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SUBCHAPTER VII. TRIAL PROCEDURE
836.
36. President may prescribe rules
837. 37.
Unlawful influencing the action of the court.
838.
38. Duties of trial counsel and defense counsel.
839. 39. Sessions.
840. 40. Continuances.
841. 41. Challenges.
842. 42. Oaths.
843. 43. Statute of
limitations.
844. 44. Former jeopardy.
845. 45. Pleas of the accused.
846. 46. Opportunity to obtain witnesses and other evidence.
847. 47. Refusal to
appear or testify.
848. 48. Contempt's.
849. 49. Depositions.
850.
50. Admissibility of records of courts of inquiry.
850a.
50a. Defense of lack of mental responsibility
851. 51. Voting and rulings.
852. 52. Number of votes
required.
853. 53. Court to announce
action.
854. 54. Record of trial.
836.
ART 36. PRESIDENT MAY PRESCRIBE RULES
(a) Pretrial, trial, and post trial procedures, including
modes of proof, for cases arising under this chapter triable in
courts-martial, military commissions and other military
tribunals, and procedures for courts of inquiry, may be
prescribed by the President by regulations which shall, so far
as he considers practicable, apply the principles of law and the
rules of evidence generally recognized in the trial of criminal
cases in the United States district courts, but which may not be
contrary to or inconsistent with this chapter.
(b) All rules and regulations made under this article shall
be uniform insofar as practicable and shall be reported to
Congress.
837. ARTICLE 37. UNLAWFULLY INFLUENCING ACTION OF COURT
(a) No authority convening a general, special, or summary
court-martial, nor any other commanding officer, may censure,
reprimand, or admonish the court or any member, military judge,
or counsel thereof, with respect to the findings or sentence
adjudged by the court, or with respect to any other exercises of
its or his functions in the conduct of the proceedings. No
person subject to this chapter may attempt to coerce or, by any
unauthorized means, influence the action of a court-martial or
any other military tribunal or any member thereof, in reaching
the findings or sentence in any case, or the action of any
convening, approving, or reviewing authority with respect to his
judicial acts. The foregoing provisions of the subsection shall
not apply with respect to (1) general instructional or
informational courses in military justice if such courses are
designed solely for the purpose of instructing members of a
command in the substantive and procedural aspects of
courts-martial, or (2) to statements and instructions given in
open court by the military judge, president of a special
court-martial, or counsel.
(b) In the preparation of an effectiveness, fitness, or
efficiency report on any other report or document used in whole
or in part for the purpose of determining whether a member of
the armed forces is qualified to be advanced, in grade, or in
determining the assignment or transfer of a member of the armed
forces or in determining whether a member of the armed forces
should be retained on active duty, no person subject to this
chapter may, in preparing any such report (1) consider or
evaluate the performance of duty of any such member, as counsel,
represented any accused before a court-martial.
838. ARTICLE 38. DUTIES OF TRIAL COUNSEL AND DEFENSE COUNSEL
(a) The trial counsel of a general or special court-martial
shall prosecute in the name of the United States, and shall,
under the direction of the court, prepare the record of the
proceedings.
(b)
(1) The accused has the right to be represented in his defense before a general or special court-martial or at an
investigation under section 832 of this title (article 32) as
provided in this subsection.
(2) The accused may be represented by civilian counsel if
provided by him.
(3) The accused may be represented--
(A) by military counsel detailed under section 827 of this
title (article 27); or
(B) by military counsel of his own selection if that counsel
is reasonably available (as determined under regulations
prescribed under paragraph (7)).
(4) If the accused is represented by civilian counsel,
military counsel detailed or selected under paragraph (3) shall
act as associate counsel unless excused at the request of the
accused.
(5) Except as provided under paragraph (6), if the accused is
represented by military counsel of his own selection under
paragraph (3)(B), any military counsel detailed under paragraph
(3)(A) shall be excused.
