Judge Advocate General's Corps Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
- This article is in reference to the U.S. JAG Corps. For alternate meanings, see Judge Advocate General's Corps (disambiguation).
- United States Air Force Judge Advocate General's Corps
- United States Army Judge Advocate General's Corps
- United States Navy Judge Advocate General's Corps
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2 Court martial 3 Appeals process 4 See also 5 External links |
the Uniform Code of Military Justice, also known as UCMJ, is the primary legal code through which all internal military affairs of the United States are governed. It was created by an act of Congress in 1951 in order to establish identical systems of courts martial in all branches of the nation's armed forces. In addition to the Uniform Code of Military Justice, personnel are subject to the terms of the Constitution and individual state laws where applicable.
The forum through which judicial cases are tried in the nation's armed forces is the court martial, the name given to a panel of military officers selected to serve similar capacities of a civilian jury. The Uniform Code of Military Justice outlines three distinct typed of courts martial.
The Uniform Code of Military Justice provides several tiers of appeal. An initial appeal may be reviewed by the convening judge of a court martial. A second tier of appeal is the Court of Military Appeals, a five member civilian panel appointed by the President of the United States. Sentences involving dismissal, discharge or confinement of over a year is automatically sent to the Court of Military Appeals. Death sentences issued by a court martial is automatically sent to the President of the United States for appeal.
This is an Article on Judge Advocate General's Corps. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Judge Advocate General's Corps Military law
Court martial
General court martial
Special court martial
Summary court martial
Appeals process
See also
External links
