Court Opinion

ID: 4183374
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-07-05 12:02:25.392523+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:40:24.067962
License: Public Domain

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

                              No. 201600189
                          _________________________

                  UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
                                   Appellee
                                       v.

                     REGINALD A. PATTERSON
                    Corporal (E-4), U.S. Marine Corps
                                Appellant
                        _________________________

 Appeal from the United States Navy-Marine Corps Trial Judiciary

          Military Judge: Major Mark D. Sameit, USMC.
  Convening Authority: Commanding Officer, Marine Air Support
Squadron-3, Marine Air Control Group-38, 3d Marine Aircraft Wing,
                      Camp Pendleton, CA.
    Staff Judge Advocate’s Recommendation: Colonel Daren K.
                        Margolin, USMC.
     For Appellant: Commander Chris D. Tucker, JAGC, USN.
 For Appellee: Major Cory A. Carver, USMC; Lieutenant Robert J.
                       Miller, JAGC, USN.
                     _________________________

                           Decided 30 June 2017
                          _________________________

     Before M ARKS , R UGH , and J ONES , 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.
                       _________________________

   MARKS, Senior Judge:
   At a special court-martial, a military judge convicted the appellant,
pursuant to his pleas, of one specification of aggravated assault in violation of
Article 128, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), 10 U.S.C. § 928 (2012).
The military judge sentenced the appellant to 175 days’ confinement and a
                    United States v. Patterson, No. 201600189

bad-conduct discharge. The convening authority (CA) approved the sentence
as adjudged but, pursuant to a pretrial agreement, suspended all
confinement in excess of three months. He then ordered the sentence, except
for the discharge, executed.
    The appellant asserts five assignments of error (AOEs): (1) that he was
denied his right to a speedy trial guaranteed by RULE FOR COURTS-MARTIAL
(R.C.M.) 707(a), MANUAL FOR COURTS-MARTIAL, UNITED STATES (2012 ed.),
when he was not brought to trial within 120 days of the imposition of pretrial
restraint and did not knowingly and voluntarily waive his right to a speedy
trial; (2) that the military judge erred by finding his pretrial restriction was
not tantamount to confinement; (3) that he was denied his right to speedy
trial pursuant to Article 10, UCMJ, when he was not brought to trial within
120 days of the imposition of pretrial restraint and did not knowingly and
voluntarily waive his right to a speedy trial; (4) that he was denied his right
to a speedy trial guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment when he was not
brought to trial by the government in a speedy manner and he did not
knowingly and voluntarily waive his right to a speedy trial; and (5) that his
Sixth Amendment right to counsel was violated because his defense counsel
was ineffective for not raising the speedy trial violation before the trial court.
We find no error materially prejudicial to the substantial rights of the
appellant and affirm the findings and sentence. Arts. 59(a) and 66(c), UCMJ.
                                I. BACKGROUND
    As the appellant’s AOEs stem from the time it took the government to
bring him to trial, we begin by examining the timeline of events in the record:
    17 August 2015 – An early morning argument between the appellant and
his wife in their home aboard Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton,
California, became physical when he pulled her from the couch to the floor,
wrapped his hands around her neck, and squeezed as hard as he could before
releasing her. After the appellant left home later that morning, his wife
reported the incident to law enforcement.
   18 August 2015 – The appellant entered pretrial confinement.
    25 August 2015 – The appellant was released from pretrial confinement.
His commanding officer imposed a military protective order (MPO) on behalf
of his wife and ordered him into pretrial restriction until his trial date.
   16 September 2015 – A single specification of Article 128, UCMJ, for
aggravated assault was preferred against the appellant.
   14 October 2015 – Scheduled date of an Article 32, UCMJ, preliminary
hearing.

