              U NITED S TATES AIR F ORCE
             C OURT OF C RIMINAL APPEALS
                          ________________________

                              No. ACM S32521
                          ________________________

                            UNITED STATES
                                Appellee
                                      v.
                        Deanna M. GORDON
           Airman First Class (E-3), U.S. Air Force, Appellant
                          ________________________

        Appeal from the United States Air Force Trial Judiciary
                        Decided 26 November 2019
                          ________________________

Military Judge: Mark F. Rosenow.
Approved sentence: Bad-conduct discharge, confinement for 60 days, re-
duction to E-1, and a reprimand. Sentence adjudged 4 January 2018 by
SpCM convened at Holloman Air Force Base, New Mexico.
For Appellant: Major Mark C. Bruegger, USAF.
For Appellee: Lieutenant Colonel Joseph J. Kubler, USAF; Captain Sean
J. Sullivan, USAF; Mary Ellen Payne, Esquire.
Before J. JOHNSON, POSCH, and KEY, Appellate Military Judges.
Judge POSCH delivered the opinion of the court, in which Senior Judge
J. JOHNSON and Judge KEY joined.
                          ________________________

    This is an unpublished opinion and, as such, does not serve as
    precedent under AFCCA Rule of Practice and Procedure 30.4.
                          ________________________

POSCH, Judge:
   In accordance with Appellant’s pleas of guilty pursuant to a pretrial agree-
ment (PTA), a special court-martial composed of a military judge found Appel-
lant guilty of one charge and specification each of absence without leave
                    United States v. Gordon, No. ACM S32521


(AWOL), wrongful use of marijuana on divers occasions, and negligent derelic-
tion of duty by driving a vehicle without a valid driver’s license, in violation of
Articles 86, 112a, and 92, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), 10 U.S.C.
§§ 886, 912a, and 892. 1,2 The military judge sentenced Appellant to a bad-con-
duct discharge, confinement for three months, forfeiture of $1,066 pay per
month for three months, reduction to the grade of E-1, and a reprimand. The
convening authority (CA) granted clemency by disapproving the forfeitures.
Consistent with the terms of the pretrial agreement, the CA approved confine-
ment for 60 days, but otherwise approved the bad-conduct discharge, reduction
in grade and reprimand as adjudged.
    Appellant identifies two errors for our review: (1) whether Appellant was
prejudiced by the Government’s failure to disclose to Appellant that the lead
investigator—a special agent of the Air Force Office of Special Investigations
(AFOSI), who testified in the Government’s sentencing case—received a letter
of reprimand (LOR) for making a false official statement; and (2) whether the
staff judge advocate’s incomplete recommendation that the CA not approve Ap-
pellant’s adjudged forfeitures thwarted the CA’s attempt to provide meaning-
ful clemency. We find no prejudicial error and affirm.

                                  I. BACKGROUND
    After court adjourned, and after Appellant’s release from confinement, the
Defense learned that the lead investigator and witness in the Government’s
presentencing case, AFOSI Special Agent (SA) AG, received an LOR for diso-
beying a verbal no contact order and later lying about it in July 2017 prior to
Appellant’s trial. The trial counsel disclosed the late discovery to Appellant’s
trial defense counsel who sought clemency for the violation on Appellant’s be-
half. The staff judge advocate (SJA) subsequently recommended the CA grant
clemency to account for the violation, and the CA acted in accordance with an
addendum to the SJA’s recommendation (SJAR) by disapproving adjudged for-
feitures of pay. The errors alleged by Appellant in her assignments of error
stem from the discovery violation and the SJA’s alleged failure to advise the
CA about the financial effect of disapproving the adjudged forfeitures of pay
that Appellant sought in clemency as redress for the violation.



1 All references in this opinion to the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), Rules
for Courts-Martial, and Military Rules of Evidence are to the versions found in the
Manual for Courts-Martial, United States (2016 ed.).
2 Appellant pleaded not guilty to a specification alleging wrongful use of cocaine, also
in violation of Article 112a, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 912a, which the convening authority
(CA) withdrew and dismissed with prejudice after announcement of sentence.


