000); United
States v. Sun-Diamond Growers of California,
526 U.S. 398, 404
(1999)(“Bribery requires intent ‘to influence’ an official act
or ‘to be influenced’ in an official act.”). Again, this does
16
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
not require that the bribe have this result, but the bribee must
have the intent for the bribe to have the unlawful influence.
It is this essential specific intent element in bribery
that distinguishes it from the offense of graft. “[I]n graft an
intent improperly to influence official action need not be
alleged or proved.” United States v. Marshall,
18 C.M.A. 426,
428,
40 C.M.R. 138, 140 (1969). “Graft involves compensation
for services performed in an official matter when no
compensation is due.” MCM, Part IV, para. 66.b. This Court has
stated that “graft contemplates personal advantage or gain in a
dishonest transaction in relation to public duties.” Marshall,
18 C.M.A at
429, 40 C.M.R. at 141. We agree with the view, “It
sometimes implies theft, corruption, dishonesty, fraud, or
swindle, and always a want of integrity.” United States v.
Eslow,
1 M.J. 620, 622 (A.C.M.R. 1975).
The close similarity between the offenses of bribery
and graft is evident from both being identified as
offenses under Article 134. Paragraph 66(b) states the
elements of two different graft offenses with elements
identical to bribery with one significant exception. MCM,
Part IV, para. 66.b.(1)-(2). Instead of the specific
intent element in bribery, graft substitutes the
following:
17
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
(1) Asking, accepting, or receiving
. . . .
(c) That the accused wrongfully asked,
accepted, or received a thing of value (as
compensation for or in recognition of services
rendered, to be rendered, or both, by the accused in
relation to a certain matter)[.]
. . . .
(2) Promising, offering, or giving
. . . .
(c) That this thing of value was promised,
offered, or given (as compensation for or in
recognition of services rendered, to be rendered, or
both, by this person in relation to a certain
matter)[.]
It is obvious that graft is a lesser included offense of
bribery.
Id. at para. 66.d.(1). Cases where this Court
affirmed convictions of graft include:
Marshall, 18 C.M.A. at
426, 40 C.M.R. at 138 (serviceman offered an administrative
clerk money to make changes to finance records regarding the
serviceman’s leave);
Bey, 4 C.M.A. at 665, 16 C.M.R. at 239
(platoon sergeant accepted money to issue a liberty pass to a
trainee);
Alexander, 3 C.M.A. at 346, 12 C.M.R. at 102 (driver
of a government car accepted money to transport a woman).
Bribery has a greater maximum punishment(five years
confinement)than the lesser offense of graft three years
confinement). MCM, Part IV, para. 66.e. The President
18
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
increased the maximum punishment for bribery from three to five
years “to reflect the greater seriousness of bribery which
requires a specific intent to influence.”
Id. at Analysis of
Punitive Articles A 23-18 at para. 66.e. compare MCM, Part IV,
para. 66.e with, MCM (1969 ed.), Part IV, para. 127.c.(6).
It is therefore clear that for Appellant to be guilty of
the offense of bribery, the record of trial must establish that
Appellant had the specific intent to have his decision or action
influenced with respect to a certain official matter. As
Appellant pleaded guilty to the bribery offense, we evaluate
this case in the context of his guilty plea.
The Providency of Appellant’s Guilty Plea to Bribery
An accused does not have a constitutional right to
plead guilty. See Santobello v. New York,
404 U.S. 257
(1971). As the Constitution guarantees only a right to
plead not guilty, an accused has generally only “a right
to offer a plea of guilty,” United States v. Penister,
25
M.J. 148, 151 (C.M.A. 1987), and may not even do that for
“an offense for which the death penalty may be adjudged,”
Article 45(b), UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 845 (2000).
Both a specific statute and case law establish the process
to evaluate a voluntary and reliable guilty plea. See Article
45, UCMJ; United States v. Davenport,
9 M.J. 364 (C.M.A. 1980);
United States v. Care,
18 C.M.A. 535,
40 C.M.R. 247 (1969).
19
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
Before accepting a plea of guilty, the military judge must
conduct a thorough inquiry and determine that the accused
understands his plea, it is entered voluntarily, and the accused
is in fact guilty.
Davenport, 9 M.J. at 364;
Care, 18 C.M.A. at
535, 40 C.M.R.at 247; Rule for Courts-Martial 910(c)-(e). Care
requires that the military judge question the accused “about
what he did or did not do, and what he
intended.” 18 C.M.A. at
541, 40 C.M.R. at 253.