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                       United States v. Patterson, No. 201600189

   21 October 2015 – Actual date of the Article 32, UCMJ, preliminary
hearing following two continuance requests from the appellant’s trial defense
counsel (TDC). Seven days were authorized as excludable delay under R.C.M.
707.
   4 November 2015 – The Article 32, UCMJ, preliminary hearing officer
submitted his report recommending general court-martial.
   8 December 2015 – The CA referred the charge to a special court-martial.
    14 December 2015 – The appellant and his TDC signed a pretrial
agreement. The CA signed it on 16 December 2015. The pretrial agreement
neither specified a trial date nor explicitly acknowledged the appellant’s
waiver of motions.
   8 January 2016 – The appellant was arraigned, pled guilty, and was
sentenced.
   The appellant’s unconditional guilty pleas came 143 days after he
commenced temporary pretrial confinement. The military judge awarded
eight days of Allen credit for the pretrial confinement from 18 to 25 August
2015.1 The TDC moved for additional confinement credit, arguing the
appellant’s pretrial restriction was tantamount to confinement.2 The military
judge disagreed but found that the pretrial restriction did violate Article 13,
UCMJ, which prohibits pretrial punishment. He awarded additional day-for-
day credit for the 143 days of pretrial restriction. With 151 days of
confinement credit and a pretrial agreement to suspend adjudged
confinement in excess of three months, the appellant was taken off restriction
the day of his court-martial.
    TDC did not assert the appellant’s regulatory, statutory, or constitutional
right to a speedy trial during the court-martial or the post-trial process.
                                    II. DISCUSSION
A. Right to a speedy trial
    For the first time on appeal, the appellant argues he was denied his right
to a speedy trial guaranteed by R.C.M. 707, Article 10, UCMJ, and the Sixth
Amendment to the Constitution because he was not brought to trial within
120 days, or in a speedy manner, and did not knowingly and voluntarily
waive his speedy trial rights.

   1   United States v. Allen, 17 M.J. 126 (C.M.A. 1984).
   2TDC ultimately relied on United States v. Mason, 19 M.J. 274 (C.M.A. 1985)
(summary disposition) and Article 13, UCMJ, in support of their motion.

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                       United States v. Patterson, No. 201600189

   We review claims regarding an appellant’s right to a speedy trial de novo.
United States v. Cooper, 58 M.J. 54, 57 (C.A.A.F. 2003).
   1. Right to a speedy trial pursuant to R.C.M. 707, UCMJ
    A military “accused shall be brought to trial within 120 days after the
earlier of: (1) [p]referral of charges; (2) [t]he imposition of restraint under
R.C.M. 304(a)(2)-(4); or (3) [e]ntry on active duty under R.C.M. 204.” R.C.M.
707(a). Restraint under R.C.M. 304 includes restriction in lieu of arrest,
arrest, and confinement—all of which involve the accused’s moral or physical
restraint to specified limits. “A failure to comply with this rule will result in
dismissal of the affected charges.” R.C.M. 707(d). But “a plea of guilty which
results in a finding of guilty waives any speedy trial issue as to that offense.”
R.C.M. 707(e).3
    The appellant’s alleged deprivation of his R.C.M. 707 right to a speedy
trial rests entirely on the passage of 143 days from his entrance into pretrial
confinement on 18 August 2015, through his pretrial restriction to his
arraignment and trial on 8 January 2016.4 Despite this prima facie violation
of R.C.M. 707, the appellant waived his claim when he entered unconditional
guilty pleas at court-martial and was convicted. Thus we find no violation of
the appellant’s right to speedy trial under R.C.M. 707.
    The appellant challenges the voluntariness of his waiver of R.C.M. 707,
alleging his TDC did not advise him of his right. Citing his “‘fundamental’
constitutional right to a speedy trial,”5 recognized in Barker v. Wingo, 407
U.S. 514, 515 (1972), the appellant urges us to disregard this waiver. Instead
of setting aside the appellant’s guilty plea for a lack of voluntariness and
providence, we will instead examine the appellant’s right to a speedy trial
under Article 10, UCMJ. In doing so, we accept the appellant’s invitation to
apply Barker v. Wingo to his case by considering its criteria.

   3 R.C.M. 707(e) explicitly carves out an exception to its automatic waiver rule for
conditional pleas, which are provided for in R.C.M. 910(a)(2).
   4   The record indicates the Article 32, UCMJ, preliminary hearing officer
approved seven days of excludable delay in response to the appellant’s two
continuance requests before the Article 32, UCMJ, preliminary hearing, pursuant to
R.C.M. 707(c)(1). See Investigating Officer’s Report, Block 21. The appellant’s
calculation of 143 days of delay between pretrial confinement on 18 August 2015 and
trial on 8 January 2016 does not reflect that exclusion. Correctly reflecting the
excludable delay, the R.C.M. 707 delay should be 136 days. This difference is not
material to our opinion.
   5   Appellant’s Brief of 25 Aug 2016 at 9.

