         U NITED S TATES N AVY –M ARINE C ORPS
             C OURT OF C RIMINAL A PPEALS
                        _________________________

                            No. 201500247
                        _________________________

                 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
                                 Appellee
                                     v.
                    NATHANIEL RODRIGUEZ
    Aviation Electronics Technician First Class (E-6), U.S. Navy
                             Appellant
                      _________________________
 Appeal from the United States Navy-Marine Corps Trial Judiciary

   Military Judge: Commander Marcus N. Fulton, JAGC, USN.
   Convening Authority: Commander, Navy Region Northwest,
                         Silverdale, WA.
     Staff Judge Advocate: Commander Edward K. Westbrook,
                           JAGC, USN.
        For Appellant: Captain Daniel R. Douglass, USMC;
             Lieutenant Doug Ottenwess, JAGC, USN.
  For Appellee: Major Cory A. Carver, USMC; Lieutenant Jetti L.
                       Gibson, JAGC, USN.
                     _________________________

                        Decided 30 January 2017
                        _________________________

 Before P ALMER , M ARKS , and C AMPBELL , Appellate Military Judges
                      _________________________

This opinion does not serve as binding precedent, but may be cited
as persuasive authority under NMCCA Rule of Practice and
Procedure 18.2.
                     _________________________

   PALMER, Chief Judge:
    A panel of members with enlisted representation, sitting as a general
court-martial, convicted the appellant, contrary to his pleas, of four
specifications of assault consummated by battery and one specification of
aggravated assault of a child with means or force likely to produce death or
grievous bodily harm in violation of Article 128, Uniform Code of Military
                  United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


Justice (UCMJ), 10 U.S.C. § 928 (2012).1 The aggravated assault conviction
was for a lesser included offense, as the members acquitted the appellant of
intentional infliction of grievous bodily harm. The appellant was sentenced to
two years’ confinement and a bad-conduct discharge. The convening authority
approved the sentence as adjudged and executed all but the discharge.
    The appellant asserts 10 assignments of error (AOE)2: (1) the military
judge erred by denying defense access to potentially favorable evidence in the
complaining witness’s psychotherapist-patient records; (2) the evidence is
legally and factually insufficient to support a conviction for aggravated
assault with means or force likely to produce death or grievous bodily harm;
(3) the military judge committed prejudicial error by instructing the members
that “‘the risk of death or grievous bodily harm must be more than merely a
fanciful, speculative or remote possibility;’” (4) the military judge’s failure to
grant a mistrial after the government gave the members inadmissible
matters too prejudicial for a curative instruction necessitates setting aside
the findings and sentence; (5) the military judge committed prejudicial error
by denying the motion to sever charges against the appellant; (6) the report of
results of trial misstates the appellant’s conviction for aggravated assault; (7)
two years’ confinement is an inappropriately severe sentence and was likely
influenced by the evidence of the appellant’s steroid use erroneously
presented to the members; (8) the appellant’s inadequate medical care during
post-trial confinement violated his Eighth Amendment and Article 55,
UCMJ, rights; (9) the assault consummated by battery convictions represent
an unreasonable multiplication of charges; and (10) the military judge
committed plain error by instructing the members that “if based on your
consideration of the evidence, you are firmly convinced that the accused is
guilty of the crime charged, you must find him guilty.”
   Additionally, we specified the issue of whether Specifications 1 and 2 of
Charge II are multiplicious. In response, the appellant argues that they are
and that Specification 2 should have been dismissed before findings.
    We find merit only in the third AOE—that the military judge erred in the
findings instructions regarding aggravated assault of a child with a means or
force likely to produce death or grievous bodily harm. In our decretal
paragraph, we set aside that conviction and the sentence, thereby rendering

   1  The appellant was acquitted of another aggravated assault with means or force
likely to produce death or grievous bodily harm, and the military judge granted a
RULE FOR COURTS-MARTIAL (R.C.M.) 917, MANUAL FOR COURTS-MARTIAL, UNITED
STATES (2012 ed.) motion for a finding of not guilty for a single specification of
maiming in violation of Article 124, UCMJ.
   2 The fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth AOEs are raised pursuant to United
States v. Grostefon, 12 M.J. 431 (C.M.A. 1982).

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                     United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


the sixth and seventh AOEs moot. We conclude the remaining findings are
correct in law and fact, and no error materially prejudicial to the substantial
rights of the appellant remains. Arts. 59(a) and 66(c), UCMJ.
                               I. BACKGROUND
   The appellant’s convictions involve assaults of his ex-girlfriend, former
Petty Officer First Class BLS, and their six-week-old daughter, AMR.
    During 2012, the appellant, on divers occasions, kicked, punched, slapped,
and choked BLS at their Oak Harbor, Washington home. That June, while
vacationing in South Padre Island, Texas, the appellant pushed BLS, causing
her to fall and fracture her elbow. The assaults stopped when the appellant
deployed that fall and for the duration of BLS’ pregnancy, which began
shortly after the appellant’s return. But on 18 September 2013—the night
before AMR was born—the appellant broke down a locked bathroom door and
attacked BLS, punching and kicking her, including in her stomach.
    On 2 November 2013, BLS awoke early to drive visiting family members
to the airport. The appellant remained home alone with AMR and BLS’s four-
year-old son from her prior marriage. Between 1430 and 1500 that afternoon,
BLS returned from the airport. Upon entering the home, the appellant
alerted her that AMR was in distress. After the appellant called an urgent
care center, he and BLS drove AMR to an emergency room.
    The emergency room doctor observed AMR breathing slowly and having
seizures. The doctors discovered an acute subdural hemorrhage, or recent
bleeding between AMR’s brain and skull. Based on this finding, the doctor
arranged to fly AMR to a trauma center.
    The next night, 3 November, civilian law enforcement conducted a non-
custodial interview of the appellant at the trauma center. During the
interview, the appellant described the events of 2 November in detail.
Between 1300 and 1330 that afternoon, he fed AMR, burped her, and
prepared to change her diaper. While AMR laid face-up on the couch, she
vomited what appeared to be most of the bottle of formula. The appellant said
he rolled her on her side and burped her, but she began gurgling. Her breaths
were short, and she was not crying normally. The appellant said he picked
her up, carried her to the sink, turned her face down, held her in his left
hand, and patted her back with his right hand. He stated formula and mucus
leaked from her nose and mouth, but her breathing remained short. When
the appellant turned AMR face up, her lips were blue. He said he was
“tapping on her back . . . trying to just . . . shaking her chest to see if you
know more stuff would come out and it didn’t and she was just turning bluer
and bluer. So at this point she started seizing up.”3 Her body became “stiff as

   3   Prosecution Exhibit (PE) 4 at transcript page 559.

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                     United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


a board.”4 The appellant said he laid her on the couch, elevated her neck, and
attempted to give her cardiopulmonary resuscitation with two fingers on her
chest. She started breathing again, but not normally. Her body was
alternately stiff and limp. While her body was relaxed, the appellant changed
her diaper and replaced her sleeper. He did not call 911 or otherwise seek
assistance until after BLS came home.
    Testimony from the treating physicians and AMR’s treatment records
comprise the remaining evidence about what happened to the infant.
Although AMR presented at the emergency room without any significant
external trauma, her seizures continued for another day or so. Ultimately, all
organic causes for AMR’s injuries were eliminated. Because the appellant and
BLS denied that AMR had suffered a fall or other accident, the doctors
rendered a medical diagnosis of non-accidental trauma. As a result of AMR’s
injuries, she and her half-brother were placed in protective custody.
    During an argument on 15 November 2013, while AMR remained in the
hospital and in protective custody, the appellant sent BLS a series of
incriminating text messages. Begging BLS not to leave him, the appellant
offered a written confession that he had struck BLS, including while she was
pregnant:
         Appellant: And for what its [sic] worth, ive [sic] never tried to
         blame me hitting you on you. I said that you know what to do
         and say to provoke the absolute worst part of me to come out.
         Save this message if you want, im [sic] admitting to it.
         BLS: Admitting to what[?]
         Appellant: Hitting you. I admit to it entirely. . . . Hitting a
         pregnant woman is a felony that has no statute of limitations
         and ill [sic] admit to that too.5
   BLS testified that in December 2013 an argument ensued after she
questioned the appellant about his version of what happened to AMR on 2
November. According to BLS, the appellant then choked her nearly to
unconsciousness.6 Eventually, she reported the alleged choking incident and
the appellant’s pattern of physical abuse that occurred in 2012.
    BLS left the appellant in February 2014 and regained custody of her
children in April 2014, purportedly because of the separation. She provided



