Public Act 099-0796
 
SB2861 EnrolledLRB099 20640 KTG 45234 b

    AN ACT concerning military justice.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 0.01. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
Illinois Code of Military Justice.
 
    Section 0.02. Purpose. This Code is an exercise of the
General Assembly's authority in the Constitution of the State
of Illinois to provide for "discipline of the militia in
conformity with the laws governing the armed forces of the
United States" (Illinois Constitution, Article XII, Section
3). This Code is in conformity with the Uniform Code of
Military Justice, at 10 U.S.C. Chapter 47, and the military
justice provisions of Title 32 of the United States Code, as
modified based on the American Bar Association-drafted "Model
State Code for Military Justice" for National Guard forces not
subject to the Uniform Code of Military Justice, adopted
February 14, 2011 with appropriate further modifications
specifically tailored for the Illinois National Guard. The
purpose of this Act is to permit discipline of the Illinois
National Guard by providing a military justice system that
includes court-martial authorities meeting current legal
standards of due process.
 
    Section 0.03. References. Sections 1 through 149 of this
Code are also designated as Articles to conform to the federal
Uniform Code of Military Justice to the extent possible.
 
PART I. GENERAL PROVISIONS

 
    Section 1. Article 1. Definitions; gender neutrality.
    (a) In this Code, unless the context otherwise requires:
        (1) "Accuser" means a person who signs and swears to
    charges, any person who directs that charges nominally be
    signed and sworn to by another, and any other person who
    has an interest other than an official interest in the
    prosecution of the accused.
        (2) "Cadet" or "candidate" means a person who is
    enrolled in or attending a State military academy, a
    regional training institute, or any other formal education
    program for the purpose of becoming a commissioned officer
    in the State military forces.
        (3) "Classified information" means:
            (A) any information or material that has been
        determined by an official of the United States or any
        state pursuant to law, an Executive order, or
        regulation to require protection against unauthorized
        disclosure for reasons of national or state security,
        and
            (B) any restricted data, as defined in Section
        11(y) of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (42 U.S.C.
        2014(y)).
        (4) "Code" means this Code.
        (5) "Commanding officer" includes only commissioned or
    warrant officers of the State military forces and shall
    include officers in charge only when administering
    nonjudicial punishment under Article 15 of this Code. The
    term "commander" has the same meaning as "commanding
    officer" unless the context otherwise requires.
        (6) "Convening authority" includes, in addition to the
    person who convened the court, a commissioned officer
    commanding for the time being or a successor in command to
    the convening authority.
        (7) "Day" for all purposes means calendar day beginning
    at 0000 hours (12:00 a.m.) and ending at 2359 hours, 59
    seconds (12:59, 59 seconds p.m.), and is not synonymous
    with the term "unit training assembly". Any punishment
    authorized by this Article which is measured in terms of
    days shall, when served in a status other than annual field
    training, be construed to mean succeeding duty days.
        (8) "Duty status other than State active duty" means
    any other type of military duty or training pursuant to a
    written order issued by authority of law under Title 32 of
    the United States Code or traditional Inactive Duty
    Training periods pursuant to 32 U.S.C. 502(a).
        (9) "Enlisted member" means a person in an enlisted
    grade.
        (10) "Judge advocate" means a commissioned officer of
    the organized State military forces who is a member in good
    standing of the bar of the highest court of a state, and
    is:
            (A) certified or designated as a judge advocate in
        the Judge Advocate General's Corps of the Army, Air
        Force, Navy, or the Marine Corps or designated as a law
        specialist as an officer of the Coast Guard, or a
        reserve or National Guard component of one of these; or
            (B) certified as a non-federally recognized judge
        advocate, under regulations adopted pursuant to this
        paragraph, by the senior judge advocate of the
        commander of the force in the State military forces of
        which the accused is a member, as competent to perform
        such military justice duties required by this Code. If
        there is no such judge advocate available, then such
        certification may be made by such senior judge advocate
        of the commander of another force in the State military
        forces, as the convening authority directs.
        (11) "May" is used in a permissive sense. The phrase
    "no person may . . ." means that no person is required,
    authorized, or permitted to do the act prescribed.
        (12) "Military court" means a court-martial or a court
    of inquiry.
        (13) "Military judge" means an official of a general or
    special court-martial detailed in accordance with Article
    26 of this Code.
        (14) "Military offenses" means those offenses
    proscribed under Articles 77 (Principals), 78 (Accessory
    after the fact), 80 (Attempts), 81 (Conspiracy), 82
    (Solicitation), 83 (Fraudulent enlistment, appointment, or
    separation), 84 (Unlawful enlistment, appointment, or
    separation), 85 (Desertion), 86 (Absence without leave),
    87 (Missing movement), 88 (Contempt toward officials), 89
    (Disrespect towards superior commissioned officer), 90
    (Assaulting or willfully disobeying superior commissioned
    officer), 91 (Insubordinate conduct toward warrant
    officer, noncommissioned officer, or petty officer), 92
    (Failure to obey order or regulation), 93 (Cruelty and
    maltreatment), 94 (Mutiny or sedition), 95 (Resistance,
    flight, breach of arrest, and escape), 96 (Releasing
    prisoner without proper authority), 97 (Unlawful
    detention), 98 (Noncompliance with procedural rules), 99
    (Misbehavior before the enemy), 100 (Subordinate
    compelling surrender), 101 (Improper use of countersign),
    102 (Forcing a safeguard), 103 (Captured or abandoned
    property), 104 (Aiding the enemy), 105 (Misconduct as
    prisoner), 107 (False official statements), 108 (Military
    property: loss, damage, destruction, or wrongful
    disposition), 109 (Property other than military property:
    waste, spoilage, or destruction), 110 (Improper hazarding
    of vessel), 112 (Drunk on duty), 112a (Wrongful use,
    possession, etc., of controlled substances), 113
    (Misbehavior of sentinel), 114 (Dueling), 115
    (Malingering), 116 (Riot or breach of peace), 117
    (Provoking speeches or gestures), 132 (Frauds against the
    government), 133 (Conduct unbecoming an officer and a
    gentleman), and 134 (General Article) of this Code.
        (15) "National security" means the national defense
    and foreign relations of the United States.
        (16) "Officer" means a commissioned or warrant
    officer.
        (17) "Officer in charge" means a member of the Navy,
    the Marine Corps, or the Coast Guard designated as such by
    appropriate authority.
        (18) "Record", when used in connection with the
    proceedings of a court-martial, means:
            (A) an official written transcript, written
        summary, or other writing relating to the proceedings;
        or
            (B) an official audiotape, videotape, digital
        image or file, or similar material from which sound, or
        sound and visual images, depicting the proceedings may
        be reproduced.
        (19) "Shall" is used in an imperative sense.
        (20) "State" means one of the several states, the
    District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico,
    Guam, or the U.S. Virgin Islands.
        (21) "State active duty" means active duty in the State
    military forces under an order of the Governor or the
    Adjutant General, or otherwise issued by authority of State
    law, and paid by State funds.
        (22) "Senior force judge advocate" means the senior
    judge advocate of the commander of the same force of the
    State military forces as the accused and who is that
    commander's chief legal advisor.
        (23) "State military forces" means the Illinois
    National Guard, as defined in Title 32, United States Code
    and the Military Code of Illinois and any other military
    force organized under the Constitution and laws of this
    State, to include the Illinois State Guard when organized
    by the Governor as Commander-in-Chief under the Military
    Code of Illinois and the Illinois State Guard Act, and when
    not in a status subjecting them to exclusive jurisdiction
    under Chapter 47 of Title 10, United States Code, and
    travel to and from such duty.
        (24) "Superior commissioned officer" means a
    commissioned officer superior in rank or command.
        (25) "Senior force commander" means the commander of
    the same force of the State military forces as the accused.
    (b) The use of the masculine gender throughout this Code
also includes the feminine gender.
 
    Section 2. Article 2. Persons subject to this Code;
jurisdiction.
    (a) This Code applies to all members of the State military
forces during any day or portion of a day when in State active
duty or in a duty status other than State active duty and at no
other times.
    (b) Subject matter jurisdiction is established if personal
jurisdiction is established in subsection (a). However,
courts-martial have primary jurisdiction of military offenses
as defined in paragraph (14) of subsection (a) of Article 1 of
this Code. A proper civilian court has primary jurisdiction of
a non-military offense. When an act or omission violates both
this Code and a state or local criminal law, foreign or
domestic, a court-martial may be initiated only after the
civilian authority has declined to prosecute or dismissed the
charge, provided jeopardy has not attached. Jurisdiction over
attempted crimes, conspiracy crimes, solicitation, and
accessory crimes must be determined by the underlying offense.
 
    Section 3. Article 3. Jurisdiction to try certain
personnel.
    (a) Each person discharged from the State military forces
who is later charged with having fraudulently obtained a
discharge is, subject to Article 43 of this Code, subject to
trial by court-martial on that charge and is, after
apprehension, subject to this Code while in custody under the
direction of the State military forces for that trial. Upon
conviction of that charge that person is subject to trial by
court-martial for all offenses under this Code committed before
the fraudulent discharge.
    (b) No person who has deserted from the State military
forces may be relieved from amenability to the jurisdiction of
this Code by virtue of a separation from any later period of
service.
 
