The Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals returned to United States v. Reimonenq for a second time and affirmed the findings and sentence. The opinion carries three practical lessons for any service member facing a court-martial: a suppression win can reshape plea negotiations, a broad waiver clause can end later appellate review, and a military judge may rely on a strong R.C.M. 706 record when accepting a guilty plea.
For Cave & Freeburg, LLP, the case also shows why an accused should bring experienced military defense counsel into the case early. Trial litigation, plea negotiations, mental-health evidence, and appellate preservation do not operate in separate boxes. Each decision changes the next one. A military defense lawyer who understands both trial and appellate practice can use that reality to protect the client when the case turns quickly.
Court-Martial Trial Practice Blog