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                    United States v. Patterson, No. 201600189

   2. Right to a speedy trial pursuant to Article 10, UCMJ
    “[A] servicemember who enters an unconditional guilty plea may appeal a
speedy trial claim under Article 10 only if the accused has invoked Article 10
at trial by filing and litigating an Article 10 motion at trial.” United States v.
Tippit, 65 M.J. 69, 75 (C.A.A.F. 2007); see also United States v. Dubouchet, 63
M.J. 586, 588 (N-M. Ct. Crim. App. 2006) (holding that “an unconditional
guilty plea that ultimately results in a guilty finding waives an Article 10
speedy trial issue as to that offense when raised for the first time on appeal”)
(citations omitted). But the appellant has asserted he did not knowingly and
voluntarily waive his right to file an Article 10, UCMJ, motion. Assuming
arguendo that the appellant did not waive this avenue of relief, we examine
his claim.
    The UCMJ codifies a service member’s right to speedy trial in statute:
“When any person subject to this chapter is placed in arrest or confinement
prior to trial, immediate steps shall be taken to inform him of the specific
wrong of which he is accused and to try him or to dismiss the charges and
release him.” Art. 10, UCMJ.
    Arrest or confinement of a service member triggers the government’s
obligation to take immediate steps toward trial. Art. 9(a), UCMJ, defines
arrest as “the restraint of a person by an order, not imposed as a punishment
for an offense, directing him to remain within certain specified limits.
Confinement is the physical restraint of a person.” R.C.M. 304 distinguishes
between arrest and “[r]estriction in lieu of arrest,” defining the latter as “the
restraint of a person by oral or written orders directing the person to remain
within specified limits; a restricted person shall, unless otherwise directed,
perform full military duties while restricted.” The Discussion to R.C.M. 304
further elaborates:
       Restriction in lieu of arrest is a less severe restraint on liberty
       than is arrest. Arrest includes suspension from performing full
       military duties and the limits of arrest are normally narrower
       than those of restriction in lieu of arrest. The actual nature of
       the restraint imposed, and not the characterization of it by the
       officer imposing it, will determine whether it is technically an
       arrest or restriction in lieu of arrest.
In determining “[w]hether a particular restriction amounts to arrest for the
purposes of Article 10, UCMJ,” the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces
(CAAF) has referred us to “such factors as the geographic limits of constraint,
the extent of sign-in requirements, whether restriction is performed with or
without escort, and whether regular military duties are performed.” United
States v. Schuber, 70 M.J. 181, 187 (C.A.A.F. 2011) (holding that Schuber’s
restriction was not tantamount to arrest when he “was restricted to base

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                    United States v. Patterson, No. 201600189

rather than to quarters. Although he was required to provide weekly urine
samples, he was permitted to avail himself of all usual base activities. He
was also given a three-day pass to grieve with his family upon the death of
his grandfather. He was not placed under guard or escort during his base
restriction or travel. Nor did the restriction orders suspend [Schuber] from
performing full, meaning normal, military duties.”).
    In this case, the appellant continued to perform his normal duties, but he
was subject to more restrictive conditions than those in Schuber. He could not
leave his barracks without an escort; he was able to leave the base to run
errands with an escort, but he did not travel further; he was required to
muster several times daily; he could not access many of the base’s amenities;
and he could not receive visitors. Based on these facts, we find the appellant’s
restraint was arrest for purposes of Article 10, UCMJ.
    As the appellant was under arrest, his command was required to take
immediate steps toward his trial or dismissal of charges and release. Art. 10,
UCMJ. Immediacy “is not constant motion, but reasonable diligence in
bringing the charges to trial.” United States v. Mizgala, 61 M.J. 122, 127
(C.A.A.F. 2005) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). We
consider four factors the Supreme Court identified in Barker v. Wingo to
determine if the government’s delay in bringing the appellant to trial was not
reasonable and thus deprived him of his right to a speedy trial. United States
v. Birge, 52 M.J. 209, 212 (C.A.A.F. 1999). The four factors are “length of
delay, the reason for the delay, the defendant’s assertion of his right, and
prejudice to the defendant.” Barker, 407 U.S. at 530. Finally, “we remain
mindful that we are looking at the proceeding as a whole and not mere
speed.” Mizgala, 61 M.J. at 129.
    First, the appellant must be able to point to “some delay which is
presumptively prejudicial” in order to trigger Barker’s four-factor analysis.
Barker, 407 U.S. at 530. Although the Barker court found “no constitutional
basis for holding that the speedy trial right can be quantified into a specified
number of days or months,” id. at 523, the President has designated 120 days
as a presumptively prejudicial length of delay in trying courts-martial.
R.C.M. 707; MANUAL FOR COURTS-MARTIAL, UNITED STATES (2012 ed.) App.
21, at A21-42. Delay in excess of 120 days6 between the appellant’s pretrial
confinement and trial demonstrate presumptively prejudicial delay in this
case. This satisfies the first Barker factor in favor of the appellant and leads
us to examine the remaining three.

