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Uniform Code of Military Justice

The Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ, 64 Stat. 109, 10 U.S.C. ch. 47) is the foundation of military law in the United States.


Contents

History

On June 30, 1775, the Second Continental Congress established 69 Articles of War to govern the conduct of the Continental Army. On April 10, 1806, the first United States Congress enacted 101 Articles of War (which applied to both the Army and the Navy), which were not significantly revised until over a century later. The military justice system continued to operate under the Articles of War until May 31, 1951, when the Uniform Code of Military Justice went into effect.

The UCMJ was passed by Congress on 5 May 1950, signed into law by President Harry S. Truman, and became effective on 31 May 1951. The word "Uniform" in the Code's title refers to the congressional intent to make military justice uniform or consistent among the armed services.

The UCMJ is found in Title 10, Subtitle A, Part II, Chapter 47 of the United States Code. The current version is printed in the latest version of the Manual for Courts-Martial (2005). Its subchapters are as follows:

Subchapter Title Section Article
I General Provisions 801 1
II Apprehension and Restraint 807 7
III Non-Judicial Punishment 815 15
IV Courts-Martial Jurisdiction 816 16
V Composition of Courts-Martial 822 22
VI Pre-Trial Procedure 830 30
VII Trial Procedure 836 36
VIII Sentences 855 55
IX Post-Trial Procedure and Review of Courts Martial 859 59
X Punitive Articles 877 77
XI Miscellaneous Provisions 935 135
XII Court of Military Appeals 941 141

General Provisions

Subchapter I, "General Provisions" has six sections (articles):

Section Article Title
801 1 Definitions
802 2 Persons subject to this chapter
803 3 Jurisdiction to try certain personnel
804 4 Dismissed officer's right to trial by court-martial
805 5 Territorial applicability of this chapter
806 6 Judge advocates and legal officers
806a 6a Investigation and disposition of maters pertaining to the fitness of military judges

Article 1, "definitions," defines terms used in the rest of the UCMJ: Judge Advocate General, "Navy," "Marine Corps," "Coast Guard," "officer in charge," "superior commissioned officer," "cadet," "midshipman," "military," "accuser," "military judge," "law specialist," "legal officer," "judge advocate," and "record."

Subchapter X, "Punitive Articles," is the subchapter that details offenses under the uniform code:

Reference

DA Pam 27-9 Military Judges Benchbook (.PDF)

See also

Categories


United States federal defense and national security legislation | Military of the United States | Military justice

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