United States v. Bannister
201600315
N.M.C.C.A.May 31, 2017Background
- Appellant (best man) and victim JCH socialized and drank at multiple wedding-related events; earlier consensual kissing and sexual contact the night before.
- After heavy drinking, JCH was observed extremely intoxicated, falling, vomiting, and acting incoherently; appellant and another servicemember helped carry her to a hotel room.
- JCH has limited memory of subsequent events; she testified appellant digitally penetrated her, placed his penis in her mouth, and attempted vaginal/anal intercourse while she was unable to consent.
- Appellant sent texts the next day admitting he knew JCH was "hammered," describing digital penetration and worrying about forensic evidence; he asked her not to report him.
- Court-martial convicted appellant of one sexual assault and two abusive sexual-contact specifications; members were told two specifications were the same and the judge merged them for sentencing.
- On appeal, court affirmed convictions as legally and factually sufficient but found the two abusive-sexual-contact specifications unreasonably multiplied and dismissed one specification with prejudice; no sentence reassessment was required.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument | Defendant's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unreasonable multiplication of charges | Prosecution maintained separate specifications were proper | Appellant argued duplicative charging of substantially one transaction | Court: convictions represented a single criminal act; one specification dismissed for unreasonable multiplication |
| Legal sufficiency: was JCH incapable of consenting due to intoxication? | Prosecution: evidence (JCH testimony, witnesses, texts) showed incapacity and appellant knew or should have known | Appellant: challenged sufficiency of proof of incapacity | Court: evidence sufficient; a reasonable factfinder could find incapacity beyond a reasonable doubt |
| Factual sufficiency / mistake of fact as to consent | Prosecution: element requires knowledge that victim was incapable, which displaces mistake-of-fact claim | Appellant: asserted he reasonably believed JCH consented | Court: evidence (observations, appellant’s admissions) showed any belief was unreasonable; factual sufficiency affirmed |
| Reassessment of sentence after dismissal | N/A (prosecution sought affirmation) | Appellant could argue sentence affected by dismissed spec | Court: members were instructed to treat the two specs as one for sentencing; dismissal did not affect sentence—no reassessment needed |
Key Cases Cited
- United States v. Quiroz, 55 M.J. 334 (C.A.A.F. 2001) (factors for determining unreasonable multiplication of charges)
- United States v. Campbell, 71 M.J. 19 (C.A.A.F. 2012) (weighing Quiroz factors; one or more factors may be compelling)
- United States v. Thomas, 74 M.J. 563 (N-M. Ct. Crim. App. 2014) (military judge must consolidate or dismiss when members find guilt on duplicative specs)
- United States v. Elespuru, 73 M.J. 326 (C.A.A.F. 2014) (consolidation/dismissal requirement when findings duplicate a single act)
- United States v. Teague, 75 M.J. 636 (A. Ct. Crim. App. 2016) (Article 120(b)(3) requires government to disprove mistake of fact on incapacity)
- United States v. Solis, 75 M.J. 759 (N-M. Ct. Crim. App. 2016) (definition of "incapable of consenting" under Article 120)
