CreatorTitleDescriptionPublication NumberOrganizationPublication DateEffective DateExpiration DateUploaded On
Coast Guard Court of Criminal AppealsUNITED STATES V DATZ - 59 MJ 510Appellant was tried by a general court-martial composed of officer and enlisted members. Contrary to his pleas of not guilty, he was convicted of the following offenses: one specification of striking a Petty Officer and one specification of treating a Petty Officer with contempt in violation of Article 91, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ); three specifications of dereliction of duty and one specification of violating a lawful general regulation in violation of Article 92, UCMJ; one specification of rape in violation of Article 120, UCMJ; and one specification of unlawful entry in violation of Article 134, UCMJ. The members sentenced Appellant to reduction to pay grade E-3 and confinement for three months. The convening authority approved the sentence as adjudged, and the Acting Judge Advocate General of the Coast Guard referred the record to this Court pursuant to Article 69(d), UCMJ.Docket No. 001-69-01Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals8/6/20038/6/200310/5/2017
Coast Guard Court of Criminal AppealsHIGGINS V RADM DG GABEL - ORDERAs recounted in the petition, Petitioner was tried by a general court-martial composed of members. He was found guilty of violating Article 128 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, (UCMJ). He was sentenced by members to reduction to E-2, restriction to Training Center Cape May for 60 days, and hard labor without confinement for 60 days. The convening authority’s action, dated 13 January 2003, approved and ordered executed so much of the sentence as provides for reduction to pay grade E-2, restriction to Training Center Cape May for 58 days, and hard labor without confinement for 58 days. On 13 January 2003, the convening authority issued a “Letter of Restriction” to Petitioner. The “Letter of Restriction” states that Petitioner’s restriction will begin on 13 January 2003 and will last for 58 days, to end on 11 March 2003; that Petitioner be restricted to Coast Guard Training Center Cape May; that each day of restriction the Petitioner will muster four times a day in the proper uniform of the day; and while restricted Petitioner is not to enter or take advantage of or use the following: gymnasium, auditorium and any recreational facilities located on the Training Center, unless for official business. In addition to these written terms of restriction, Petitioner was verbally advised at various times that he was not allowed to have visitors, could have visitors for two hours in the evening and, most recently, that he could have visitors for one hour in the evening.MISC. DOCKET No. 001-03Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals2/21/20032/21/200310/5/2017
Coast Guard Court of Criminal AppealsUNITED STATES V BRIDGES - 58 MJ 540Appellant was tried by a general court-martial composed of officer members. Contrary to his pleas, he was convicted of two specifications of indecent acts with a child in violation of Article 134, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ); one specification of rape of a child under age 12 in violation of Article 120, UCMJ; and one specification of forcible sodomy upon a child under age 12 in violation of Article 125, UCMJ. Appellant was sentenced to reduction to pay grade E-1, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, confinement for 22 years, and a dishonorable discharge. The convening authority disapproved and dismissed one specification of indecent acts and the sole specification and charge of forcible sodomy, and approved the findings of guilt for the charge and one specification of indecent acts with a child and the charge and one specification of rape of a child under 12. The convening authority approved the reduction,forfeitures, and punitive discharge as adjudged, but approved confinement for only 20 years.Docket No. 1147Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals3/6/20033/6/200310/5/2017
Coast Guard Court of Criminal AppealsUNITED STATES V STIREWALT - 58 MJ 552This represents the second occasion for this Court to review this case pursuant to Article 66, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), and the third time it has been before us. Because of the case’s unusual procedural history, a brief recitation of its background is provided. On 17 June 1997, Appellant was convicted of the following offenses by a general court-martial composed of officer and enlisted members: four specifications of maltreatment by sexual harassment, one specification of rape, one specification of forcible sodomy, three specifications of assault consummated by a battery, four specifications of adultery, and four specifications of indecent assault, in violation of Articles 93, 120, 125, 128, and 134 of the UCMJ, respectively. Prior to sentencing, the original military judge dismissed two specifications of maltreatment, two specifications of assault consummated by a battery, and one specification of adultery as multiplicious. The members sentenced Appellant to reduction to paygrade E-1, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, confinement for ten years, and a dishonorable discharge. On 29 October 1997, the convening authority approved the findings and sentence and ordered it executed with the exception of the dishonorable discharge. For a detailed recitation of the facts underlying the aforementioned charges, see United States v. Stirewalt, 53 M.J. 582 (C.G. Ct. Crim. App. 2000).Docket No. 1089Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals3/11/20033/11/200310/5/2017
