Court Opinion

ID: 9900508
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-11-18 23:01:35.770576+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:21:06.896648
License: Public Domain

This opinion is subject to administrative correction before final disposition.

                                  Before
                        KISOR, BROWN, and DALY
                         Appellate Military Judges

                         _________________________

                           UNITED STATES
                               Appellee

                                      v.

                       Antonio D. MILLER
                  Airman Apprentice (E-2), U.S. Navy
                             Appellant

                             No. 202200230

                         _________________________

                          Decided: 23 October 2023

    Appeal from the United States Navy-Marine Corps Trial Judiciary

                               Military Judge:
                              Donald R. Ostrom

 Sentence adjudged 5 August 2022 by a special court-martial convened
 at Naval Station Norfolk, Virginia, consisting of a military judge sitting
 alone. Sentence in the Entry of Judgment: reduction to E-1, confine-
 ment for two months, and a bad-conduct discharge. 1

                          For Appellant:
         Lieutenant Commander Daniel C. LaPenta, JAGC, USN
         Lieutenant Commander Megan P. Marinos, JAGC, USN

 1 Appellant is credited with having served 79 days of pretrial confinement.

    24 October 2023: Administrative Correction to footnotes 35 and 42.
                United States v. Miller, NMCCA No. 202200230
                             Opinion of the Court

                                For Appellee:
                         Major Mary C. Finnen, USMC

   Judge BROWN delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Senior
   Judge KISOR and Judge DALY joined.

                          _________________________

         This opinion does not serve as binding precedent, but
              may be cited as persuasive authority under
               NMCCA Rule of Appellate Procedure 30.2.

                          _________________________

BROWN, Judge:
    A military judge sitting alone as a special court-martial convicted Appel-
lant, in accordance with his pleas, of desertion in violation of Article 85, Uni-
form Code of Military Justice [UCMJ], for leaving his unit, Naval Station Nor-
folk, Virginia, without authority on or about 14 April 1978, intending to remain
away permanently, and remaining absent in desertion until he was appre-
hended on 19 May 2022. 2 Additionally, Appellant pleaded not guilty to obstruc-
tion of justice, in violation of Article 131b, UCMJ, and that charge was with-
drawn without prejudice to ripen into prejudice upon completion of appellate
review. 3
    Appellant’s case was originally submitted to this Court without assignment
of error; however, upon review of the record, we ordered briefing of the follow-
ing specified issues:
       (1) With respect to the sole Specification of Charge I (Deser-
           tion), had the statute of limitations expired?
       (2) Did Appellant knowingly and voluntarily waive his right to
           assert the statute of limitations bar as to the sole Specifica-
           tion of Charge I (Desertion)?
       (3) Did the lack of a statute of limitations inquiry with respect
           to the sole Specification of Charge I (Desertion) materially
           prejudice Appellant’s substantial rights?

   2 10 U.S.C. § 885.

   3 10 U.S.C. § 931b.

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                United States v. Miller, NMCCA No. 202200230
                             Opinion of the Court

The parties filed their respective briefs, and Appellant moved the Court for an
expedited review, which we granted on 19 May 2023.

                                 I. BACKGROUND

    Appellant entered active duty in the United States Navy on 2 March 1976. 4
Nearly two years later, Appellant left his unit, Naval Station Norfolk, Virginia,
without permission or authority to do so, and traveled to his home in Chatta-
nooga, Tennessee. A few days after arriving in Chattanooga, Appellant re-
turned briefly to military control when he visited a Naval Reserve Center in
Chattanooga where they booked him on a flight to Norfolk and instructed him
to return to his unit immediately. Appellant did not return to Naval Station
Norfolk, however, and instead traveled to St. Petersburg, Florida, where one
of his brothers resided.
  Shortly thereafter, Appellant was apprehended by civilian authorities in
Florida and transferred to military custody at Naval Administrative Command
[NAVADMINCOM], Orlando, Florida. While there, military officials again or-
dered Appellant to return to his appointed place of duty, Naval Station Norfolk.
However, on or about 14 April 1978, pending his return to his duty station,
Appellant traveled again, without authority, to see his brother in St. Peters-
burg, Florida. 5 This time Appellant remained absent for more than 44 years
until he was arrested by civilian authorities in Tennessee in May 2022.
    During his court-martial, Appellant acknowledged that at some point dur-
ing his absence he determined he would not return to the Navy. 6
    Appellant’s forty-plus-year absence ended on 19 May 2022, in Soddy-Daisy,
Tennessee, following an encounter with the local police. During the encounter,
officers asked Appellant for his identification. Instead of providing his personal
identification, Appellant presented officers with his deceased brother’s driver’s
license and identified himself as his deceased brother. At some point, the
Soddy-Daisy Police Department discovered Appellant’s true identity and took

