United States v. Tardif, C.A.A.F. (2002)
United States v. Tardif, C.A.A.F. (2002)
United States v. Tardif, C.A.A.F. (2002)
V.
Sean M. TARDIF, Food Service Specialist Third Class
U.S. Coast Guard, Appellant
No. 01-0520
Crim. App. No. 1141
Robert Bruce
The
ACTION
Appellant sentenced
Confinement deferred
Deferment ends
Military Judge
receives record of
trial
Record authenticated
Record served on
Defense Counsel (DC)
Recommendation of
Staff Judge Advocate
(SJA) prepared1
DC responds to SJA
recommendation
Convening
Authoritys action
Record forwarded to
Headquarters, U.S.
Coast Guard
Record received at
Coast Guard
Headquarters
Record referred to
Coast Guard Court of
Criminal Appeals
DAYS ELAPSED
0
0
7 days
53 days
101 days
145 Days
163 days
198 days
223 days
338 days
368 days
384 days
The record does not reflect the date on which the SJAs recommendation was
served on defense counsel.
The court below focused on the 115 days that elapsed after
the convening authoritys action and before the record was
forwarded to Coast Guard Headquarters.
55 MJ at 668.
In Chief
Id. at 669.
Id.
Legal Context
See
United States v. Tucker, 9 USCMA 587, 589, 26 CMR 367, 369 (1958)
(Unexplained delays . . . [in appellate processes] should not be
tolerated by the services, and they will not be countenanced by
this Court.).
In United States v. Burton, 21 USCMA 112, 44 CMR 166 (1971),
the appellant asked this Court to set aside his conviction and
sentence and dismiss the charges, on the ground that he had been
denied his right to a speedy trial, in violation of Article 10,
UCMJ, 10 USC 810.
This Court
Id.
prejudice.
7 MJ at 93-94.2
See
In all these
None of these
The
In United States v. Kossman, 38 MJ 258, 262 (CMA 1993), this Court also
abrogated the Burton rule and returned to a reasonable diligence test.
Article
Board may set aside, on the basis of the record, any part of a
sentence, either because it is illegal or because it is
inappropriate.).
See United
We have
United States v.
Wheelus, 49 MJ at 288,
10
In
See United
Considered
Article
are satisfied, the court may affirm only so much of the findings
and sentence as it determines, on the basis of the entire
record, should be approved.
11
The
53 MJ at 727.
our Court and the Courts of Criminal Appeals about the draconian
remedy required by Dunlap and its progeny for excessive posttrial delay.
12
noted that the court below had purged the effect of a trial error
by modifying the findings, making dismissal of the charges
unwarranted.
13
order a rehearing.
Assuming
We further conclude
The Courts of
14
15
In so
United
Instead, this
See United v. Key, No. 01-0646, ___ MJ ___ n.* (2002)(Crawford, C.J.,
concurring in the result).
In addition, there
Id.
Id. at 1187.
Nor have we
(CMA 1978).
Additionally, the plain meaning of the statute in the
context of its enactment in 1950 does not support the majoritys
position.
See Art.
United States v.
We
In interpreting Articles
court in Collazo.
If Congress wanted to
Numerous changes to
the UCMJ have been enacted by Congress over the last 50 years,
many in response to various judicial decisions.
No changes have
Contrary to the
The
We should
That
Rulemaking by
See United
As to
These later
In fact, leaving
Judges should be
There
The difficulties
I would
See United
both the Government and appellant concede that appellant has not
suffered material prejudice from the post-trial delay in this
case so as to warrant reversal of his conviction.
See United
See United
Ct.Crim.App. 2000)
55 MJ at 669.
The lower court was well aware of its sentence approval power and
did not state it was barred from considering simple post-trial
delay as one factor among many in determining an appropriate
sentence.
Final Brief
United
This is neither the letter nor the spirit of Article 66(c), UCMJ,
nor is it what the Supreme Court meant by the power to determine
sentence appropriateness.
In
The sentence
See United
Moreover,
The