Coast Guard Court of Criminal AppealsUNITED STATES V FREEMAN - PER CURIAMAppellant was tried by special court-martial, judge alone. Pursuant to his guilty pleas, entered in accordance with a pretrial agreement, he was convicted of the following offenses: one specification of conspiracy with Coast Guard Fireman Apprentice James R. Frye to commit larceny of $600 from a Coast Guard shipmate, in violation of Article 81, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ); one specification of larceny of a shipmate's Automated Teller Machine (ATM) card, and two specifications of larceny of $100 from that shipmate, in violation of Article 121, UCMJ. The military judge sentenced Appellant to a bad conduct discharge (BCD), confinement for four months, and a fine of $300. The convening authority approved the BCD, the fine of $300, and a reduced period of confinement of 75 days, which was within the terms of the pretrial agreement. Before this Court, Appellant has assigned three errors, all of which are rejected as described below.Docket No. 1174Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals3/20/20033/20/200310/5/2017
Coast Guard Court of Criminal AppealsUNITED STATES V FRYE - PER CURIAMAppellant was tried by special court-martial, judge alone. Pursuant to his guilty pleas, entered in accordance with a pretrial agreement, he was convicted of the following offenses: one specification of conspiracy with Coast Guard Seaman Recruit Aaron M. Freeman to commit larceny of $600 from a Coast Guard shipmate, in violation of Article 81, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ); one specification of wrongful appropriation of a shipmate's Automated Teller Machine (ATM) card, and one specification of larceny of $400 from that shipmate, in violation of Article 121, UCMJ. The military judge sentenced Appellant to a bad conduct discharge (BCD), confinement for 100 days, and a fine of $200. The convening authority approved the BCD, the fine of $200, and a reduced period of confinement of 75 days, which was within the terms of the pretrial agreement. Before this Court, Appellant has assigned two errors both of which are rejected as described below.Docket No. 1173Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals3/20/20033/20/200310/5/2017
Coast Guard Court of Criminal AppealsUNITED STATES V MEEK - 58 MJ 579Appellant was tried by special court-martial, military judge alone. He was charged with one specification of desertion in violation of Article 85, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ); one specification of missing movement by design in violation of Article 87, UCMJ; and one specification of wrongful use of marijuana in violation of Article 112a, UCMJ. Pursuant to a pretrial agreement, Appellant pled not guilty to desertion, and entered pleas of guilty to the lesser included offense of unauthorized absence terminated by apprehension in violation of Article 86, UCMJ and to the charges and specifications of missing movement by design and illegal drug use. According to a stipulation of fact and the Care1 inquiry during the trial, Appellant failed to return to USCGC BOUTWELL after a period of authorized leave, and remained absent from 18 February 2001 until 24 March 2001, when he was apprehended in Arkansas by local authorities. While absent, he missed USCGC BOUTWELL’s scheduled movement from Golfito, Costa Rica to Alameda, California and used marijuana. The military judge accepted Appellant’s pleas, and sentenced Appellant to 75 days confinement, reduction to paygrade E-1, and a bad conduct discharge. The military judge, with concurrence of both the trial counsel and trial defense counsel, determined that Appellant was entitled to credit for 53 days of pretrial confinement under United States v. Allen, 17 M.J. 126 (C.M.A. 1984). The convening authority disapproved the findings of guilt to the charge and specification of unauthorized absence, approved the remaining findings, and approved the sentence as adjudged, but suspended all confinement in excess of 60 days for a period of 12 months as provided under the pre-trial agreement.Docket No. 1176Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals3/27/20033/27/200310/5/2017
