Litigator Libations

Sam Castanien & Trevor Ward

Updates and tips on defensive litigation in military justice including discussing recent appellate decisions and providing advocacy tips.

  1. 17 ABR

    106 - A Whole Lot of “Chutzpah”

    Send us Fan Mail This week, Sam and Trevor cover two cases, United States v. Braum, __M.J.__, No. 25-0046/AF, 2026 CAAF LEXIS 343 (C.A.A.F. Apr. 8, 2026), and United States v. Talley, No. ACM 40828, 2026 CCA LEXIS 171 (A.F. Ct. Crim. App. Apr. 9, 2026). In Braum, another divided Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces (CAAF) found there was no prejudice when the Government refused to turn over the complaining witness’s cellphone extraction in its possession, custody, or control. The duo lament how the lead opinion did not answer whether the military judge erred by failing to order disclosure of the phone to the defense. But the two are hopeful that the CAAF may soon answer that question in United States v. Wicks, __M.J.__, No. 26-0062/AR, 2026 CAAF LEXIS 302 (C.A.A.F. Apr. 3, 2026).  In better news, the Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals found that the military judge abused his discretion by excluding evidence under Mil. R. Evid. 412 and set aside the finding of guilt for a sexual assault conviction. As Sam and Trevor explain, both cases deal with complaining witnesses turning their rights into a sword against the accused and what trial defenders can do to disarm such “chutzpa[dik]” witnesses. See Braum, __M.J.__, No. 25-0046/AF, 2026 CAAF LEXIS 343, at *28 (Ohlson, C.J., dissenting) (labeling the colloquial terms for the victim’s approach as “chutzpah”). Note: We apologize for any audio issues you may notice during listening. We are aware of the microphone issues and are working to fix it for future episodes. As always, we welcome your questions, comments, and feedback at litigator.libations@gmail.com!

    31 min
  2. 6 MAR

    103 - Improper Argument Strikes Again

    Send us Fan Mail This week, Sam and Trevor start off by answering a listener question about one of last episode’s cases: United States v. Kruse, No. 202500370, 2026 CCA LEXIS 13 (N-M Ct. Crim. App. Jan. 21, 2026). After a brief recap and debate, the two tackle United States v. Matti, No. 25-0148, 2026 CAAF LEXIS 189 (C.A.A.F. Feb. 17, 2026), a recent Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces (CAAF) decision on improper argument. Matti reveals the frustration of the CAAF judges, who appear tired of repeatedly dealing with the same improper arguments by Government counsel. To educate the field, the CAAF published an appendix to Matti, which un-exhaustively lists twenty-two improper arguments, and encouraged all military judges and counsel to read the appendix to protect against future errors.  But a week after Matti, the Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals issued United States v. Kindred, No. ACM 40607 (f rev), 2026 CCA LEXIS 87 (A.F. Ct. Crim. App. Feb. 24, 2026). In this case, the Air Force Court seemingly disagreed with the CAAF’s determination that certain arguments were improper. Sam and Trevor discuss Kindred and how the Air Force Court got it right for at least one improper argument that implicated constitutional rights, but got it wrong for others.        Questions, comments, concerns? Send them our way at litigator.libations@gmail.com! (Since, apparently, we can’t respond to Buzzsprout fan mail immediately…)

    45 min

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Updates and tips on defensive litigation in military justice including discussing recent appellate decisions and providing advocacy tips.

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