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INTRODUCTION TO MILITARY LAW

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Restraint ordered required by the circumstances. Pretrial Confinement Most severe form ... Exigent circumstances. Types of Searches - No PC required. Entry ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: INTRODUCTION TO MILITARY LAW


1
INTRODUCTION TO MILITARY LAW
  • WEEK 11
  • Pretrial Confinement
  • Article 31 v. Miranda
  • Search and Seizure

2
This Week
  • Is there bail in the military?
  • How does Miranda apply or does it?
  • Search and Seizure
  • 4th Amendment
  • Inspections
  • Right of Privacy?

3
Pretrial Confinement/Restraint
  • Is there bail in the military?
  • Jail opportunity very limited
  • Extra options available
  • Conditions on Liberty
  • Orders directing a person to do or refrain from a
    specified act
  • Restriction in lieu of arrest
  • Moral restraint by oral or written orders
    perform duty
  • Arrest
  • Restraint by oral or written orders no duty
  • Pretrial Confinement
  • Physical restraint

4
Pretrial Restraint
  • Must have Probable Cause to order any form of
    pretrial restraint
  • Offense triable by court-martial
  • Person restrained committed offense
  • Restraint ordered required by the circumstances
  • Pretrial Confinement Most severe form
  • RCM 304
  • Same PC requirement
  • Lesser forms of restraint must be inadequate
  • Additional due process requirements

5
Pretrial Confinement Procedures
  • Rights advisement promptly
  • Nature of offense
  • Right to remain silent
  • Right to retain civilian counsel
  • Procedures for review of confinment decision
  • Three Mandatory reviews
  • 48 hour PC determination
  • Usually by individual commander must be neutral
  • 72 hour Commanders memo
  • Usually same as 48 hours is CC is neutral
  • 7 Day review
  • Appointed Magistrate
  • Non-adversarial
  • Standard for review
  • Release or keep confined
  • Cant set limits on release

6
Pretrial Confinement
  • Mandatory review by military judge
  • Once sent forward to trial
  • Upon motion by defense
  • Abuse of discretion standard
  • If prisoner released CC cant send back
  • Unless additional misconduct

7
Confinement Credit
  • Allen Credit 1 for 1 credit against sentence to
    confinement
  • US v. Allen - 81 days prior to trial
  • Mason Credit 1 for 1 credit for pretrial
    restraint tantamount to confinement
  • Article 13 Credit Unlawful pretrial punishment
  • Intentional pretrial punishment
  • Pretrial confinement conditions more rigorous
    than necessary to ensure presence at trial
  • Does not require jail and can be multiple day
    credit in discretion of military judge
  • US v. Mosby
  • pretrial detainee placed in maximum
    custody/solitary confinment based on seriousness
    of offense
  • Military judge - no intent to punish and no
    infliction of unduly rigorous circumstances
  • Burden on accused to show entitled to additional
    credit
  • Court affirms - no intent to punish therefore no
    credit
  • US v. Fischer - pay stopped while in pretrial at
    ETS
  • Various sex offenses with minors
  • Alleged Article 13 violation
  • If acquitted, would be reimbursed
  • No intent to punish and application of policy
    reasonable - no violation

8
Confinement Credit Continued
  • RCM 305 Credit Failure to comply with
    procedural requirements
  • 1 for 1 but in addition to Allen credit
  • If no confinement adjudged, can apply credit to
    other portions of the sentence
  • Confinement starts speedy trial clock

9
Article 31 v. Miranda
  • MRE 304 Confessions and Admissions
  • Involuntary? Not admissible (and your little dog
    too!!)?
  • No rights
  • Coercion
  • Promises of immunity
  • Mind Games
  • Deception permissible only after waiver
  • Unlawful command influence
  • Burden shifting to prosecution to prove
    voluntariness

10
Article 31
  • Article 31
  • Does 3 things
  • Prohibits compelled self-incrimination
  • Imposes a warnings requirement
  • Excludes involuntary statements from
    court-martial
  • When? Who? Where?
  • Does not address right to counsel
  • When not required?
  • Non-testimonial acts
  • Handwriting/voice exemplars
  • Urine/blood sample
  • Consent to search
  • Remedy for violation? Exclusion