    Section 4. Article 4. (Reserved).
 
    Section 5. Article 5. Territorial applicability of this
Code.
    (a) This Code has applicability at all times and in all
places, provided that there is jurisdiction over the person
pursuant to subsection (a) of Article 2; however, this grant of
military jurisdiction shall neither preclude nor limit
civilian jurisdiction over an offense, which is limited only by
subsection (b) of Article 2 and the prohibition of double
jeopardy.
    (b) Courts-martial and courts of inquiry may be convened
and held in units of the State military forces while those
units are serving outside this State with the same jurisdiction
and powers as to persons subject to this Code as if the
proceedings were held inside this State, and offenses committed
outside this State may be tried and punished either inside or
outside this State.
 
    Section 6. Article 6. Judge Advocates.
    (a) The senior force judge advocates in each of the State's
military forces or that judge advocate's delegates shall make
frequent inspections in the field in supervision of the
administration of military justice in that force.
    (b) Convening authorities shall at all times communicate
directly with their judge advocates in matters relating to the
administration of military justice. The judge advocate of any
command is entitled to communicate directly with the judge
advocate of a superior or subordinate command, or with the
State Judge Advocate.
    (c) No person who has acted as member, military judge,
trial counsel, defense counsel, or investigating officer, or
who has been a witness, in any case may later act as a judge
advocate to any reviewing authority upon the same case.
 
    Section 6a. Article 6a. Military judges. The Governor or
the Adjutant General shall appoint at least one judge advocate
officer from the active rolls of the Illinois National Guard
who has been previously certified and qualified for duty as a
military judge by the Judge Advocate General of the judge
advocate officer's respective armed force under Article 26(b)
of the federal Uniform Code of Military Justice to serve as a
military judge under this Code. The military judge shall hold
the rank of Major or above.
 
PART II. APPREHENSION AND RESTRAINT

 
    Section 7. Article 7. Apprehension.
    (a) Apprehension is the taking of a person into custody.
    (b) Any person authorized by this Code or by Chapter 47 of
Title 10, United States Code, or by regulations issued under
either, to apprehend persons subject to this Code, any marshal
of a court-martial appointed pursuant to the provisions of this
Code, and any peace officer or civil officer having authority
to apprehend offenders under the laws of the United States or
of a state, may do so upon probable cause that an offense has
been committed and that the person apprehended committed it.
    (c) Commissioned officers, warrant officers, petty
officers, and noncommissioned officers have authority to quell
quarrels, frays, and disorders among persons subject to this
Code and to apprehend persons subject to this Code who take
part therein.
    (d) If an offender is apprehended outside this State, the
offender's return to the area must be in accordance with normal
extradition procedures or by reciprocal agreement.
    (e) No person authorized by this Article to apprehend
persons subject to this Code or the place where such offender
is confined, restrained, held, or otherwise housed may require
payment of any fee or charge for so receiving, apprehending,
confining, restraining, holding, or otherwise housing a person
except as otherwise provided by law.
 
    Section 8. Article 8. (Reserved).
 
    Section 9. Article 9. Imposition of restraint.
    (a) Arrest is the restraint of a person by an order, not
imposed as a punishment for an offense, directing him to remain
within certain specified limits. Confinement is the physical
restraint of a person.
    (b) An enlisted member may be ordered into arrest or
confinement by any commissioned officer by an order, oral or
written, delivered in person or through other persons subject
to this Code. A commanding officer may authorize warrant
officers, petty officers, or noncommissioned officers to order
enlisted members of the commanding officer's command or subject
to the commanding officer's authority into arrest or
confinement.
    (c) A commissioned officer, a warrant officer, or a
civilian subject to this Code or to trial thereunder may be
ordered into arrest or confinement only by a commanding officer
to whose authority the person is subject, by an order, oral or
written, delivered in person or by another commissioned
officer. The authority to order such persons into arrest or
confinement may not be delegated.
    (d) No person subject to this Code may be ordered into
arrest or confinement except for probable cause after
coordination with a judge advocate officer unless impractical
or not possible.
    (e) This Article does not limit the authority of persons
authorized to apprehend offenders to secure the custody of an
alleged offender until proper authority may be notified.
 
    Section 10. Article 10. Restraint of persons charged with
offenses. Any person subject to this Code charged with an
offense under this Code may be ordered into arrest or
confinement, as circumstances may require. When any person
subject to this Code is placed in arrest or confinement prior
to trial, immediate steps shall be taken to inform the person
of the specific wrong of which the person is accused and
diligent steps shall be taken to try the person or to dismiss
the charges and release the person.
 
    Section 11. Article 11. Place of confinement; reports and
receiving of prisoners.
    (a) If a person subject to this Code is confined before,
during, or after trial, confinement shall be in a civilian
county jail, a Department of Corrections facility, or a
military confinement facility.
    (b) No person, Sheriff, or individual in a Department of
Corrections facility authorized to receive prisoners pursuant
to subsection (a) may refuse to receive or keep any prisoner
committed to the person's charge by a commissioned officer of
the State military forces, when the committing officer
furnishes a statement, signed by such officer, of the offense
charged or conviction obtained against the prisoner, unless
otherwise authorized by law.
    (c) Every person authorized to receive prisoners pursuant
to subsection (a) to whose charge a prisoner is committed
shall, within 24 hours after that commitment or as soon as the
person is relieved from guard, report to the commanding officer
of the prisoner the name of the prisoner, the offense charged
against the prisoner, and the name of the person who ordered or
authorized the commitment.
 
    Section 12. Article 12. Confinement with enemy prisoners
prohibited. No member of the State military forces may be
placed in confinement in immediate association with enemy
prisoners or other foreign nationals not members of the armed
forces.
 
    Section 13. Article 13. Punishment prohibited before
trial. No person, while being held for trial or awaiting a
verdict, may be subjected to punishment or penalty other than
arrest or confinement upon the charges pending against the
person, nor shall the arrest or confinement imposed upon such
person be any more rigorous than the circumstances required to
ensure the person's presence, but the person may be subjected
to minor punishment during that period for infractions of
discipline.
 
    Section 14. Article 14. Delivery of offenders to civil
authorities.
    (a) A person subject to this Code accused of an offense
against civil authority may be delivered, upon request, to the
civil authority for trial or confinement.
    (b) When delivery under this Article is made to any civil
authority of a person undergoing sentence of a court-martial,
the delivery, if followed by conviction in a civil tribunal,
interrupts the execution of the sentence of the court-martial,
and the offender after having answered to the civil authorities
for the offense shall, upon the request of competent military
authority, be returned to the place of original custody for the
completion of the person's sentence.
 
PART III. NON-JUDICIAL PUNISHMENT

 
    Section 15. Article 15. Non-judicial punishment
proceedings. The Adjutant General may adopt rules to effectuate
non-judicial punishment proceedings in accordance with the
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act which may impose
disciplinary punishments for minor offenses without the
intervention of a court-martial pursuant to this Article.
 
PART IV. COURT-MARTIAL JURISDICTION

 
    Section 16. Article 16. Courts-martial classified. The 3
kinds of courts-martial in the State military forces are:
        (1) general courts-martial, consisting of:
            (A) a military judge and not less than 5 members;
        or
            (B) only a military judge, if before the court is
        assembled the accused, knowing the identity of the
        military judge and after consultation with defense
        counsel, requests orally on the record or in writing a
        court composed only of a military judge and the
        military judge approves;
        (2) special courts-martial, consisting of:
            (A) a military judge and not less than 3 members;
        or
            (B) only a military judge, if one has been detailed
        to the court, and the accused under the same conditions
        as those prescribed in subparagraph (B) of paragraph
        (1) so requests; and
        (3) summary courts-martial consisting of one
    commissioned officer.
 
    Section 17. Article 17. Jurisdiction of courts-martial in
general. Each component of the State military forces has
court-martial jurisdiction over all members of the particular
component who are subject to this Code. Additionally, the Army
and Air National Guard State military forces have court-martial
jurisdiction over all members subject to this Code.
 
    Section 18. Article 18. Jurisdiction of general
courts-martial. Subject to Article 17 of this Code, general
courts-martial have jurisdiction to try persons subject to this
Code for any offense made punishable by this Code, and may,
under such limitations as the Governor may prescribe, adjudge
any punishment not forbidden by this Code.
 
    Section 19. Article 19. Jurisdiction of special
courts-martial. Subject to Article 17, special courts-martial
have jurisdiction to try persons subject to this Code for any
offense made punishable by this Code, and may, under such
limitations as the Governor may prescribe, adjudge any
punishment not forbidden by this Code except dishonorable
discharge, dismissal, confinement for more than one year,
forfeiture of pay exceeding two-thirds pay per month, or
forfeiture of pay for more than one year.
 
    Section 20. Article 20. Jurisdiction of summary
courts-martial.
    (a) Subject to Article 17 of this Code, summary
courts-martial have jurisdiction to try persons subject to this
Code, except officers, cadets, and candidates for any offense
made punishable by this Code under such limitations as the
Governor may prescribe.
    (b) No person with respect to whom summary courts-martial
have jurisdiction may be brought to trial before a summary
court-martial if that person objects thereto. If objection to
trial by summary court-martial is made by an accused, trial by
special or general court-martial may be ordered, as may be
appropriate. Summary courts-martial may, under such
limitations as the Governor may prescribe, adjudge any
punishment not forbidden by this Code except dismissal,
dishonorable or bad-conduct discharge, confinement for more
than one month, restriction to specified limits for more than 2
months, or forfeiture of more than two-thirds of one month's
pay.
 