(6) The accused is not entitled to be represented by more
than one military counsel. However, the person authorized under
regulations prescribed under section 827 of this title (article
27) to detail counsel in his sole discretion--
(A) may detail additional military counsel as assistant
defense counsel; and
(B) if the accused is represented by military counsel of his
own selection under paragraph (3)(B), may approve a request from
the accused that military counsel detailed under paragraph
(3)(A) act as associate defense counsel.
(7) The Secretary concerned shall, by regulation, define
"reasonably available" for the purpose of paragraph (3)(B) and
establish procedures for determining whether the military
counsel selected by an accused under that paragraph is
reasonably available. Such regulations may not prescribe any
limitation based on the reasonable availability of counsel
solely on the grounds that the counsel selected by the accused
if from an armed force other than the armed force of which the
accuse is a member. To the maximum extent practicable, such
regulations shall establish uniform policies among the armed
forces while recognizing the differences in the circumstances
and needs of the various armed forces. The Secretary concerned
shall submit copies of regulations prescribed under this
paragraph to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and
House of Representatives.
(c) In any court-martial proceeding resulting in a
conviction, the defense counsel-
(1) may foreword for attachment to the record of proceedings
a brief of such matters as he determines should be considered in
behalf of the accused on review (including any objections to the
contents of the record which he considers appropriate);
(2) may assist the accused in the submission of any mater
under section 860 of this title (article 60); and
(3) may take other action authorized by this chapter.
(d) An assistant trial counsel of a general court-martial
may, under the direction of the trial counsel or when he is
qualified to be a trial counsel as required by section 827 of
this title (article 27), perform any duty imposed by law,
regulation, or the custom of the service upon the trial counsel
of the court. An assistant trial counsel of a special court-
martial may perform any duty of the trial counsel.
(e) An assistant defense counsel of a general or special
court-martial may, under the direction of the defense counsel or
when he is qualified to be the defense counsel as required by
section 827 of this title (article 27), perform any duty imposed
by law, regulation, or custom of the service upon counsel for
the accused.
839. ARTICLE 39. SESSIONS
(a) At any time after the service of charges which have been
referred for trial by court-martial composed of a military judge
and members, the military judge may, subject to section 835 of
this title (article 35), call the court into session without the
presence of the members for the purpose of--
(1) hearing and determining motions raising defenses or
objections which are capable of determination without trial of
the issues raised by a plea of not guilty;
(2) hearing and ruling upon any matter which may be ruled
upon by the military judge under this chapter, whether or not
the matter is appropriate for later consideration or decision by
the members of the court;
(3) if permitted by regulations of the Secretary concerned,
holding the arraignment and receiving the pleas of the accused;
and
(4) performing any other procedural function which may be
performed by the military judge under this chapter or under
rules prescribed pursuant to section 836 of this title (article
36) and which does not require the presence of the members of
the court.
These proceedings shall be conducted in the presence of the
accused, the defense counsel, and the trial counsel and shall be
made part of the record.
(b) When the members of a court-martial deliberate or vote,
only the members may be present. All other proceedings,
including any other consultation of the members of the court
with counsel or the military judge, shall be made a part of the
record and shall be in the presence of the accused, the defense
counsel, the trial counsel, and in cases in which a military
judge has been detailed to the court, the military judge.
840. ARTICLE 40.
CONTINUANCES.
The military judge or a court-martial without a military
judge may, for reasonable cause, grant a continuance to any
party for such time, and as often, as may appear to be just.
841. ARTICLE 41.
CHALLENGES
(a) The military judge and members of a general or special
court- martial may be challenged by the accused or the trial
counsel for cause stated to the court. The military judge, or if
none, the court, shall determine the relevance and validity of
the challenges for cause, and may not receive a challenge to
more than one person at a time. Challenges by the trial counsel
shall ordinarily be presented and decided before those by the
accused are offered.
(b) Each accused and the trial counsel is entitled to one
preemptory challenge, but the military judge may not be
challenged except for cause.
