United States v. Howard, NMCCA No. 202400300 (Dec. 18, 2025)

1. Charges and Sentence

Charges (Plea):

  • One specification of violating a lawful general order (fraternization) in violation of Article 92, UCMJ.

  • One specification of false official statement (lying to Naval Criminal Investigative Service [NCIS]) in violation of Article 107, UCMJ.

  • (A second false official statement specification was withdrawn pursuant to a plea agreement.)

Sentence (Special Court-Martial):

  • Adjudged by military judge sitting alone on 28 May 2024: reduction to paygrade E-6.

  • Plea agreement limited punishment: no punitive discharge, no confinement, no forfeitures, no fine.

  • Military judge recommended convening authority suspend reduction below E-7 for four months; convening authority took no action on the sentence.


2. Issue Presented

Single appellate issue:

  • Whether the adjudged sentence was inappropriately severe in light of the appellant’s service record and character.


3. Analysis of the Opinion

Standard of Review

  • NMCCA reviews sentence appropriateness de novo. The court may affirm only findings and parts of a sentence “correct in law and … should be approved” based on the whole record. Courts are not authorized to engage in acts of clemency.

Application to Factual Record

  • Appellant was a 21-year veteran serving as deck department leading chief petty officer on USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72) when the fraternization offense occurred with a subordinate Sailor.

  • The fraternization offense involved consensual sexual relations with a subordinate who visited him as a mentor.

  • Appellant lied to NCIS during the investigation, which resulted in the false official statement charge to which he pled guilty.

Appellate Court Reasoning

  • The appellate court weighed nature and seriousness of offenses against appellant’s character evidence, including performance evaluations and letters supporting mitigation.

  • The court noted the plea agreement’s limitations on sentence (no punitive discharge or confinement), and emphasized that appellant’s acceptance of the agreed sentence strengthens the appropriateness determination.

  • Contrary to appellant’s argument suggesting prosecutorial imbalance, the court observed that appellant neither raised voluntariness concerns at trial nor claimed a coercive plea.

  • The court upheld the sentence, finding it not inappropriately severe and consistent with individualized consideration of offense gravity and offender character.

Holding

  • The NMCCA affirmed both the findings and the sentence, concluding no material prejudice to appellant’s substantial rights.


4. Primary Law Used

Authority Application
Articles 59(a) & 66(c), UCMJ (2016) Governs appellate review authority and sentence appropriateness criteria.
Article 92, UCMJ (Violation of Order) Basis for fraternization specification (violation of lawful general order).
Article 107, UCMJ (False Official Statement) Basis for false statement specification.
Rule for Courts-Martial 1002(c) Factors for sentencing consideration.
Cases Interpreting Sentence Appropriateness United States v. Baier, Snelling, Healy, and Widak (principles governing de novo review and limits on clemency review).

Cave & Freeburg Expertise

Cave & Freeburg’s military justice team has deep experience evaluating and litigating sentence appropriateness issues under Articles 59 and 66, UCMJ before both appellate courts and at courts-martial. Our practitioners have guided clients through complex plea negotiations, tailored argumentation on character evidence and sentencing factors, and crafted persuasive filings on appeal when sentence severity is challenged. Should you face similar appellate or trial issues involving pleas, sentencing limitations, or severity disputes, Cave & Freeburg offers strategic advocacy grounded in detailed understanding of UCMJ authorities, precedent, and appellate standards.

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