    Section 21. Article 21. (Reserved).
 
PART V. APPOINTMENT AND COMPOSITION OF COURTS-MARTIAL

 
    Section 22. Article 22. Who may convene general
courts-martial.
    (a) General courts-martial may be convened by:
        (1) the Governor, or;
        (2) the Adjutant General.
    (b) (Reserved).
 
    Section 23. Article 23. Who may convene special
courts-martial.
    (a) Special courts-martial may be convened by:
        (1) any person who may convene a general court-martial;
        (2) the Commander of the Illinois Army National of
    members of the Illinois Army National Guard when empowered
    by the Adjutant General; or
        (3) the Commander of the Illinois Air National Guard of
    members of the Illinois Air National Guard when empowered
    by the Adjutant General.
    (b) If any such officer is an accuser, the court shall be
convened by superior competent authority and may in any case be
convened by such superior authority if considered desirable by
such authority.
 
    Section 24. Article 24. Who may convene summary
courts-martial.
    (a) Summary courts-martial may be convened by:
        (1) any person who may convene a general or special
    court-martial;
        (2) the commanding officer or officer in charge of any
    other command when empowered by the Adjutant General.
    (b) When only one commissioned officer is present with a
command or detachment that officer shall be the summary
court-martial of that command or detachment and shall hear and
determine all summary court-martial cases. Summary
courts-martial may, however, be convened in any case by
superior competent authority if considered desirable by such
authority.
 
    Section 25. Article 25. Who may serve on courts-martial.
    (a) Any commissioned officer of the State military forces
is eligible to serve on all courts-martial for the trial of any
person subject to this Code.
    (b) Any warrant officer of the State military forces is
eligible to serve on general and special courts-martial for the
trial of any person subject to this Code, other than a
commissioned officer.
    (c) Any enlisted member of the State military forces who is
not a member of the same unit as the accused is eligible to
serve on general and special courts-martial for the trial of
any enlisted member subject to this Code, but that member shall
serve as a member of a court only if, before the conclusion of
a session called by the military judge under subsection (a) of
Article 39 of this Code prior to trial or, in the absence of
such a session, before the court is assembled for the trial of
the accused, the accused personally has requested orally on the
record or in writing that enlisted members serve on it. After
such a request, the accused may not be tried by a general or
special court-martial the membership of which does not include
enlisted members in a number comprising at least one-third of
the total membership of the court, unless eligible enlisted
members cannot be obtained on account of physical conditions or
military exigencies. If such members cannot be obtained, the
court may be assembled and the trial held without them, but the
convening authority shall make a detailed written statement, to
be appended to the record, stating why they could not be
obtained. In this Article, "unit" means any regularly organized
body of the State military forces not larger than a company, a
squadron, a division of the naval militia, or a body
corresponding to one of them.
    (d) When it can be avoided, no person subject to this Code
may be tried by a court-martial any member of which is junior
to the accused in rank or grade.
    (e) When convening a court-martial, the convening
authority shall detail as members thereof such members of the
State military forces as, in the convening authority's opinion,
are best qualified for the duty by reason of age, education,
training, experience, length of service, and judicial
temperament. No member of the State military forces is eligible
to serve as a member of a general or special court-martial when
that member is the accuser, a witness, or has acted as
investigating officer or as counsel in the same case.
    (f) Before a court-martial is assembled for the trial of a
case, the convening authority may excuse a member of the court
from participating in the case. The convening authority may
delegate the authority under this subsection to a judge
advocate or to any other principal assistant.
 
    Section 25a. Article 25a. (Reserved).
 
    Section 26. Article 26. Military judge of a general or
special court-martial.
    (a) A military judge shall be detailed to each general and
special court-martial. The military judge shall preside over
each open session of the court-martial to which the military
judge has been detailed.
    (b) In addition to the requirements noted in Article 6a, a
military judge shall be:
        (1) an active commissioned officer of an organized
    state military force;
        (2) a member in good standing of the bar of the highest
    court of a state or a member of the bar of a federal court
    for at least 5 years; and
        (3) certified as qualified for duty as a military judge
    by the senior force judge advocate which is the same force
    as the accused.
    (c) In the instance when a military judge is not a member
of the bar of the highest court of this State, the military
judge shall be deemed admitted pro hac vice, subject to filing
a certificate with the senior force judge advocate which is the
same force as the accused setting forth such qualifications
provided in subsection (b).
    (d) The military judge of a general or special
court-martial shall be designated by the senior force judge
advocate which is the same force as the accused, or a designee,
for detail by the convening authority. Neither the convening
authority nor any staff member of the convening authority shall
prepare or review any report concerning the effectiveness,
fitness, or efficiency of the military judge so detailed, which
relates to performance of duty as a military judge.
    (e) No person is eligible to act as military judge in a
case if that person is the accuser or a witness, or has acted
as investigating officer or a counsel in the same case.
    (f) The military judge of a court-martial may not consult
with the members of the court except in the presence of the
accused, trial counsel, and defense counsel nor vote with the
members of the court.
 
    Section 27. Article 27. Detail of trial counsel and defense
counsel.
    (a)(1) For each general and special court-martial the
authority convening the court shall detail trial counsel,
defense counsel, and such assistants as are appropriate.
    (2) No person who has acted as investigating officer,
military judge, witness, or court member in any case may act
later as trial counsel, assistant trial counsel, or, unless
expressly requested by the accused, as defense counsel or
assistant or associate defense counsel in the same case. No
person who has acted for the prosecution may act later in the
same case for the defense nor may any person who has acted for
the defense act later in the same case for the prosecution.
    (b) Except as provided in subsection (c), trial counsel or
defense counsel detailed for a general or special court-martial
must be:
        (1) a judge advocate as defined in paragraph (10) of
    Article 1 of this Code; and
        (2) in the case of trial counsel, a member in good
    standing of the bar of the highest court of the state where
    the court-martial is held.
    (c) In the instance when a defense counsel is not a member
of the bar of the highest court of this State, the defense
counsel shall be deemed admitted pro hac vice, subject to
filing a certificate with the military judge setting forth the
qualifications that counsel is:
        (1) a commissioned officer of the armed forces of the
    United States or a component thereof; and
        (2) a member in good standing of the bar of the highest
    court of a state; and
        (3) certified as a judge advocate in the Judge Advocate
    General's Corps of the Army, Air Force, Navy, or the Marine
    Corps; or
        (4) a judge advocate as defined in paragraph (10) of
    Article 1 of this Code.
 
    Section 28. Article 28. Detail or employment of reporters
and interpreters. Under such regulations as may be prescribed,
the convening authority of a general or special court-martial
or court of inquiry shall detail or employ qualified court
reporters, who shall record the proceedings of and testimony
taken before that court and may detail or employ interpreters
who shall interpret for the court.
 
    Section 29. Article 29. Absent and additional members.
    (a) No member of a general or special court-martial may be
absent or excused after the court has been assembled for the
trial of the accused unless excused as a result of a challenge,
excused by the military judge for physical disability or other
good cause, or excused by order of the convening authority for
good cause.
    (b) Whenever a general court-martial, other than a general
court-martial composed of a military judge only, is reduced
below 5 members, the trial may not proceed unless the convening
authority details new members sufficient in number to provide
not less than the applicable minimum number of 5 members. The
trial may proceed with the new members present after the
recorded evidence previously introduced before the members of
the court has been read to the court in the presence of the
military judge, the accused, and counsel for both sides.
    (c) Whenever a special court-martial, other than a special
court-martial composed of a military judge only, is reduced
below 3 members, the trial may not proceed unless the convening
authority details new members sufficient in number to provide
not less than 3 members. The trial shall proceed with the new
members present as if no evidence had been introduced
previously at the trial, unless a verbatim record of the
evidence previously introduced before the members of the court
or a stipulation thereof is read to the court in the presence
of the military judge, the accused, and counsel for both sides.
    (d) If the military judge of a court-martial composed of a
military judge only is unable to proceed with the trial because
of physical disability, as a result of a challenge, or for
other good cause, the trial shall proceed, subject to any
applicable conditions of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of
Article 16 or subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) of Article 16
of this Code, after the detail of a new military judge as if no
evidence had previously been introduced, unless a verbatim
record of the evidence previously introduced or a stipulation
thereof is read in court in the presence of the new military
judge, the accused, and counsel for both sides.
 
PART VI. PRE-TRIAL PROCEDURE

 
    Section 30. Article 30. Charges and specifications.
    (a) Charges and specifications shall be signed by a person
subject to this Code under oath before a commissioned officer
authorized by subsection (a) of Article 136 of this Code to
administer oaths and shall state:
        (1) that the signer has personal knowledge of, or has
    investigated, the matters set forth therein; and
        (2) that they are true in fact to the best of the
    signer's knowledge and belief.
    (b) Upon the preferring of charges, the proper authority
shall take immediate steps to determine what disposition should
be made thereof in the interest of justice and discipline, and
the person accused shall be informed of the charges as soon as
practicable.
 
