In the very recent past, the case of US Air Force Lt Col
James Wilkerson, a fighter pilot and Inspector General posted at Aviano Air
Base at Italy, has caused much brain-storming on the subject of military commanders
and convening authorities having been granted the powers to overturn verdicts
of courts-martial. In the said case, while the General Court Martial had rendered
a verdict of one year imprisonment and dismissal from service to the officer,
the convening authority, a Lt Gen based in Germany, overturned the verdict
resulting in calls for review of such authority provided to military commanders.
The controversy is not restricted to just the Armed Forces
of the United States but has a sounding-board effect on militaries of all
democracies.
Mr Eugene Fidell, the President Emeritus of US National
Institute of Military Justice, in this original work published here (link),
recounts the controversy. A must read for anyone even remotely connected with military law.
(After Mr Fidell’s write-up is a link to
the call of the Senate Armed Forces Committee for deliberating this issue)
Aviano II
Eugene R Fidell
It's rare for two important things to
happen in the same place. But so it is with Aviano Air Base, in Italy. Among
military lawyers, Aviano was previously associated with a terrible accident in
1998 when a U.S. Marine Corps jet severed the cable of a ski gondola, sending
20 civilians to their deaths and leading to high-profile courts-martial. Aviano
is now in the news because of another military justice case.
Last November, an Air Force general
court-martial at Aviano convicted a fighter pilot (and acting inspector
general) named James Wilkerson of sexually assaulting a civilian contractor and
sentenced him to a year's confinement and to be dismissed from the service. By
statute, the court-martial was subject to review by a three-star general
stationed in Germany before the case would enter the military appellate court
system. Under article 60 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), 10
U.S.C. § 860, that officer -- known as the convening authority
because he is also responsible for establishing (or convening) the
court-martial and deciding that the case should be referred to it for trial --
has "sole discretion" "to dismiss any charge or specification by
setting aside a finding of guilty." Authority to modify the findings and
sentence "is a matter of command prerogative involving the sole discretion
of the convening authority." Rule for Courts-Martial 1107, which is part
of the Manual for Courts-Martial (an Executive Order) adds
that, before taking post-trial action, the convening authority may consider not
only the record of trial, the accused's service record, and any matters
submitted by the accused, but also "[s]uch other matters as the convening
authority deems appropriate." According to the official
"Discussion" under R.C.M. 1107, the convening authority may "for
any reason or no reason" disapprove a finding of guilty. The Manual does
not require an explanation.
Late in February, Lt Gen Craig A.
Franklin, the convening authority, exercised this power and disapproved the
findings of guilt. Lt Col Wilkerson was released from confinement.
Given the current controversy over
sexual assault in the military, it is not surprising that Lt Gen Franklin's
action has sparked heated debate. This week the Senate Armed Services Committee
will conduct a hearing on sexual assault in the military and it is likely the Wilkerson case
will be Topic A.
Legislators from both sides of the
aisle and across the political spectrum are expected to weigh in. It is
important that they do so with a full understanding of the issue.
First, it would be wrong to harass or
penalize Lt Gen Franklin. His action, whatever the reason(s) for it, was
plainly authorized. Congress granted him sole discretion and he used it. To
probe his reasons is to repudiate the statute. It is also a form of legislative
"command influence" calculated to affect others' exercise of
discretion, and as such no more appropriate than "unlawful command
influence" exerted by senior officers.
But that is not to say Congress should
do nothing. It may want to use this incident as an occasion for revisiting the
statutory grant of unbridled post-trial review powers to commanders. Democratic
countries are moving away from this role for commanders. Congress ought to
fully inform itself of that trend and make an informed judgment as to whether
the United States should abandon this command-centric aspect of the military
justice system. Such a shift would rationalize our system, which includes not
only a rough replica of the jury system, but also a military trial bench, two
tiers of specialized appellate courts, and a clemency and parole system. The
convening authority's post-trial power of review is a throwback to an earlier
age and fundamentally discordant with other, more modern aspects of the
military justice system. What are the members of courts-martial -- our
uniformed jurors -- to think if they know that a commander can set aside the
verdict they have painstakingly rendered after hearing the evidence, perhaps
asking questions of their own (as military law permits), applying the military
judge's binding legal instructions, and deliberating in secret?
If it conducts this examination of the back end
of the military justice system, Congress should also look at the front end,
where non-lawyer convening authorities enjoy equally broad discretion to decide
which cases will be referred for trial by court-martial. To bring
the one up to date and into sync with other aspects of the UCMJ while
leaving its mate hard aground in the 18th century would make no sense. Congress
could do as other democratic countries have done in the last several decades,
and move the prosecution decision to a legal official such as a director of
military or service prosecutions and away from commanders. Under a reformed
system, commanders could of course express their views as to how any particular
case should be handled, but they would have to do so in writing and the actual
decision would lie with a trained, independent prosecutor.We can expect heat about the Wilkerson case
in the coming weeks, but perhaps we can hope for some light as well.
Addendum as of 2:30 p.m., Mar. 11, 2013: see Secretary of Defense Hagel's letter dated
Mar. 7, 2013 to Sens. Boxer and Shaheen.
-----
Readers may now like to peruse the House Armed Forces Committee of the United States website wherein a letter to Secretary Hagel has
been addressed on the same subject.
6 comments:
here, convening authorities would have doubled the verdict of court-martial, merely to satisfy Media
Here we do it the better way. The court passes the verdict as directed. Simple.
Dear Navdeep singh ji
Kudos to you for your thought process and the extent of access that you endeavor for updating legal acumen.
May the God bless you with more "TIKHI NAZAR"
Is the article questioning the legitimacy of the Convening Authority ?
If the punishment has been overturned I'm sure it would have some legal basis and not on the whims and fancies of one individual.
It is incorrect to state that only individuals who have studied law can pass judgements. Generals come up the hard way and have the experience to judge what is right and wrong.
Lastly the Convening Authority has been granted the legitimacy of overtuning Court Martial verdicts as over a period of time it was felt the crimes committed by Service Personnel (during the Course of Duty)need to be looked at through the eyes of a Service Personnel as he/she alone can emphathise correctly. In the military, circumstances are often such that black is white and vice versa.
What was done by comdg Gen is as per statutory law that is existing.Nothing unlawful-perfectly o kay.
Well, if one keeps on amending these provisions,to suite particular case ; next time it may be other way.
Let us watch how these senators react.
Unfortunately what was considered a crime at some point of time is not so after some time.The law is ... and lacks human element - it is a sort of mechanical with varying interpretations with passage of time.
All, very interesting . life is like that !
In the Indian Armed Forces, The Army Navy rules are not taught or explained to anyone.
The Naval Rules called the Regs Navy is so harsh that it is for all practical purposes USELESS.
It doles out imprisonment, whipping and death like chai at Solan.
No one is well versed enough in it that he can use the warrant punishments in it effectively. Therefore the hardened and seasoned Paapis get away with just about anything while the generally scared lot get further scared when the Articles of War are read out.
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