842. ARTICLE 42. OATHS
(a) Before performing their respective duties, military
judges, members of general and special courts-martial, trial
counsel, assistant trial counsel, defense counsel, assistant or
associate defense counsel, reporters, and interpreters shall
take an oath to perform their duties faithfully. The form of the
oath, the time and place of the taking thereof, the manner of
recording the same, and whether the oath shall be taken for all
cases in which these duties are to be performed or for a
particular case, shall be as prescribed in regulations of the
Secretary concerned. These regulations may provide that an oath
to perform faithfully duties as a military judge, trial counsel,
assistant trial counsel, defense counsel, or assistant or
associate defense counsel may be taken at any time by any judge
advocate or other person certified to be qualified or competent
for duty, and if such an oath is taken it need not again be
taken at the time the judge advocate, or other person is
detailed to that duty.
(b) Each witness before a court-martial shall be examined on
oath.
* 843.
ARTICLE 43. STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
(a) A person charged with absence without leave or missing
movement in time of war, or with any offense punishable by
death, may be tried at any time without limitation.
(b)
(1) Except as otherwise provided in this section
(article), a person charged with an offense is not liable to be
tried by court-martial if the offense was committed more than
five years before the receipt of sworn charges and
specifications by an officer exercising summary court- martial
jurisdiction over the command.
(2) A person charged with an offense is not liable to be
punished under section 815 of this title (article 15) if the
offense was committed more than two years before the imposition
of punishment.
(c) Periods in which the accused is absent without authority
or fleeing from justice shall be excluded in computing the
period of limitation prescribed in this section (article).
(d) Periods in which the accused was absent from territory in
which the United States has the authority to apprehend him, or
in the custody of civil authorities, or in the hands of the
enemy, shall be excluded in computing the period of limitation
prescribed in this article.
(e) For an offense the trial of which in time of war is
certified to the President by the Secretary concerned to be
detrimental to the prosecution of the war or inimical to the
national security, the period of limitation prescribed in this
article is extended to six months after the termination of
hostilities as proclaimed by the President or by a joint
resolution of Congress.
(f) When the United States is at war, the running of any
statute of limitations applicable to any offense under this
chapter--
(1) involving fraud or attempted fraud against the United
States or any agency thereof in any manner, whether by
conspiracy or not;
(2) committed in connection with the acquisition, care,
handling, custody, control, or disposition of any real or
personal property of the United States; or
(3) committed in connection with the negotiation,
procurement, award, performance, payment, interim financing,
cancellation, or other termination or settlement, of any
contract, subcontract, or purchase order which is connected with
or related to the prosecution of the war, or with any
disposition of termination inventory by any war contractor or
Government agency;
is suspended until three years after the termination of
hostilities as proclaimed by the President or by a joint
resolution of Congress.
(g)
(1) If charges or specifications are dismissed or
insufficient for any cause and the period prescribed by the
applicable statute of limitations--
(A) has expired; or
(B) will expire within 180 days after the date of dismissal
of the charges and specifications, trial and punishment under
new charges and specifications are not bared by the statute of
limitations if the conditions specified in paragraph (2) are
met.
(2) The conditions referred to in paragraph (1) are that the
new charges and specifications must--
(A) be received by an officer exercising summary
court-martial jurisdiction over the command within 180 days
after dismissal of the charges or specifications; and
(B) allege the same acts or omissions that were alleged in
the dismissed charges or specifications (or allege acts or
omissions that were included in the dismissed charges or
specifications).
844. ARTICLE 44.
FORMER JEOPARDY
(a) No person may, without his consent, be tried a second
time for the same offense.
(b) No proceeding in which the accused has been found guilty
by court- martial upon any charge or specification is a trial in
the sense of this article until the finding of guilty has become
final after review of the case has been fully completed.
(c) A proceeding which, after the introduction of evidence
but before a finding, is dismissed or terminated by the
convening authority or motion of the prosecution for failure of
available evidence or witnesses without any fault of the accused
is a trial in the sense of this article.
845.
ARTICLE
45. PLEAS OF THE ACCUSED
(a) If an accused after arraignment makes an irregular
pleading, or after a plea of guilty sets up matter inconsistent
with the plea, or if it appears that he has entered the plea of
guilty improvidently or through lack of understanding of its
meaning and effect, or if he fails or refuses to plead, a plea
of not guilty shall be entered in the record, and the court
shall proceed as though he had pleaded not guilty.