    Section 31. Article 31. Compulsory self-incrimination
prohibited.
    (a) No person subject to this Code may compel any person to
incriminate himself or to answer any question the answer to
which may tend to incriminate him.
    (b) No person subject to this Code may interrogate or
request any statement from an accused or a person suspected of
an offense without first informing that person of the nature of
the accusation and advising that person that the person does
not have to make any statement regarding the offense of which
the person is accused or suspected and that any statement made
by the person may be used as evidence against the person in a
trial by court-martial.
    (c) No person subject to this Code may compel any person to
make a statement or produce evidence before any military court
if the statement or evidence is not material to the issue and
may tend to degrade the person.
    (d) No statement obtained from any person in violation of
this Article or through the use of coercion, unlawful
influence, or unlawful inducement may be received in evidence
against the person in a trial by court-martial.
 
    Section 32. Article 32. Investigation.
    (a) No charge or specification may be referred to a general
or special court-martial for trial until a thorough and
impartial investigation of all the matters set forth therein
has been made. This investigation shall include inquiry as to
the truth of the matter set forth in the charges, consideration
of the form of charges, and a recommendation as to the
disposition which should be made of the case in the interest of
justice and discipline.
    (b) The accused shall be advised of the charges against the
accused and of the right to be represented at that
investigation by counsel. The accused has the right to be
represented at that investigation as provided in Article 38 of
this Code and in regulations prescribed under that Article. At
that investigation, full opportunity shall be given to the
accused to cross-examine witnesses against the accused, if they
are available, and to present anything the accused may desire
in the accused's own behalf, either in defense or mitigation,
and the investigating officer shall examine available
witnesses requested by the accused. If the charges are
forwarded after the investigation, they shall be accompanied by
a statement of the substance of the testimony taken on both
sides and a copy thereof shall be given to the accused.
    (c) If an investigation of the subject matter of an offense
has been conducted before the accused is charged with the
offense, and if the accused was present at the investigation
and afforded the opportunities for representation,
cross-examination, and presentation prescribed in subsection
(b), no further investigation of that charge is necessary under
this Article unless it is demanded by the accused after the
accused is informed of the charge. A demand for further
investigation entitles the accused to recall witnesses for
further cross-examination and to offer any new evidence in the
accused's own behalf.
    (d) If evidence adduced in an investigation under this
Article indicates that the accused committed an uncharged
offense, the investigating officer may investigate the subject
matter of that offense without the accused having first been
charged with the offense if the accused:
        (1) is present at the investigation;
        (2) is informed of the nature of each uncharged offense
    investigated; and
        (3) is afforded the opportunities for representation,
    cross-examination, and presentation prescribed in
    subsection (b).
    (e) The requirements of this Article are binding on all
persons administering this Code but failure to follow them does
not constitute jurisdictional error.
 
    Section 33. Article 33. Forwarding of charges. When a
person is held for trial by general court-martial, the
commanding officer shall within 15 days after the accused is
ordered into arrest or confinement, if practicable, forward the
charges, together with the investigation and allied papers, to
the person exercising general court-martial jurisdiction. If
that is not practicable, the commanding officer shall report in
writing to that person the reasons for delay.
 
    Section 34. Article 34. Advice of judge advocate and
reference for trial.
    (a) Before directing the trial of any charge by general or
special court-martial, the convening authority shall refer it
to a judge advocate for consideration and advice. The convening
authority may not refer a specification under a charge to a
general or special court-martial for trial unless the convening
authority has been advised in writing by a judge advocate that:
        (1) the specification alleges an offense under this
    Code;
        (2) the specification is warranted by the evidence
    indicated in the report of investigation under Article 32
    of this Code, if there is such a report; and
        (3) a court-martial would have jurisdiction over the
    accused and the offense.
    (b) The advice of the judge advocate under subsection (a)
with respect to a specification under a charge shall include a
written and signed statement by the judge advocate:
        (1) expressing conclusions with respect to each matter
    set forth in subsection (a); and
        (2) recommending action that the convening authority
    take regarding the specification.
If the specification is referred for trial, the recommendation
of the judge advocate shall accompany the specification.
    (c) If the charges or specifications are not correct
formally or do not conform to the substance of the evidence
contained in the report of the investigating officer, formal
corrections, and such changes in the charges and specifications
as are needed to make them conform to the evidence, may be
made.
 
    Section 35. Article 35. Service of charges. The trial
counsel shall serve or caused to be served upon the accused a
copy of the charges. No person may, against the person's
objection, be brought to trial before a general court-martial
case within a period of 60 days after the service of charges
upon the accused, or in a special court-martial, within a
period of 45 days after the service of charges upon the
accused.
 
PART VII. TRIAL PROCEDURE

 
    Section 36. Article 36. Trial procedure. The Adjutant
General may adopt rules in accordance with the Illinois
Administrative Procedure Act which establish pretrial, trial,
and post-trial procedures, including modes of proof, for
courts-martial cases arising under this Code and for courts of
inquiry, and which shall apply the principles of law and the
rules of evidence generally recognized in military criminal
cases in the courts of the Armed Forces of the United States
but which may not be contrary to or inconsistent with this
Code. The Governor or the Adjutant General may prescribe courts
of inquiry by regulations, or as otherwise provided by law,
which shall apply the principles of law and the rules of
evidence generally recognized in military cases.
 
    Section 37. Article 37. Unlawfully influencing action of
court.
    (a) No authority convening a general, special, or summary
court-martial, nor any other commanding officer, or officer
serving on the staff thereof, may censure, reprimand, or
admonish the court or any member, the military judge, or
counsel thereof, with respect to the findings or sentence
adjudged by the court or with respect to any other exercise of
its or their functions in the conduct of the proceedings. No
person subject to this Code may attempt to coerce or, by any
unauthorized means, influence the action of a court-martial or
court of inquiry 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
their judicial acts. The foregoing provisions of this
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) statements and instructions given in
open court by the military judge, summary court-martial
officer, or counsel.
    (b) In the preparation of an effectiveness, fitness, or
efficiency report, or any other report or document used in
whole or in part for the purpose of determining whether a
member of the State military forces is qualified to be advanced
in grade, or in determining the assignment or transfer of a
member of the State military forces, or in determining whether
a member of the State military forces should be retained on
active status, no person subject to this Code may, in preparing
any such report, (1) consider or evaluate the performance of
duty of any such member as a member of a court-martial or
witness therein or (2) give a less favorable rating or
evaluation of any counsel of the accused because of zealous
representation before a court-martial.
 
    Section 38. Article 38. Duties of trial counsel and defense
counsel.
    (a) The trial counsel of a general or special court-martial
shall be a member in good standing of the State bar and shall
prosecute in the name of the State of Illinois, 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
defense before a general or special court-martial or at an
investigation under Article 32 of this Code as provided in this
subsection.
    (2) The accused may be represented by civilian counsel at
the provision and expense of the accused.
    (3) The accused may be represented:
        (A) by military counsel detailed under Article 27 of
    this Code; or
        (B) by military counsel of the accused's own selection
    if that counsel is reasonably available as determined 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
subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3), any military counsel
detailed under subparagraph (A) of paragraph (3) 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 Article 27 of this Code to detail
counsel, in that person's sole discretion:
        (A) may detail additional military counsel as
    assistant defense counsel; and
        (B) if the accused is represented by military counsel
    of the accused's own selection under subparagraph (B) of
    paragraph (3), may approve a request from the accused that
    military counsel detailed under subparagraph (A) of
    paragraph (3) act as associate defense counsel.
    (7) The senior State Judge Advocate of the same state of
which the accused is a member shall determine whether the
military counsel selected by an accused is reasonably
available.
    (c) In any court-martial proceeding resulting in a
conviction, the defense counsel:
        (1) may forward for attachment to the record of
    proceedings a brief of such matters as counsel determines
    should be considered in behalf of the accused on review,
    including any objection to the contents of the record which
    counsel considers appropriate;
        (2) may assist the accused in the submission of any
    matter under Article 60 of this Code; and
        (3) may take other action authorized by this Code.
 
    Section 39. Article 39. Sessions.
    (a) At any time after the service of charges which have
been referred for trial to a court-martial composed of a
military judge and members, the military judge may, subject to
Article 35 of this Code, 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 Code, whether
    or not the matter is appropriate for later consideration or
    decision by the members of the court;
        (3) holding the arraignment and receiving the pleas of
    the accused; and
        (4) performing any other procedural function which
    does not require the presence of the members of the court
    under this Code.
These proceedings shall be conducted in the presence of the
accused, the defense counsel, and the trial counsel and shall
be made a part of the record. These proceedings may be
conducted notwithstanding the number of court members and
without regard to Article 29.
    (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 the military judge.
 
    Section 40. Article 40. Continuances. The military judge of
a court-martial may, for reasonable cause, grant a continuance
to any party for such time, and as often, as may appear to be
just.
 