11
Right to Counsel MRE 305
  • 5th Amendment
  • Custodial interrogation
  • Miranda v. Arizona
  • Unequivocal request? Stop!
  • Accused can reinitiate
  • Break in custody before waiver
  • 6th Amendment
  • Counsel in all criminal prosecutions
  • Attaches at initiation of adverse judicial
    proceedings
  • Preferral of charges
  • Offense specific
  • Prosecutorial forces of an organized society and
    their minions are barred from initating contact
    after invocation
  • Neither custody or coercive inlfuences are
    required

12
Article 31 Cases
  • US v. Duga
  • Facts
  • Amn Byers - SF member questioned by OSI about
    appellant
  • Amn Byers and appellant social acquaintances and
    same rank
  • Amn Byers on duty, met appellant on bike, engaged
    in conversation and asked what he was up to
  • Appellant provided incriminating response then
    Amn Byers asked follow up question
  • No Article 31 warnings - alleged at trial and on
    appeal
  • Court did not fall within purview of Article 31
  • Purpose of Article 31 - provide service members
    protection necessary because of subtle pressures
    of military society
  • Only applies to situations where there may be
    pressure on an individual to respond
  • Not done in an official capacity - not acting on
    behalf of OSI
  • Motivated by his own personal curiosity
  • Appellant did not perceive interrogation as
    official in nature

13
  • US v. Ravenel
  • Premeditate murder/adultery
  • Accused intervened in domestic between Covin and
    spouse - held Covin until Gaines assisted spouse
    in leaving
  • Ravenel left apartment and took bat with him,
    going to MP station
  • MPs responded and found Covin lying on floor -
    died with 3-4 minutes
  • CID interviewed Gaines, Covin and spouse then
    Ravenel
  • Questioned as witness - did not suspect him
  • Agents later collectively decided to warn and
    requestion same day and then three days later
  • Court Should have warned after initial
    admission of assault
  • Court Does Article 31 precisely parallel 5th
    Amend?
  • Article 31 is broader and is applied differently
    (Oregon v. Elstad)?
  • Presumption of taint applies to all subsequent
    interrrogations following unwarned questioning
  • No cleansing statement - same investigator -
    unwarned admission referenced in subsequent
    interviews
  • Remanded - decide sufficient attenuation

14
Search and Seizure
  • First 4th Amendment APPLIES to the military (US
    v. Ezell, 6 MJ 307 (CMA 1979))?
  • Some exceptions made by rule
  • US v. Stuckey, 10 MJ 347 (CMA 1981) That is
    not to say, however, that in its application
    it does not take into account the exigencies of
    military necessity and unique conditions in
    the military
  • Military commanders power to authorize searches
    is independent of the Warrant Clause of the 4th
    Amendment
  • No oath/affirmation requirement
  • Must be based on PC (MRE 315)?
  • Limitations on use
  • Searches governed by MRE 311 317
  • Normal 4th Amendment analysis applies

15
  • Overseas Application
  • Not applicable to searches by foreign officials
  • Unless US agents participated in search
  • Direct contribution
  • Not mere presence, interpreter, routine
    furnishing of information
  • If US participation, normal 4th Amendment
    standards apply
  • If no US participation, standard is gross and
    brutal maltreatment regardless of compliance
    with foreign rules
  • No standing to complain of violation of
    international treaties or international law

16
  • Expectation of Privacy
  • In general, same rules apply - MRE 311
  • Standing based on expectation of privacy in the
    area to be searched and has a legitimate interest
    in property to be seized
  • Expectation of privacy in military may be greatly
    diminished (US v. Middleton, 10 MJ 123 (CMA
    1981))?
  • None in common areas such as dorms, unlocked
    locker in common work area, use of drug dogs in
    parking lots and hallways, etc
  • Government property mostly caselaw
  • Reduced expectation in barracks room
    (inspections)?
  • 4th Amendment applies to government quarters
  • Office reduced expectation of privacy