   4 Immediately prior to commencing his service in the United States Navy, Appel-

lant completed four years of service in the U.S. Marine Corps and was honorably dis-
charged from the Marine Corps on 1 March 1976. R. at 29; Defense Ex. A.
   5 Although Appellant began his lengthy period of absence while temporarily located

at NAVADMINCOM in Orlando, Florida, the parties agreed Naval Station Norfolk was
Appellant’s appointed place of duty for purposes of the desertion offense. R. at 8-9.
   6 R. at 51-58; Pros. Ex. 1.

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                  United States v. Miller, NMCCA No. 202200230
                               Opinion of the Court

him into custody. Soon thereafter, Appellant was transferred to military con-
trol and assigned to Transient Personnel Unit [TPU] Norfolk, Virginia.
    On 1 July 2022, Appellant was charged with desertion and obstruction of
justice for allegedly identifying himself as his deceased brother during the en-
counter with the Soddy-Daisy police. On 6 July 2022, those charges were re-
ceived by the convening authority who signed as the officer exercising sum-
mary court-martial jurisdiction over TPU Norfolk. The convening authority
later referred the charges and specifications to a special court-martial.
   Appellant entered into a plea agreement with the convening authority
where Appellant agreed to plead guilty to desertion and to receive a bad-con-
duct discharge. 7 In exchange, the convening authority agreed to dismiss the
obstruction of justice charge. 8 The parties further agreed Appellant would be
sentenced to between two and five months of confinement. 9
    Appellant’s plea agreement also contained a provision in which he agreed
to “waive all motions except those that are non-waivable pursuant to [the Rules
for Court-Martial] or otherwise.” 10 At Appellant’s court-martial, the military
judge summarized this provision for Appellant and then asked trial defense
counsel, “are there any motions that you had intended to file in this case but
did not based upon this agreement?” 11 Trial defense counsel answered, “No,
your honor.” 12 Appellant then acknowledged that he understood all of the
terms in the plea agreement and their effects on his case, and the military
judge accepted the agreement. 13
    The trial transcript, plea agreement, stipulation of fact, and the record are
silent as to the statute of limitations. 14

   7 Appellate Ex. 1.

   8 Id.

   9 Id.

   10 Id. at para. G.

   11 R. at 66.

   12 R. at 66.

   13 R. at 72-73.

   14 This Court appreciates that trial counsel, trial defense counsel, and the military

judge reviewed and discussed the Manual for Courts-Martial in effect at the time of
the charged desertion offense to ensure, for example, use of the proper elements of the
offense during the providence inquiry. R. at 7-8. But notably this discussion, at least
as summarized in the Record, did not include mention of any statute of limitations

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                United States v. Miller, NMCCA No. 202200230
                             Opinion of the Court

                                   II. DISCUSSION

    We find the military judge committed plain error by failing to conduct an
open-court statute of limitations inquiry with Appellant, which is a procedural
requirement to determine whether Appellant knowingly and voluntarily
waived his right to assert the statute of limitations in bar of trial with respect
to the offense of desertion. 15

A. Law
   We review a military judge’s failure to conduct a statute of limitations in-
quiry for plain error. 16 “To establish plain error, [an appellant] must show ‘(1)
error that is (2) clear or obvious and (3) results in material prejudice to his
substantial rights.’” 17
      There is a “presumption . . . that the statute of limitations in effect at the
time of the offense controls.” 18 Here, both parties concede the statute of limita-
tions in effect at the time Appellant began his period of desertion in 1978 con-
trols. 19 We agree. In 1978, at the time of the offense, Article 43(b), UCMJ,
stated in relevant part that, “a person charged with desertion in time of peace
. . . is not liable to be tried by court-martial if the offense was committed more
than three years before the receipt of sworn charges and specifications by an
officer exercising summary court-martial jurisdiction over the command.” 20

concern, much less the 1969 version of Article 43(b) which identifies the three-year
statute of limitations for a peacetime desertion offense. Id.
   15 Because we find error and material prejudice as to Specified Issue 3, Specified

Issues 1 and 2 are rendered moot.
   16 See United States v. McPherson, 81 M.J. 372, 377 (C.A.A.F. 2021) (citing United

States v. Briggs, 78 M.J. 289, 295 (C.A.A.F. 2019), rev’d on other grounds, 141 S. Ct.
467 (2020)).
   17 McPherson, 81 M.J. at 377 (quoting United States v. Armstrong, 77 M.J. 465, 469

(C.A.A.F. 2018) (internal quotation marks omitted) (citation omitted)).
   18 See McPherson, 81 M.J. at 377.

