J’recuse (I recuse)

Why Judicial Recusal Protects You in a court-martial

A Cave & Freeburg, Military Lawyers, Client Explainer

When you face investigation, adverse administrative action, or court-martial, one principle stands above all others: your case must be heard by a fair and impartial judge. The military justice system—like every American court—recognizes that justice collapses when a judge appears biased or influenced. Recusal, the process by which a judge steps aside, protects your right to a neutral decision-maker.

At Cave & Freeburg, we evaluate every case for potential judicial or command-related bias (unlawful influence under UCMJ art. 37). Understanding how recusal works helps recognize when the system must act to preserve fairness.


Why Recusal Matters for Service Members

Military judges carry substantial authority. They make rulings that shape your entire case. They rule on motions to suppress evidence, admissibility of statements for or against you, whether you can have an expert consultant or witness, and impose a sentence if convicted. If the judge has a prior relationship with witnesses, has expressed opinions about your case, or holds a position that creates pressure to reach a particular outcome, your right to a fair trial is at risk.

Recusal safeguards that right. When a judge steps aside, the system acknowledges that justice requires distance from potential influence.


The Legal Standard: Fairness You Can See and Feel

Every service applies a version of R.C.M. 902, which requires recusal when a judge’s impartiality “might reasonably be questioned.” This is an objective test—what a reasonable observer would think—rather than a subjective belief about whether the judge feels fair.

Federal courts enforce the same idea through 28 U.S.C. § 455, and the Supreme Court has long emphasized that the judiciary must remain free of both actual bias and the appearance of bias. The message is simple: no one should doubt the neutrality of the decision-maker in your case.

Case law based on the Constitution and decisions of the Courts of Criminal Appeals and the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces apply to recusal decisions at the time of trial and on appeal.


When Recusal Becomes a Constitutional Requirement

In rare but serious cases, the Constitution itself requires a judge to step aside. The Supreme Court made this clear in Caperton when it held that due process is violated if a judge sits on a case involving someone who made massive financial or political contributions to help elect that judge.

The Court described this as an “extraordinary” situation—an example where the risk of unfairness was so severe that the Constitution intervened.

Military judges are not elected, but they operate within a hierarchical command environment. When senior leaders comment on a case, when a judge has prior involvement in related investigations, or when institutional pressures threaten neutrality, Caperton principles remind the system that constitutional fairness still sets the floor.

In the unlikely event that Captain (Senator) Kelly faces a court-martial, the independence and fairness of the military judge will be front and center.


Vacating a Judgment: The Liljeberg Framework

Even when bias does not rise to the level of a constitutional violation, a judge may still have violated the recusal rule. In Liljeberg, the Supreme Court held that a court can vacate a judgment if the judge should have recused but did not. The analysis focuses on:

  1. The risk of injustice to you

  2. The risk of injustice in future cases

  3. The risk of undermining public confidence in the military justice system

This test applies frequently in practice. At Cave & Freeburg, we use it when we evaluate whether an adverse ruling should be challenged on appeal.


Examples of Recusal Issues in Military Cases

You may face a recusal problem if:

  • The judge previously served as an SJA or prosecutor in a related case

  • The judge made public comments about your offense category

  • Senior leaders have expressed desired outcomes while the judge is in their rating chain

  • The judge has personal relationships with key witnesses

  • The judge participated in pre-trial investigative steps

  • Command influence creates pressure that a reasonable observer would view as compromising neutrality

These situations are not abstract. They occur regularly across services and have reversed outcomes in high-profile cases.


Cave & Freeburg Protects You

We assess recusal from day one. Our team reviews the judge’s background, prior roles, public statements, and any connections to your command or witnesses. We file tailored motions to identify bias, and we protect the record so appellate courts can act if the trial court fails to.

Our approach ensures that your case is heard by a judge who meets the neutrality standards required by the Constitution, the Uniform Code of Military Justice, and the public’s expectation of fairness.


Why Recusal Strengthens Your Case

Recusal is not a sign of weakness in the system—it is a sign that the system values justice. When a military judge steps aside appropriately:

  • Your rights are protected

  • The trial becomes more credible

  • The case becomes less vulnerable on appeal

  • The public can trust the result

A fair process is essential to a fair outcome.


Bottom Line for Service Members

If you believe the judge in your case may not be impartial, you are not powerless. Recusal rules exist to protect you. At Cave & Freeburg, we know how to raise these issues effectively and strategically, and we stand ready to challenge bias wherever it threatens your case.

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