A court shall not accept a plea of guilty where “an accused
. . . . sets up matter inconsistent with the plea, or if it
appears that he has entered the plea of guilty improvidently.
. . .” Article 45, UCMJ. “Unlike the civilian criminal justice
system, Article 45(a) requires that, in a guilty-plea case,
inconsistencies and apparent defenses must be resolved by the
military judge or the guilty pleas must be rejected.” United
States v. Outhier,
45 M.J. 326, 331 (C.A.A.F. 1996) (citing
United States v. Jemmings,
1 M.J. 414, 418 (C.M.A. 1976); United
States v. Dunbar,
20 C.M.A. 478,
143 C.M.R. 318 (1971)). “Mere
conclusions of law recited by an accused are insufficient to
provide a factual basis for a guilty plea.”
Id. at 331 (citing
United States v. Terry,
21 C.M.A. 442,
45 C.M.R. 216 (1972)).
However, this Court will not set aside a guilty plea
on appeal unless there is a substantial basis in law and
20
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
fact for questioning the plea. United States v. Prater,
32 M.J. 433, 436 (C.M.A. 1991). Appreciating the tendency
of persons accused of criminal offenses to rationalize
their behavior, this Court permits the military judge "in
a borderline case . . . [to] give weight to the defense
evaluation of the evidence." United States v. Clark,
28
M.J. 401, 407 (C.M.A. 1989).
This Court in United States v. Bickley stated, “In
examining the providency of a guilty plea, this Court has noted
that ‘the factual predicate is sufficiently established if the
‘factual circumstances as revealed by the accused himself
objectively support the plea. . . .’”
50 M.J. 93, 94 (C.A.A.F.
1999),(citing United States v. Faircloth,
45 M.J. 172, 174
(C.A.A.F. 1996)(quoting
Davenport, 9 M.J. at 367). In upholding
Appellant’s plea as provident, the Court focused on the
circumstance that Appellant “fully and freely admitted that his
actions violated each of the elements of the offense charged.”
Id. at 94-95. We examine Appellant’s guilty plea in light of
this legal authority regarding guilty pleas.
In the present case, the military judge initially
established the voluntariness of Appellant’s pleas on the record
by informing Appellant of his rights and the meaning of his
pleas. The military judge informed Appellant that his guilty
plea was “equivalent to a conviction, and it’s the strongest
21
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
form of proof known to the law.” He then instructed Appellant
not to plead guilty unless he believed that he was, in fact,
guilty.
Next, the military judge engaged Appellant in a detailed
dialogue that allowed Appellant to establish the factual
circumstances surrounding the bribery offense when he pleaded
guilty. Importantly, the military judge expressly stated the
intent element for each of the bribery offenses. The judge
initially addressed the factual predicate for the first bribery
offense, specification 2 of Charge IV (relating to appellant
asking for and receiving money to ensure a trainee would pass
the PFT). The judge pointedly asked Appellant, “Was it your
intent to insure that, for this sum of money, Private [W]’s
score would reflect that he passed?” Appellant’s response was
simply “Yes, Sir.” This response established Appellant’s intent
was to protect the serviceman from failing the PFT and to
guarantee the serviceman passed the test.
For all other bribery offenses Appellant reaffirmed his
intent stating simply that these offenses were “[p]retty much
the same circumstances,” “the same basic fact pattern,” and
“[p]retty much the same reasons, sir, just different
circumstances.” Additionally, the detailed stipulation of fact
explicitly established Appellant’s intent to be influenced by
each of the bribes. In the stipulation, Appellant repeatedly
22
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
states with regard to each of the offenses alleged in
specifications 7 through 9 of Charge IV, that he asked for money
from trainees “with the intent to have his decision influenced
with respect to deciding whether to recommend Article 15
punishment against [the trainee].” Appellant’s admission in
this stipulation is another factor in concluding that his plea
is provident. See United States v. Sweet,
42 M.J. 183 (C.A.A.F.
1995)(relying on stipulation to establish factual basis for
guilty plea). Having established Appellant’s pattern of intent
to influence his decision and actions regarding several
different servicemembers in different situations, it was not
necessary that the military judge repeatedly inquire about
Appellant’s intent by additional questions. See United States
v. Barton,
60 M.J. 62 (C.A.A.F. 2004)(evaluating sufficiency of
the providency inquiry in context of entire record discussion).