   4   Id. at 551.
   5   PE 1 at 1.
   6   The members acquitted the appellant of this assault allegation.

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                  United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


Naval Criminal Investigative Service agents a statement and gave them the
appellant’s incriminating text messages on 20 June 2014.
                                II. DISCUSSION
A. Factual and legal sufficiency
    We review questions of legal and factual sufficiency de novo. United
States v. Washington, 57 M.J. 394, 399 (C.A.A.F. 2002). The test for legal
sufficiency is “whether, considering the evidence in the light most favorable
to the prosecution, any reasonable fact-finder could have found all the
essential elements beyond a reasonable doubt.” United States v. Day, 66 M.J.
172, 173-74 (C.A.A.F. 2008) (citing United States v. Turner, 25 M.J. 324, 324
(C.M.A. 1987)). In applying this test, “we are bound to draw every reasonable
inference from the evidence of record in favor of the prosecution.” United
States v. Barner, 56 M.J. 131, 134 (C.A.A.F. 2001) (citations omitted).
    The test for factual sufficiency is whether “after weighing all the evidence
in the record of trial and recognizing that we did not see or hear the
witnesses as did the trial court, this court is convinced of the appellant’s guilt
beyond a reasonable doubt.” United States v. Rankin, 63 M.J. 552, 557 (N-M.
Ct. Crim. App. 2006) (citing Turner, 25 M.J. at 325 and Art. 66(c), UCMJ),
aff’d on other grounds, 64 M.J. 348 (C.A.A.F. 2007). In conducting this unique
appellate role, we take “a fresh, impartial look at the evidence,” applying
“neither a presumption of innocence nor a presumption of guilt” to “make
[our] own independent determination as to whether the evidence constitutes
proof of each required element beyond a reasonable doubt.” Washington, 57
M.J. at 399. While this is a high standard, the phrase “beyond a reasonable
doubt” does not imply that the evidence must be free from conflict. Rankin,
63 M.J. at 557.
   In order to convict the appellant of aggravated assault consummated by a
battery upon a child under the age of 16, by a means or force likely to produce
death or grievous bodily injury, in violation of Article 128, UCMJ,
(Specification 5 of Charge II) the government had to prove:
       One, that on or about 2 November 2013, at or near Oak Harbor,
       Washington, the accused did bodily harm to AMR;
       Two, that the accused did so by moving her with his body;
       Three, that the bodily harm was done with unlawful force or
       violence;
       Four, that the force was used in a manner likely to produce
       death or grievous bodily harm; and




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                       United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


         Five, that AMR was a child under the age of 16 years.7
    As described, supra, on 2 November 2013 AMR presented to a medical
facility suffering from an acute subdural hemorrhage, a permanent injury to
her brain. At trial, multiple medical experts testified as to the cause of AMR’s
injuries and cited “trauma is probably the highest, the most likely cau--
reason, whether it be accidental or non-accidental[,]”8 as no organic or non-
trauma event would have caused AMR’s seizures or subdural bleeding; that
AMR was too young to roll over and thus unable to cause the injuries to
herself; that the injuries most likely occurred on 2 November 2013; that it
was unlikely the injury occurred before the morning of 2 November 2013
because AMR was “eating normally . . . and acting normally;”9 and that
subdural hemorrhaging can be caused by acceleration/deceleration forces
such as shaking or whiplash. AMR’s grandparents and her aunt and uncle
testified they had done nothing to harm AMR, and AMR was fine before
being left alone with the appellant. The appellant’s own statements reveal
AMR went into distress while under his exclusive care in the five to six hours
before her respiratory arrest. Additionally, even though the appellant
described his daughter as turning blue, having seizures, and not breathing—
to the extent he needed to revive her with cardiopulmonary resuscitation—he
inexplicably did not call 911 or seek medical attention for her until BLS came
home.
    Finding the members were properly instructed on the use of
circumstantial evidence,10 and recognizing that “[f]indings may be based on
direct or circumstantial evidence[,]”11 after weighing all the evidence in the
record of trial, the pleadings, and having made allowances for not having
personally observed the witnesses, we are convinced beyond a reasonable
doubt of the appellant’s guilt. With the exception of the instructional error
discussed infra, we are similarly satisfied the appellant’s court-martial was
legally sufficient.
B. Aggravated assault instruction
   The appellant claims prejudicial error in the military judge’s instruction
that “the risk of death or grievous bodily harm must be more than merely a
fanciful, speculative, or remote possibility.” We agree.

    7 Record at 1097; MANUAL FOR COURTS-MARTIAL, UNITED STATES (2012 ed.), Part

IV, ¶ 54b(4)(a).
   8   Record at 463.
   9   Id. at 528.
   10   Id. at 1106.
   11   R.C.M. 918(c).

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                  United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


   Proper instructions to the members are a question of law we review de
novo. When, as here, the appellant fails to object to an instruction at trial, we
review for plain error. United States v. Payne, 73 M.J. 19, 22-23 (C.A.A.F.
2014). Plain error requires an appellant to demonstrate that: (1) there was
error; (2) the error was plain or obvious; and (3) the error materially
prejudiced a substantial right of the accused. United States v. Girouard, 70
M.J. 5, 11 (C.A.A.F. 2011) (holding that where an erroneous instruction
implicated a constitutional issue and where the error was obvious, the
appellant must also suffer prejudice to a substantial right).
   1. Error that was plain or obvious
   The subject instruction provisions, taken directly from the Military
Judges’ Benchbook,12 defined “force likely to produce death or grievous bodily
harm,” an element of aggravated assault with a dangerous weapon or other
means or force likely to produce death or grievous bodily harm:
        A force is likely to produce death or grievous bodily harm when
        the natural and probable results of its particular use would be
        death or grievous bodily harm. It is not necessary that death or
        grievous bodily harm actually result.
        ....
        The likelihood of death or grievous bodily harm is determined
        by measuring two factors. Those two factors are: one, the risk
        of harm; and two, the magnitude of the harm. In evaluating the
        risk of the harm, the risk of death or grievous bodily harm
        must be more than merely a fanciful, speculative or remote
        possibility. In evaluating the magnitude of the harm, the
        consequence of death or grievous bodily harm must be at least
        probable and not just possible, or in other words, death or
        grievous bodily harm would be a natural and probable
        consequence of the accused’s act. Where the magnitude of the
        harm is great, you may find that an aggravated assault exists
        even though the risk of harm is statistically low. For example,
        if someone fires a rifle bullet into a crowd, and a bystander in
        the crowd is shot, then to constitute an aggravated assault, the
        risk of harm by hitting—of hitting that person need only be
        more than merely a fanciful, speculative or remote possibility




   12 Military Judges’ Benchbook, Dept. of the Army Pamphlet, 27-9 at 735-36 (10
Sep 2014).

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                   United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


        since the magnitude of harm which the bullet is likely to inflict
        on that person it—it hits is great.13
    The military judge’s error in providing this instruction was plain or
obvious. Weeks before this trial, the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces
(CAAF) expressly overruled United States v. Joseph, 37 M.J. 392 (C.M.A.
1993), which formed much of the basis for the subject instruction. United
States v. Gutierrez, 74 M.J. 61, 68 (C.A.A.F. 2015). In Gutierrez, the CAAF
found no authority for defining “‘likely’” as “‘more than merely a fanciful,
speculative, or remote possibility’” and invalidated the risk of harm prong of
the two-part analysis within the instruction. Id. at 66 (citing Joseph, 37 M.J.
at 397). Instead, “likely” must be defined consistently for all Article 128,
UCMJ, prosecutions, and not inconsistently with the “plain English” meaning
of the word. Id. Further, the CAAF held that grievous bodily harm is likely
when it is the “‘natural and probable consequence’” of the particular act
alleged. Id. (quoting United States v. Weatherspoon, 49 M.J. 209, 211
(C.A.A.F. 1998) (quoting MANUAL FOR COURTS-MARTIAL (MCM), UNITED
STATES (1995 ed.), Part IV, ¶ 54c(4)(a)(ii)). The Military Judges’ Benchbook
having not yet incorporated Gutierrez by the date of trial does not impact the
plain or obvious error of instructing on the repudiated Joseph standard.14
    2. Material prejudice to a substantial right
    Next we consider whether the error materially prejudiced a substantial
right of the appellant. The right to accurate members’ instructions is
substantial because, in cases such as this, it is Constitutional. An accused’s
right to a fair trial obligates a military judge to ‘“provide appropriate legal
guidelines to assist the jury in its deliberations . . . .”’ United States v.
Wolford, 62 M.J. 418, 419 (C.A.A.F. 2006) (quoting United States v. McGee, 1
M.J. 193, 195 (C.M.A. 1975)). When an instruction contains “misdescriptions”
of even a single element of an offense, “the erroneous instruction precludes
the jury from making a finding on the actual element of the offense” and
violates the Constitution’s Sixth Amendment. Neder v. United States, 527
U.S. 1, 9-10, 12 (1999) (emphasis in original) (“[A]n improper instruction on