   6 Whether we rely on the appellant’s count of 143 days of delay or our count of
136 days, explained in n. 4, the delay exceeds 120 days.

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                    United States v. Patterson, No. 201600189

    “Reason for the delay” is the second factor. Barker, 407 U.S. at 530.
Without findings of fact developed during litigation of an Article 10, UCMJ,
motion at the trial court, there is minimal evidence about delay in the
record.7 The timeline in this case reveals delays between case milestones that
could have been shorter, but nowhere in the timeline does the prosecution
appear to languish. More significantly, the appellant presents no evidence of
willful or malicious conduct on the part of the government. See Birge, 52 M.J.
at 212 (concluding “[t]here is no evidence of willful or malicious conduct on
the part of the Government to create the delay” before finding Birge’s
appellate Article 10, UCMJ, claim “readily resolved [unfavorably] under the
Barker v. Wingo . . . factors”). As in Birge, the appellant fails to make the case
for an Article 10, UCMJ, violation with this factor.
    The third factor, the appellant’s “assertion of his right,” 407 U.S. at 530,
also inures to the government. Nowhere in the record does the appellant raise
R.C.M. 707, Article 10, UCMJ, or the right to a speedy trial. The Barker court
noted that “[t]he more serious the deprivation, the more likely a defendant is
to complain. The defendant’s assertion of his speedy trial right, then, is
entitled to strong evidentiary weight in determining whether the defendant is
being deprived of the right.” Id. at 531-32.
    The appellant’s failure to raise his right to speedy trial, particularly in
light of TDC’s successful motion for confinement credit, significantly weakens
his current argument for an Article 10, UCMJ, violation. We will address the
appellant’s claim that his failure to raise Article 10, UCMJ, is attributable to
his TDC’s failure to advise him of the right infra.
    Finally, we consider the “prejudice to the [appellant].” Id. at 530.
Prejudice to the appellant “should be assessed in the light of the interests of
defendants which the speedy trial right was designed to protect. . . . (i) to
prevent oppressive pretrial incarceration; (ii) to minimize anxiety and
concern of the accused; and (iii) to limit the possibility that the defense will
be impaired.” Id. at 532. The most serious prejudice concerns when the
passage of time diminishes the defendant’s ability to mount a defense, such
as through the loss of witnesses or of their memories. Id.
   The appellant alleges prejudice in pretrial restriction “equivalent to
unduly oppressive pretrial incarceration,” “conditions on his liberty,
separation from his family, and ‘living under a cloud’ of suspicion,” and

   7   The Barker Court “emphasize[d] that failure to assert the right [to a speedy
trial] will make it difficult for a defendant to prove that he was denied a speedy
trial.” 407 U.S. at 532.