(b) A plea of guilty by the accused may not be received to
any charge or specification alleging an offense for which the
death penalty may be adjudged. With respect to any other charge
or specification to which a plea of guilty has been made by the
accused and accepted by the military judge or by a court-martial
without a military judge, a finding of guilty of the charge or
specification may, if permitted by regulations of the Secretary
concurrence, be entered immediately whither vote. This finding
shall constitute the finding of the court unless the plea of
guilty is withdrawn prior to announcement of the sentence, in
which event the proceedings shall continue as though the accused
had pleaded not guilty.
846. ARTICLE 46. OPPORTUNITY TO OBTAIN WITNESSES AND OTHER EVIDENCE
The trial counsel, the defense counsel, and the court-martial
shall have equal opportunity to obtain witnesses and other
evidence in accordance with such regulations as the President
may prescribe. Process issued in court- martial cases to compel
witnesses to appear and testify and to compel the production of
other evidence shall be similar to that which courts of the
Unites States having criminal jurisdiction may lawfully issue
and shall run to any part of the United States, or the
Territories, Commonwealths, and possessions.
847.
ARTICLE 47. REFUSAL TO APPEAR OR TESTIFY
(a) Any person not subject to this who--
(1) has been dully subpoenaed to appear as a witness before a
court- martial, military commission, court of inquiry, or any
other military court or board, or before any military or civil
officer designated to take a deposition to be read in evidence
before such a court, commission, or board;
(2) has been dully paid or tendered the fees and mileage of a
witness at the rates allowed to witnesses attending the courts
of the United States; and
(3) willfully neglects or refuses to appear, or refuses to
qualify as a witness or to testify or to produce any evidence
which that person may have been legally subpoenaed to produce;
is guilty of an offense against the United States.
(b) Any person who commits an offense named in subsection (a)
shall be tried on information in a United States district court
or in a court of original criminal jurisdiction in any of the
Territories, Commonwealths, or possessions of the United States,
and jurisdiction is conferred upon those courts for that
purpose. Upon conviction, such person shall be punished by a
fine of not more than $500, or imprisonment for not more than
six months, or both.
(c) The United States attorney or the officer prosecuting for
the United States in any such court of original criminal
jurisdiction shall, upon the certification of the facts to him
by the military court, commission, court of inquiry, or board,
file an information against and prosecute any person violating
this article.
(d) The fees and mileage of witnesses shall be advanced or
paid out of the appropriations for the compensation of
witnesses.
848. ARTICLE 48.
CONTEMPT'S
A court-martial, provost court, or military commission may
punish for contempt any person who uses any menacing word, sign,
or gesture in its presence, or who disturbs its proceedings by
any riot or disorder. The punishment may not exceed confinement
for 30 days or a fine of $100 or both.
849. ARTICLE 49.
DEPOSITIONS
(a) At any time after charges have been signed as provided in
section 830 of this title (article 30), any party may take oral
or written depositions unless the military judge or
court-martial without a military judge hearing the case or, if
the case is not being heard, an attorney competent to convene a
court-martial for the trial of those charges forbids it for good
cause. If a deposition is to be taken before charges are
referred for trial, such authority may designate commissioned
officers to represent the prosecution and the defense and may
authorize those officers to take the deposition of any witness.
(b) The party at whose instance a deposition is to be taken
shall give to every other party reasonable written notice of the
time and place for taking the deposition.
(c) Depositions may be taken before and authenticated by any
military or civilian authorized by the laws of the United States
or by the laws of the place where the deposition is taken to
administer oaths.