   13Record at 1098-99; see also Military Judges’ Benchbook, Dept. of the Army
Pamphlet 27-9 at 735-36 (10 Sep 2014).
   14  The unofficial Military Judge’s Benchbook published 12 September 2016, and
incorporating changes made in February, May, and September 2016, reflects the
deletion of the second paragraph of the instruction, including the two-factor analysis
and the example. Military Judges’ Benchbook, Dept. of the Army Pamphlet 27-9 at
738 (Unofficial ver. 16.2, 12 Sep 2016). See United States v. Harcrow, 66 M.J. 154,
159 (C.A.A.F. 2008) (“In undertaking our plain error analysis in this case, we
therefore consider whether the error is obvious at the time of appeal, not whether it
was obvious at the time of the court-martial.”)

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                     United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


an element of the offense violates the Sixth Amendment’s jury trial
guarantee.”); see also United States v. Smith, No. 201100594, unpublished op,
2012 CCA LEXIS 908, at *11 (N-M. Ct. Crim. App. 27 Dec 2012) (“[A] jury
instruction which lessens to any extent the Government’s burden to prove
every element of a crime violates due process.”) (citing Francis v. Franklin,
471 U.S. 307, 313-14 (1985)).
    The ultimate, fact-specific question is whether error not only affected the
substantial right to a fair trial, but also materially prejudiced it. See United
States v. Powell, 49 M.J. 460, 465 (C.A.A.F. 1998). Further clarifying this
standard, the CAAF espoused “the Fisher requirement that plain error have
‘an unfair prejudicial impact on the jury’s deliberations.’” Id. (quoting United
States v. Fisher, 21 M.J. 327, 328 (C.M.A. 1986)).
    Although we find the appellant’s conviction to be factually sufficient, we
recognize that the members largely relied on circumstantial evidence to
determine that AMR’s grievous bodily injuries resulted from the appellant’s
battery of AMR. Unlike the overwhelming proof that AMR was grievously
injured, as defined by the law,15 there was little direct evidence on the exact
means by which the appellant caused those injuries. In finding the appellant
guilty, the members most certainly relied on evidence the appellant had sole
custody of AMR for the five to six hours before her seizures and respiratory
arrest, his failure to summon emergency services, and the expert witness
testimony citing trauma as the cause of her injuries. Nevertheless, when
faced with circumstantial evidence of the actual force the appellant used and
the lack of any relevant external injuries to AMR, the members had to assess
the relationship among AMR’s injuries, the appellant’s means of harming his
daughter, and whether those means were likely to produce death or a
grievous bodily injury. Instead of being instructed on the “plain English”
meaning of the word “likely,”16 they were told to evaluate the risk of harm
and advised that the threshold for the risk of death or grievous bodily harm
need only be more than a fanciful, speculative, or remote possibility. At best,
the members would have been confused by this instruction, and at worst,
misled. Under the circumstances of this case, we are unable to conclude the
members would have found the appellant guilty absent this error. Thus we
find the instructional error materially prejudiced the appellant’s substantial
rights.



   15  Grievous bodily injury is defined as “serious bodily injury. It does not include
minor injuries, such as a black eye or a bloody nose, but does include fractured or
dislocated bones, deep cuts, torn members of the body, serious damage to internal
organs, and other serious bodily injuries.” MCM, Part IV, ¶ 54c(4)(a)(iii).
   16   Gutierrez, 74 M.J. at 66.

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                     United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


C. Psychotherapist-Patient records
   The appellant alleges the military judge erroneously denied production of
BLS’s mental health records for in camera review, because two
psychotherapist-patient privilege exceptions applied in this case: (1) child
abuse and (2) constitutional necessity.
   In accordance with MILITARY RULE OF EVIDENCE (MIL. R. EVID.) 513,
SUPPLEMENT TO THE MANUAL FOR COURTS-MARTIAL (2012 ed.):
         A patient has a privilege to refuse to disclose and to prevent
         any other person from disclosing a confidential communication
         made between the patient and a psychotherapist or an
         assistant to the psychotherapist, in a case arising under the
         [UCMJ], if such communication was made for the purpose of
         facilitating diagnosis or treatment of the patient’s mental or
         emotional condition.
Two of the eight exceptions to the privilege are relevant here: (1) “when the
communication is evidence of child abuse or of neglect, or in a proceeding in
which one spouse is charged with a crime against a child of either spouse;”
and (2) “when admission or disclosure of a communication is constitutionally
required.” MIL. R. EVID. 513(d)(2),(8). To invoke an exception and secure
production of privileged mental health records, a moving party must (1) “set
forth a specific factual basis demonstrating a reasonable likelihood that the
requested privileged records would yield evidence admissible under an
exception to [MIL. R. EVID.] 513;” (2) proffer whether “the information sought
[is] merely cumulative of other information available;” and (3) proffer
whether “the moving party [made] reasonable efforts to obtain the same or
substantially similar information through non-privileged sources[.]” United
States v. Klemick, 65 M.J. 576, 580 (N-M. Ct. Crim. App. 2006).
    The appellant moved to compel production of BLS’s privileged mental
health records, citing BLS’s numerous mental health diagnoses discussed and
disclosed at the Article 32, UCMJ, hearing and in discovery. Invoking the
constitutional exception, the appellant argued he needed to determine
whether BLS’s conditions might “disrupt her memory, identity, or perception
of the environment or otherwise make her dramatic, emotional, and erratic”
and thus affect her credibility.17 The military judge denied the motion.
    On appeal, the appellant has challenged the military judge’s decision that
the constitutional exception did not apply and, for the first time, raised the
child abuse exception. We begin our analysis with the child abuse exception.



   17   Appellate Exhibit (AE) II at 4-5.

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                  United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


    1. Child abuse exception
    The appellant failed to raise the MIL. R. EVID. 513(d)(2) child abuse
exception before or at trial and therefore forfeited it. Thus we review the
military judge’s failure to invoke the exception sua sponte for plain error.
Powell, 49 M.J. at 464; see also Klemick, 65 M.J. at 579. To find plain error,
an appellant must demonstrate that: (1) there was error; (2) the error was
plain or obvious; and (3) the error materially prejudiced a substantial right of
the accused. Girouard, 70 M.J. at 11. The military judge did not err by not
ordering production of BLS’s mental health records pursuant to the child
abuse exception.
    Considering the first Klemick factor, the appellant set forth no factual
basis demonstrating a reasonable likelihood that there was evidence of child
abuse in BLS’s counseling records. Unlike the records sought in the Klemick
case, where the incident of alleged child abuse precipitated the patient’s
counseling, BLS’s counseling preceded the allegation of child abuse by at
least a year. See 65 M.J. at 580 (“The death of a child at the hands of his
father, followed soon thereafter by a discussion between the parents of the
father’s treatment of the child and then by psychological counseling for the
child’s mother, reasonably led to the conclusion that records of that
counseling would contain information related to the event and the reactions
of the victim’s mother.”)
    The appellant was not a spouse charged with a crime against a child of
either spouse. He and BLS never married. While one could logically argue
that the child abuse exception should apply to unmarried as well as married
parents when their child is the victim, the military judge committed no error
in failing to extend the exception beyond its plain language.
   Finding no error, we end our analysis of this exception.
    2. Constitutional exception
    The appellant raised constitutional necessity in his unsuccessful pretrial
motion to compel production of BLS’s mental health records. We review the
military judge’s decision to deny production of mental health records for in
camera review for an abuse of discretion. Klemick, 65 M.J. at 580. “‘An abuse
of discretion arises in cases in which the judge was controlled by some error
of law or where the order, based upon factual, as distinguished from legal,
conclusions, is without evidentiary support.’” United States v. Travers, 25
M.J. 61, 63 (C.M.A. 1987) (quoting Renney v. Dobbs House, Inc., 275 S.C. 562,
274 S.E. 2d 290, 291 (1981)).
   During oral argument, trial defense counsel proffered that BLS exhibited
borderline personality disorder symptoms. The appellant testified to
observing: “[c]utting—self-cutting issues, depression—lot of depression, lot of
anxiety, strong impulsive decisions especially with money, sometimes poor

