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Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Rape Charge Dropped Against Officer Represented by Attorney Richard Stevens

Recently, a military officer defended by attorney Richard Stevens had the rape charge he faced dropped by the government. After investigation and witness interviews by the defense, we litigated the Article 32 hearing and exposed the inconsistencies and credibility issues with the claim, the motivations to fabricate and, generally, the weaknesses in the rape case. As a result of our investigation and litigation of the pretrial Article 32 hearing, the Article 32 Investigating Officer recommended dropping the rape allegation, and that recommendation was followed - the rape allegation was dropped by the government. The maximum authorized punishment for a rape conviction would have been life in prison without the possibility of parole.

For clients represented/defended by Richard Stevens, that brings to nine, the number of military rape, sexual assault and sexual offense allegation cases in the last few years which did not result in a court-martial conviction for the government – either because of withdrawal, dismissal or because the client was found not guilty. Please see previous blog posts for descriptions of those cases.

While these criminal cases were successfully defended, it is important to understand that every case has different facts, and success in previous cases does not guarantee success in any particular future case. No military lawyer or civilian defense lawyer, including those who specialize in military law, can guarantee the outcome of any military trial. For more information on the military justice system, please see our other blog posts.

By: Attorney Richard V. Stevens
Civilian criminal defense lawyer and military defense lawyer
Military Defense Law Offices of Richard V. Stevens, PC
http://www.militaryadvocate.com

Blog postscript: Attorney Frank Spinner and I (attorney Richard Stevens) are former active duty military lawyers (JAG). Our perspectives and advice, therefore, are based upon our experience as military defense lawyers and as civilian criminal defense lawyers practicing exclusively in the area of military law. This blog addresses issues in military law, military justice, military discipline, military defense, court-martial practice, the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ) and other military and/or legal topics. Nothing posted in this blog should be substituted for legal advice in any particular case. If you seek legal advice for a particular case, please contact The Law Offices of Richard V. Stevens & The Law Office of Frank J. Spinner for a free consultation.

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