Regular readers of the blog would be aware of Mr Eugene R Fidell whose guest post was published on the blog earlier on 16 March 2013. Besides being the President Emeritus of the US National Institute of Military Justice, Mr Fidell was magnanimous in his support towards my idea of the Forces Law Gazette.
Here is another topical write-up by him originally published earlier this month on ‘Balkinization’ which again is a sounding-board not just for American military law, but other nations as well.
HOW “ROBUST” IS APPELLATE REVIEW OF
COURTS-MARTIAL?
Secretary of Defense Hagel’s March 7, 2013 letter to Senator Boxer
advised that he had ordered a review to determine whether the requirements of
the Uniform Code of Military Justice were followed in connection with the
widely-noted Convening Authority (CA) action under Article 60 in United
States v. Wilkerson and whether that case suggests a need
for changes in either the UCMJ or the services’ implementation of it. He noted
that “this case does raise a significant question whether it is necessary or
appropriate to place the convening authority in the position of having the
responsibility to review the findings and sentence of a court-martial,
particularly prior to the robust appellate process made
available by the UCMJ” (emphasis added). On April 8, 2013 he recommended that
Congress modify Article 60.
Congress will decide whether the CA’s powers should be reduced or
reallocated, but it should do so only with a correct understanding of the
appellate process, since changes are needed there as well. The critical point
is that the current process is not “robust.”
First, for a court-martial to qualify for review by a service
Court of Criminal Appeals (CCA) under Article 66, the sentence as approved by
the CA must include the death penalty, confinement for a year or more, or a
punitive discharge (i.e., dismissal for officers and service academy
cadets and midshipmen, bad-conduct or dishonorable discharge for enlisted
personnel). Because of the jurisdictional threshold, many special and general
courts-martial are not subject to review by the military appellate courts.
Instead, the only available direct review is within the office of the Judge
Advocate General under Article 69. That review is conducted without judges,
appellate counsel, full briefing or oral argument.
A few numbers demonstrate the limits. In Fiscal Year 2012, 368
(21.3%) of the 1727 special and general courts-martial received by the TJAGs
were eligible only for the internal administrative review. A handful of these
Article 69 cases may have been referred to the CCAs as a matter of JAG discretion
but, once there, they are subject to narrower review than Article 66 cases. CompareArticle
66(c) (power to weigh evidence, judge credibility of witnesses, and determine
controverted questions of fact) with Article 69(e) (CCA may
take action “only with respect to matters of law”).
Do not suppose that courts-martial that don’t meet the
jurisdictional threshold for CCA review are unimportant. Many can have
significant effects on the accused, including lifelong stigmatization as a
federal offender and, in some cases, sex offender registration, loss of the
right to possess firearms, deportation, and other collateral consequences.
Second, neither the Constitution nor the UCMJ affords CCA judges
the protection of fixed terms of office (much less the life tenure enjoyed by
Article III judges). See Weiss v. United States, 510 U.S. 163
(1994). By regulation, Army and Coast Guard CCA judges have three-year terms;
those on the Navy-Marine Corps and Air Force CCAs remain without fixed terms of
any duration. At-will appellate judges such as these are unheard of in any
other part of the American legal system.
Third, cases that come within CCA jurisdiction often meet with
significant, and in some instances, extreme delays. A recent case took the Air
Force CCA 1024 days from docketing to decision.
Fourth, CCA decisions are in turn reviewable by the United States
Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces (CAAF). Under Article 67(c), CAAF may
“take action only with respect to matters of law” and does not review sentences
for reasonableness. It automatically reviews the few military capital cases,
and in noncapital cases grants discretionary review “on good cause shown.” The
JAGs, however, need not show good cause to obtain CAAF review: Article 67(a)(2)
gives them the power simply to refer (or certify) a case to CAAF. In Fiscal
Year 2012 eight cases were certified. Since the JAGs rarely certify cases for
the benefit of the accused, this aspect of the UCMJ appellate process is
asymmetric.