Coast Guard Court of Criminal AppealsUNITED STATES V OSUNA - 58 MJ 879The record in this case was first acted upon by this Court on 28 November 2001 in a decision which affirmed the findings of guilty, and returned the record for a new convening authority’s action on the sentence. That sentence action has been completed by the convening authority, and has resulted in his reducing the earlier approved dishonorable discharge to a bad conduct discharge, and approval again of the remaining adjudged sentence of confinement for three months and reduction to paygrade E-1. Before this Court, Appellant has reasserted an error assigned by him earlier, that the evidence of record is insufficient to support a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt for two specifications alleging maltreatment of a Seaman Apprentice (SA) under his authority as an Honor Guard trainee.2 This assignment was rejected by two of the three judges on this panel during our first review of the case, with a determination that the findings of guilty were both legally and factually sufficient. As the third member of the panel, I dissented from this view, finding the two specifications of maltreatment not proven beyond a reasonable doubt. Now, Appellant asks us to revisit the majority’s decision in this regard. In so doing, he notes that the question of what extent a service court is bound by its previous factual findings is presently pending before the United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces in the case of United States v. Riley, 57 M.J. 157 (C.A.A.F. 2002).Docket No. 1122Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals4/9/20034/9/200310/5/2017
Coast Guard Court of Criminal AppealsUNITED STATES V PINTOS - PER CURIAMAppellant was tried by special court-martial, military judge alone. Pursuant to his pleas of guilty, entered in accordance with a pretrial agreement, he was found guilty of one specification of desertion in violation of Article 85, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ). The judge sentenced Appellant to a bad conduct discharge (BCD), confinement for ninety days, and reduction to paygrade E-1. The convening authority approved the adjudged sentence, but suspended all confinement not already served for twelve months from the date sentence was announced, and credited Appellant with sixty-three days of pretrial confinement in accordance with United States v. Allen, 17 M.J. 126 (C.M.A. 1984). This had the effect of releasing Appellant from confinement on the day sentence was announced.Docket No. 1175Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals4/25/20034/25/200310/5/2017
Coast Guard Court of Criminal AppealsUNITED STATES V TARDIF - 58 MJ 714On 26 March 2001, when we first reviewed this case, this Court set aside a twelve day unauthorized absence conviction and dismissed that charge and specification,. We affirmed the remaining findings of guilty of assaulting a child under 16 years of age and the approved sentence of a dishonorable discharge, confinement for two years, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, and reduction to paygrade E-1. On 25 April 2001, this Court reconsidered and reaffirmed that decision, and, in addition, ordered confinement credit pursuant to United States v. Allen, 17 M.J. 126 (C.A.A.F. 1984) for twelve days of incarceration by civil authorities, which had formed the basis for the earlier unauthorized absence charge. In separate opinions to both of those decisions, I concurred with all but the affirming of two years confinement. Following United States v. Collazo, 53 M.J. 721 (A. Ct. Crim. App. 2000), I would have reduced the confinement to 21 months based on a delay of 115 days in forwarding the record for review by this Court after the convening authority had acted.Docket No. 1141Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals5/14/20035/14/200310/5/2017
Coast Guard Court of Criminal AppealsUNITED STATES V BULLA - 58 MJ 715Appellant was tried by special court-martial, military judge alone. Pursuant to her pleas of guilty, entered in accordance with a pretrial agreement, Appellant was found guilty of the following offenses: two specifications of unauthorized absence in violation of Article 86, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ); one specification of wrongful use of cocaine, in violation of Article 112(a), UCMJ; and one specification of wrongful appropriation of military property in violation of Article 121, UCMJ. Appellant was sentenced to a bad conduct discharge (BCD), confinement for forty-nine days, reduction to paygrade E-1, and forfeiture of two-thirds pay for two months. With respect to the adjudged sentence, the pretrial agreement allowed approval of all elements, requiring only that the convening authority suspend the BCD for a period of twelve months from the date of the convening authority’s action. Additionally, however, the pretrial agreement included a misconduct provision that permitted the convening authority, among other things, to disregard the sentence limiting part of the pretrial agreement if the Appellant committed a violation of the UCMJ between the time the sentence was announced at her court-martial and the time the convening authority acted on the sentence.Docket No. 1171Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals5/16/20035/16/200310/5/2017