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                        United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


hygiene” and mood swings.18 No psychologist testified about borderline
personality disorder, because the government had not yet responded to the
appellant’s request for an expert witness in this field. However, trial defense
counsel failed to submit excerpts from the DIAGNOSTIC AND STATISTICAL
MANUAL OF MENTAL DISORDERS, scholarly articles, or any other documentary
evidence about the effects of borderline personality disorder. Instead, trial
defense counsel proffered that those who suffer from the disorder “have
significant departures from reality at times, [and] experience their own
version of reality . . . .”19
    Pointing to contradictions in BLS’s testimony at the Article 32, UCMJ,
hearing and her history of mental health treatment, the appellant also
argued that he needed to mine BLS’s mental health records for statements
that might impeach her testimony on the merits or potential testimony
during presentencing. The military judge dismissed these arguments as a
fishing expedition, not a specific factual basis for piercing the privilege.
    In his ruling, the military judge correctly spelled out the three
requirements Klemick imposes on a party seeking privileged psychotherapist-
patient communications. The military judge focused on the requirement of a
“specific factual predicate” as a prerequisite to even an in camera review of
privileged records.20
    In his findings of fact, the military judge pointed to specific examples of
inconsistencies in BLS’s statements and Article 32, UCMJ, testimony.
Specifically, she reported multiple allegations of assault and battery at the
hands of the appellant in her 20 June 2014 statement but “did not tell the
truth about any of the incidents she first reported on 20 June 2014 when
those incidents initially occurred and she was questioned about them by
medical, law enforcement, or other persons.”21 She denied suffering any abuse
at the hands of her ex-husband despite evidence of a substantiated allegation
of physical abuse against him in 2010. Finally, the military judge pointed to
trial defense counsel’s receipt of numerous medical records concerning BLS,
evidence of her diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder, and the absence of
evidence of any new diagnoses since her relationship with the appellant.
   The military judge concluded that the appellant’s speculation about what
was protected in BLS’s mental health records and its impact on her



   18   Record at 22.
   19   Id. 30.
   20   AE XI at 3.
   21   Id. at 4.

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                       United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


credibility fell short of “a specific factual showing as required by Klemick.”22
Despite the evidence that BLS suffered from one or more mental health
conditions, the military judge specifically cited the absence of “documentary
or testimonial evidence, that such conditions or the attendant diagnosis effect
[sic] perception or memory.”23 Again finding no specific, factual support, he
also rejected trial defense counsel’s assertion that BLS’s records contained
statements needed to impeach her testimony on the merits and potentially,
on sentencing. We find no error of law controlled the military judge’s
conclusions, and there was sufficient evidentiary support for his findings of
fact. Thus, we find no abuse of discretion.
    Near the end of the government’s case, trial counsel disclosed to trial
defense counsel that BLS had suddenly admitted to suffering from borderline
personality disorder. Shortly thereafter, trial defense counsel called an expert
psychologist who testified specifically about how borderline personality
disorder manifests itself. This expert testimony arguably provided the
specific factual basis missing from the appellant’s pretrial motion. Because
the appellant did not renew his motion for production of the privileged
records again after the psychologist’s testimony, there is no ruling from the
presiding military judge. However, even with a more specific factual basis
satisfying the first Klemick prong, the records sought were merely cumulative
of other evidence already presented and thus do not satisfy the second
Klemick prong. 65 M.J. at 580.
     Trial defense counsel were able to explore BLS’s multiple diagnoses and
their effects and repeatedly impeach her credibility. After BLS confirmed her
borderline personality disorder diagnosis, the appellant’s expert psychologist
explained its symptoms to the members. The psychologist pointed to BLS’s
own words in her journal as consistent with borderline personality disorder.
In the privacy of her journal, BLS described herself as deceptive and
manipulative: “I lie, manipulate others to get what I want, I’m selfish, 2 faced
. . . .”24 Trial defense counsel was able to elicit an admission that BLS lied at
the Article 32, UCMJ, hearing to protect her ex-husband when she denied
accusing him of physical abuse. BLS acknowledged she had begun living with
her ex-husband again two weeks before the court-martial.
    The constitutional necessity of examining BLS’s mental health records
diminished with each piece of non-privileged medical evidence, testimony,
and written reflection challenging her credibility. Perhaps the best indicator
of the appellant’s successful impeachment of BLS, without her mental health

   22   Id. at 7.
   23   Id.
   24   PE 54 at 24.

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                     United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


records, is the verdict. The members convicted the appellant of the four
specifications of assault preceding his texted confession of 15 November 2013.
The only evidence of the alleged aggravated assault in December 2013 was
BLS’s testimony, and the members found her word alone insufficient. Again,
we find no abuse of discretion in the sustained MIL. R. EVID. 513 privilege
afforded to BLS’s mental health records.
D. Mistrial for inadmissible evidence
   The appellant avers error in the military judge’s failure to grant a
mistrial after the members briefly had access to inadmissible, prejudicial
evidence.
    “The decision to grant a mistrial rests within the military judge’s
discretion, and we will not reverse his determination absent clear evidence of
abuse of discretion.” United States v. Rushatz, 31 M.J. 450, 456 (C.M.A. 1990)
(citing United States v. Rosser, 6 M.J. 267, 270-71 (C.M.A. 1979)). “[M]istrial
is a drastic remedy, and such relief will be granted only to prevent a manifest
injustice against the accused.” Id. (citing United States v. Pastor, 8 M.J. 280,
281 (C.M.A. 1980)); see also RULE FOR COURTS-MARTIAL (R.C.M.) 915,
MANUAL FOR COURTS-MARTIAL, UNITED STATES (2012 ed.) (“The military
judge may, as a matter of discretion, declare a mistrial when such action is
manifestly necessary in the interest of justice because of circumstances
arising during the proceedings which cast substantial doubt upon the
fairness of the proceedings.”) A military judge’s most important consideration
when ruling on a mistrial motion is the “‘desires of and the impact on the
defendant.’” United States v. Thompkins, 58 M.J. 43, 47 (C.A.A.F. 2003)
(quoting United States v. Harris, 51 M.J. 191, 196 (C.A.A.F. 1999)). Given the
drastic nature of a mistrial, courts prefer using a curative instruction as an
alternative remedy. Rushatz, 31 M.J. at 456. The CAAF has often found a
curative instruction “adequate to neutralize certain inadmissible evidence
which might have prejudiced the accused.” United States v. Barron, 52 M.J. 1,
5 (C.A.A.F. 1999) (citing United States v. Balagna, 33 M.J. 54 (C.M.A. 1991)).
Members are presumed to have complied with a military judge’s curative
instructions absent evidence to the contrary. Rushatz, 31 M.J. at 456
(citations omitted).
    In this case, a motion for mistrial arose because of the inadvertent,
temporary admission of evidence previously deemed inadmissible under MIL.
R. EVID. 404(b). When the government sought to admit evidence of uncharged
misconduct within the appellant’s incriminating text messages, the military
judge found its probative value substantially outweighed by the danger of
unfair prejudice.25 Nevertheless, within minutes of the government’s

   25   AE XIII at 4, 6.

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                    United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


publication of the text messages to the members, trial defense counsel
realized that reference to the uncharged misconduct had not been redacted
from the exhibit. After initially proposing a curative instruction, the
appellant moved for a mistrial.
    Having considered the totality of the circumstances, the military judge
found a mistrial “not manifestly necessary in the interests of justice.”26
Among the circumstances cited were the trial defense counsel’s failure to
detect the inadmissible reference when the exhibit was admitted into
evidence and its relative inconspicuousness within the lengthy exchange of
text messages.
   The military judge then deferred to trial defense counsel for corrective
measures. At trial defense counsel’s request, the government replaced the
exhibit depicting screen shots of the text messages with a typed transcript.
The transcript did not contain a black box of redacted text that might remind
members of what had been removed. The military judge also invited trial
defense counsel to draft a curative instruction, which he read to the members
twice. The appellant offers no evidence rebutting the presumption that the
members complied with the curative instruction.
    The military judge applied the correct standard in finding a mistrial
unnecessary to prevent manifest injustice. He read trial defense counsel’s
preferred curative instruction to the members on two separate occasions. The
corrective measures taken were more than adequate to mitigate the error and
protect the fairness of the trial. The appellant has failed to demonstrate that
the military judge abused his discretion.
E. Severance of charges
    The appellant alleges that denial of his motion to sever the specifications
with separate victims resulted in actual prejudice and deprived him of a fair
trial.
    We review a military judge’s decision to deny a motion to sever offenses
for an abuse of discretion. United States v. Southworth, 50 M.J. 74, 76
(C.A.A.F. 1999). An accused may file a motion for “severance of offenses, but
only to prevent manifest injustice.” R.C.M. 906(b)(10). “Ordinarily, all known
charges should be tried at a single court-martial. Joinder of minor and major
offenses, or of unrelated offenses is not alone a sufficient ground to sever
offenses.” R.C.M. 906(b)(10), Discussion.
    Denial of a motion to sever offenses does not constitute an abuse of
discretion unless the accused can show “actual prejudice in that it prevented
him from receiving a fair trial; it is not enough that separate trials may have