   19 Appellant’s Br. at 9; Gov’t Br. at 9.

   20 10 U.S.C. § 843(b) (Manual for Courts-Martial [MCM], United States (1969 ed.),

app. 2) (emphasis added).

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                United States v. Miller, NMCCA No. 202200230
                             Opinion of the Court

    Desertion is not a continuing offense; it is committed when the servicemem-
ber begins his period of desertion or unauthorized absence. 21 The discussion to
Rule for Courts-Martial [R.C.M.] 907(b)(2)(B), while not binding, is instructive
on this point. In relevant part, the discussion explains, “Some offenses are con-
tinuing offenses and any period of the offense occurring within the statute of
limitations is not barred.” 22 The discussion continues, “Absence without leave,
desertion, and fraudulent enlistment are not continuing offenses and are com-
mitted, respectively, on the day the person goes absent, deserts, or first re-
ceives pay or allowances under the enlistment.” 23 Thus, for the purposes of cal-
culating the running of the three-year statute of limitations period for Appel-
lant’s desertion offense, the clock started to run when Appellant began his pe-
riod of desertion in April 1978. Moreover, the parties agree on this point.
    An action that might toll the running of the limitations period is preferral
of charges, and receipt of those charges by an officer exercising summary-court
martial jurisdiction over the command, prior to the statute of limitations pe-
riod running its course. 24 In this case, however, there is no evidence in the
record to indicate that a charge of desertion was preferred prior to the three-
year limitations period expiring in April 1981. Indeed, the only charge sheet in
the record is the one before us which was preferred and referred in July 2022.
    The version of Article 43(d), UCMJ, in effect at the time Appellant began
his period of desertion provided that the only time properly excluded from com-
puting the running of the three-year limitations period included time the ac-
cused (1) was absent from a territory where the United States had authority
to apprehend him; (2) was in the custody of civil authorities; or (3) was in the
hands of the enemy. 25 The only one of these circumstances which appears to

    21 United States v. Tunnell, 23 M.J. 110, 111 (C.M.A. 1986) (citing MCM, Chapter

XXIX, para. 215(d) (1969)).
    22 R.C.M. 907(b)(2)(B), Discussion.

    23 Id.

    24 See United States v. Powell, 38 M.J. 153, 153 (C.A.A.F. 1993); see also United

States v. Rodgers, 24 C.M.R. 36, 41 (C.M.A. 1957) (“The practice of filing charges prior
to the statute of limitations running its course is commendable and is to be encour-
aged.”); R.C.M. 907(b)(2)(B), Discussion (“If sworn charges have been received by an
officer exercising summary court-martial jurisdiction over the command within the pe-
riod of the statute, minor amendments . . . may be made in the specification after the
statute of limitations has run. However, if new charges are drafted or a major amend-
ment made . . . after the statute of limitations has run, prosecution is barred.”).
    25 10 U.S.C. § 843(d) (MCM, United States (1969 ed.), app. 2).

                                           6
                 United States v. Miller, NMCCA No. 202200230
                              Opinion of the Court

have occurred in this case is Appellant’s short stint in the custody of civil au-
thorities—with the Soddy-Daisy police—between May and June 2022. Indeed,
these few weeks appear to be the only excludable time evident in the record;
and, because Appellant’s time in the custody of civil authorities occurred well
after the three-year limitations period appears to have already expired, any
excludable time is not applied in this case when calculating the running of the
limitations period. 26
     Rule for Courts-Martial [R.C.M.] 907(b)(2)(B) provides that an accused may
waive the statute of limitations defense but also requires the military judge to
inform the accused of the right to assert the statute of limitations defense any
time it appears the accused is unaware of that right; this is an affirmative
duty. 27 “When the evidence reasonably raises issues concerning . . . the statute
of limitations, the military judge is charged with specific affirmative responsi-
bilities.” 28 This “affirmative obligation” exists to ensure that any “waiver of the
statute of limitations bar is both knowing and voluntary.” 29 The “principle of