Coast Guard Court of Criminal AppealsUNITED STATES V HUTCHISON - 58 MJ 744A panel of this Court first decided this case on 27 June 2001, and affirmed findings of guilty and twenty-eight months confinement. However, after considering, among other things, Appellant’s subsequent conviction and punishment by state authorities for the same acts underlying the court-martial offenses, it disapproved that portion of the sentence providing for a bad conduct discharge and reduction to paygrade E-1. Upon request by the Government, the Court sitting as a whole reconsidered and reaffirmed that decision, but limited its decision to legal issues relating to the Court’s consideration of the state proceeding. Finding no error contributing to the sentence action, the Court expressly refrained from reviewing the court-martial sentence again, noting that at least one of our higher court’s judges, former Chief Judge Everett, believed it was not in our power to reconsider en banc a panel’s determination of sentence appropriateness. Thereafter, pursuant to Article 67(a)(2), the Judge Advocate General (JAG) ordered the case sent to the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces. The JAG certified four issues for review.4 On 30 August 2002, that Court remanded the record to us for clarification in order to determine whether this Court abused our discretion by seeking to lessen the effect of the punishment from the state court proceedings, rather than properly exercising our Article 66, UCMJ, authority by taking into account the conviction and punishment by state authorities in considering whether the military sentence was appropriate. Our superior court specifically directed us to provide that clarification in the form of a de novo review of sentence appropriateness under Article 66(c), UCMJ. We were further instructed to then return the record directly to the Court of Appeals of the Armed Forces in order to allow them to complete their review under Article 67, UCMJ. United States v. Hutchison, 57 M.J. 231, 234 (C.A.A.F. 2002).Docket No. 1090Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals6/3/20036/3/200310/5/2017
Coast Guard Court of Criminal AppealsUNITED STATES V REDLINSKI - 59 MJ 562On 30 October 2001, this Court issued a decision in this case, United States v. Redlinski, 56 M.J. 508, 521 (C.G. Ct. Crim. App. 2001), which was appealed to the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces. On 21 February 2003, that Court reversed as to Specification 2 of the Charge and as to the sentence, but affirmed in all other respects. United States v. Redlinski, 58 M.J. 117 (2003). After setting aside the finding of guilty of Specification 2 of the Charge and the sentence, the Court remanded the record with direction that this Court could either dismiss Specification 2 of the Charge and reassess the sentence, or we could order a rehearing.Docket No. 1116Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals6/24/20036/24/200310/5/2017
Coast Guard Court of Criminal AppealsUNITED STATES V BERNARD - 69 MJ 694UNITED STATES V BERNARD - 69 MJ 694 Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals - Opinion Appellant was tried by general court-martial composed of officer and enlisted members. Contrary to his pleas, Appellant was convicted of two specifications of wrongful sexual contact, in violation of Article 120, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ); one specification of assault, in violation of Article 128, UCMJ; and one specification each of indecent assault and indecent language, in violation of Article 134, UCMJ. The court sentenced Appellant to restriction for two months, reduction to E-3, and a bad-conduct discharge. The Convening Authority approved the sentence except for the restriction.Docket No. 1328Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals12/21/201012/21/20109/21/2017
Coast Guard Court of Criminal AppealsUNITED STATES V KOWALSKI - 69 MJ 705UNITED STATES V KOWALSKI - 69 MJ 705 Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals - Opinion Appellant was tried by general court-martial, military judge alone. Pursuant to his pleas of guilty, entered in accordance with a pretrial agreement, Appellant was convicted of one specification of attempting to communicate indecent language to minors, in violation of Article 80, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ); and four specifications of violating 18 U.S.C. § 2251 by enticing or attempting to entice a minor to produce child pornography, two specifications of violating 18 U.S.C. § 2252A by possessing child pornography, three specifications of violating 18 U.S.C. § 2422(b) by attempting to engage a minor in illegal sexual activity, and one specification of communicating indecent language, all in violation of Article 134, UCMJ. The military judge sentenced Appellant to confinement for sixty-five months, reduction to E-1, and a dishonorable discharge. The Convening Authority approved the sentence, but suspended confinement in excess of thirty months for twelve months after release from confinement, pursuant to the pretrial agreement.Docket No. 1330Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals12/15/201012/15/20109/21/2017
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Oral Arguments


Pursuant to U.S. Department of Defense Standard carrying out Article 140a, Uniform Code of Military Justice [10 U.S.C. s. 940a] (revised, January 2025), an audio recording of an oral argument will typically be made publicly accessible. Audio recordings for oral arguments after the effective date of this new rule (January 2025) are below. As part of this requirement, a military service provides a mechanism by which a written transcript may be made available upon request. Contact HQS-DG-LST-CG-LMJ@uscg.mil with the reason for the request. 

 

Parties Docket Audio File Date
U.S. v. Ray 1498 MP3 2025/05/13
U.S. v. Kelley 1495 MP3 2025/03/26