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                       United States v. Patterson, No. 201600189

“restriction [that] hindered his ability to meet with witnesses or revisit his
home to gather potentially relevant evidence.”8
   While the appellant’s pretrial restriction amounted to arrest, it was not
oppressive pretrial incarceration. Nevertheless, the military judge awarded
the appellant day-for-day credit for his pretrial confinement and restriction,
sparing him any of his awarded confinement. See Birge, 52 M.J. at 212
(noting that the “appellant received credit for his pretrial confinement on his
sentence” in holding that the facts were “not sufficient to raise the issue of an
Article 10 violation”).
   Aside from some of the provisions of his restriction, such as the
prohibition against receiving visitors, the appellant has offered no evidence
that delay caused anxiety and concern beyond what is normally experienced
while an accused is restrained, separated from family, and facing a court-
martial. See United States v. Wilson, 72 M.J. 347, 354 (C.A.A.F. 2013)
(expressing the CAAF’s concern “not with the normal anxiety and concern
experienced by an individual in pretrial confinement, but rather with some
degree of particularized anxiety and concern greater than the normal anxiety
and concern associated with pretrial confinement”).
    The appellant has presented no evidence that delay hindered his defense.
The appellant’s only witness at the court-martial was his wife, the victim of
his aggravated assault. An MPO, not the conditions of his pretrial restriction,
prevented the appellant from speaking or meeting with her. If anything, time
allowed the wife’s feelings toward her husband to soften. Contrary to his
assertion, the appellant was able to visit his on-base residence, and he has
not named any other witnesses he was unable to consult during his pretrial
restriction or how they would have contributed to his defense. His inability to
receive visitors would not have barred them from his TDC’s office. Without
some evidence of delay harming the appellant’s ability to defend himself, we
find no material prejudice to the appellant’s substantial rights.
    The appellant can successfully attack the government’s speed in
prosecuting his case with the number of days on the R.C.M. 707 clock, but he
cannot demonstrate a lack of reasonable diligence. When the 120th day
passed, the appellant had signed a pretrial agreement, and a trial date two
weeks hence was either on the docket or would imminently appear there.9 A
lack of speed does not overcome the diligence reflected in that fact.

   8   Appellant’s Brief of 25 Aug 2016 at 30-31.
   9Subtracting the seven days of excludable delay from the day count beginning 19
August 2015, day 120 fell on 23 December 2015.

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                    United States v. Patterson, No. 201600189

Considering all four Barker factors in the context of the proceeding as a
whole, we find no merit in the appellant’s Article 10, UCMJ, claim.
   3. Right to a speedy trial guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment to the
      Constitution
    The Sixth Amendment to the Constitution provides, that, “[i]n all
criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and
public trial[.]” U.S. CONST. amend. VI. “In the military, Sixth Amendment
speedy trial protections are triggered upon preferral of charges or the
imposition of pretrial restraint.” United States v. Danylo, 73 M.J. 183, 186
(C.A.A.F. 2014) (citation omitted). However, an unconditional guilty plea
which results in a finding of guilty “waives any speedy trial issue as to that
offense under the Sixth Amendment.” Tippitt, 65 M.J. at 75 (citing Mizgala,
61 M.J. at 125).
    Here, the appellant’s unconditional guilty plea and resulting guilty
finding waived any claim of a speedy trial violation under the Sixth
Amendment, and thus we find no violation.
B. Ineffective assistance of counsel
    The appellant argues his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of
counsel was violated because his defense counsel failed to raise a speedy trial
violation before the trial court and failed to advise him of the right
altogether.
    The court reviews the effectiveness of counsel and the resulting prejudice
of any errors de novo. United States v. Perez, 64 M.J. 239, 243 (C.A.A.F.
2006).
   An appellant challenging the effectiveness of his TDC must satisfy the
two-part test in United States v. Strickland, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984). Id.
       First, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance was
       deficient. This requires showing that counsel made errors so
       serious that counsel was not functioning as the “counsel”
       guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment. Second,
       the defendant must show that the deficient performance
       prejudiced the defense. This requires showing that counsel’s
       errors were so serious as to deprive the defendant of a fair trial,
       a trial whose result is reliable.
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687.
    In evaluating TDC’s competence, “[w]e will not second-guess the strategic
or tactical decisions made at trial by defense counsel” as long as the record
reflects action where it should occur. United States v. Rivas, 3 M.J. 282, 289
(C.M.A. 1977); see also United States v. Alves, 53 M.J. 286, 289 (C.A.A.F.