    Section 41. Article 41. Challenges.
    (a)(1) 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 the court shall determine the relevancy and validity of
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.
    (2) If exercise of a challenge for cause reduces the court
below the minimum number of members required by Article 16 of
this Code, all parties shall, notwithstanding Article 29 of
this Code, either exercise or waive any challenge for cause
then apparent against the remaining members of the court before
additional members are detailed to the court. However,
peremptory challenges shall not be exercised at that time.
    (b)(1) Each accused and the trial counsel are entitled
initially to one peremptory challenge of members of the court.
The military judge may not be challenged except for cause.
    (2) If exercise of a peremptory challenge reduces the court
below the minimum number of members required by Article 16 of
this Code, the parties shall, notwithstanding Article 29 of
this Code, either exercise or waive any remaining peremptory
challenge, not previously waived, against the remaining
members of the court before additional members are detailed to
the court.
    (3) Whenever additional members are detailed to the court,
and after any challenges for cause against such additional
members are presented and decided, each accused and the trial
counsel are entitled to one peremptory challenge against
members not previously subject to peremptory challenge.
 
    Section 42. Article 42. Oaths or affirmations.
    (a) Before performing their respective duties, military
judges, general and special courts-martial members, trial
counsel, defense counsel, reporters, and interpreters shall
take an oath or affirmation in the presence of the accused to
perform their duties faithfully. The form of the oath or
affirmation, the time and place of the taking thereof, the
manner of recording the same, and whether the oath or
affirmation shall be taken for all cases in which these duties
are to be performed or for a particular case, shall be as
prescribed in regulation or as provided by law. These
regulations may provide that an oath or affirmation to perform
faithfully the duties as a military judge, trial counsel, or
defense counsel may be taken at any time by any judge advocate
or other person certified or designated to be qualified or
competent for the duty, and if such an oath or affirmation 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
under oath or affirmation.
 
    Section 43. Article 43. Statute of limitations.
    (a) Except as otherwise provided in this Article, a person
charged with any offense is not liable to be tried by
court-martial or punished under Article 15 of this Code if the
offense was committed more than 3 years before the receipt of
sworn charges and specifications by an officer exercising
court-martial jurisdiction over the command or before the
imposition of punishment under Article 15 of this Code.
    (b) 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 Article.
    (c) Periods in which the accused was absent from territory
in which this State 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.
    (d) When the United States is at war or armed conflict
authorized by law, the running of any statute of limitations
applicable to any offense under this Code:
        (1) involving fraud or attempted fraud against the
    United States, any state, or any agency of either 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 any
    state; 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 2 years after the termination of hostilities
or armed conflict as proclaimed by the President or by a joint
resolution of Congress.
    (e)(1) If charges or specifications are dismissed as
defective 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 barred 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 special
    court-martial jurisdiction over the command within 180
    days after the 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).
 
    Section 44. 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 an accused has been found guilty
by a 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 on 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.
 
    Section 45. 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 the accused has entered
the plea of guilty improvidently or through lack of
understanding of its meaning and effect, or if the accused
fails or refuses to plead, a plea of not guilty shall be
entered in the record, and the court shall proceed as though
the accused had pleaded not guilty.
    (b) With respect to any 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 be
entered immediately without 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.
 
    Section 46. 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 as prescribed by regulations and provided by
law. Process issued in court-martial cases to compel witnesses
to appear and testify and to compel the production of other
evidence shall apply the principles of law and the rules of
courts-martial generally recognized in military criminal cases
in the courts of the armed forces of the United States, but
which may not be contrary to or inconsistent with this Code.
Process shall run to any part of the United States, or the
Territories, Commonwealths, and possessions, and may be
executed by civil officers as prescribed by the laws of the
place where the witness or evidence is located or of the United
States.
 
    Section 47. Article 47. Refusal to appear or testify.
    (a) Any person not subject to this Code who:
        (1) has been duly subpoenaed to appear as a witness or
    to produce books and records before a court-martial or
    court of inquiry, or before any military or civil officer
    designated to take a deposition to be read in evidence
    before such a court;
        (2) has been duly paid or tendered the fees and mileage
    of a witness at the rates allowed to witnesses attending a
    criminal court of this State; 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;
may be punished by the military court in the same manner as a
criminal court of this State.
    (b) The fees and mileage of witnesses shall be advanced or
paid out of the appropriations for the compensation of
witnesses.
 
    Section 48. Article 48. Contempts. A military judge may
punish for contempt any person who refuses a court order, is
disrespectful to the court, or who uses any menacing word,
sign, or gesture in its presence, or who disturbs its
proceedings by any riot or disorder.
    (a) A person subject to this Code may be punished for
contempt by confinement not to exceed 30 days or a fine up to
$500, or both.
    (b) A person not subject to this Code may be punished for
contempt by a military court in the same manner as a criminal
court of this State.
 
    Section 49. Article 49. Depositions.
    (a) At any time after charges have been signed as provided
in Article 30 of this Code, any party may take oral or written
depositions unless the military judge hearing the case or, if
the case is not being heard, an authority competent to convene
a court-martial for the trial of those charges forbids it for
good cause.
    (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 civil officer authorized by the laws of this
State 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 the other parties, so far as otherwise admissible
under the rules of evidence, may be read in evidence or, in the
case of audiotape, videotape, digital image or file, or similar
material, may be played in evidence before any military court,
if it appears:
        (1) that the witness resides or is beyond the state in
    which the court 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.
 
    Section 50. Article 50. Admissibility of records of courts
of inquiry.
    (a) In any case 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 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 cases extending to the dismissal of a commissioned
officer.
    (c) Such testimony may also be read in evidence before a
court of inquiry.
 
    Section 50a. 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 severe
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 shall instruct the members of the court as to the defense
of lack of mental responsibility under this Article and 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 provisions of Article 52 of this
Code, 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 a court-martial composed of a
    military judge only, the military judge determines that the
    defense of lack of mental responsibility has been
    established.
 
    Section 51. Article 51. Voting and rulings.
    (a) Voting by members of a general or special court-martial
on the findings and on the sentence 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 shall rule 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 law or any interlocutory question other than
the factual issue of mental responsibility of the accused is
final and constitutes the ruling of the court. However, the
military judge may change the 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 Article 52 of this Code,
beginning with the junior in rank.
    (c) Before a vote is taken on the findings, the 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 the accused
    must be acquitted;
        (3) that, if there is a 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 reasonable doubt is upon the State.
    (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 filed, it will be
sufficient if the findings of fact appear therein.
 
    Section 52. Article 52. Number of votes required.
    (a) No person may be convicted of an offense except as
provided in subsection (b) of Article 45 of this Code or by the
concurrence of two-thirds of the members present at the time
the vote is taken.
    (b) 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 relating to the question of the accused's sanity is a
determination against the accused. A tie vote on any other
question is a determination in favor of the accused.
 
    Section 53. Article 53. Court to announce action. A
court-martial shall announce its findings and sentence to the
parties as soon as determined.
 
    Section 54. Article 54. Record of trial.
    (a) Each general and special court-martial shall keep 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 this subsection.
    (b)(1) A complete verbatim record of the proceedings and
testimony shall be prepared in each general and special
court-martial case resulting in a conviction.
    (2) In all other court-martial cases, the record shall
contain such matters as may be prescribed by regulations.
    (c) 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.
 
PART VIII. SENTENCES

 
    Section 55. Article 55. Cruel and unusual punishments
prohibited. Punishment by flogging, or by branding, marking, or
tattooing on the body, or any other cruel or unusual punishment
may not be adjudged by a court-martial or inflicted upon any
person subject to this Code. The use of irons, single or
double, except for the purpose of safe custody, is prohibited.
 
    Section 56. Article 56. Maximum limits.
    (a) The punishment which a court-martial may direct for an
offense may not exceed such limits as prescribed by this Code,
but in no instance may a sentence exceed more than 10 years for
a military offense, nor shall a sentence of death be adjudged.
A conviction by general court-martial of any military offense
for which an accused may receive a sentence of confinement for
more than one year is a felony offense. All other military
offenses are misdemeanors.
    (b) The limits of punishment for violations of the punitive
Articles prescribed herein shall be equal to or lesser of the
sentences prescribed by the Manual for Courts-Martial of the
United States in effect on the effective date of this Code, and
in no instance shall any punishment exceed that authorized by
this Code.
 
    Section 56a. Article 56a. (Reserved).
 
    Section 57. Article 57. Effective date of sentences.
    (a) Whenever a sentence of a court-martial as lawfully
adjudged and approved includes a forfeiture of pay or
allowances in addition to confinement not suspended, the
forfeiture may apply to pay or allowances becoming due on or
after the date the sentence is approved by the convening
authority. No forfeiture may extend to any pay or allowances
accrued before that date.
    (b) Any period of confinement included in a sentence of a
court-martial begins to run from the date the sentence is
adjudged by the court-martial, but periods during which the
sentence to confinement is suspended or deferred shall be
excluded in computing the service of the term of confinement.
    (c) All other sentences of courts-martial are effective on
the date ordered executed.
 