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                  United States v. Gordon, No. ACM S32521


    We begin our review with the uncontested facts and circumstances of Ap-
pellant’s three convictions that were presented at trial through a stipulation of
fact entered into between Appellant and the trial counsel.
    From early September 2017 to early November 2017, Appellant smoked
marijuana multiple times each week, usually at her off-base residence in Ala-
mogordo, New Mexico. Soon after learning that AFOSI agents were investigat-
ing her for alleged drug abuse, Appellant absented herself from her unit at
nearby Holloman Air Force Base (AFB) without authority. Her absence was
discovered on 3 November 2017 after Appellant’s first sergeant told Appellant
the evening before that she would pick Appellant up the next morning and
drive Appellant to work. The next morning, the first sergeant could not locate
Appellant at her off-base residence or in her dorm room on base. Appellant did
not report for duty or communicate with anyone in her supervisory chain that
she would be absent.
    Unbeknownst to military authorities at the time of her absence, Appellant
emptied her bank account, and left her military uniform and the key to her on-
base dormitory room at the residence where she used drugs. Initially, Appel-
lant traveled around New Mexico and Colorado. On 7 November 2017, Appel-
lant walked across the border into Mexico despite encouragement from friends
to remain in the United States. Appellant stayed with a civilian friend’s rela-
tive in Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico, and told friends and family she was
“out of the state,” but she would contact them if it was necessary to do so. While
she was a fugitive in Mexico, Appellant smoked marijuana in the residence in
Ciudad Juarez where she stayed.
    Sometime after going AWOL, AFOSI agents began coordinating their
search with deputies of the United States Marshals Service (USMS) who were
investigating Appellant’s civilian friend who sold Appellant the marijuana she
used while still in New Mexico. Two days later Appellant learned that author-
ities in the United States had located and arrested her civilian friend, and after
that, the friend and his family convinced Appellant to cross the border and
return to the United States. On 15 November 2017, Appellant terminated her
absence when she crossed back into the United States at the Paso Del Norte
Port of Entry and was placed in the custody of USMS deputies. That same day
the deputies turned Appellant over to the custody of Air Force authorities and
Appellant was ordered into pretrial confinement.
    On 4 January 2018, Appellant pleaded guilty to the marijuana and AWOL
offenses, and also to negligently failing to refrain from driving a motor vehicle
without a driver’s license. At trial, Appellant stipulated to the facts surround-
ing her commission of the three offenses, including that from 3–15 November
2017, the public affairs office at Holloman AFB had responded to numerous



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                  United States v. Gordon, No. ACM S32521


calls and requests for comment or information about an Airman who was re-
ported missing from Holloman AFB.
    In the Government’s presentencing case, Appellant’s squadron commander
testified about the steps he and the unit’s first sergeant initially took to try to
locate Appellant. He described spending two-thirds of a duty day trying to find
Appellant, and explained her absence was a hardship for the squadron because
others had to perform her duties. Appellant’s first sergeant testified how Ap-
pellant’s AWOL became her main concern, so responsibilities she had for other
Airmen were pushed down to their supervisors or other first sergeants. She
testified she spent off-duty time coordinating and working with the legal office
and agents of the AFOSI.
    The parties stipulated to the expected testimony of a USMS deputy as-
signed to a fugitive task force. The stipulation described the assistance SA AG
requested from the USMS to help locate and apprehend Appellant. According
to the stipulation, SA AG relayed that Appellant could have fled with a civilian
friend who was wanted by the task force. Following this lead, the deputy re-
viewed law enforcement records and commercially-available information,
which led to an address in New Mexico where authorities thought they might
locate the civilian friend, and possibly Appellant.
    The stipulation explained that on the morning of 15 November 2017, ten
members of the task force conducted surveillance of the address with partici-
pation by SA AG and two other AFOSI agents. Later in the morning, with ad-
ditional investigative assistance provided by two AFOSI agents, the deputies
located and arrested the civilian friend. As stipulated, the friend confirmed he
knew Appellant’s whereabouts and revealed that Appellant had fled to Mexico,
and gave the address where he believed Appellant was residing. Family mem-
bers of the civilian friend spoke to Appellant and convinced her to return to the
United States. In the afternoon, four members of the task force notified the
United States Customs and Border Protection (CBP) that Appellant may be
entering the United States, and asked for assistance in verifying Appellant’s
identity in the event she had no form of identification on her person. Shortly
after 1700 hours, CBP officers detained Appellant until she was later released
to the custody of USMS deputies. All told, eight USMS deputies participated
in the search for and apprehension of Appellant in addition to involvement by
AFOSI agents.
   In presentencing the military judge admitted four LORs and two letters of
counseling from Appellant’s personnel records, which were offered by the trial
counsel in accordance with Rule for Courts-Martial (R.C.M.) 1001(b)(2).