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                    United States v. Patterson, No. 201600189

2000) (noting that “[a] defense counsel is presumed to be competent. . . .
Judicial scrutiny of such a claim is highly deferential and should not be
colored by the distorting effects of hindsight”) (citation omitted).
    The appellant alleges error in his TDC’s failure to raise a motion for a
speedy trial. But TDC raised a timely motion for confinement credit for every
day the appellant spent in pretrial restriction. The appellant does not
acknowledge this motion and how it conflicts with his assertion of the right to
a speedy trial. See Barker, 407 U.S. at 521 (“Delay is not an uncommon
defense tactic.”) Every day the appellant remained in pretrial restriction
increased the balance the military judge might convert into credit against the
appellant’s sentence to confinement. And the appellant continued to collect
full pay and allowances during pretrial restriction. He has failed to
demonstrate how prioritizing confinement credit over a weak speedy trial
claim and allowing additional days of potential confinement credit to accrue
constitutes deficient performance. See Dubouchet, 63 M.J. at 589 (noting that
“the appellant fails to acknowledge and address any of the tactical reasons
why the defense counsel would not raise a speedy trial issue” before rejecting
“the appellant’s assertion that his counsel’s performance was ineffective”).
    Turning now to the second Strickland prong and prejudice, we must first
discern what prejudice the appellant alleges. As with most guilty pleas,
prejudice does not turn on the reliability of the outcome of the trial. Instead,
the appellant asserts that, but for the error alleged, he would have pled not
guilty and insisted on going to trial. Alves, 53 M.J. at 289-90. In his reply
brief, the appellant implies that had he been aware of his right to a speedy
trial, he would have withdrawn his guilty plea and pursued his right. He fails
to acknowledge that an accused may file an Article 10, UCMJ, motion and
still plead guilty to the underlying charge. See Mizgala, 61 M.J. at 127
(holding that “a litigated speedy trial motion under Article 10 is not waived
by a subsequent unconditional guilty plea”). As the appellant has not
contested the providence of his plea to aggravated assault, we conclude he
does not seek to relitigate his conviction.
   Instead, his alleged prejudice is more likely the missed opportunity to
pursue dismissal of his charge for an Article 10, UCMJ, violation.
       When an allegation of ineffective assistance of counsel is based
       on a failure to make a motion, the appellant must show that
       there is a reasonable probability that such a motion would have
       been meritorious. . . . In order to meet this burden, an
       appellant has the responsibility to bring to an appellate court’s
       attention facts rather than mere speculation.
Dubouchet, 63 M.J. at 589 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
In the appellant’s original brief, he argued “it is reasonably probable that a

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                       United States v. Patterson, No. 201600189

reasonable, conscientious, and impartial military judge would have ruled in
favor of a speedy trial motion and dismissed the sole charge since the
Government had committed a per se violation of RCM 707(a) by not bringing
Appellant to trial for 143 days since the 707 clock had begun to run, well
beyond the 120 day maximum required by RCM 707.”10 Again, the single fact
supporting the appellant’s claim of a speedy trial violation is the R.C.M. 707
day count. A military judge hearing the appellant’s motion for dismissal
under R.C.M. 707 might dismiss with prejudice “where the accused has been
deprived of his or her constitutional right to a speedy trial.” R.C.M. 707(d)(1).
Having analyzed the alleged deprivation of the appellant’s constitutional
right to a speedy trial in accordance with Barker in the previous section, we
conclude that the appellant’s motion for dismissal with prejudice would not
be meritorious.11 Without a meritorious motion, the appellant cannot
demonstrate prejudice.
    With neither deficient performance nor prejudice, we decline to find
ineffective assistance of counsel for failing to raise speedy trial under R.C.M.
707 or Article 10, UCMJ.
    Finally, we address the appellant’s claim that his TDC erred by failing to
advise him of his right to speedy trial, much less pursue it. “If we conclude
that any error would not have been prejudicial under the second prong of
Strickland, we need not ascertain the validity of the allegations . . . .” United
States v. Saintaude, 61 M.J. 175, 179-180 (C.A.A.F. 2005). Having concluded
the appellant suffered no prejudice from alleged deprivation of his right to a
speedy trial, we find no merit in this allegation of ineffective assistance of
counsel.
C. Restriction not tantamount to confinement
   Lastly, the appellant argues the military judge erred by finding his
pretrial restriction was not tantamount to confinement.
    “We review de novo the ultimate legal question of whether certain pretrial
restrictions are tantamount to confinement.” United States v. King, 58 M.J.
110, 113 (C.A.A.F. 2003) (citations omitted).
    TDC sought confinement credit for the appellant under two separate but
related theories—United States v. Mason, 19 M.J. 274 (C.M.A. 1985)
(summary disposition), and Article 13, UCMJ.12 The military judge found the