    Section 57a. Article 57a. Deferment of sentences.
    (a) On application by an accused who is under sentence to
confinement that has not been ordered executed, the convening
authority or, if the accused is no longer under that person's
jurisdiction, the person exercising general court-martial
jurisdiction over the command to which the accused is currently
assigned, may in that person's sole discretion defer service of
the sentence to confinement. The deferment shall terminate when
the sentence is ordered executed. The deferment may be
rescinded at any time by the person who granted it or, if the
accused is no longer under that person's jurisdiction, by the
person exercising general court-martial jurisdiction over the
command to which the accused is currently assigned.
    (b)(1) In any case in which a court-martial sentences an
accused referred to in paragraph (2) to confinement, the
convening authority may defer the service of the sentence to
confinement, without the consent of the accused, until after
the accused has been permanently released to the State military
forces by a state, the United States, or a foreign country
referred to in that paragraph.
    (2) Paragraph (1) applies to a person subject to this Code
who:
        (A) while in the custody of a state, the United States,
    or a foreign country is temporarily returned by that state,
    the United States, or a foreign country to the State
    military forces for trial by court-martial; and
        (B) after the court-martial, is returned to that state,
    the United States, or a foreign country under the authority
    of a mutual agreement or treaty, as the case may be.
    (3) In this subsection, the term "state" includes the
District of Columbia and any Commonwealth, Territory, or
possession of the United States.
    (c) In any case in which a court-martial sentences an
accused to confinement and the sentence to confinement has been
ordered executed, but in which review of the case under Article
67a of this Code is pending, the Adjutant General may defer
further service of the sentence to confinement while that
review is pending.
 
    Section 58. Article 58. Execution of confinement.
    (a) A sentence of confinement adjudged by a court-martial,
whether or not the sentence includes discharge or dismissal,
and whether or not the discharge or dismissal has been
executed, may be carried into execution by confinement in any
place authorized by this Code. Persons so confined are subject
to the same discipline and treatment as persons regularly
confined or committed to that place of confinement.
    (b) The omission of hard labor as a sentence authorized
under this Code does not deprive the State confinement facility
from employing it, if it otherwise is within the authority of
that facility to do so.
    (c) No place of confinement may require payment of any fee
or charge for so receiving or confining a person except as
otherwise provided by law.
 
    Section 58a. Article 58a. Sentences: reduction in enlisted
grade upon approval.
    (a) A court-martial sentence of an enlisted member in a pay
grade above E-1, as approved by the convening authority, that
includes:
        (1) a dishonorable or bad-conduct discharge; or
        (2) confinement;
reduces that member to pay grade E-1, effective on the date of
that approval.
    (b) If the sentence of a member who is reduced in pay grade
under subsection (a) is set aside or disapproved, or, as
finally approved, does not include any punishment named in
paragraphs (1) or (2) of subsection (a), the rights and
privileges of which the person was deprived because of that
reduction shall be restored, including pay and allowances.
 
    Section 58b. Article 58b. Sentences: forfeiture of pay and
allowances during confinement.
    (a)(1) A court-martial sentence described in paragraph (2)
shall result in the forfeiture of pay, or of pay and
allowances, due that member during any period of confinement or
parole. The forfeiture pursuant to this Article shall take
effect on the date determined under subsection (a) of Article
57 of this Code and may be deferred as provided by that
Article. The pay and allowances forfeited, in the case of a
general court-martial, shall be all pay and allowances due that
member during such period and, in the case of a special
court-martial, shall be two-thirds of all pay due that member
during such period.
    (2) A sentence covered by this Article is any sentence that
includes:
        (A) confinement for more than 6 months; or
        (B) confinement for 6 months or less and a dishonorable
    or bad-conduct discharge or dismissal.
    (b) In a case involving an accused who has dependents, the
convening authority or other person acting under Article 60 of
this Code may waive any or all of the forfeitures of pay and
allowances required by subsection (a) for a period not to
exceed 6 months. Any amount of pay or allowances that, except
for a waiver under this subsection, would be forfeited shall be
paid, as the convening authority or other person taking action
directs, to the dependents of the accused.
    (c) If the sentence of a member who forfeits pay and
allowances under subsection (a) is set aside or disapproved or,
as finally approved, does not provide for a punishment referred
to in paragraph (2) of subsection (a), the member shall be paid
the pay and allowances which the member would have been paid,
except for the forfeiture, for the period during which the
forfeiture was in effect.
 
PART IX. POST-TRIAL PROCEDURE AND REVIEW OF COURTS-MARTIAL

 
    Section 59. Article 59. Error of law; lesser included
offense.
    (a) A finding or sentence of a court-martial may not be
held incorrect on the ground of an error of law unless the
error materially prejudices the substantial rights of the
accused.
    (b) Any reviewing authority with the power to approve or
affirm a finding of guilty may approve or affirm, instead, so
much of the finding as includes a lesser included offense.
 
    Section 60. Article 60. Action by the convening authority.
    (a) The findings and sentence of a court-martial shall be
reported promptly to the convening authority after the
announcement of the sentence.
    (b)(1) The accused may submit to the convening authority
matters for consideration by the convening authority with
respect to the findings and the sentence. Any such submission
shall be in writing. Such a submission shall be made within 30
days after the accused has been given an authenticated record
of trial and, if applicable, the recommendation of a judge
advocate under subsection (d).
    (2) If the accused shows that additional time is required
for the accused to submit such matters, the convening authority
or other person taking action under this Article, for good
cause, may extend the applicable period under paragraph (1) for
not more than an additional 20 days.
    (3) The accused may waive the right to make a submission to
the convening authority under paragraph (1). Such a waiver must
be made in writing and may not be revoked. For the purposes of
paragraph (2) of subsection (c), the time within which the
accused may make a submission under this subsection (b) shall
be deemed to have expired upon the submission of such a waiver
to the convening authority.
    (c)(1) The authority under this Article to modify the
findings and sentence of a court-martial is a matter of command
prerogative involving the sole discretion of the convening
authority. If it is impractical for the convening authority to
act, the convening authority shall forward the case to a person
exercising general court-martial jurisdiction who may take
action under this Article.
    (2) Action on the sentence of a court-martial shall be
taken by the convening authority or by another person
authorized to act under this Article. Such action may be taken
only after consideration of any matters submitted by the
accused under subsection (b) or after the time for submitting
such matters expires, whichever is earlier. The convening
authority or other person taking such action, in that person's
sole discretion may approve, disapprove, commute, or suspend
the sentence in whole or in part.
    (3) Action on the findings of a court-martial by the
convening authority or other person acting on the sentence is
not required. However, such person, in the person's sole
discretion may:
        (A) dismiss any charge or specification by setting
    aside a finding of guilty thereto; or
        (B) change a finding of guilty to a charge or
    specification to a finding of guilty to an offense that is
    a lesser included offense of the offense stated in the
    charge or specification.
    (d) Before acting under this Article on any general or
special court-martial case in which there is a finding of
guilt, the convening authority or other person taking action
under this Article must obtain the written concurrence of the
State Judge Advocate by means of legal review. The convening
authority or other person taking action under this Article
shall refer the record of trial to the judge advocate, and the
judge advocate shall use such record in the preparation of the
review. The review of the judge advocate shall include such
matters as may be prescribed by regulation and shall be served
on the accused, who may submit any matter in response under
subsection (b). Failure to object in the response to the legal
review or to any matter attached to the recommendation waives
the right to object thereto.
    (e)(1) The convening authority or other person taking
action under this Article, in the person's sole discretion, may
order a proceeding in revision or a rehearing.
    (2) A proceeding in revision may be ordered if there is an
apparent error or omission in the record or if the record shows
improper or inconsistent action by a court-martial with respect
to the findings or sentence that can be rectified without
material prejudice to the substantial rights of the accused. In
no case, however, may a proceeding in revision:
        (A) reconsider a finding of not guilty of any
    specification or a ruling which amounts to a finding of not
    guilty;
        (B) reconsider a finding of not guilty of any charge,
    unless there has been a finding of guilty under a
    specification laid under that charge, which sufficiently
    alleges a violation of some Article of this Code; or
        (C) increase the severity of the sentence.
    (3) A rehearing may be ordered by the convening authority
or other person taking action under this Article if that person
disapproves the findings and sentence and states the reasons
for disapproval of the findings. If such person disapproves the
findings and sentence and does not order a rehearing, that
person shall dismiss the charges. A rehearing as to the
findings may not be ordered where there is a lack of sufficient
evidence in the record to support the findings. A rehearing as
to the sentence may be ordered if the convening authority or
other person taking action under this subsection disapproves
the sentence.
 
    Section 61. Article 61. Withdrawal of appeal.
    (a) In each case subject to appellate review under this
Code, the accused may file with the convening authority a
statement expressly withdrawing the right of the accused to
such appeal. Such a withdrawal shall be signed by both the
accused and his defense counsel and must be filed in accordance
with appellate procedures as provided by law.
    (b) The accused may withdraw an appeal at any time in
accordance with appellate procedures as provided by law.
 
    Section 62. Article 62. Appeal by the State.
    (a)(1) In a trial by court-martial in which a punitive
discharge may be adjudged, the State may appeal the following,
other than a finding of not guilty with respect to the charge
or specification by the members of the court-martial, or by a
judge in a bench trial so long as it is not made in
reconsideration:
        (A) An order or ruling of the military judge which
    terminates the proceedings with respect to a charge or
    specification.
        (B) An order or ruling which excludes evidence that is
    substantial proof of a fact material in the proceeding.
        (C) An order or ruling which directs the disclosure of
    classified information.
        (D) An order or ruling which imposes sanctions for
    nondisclosure of classified information.
        (E) A refusal of the military judge to issue a
    protective order sought by the State to prevent the
    disclosure of classified information.
        (F) A refusal by the military judge to enforce an order
    described in subparagraph (E) that has previously been
    issued by appropriate authority.
    (2) An appeal of an order or ruling may not be taken unless
the trial counsel provides the military judge with written
notice of appeal from the order or ruling within 72 hours of
the order or ruling. Such notice shall include a certification
by the trial counsel that the appeal is not taken for the
purpose of delay and, if the order or ruling appealed is one
which excludes evidence, that the evidence excluded is
substantial proof of a fact material in the proceeding.
    (3) An appeal under this Article shall be diligently
prosecuted as provided by law.
    (b) An appeal under this Article shall be forwarded to the
court prescribed in Article 67a of this Code. In ruling on an
appeal under this Article, that court may act only with respect
to matters of law.
    (c) Any period of delay resulting from an appeal under this
Article shall be excluded in deciding any issue regarding
denial of a speedy trial unless an appropriate authority
determines that the appeal was filed solely for the purpose of
delay with the knowledge that it was totally frivolous and
without merit.
 