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                   United States v. Gordon, No. ACM S32521


                                  II. DISCUSSION
A. Failure to Provide Discovery
    1. Additional Background
    At trial on 4 January 2018, the Government also presented the testimony
of SA AG who gave a first-hand account of efforts AFOSI made to locate Ap-
pellant. Ensuring Appellant’s safety, she explained, was her detachment’s
“first and foremost priority.” Concern for Appellant’s safety was especially
heightened when it became apparent that Appellant fled to a location outside
the United States that was off-limits to military personnel due to drug cartel-
related activity and violence, including kidnappings and homicides. 3 At vari-
ous times the search involved all eight members of her detachment, as well as
agents at three other bases. The AFOSI also received assistance from the Ala-
mogordo (New Mexico) Police Department, the Otero County (New Mexico)
Sheriff’s Office, USMS deputies, and personnel at the Department of Home-
land Security and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives.
    SA AG explained that AFOSI attempted to publicize Appellant’s disappear-
ance, but the search was hindered by restrictions imposed on her detachment
after a recent shooting in Texas. Among the steps taken, the agents examined
Appellant’s cell phone and bank records, and interviewed persons who recently
had been in contact with her. The agents canvassed areas where Appellant
might be found. SA AG described an instance of showing Appellant’s picture to
a gas station employee who thought he recognized Appellant as a customer he
had seen that morning. After pulling surveillance footage and spending two-
and-a-half days looking for the customer, the agents determined it was actually
a hotel employee who looked like Appellant. SA AG suggested there were mul-
tiple indications Appellant was attempting to avoid being found including that
she had left a credit card behind, emptied her bank account, turned off her cell
phone, and avoided posting information on social media.
   SA AG testified she worked 18–20 hour days and received phone calls at all
hours of the night. She testified that AFOSI dedicated substantially more time
and effort to Appellant’s case than a typical case because it was a priority. In
her words, “All of our cases, [and] everything else that we were doing at the
time was stopped. We didn’t do anything else but focus on this case.”
    On cross-examination, trial defense counsel challenged SA AG’s testimony
with prior statements she made, including: (1) whether USMS deputies be-
came “actively” involved in the search just three days or one week before Ap-
pellant’s apprehension; (2) the extent to which the alleged strain on AFOSI

3 Appellant was not charged with an offense involving the alleged violation of an off-
limits travel restriction.


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                    United States v. Gordon, No. ACM S32521


was caused by Appellant’s AWOL or the Texas shooting; (3) whether SA AG
promised trial defense counsel that she would not conduct a post-apprehension
interview of Appellant; and (4) whether SA AG was aware that Appellant had
not taken medication for a behavioral health concern prior to her post-appre-
hension interview with AFOSI.
    At the time of SA AG’s testimony, the Defense was unaware that in July of
the previous year, 2017, SA AG had received a LOR from the AFOSI detach-
ment’s superintendent for disobeying a no contact order and for making a false
statement. SA AG had requested an extension to her leave status, but falsified
that she was not with the person with whom she was not to have contact. The
Defense did not receive this derogatory information despite making a specific
request for such information before trial. 4 The trial counsel disclosed this in-
formation to the Defense on 1 March 2018, after Appellant’s court-martial had
adjourned, and after AFOSI informed the Holloman AFB legal office about the
LOR.
    2. Law
    “[T]he suppression by the prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused
upon request violates due process where the evidence is material either to guilt
or to punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution.”
Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 87 (1963). The duty to disclose “encompasses
impeachment evidence as well as exculpatory evidence.” Strickler v. Greene,
527 U.S. 263, 280 (1999) (citation omitted); see United States v. Claxton, 76
M.J. 356, 359 (C.A.A.F. 2017). To determine whether evidence, including im-
peachment evidence, is “material” to punishment, the court must evaluate
whether “there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been dis-
closed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682 (1985). “A ‘reasonable probability’ is
a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome” of the trial.
Id.
    When the defense specifically requests discoverable information that is
withheld, the heightened constitutional harmless beyond a reasonable doubt
standard applies. Claxton, 72 M.J. at 359. “Failing to disclose requested mate-
rial favorable to the defense is not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt if the



4 Before trial, the Defense asked the Government to disclose evidence that might tend
to diminish the credibility of a witness including but not limited to evidence of charac-
ter, conduct, or bias bearing on credibility. The Defense also requested derogatory data
on AFOSI agents “involved in [Appellant’s] investigation,” including “evidence of any
adverse administrative or disciplinary actions.” No information responsive to Appel-
lant’s request was provided before trial.