   10   Appellant Brief at 37.
   11  We decline to find an R.C.M. 707 motion resulting in the dismissal of the
charge without prejudice and the likely re-referral of the charge without the benefit
of the negotiated pretrial agreement meritorious.
   12   Article 13, UCMJ provides that:

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                        United States v. Patterson, No. 201600189

appellant’s pretrial restriction violated Article 13, UCMJ, and thus merited
day-for-day confinement credit. Therefore, we will not reconsider the judge’s
finding that certain restrictions upon the appellant served no “legitimate
purpose . . . other than to punish”13 him. Instead we will limit our review of
the military judge’s denial of Mason credit and the case law interpreting that
credit.
   In Mason, our superior court extended the day-for-day credit received for
pretrial confinement to pretrial restriction it deemed “equivalent to
confinement.” 19 M.J. at 274. Soon thereafter, the Army’s Court of Military
Review held that “[t]he determination whether the conditions of restriction
are tantamount to confinement must be based on the totality of the
conditions imposed.” United States v. Smith, 20 M.J. 528, 530 (A.C.M.R.
1985); see also King, 58 M.J. at 113. Factors comprising the totality of the
conditions imposed include:
         [T]he nature of the restraint (physical or moral), the area or
         scope of the restraint (confined to post, barracks, room, etc.),
         the types of duties, if any, performed during the restraint
         (routine military duties, fatigue duties, etc.), and the degree of
         privacy enjoyed within the area of restraint. Other important
         conditions which may significantly affect one or more of these
         factors are: whether the accused was required to sign in
         periodically with some supervising authority; whether a charge
         of quarters or other authority periodically checked to ensure
         the accused’s presence; whether the accused was required to be
         under armed or unarmed escort; whether and to what degree
         accused was allowed visitation and telephone privileges; what
         religious, medical, recreational, educational, or other support
         facilities were available for the accused’s use; the location of
         the accused’s sleeping accommodations; and whether the

         No person, while being held for trial, may be subjected to punishment
         or penalty other than arrest or confinement upon the charges pending
         against him, nor shall the arrest or confinement imposed upon him be
         any more rigorous than the circumstances required to insure his
         presence, but he may be subjected to minor punishment during that
         period for infractions of discipline.
See United States v. Chapa, 57 M.J. 140, 141 (C.A.A.F. 2002) (drawing a distinction
between a request for relief for illegal pretrial punishment in violation of Article 13,
UCMJ, and the assertion that restriction was tantamount to confinement and thus
merited the protections of R.C.M. 305 and credit pursuant to Mason, 19 M.J. at 274).
   13   Record at 53.

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                    United States v. Patterson, No. 201600189

       accused was allowed to retain and use his personal property
       (including his civilian clothing).
Smith, 20 M.J. at 531-32; see also King, 58 M.J. at 113. Analysis of those
factors reveals “levels of restraint . . . which fall somewhere on a spectrum
that ranges from ‘restriction’ to ‘confinement.’ If the level of restraint falls so
close to the ‘confinement’ end of the spectrum as to be tantamount thereto,
[an] appellant is entitled to appropriate and meaningful administrative credit
against his sentence.” Smith, 20 M.J. at 531. The CAAF has also
“consider[ed] ‘the prior examples of such cases . . . and the factors gleaned
from them’ in determining whether pretrial restriction is tantamount to
confinement.” King, 58 M.J. at 113 (citation omitted).
    In the case before us, the appellant received a restriction order with the
following provisions:
          restriction to his barracks room, normal work area, any base
           chapel on Sundays, the infirmary, the mess hall, and the 21 Area
           Exchange, barbershop, dry cleaners, and fitness center;
          regular musters in the uniform of the day or utilities with the
           barracks noncommissioned officer (NCO) four times per workday
           and every two hours between 0700 and 1500 then at 1800, 2000,
           and 2145 on weekends and holidays;
          required notification of the barracks NCO and an NCO escort
           when leaving the barracks;
          no use of alcohol or other intoxicants, attendance at any service
           club, movie theater, or Morale, Welfare, and Recreation activity, or
           participation in intramural sports;
          no operation of a privately-owned vehicle; and
          no visitors.
But the appellant retained:
          performance of his regular military duties;
          use of his cell phone and other personal electronics in his barracks
           room; and
          the ability to visit his on-base residence and conduct business off-
           base with advance permission and an NCO escort.
    The command legal officer testified that the appellant received the same
restriction order given to Marines awarded restriction at a court-martial or
nonjudicial punishment proceeding. She understood that the appellant’s
pretrial restriction was to be more relaxed than post-trial restriction, but the