   26   Record at 715.

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                       United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


provided him with a better opportunity for an acquittal.” United States v.
Duncan, 53 M.J. 494, 497-98 (C.A.A.F. 2000) (citations omitted).
    To determine if denial caused actual prejudice by depriving the appellant
of a fair trial, we consider three factors: “(1) whether the evidence of one
offense would be admissible proof of the other; (2) whether the military judge
has provided a proper limiting instruction; and (3) whether the findings
reflect an impermissible crossover.” Southworth, 50 M.J. at 76 (citing United
States v. Curtis, 44 M.J. 106, 128 (C.A.A.F. 1996) rev’s as to sentence on
recon., 46 M.J. 129 (C.A.A.F. 1997) (additional citations omitted)).
    1. Would evidence of one offense be admissible proof of the other?
    Evidence of the offenses against BLS would not be admissible to prove the
offense against AMR and vice versa. However, finding that this first factor
favors the appellant, alone, does not require severance, because a proper
instruction from the military judge can address this concern. Duncan, 53 M.J.
at 498 (citing Southworth, 50 M.J. at 77-78).
    2. Did the military judge provide a proper limiting instruction?
    The military judge provided the standard spillover instruction as a proper
limiting instruction to the members.27 As the appellant points out, the
previous military judge who ruled on the severance motion mentioned the
need for “a specific, tailored limiting instruction to prevent impermissible
crossover.”28 While finalizing the findings instructions, the military judge
addressed this with trial defense counsel: “[Y]ou’d like me to tailor it to
specifically mention that the evidence that the accused committed an offense
against one alleged victim does not constitute evidence that he would have
assaulted the second victim, and put it in terms of separating victims, is that
correct?”29 Trial defense counsel agreed. Beyond the verbatim Military
Judges’ Benchbook’s spillover instruction, the military judge added the
following: “Proof that the accused committed assault against one person does
not give rise to permit any inference that the accused assaulted anyone
else.”30 Thus, the instruction addressed impermissible crossover using the
standard, approved language as well as the appellant’s requested language.
    3. Do the findings reflect an impermissible crossover?
    The appellant argues that his conviction for aggravated assault of AMR
reflects impermissible crossover. We disagree. It is true that the
government’s presentation of evidence at court-martial did not perfectly


   27   Id. at 1107-09.
   28   AE XII at 7.
   29   Record at 1044.
   30   Id. at 1109.

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                   United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


segregate the specifications involving AMR from those involving BLS, and
trial counsel did imply that the appellant lost control while handling AMR.
But amidst all the evidence of the dysfunctional relationship between the
appellant and BLS, there was no evidence that the appellant reacted to his
daughter with anything like the frustration that characterized his
interactions with her mother.
    Although our ruling on instructional error moots any alleged prejudice,
we nevertheless find the denial of the appellant’s motion to sever did not give
rise to actual prejudice that denied the appellant a fair trial.
F. Cruel and unusual punishment in post-trial confinement
    The appellant asserts he has received inadequate medical treatment
during post-trial confinement, constituting cruel and unusual punishment in
violation of the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution and Article 55,
UCMJ.
    Prohibitions against the infliction of “cruel and unusual punishment”
derive from the Constitution and the UCMJ. U.S. CONST. amend. VIII; Art.
55, UCMJ.31 The Supreme Court has interpreted “punishments which are
incompatible with ‘the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress
of a maturing society . . . or which involve the unnecessary and wanton
infliction of pain[,]” to violate the Eighth Amendment. Estelle v. Gamble, 429
U.S. 97, 102-03 (1976) (internal citations and quotation marks omitted); see
also United States v. Lovett, 63 M.J. 211, 214 (C.A.A.F. 2006).
    But before prisoners may seek judicial intervention in their allegations of
cruel and unusual punishment, they must exhaust administrative remedies.
United States v. Miller, 46 M.J. 248, 250 (C.A.A.F. 1997); United States v.
Coffey, 38 M.J. 290, 291 (C.M.A. 1993) (“In this regard appellant must show
us, absent some unusual or egregious circumstance, that he has exhausted
the prisoner grievance system of the [confinement facility] and that he has
petitioned for relief under Article 138, UCMJ . . . .”) (citation omitted)). “In
addition to promoting resolution of grievances at the lowest possible level, the
exhaustion requirement in Coffey is intended to ensure that an adequate
record has been developed with respect to the procedures for considering a
prisoner grievance and applicable standards.” Miller, 46 M.J. at 250.
   In this case, the appellant has failed to demonstrate that he has
exhausted his administrative remedies. By his own admission, he has not

   31 “Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and
unusual punishments inflicted.” U.S. CONST. amend. VIII; “Punishment by flogging,
or by branding, marking, or tattooing on the body, or any other cruel or unusual
punishment, may not be adjudged by a court-martial or inflicted upon any person
subject to this chapter.” Art. 55, UCMJ.

                                          17
                  United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


forwarded his complaints to his commanding officer, pursuant to Article 138,
UCMJ, or the confinement facility’s grievance procedures. His rationale does
not rise to the level of unusual or egregious circumstances. In his affidavit,
the appellant claimed he feared the Technical Director would intercept and
dismiss his complaint, as occurred with a prior grievance involving incoming
mail. However, the appellant has failed to show us that he has even
addressed a complaint to his commanding officer. Therefore, the appellant
has not made the required showing for relief from this court.
G. Unreasonable multiplication of charges
   The appellant next alleges the military judge erred in denying his motion
to dismiss one or more specifications of assault of BLS for unreasonable
multiplication of charges.
  We review a military judge’s decision to deny relief for unreasonable
multiplication of charges for an abuse of discretion. United States v.
Campbell, 71 M.J. 19, 22 (C.A.A.F. 2012).
   Like the appellant, we turn to United States v. Quiroz, 55 M.J. 334
(C.A.A.F. 2001) for the factors guiding our analysis:
        (1) Did the appellant object at trial that there was an
        unreasonable multiplication of charges and/or specifications?;
        (2) Is each charge and specification aimed at distinctly separate
        criminal acts?;
        (3) Does the number of charges and specifications misrepresent
        or exaggerate the appellant’s criminality?;
        (4) Does the number of charges and specifications
        [unreasonably] increase the appellant's punitive exposure?; and
        (5) Is there any evidence of prosecutorial overreaching or abuse
        in the drafting of the charges?
Id. at 338 (citing United States v. Quiroz, 53 M.J. 600, 607 (N-M. Ct. Crim.
App. 2000)).
    First, the appellant made an objection for unreasonable multiplication at
trial, after the government rested its case.
    Second, we consider whether Specifications 1, 2, and 3 under Charge II
refer to separate and distinct acts.32 The appellant argues that Specification 1


   32 Specification 1: In that [the appellant] . . . did, at or near Oak Harbor,
Washington, on divers occasions from in or about February 2012 to in or about
September 2012, unlawfully touch [BLS] on the head, neck, arms, legs, and torso
with his arms, hands, legs, and feet.

