Hemphill is an inmate in the United States Penitentiary at Leavenworth, having been convicted by a military court of assault with intent to commit rape. The conviction was affirmed by a United States Army Board of Review and leave to appeal to the United States Court of Military Appeals was denied.
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In the instant habeas corpus case, Hemphill alleges that the military court was without jurisdiction to try him for the crime inasmuch as it was a non-military offense committed off-post while on leave. This allegation draws into question the applicability of O’Callahan v. Parker,
Ordinarily habeas corpus petitions from military prisoners must not be entertained by federal civilian courts until all available remedies within the military court system have been invoked in vain. Noyd v. Bond,
Our decision in Noyd is unaffected by the disposition of the exhaustion argument here. In Noyd the appellant was not challenging the jurisdiction of the military to hear his case, nor had the military review boards completed considering the case. In those circumstances, the rule remains intact that armed forces personnel must exhaust available military review procedures before bringing a federal habeas corpus action.
Although Hemphill’s conviction came some three years prior to the O’Callahan decision, because of factual distinctions the issue of O’Callahan’s retroactive application need not be considered. Relford v. Commandant, U. S. Disciplinary Barracks,
A very important consideration in the O’Callahan decision is that the crime was committed on American territory where civilian courts could afford the defendant the full panoply of constitutional protections. “In O’Callahan * * * the Court held that a court-martial may not try a member of our armed forces charged with attempted rape of a civilian, with housebreaking, and with assault with intent to rape, when the alleged offenses were committed off-post
on American territory,
when the soldier was on leave, and
when the charges could have been prosecuted in a civilian court.”
Relford v. Commandant, U. S. Disciplinary Barracks,
When a crime occurs on foreign soil, United States civilian courts are generally not available to vouchsafe the rights of the accused.
See
Gallagher v. United States,
The only argument made by appellant on this point is that the Supreme Court, in Reid v. Covert,
Appellant’s appointed counsel argues on appeal that the military court procedures violated Hemphill’s constitutional rights (a) to trial by jury; (b) to compulsory process; (c) to exercise the right to not give testimony against himself and to have counsel; and (d) to be free from command influence. We have carefully scrutinized Hemphill’s pro se habeas corpus petition as well as the Memorandum and Order of the trial court. With the exception of the trial by jury argument, there is no indication that any of these arguments was made to the trial court, and we will not first consider them on appeal. The trial by jury contention was urged concomitantly with and dependent upon the argument on military jurisdiction which we have heretofore decided against appellant.
Affirmed.
