From Military.com:
“Military
Rape Cases Have No Statute of Limitations, Supreme Court Decides”
In an 8-0
opinion issued Thursday, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that military personnel
accused of a rape between 1986 and 2006 -- a period previously subject to a
five-year statute of limitations -- can be charged for the crime. At issue in
U.S. v. Briggs is a decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces,
or CAAF, to overturn three rape convictions that occurred within that 20-year
period. Prior to 1996, the UCMJ held that rape was a crime punishable by death
and therefore had no time limit for prosecuting the crime. A 1998 CAAF ruling
established the five-year time limit, which remained in place until Congress
moved to abolish it in 2006. In the new opinion, authored by Justice Samuel
Alito, the justices said the Uniform Code of Military Justice favored the
government's interpretation that military rape cases are "punishable by
death" and therefore, carry no statute of limitations regardless of when
the crime occurred. The justices also agreed with government's argument that
rape is a particularly damaging crime in the military context because it
disrupts good order and discipline. "Among other things, the government
argues that a rape committed by a service member may cause special damage by
critically undermining unit cohesion and discipline and that, in some
circumstances, the crime may have serious international implications. That also
appears to have been the view of Congress and the executive," Alito wrote.
Attorneys for
Air Force Lt. Col. Michael Briggs, convicted in 2014 of raping another service
member in 2005, had argued that the statute of limitations did not exist when
Briggs committed the crime. That defense was based on a 1977 Supreme Court
ruling that eliminated the death penalty for rape cases in the U.S.; CAAF's
1998 decision and a February 2018 case; U.S. v. Mangahas, in which the military
appeals court ruled that the death penalty for rape cases was a violation of
the UCMJ's prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment. Briggs’s conviction, as
well as others, came after the law was changed to get rid of the five-year
prosecution time limit. But in Mangahas, decided in February 2018, the military
appeals court affirmed the statute of limitations for cases that occurred in
the 20-year legal gray area. In Briggs, the government argued that rape is an
"egregious and destructive crime" in any case, but rape by a member
of the military "creates a unique set of harms that goes even beyond those
of rape by a civilian." ‘
Acting U.S.
Solicitor General Jeffrey Wall argued that the provision needed to remain to
maintain "order and discipline and operate in a national security
environment." The justices agreed, with Alito saying that "punishable
by death" is a "term of art that is defined by the provisions of the
UCMJ specifying the punishments for the offenses it outlaws." "The
meaning of a statement often turns on the context in which it is made, and that
is no less true of statutory language ... And in these cases, context is
determinative," Alito wrote. The decision reinstates the conviction of
Briggs and two other cases -- that of Air Force Master Sgt. Richard Collins,
who raped an airman in 2000, and Air Force Lt. Col. Humphrey Daniels, convicted
of raping a woman in Minot, North Dakota, in 1998. The previous CAAF rulings
have resulted in the dismissal of at least 10 other military rape cases, including
the U.S. Army's case against retired Army Maj. Gen. James Grazioplene, accused
in 2015 of sexually assaulting his teenage daughter between 1983 and 1989. Grazioplene
was prosecuted in a civilian court in Virginia, where he pleaded guilty and was
sentenced to 20 years' probation after spending 18 months in jail. In an
addendum to the opinion, Justice Neil Gorsuch questioned whether the U.S.
Supreme Court has authority over the CAAF. "I continue to think this court
lacks jurisdiction to hear appeals directly from the CAAF," Gorsuch wrote.
"But a majority of the court believes we have jurisdiction, and I agree
with the court's decision on the merits. I therefore join the court's
opinion." Justice Amy Coney Barrett did not participate in the ruling since
the case was argued Oct. 13, 13 days before her confirmation.
^ There should
never be a statute of limitations on Rape (whether in a Civilian or a Military
Court.) People who rape are disgusting and vile and need to ne punished to the
fullest extent of the law. ^
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