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                  United States v. Gordon, No. ACM S32521


undisclosed evidence might have affected the outcome of the trial.” Id. (citing
United States v. Coleman, 72 M.J. 184, 187 (C.A.A.F. 2013).
   3. Analysis
    At the outset, we find, as the Government concedes, that the withholding
of information amounted to a discovery violation. Appellant asks this court to
provide appropriate sentence relief because of the Government’s failure to dis-
close material evidence favorable to Appellant. Had the information in the LOR
been disclosed, Appellant would have used it to challenge the SA AG’s cred-
ibility. Appellant suggests the military judge might have found the agent
less credible if he knew she had made a false official statement and been
disciplined for it. According to Appellant, this could have affected the out-
come of the proceedings because Appellant might have received a lesser
sentence. Although we are convinced that the Government improperly
withheld discovery, we are also convinced that Appellant suffered no prej-
udice.
    SA AG’s testimony described the efforts undertaken by AFOSI to locate
and apprehend Appellant, a fugitive Airman, during a 12-day AWOL. On
the one hand, the improperly-withheld discovery was probative of truthful-
ness and might have been used to impeach SA AG’s credibility and to suggest
a motive to paint the efforts of AFOSI in a favorable light to curry favor with
the AFOSI superintendent who administered the LOR. On the other hand, the
withheld discovery did not directly contradict any evidence presented at trial,
material or otherwise, or exonerate Appellant, or deprive Appellant of an op-
portunity to present evidence in extenuation or mitigation about her or any
offense.
   The discovery violation also did not impact sentencing for the drug and
dereliction of duty offenses or cast Appellant’s derogatory information from
her personnel record in a new light. Appellant’s stipulations with the trial
counsel established that she fled the United States when she learned that
AFOSI agents were investigating her for drug abuse. Evidence other than
SA AG’s testimony established the impact of her AWOL offense on her com-
mander, first sergeant, and other Airmen in the unit. There is ample evi-
dence in the record—established through means other than SA AG’s testi-
mony—of USMS involvement and the role of a fugitive task force in tracking
Appellant down through her civilian friend, and then apprehending Appellant
when she reentered the United States from Mexico. This other evidence of
federal agency efforts reinforced SA AG’s testimony that AFOSI, likewise,
expended time and effort to search for Appellant.




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                   United States v. Gordon, No. ACM S32521


    Even if we assume the military judge would have given less weight to
the impact SA AG described in her testimony if the Defense had the oppor-
tunity to confront her with the withheld discovery, we are not convinced
any component of Appellant’s approved sentence would have been less se-
vere. Other evidence in the record warranted the punitive discharge, reduc-
tion in grade, and reprimand as punishment for the convictions. The 60
days of confinement approved by the CA was about one-third less than ad-
judged, and the CA disapproved the forfeitures to account for the discovery
violation. We find there is no reasonable probability that the outcome would
have been more favorable to Appellant had the Government fully complied
with its discovery obligation. See generally, Bagley, 473 U.S. at 682; Coleman,
72 M.J. at 187. For these reasons the Government’s nondisclosure was harm-
less beyond a reasonable doubt, and relief is not warranted.
B. The Addendum to the SJAR and the CA Action
    Appellant claims the SJA failed to advise the CA that her requested relief
from forfeitures would amount to substantially less financial benefit to her
than the sum of $1,066 pay per month for three months, as a result of the CA
disapproving the adjudged forfeitures as relief for the Government’s discovery
violation. Appellant claims the SJA’s advice to the CA was incomplete, and the
CA’s attempt to grant clemency was thereby thwarted. We are not persuaded.
    1. Additional Background
    The military judge’s sentence of 4 January 2018 directed Appellant to for-
feit $1,066 of her military pay per month for three months. Appellant com-
pleted her sentence to confinement by 14 January 2018, and was not subject to
mandatory forfeitures of pay. 5 By operation of law, adjudged forfeitures would
become effective on 18 January 2018, see Article 57(a), UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. §
857(a), unless the CA disapproved the forfeitures when he took action.
    After release from confinement and eight days after the effective date of
the adjudged forfeitures, on 26 January 2018, Appellant requested to be placed