                                       18
                   United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


alleged a course of conduct broad enough to include the assaults alleged in
Specifications 2 and 3. However, Specifications 2 and 3 alleged specific
assaults for which the government submitted documentary evidence in
corroboration. BLS testified that the more egregious assault to her face and
head in May 2012, alleged in Specification 2, was the first altercation that
left her with a black eye. She authenticated a photograph she took of the
black eye in May 2012. Specification 3, which alleged a pushing incident that
occurred near South Padre Island, Texas, was necessarily a distinct act
because it occurred at a different situs— than the assaults described in
Specifications 1 and 2.
   Third, because Specification 3 addresses a separate assault, which also
caused distinct harm to BLS,33 it neither misrepresents nor exaggerates the
appellant’s criminality.
    Fourth, the number of specifications did not unreasonably increase the
appellant’s punitive exposure. Each specification increased the maximum
confinement by six months, resulting in a significant proportional increase
with each additional specification. However, Specifications 2 and 3 were
distinct assaults which reasonably increased the appellant’s punitive
exposure. Moreover, the appellant already benefitted from reduced punitive
exposure from Specification 1 itself, as the government could have charged
other individual assaults within this specification as separate specifications,
rather than consolidating them in Specification 1. This reduced the
appellant’s punitive exposure. See Campbell, 71 M.J. at 25 (finding no abuse
of discretion in the military judge’s refusal to dismiss charges for possessing
and stealing the same narcotics, on the same divers occasions, as “[t]he
Government’s decision to charge on divers occasions only exposed [Campbell]
to eleven years of confinement[,]” thereby reducing “rather than exaggerating
[her] criminality or exposure,” as she “could have faced thirty-one separate
specifications of larceny” and “thirty-one years of confinement.”)
    Fifth, there is no evidence of prosecutorial overreach or abuse in charging.
The aforementioned decision to consolidate in Specification 1 all but two of
the assaults in an eight-month pattern of physical abuse, weighs against any
allegation of overreach or abuse.



    Specification 2: In that [the appellant] . . . did, at or near Oak Harbor,
Washington, in or about May 2012, unlawfully strike [BLS] in her face and head with
his hand. .
   Specification 3: In that [the appellant] . . . did, at or near South Padre Island,
Texas, in or about June 2012, unlawfully push [BLS] on her body with his hands.
   33 The government presented hospital records documenting injuries to BLS’s
elbow, which she attributed to the appellant’s assault described in Specification 3.

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                    United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


   For these reasons, we find the military judge did not abuse his discretion
in denying the appellant’s motion to dismiss any specification for
unreasonable multiplication of charges.
H. Instruction regarding a finding of guilty
    The appellant avers error in the military judge’s instruction to members
that, “[i]f, based upon your consideration of the evidence, you are firmly
convinced that the accused is guilty of the crime charged, you must find him
guilty.”34
    We found no error in the use of the same challenged reasonable doubt
instruction in United States v. Rendon, 75 M.J. 908, 917 (N-M. Ct. Crim. App.
2016), petition for rev. filed, __ M.J. __, No. 17-0168/MC (C.A.A.F. Dec. 30,
2016), and in accordance with that holding, we summarily reject this AOE as
meritless. United States v. Clifton, 35 M.J. 79, 81 (C.M.A. 1992).
I. Multiplicity
    The appellant argues Specifications 1 and 2 of Charge II are multiplicious
because Specification 2 describes one specific act (unlawfully striking BLS in
the face and head with his hand in or about May 2012) that is encapsulated
in Specification 1 (on divers occasions unlawfully touching BLS on the head,
neck, arms, legs, and torso with his hands, legs, and feet from February 2012
to in or about September 2012).
    Whether two offenses are multiplicious is a question of law that we review
de novo. United States v. Anderson, 68 M.J. 378, 385 (C.A.A.F. 2010). But
when an appellant fails to raise the issue at trial, he forfeits any error unless
he can show plain error. An appellant may show plain error by showing that
the specifications at issue are “facially duplicative, that is, factually the
same.” United States v. Michelena, No. 201400376, 2015 CCA LEXIS 463, at
*4, unpublished op., (N-M. Ct. Crim. App. 29 Oct 2015) (quoting United
States v. Heryford, 52 M.J. 265, 266 (C.A.A.F. 2000)). “Whether specifications
are facially duplicative is determined by reviewing the language of the
specifications and facts apparent on the face of the record.” Id. (citations and
internal quotation marks omitted).
   The appellant did not raise a multiplicity objection at trial.35 Thus we
assess for plain error, and whether the appellant has met his burden to


   34   Record at 1110-11.
   35 Although the appellant, at trial, characterized Specification 1 of Charge II as a
“catchall” and asked the military judge to dismiss it, he did so in the context of an
R.C.M. 917 motion for a finding of not guilty. He did not raise the issue of
multiplicity, or otherwise implicate R.C.M. 907(b)(2). Record at 958. See Payne, 73
M.J. at 22-23 (reviewing the military judge’s instructions regarding the elements of

                                          20
                      United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


demonstrate that Specifications 1 and 2 are factually the same. We find he
has not.
    Specification 1 alleges the appellant, on divers occasions from February
2012 to in or about September 2012, did “unlawfully touch [BLS] on the head,
neck, arms, legs, and torso with his arms, hands, legs, and feet.”36
Specification 2 alleges the appellant did, in or about May 2012, “unlawfully
strike [BLS] in her face and head with his hand.”37 The specifications are
obviously not factually identical. Although the dates and location in
Specification 2 overlap with those in Specification 1, the singular event of the
appellant striking BLS in her face and head with his hand is factually
different than the divers touching on the various parts of her body. These
factual differences were addressed by BLS in her testimony. She described a
pattern of abuse, starting in February 2012, occurring “a couple times a
month” wherein the appellant would hit or kick her “in places that could be
covered up with clothing: my legs, my arms, my back, [and my] shoulders . . .
.”38 She further testified to a separate incident in which the appellant
“punched the back of my head, and then I turned and he ended up giving me
a black eye.”39 She explained this was the first time he struck her and left a
visible injury that she could not cover with clothing or attribute to an
accident. She specifically testified this particular assault occurred in May
2012. We have no difficulty concluding this separate incident comprised the
evidence the members used to convict the appellant on Specification 2 of
Charge II.40



one specification of a charge for plain error, where trial defense counsel had lodged a
“general objection” to the specifications of a charge, which did not “identify which
specification or specifications he was referring to or which elements he felt the
military judge should have instructed on”). Likewise, the appellant did not raise the
issue of multiplicity in his initial brief, or in his three, separate supplemental
assignments of error.
   36 “Specification 1: In that [the appellant] . . . did, at or near Oak Harbor,
Washington, on divers occasions from in or about February 2012 to in or about
September 2012, unlawfully touch [BLS] on the head, neck, arms, legs, and torso
with his arms, hands, legs, and feet.”
   37 “Specification 2: In that [the appellant] . . . did, at or near Oak Harbor,
Washington, in or about May 2012, unlawfully strike [BLS] in her face and head with
his hand.”
   38   Record at 693-94.
   39   Id. at 699.
   40 We are equally convinced the members correctly applied the evidence to the
appropriate specification. When instructing the members, the military judge
correctly ensured that he did not use the word “face” when describing Specification 1

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                   United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


    We are unpersuaded by the appellant’s reliance on United States v.
Maynazarian, 31 C.M.R. 70, 72 (C.M.A. 1961), in which our superior court
held it was “improper for the government to seek, at one and the same time,
to charge an accused with a general course of misconduct over a stated period
and select from that [misconduct] a specific act to be alleged as a separate
offense”. (Citations omitted). Multiplicious dates do not necessarily result in
multiplicious specifications. Although Maynazarian was charged, like the
appellant, with two UCMJ specifications in which the second specification
described an offense occurring on a single date that fell within a five-month
date period contained in the first specification, the similarities end there.
Maynazarian was charged with embezzlement larceny offenses, in which the
separately charged larceny was in fact “part and parcel of the former.” The
court found the record “devoid of any evidence demonstrating the two charged
offenses were separate.” Id. at 485. (emphasis added.) Not so here, where the
record clearly supports that Specification 2 was a separate and
distinguishable assault upon BLS.
    Even assuming arguendo that the appellant did not forfeit the
multiplicity issue, we remain convinced in de novo review that Specification 1
and 2 were not multiplicious. A primary question in resolving multiplicity
issues is whether the charged offenses “amount to the ‘same act or course of
conduct’ or whether they are distinct and discrete acts, allowing separate
convictions.” United States v. Paxton, 64 M.J. 484, 490 (C.A.A.F. 2007)
(quoting United States v. Teters, 37 M.J. 370, 373 (C.M.A. 1993)) (additional
citation omitted). We find, for the same reasons discussed supra, that striking
BLS in the face during May of 2012 was a distinct and discrete act from the
offenses described in Specification 1. Here, Specification 2 requires proof of a
fact that Specification 1 does not—that the appellant struck BLS in the face.
“[S]imply because two offenses violate the same statute or law does not make
them the same offense as a matter of fact[.]” United States v. Neblock, 45 M.J.
191, 196, (C.A.A.F. 1996). There being no evidence that the appellant’s
punching BLS’s face in May 2012 was part of the same acts or course of
conduct alleged in Specification 1, we find no multiplicity in the appellant’s
convictions under Specifications 1 and 2 of Charge II.
                               III. CONCLUSION
    The guilty finding to Specification 5 under Charge II and the sentence are
set aside. The remaining findings are affirmed. The record is returned to the


and omitted the word “head” when describing Specification 2, advising the members
the actus reus of Specification 2 was “striking her in the face with his hands.” Record
at 1093; AE XXXII at 2. When afforded an opportunity by the military judge, the
appellant did not object to these instructions. Record at 1042-44. Moreover, the
military judge provided an appropriate spillover instruction. See II(E), supra.