    Section 63. Article 63. Rehearings. Each rehearing under
this Code shall take place before a court-martial composed of
members not members of the court-martial which first heard the
case. Upon a rehearing the accused may not be tried for any
offense of which he was found not guilty by the first
court-martial, and no sentence in excess of or more severe than
the original sentence may be approved, unless the sentence is
based upon a finding of guilty of an offense not considered
upon the merits in the original proceedings, or unless the
sentence prescribed for the offense is mandatory. If the
sentence approved after the first court-martial was in
accordance with a pretrial agreement and the accused at the
rehearing changes a plea with respect to the charges or
specifications upon which the pretrial agreement was based, or
otherwise does not comply with the pretrial agreement, the
approved sentence as to those charges or specifications may
include any punishment not in excess of that lawfully adjudged
at the first court-martial.
 
    Section 64. Article 64. Review by the senior force judge
advocate.
    (a) Each general and special court-martial case in which
there has been a finding of guilty shall be reviewed by the
senior force judge advocate, or a designee. The senior force
judge advocate, or designee, may not review a case under this
subsection if that person has acted in the same case as an
accuser, investigating officer, member of the court, military
judge, or counsel or has otherwise acted on behalf of the
prosecution or defense. The senior force judge advocate's
review shall be in writing and shall contain the following:
        (1) Conclusions as to whether:
            (A) the court had jurisdiction over the accused and
        the offense;
            (B) the charge and specification stated an
        offense; and
            (C) the sentence was within the limits prescribed
        as a matter of law.
        (2) A response to each allegation of error made in
    writing by the accused.
        (3) If the case is sent for action under subsection
    (b), a recommendation as to the appropriate action to be
    taken and an opinion as to whether corrective action is
    required as a matter of law.
    (b) The record of trial and related documents in each case
reviewed under subsection (a) shall be sent for action to the
Adjutant General if:
        (1) the judge advocate who reviewed the case recommends
    corrective action;
        (2) the sentence approved under subsection (c) of
    Article 60 of this Code extends to dismissal, a bad-conduct
    or dishonorable discharge, or confinement for more than 6
    months; or
        (3) such action is otherwise required by regulations of
    the Adjutant General.
    (c)(1) The Adjutant General may:
        (A) disapprove or approve the findings or sentence, in
    whole or in part;
        (B) remit, commute, or suspend the sentence in whole or
    in part;
        (C) except where the evidence was insufficient at the
    trial to support the findings, order a rehearing on the
    findings, on the sentence, or on both; or
        (D) dismiss the charges.
    (2) If a rehearing is ordered but the convening authority
finds a rehearing impracticable, the convening authority shall
dismiss the charges.
    (3) If the opinion of the senior force judge advocate, or
designee, in the senior force judge advocate's review under
subsection (a) is that corrective action is required as a
matter of law and if the Adjutant General does not take action
that is at least as favorable to the accused as that
recommended by the judge advocate, the record of trial and
action thereon shall be sent to the Governor for review and
action as deemed appropriate.
    (d) The senior force judge advocate, or a designee, may
review any case in which there has been a finding of not guilty
of all charges and specifications. The senior force judge
advocate, or designee, may not review a case under this
subsection if that person has acted in the same case as an
accuser, investigating officer, member of the court, military
judge, or counsel or has otherwise acted on behalf of the
prosecution or defense. The senior force judge advocate's
review shall be limited to questions of subject matter
jurisdiction.
    (e) The record of trial and related documents in each case
reviewed under subsection (d) shall be sent for action to the
Adjutant General. The Adjutant General may:
        (1) when subject matter jurisdiction is found to be
    lacking, void the court-martial ab initio, with or without
    prejudice to the Government, as the Adjutant General deems
    appropriate; or
        (2) return the record of trial and related documents to
    the senior force judge advocate for appeal by the
    Government as provided by law.
 
    Section 65. Article 65. Disposition of records after review
by the convening authority. Except as otherwise required by
this Code, all records of trial and related documents shall be
transmitted and disposed of as prescribed by regulation and
provided by law.
 
    Section 66. Article 66. (Reserved).
 
    Section 67. Article 67. (Reserved).
 
    Section 67a. Article 67a. Review by State Appellate
Authority. Decisions of a court-martial are from a court with
jurisdiction to issue misdemeanor and felony convictions. All
appeals from final decisions of a court-martial shall be to the
Illinois Appellate Court in the same manner as are final
decisions of a circuit court in accordance with the Appellate
Court Act. All such appeals shall be to the Illinois Appellate
Court for the Fourth District. No appeal from a judgment
entered upon a plea of guilty shall be taken except in
accordance with applicable law and Supreme Court Rules. Unless
waived, an accused may appeal as a matter of right a finding of
guilt resulting in an approved sentence of one-year confinement
or more, or in a dismissal for a commissioned officer or
warrant officer, a dishonorable discharge, or a bad-conduct
discharge. The appellate rights and procedures to be followed
shall be those provided by applicable law and Supreme Court
Rules for criminal appeals.
 
    Section 68. Article 68. (Reserved).
 
    Section 69. Article 69. (Reserved).
 
    Section 70. Article 70. Appellate counsel.
    (a) The Attorney General shall act as appellate government
counsel to represent the State in the review or appeal of cases
specified in Article 67a of this Code and before any federal
court. The Attorney General may appoint a judge advocate
nominated by the senior force judge advocate as a Special
Assistant Attorney General to act as appellate government
counsel to represent the State. Such appointment as a Special
Assistant Attorney General shall be at the discretion of the
Attorney General.
    (b) Upon an appeal by this State, an accused has the right
to be represented by detailed military counsel before any
reviewing authority and before any appellate court.
    (c) Upon the appeal by an accused, the accused has the
right to be represented by military counsel before any
reviewing authority.
    (d) Upon the request of an accused entitled to be so
represented, the senior force judge advocate shall appoint a
judge advocate to represent the accused in the review or appeal
of cases specified in subsections (b) and (c) of this Article.
    (e) An accused may be represented by civilian appellate
counsel at no expense to this State.
 
    Section 71. Article 71. Execution of sentence; suspension
of sentence.
    (a) If the sentence of the court-martial extends to
dismissal or a dishonorable or bad-conduct discharge and if the
right of the accused to appellate review is not waived, and an
appeal is not withdrawn under Article 61 of this Code, that
part of the sentence extending to dismissal or a dishonorable
or bad-conduct discharge may not be executed until there is a
final judgment as to the legality of the proceedings. A
judgment as to the legality of the proceedings is final in such
cases when review is completed by the Illinois Appellate Court
for the Fourth District as prescribed in Article 67a of this
Code, and is deemed final by the law of this State.
    (b) If the sentence of the court-martial extends to
dismissal or a dishonorable or bad conduct discharge and if the
right of the accused to appellate review is waived, or an
appeal is withdrawn under Article 61 of this Code, that part of
the sentence extending to dismissal or a dishonorable or
bad-conduct discharge may not be executed until review of the
case by the senior force judge advocate and any action on that
review under Article 64 of this Code is completed. Any other
part of a court-martial sentence may be ordered executed by the
convening authority or other person acting on the case under
Article 60 of this Code when so approved under that Article.
 
    Section 72. Article 72. Vacation of suspension.
    (a) Before the vacation of the suspension of a special
court-martial sentence, which as approved includes a
bad-conduct discharge, or of any general court-martial
sentence, the officer having special court-martial
jurisdiction over the probationer shall hold a hearing on an
alleged violation of probation. The probationer shall be
represented at the hearing by military counsel if the
probationer so desires.
    (b) The record of the hearing and the recommendation of the
officer having special court-martial jurisdiction shall be
sent for action to the officer exercising general court-martial
jurisdiction over the probationer. If the officer vacates the
suspension, any unexecuted part of the sentence, except a
dismissal, shall be executed, subject to applicable
restrictions in this Code.
    (c) The suspension of any other sentence may be vacated by
any authority competent to convene, for the command in which
the accused is serving or assigned, a court of the kind that
imposed the sentence.
 
    Section 73. Article 73. Petition for a new trial. At any
time within 2 years after approval by the convening authority
of a court-martial sentence the accused may petition the
Adjutant General for a new trial on the grounds of newly
discovered evidence or fraud on the court-martial.
 
    Section 74. Article 74. Remission and suspension.
    (a) Any authority competent to convene, for the command in
which the accused is serving or assigned, a court of the kind
that imposed the sentence may remit or suspend any part or
amount of the unexecuted part of any sentence, including all
uncollected forfeitures other than a sentence approved by the
Governor.
    (b) The Governor may, for good cause, substitute an
administrative form of discharge for a discharge or dismissal
executed in accordance with the sentence of a court-martial.
 