(d) A duly authenticated deposition taken upon reasonable
notice to other parties, so far as otherwise admissible under
the rules of evidence, may be read in evidence or, in the case
of audiotape, videotape, or similar material, may be played in
evidence before any military court or commission in any case not
capital, or in any proceeding before a court of inquiry or
military board, if it appears--
(1) that the witness resides or is beyond the State,
Territory, Commonwealth, or District of Columbia in which the
court, commission, or board is ordered to sit, or beyond 100
miles from the place of trial or hearing;
(2) that the witness by reason of death, age, sickness,
bodily infirmity, imprisonment, military necessity, non
amenability to process, or other reasonable cause is unable or
refuses to appear and testify in person at the place of trial or
hearing; or
(3) that the present whereabouts of the witness is unknown.
(e) Subject to subsection (d), a deposition may be read in
evidence or, in the case of audiotape, videotape, or similar
material, may be played in evidence in any case in which the
death penalty is authorized but is not mandatory, whenever the
convening authority directs that the case be treated as not
capital, and in such a case a sentence of death may not be
adjudged by the court-martial.
850. ARTICLE 50. ADMISSIBILITY OF RECORDS OF COURTS OF INQUIRY
(a) In any case not capital and not extending to the
dismissal of a commissioned officer, the sworn testimony,
contained in the duly authenticated record of proceedings of a
court of inquiry, of a person whose oral testimony cannot be
obtained, may, if otherwise admissible under the rules of
evidence, be read in evidence by any party before a court-
martial or military commission if the accused was a party before
the court of inquiry and if the same issue was involved or if
the accused consents to the introduction of such evidence.
(b) such testimony may be read in evidence only by the
defense in capital cases extending to the dismissal of a
commissioned officer.
(c) Such testimony may also be read in evidence before a
court of inquiry or a military board.
850a.
ARTICLE 50a. DEFENSE OF LACK OF MENTAL RESPONSIBILITY
(a) It is an affirmative defense in a trial by court-martial
that, at the time of the commission of the acts constituting the
offense, the accused, as a result of a sever mental disease or
defect, was unable to appreciate the nature and quality or the
wrongfulness of the acts. Mental disease or defect does not
otherwise constitute a defense.
(b) The accused has the burden of proving the defense of lack
of mental responsibility by clear and convincing evidence.
(c) Whenever lack of mental responsibility of the accused
with respect to an offense is properly at issue, the military
judge, or the president of the court-martial without a military
judge, shall instruct the members of the court as to the defense
of lack of mental responsibility under this section and shall
charge them to find the accused--
(1) guilty;
(2) not guilty; or
(3) not guilty only by reason of lack of mental
responsibility.
(d) Subsection (c) does not apply to a court-martial composed
of a military judge only. In the case of a court-martial
composed of a military judge only, whenever lack of mental
responsibility of the accused with respect to an offense is
properly at issue, the military judge shall find the accused--
(1) guilty;
(2) not guilty; or
(3) not guilty only by reason of lack of mental
responsibility.
(e) Notwithstanding the provision of section 852 of this
title (article 52), the accused shall be found not guilty only
by reason of lack of mental responsibility if--
(1) a majority of the members of the court-martial present at
the time the vote is taken determines that the defense of lack
of mental responsibility has been established; or
(2) in the case of court-martial composed of a military judge
only, the military judge determines that the defense of lack of
mental responsibility has been established.
851.
ARTICLE 51.
VOTING AND RULINGS
(a) Voting by members of a general or special court-martial
on the findings and on the sentence, and by members of a
court-martial without a military judge upon questions of
challenge, shall be by secret written ballot. The junior member
of the court shall count the votes. The count shall be checked
by the president, who shall forthwith announce the result of the
ballot to the members of the court.
(b) The military judge and, except for questions of
challenge, the president of a court-martial without a military
judge shall ruse upon all questions of law and all interlocutory
questions arising during the proceedings. Any such ruling made
by the military judge upon any question of lay or any
interlocutory question other than the factual issue of mental
responsibility of the accused, or by the president of a
court-martial without a military judge upon any question of law
other than a motion for a finding of not guilty, is final and
constitutes the ruling of the court. However, the military judge
or the president of a court-martial without a military judge may
change his ruling at any time during the trial. Unless the
ruling is final, if any member objects thereto, the court shall
be cleared and closed and the question decided by a voice vote
as provided in section 852 of this title (article 52), beginning
with the junior in rank.