    26 In 1986, Article 43, UCMJ, was amended to increase the statute of limitations

for peacetime desertion to five years. Importantly, Congress also added another cate-
gory of time properly excluded from computing the running of the statute of limita-
tions: “[p]eriods in which the accused is absent without authority . . . shall be excluded
in computing the period of limitation prescribed in this section . . .” 10 U.S.C.
§ 843(b)(1) and (c) (1986). However, the 1986 amendment does not retroactively apply
to Appellant’s 1978 desertion offense, and therefore in this case Appellant’s lengthy
term of unauthorized absence is not excludable time when calculating the running of
the three-year limitations period.
    27 The predecessor rule to R.C.M. 907 in effect at the time of Appellant’s charged

desertion offense was paragraph 68c of the 1969 revised version of the Manual for
Courts-Martial. Subsection c of paragraph 68 similarly addressed the statute of limi-
tations in detail. We include this quote from subsection c because it provided a textbook
example identifying the statute of limitations concern in this case:
        For example, if it appears from the charges in a peacetime desertion
        case that more than three years have elapsed between the date of com-
        mission of the offense and the date when sworn charges and specifica-
        tions were received by an officer exercising summary court-martial ju-
        risdiction over the command, the motion [to dismiss] should be granted
        unless the prosecution shows by a preponderance of evidence that the
        statute does not apply because of periods which, under the provisions
        of Article 43(d), are to be excluded in computing the [then three-year
        statute of limitations for the offense of desertion].
    28 United States v. Thompson, 59 M.J. 432, 439 (C.A.A.F. 2004).

    29 Id. (citations omitted).

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                 United States v. Miller, NMCCA No. 202200230
                              Opinion of the Court

open-court advisement” prior to imposing any waiver of the statute of limita-
tions was acknowledged in Paragraph 68c of the 1951 and 1969 Manuals for
Courts-Martial, and later in R.C.M. 907(b)(2)(B), which first appeared in the
1984 edition of the Manual for Courts-Martial. 30 Indeed, thirty-eight years ago
in Salter, the Court of Military Appeals emphasized that the requirement that
a military judge conduct an open-court statute of limitations inquiry was “too
well-established in military law to require further elaboration . . .” 31 The fol-
lowing year in Tunnell the court added that in the context of guilty pleas, for
there to be a valid waiver of the statute of limitations defense “the record must
disclose that--by reason of advice from the military judge or otherwise--the ac-
cused was aware of his right to assert the statute of limitations and nonethe-
less chose to plead guilty.” 32 Furthermore, this Court has consistently held that
the longstanding requirement for a military judge to confirm a knowing and
voluntary waiver of any statute of limitations defense applies in the guilty plea
context. 33 The law has not changed since the middle of the last century. As
recently as 2019, our superior court has stated, “in a court-martial, R.C.M.
907(b)(2)(B) makes the statute of limitations ‘part of a case’ whenever the ac-
cused has a statute of limitations defense and does not appear to know it.” 34

    30 United States v. Salter, 20 M.J. 116, 117 (C.M.A. 1985).

    31 Id.; see also Rodgers, 24 C.M.R. at 37 (quoting MCM, para. 68c (1951) (“It is well

established in military jurisprudence that whenever it appears the statute of limita-
tions has run against an offense, the court ‘will bring the matter to the attention of the
accused and advise him of his right to assert the statute unless it otherwise affirma-
tively appears that the accused is aware of his rights in the premises.’”)).
    32 Tunnell, 23 M.J. at 111 (citations omitted).

    33 See, e.g., United States v. Robinson, 2001 CCA LEXIS 70, *5 (N-M. Ct. Crim.

App. Jan. 9, 2001) (“Guilty pleas alone do not waive the bar to prosecution provided by
the statute of limitations. For such a waiver to exist, the record must reflect that the
accused was aware of his right to plead the statute of limitations in bar of trial and
nonetheless chose to plead guilty.”); United States v. Keeney, 1991 CMR LEXIS 835, *1
(N.C.M.R. June 14, 1991) (finding military judge erred by not bringing the statute of
limitations defense to appellant’s attention and seeking a waiver prior to accepting
appellant’s guilty plea); cf. United States v. Smith, 1992 CMR LEXIS 371, *2-4
(N.C.M.R. Mar. 24, 1992) (finding appellant’s plea improvident where “nothing on the
record to suggest the statute of limitations was brought to the appellant’s attention”);
see also MCM, Chapter XII, para. 68c (1969 ed.) (“Since the statute of limitations is a
matter of defense, it may be waived by the accused provided he is aware of his right to
assert it. A plea of guilty, after explanation of its effect with respect to the statute of
limitations, operates as such a waiver.”).
    34 Briggs, 78 M.J. at 295.