We reject Appellant’s assertion that his disclosure in the
providency inquiry that he was taking advantage of the situation
relating to the first sergeant’s idle threat of Article 15
punishment is inconsistent with his guilty plea. The fact that
Appellant knew that the first sergeant was bluffing is not
dispositive because it is Appellant’s intent, and not that of
the first sergeant, which is at issue. Appellant admitted that
he “pretty much had say-so” when recommending Article 15
punishment. Therefore, even if the first sergeant did not
23
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
intend to recommend Article 15 punishment, Appellant still had
the power to recommend to the commander or the first sergeant
that the punishment be imposed upon the trainees. The record
establishes the offense of bribery because Appellant repeatedly
admitted that he asked for money from his trainees with the
intent to guarantee that the trainees not get Article 15
punishment and that they graduate on time. As the providency
inquiry establishes Appellant’s specific intent, Appellant’s
offense was bribery and not the lesser included offense of
graft.
Importantly, in this case, Appellant was not prosecuted for
larceny of the money the trainees paid Appellant. This Court
has recognized that prosecution for both bribery and a larceny
by falsely representing what the bribee intends to do may be
problematic when the two offenses are rooted in mutually
inconsistent findings. See United States v. Clark,
20 C.M.A.
140, 143,
42 C.M.R. 332, 335 (1970). The prosecution avoided
that situation here and elected to proceed on the bribery
offense alone. Having made that election, the Government in
this case could rely on Appellant’s guilty plea, as supported by
the Care inquiry and the stipulation, to establish that
Appellant asked for the payment of money from his trainees with
specific intent to influence his decision or actions relating to
his duties.
24
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
Also, Appellant’s disclosure in the Stipulation of Fact of
his uncharged misconduct (actually receiving money in every
bribe) bolsters the adequacy of Appellant’s guilty plea. This
Court has stated, assuming no overreaching by the Government,
evidence of uncharged misconduct, otherwise inadmissible
evidence, may be presented to the court by stipulation and may
be considered by the court. See United States v. Glazier,
26
M.J. 268 (C.M.A. 1988). There is no evidence of overreaching
here, and it is clear that the parties availed themselves of
this mechanism to present the facts relating to uncharged
misconduct to the military judge.
As part of the negotiated guilty plea, Appellant agreed to
the admission of a “Stipulation of Fact correctly describing the
facts and circumstances surrounding the offense to which [he is]
pleading guilty and any relevant aggravating and mitigating
facts. [He] understand[s] the military judge may use the
Stipulation of Fact to determine the providency of [his] plea .
. . .” The stipulation further explicitly stated that
Appellant received money in every bribe. Also the military
judge elicited from Appellant cumulative admissions that he
actually received payments of money in five of the bribery
offenses. In these circumstances, the providency inquiry was
not tainted by but instead strengthened by the record discussion
of the uncharged misconduct.
25
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
In summary, Appellant’s statements establish that
Appellant asked for, and often actually received, the money from
trainees with the intent that the payments would influence his
decision to insure they did not receive Article 15 punishment.
The record alternatively establishes that each of the trainees
gave, and Appellant accepted, monetary bribes with the intent to
influence the decision and action of Appellant regarding
possible future punishment.
For these reasons, we hold that there is no substantial
basis in law or fact for overturning Appellant’s guilty pleas.
The facts and Appellant’s admissions are consistent with the
guilty pleas. The military judge explained the meaning and
effect of pleading guilty, as well as each element of the
charged offenses and the meaning of the word “element.”
Appellant admitted he had the requisite intent, as well as the
other elements of bribery, and sufficiently described the facts
to support his plea. We hold that the Court of Criminal Appeals
did not err in affirming the decision of the military judge to
accept Appellant’s guilty pleas as provident.
Decision
The decision of the United States Army Court of
Criminal Appeals is affirmed.
26
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
ERDMANN, Judge, with whom EFFRON, Judge, joins
(dissenting):
I respectfully dissent. In my view the record is
insufficient to sustain Staff Sergeant McCrimmon’s guilty
pleas to Specifications 7, 8 and 9 of Charge IV, which
allege bribery by asking for money. Specifically, the
record does not support the providence of these pleas to
the element of the offense which requires McCrimmon to have
accepted the money with the intent of having his decision
or action influenced. See Manual for Courts-Martial,
United States (2002 ed.) [MCM], Part IV, para. 66.b.(1)(c).
The record, however, provides ample support to affirm a
conviction for the crime of graft and also supports
affirming McCrimmon’s sentence.
