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IN A GENERAL COURT-MARTIAL SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, U.S. ARMY TRIAL JUDICIARY FORT BRAGG, NORTH CAROLINA UNITED STATES ) Defense Response to Government ) Supplement to Motion in Limine to v. ) Admit Evidence of Injuries in the ) Government Case in Chief SGT Robert B. Bergdahl ) HHC, Special Troops Battalion ) U.S. Army Forces Command ) Fort Bragg, North Carolina 28310 ) 29 November 2016 RELIEF SOUGHT The Defense in the above case requests that the Court deny the Government s Motion to Admit Evidence of Injuries in the Government s Case in Chief. The Defense sees no need for additional oral argument. The prosecution has argued its positions in a written motion and twice during oral argument. The prosecution argues again in its supplement but offers nothing substantially different from what it has already stated. 1 If the Court, however, deems that additional oral argument would be helpful in rendering a decision, the Defense asks for clarification of what matters will be taken up during such argument that have not been taken up previously. BURDEN OF PERSUASION AND BURDEN OF PROOF The Government, as moving party on the motion in limine, has the burden of persuasion. Proof by a preponderance of the evidence is required as to factual matters. R.C.M. 905(c)(1). FACTS The Defense incorporates the facts as they were adduced at the evidentiary hearing on 14 and 15 November 2016 as well as the AR 15-6 investigation submitted as D APP 51. The Defense does not stipulate to the facts as set forth by the prosecution in its original motion or their supplement. 1 The email that transmitted the supplement indicated that the prosecution intends to focus the requested additional oral argument on other evidence it wishes to offer. If it seeks an advance ruling with regard to evidence that was not the subject of the evidentiary hearing on 14 and 15 November 2016 or the pending motion in limine, the prosecution should file a separate motion in limine so the Defense will have fair notice of the issue(s) to be addressed. D APP 52 -#1

LAW AND ARGUMENT The prosecution has failed to meet its burden to establish that the evidence of injuries are relevant to Charge II and its Specification. Furthermore, the probative value of the evidence is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice and confusion of the issues. I. THE PROSECUTION HAS FAILED TO MEET ITS BURDEN TO ESTABLISH THAT THE EVIDENCE OF INJURIES IS RELEVANT TO CHARGE II AND ITS SPECIFICATION In order for evidence of injuries to MSG (R) Allen and Mr. Morita to be relevant, the prosecution bears the burden of proving facts that connect evidence of the injuries to the element of endangerment to TF Yukon or OP Mest. 2 Under Military Rule of Evidence (MRE) 104(b), a trial court neither weighs credibility nor makes a finding that the Government has proved a conditional fact by a preponderance of the evidence. See United States v. Mirandes-Gonzalez, 26 M.J. 411, 413 (C.M.A. 1988). The Court simply examines all the evidence in the case and decides whether the jury could reasonably find the conditional fact by a preponderance of the evidence. Id. at 413-14. While it can be deemed to be a fairly low threshold to establish sufficient evidence of a predicate fact for the purposes of a motion in limine under MRE 104(b), the burden remains a meaningful one. As the Court of Military Appeals admonished in United States v. Stubbs, an offer of proof is not itself evidence. United States v. Stubbs, 23 M.J. 188, 194 (C.M.A. 1987). The Court suggested that rather than rely on mere offers of proof in motions practice, trial Judges should force parties to call the witness, provide valid real and documentary evidence or provide a stipulation. Id. at 195. See also United States v. Vanderwier, 25 M.J. 263 (C.M.A. 1987) (finding that a military Judge abused his discretion in determining that a witness was unavailable to testify at trial based on sparse and stale facts before him). In determining whether the prosecution has met its burden, the legal conclusions must be based on the facts presented at the hearing, not what the parties claim are the facts. In this case, the prosecution has not met its burden of proof because it has not provided evidence of a fact that would support the relevance of injuries of MSG (R) Allen and Mr. Morita to the element of endangerment to TF Yukon or OP Mest. The Specification of Charge II is not that SGT Bergdahl endangered any location or any command. It is specific to TF Yukon and OP Mest. As the following sections of this response will illustrate, no evidence was presented that the two men were located at OP Mest. No evidence was presented that they were part of TF Yukon. No evidence was presented that would lead a reasonable factfinder to conclude that they were OPCON to TF Yukon. Even if the prosecution presented sufficient evidence that they were OPCON to TF Yukon or had any other type of command relationship with TF Yukon, 2 Although the prosecution argued on page 5 of G APP 44 that it intends to offer MSG (R) Allen s and Jonathan Morita s injuries as evidence of endangerment to TF Yukon and OP Mest, the prosecution appears to have abandoned the portion of that proposition which relates to OP Mest. D APP 52 -#2

