The Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces (CAAF) has spent
the last two terms mired within the UCMJ, determining what constitutes the
proper mens rea for various offenses
due to imprecise drafting by Congress, the president, and commanders. The CAAF
has twice found issue with general orders
and Article
92, looked at maltreatment in Article
93, and at communicating a threat in Article 134.
Next term, the CAAF will look at negligent dereliction of duty within another
section of Article
92.
“Few areas of criminal law pose more difficulty than the
proper definition of the mens rea
required for any particular crime." United
States v. Thomas, 65 M.J. 132, 133 (C.A.A.F. 2007) (citing United States v. Bailey, 444 U.S. 394,
403 (1980). Yet the Supreme Court’s
opinion in Elonis
set the CAAF on this path, ensuring that in the absence of clear intent of
Congress (or the president or a superior officer), military members cannot be
found guilty unless the fact-finder determines they acted with at least a
reckless state of mind.
In the background to these cases are mens rea reformers, pushing to heighten what constitutes a guilty mind.
While these reforms
mostly target the administrative state and public welfare offenses, they would also
include traditional crimes recognized at the common law. Even though these
reforms have failed to take hold within Congress, the efforts appear to have
reminded courts of long-standing precedents, causing this recent reexamination
of mens rea.
If Congress wants to maintain more control of the UCMJ, it should
address the implication of Elonis and
these CAAF decisions the next time it updates the UCMJ. Congress could either
clearly dispense with mens rea for
some crimes, or include a default method of interpretation to gap-fill the mens rea when a statute is otherwise
unclear. Currently, the UCMJ is a mishmash of common law and modern crimes,
some with imprecise mens rea terms.
It also contains longstanding military specific offenses. This sometimes leads
to confusing results even at the CAAF, such as in Caldwell, where the Court held maltreatment was a general intent
crime that did not require appellant acted recklessly. While this opinion
hinted at a military-specific exception to the mens rea requirement, the opinion did not make that holding
explicit. Subsequent cases have juggled Caldwell’s
nod to general intent with the more modern concepts of recklessness,
knowledge, intent, and negligence that underpin mens rea reforms.
In any case, the CAAF’s recent grant indicates it will not be
slowing down any time soon. Perhaps in the near future, the CAAF may even
examine sexual assault by bodily harm in Article
120 or conduct becoming an officer in Article
133. Hopefully Congress steps in soon to make its intent known, otherwise
the CAAF will be stuck cleaning up this mess.
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