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                United States v. Miller, NMCCA No. 202200230
                             Opinion of the Court

B. Analysis
    The fact that Appellant began his period of desertion in 1978, combined
with the fact that Appellant’s desertion charge was only recently preferred and
referred in 2022, should have oriented the military judge toward a possible
statute of limitations defense in this case. There being no indication in the rec-
ord that Appellant was aware of this potential defense, the military judge was
required to bring this issue to the attention of Appellant—in open court—to
ask Appellant whether he wished to waive any such defense and proceed with
his guilty plea. By not conducting a statute of limitations inquiry with Appel-
lant, the military judge clearly erred. Moreover, where in this case there was
a possible statute of limitations defense to the charge of desertion, the military
judge’s error resulted in material prejudice to Appellant’s substantial rights.
     Because desertion is not a continuing offense, the statute of limitations in
Appellant’s case was three years and began to run in 1978. Absent any exclud-
able time—of which there is none to be applied in this case, and neither party
argues otherwise—the three-year limitations period expired in 1981, unless
the limitations period was tolled by sworn charges received by an officer exer-
cising summary court-martial jurisdiction over the command within the three-
year period between 1978 and 1981. The Government concedes it has not yet
found a preferred charge sheet from that period. 35 Consequently, the three-
year limitations period appears to have expired in 1981, resulting in a bar to
prosecution for this offense absent Appellant’s knowing and voluntary
waiver. 36
    However, we need not decide whether the statute of limitations actually
expired to find the military judge committed plain error. As indicated above,
R.C.M. 907(b)(2)(B) requires the military judge to inform the accused of the
right to assert the statute of limitations defense any time it appears the ac-
cused is unaware of that right. Moreover, nothing in the plain language of the
Rule requires the military judge to find a statute of limitations bar to prosecu-
tion prior to raising the issue with an accused; the Rule simply obligates the

   35 Gov’t Answer at 10. Even had the Government found a timely preferred charge

sheet, it would not have changed the outcome here. The only desertion charge before
us was preferred and referred in July 2022, and the three-year statute of limitations
period had expired with respect to this charge. See R.C.M. 907(b)(2)(B), Discussion,
supra, fn 24.
   36 The Government concedes it cannot show the statute of limitations had not ex-

pired before the Appellant’s desertion charge was preferred and referred in July 2022.
Id.

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                 United States v. Miller, NMCCA No. 202200230
                              Opinion of the Court

military judge to notify the accused when, based on the evidence in the record,
there may be a statute of limitations defense, and it appears the accused is
unaware of it. 37 Given the three-year limitations period for the desertion of-
fense started to run in 1978, and the only charge sheet in the record (capable
of stopping the clock) was preferred and referred in 2022, a statute of limita-
tions concern should have been evident to the military judge. In these circum-
stances, the military judge should have recognized the potential for a statute
of limitations defense; and, because there is no indication in the record that
Appellant was aware of it, the military judge was required to conduct an open-
court inquiry with Appellant and inform him of the right to assert such a de-
fense. By not doing so, the military judge clearly and obviously erred.
    Furthermore, the military judge’s clear and obvious error resulted in ma-
terial prejudice to Appellant’s substantial rights, not because the statute of
limitations expired with respect to the charge before us, but rather because in
not being apprised of the right to assert the statute of limitations in bar of trial
as is procedurally required, Appellant unwittingly forfeited a right to assert a
possible defense. 38 Thus, Appellant was deprived of the substantial right to
make a fully informed decision regarding his defense and whether or not to
plead guilty. 39
    The Government urges the Court to overlook seventy years of military jus-
tice jurisprudence and precedent and find that Appellant waived his right to

