Published by Cave & Freeburg LLP | Military Justice Defense Attorneys

Case Citation: United States v. Castillo, No. ACM 40705 (A.F. Ct. Crim. App. Mar. 11, 2026) | Unpublished


A recent Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals decision — United States v. Castillo — raises an important question every military defense lawyer must understand: when does a military judge have a duty to instruct on an affirmative defense, even during a guilty plea proceeding? The answer directly affects court-martial strategy, plea negotiations, and appellate rights for servicemembers facing charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ).

Overview

The Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals (NMCCA) decided United States v. Selleneit on 17 March 2026, affirming the findings and sentence of a general court-martial tried at Naval Station Rota, Spain. Fire Controlman Aegis Petty Officer Second Class (E-5) George B. Selleneit faced charges of sexual assault under Article 120, UCMJ, and unlawful entry under Article 129, UCMJ. A panel of officer and enlisted members acquitted him of sexual assault but convicted him of unlawful entry. The court sentenced Selleneit to reduction to E-3, restriction to USS Porter for two months, and forfeiture of all pay and allowances for two months (with the convening authority waiving forfeitures above two-thirds pay per month).

Factual Background

When “Not Guilty” Still Costs You: Acquitted Conduct Sentencing in Military Court-Martial

Being found not guilty on a charge should mean something. But in both federal and military courts, a “not guilty” verdict on one count can still drive up the punishment on counts where the jury did convict you. This practice — called acquitted conduct sentencing — raises serious constitutional questions under the Fifth and Sixth Amendments, and the rules governing it just changed significantly. Here is what every service member facing court-martial needs to know.


What Is Acquitted Conduct Sentencing at Court-Martial?

Government appeals under Article 62 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ) involve some of the most procedurally complex cases in the military justice system. When the Government challenges a military judge’s ruling during an ongoing court-martial, the case unexpectedly shifts from trial litigation to appellate practice. Defense counsel must quickly defend a favorable ruling before the service court of criminal appeals while protecting the accused’s rights and maintaining the integrity of the trial record. The Navy–Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals’ decision in United States v. ScottGeorge demonstrates both the legal standards for these appeals and the importance of experienced appellate advocacy.

The Government’s Interlocutory Appeal

In ScottGeorge, the Government invoked Article 62(a)(1)(B), UCMJ, to challenge a military judge’s order suppressing statements obtained during an NCIS interrogation. Article 62 allows the Government to appeal certain rulings that exclude evidence constituting substantial proof of a material fact. Unlike typical appeals, however, Article 62 proceedings occur while the court-martial is still ongoing. Once the Government files the appeal, the trial is paused, and the appellate court reviews the ruling based on the existing record.

The Glenn Defense Marine Asia (GDMA) scandal—commonly referred to as the “Fat Leonard” case—was one of the largest corruption investigations in the history of the U.S. Navy. The scheme centered on Leonard Glenn Francis, the head of GDMA, a Singapore-based ship husbanding contractor that serviced U.S. Navy vessels throughout the Western Pacific.

Beginning in the early 2000s and continuing for more than a decade, Francis cultivated relationships with Navy officers and contracting officials. In exchange for cash, luxury travel, hotel stays, meals, and the services of prostitutes, certain officials provided GDMA with classified ship schedules, steered port visits toward GDMA-controlled ports, and approved inflated or fraudulent invoices. The government alleged that GDMA overbilled the Navy by tens of millions of dollars.

Francis was arrested in 2013 in a federal sting operation. He pleaded guilty in 2015 in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California to bribery, conspiracy, and fraud-related offenses. His sentencing was delayed for years while he cooperated with prosecutors. Dozens of Navy officers—active and retired—were investigated. More than 30 individuals, including both officers and civilians, ultimately pleaded guilty to various offenses.

Senior Airman Brennen J. Patterson served in the U.S. Air Force and stood before a general court-martial convened at Joint Base San Antonio–Fort Sam Houston, Texas. The military judge accepted Patterson’s plea, pursuant to a plea agreement, to one specification of illegal transportation of an alien within the United States in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1324(a)(1)(A)(ii) as assimilated under Article 134, UCMJ. The judge sentenced Patterson to a bad-conduct discharge, three months’ confinement, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, and reduction to the grade of E-1. The convening authority took no action on the findings but suspended the forfeitures and waived certain automatic forfeitures.

Patterson’s plea agreement withdrew and dismissed with prejudice additional charges, including conspiracy and carrying a handgun during criminal activity. Patterson raised seven issues on appeal:

  1. Whether the court-martial lacked subject-matter jurisdiction.

On Jan. 28, 2026, the Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals (NMCCA) issued its decision in United States v. Poller, affirming both the findings and sentence imposed at general court-martial for Hos- pital Corpsman Third Class (E-4) Chase R. Poller. Poller pleaded guilty to multiple violations of Article 134, UCMJ — specifically receiving, possessing, distributing, and producing child pornography — with a resulting sentence of reduction to E-1, 17 years confinement, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, and a dishonorable discharge. On appeal, Poller challenged only the severity of the confinement portion of his sentence, arguing for reduction to 12 years. The appellate court rejected the claim and affirmed the findings and sentence as both lawful and correct.

While the NMCCA’s published decision is brief and does not delve into fact patterns in detail, it underscores core appellate standards under the UCMJ — particularly the principles that govern sentencing review and the limited scope of sentence appropriateness arguments in the absence of reversible legal error. This case highlights key concepts every military justice practitioner must understand.


Appellate Standards & Sentence Appropriateness

In United States v. Taylor, NMCCA No. 202400313, the United States Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals (NMCCA) delivered a clear message about the limits of circumstantial evidence in CSAM prosecutions when the Government fails to connect digital evidence to the accused beyond a reasonable doubt. Decided 29 January 2026, this unpublished opinion confronts core military justice issues involving digital forensic evidence, factual sufficiency, proper evidentiary findings, and protecting constitutional rights under the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ).

Our team at Cave & Freeburg has repeatedly seen how complex digital evidence cases can devolve into prosecutorial overreach when the Government substitutes inference for proof. The Taylor opinion exemplifies this problem—and more importantly, shows how appellate review should function as a check against convictions unsupported by the evidentiary record.


Case Synopsis: Facts Without Forensic Connection

The Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals’ recent decision in United States v. Tennyson underscores a reality that senior enlisted members and officers cannot afford to ignore: sexual-harassment allegations under Article 92, UCMJ, often turn on regulatory language, not common-law instincts about severity or harm. The case also illustrates why early, experienced defense representation matters when commands rely on broad policy orders rather than traditional punitive articles.

The Case at a Glance

Gunnery Sergeant Eric Tennyson faced a special court-martial for alleged violations of Article 92, UCMJ, based on Marine Corps Order 5354.1E, the Prohibited Activities and Conduct (PAC) Order. The Government charged him with three specifications of sexual harassment arising from separate workplace incidents during his check-in to a new command in October 2020. The military judge, sitting alone, convicted him of two specifications and acquitted him of a third. The adjudged and approved sentence consisted of a reprimand.

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