                                          22
                     United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


Judge Advocate General of the Navy for remand to an appropriate convening
authority with a rehearing on the set aside conviction and sentence or on the
sentence alone is authorized. Art. 66(d), UCMJ.


   MARKS, SJ, concurring in part and dissenting in part:
    I respectfully dissent from the majority’s opinion with regard to the
second Assignment of Error (AOE), (Part II, Section A), and the factual
sufficiency of the appellant’s conviction of assault with means or force likely
to produce death or grievous bodily harm. Instead of setting aside the
conviction of Charge II, Specification 5, and authorizing a rehearing, I would
affirm the conviction only in so far as it includes the lesser included offense of
assault consummated by battery of a child and reassess the sentence to 18
months’ confinement and a bad-conduct discharge. I concur with the majority
on the remaining AOEs.
A. Factual sufficiency of assault with means likely to produce death
or grievous bodily harm
    Having reviewed the evidence de novo, United States v. Washington, 57
M.J. 394, 399 (C.A.A.F. 2002), and “weighing the evidence in the record of
trial and making allowances for not having personally observed the
witnesses,” I am not “convinced of the [appellant’s] guilt beyond a reasonable
doubt.” United States v. Turner, 25 M.J. 324, 325 (C.M.A. 1987).1
    As the majority implies, the prosecution in this case relied almost entirely
on the circumstantial evidence of AMR’s injury. I concur with the majority
that the forensic evidence and testimony of the doctors, radiologists, and
medical experts constitute overwhelming proof that AMR suffered grievous
harm to her brain. The appellant’s sole custody of AMR for five to six hours
before she showed signs of distress is more than adequate evidence that he is
responsible for her injury. The who, what, when, and where regarding the
injuries are relatively clear. But as the government’s child abuse expert
testified, injury alone does not prove child abuse. Evidence of the how and
why is necessary. But such evidence is insufficient in this case, at least with
regards to means or force likely to produce death or grievous bodily harm.
   First, the government never articulated, with any particularity, the
means or force the appellant used. The specification alleging aggravated
assault of AMR accused the appellant of “moving her with his body.”2 In his
opening statement, assistant trial counsel previewed his case: AMR suffered

   1   Having found the evidence factually insufficient, we need not address legal
sufficiency.
   2   Charge Sheet, Charge II, Specification 5.

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                      United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


an injury, and by process of elimination, the appellant is the person who “did
it to her.”3 Even after presenting all its evidence, the government still
stopped short of specifying a manner in which the appellant moved AMR.
Trial counsel repeatedly cited the diagnosis of “trauma”4 and referred vaguely
to the appellant’s “actions,”5 accusing him of “inflict[ing]” AMR’s injuries,6
“caus[ing] brain damage to his daughter,”7 and “hurt[ing]”8 her.
    AMR’s injuries revealed no more definitive evidence. Absent were the
retinal hemorrhages, bruises (other than to her eyelid), cracked ribs, and
spiral fractures that often indicate how someone has mishandled a child. All
of the doctors who testified identified non-accidental trauma as the most
likely source of AMR’s subdural hemorrhage or hematoma, but many
explained that the diagnosis was made by process of elimination. A
pediatrician who specializes in child abuse testified that the most common
non-accidental     trauma     resulting    in   subdural    hematoma       was
“acceleration/deceleration injury . . . kind of akin to whiplash. It’s kind of
what you may commonly think [sic] as shaking.”9 But then she qualified her
use of the word “shaking” by saying, “I’ve had some cases with [histories] of
very creative ways to cause that type of motion to a baby’s head, so there’s no
classic one way to do it.”10
    Other than the appellant, there were no witnesses to what caused AMR’s
injuries. While her four-year-old half-brother was home at the time, there is
no evidence that he reported hearing AMR cry or seeing anything. Only
BLS’s father testified to ever having seen the appellant handle AMR
inappropriately: “one time [AMR] was fussing, and [the appellant] did grab
her by the chin and shake her and shush her a little bit, which I thought was
a little—little rough for a 6-week-old baby. That was—that’s the only thing I
noticed.”11 No one testified to witnessing the appellant shout or vent his
frustrations at AMR. Instead, the government cited his sleep deprivation and
regular consumption of energy drinks, the stress of his upcoming move to
Hawaii, and his inexperience as a father as evidence he lost control with his

   3   Record at 217.
   4   Id. at 1048, 1050, 1052.
   5   Id. at 1048.
   6   Id.
   7   Id. at 1049.
   8   Id. at 1054.
   9   Id. at 464.
   10   Id. at 465.
   11   Id. at 877.

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                      United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


daughter. They offered no confession or admissions from the appellant,12 only
the recording of his 3 November 2013 interview with the civilian
investigators. While trial counsel challenged aspects of the appellant’s
account and questioned some of his actions, they failed to discredit them
entirely.
    We have no evidence of how vigorously or violently the appellant moved
his daughter’s body beyond what we can infer from her one-time injury. As
the majority states supra, circumstantial evidence is admissible on that
point. It allows us to conclude with confidence that the appellant moved AMR
with a means or force that resulted in her grievous bodily injury. But that is
not enough. Likelihood of death or grievous injury from the means or force
used is also an element of this offense. According to the government’s child
abuse expert, “when a baby undergoes a—a trauma like some sort of shaking,
the brain kind of can move inside the skull. . . . It can cause injury to the
brain tissue, it can cause blood vessels to break and to bleed, things like
that.”13 Just because something can happen does not necessarily mean it is
likely to happen. “[S]eizures aren’t in every case of head trauma, but they do
occur in a good number of cases of head trauma.”14 While a “good number” is
more than a possibility, we do not have any evidence the expert equated it to
a likelihood. To find the evidence factually sufficient to affirm this conviction,
we have to extrapolate the nature of the means or force the appellant used
and then predict the probable, not just possible, outcome of its repeated use. I
do not believe the evidence in this case carries us across both of those
hurdles.
C. LIO of assault consummated by battery
    Although I find the evidence of aggravated assault with means or force
likely to produce death or grievous bodily harm factually insufficient, I would
“‘affirm . . . so much of the finding as includes a lesser included offense.’”
United States v. Upham, 66 M.J. 83, 87 (C.A.A.F. 2008) (quoting Article 59(b),
UCMJ); see also United States v. McKinley, 27 M.J. 78, 79 (C.M.A. 1988)
(noting that when “proof of an essential element is lacking,” an appellate
court “may substitute a lesser-included offense for the disapproved
findings.”).
   The elements of the lesser included offense (LIO) of assault consummated
by battery upon a child under 16 years are:


   12 The appellant’s incriminating texts addressed assaults of his then-girlfriend,
BLS, and made no mention of their daughter. Prosecution Exhibit 1.
   13   Record at 465 (emphasis added).
   14   Id. at 467.