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                   United States v. Patterson, No. 201600189

government presented no evidence that the appellant was advised of the
supposedly relaxed provisions.
    Although bound by a post-trial restriction order, the appellant enjoyed
privileges post-trial restrictees did not. He continued to perform his normal
duties at his command instead of being assigned to a work detail. Although
required to travel with an escort, he was able to retrieve possessions from his
on-base residence and run errands off-base, including a trip to the bank. The
appellant believed he was not permitted visitors outside his chain of
command, but he was allowed to use his cell phone and any personal
electronics in the privacy of his barracks room. The appellant’s muster
requirements were no more onerous and his movements were no more
restricted than those of the post-trial restrictees. Moral restraint on his
movement was consistent with the MPO and the command’s responsibility to
protect his wife, who lived aboard Camp Pendleton. In light of evidence that
the appellant had been drinking before the alleged assault, the requirement
that the appellant abstain from alcohol was reasonably related to his wife’s
safety. However, the prohibitions against receiving visitors, using
recreational facilities, participating in intramural sports, and his berthing
assignment with post-trial restrictees were punitive, post-trial restriction
provisions. Nevertheless, they were closer on the spectrum to routine
restriction orders than confinement.
    Comparing the appellant’s case with others also supports the conclusion
that the appellant’s restriction was not tantamount to confinement. See King,
58 M.J. at 111-12, (holding that King’s restriction to his dormitory, dining
facility, squadron building, and defense counsel’s office, reassignment to
cleaning and manual labor duties, requirement to muster twice per day, and
inability to use the gym was not tantamount to confinement); United States v.
Guerrero, 28 M.J. 223, 224-25 (C.M.A. 1989) (holding that Guerrero’s
restriction to his room, the latrine, the chapel, mess hall and other places of
duty, required NCO escort, and required muster “every 30 minutes until
normal ‘lights out’” was not tantamount to confinement); United States v.
Parker, 75 M.J. 603, 610-11 (N-M. Ct. Crim. App. 2016) (holding that
Parker’s restriction to the base with permission to visit the Exchange, gym,
on-base food establishments, and other base facilities with an escort,
requirement to muster every two hours during the day, prohibition against
receiving visitors, and reassignment to routine administrative functions was
not tantamount to confinement). Cf Smith, 20 M.J. at 530, 532 (holding that
Smith’s prohibition against private telephone conversations, limitations on
receipt of visitors, requirement to muster every 30 minutes in the evenings
and on non-duty days, and requirement to leave his barracks room door
unlocked was tantamount to confinement). The appellant’s circumstances
were also less restrictive than those that prompted the Mason court to extend

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                   United States v. Patterson, No. 201600189

confinement credit to pretrial restriction—restriction to a dayroom with
permission to go, under escort, only to the latrine, chapel, and mess hall,
hourly musters, and exclusion from training. Smith, 20 M.J. at 531.
   Thus we concur with the military judge that the appellant suffered
pretrial punishment, in contravention of Article 13, UCMJ, but the conditions
were not tantamount to confinement as required for Mason credit.
                             III. CONCLUSION
   The findings and the sentence as approved by the CA are affirmed.
   Judge RUGH and Judge JONES concur.
                                      For the Court

                                      R.H. TROIDL
                                      Clerk of Court

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