Gary Lee Smith was charged and convicted on 40 counts of sexual abuse and exploitation of his children in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 13 and 2032. Smith appeаls his conviction on the grounds that it was obtained in violation of his double jeopardy rights. We review double jeopardy challenges
de novo. United States v. Castiglione,
BACKGROUND
Smith was a sеrgeant in the United States Army at the time he committed the offenses for which he was convicted. On December 5, 1988, military charges were issued agаinst Smith for substantially the same conduct that would be charged in the federal indictment on December 14, 1988. While both federal and military charges werе pending, Smith submitted a request for “Discharge for the Good of the Service” pursuant to Chapter 10 of Army Regulations 635-200. Chapter 10 permits a soldier whо has committed an offense subject to a bad conduct discharge to request discharge on this non-punitive basis. In the request for discharge, Smith admitted guilt to the charged offenses “or of lesser included offenses therein which also authorizes the imposition of a bad conduct or dishоnorable discharge.” The request was granted and Smith was discharged Under Other Than Honorable Conditions with the notation that the discharge was “For thе good of the service — in lieu of court-martial.” Smith argues that the Chapter 10 discharge was a plea agreement in settlement of the pending military charges. As such, Smith contends that jeopardy attached to those charges, prohibiting further prosecution by either the military or civil authorities for the same conduct.
DISCUSSION
The Double Jeopardy Clause bars a second prosecution of a defendant who has alrеady been placed in jeopardy for the same offense by the same sovereign.
See Christ v. Bretz,
Smith argues that jeopardy attached to the military proceeding when the Army aсcepted his “guilty plea” and granted his discharge. Jeopardy ordinarily attaches upon the court’s acceptance of а plea agreement.
United States v. Vaughan,
We reject Smith’s argument. The Chapter 10 request and discharge did not place Smith in jeopardy. “Jeopardy denоtes risk” of an essentially criminal nature.
Breed v. Jones,
This reasoning is consistent with the only published decision addressing thеse circumstances.
1
In
Bartlett v. United States,
Smith’s claim of double jeopаrdy also fails because his discharge request was not a “plea agreement” to criminal charges. Jeopardy ordinarily attaches upon the acceptance of a guilty plea, in part, because it is the formal plea that exposes the defendant tо conviction. “A plea of guilty ... is itself a conviction. More is not re-quired_”
Kercheval v. United States,
Smith’s discharge request contained no guilty plea and nо threat of a conviction. The request was pursuant to Chapter 10 rather than Rule 705 of the Rules for Court-Martial, which expressly provide for plea agreements to court-martial charges. The request did not admit guilt to any particular crime but only generally to the charged crimes
“or
lesser included offenses therein which also authorizes the imposition of a bad conduct or dishonorable discharge.” This language is takеn verbatim from the pattern discharge request included in the regulations. Rather than a plea of “guilty,” the admission establishes the precondition for the Chapter 10 discharge that the soldier has “committed an offense or offenses, the punishment for which ... includes a bad conduct or dishonorable discharge.” AR 635-200, Chap. 10-1.a. Unlike a guilty plea, these statements are not admissible as evidence in a criminal proceeding.
See United States v. Barunas,
Similarly, we reject Smith’s argument that acceptance of the Chapter 10 discharge request equitably estopped the civil authorities from prоsecuting his case.
2
Although the military court jurisdiction terminates upon grant of a discharge to the defendant,
United States v. MacDonald,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The two circuit court decisions cited by the Government are distinguishable. In
Denton,
. The Government interprets Smith’s argument as one of collateral estoppel. Collateral estop-pel is not applicable because there has been no adjudication of any fact in the first proceeding.
Dowling v. United States,
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