there is no basis to suggest that they can then be deemed to have been part of TF Yukon. A. The prosecution did not provide sufficient evidence to determine that MSG (R) Allen, SPC Morita or any other members of the ETT were part of TF Yukon No evidence presented at the hearing established that MSG (R) Allen, SPC Morita or any other member of the ETT were part of TF Yukon. The testimony of COL Minalga and LTC (R) Aymat was that the ETTs were part of a completely separate chain of command. The burden is on the Government to establish that the Soldiers were part of TF Yukon and not on the Defense to disprove it. The Government has failed to meet that burden. B. The Government did not provide sufficient evidence that MSG (R) Allen, SPC Morita, or any other members of the ETT were OPCON to TF Yukon. The Government argues that it adduced sufficient evidence that MSG (R) Allen, Mr. Morita, and the other Soldiers of the ETT were OPCON to TF Yukon and therefore were part of TF Yukon. They argue on page 3 of the supplement that COL Campbell testified that the Soldiers were under his OPCON at the time of the mission and that COL Minalga testified that the ETT was OPCON to his battalion. The prosecution misstates the evidence. On cross-examination, COL Campbell affirmed that he did not remember the specific command relationships that existed in Kushamond in July 2009. 3 Therefore, the only evidence from his testimony regarding the Command relationship between the ETT and TF Yukon is that he simply does not know what it was. Furthermore, he testified that the relationship would have been in writing. The Government presented no evidence of such a writing. The prosecution further misstates the evidence when it claims that COL Minalga testified that the ETT was OPCON to his battalion. The Defense recalls that his testimony was, in substance, that he merely believed that there were ETT OPCON to his battalion. He never made a connection between MSG (R) Allen, Mr. Morita and the other ETT personnel who were on the mission in question, on the one hand, and with the ETT that was possibly OPCON to his battalion, on the other. Moreover, on crossexamination, COL Minalga confirmed the following facts: (i) that the command relationships as they existed in 2009 were constantly updated in writing; (ii) that the chart the Government asked the Court to consider from the beginning of June 2009 was stale by July 2009; (iii) that he cannot remember the specific details of the task organization as it existed on 8 July 2009; (iv) that he recalls that the ETTs were part of a 3 The Defense also recalls (but would need the transcript to verify with certainty) that on direct examination COL Campbell merely stated he believed that the ETT members were OPCON. The use of the word believe is far different from stating the matter as fact. In any event, what he meant by believe was clarified during cross-examination when he affirmed that he does not remember the command relationship. D APP 52 -#3

completely separate chain of command prior to September 2009; (v) that he never met MSG (R) Allen or SPC Morita; and (vi) that it would be possible to link the individual Soldiers to specific units with the proper documentation. Bottom line: no writing was ever presented linking those Soldiers with TF Yukon. Furthermore, there was no testimony from COL Minalga that MSG (R) Allen, Mr. Morita, or other Soldiers who were on the mission in question were either part of TF Yukon or OPCON to TF Yukon. The prosecution s contrary assertions are simply that; they are contrary to the evidence. It is not the Defense s burden to establish that the Soldiers were not part of TF Yukon. It is the prosecution s burden to offer some evidence that they were. The Government also argues circumstantially that the ETT was OPCON to TF Yukon because COL Campbell asked it to conduct the specific mission in question and the ETT did so. This overlooks the fact that there are different types of command relationship that would also encompass such a scenario. For example, one command may simply be providing support to another. See Joint Publication 1, Doctrine for the Armed Forces of the United States; Joint Publication 3, Joint Operations. Merely performing a mission that a battalion commander would like to have performed does not provide evidence of the Command relationship that existed between the units. The evidence is not sufficient for a factfinder to determine that the ETT was OPCON to TF Yukon. In addition to the lack of evidence presented by the Government, as the Defense pointed out during oral argument, SSG Walters testified that when his 1SG [Richard Smith] refused to go out on a mission following the incident, COL Campbell stated in substance, then why are you here?. In a sworn statement included as an exhibit in the AR 15-6 investigation into the incident, SSG Walters related that the statement of COL Campbell was, if that s the attitude that you re going to have then you might as well leave. See D App. 51, bates number 5891. In either case, the interaction between COL Campbell and 1SG Smith does not demonstrate an OPCON relationship. As LTC (R) Aymat testified, the relationship of the ETTs to the battlespace owners was one of support, which is what the previously described interaction suggests. For these reasons, the prosecution did not establish an OPCON relationship between the ETTs and TF Yukon. Therefore, even under the prosecution s theory that an OPCON relationship is the equivalent of being part of TF Yukon, the Government has failed to meet its burden. C. The Government has provided no evidence to support the proposition that an OPCON relationship establishes that one Task Force can become a part of another Task Force. Even if the Government offered evidence that MSG (R) Allen, Mr. Morita, and the other members of the ETT on the mission in question were OPCON to TF Yukon, it has not provided any facts nor cited any case law which would support the proposition that the Soldiers would thereby become part of TF Yukon. The Charge is not that SGT Bergdahl endangered any Command at any location. The Charge is specific to TF Yukon and OP Mest. Consequently, the Government would not have met D APP 52 -#4