17
Types of Searches
  • Probable Cause
  • MRE 315
  • Civilian Search Warrant
  • Search Authorization
  • Express Permission
  • Written or Oral
  • Competent military authority
  • Scope
  • Power to authorize
  • Commander
  • Military magistrate
  • Military judge
  • Process
  • Exigent circumstances

18
Types of Searches - No PC required
  • Entry/Exit of installation
  • Search of Government Property
  • Consider personal expectation of privacy
  • Consent
  • Oral or written
  • Scope
  • Withdrawal
  • Article 31 not required
  • Stop and frisk
  • Incident to apprehension
  • Inspections - a different beast

19
Inspections - MRE 313
  • Not considered a search under 4th Amendment
  • Examination of whole or part of a unit,
    organization, vessel, aircraft
  • Incident to Command
  • Primary purpose is ensure security, fitness or
    good order and discipline
  • Includes examination to locate and confiscate
    unlawful weapons or other contraband
  • Order to produce bodily fluid is permissible
    under this rule (urinalysis program)?
  • Inspection with primary purpose of obtaining
    evidence for use in court is not an inspection

20
Inspections Continued
  • Conducted in a reasonable fashion
  • Everyone treated same - no different intrusions
  • Cant pick specific people
  • Mixed purpose is OK - primary purpose must be
    unit readiness
  • With or without notice
  • Not required to be in writing
  • Better practice put in writing to document
    purpose and procedures
  • Weapons, contraband, evidence may be seized
  • Stop and get search authorization
  • Those executing may have some discretion
  • Gate inspections and urinalysis program

21
  • US v. Hayes
  • Barracks security inspection
  • Upon entry
  • Contents of box
  • Sign in/Sign out and logging of handcarried items
  • Instituted by commander
  • Discovered stolen property
  • Objected to admission
  • Court Primary issue was scope limited in
    accordance with legitimate governmental purpose
  • Purpose - secure living environment
  • Appellant aware of procedures
  • BUT lacking information regarding level of
    discretion, results of refusing the search
  • Recognizes military must possess substantial
    discretion over internal discipline
  • BUT prosecutors must demonstrate the command
    interest and methods
  • RESULT suppression

22
Lawful but not useable
  • Commander directed urinalysis or other search
    (MRE 312)?
  • Does not fit any recognized exceptions to PC
    requirement
  • Based on reasonable suspicion not probable cause
  • Cant be without cause
  • order as part of inspection is not commander
    directed
  • Violate 4th amendment but lawful
  • UCMJ, regulation and courts limit use to
    administrative action
  • Exclusionary Rule - MRE 311
  • Unlawful search or seizure exclusion

23
Computers
  • No expectation of privacy in email stored on
    government computer system
  • monitor v. search
  • Log on Banner
  • Sys Admin can monitor system for security
  • Balance between providers needs and users
    privacy
  • If offense discovered, SA must report incident
    and not engage in any independent investigation
  • SA cant be agent of law enforcement
  • Must get warrant/authorization or permission from
    Designated Approving Official for network
    search
  • No reasonable expectation of privacy

24
Computers
  • PC or virtual private drive requires
    authorization/warrant
  • Member has a reasonable expectation of privacy
  • Employer can search if no merely to obtain
    evidence and search is justified by work purpose
    and reasonable in scope
  • Commander directed monitoring of specific email
    and internet accounts is impermissible without
    authorization
  • Seizure v. Search of computer
  • Can seize but not search without authorization
  • House analogy

25
US v. Long
  • 2006 - expectation of privacy in emails stored on
    government computer system
  • Drug use case - SA retrieved emails from system
    at direction of IG investigator looking into
    improper relationship between accused and an
    officer
  • Emails seized solely for law enforcement purposes
    and went beyond work related monitoring (OConnor
    v. Ortega application)?
  • Subjective and Objective reasonable expectation
    of privacy
  • Banner qualified expectation but did not
    extinguish it - password language of banner
  • Qualified with unique aspects of military
    environment
  • GC Opinion

26
NEXT WEEK
  • Courts-Martial
  • Types and process
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