5 Appellant surrendered to deputies of the USMS on 15 November 2017, and was con-
tinuously held in pretrial confinement until sentencing on 4 January 2018. The mili-
tary judge ordered credit against Appellant’s sentence to confinement for the 50 days
she was held in pretrial confinement. Because Appellant’s agreement with the CA lim-
ited the confinement component of her sentence to 60 days, even without taking into
account good time credit Appellant would have completed her sentence to confinement
not later than 14 January 2018, and would not have been subject to mandatory forfei-
tures of pay, see Article 58b(a), UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 858b(a), when the adjudged forfei-
tures took effect on 18 January 2018.




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                    United States v. Gordon, No. ACM S32521


in voluntary excess leave status pending the CA taking action in her case. 6
Appellant acknowledged in a written memorandum that she understood “ex-
cess leave is a non-pay status,” that the Air Force “stops all pay and allowances
effective the first day of excess leave,” and that she “will not accrue any pay
and allowances while on excess leave.” Appellant provided an out-of-state leave
address along with her contact information above her signature on the request.
The wing commander, who was also the CA, approved Appellant’s request by
indorsement to Appellant’s memorandum.
    Post-trial processing of Appellant’s case continued while Appellant was on
excess leave in a no-pay status. In the SJAR dated 16 March 2018, the SJA
advised the CA to approve the sentence as adjudged except for the full three
months of confinement because the CA had agreed in the PTA to limit the con-
finement to 60 days. In Appellant’s 10 April 2018 clemency submission, Appel-
lant and her defense counsel petitioned the CA to disapprove both adjudged
forfeitures and the reduction in grade. Defense counsel tied the request to the
Government’s discovery violation explaining that it was a meaningful and pro-
portionate post-trial remedy. In a 13 April 2018 addendum to the SJAR, the
SJA acknowledged “trial counsel should have discovered and disclosed the
[LOR] to the defense” before trial as required by military law. In the addendum
to the SJAR, the SJA changed his recommendation and advised the CA to grant
clemency by disapproving the adjudged forfeitures.
    Using his authority under Article 60(c)(2), UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 860(c)(2), and
following the changed recommendation of his SJA in the addendum to the
SJAR, on 4 May 2018, the CA honored the PTA’s confinement cap and granted
clemency by disapproving the adjudged forfeitures of pay as Appellant and her
counsel requested, but approved the reduction to the grade of E-1 along with
the remaining components of the sentence imposed by the military judge. 7
    2. Law
    The proper completion of post-trial processing is a question of law this court
reviews de novo. United States v. Sheffield, 60 M.J. 591, 593 (A.F. Ct. Crim.
App. 2004) (citing United States v. Kho, 54 M.J. 63 (C.A.A.F. 2000)). Failure
to comment in a timely manner on matters in or attached to the SJAR forfeits

6 “Members with an adjudged sentence that includes a punitive discharge may volun-
teer to be placed on excess leave pending the [CA]’s action.” Air Force Instruction (AFI)
51-201, Administration of Military Justice, ¶ 8.39.2 (8 Dec. 2017). The Air Force pro-
cedures for voluntary excess leave are set out in AFI 36-3003, ¶ 4.2.2 and Table 4.4
Rule 7 (11 May 2016).
7 The CA’s action further directed Appellant to be placed in involuntary excess leave
status in accordance with Article 76a, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 876a (“The accused may be
required to begin such leave on the date on which the sentence is approved.”).


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                  United States v. Gordon, No. ACM S32521