Fifth, only a limited subset of the cases that reach CAAF ever
become eligible for review by the Supreme Court of the United States. Under 28
U.S.C. § 1259, certiorari is available to review CAAF’s capital cases, those
certified by a JAG, those in which CAAF grants discretionary review, and others
– brought by extraordinary writ -- in which it grants relief. Article 67a(a)
adds that the Supreme Court “may not review by writ of certiorari under this
section any action of [CAAF] in refusing to grant a petition for review.” Thus,
except for the rare capital cases and the handful certified by the TJAGs, a
party can petition for certiorari only if CAAF has in its discretion granted
review or an extraordinary writ. In Fiscal Year 2012, CAAF granted 202 petitions for review and two petitions
for extraordinary writ or writ-appeal petitions and denied 616 petitions and 27
writs, rendering 76% of the total statutorily ineligible for Supreme
Court review.
Sixth, the cumulative result of the jurisdictional threshold for
CCA review and CAAF’s ability to bar the door to Supreme Court review is that
roughly 90% of special and general courts-martial never become eligible for
Supreme Court review. In contrast, all federal and state defendants and even
persons convicted by military commission have a right to petition the Supreme
Court for review of their cases.
Seventh, in the minority of CAAF cases that are eligible for
Supreme Court review, the Solicitor General takes the position (despite contrary
legislative history) that the Supreme Court may only decide “issues” as to
which CAAF has granted review. On this view, an ungranted issue in a granted
case remains outside the Supreme Court’s jurisdiction. The Supreme Court has
repeatedly declined to address this question, having never granted certiorari
on an ungranted issue.
Finally, the military judicial process does not include a
statutory post-conviction fact-finding mechanism like that provided for
civilian federal criminal cases in 28 U.S.C. § 2255. Instead, it relies on the
so-called DuBay hearing, a judicially-manufactured substitute
that seeks to compensate for process failures in the existing system, which
lacks a standing trial court. These limited evidentiary hearings are ordered
when, for example, a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel arises.
Although they avoid “the unsatisfactory alternative of settling [an] issue on
the basis of ex parte affidavits, amidst a barrage of claims
and counterclaims,” United States v. DuBay, 37 C.M.R. 411, 413
(1967), they remain a makeshift appendage to the military appellate process.
Appellate review under the UCMJ is not “robust.”
5 comments:
Dear Navdeep,
It is nice to see that you continue to persevere with ur sharp legal mind.
But then the Fauji set up ensures that even a victory over the system is but a pyrrhic one
. The system of Court martial is great provided it applies to everyone for a certain category of offence. E.g to all Govt employees wrt corruption etc
However it only applies to one category ie fauji and to him in all categories eg he can be sentenced to RI for something as commonplace as misappropriating some tins of ration jam and cheese.
And u have Tatras , 2G, bansal, CWG, etc etc where no one gets even a rap on his thievin knuckles.
I may be off topic but try to see the point.
No comments yet!!! Puzzled, what to say!
I have written a whole chapter on Military Justice System for Indian Armed Forces in my book Effective Deterrence because I feel that fair and prompt justice system free from Command influence but at the same time capable of ensuring discipline is necessary. I have proposed that JAG Branch be broken into thee branches, namely, Advocate General, Counsel General and Military Judges who will preside in Courts Martial by Jury. Advocate General will be prosecuting branch while Counsel General will be advisors to Commander as also All Rank. We should also stop direct commissioning of JAG officers. All ooficers should firat servefor 14 years in Arms than volunteers be selected and put through LLB/ LLM.
Dear Navdeep,,
What can we do if a certain corrupt CDA person harasses is by returning claims on flimsy pretexts or by asking for irrelevant documents and then stating that all documents sought are necessary to ensure financial propreity?
Higher ups in the CDA set up dont entertain any questions.
I humbly solicit ur help in sorting these thieves out. Can i mail you some details
Need your help on this.
I am a widow of an army major drawing special family pension since 17th Aug 1992; having appealed to the Defence Ministry regarding his demise and the extent of medical negligence that was involved. He had completed almost 18 years of service, but his promotion was withheld due to his medical condition. A letter regarding his promotion from AHQ was received at the 340 Brigade HQ prior to his demise. Considering the emotional turmoil I was going through at the time, I do not recall the exact contents of the letter, nor was I in a position to seek a copy of the same. I am now aware that the brigade has moved out of Pune. I would therefore be grateful if you could let me know whether my husband was eligible for the next rank and if so, the details of any revision in the pension. His I.C. No. is 36234P. I await your response eagerly.
- Mrs. Padma Ravi. (padmaravi1960@gmail.com)
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