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                      United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


  One, that on or about 2 November 2013, at or near Oak Harbor,
Washington, the accused did bodily harm to [AMR];
    Two, that the accused did so by moving her with his body;
    Three, that the bodily harm was done with unlawful force or violence; and
    Four, that [AMR] was a child under the age of 16 years.15
    Missing is the element about use of means or force likely to produce death
or grievous bodily harm. Instead, battery must be committed with intent or
culpable negligence.16 As the appellant was acquitted of intending to harm
AMR, we focus on culpable negligence. A culpably negligent act is one
“accompanied by a culpable disregard for the foreseeable consequences to
others of that act or omission.”17 Notably, a foreseeable consequence of an act
is not necessarily a natural and probable consequence of that act.18
    According to the appellant’s interview, he patted and shook his daughter
to clear her airway after she vomited formula. Although a new father, he
understood not to shake her hard: “I don’t mean like rough like shaking her
or anything like that. . . . I would never do that . . . .”19 But he did shake or
move AMR hard enough to cause her brain injury. Whether he acted out of
frustration or panic, he disregarded his understanding of the risk and acted
in a way he could have reasonably foreseen could cause her injury.
    While I do not believe the evidence supports the inference that the
appellant acted with a means or force that would probably cause death or
grievous bodily harm, I do believe it is sufficient to infer that the injury was a
foreseeable consequence of his means or force. Therefore, I would affirm only
so much of the finding of Charge II, Specification 5, as constitutes assault
consummated by battery of a child.20




    Record at 1100; MANUAL FOR COURTS-MARTIAL, UNITED STATES (2012 ed.)
    15

(MCM), Part IV, ¶ 54b.
    16   MCM, Part IV, ¶ 54c(2)(d).
    17MCM, Part IV, ¶ 44c(2)(a)(i); see United States v. Mayo, 50 M.J. 473, 474
(C.A.A.F. 1999) (applying the definition of culpable negligence in Article 119, UCMJ,
manslaughter, to Article 128, UCMJ, assault.)
    18   MCM, Part IV, ¶ 44c(2)(a)(i).
    19   PE 4 at transcript page 572.
    20 The change in the finding to Charge II, Specification 5 moots the sixth AOE,
the allegation of error in the report of results of trial with regard to this specification.

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                    United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


D. Sentence reassessment
   Next I consider whether I would reassess the appellant’s sentence, using
the four factors in United States v. Winckelmann, 73 M.J. 11, 15-16 (C.A.A.F.
2013):
   (1) Dramatic changes in the penalty landscape and exposure.
   (2) Whether an appellant chose sentencing by members or a military
judge alone.
    (3) Whether the nature of the remaining offenses captures the gravamen
of criminal conduct included within the original offenses and, in related
manner, whether significant or aggravating circumstances addressed at the
court-martial remain admissible and relevant to the remaining offenses.
    (4) Whether the remaining offenses are of the type that judges of the
courts of criminal appeals should have the experience and familiarity with to
reliably determine what sentence would have been imposed at trial.
    First, the maximum confinement for assault consummated by battery of a
child is two years—vice five years for aggravated assault with means or force
likely to produce death or bodily harm.21 A sixty-percent reduction in
exposure to confinement is dramatic. Second, the appellant chose sentencing
by members, making reassessment of the sentence less predictable. Third,
the remaining offenses are now all assaults consummated by battery. There
is no longer an aggravated assault, but that change does not reflect any
suppression of evidence. The culpability of the appellant has changed, but the
gravamen of the injury to the child has not. Finally, the remaining offenses
are of the type that the judges of this court can reliably determine what
sentence would have been imposed at trial.
    Considering the totality of the circumstances reflected in these four
factors, I would reassess the sentence and reduce it from two years’
confinement to 18 months’ confinement.


   CAMPBELL, SJ, concurring in part and dissenting in part:
   I join in Parts I and II of the majority opinion, except for a portion of the
unreasonable multiplication of charges analysis (Part II, Section G), and its
holding on the specified issue (Part II, Section I). Respectfully, I find that
Specifications 1 and 2 under Charge II are multiplicious. Consequently,
without reaching whether they also represent an unreasonable multiplication



   21   MCM, App. 12, p. A12-5.

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                    United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


of charges, I would set aside the conviction for that second specification, with
prejudice, within Part III of the majority opinion, in which I also join.
    In United States v. Maynazarian, 31 C.M.R. 70, 71 (C.M.A. 1961) the
court “recognized that a military accused could be charged with and found
guilty of a single-act offense by alleging and finding a course of the same
conduct between two dates. . . .” but also held “that a conviction under such
broad pleadings would bar a second conviction at the same trial for a single-
act offense within the charged period.” United States v. Neblock, 45 M.J. 191,
199 (C.A.A.F. 1996) (citations omitted).
   The members here were instructed, in part, that convicting the appellant
of Charge II’s non-aggravated assault specifications required that they be
convinced beyond a reasonable doubt:
         In Specification 1: That on divers occasions from about
         February to about September 2012, at or near Oak Harbor,
         Washington, the accused did bodily harm to B. S.;
         Two: that the accused did so by striking her on the head, neck,
         arms, legs and torso with his arms, hands, legs and feet; and
         Three, that the bodily harm was done with unlawful force or
         violence.
         In Specification 2:
         That in or about May 2012, at or near Oak Harbor,
         Washington, the accused did bodily harm to B. S.;
         That the accused did so by striking her in the face with his
         hands; and
         Three, that the bodily harm was done with unlawful force or
         violence.1
     Inexplicably, these findings instructions for Specifications 1 and 2 differed
from the actual charge sheet, which, as amended, respectively alleged the
appellant “did . . . unlawfully touch . . . [B.S.] on the head, neck, arms, legs,
and torso with his arms, hands, legs, and feet” and “did . . . unlawfully strike
. . . her face and head with his hand.” (emphasis added). Responding to the
defense motion to dismiss the specifications under RULE FOR COURTS-
MARTIAL 917, MANUAL FOR COURTS-MARTIAL, UNITED STATES (2012 ed.), the
assistant trial counsel explained that “strike” was amended to “touch” in
Specification 1 in order to describe more, not less, of the appellant’s alleged
misconduct—specifically, a neck-choking incident that might not be


   1   Record at 1093-94.

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                         United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


considered a strike—without indications that the amendment was to
somehow differentiate the specifications.2
    Like our superior court in Maynazarian, I “simply cannot disregard the
fair probability that the second, specific . . . [assault consummated by battery]
charged was embraced in the first general count.” 31 C.M.R. at 72. 3
Regardless of the instructions removing “head” from the elements of the
alleged May 2012 specific act and the fact that the face is part of the head,




    2   Id. at 961-62.
    3 See also United States v. Thayer, 16 M.J. 846, 847-48 (N-M.C.M.R. 1983)
(modifying findings and reassessing the sentence when “the accused was convicted of
wrongful sale of five pounds of marijuana from about March 1981 to about December
1981 (Charge II, specification 33), six wrongful sales of marijuana to a named
individual within the same period of time or from March to August 1981 (Charge II,
specifications 1 through 6), and a wrongful sale of marijuana to another named
individual between March 1981 and August 1981 (Charge II, specification 20),”
because “[t]he sales to the individuals named in specifications 1 through 6 and 20 of
Charge II involved portions of the five pounds of marijuana specified in . . .
specification 33 of Charge II” and thus were “multiplicious”); United States v. Gill, 37
M.J. 501, 509-10 (A.F.C.M.R. 1993) (finding a “multiplicity issue” arose when the
court-martial members, through exceptions and substitutions of the alleged dates,
convicted the appellant of committing “aggravated assault. . . on 13 December 1989,
and . . . [separately committing] the same type of conduct against the same victim on
divers occasions from 15 August 1989 to 13 December 1989” because “the individual
offense [then] fell within the period of the ‘course of conduct’ offense”) , rev. denied, 39
M.J. 376 (C.M.A. 1994); United States v. Stephenson, 25 M.J. 816, 816-17 (A.F.C.M.R.
1988) (setting aside and dismissing five specifications, which each alleged possession
of the same drug in the same vicinity on “specific dates,” as multiplicious for findings
with the remaining specification, that “alleged a five month period which
encompassed the times alleged in all of the five other specifications. . . . [because it] is
improper . . . to go to findings on both the specific-series specifications and the
related umbrella specification”) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted), rev.
denied, 26 M.J. 224 (C.M.A. 1988);. Cf. United States v. Dorflinger, No. ACM 38572,
2015 CCA LEXIS 326, at *8 n.4, unpublished op. (A.F. Ct. Crim. App. 11 Aug. 2015)
(“Since both specifications alleged a single use [of morphine], this case does not
present the former jeopardy problem that arises when a specification alleging
misconduct on divers occasions over a period of time overlaps with another
specification alleging the same offense during the period of time covered by the divers
occasions specification.”) (citation omitted) , rev. denied, 75 M.J. 110 (C.A.A.F. 2015).

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                    United States v. Rodriguez, No. 201500247


Specification 2 is encapsulated within Specification 1 based on the language
alleged in the charge sheet.4


                                    For the Court



                                    R.H. TROIDL
                                    Clerk of Court




    4 No further multiplicity analysis is required. But to the extent that the majority

opinion seemingly blends multiplicity and unreasonable multiplication of charges by
analyzing whether there was evidence of the specific offense alleged in Specification
2, as the appellant points out, “[t]he government did not argue . . . nor were there any
instructions . . . that the face punch should only be considered for Specification 2, and
not for Specification 1.” Appellant’s Brief on Specified Issue of 19 Dec 2016 at 4.



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