I agree with the majority opinion that the focus of
our decision in this case is whether this record
establishes a factual basis for McCrimmon’s plea to the
specific intent element of bribery: “That the accused
asked, accepted, or received this thing of value with the
intent to have the accused’s decision or action influenced
with respect to a certain matter.”
Id. The intent to have
one’s actions or decisions influenced is a critical element
of bribery by asking. United States v. Marshall,
18 C.M.A.
426, 428,
40 C.M.R. 138, 140 (1969)(holding bribery must
1
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
entail “a corrupt intent to influence official action”);
see also United States v. Sun-Diamond Growers of Cal.,
526
U.S. 398, 404 (1999)(noting the federal statutory
requirement that there be an “intent . . . ‘to influence
any official act’ (giver) or in return for ‘being
influenced in the performance of any official act’
(recipient)”); United States v. Jennings,
160 F.3d 1006,
1014 (4th Cir. 1998). This record reveals that McCrimmon
did not intend to have his actions influenced in any way.
He was simply capitalizing on a concrete situation that
already existed and he did not contemplate or take any
individual official action nor did he contemplate or take
steps to influence another’s official action.
During his discussion of the offenses with the
military judge, McCrimmon acknowledged that as drill
sergeant he “pretty much had say-so” as to Article 15
punishment. Despite this acknowledgment of general
influence over the Article 15, Uniform Code of Military
Justice [UCMJ], 10 U.S.C. § 815 (2000), decision-making
process, in this case McCrimmon never asserted that he
intended to exercise his own authority to make a
recommendation regarding imposition of punishment under
Article 15, UCMJ. Instead, McCrimmon acknowledged to the
military judge that he was simply capitalizing on a
2
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
situation not of his own making and which required no
action whatsoever on his part:
After conversing with the First Sergeant and
realizing that it was just a scare tactic, I took
advantage of the situation also and took it a
step further, as far as the scare tactic. I had
them thinking that had they gotten an Article 15,
it would have an effect on them not graduating
from basic training. So at that moment, I took
advantage of them and accepted money from them.
I explained to them that if they paid me money,
they wouldn’t get the Article 15 that was
promised to them by the First Sergeant, and
they’d be allowed to go ahead on and graduate.
Any implied promise to influence the process was nothing
more than a false pretense to get money from the three
trainees involved.
In the stipulation of fact, McCrimmon did stipulate
that he “asked for and received this sum, with the intent
to have his decision influenced[.]” I am not persuaded,
however, that this stipulation alone is sufficient to
resolve the factual issue of McCrimmon’s actual intent in
this case. The stipulation is written as a virtual
recitation of the elements of the offense and hardly seems
reflective of actual facts. More importantly, however, the
difference between the stipulation and McCrimmon’s actual
statements should have caused the military judge to conduct
a more in-depth inquiry into the facts. See United States
v. Outhier,
45 M.J. 326, 331 (C.A.A.F. 1996).
3
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
If he could not resolve the inconsistency between the
stipulation and the articulated facts, the military judge
should have rejected the pleas. United States v. Garcia,
44 M.J. 496, 498 (C.A.A.F. 1996), (quoting Article 45(a),
UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 845(a)(1994)); see also Rule for Courts-
Martial 910(e), (h)(2). McCrimmon’s sworn statement to the
military judge is factually inadequate and the conflict
with the stipulation of fact is unresolved. These defects
present a substantial basis in fact and law for questioning
the providence of these pleas. United States v. Russell,
50 M.J. 99, 100 (C.A.A.F. 1999); United States v. Prater,
32 M.J. 433, 436 (C.M.A. 1991).
In this case, the record supports a provident guilty
plea only to the lesser-included offense of graft. Graft
is distinct from bribery in that graft requires no specific
intent to have a decision or action influenced. MCM, Part
IV, para. 66.b.(1)(c). McCrimmon’s statements reveal that
he asked for the money from the three trainees for
services, although he had no intention of performing any
service or taking any action whatsoever.
I would modify the findings of guilty to
specifications 7, 8, and 9 of Charge IV to reflect only a
finding of guilty to the lesser-included offense of graft
in violation of Article 134, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 934 (2000).
4
United States v. McCrimmon, No. 02-0941/AR
I would affirm the modified findings and the remaining
findings of guilty. I am convinced, however, that had the
military judge found McCrimmon guilty of graft in these
three specifications, he would have adjudged an identical
sentence. Therefore, I would affirm the sentence.
5