its burden even if it had adduced evidence that the Soldiers in question were OPCON to TF Yukon. II. THE PROBATIVE VALUE OF THE EVIDENCE OF INJURIES IN QUESTION IS SUBSTANTIALLY OUTWEIGHED BY THE DANGER OF UNFAIR PREJUDICE, CONFUSION OF THE ISSUES, AND WASTE OF TIME Aside from not being relevant for the reasons stated in Point I, evidence of injuries to MSG (R) Allen and Mr. Morita should be excluded pursuant to MRE 403. The probative value of that evidence is substantially diminished based on the intervening causes of the injuries in question. Furthermore, the danger of unfair prejudice and confusion of the issues is extremely high and litigating the issue would be a considerable waste of time. When balanced, the probative value of the evidence is substantially outweighed by these salient countervailing dangers and considerations. A. The probative value of the evidence is substantially diminished because of the intervening causes of the injuries in question. As was made clear during the evidentiary hearing on 14 and 15 November 2016 as well as the 15-6 investigation in evidence as D APP 51, SGT Bergdahl was not the proximate cause of the injuries MSG (R) Allen and Mr. Morita sustained. The mission was so severely flawed in so many respects that the Infantry Officer assigned to conduct the Government s own investigation testified that the mission should never have taken place, even under the circumstances of the DUSTWUN. In contrast to the prosecution s description, the Defense s argument is not limited to the proposition that the mission should not have taken place in the prevailing circumstances. The Defense also submits that the probative value of the injuries is substantially diminished by the intervening causes that were examined at length during the hearing. Because those intervening causes had nothing to do with SGT Bergdahl s actions, the probative value of suggesting that he caused any endangerment is extremely low. But for any number of intervening causes, the injuries would never have occurred. In its oral argument and proffered supplement, the prosecution discounts other intervening causes by focusing on the increased risk it claims was required because of the DUSTWUN. According to the prosecution, any flaws in the mission were caused by SGT Bergdahl s actions. The Government s own AR 15-6 investigator, however, testified persuasively that even under the circumstances of the DUSTWUN, the mission was deeply flawed and should not have taken place. Even COL Campbell testified that he would have assumed that the number of American Soldiers on such a mission would have been in the double-digits. The prosecution s attempts to diminish the credibility of the Army s own AR 15-6 investigator miss the mark. The prosecution has provided no evidence that the conclusions in his report or his testimony are incorrect or would have changed. In fact, following a thorough cross-examination, the investigator strongly stood his ground. D APP 52 -#5

Overall, the evidence adduced at the hearing reveal a deeply flawed mission with numerous contributing and intervening causes for the injuries MSG (R) Allen and Mr. Morita sustained. The probative value of using those injuries as evidence of SGT Bergdahl s responsibility for endangerment of TF Yukon or OP Mest is therefore, at best, extremely limited. B. The danger of unfair prejudice The danger of offering evidence of injuries to MSG (R) Allen and Mr. Morita is that the factfinder will use the evidence for something other than its logical, probative force. See United States v. Owens, 16 M.J. 999 (A.C.M.R. 1983). Evidence of horrific injuries of the kind they suffered has an obvious emotional impact. Therefore, the danger is that a panel would decide the critical issue of endangerment based on that emotional impact and not with regard to the circumstances under which the injuries occurred. The methods of ameliorating the unfair prejudice that the Government proposes are not sufficient. Even if the prosecution limits the extent to which evidence of injuries are presented, the emotional impact would not be sufficiently diminished to tip the balance. That the prosecution could make matters even worse by offering even more unfairly prejudicial evidence (as the supplement remarks at p. 5) is not a valid basis for admitting the evidence. Limiting instructions and voir dire may be enough to tip the scale in favor of admissibility where the probative value is high enough. In this case, however, the probative value of the proffered evidence is extremely low. In effect, the prosecution s arguments are a rejection of MRE 403 rather than an effort to balance the probative value and the contemplated dangers in this particular case. The probative value of the evidence at issue is rather clearly outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice. C. The danger of confusion of the issues An even greater danger is that the proffered evidence confuses the issues. The issue is not whether or not Soldiers were injured; it is whether Soldiers were endangered. Soldiers that were endangered by SGT Bergdahl s alleged misconduct may never have been injured. Conversely, even serious injuries are not evidence either that SGT Bergdahl caused those injuries or of the circumstances which led to them. As the Defense demonstrated at the hearing on 14 and 15 November 2016, numerous intervening and contributing causes led to those circumstances and have nothing to do with what SGT Bergdahl is alleged to have done. When the requisite balance is struck, the probative value of the evidence is substantially outweighed by the danger of confusion of the issues. D. The consideration of waste of time Closely related to the danger of confusing the issues is consideration of the amount of time that would be wasted. Litigating evidence of the injuries, the cause of the injuries, and how those injuries relate specifically to the endangerment of TF Yukon D APP 52 -#6