(c) Before a vote is taken of the findings, the military
judge or the president of a court-martial without a military
judge shall, in the presence of the accused and counsel,
instruct the members of the court as to the elements of the
offense and charge them--
(1) that the accused must be presumed to be innocent until
his guilt is established by legal and competent evidence beyond
reasonable doubt;
(2) that in the case being considered, if there is a
reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the accused, the doubt must
be resolved in favor of the accused and he must be acquitted;
(3) that, if there is reasonable doubt as to the degree of
guilt, the finding must be in a lower degree as to which there
is no reasonable doubt; and
(4) that the burden of proof to establish the guilt of the
accused beyond a reasonable doubt is upon the United States.
(d) Subsections (a), (b), and (c) do not apply to a
court-martial composed of a military judge only. The military
judge of such a court- martial shall determine all questions of
law and fact arising during the proceedings, and, if the accused
is convicted, adjudge an appropriate sentence. The military
judge of such a court-martial shall make a general finding and
shall in addition on request find the facts specially. If an
opinion or memorandum of decision is field, it will be
sufficient if the findings of fact appear therein.
852.
ARTICLE 52. NUMBER OF VOTES REQUIRED
(a)
(1) No person may be convicted of an offense for which
the death penalty is made mandatory by law, except by the
concurrence of all the members of the court-martial present at
the time the vote is taken.
(2) No person may be convicted of any other offense, except
as provided in section 845(b) of this title (article 45(b)) or
by concurrence of two-thirds of the members present at the time
the vote is taken.
(b)
(1) No person may be sentenced to suffer death, except by
the concurrence of all the members of the court-martial present
at the time the vote is taken and for an offense in this chapter
expressly made punishable by death.
(2) No person may be sentenced by life imprisonment or to
confinement for more than ten years, except by the concurrence
of three-fourths of the members at the time the vote is taken.
(3) All other sentences shall be determined by the
concurrence of two- thirds of the members at the time the vote
is taken.
(c) All other questions to be decided by the members of a
general or special court-martial shall be determined by a
majority vote, but a determination to reconsider a finding of
guilty or to reconsider a sentence, with a view toward
decreasing it, may be made by any lesser vote which indicates
that the reconsideration is not opposed by the number of votes
required for that finding or sentence. A tie vote on a challenge
disqualifies the member challenged. A tie vote on a motion for a
finding of not guilty or on a motion relating to the question of
the accused sanity. is a determination against the accused. A
tie vote on any other question is a determination in favor of
the accused.
853.
ARTICLE 53. COURT TO ANNOUNCE ACTION
A court-martial shall announce its findings and sentence to
the parties as soon as determined.
854. ARTICLE 54.
RECORD OF TRIAL
(a) Each general court-martial shall deep a separate record
of the proceedings in each case brought before it, and the
record shall be authenticated by the signature of the military
judge. If the record cannot be authenticated by the military
judge by reason of his death, disability, or absence, it shall
be authenticated by the signature of the trial counsel or by
that of a member if the trial counsel is unable to authenticate
it by reason of his death, disability, or absence. In a
court-martial consisting of only a military judge the record
shall be authenticated by the court reporter under the same
conditions which would impose such a duty on a member under the
subsection.
(b) Each special and summary court-martial shall keep a
separate record of the proceedings in each case, and the record
shall be authenticated in the manner required by such
regulations as the President may prescribe.
(c)
(1) A complete record of the proceedings and testimony
shall be prepared--
(A) in each general court-martial case in which the sentence
adjudged includes death, a dismissal, a discharge, or (if the
sentence adjudged does not include a discharge) or any other
punishment which exceeds that which may otherwise be adjudged by
a special court-martial; and
(B) in each special court-martial case in which the sentence
includes a bad-conduct discharge.
(2) In all other court-martial cases, the record shall
contain such matters as may be prescribed by regulations of the
President.
(d) A copy of the record of the proceedings of each general
and special court-martial shall be given to the accused as soon
as it is authenticated. |