    37 See Thompson, 59 M.J. at 439; see also Rodgers, 24 C.M.R. at 37. Moreover, if

after an open-court advisement by the military judge an accused were to file a motion
to dismiss a specification alleging a statute of limitations bar to prosecution, the Gov-
ernment would have an opportunity to respond to the motion, and perhaps demon-
strate the limitations period had not expired by, for example, producing a timely pre-
ferred charge sheet, or demonstrating the existence of any excludable time. Nothing in
the language of R.C.M. 907(b)(2)(B) suggests this litigation be conducted, or that find-
ings be made on such a motion, as a condition precedent to an open-court statute of
limitations inquiry.
    38 See Briggs, 78 M.J. at 296 (finding material prejudice to appellant’s substantial

rights because, “If the military judge had informed [a]ppellant of a possible statute of
limitations defense, it requires no speculation to believe that [a]ppellant would have
sought dismissal.”).
    39 See Rodgers, 24 C.M.R. at 38 (“[W]e do not presume that the accused waived a

substantial right [to assert the statute of limitations in bar of trial] which the record
fails to show he even knew of.”); see also Tunnell, 23 M.J. at 111 (finding no valid
waiver where “[n]othing in the record adequately demonstrate[d]” appellant’s aware-
ness of the statute of limitations bar to prosecution prior to pleading guilty).

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                 United States v. Miller, NMCCA No. 202200230
                              Opinion of the Court

assert the statute of limitations defense where Appellant had a “waive all wai-
vable motions” clause in his plea agreement. 40 We will not do so. The require-
ment to make a record of a knowing and voluntary waiver of the statute of
limitations defense is etched in military case law and procedure, and the Gov-
ernment has cited no authority supporting the proposition that a generic
waiver clause in a plea agreement trumps a longstanding procedural require-
ment like the one found in R.C.M. 907(b)(2)(B). 41
    The Government also contends that “[n]othing in the record supports that
Appellant ‘appeared’ to not understand his rights.” 42 We disagree. During Ap-
pellant’s court-martial, trial defense counsel answered “no” to the military
judge’s question as to whether the Defense forwent the filing of any motions as
a result of Appellant entering into a plea agreement. Based on trial defense
counsel’s assertion he did not intend to file any motions in Appellant’s case,
and given the facts and law as described herein, we have very little confidence
that trial defense counsel, much less Appellant himself, was aware of the stat-
ute of limitations issue. Perhaps even more revealing that Appellant was not
aware of his rights, every attorney involved in the military justice processing
of Appellant’s case appears to have been unaware of Appellant’s right to be
advised of the statute of limitations defense prior to pleading guilty. 43
    An accused’s determination of whether or not to plead guilty is a significant
occasion in the military justice process; and any decision to plead guilty is
solely an accused’s to make following consultation with his or her defense coun-
sel, and after consideration of what is in his or her own best interests. At the
end of the day, however, it remains a procedural requirement in the military
justice system that any waiver of the right to assert the statute of limitations

    40 Gov’t Answer at 16-17.

    41 See United States v. Sayers, 2023 CCA LEXIS 199, *10 (A.F. Ct. Crim. App. 27

Mar. 2023) (finding the military judge erred by not apprising appellant of his right to
assert the statute of limitations defense prior to accepting appellant’s guilty plea, even
though appellant had a “waive all waivable motions” clause in his plea agreement, and
stating, “We are not at liberty to simply disregard requirements in the Rules for Court-
Martial that protect an accused’s right to make fully informed decisions regarding the
defense.”) (internal quotations omitted).
    42 Gov’t Answer at 16-17.

    43 While the military judge’s oversight regarding the statute of limitations inquiry

is the focus of this opinion, we believe it important to emphasize that every attorney
involved in the processing of Appellant’s case had a responsibility to understand and
identify the statute limitations concern and address it appropriately.

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               United States v. Miller, NMCCA No. 202200230
                            Opinion of the Court

in bar of trial must be made knowingly and voluntarily—and to be sure when
an accused appears to be unaware of this right, any such waiver must be made
following a formal statute of limitations inquiry conducted, in open court, by
the military judge.
   Accordingly, we hold the military judge committed plain error by failing to
conduct an open-court statute of limitations inquiry with Appellant regarding
the sole Specification of Charge I (Desertion).

                                III. CONCLUSION

    After careful consideration of the record and briefs of appellate counsel, the
findings and sentence are SET ASIDE, with a rehearing authorized. 44

                                 FOR THE COURT:

                                 MARK K. JAMISON
                                 Clerk of Court

   44 Articles 59 & 66, UCMJ.

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