a later claim of error; we analyze such forfeited claims for plain error. Id. (ci-
tations omitted). “To prevail under a plain error analysis, Appellant must per-
suade this Court that: ‘(1) there was an error; (2) it was plain or obvious; and
(3) the error materially prejudiced a substantial right.’” United States v. Scalo,
60 M.J. 435, 436 (C.A.A.F. 2005) (quoting Kho, 54 M.J. at 65) (additional cita-
tion omitted). “To meet this burden in the context of a [SJAR] error, whether
that error is preserved or is otherwise considered under the plain error doc-
trine, an appellant must make ‘some colorable showing of possible prejudice.’”
Id. at 436–37 (quoting Kho, 54 M.J. at 65).
    3. Analysis
    On appeal, Appellant makes clear a consequence of her clemency request
and the resultant CA action that partially granted her request, which may not
have been apparent to her at the time. Appellant explains the adjudged forfei-
tures of $1,066 pay per month for three months that the CA disapproved would
benefit Appellant for just eight days, that is, from 18 January 2018, the effec-
tive date forfeitures would have taken effect, to 25 January 2018, the day be-
fore Appellant went on voluntary excess leave. 8 Appellant claims the SJA
failed to advise the CA that Appellant’s requested relief from forfeitures would
amount to just $275. Appellant argues this is “a meager amount,” in fact $2,923
less than the sum of $1,066 pay per month for three months, which are the
forfeitures the CA disapproved when he took action on Appellant’s sentence.
    Citing this court’s opinion in United States v. Koehn, No. ACM S31021,
2007 CCA LEXIS 128 (A.F. Ct. Crim. App. 2 Mar. 2007) (unpub. op.), Appellant
claims the SJA’s failure to adequately advise the CA is a colorable showing of
possible prejudice and therefore Appellant should be provided meaningful sen-
tence relief on appeal. In Koehn, the CA contacted the appellant at the confine-
ment facility to inquire into his financial situation. Id. at *2. At the end of the
conversation, the CA told the appellant that he was going to grant him relief
so that the appellant had money to pay bills. Id. In clemency, appellant stated
he needed $495.00 per month. Id. at *3. Contrary to the SJA’s recommenda-
tion, the CA reduced forfeitures to $500.00 pay per month for 12 months. Id.
However, by operation of Article 58b, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 858b, the appellant
forfeited two-thirds, or $820.00, pay per month because automatic forfeitures
began 14 days after the appellant’s sentence was adjudged. Id. A panel of this




8We note that Appellant’s claim has us assume she was placed on excess leave on 26
January 2019, the date she signed the request to be placed in a non-pay status, and
not a later date.


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                  United States v. Gordon, No. ACM S32521


court directed remand for new post-trial processing because “the convening au-
thority intended to grant clemency, but that intent may have been thwarted in
the execution.” Id. at *8.
    Here, unlike Koehn, there was no meeting of the minds or evidence that the
CA was disposed to grant Appellant a particular level of financial relief such
as to pay bills or for some other purpose. Appellant’s situation is also unlike
Koehn because here it was Appellant’s own request to be placed on voluntary
excess leave, not automatic forfeitures, that reduced the monetary value of the
clemency she would later request and might have received if she had not vol-
untarily requested to be placed in excess leave status.
    Under the plain error standard of review, Appellant must show error that
was plain or obvious. Appellant voluntarily requested to enter a non-pay status
on 26 January 2018, which the CA approved. One hundred days later, on 10
April 2018, Appellant requested relief from adjudged forfeitures, which the CA
also approved based on the Government’s failure to disclose the agent’s LOR.
The SJA did not provide an incomplete or incorrect recommendation to the
CA. Rather, the addendum to the SJAR advised the CA to do exactly what
Appellant requested and to disapprove the forfeitures imposed by the mili-
tary judge. Although the SJA did not inform the CA that this act of clem-
ency would bring about a modest financial benefit—as Appellant now
claims on appeal, neither Appellant nor counsel sought a particular level of
financial relief, or disclosed that Appellant’s request to be placed on voluntary
excess leave should enter the CA’s calculus when he took action.
    Even if we assume that the SJA erred, it was not a clear or obvious one.
The SJA and CA could not reasonably divine that by fully granting Appellant’s
request for relief from forfeitures that Appellant would nonetheless conclude
it was less than she expected to receive. Had Appellant not requested excess
leave and post-trial processing continued on the same timeline as it did in her
case, Appellant would not have been subject to forfeit her pay due to the CA’s
disapproval of the forfeitures. Under these circumstances, Appellant has not
shown the SJA thwarted Appellant’s request for clemency, as claimed, or
error, plain or otherwise. See Kho, 54 M.J. at 65.

                               III. CONCLUSION
    The approved findings and sentence are correct in law and fact, and no er-
ror materially prejudicial to the substantial rights of Appellant occurred. Arti-
cles 59(a) and 66(c), UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. §§ 859(a), 866(c).




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             United States v. Gordon, No. ACM S32521


Accordingly, the findings and the sentence are AFFIRMED.


            FOR THE COURT



            CAROL K. JOYCE
            Clerk of the Court




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