    Section 75. Article 75. Restoration.
    (a) Under such regulations as may be prescribed, all
rights, privileges, and property affected by an executed part
of a court-martial sentence which has been set aside or
disapproved, except an executed dismissal or discharge, shall
be restored unless a new trial or rehearing is ordered and such
executed part is included in a sentence imposed upon the new
trial or rehearing.
    (b) If a previously executed sentence of dishonorable or
bad-conduct discharge is not imposed on a new trial, the
Governor may substitute therefor a form of discharge authorized
for administrative issuance unless the accused is to serve out
the remainder of the accused's enlistment.
    (c) If a previously executed sentence of dismissal is not
imposed on a new trial, the Governor may substitute therefor a
form of discharge authorized for administrative issue, and the
commissioned officer dismissed by that sentence may be
reappointed by the Governor alone to such commissioned grade
and with such rank as in the opinion of the Governor that
former officer would have attained had he not been dismissed.
The reappointment of such a former officer shall be without
regard to the existence of a vacancy and shall affect the
promotion status of other officers only insofar as the Governor
may direct. All time between the dismissal and the
reappointment shall be considered as actual service for all
purposes, including the right to pay and allowances, as
permitted by applicable financial management regulations.
 
    Section 76. Article 76. Finality of proceedings, findings,
and sentences. The appellate review of records of trial
provided by this Code, the proceedings, findings, and sentences
of courts-martial as approved, reviewed, or affirmed as
required by this Code, and all dismissals and discharges
carried into execution under sentences by courts-martial
following approval, review, or affirmation as required by this
Code, are final and conclusive. Orders publishing the
proceedings of courts-martial and all action taken pursuant to
those proceedings are binding upon all departments, courts,
agencies, and officers of the United States and the several
states, subject only to action upon a petition for a new trial
as provided in Article 73 of this Code and to action under
Article 74 of this Code.
 
    Section 76a. Article 76a. Leave required to be taken
pending review of certain court-martial convictions. Under
regulations prescribed, an accused who has been sentenced by a
court-martial may be required to take leave pending completion
of action under this Article if the sentence, as approved under
Article 60 of this Code, includes an unsuspended dismissal or
an unsuspended dishonorable or bad-conduct discharge. The
accused may be required to begin such leave on the date on
which the sentence is approved under Article 60 of this Code or
at any time after such date, and such leave may be continued
until the date on which action under this Article is completed
or may be terminated at any earlier time.
 
PART X. PUNITIVE ARTICLES

 
    Section 77. Article 77. Principals. Any person subject to
this Code who:
        (1) commits an offense punishable by this Code, or
    aids, abets, counsels, commands, or procures its
    commission; or
        (2) causes an act to be done which if directly
    performed by him would be punishable by this Code;
is a principal.
 
    Section 78. Article 78. Accessory after the fact. Any
person subject to this Code who, knowing that an offense
punishable by this Code has been committed, receives, comforts,
or assists the offender in order to hinder or prevent his
apprehension, trial, or punishment shall be punished as a
court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 79. Article 79. Conviction of lesser included
offense. An accused may be found guilty of an offense
necessarily included in the offense charged or of an attempt to
commit either the offense charged or an offense necessarily
included therein.
 
    Section 80. Article 80. Attempts.
    (a) An act, done with specific intent to commit an offense
under this Code, amounting to more than mere preparation and
tending, even though failing, to effect its commission, is an
attempt to commit that offense.
    (b) Any person subject to this Code who attempts to commit
any offense punishable by this Code shall be punished as a
court-martial may direct, unless otherwise specifically
prescribed.
    (c) Any person subject to this Code may be convicted of an
attempt to commit an offense although it appears on the trial
that the offense was consummated.
 
    Section 81. Article 81. Conspiracy. Any person subject to
this Code who conspires with any other person to commit an
offense under this Code shall, if one or more of the
conspirators does an act to effect the object of the
conspiracy, be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 82. Article 82. Solicitation.
    (a) Any person subject to this Code who solicits or advises
another or others to desert in violation of Article 85 of this
Code or mutiny in violation of Article 94 of this Code shall,
if the offense solicited or advised is attempted or committed,
be punished with the punishment provided for the commission of
the offense, but, if the offense solicited or advised is not
committed or attempted, the person shall be punished as a
court-martial may direct.
    (b) Any person subject to this Code who solicits or advises
another or others to commit an act of misbehavior before the
enemy in violation of Article 99 of this Code or sedition in
violation of Article 94 of this Code shall, if the offense
solicited or advised is committed, be punished with the
punishment provided for the commission of the offense, but, if
the offense solicited or advised is not committed, the person
shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 83. Article 83. Fraudulent enlistment,
appointment, or separation. Any person who:
        (1) procures his own enlistment or appointment in the
    State military forces by knowingly false representation or
    deliberate concealment as to his qualifications for that
    enlistment or appointment and receives pay or allowances
    thereunder; or
        (2) procures his own separation from the State military
    forces by knowingly false representation or deliberate
    concealment as to his eligibility for that separation;
shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 84. Article 84. Unlawful enlistment, appointment,
or separation. Any person subject to this Code who effects an
enlistment or appointment in or a separation from the State
military forces of any person who is known to him to be
ineligible for that enlistment, appointment, or separation
because it is prohibited by law, regulation, or order shall be
punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 85. Article 85. Desertion.
    (a) Any member of the State military forces who:
        (1) without authority goes or remains absent from his
    unit, organization, or place of duty with intent to remain
    away therefrom permanently;
        (2) quits his unit, organization, or place of duty with
    intent to avoid hazardous duty or to shirk important
    service; or
        (3) without being regularly separated from one of the
    State military forces enlists or accepts an appointment in
    the same or another one of the State military forces, or in
    one of the armed forces of the United States, without fully
    disclosing the fact that he has not been regularly
    separated, or enters any foreign armed service except when
    authorized by the United States;
is guilty of desertion.
    (b) Any commissioned officer of the State military forces
who, after tender of his resignation and before notice of its
acceptance, quits his post or proper duties without leave and
with intent to remain away therefrom permanently is guilty of
desertion.
    (c) Any person found guilty of desertion or attempt to
desert shall be punished, if the offense is committed in time
of war, by confinement of not more than 10 years or such other
punishment as a court-martial may direct, but if the desertion
or attempt to desert occurs at any other time, by such
punishment as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 86. Article 86. Absence without leave. Any person
subject to this Code who, without authority:
        (1) fails to go to his appointed place of duty at the
    time prescribed;
        (2) goes from that place; or
        (3) absents himself or remains absent from his unit,
    organization, or place of duty at which he is required to
    be at the time prescribed;
shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 87. Article 87. Missing movement. Any person
subject to this Code who through neglect or design misses the
movement of a ship, aircraft, or unit with which he is required
in the course of duty to move shall be punished as a
court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 88. Article 88. Contempt toward officials. Any
commissioned officer who uses contemptuous words against the
President, the Vice President, Congress, the Secretary of
Defense, the Secretary of a military department, the Secretary
of Homeland Security, or the Governor or General Assembly shall
be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 89. Article 89. Disrespect toward superior
commissioned officer. Any person subject to this Code who
behaves with disrespect toward his superior commissioned
officer shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 90. Article 90. Assaulting or willfully disobeying
superior commissioned officer. Any person subject to this Code
who:
        (1) strikes his superior commissioned officer or draws
    or lifts up any weapon or offers any violence against him
    while he is in the execution of his office; or
        (2) willfully disobeys a lawful command of his superior
    commissioned officer;
shall be punished, if the offense is committed in time of war,
by confinement of not more than 10 years or such other
punishment as a court-martial may direct, and if the offense is
committed at any other time, by such punishment as a
court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 91. Article 91. Insubordinate conduct toward
warrant officer, noncommissioned officer, or petty officer.
Any warrant officer or enlisted member who:
        (1) strikes or assaults a warrant officer,
    noncommissioned officer, or petty officer, while that
    officer is in the execution of his office;
        (2) willfully disobeys the lawful order of a warrant
    officer, noncommissioned officer, or petty officer; or
        (3) treats with contempt or is disrespectful in
    language or deportment toward a warrant officer,
    noncommissioned officer, or petty officer, while that
    officer is in the execution of his office;
shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 92. Article 92. Failure to obey order or
regulation. Any person subject to this Code who:
        (1) violates or fails to obey any lawful general order
    or regulation;
        (2) having knowledge of any other lawful order issued
    by a member of the State military forces, which it is his
    duty to obey, fails to obey the order; or
        (3) is derelict in the performance of his duties;
shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 93. Article 93. Cruelty and maltreatment. Any
person subject to this Code who is guilty of cruelty toward, or
oppression or maltreatment of, any person subject to his orders
shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 94. Article 94. Mutiny or sedition.
    (a) Any person subject to this Code who:
        (1) with intent to usurp or override lawful military
    authority, refuses, in concert with any other person, to
    obey orders or otherwise do his duty or creates any
    violence or disturbance is guilty of mutiny;
        (2) with intent to cause the overthrow or destruction
    of lawful civil authority, creates, in concert with any
    other person, revolt, violence, or other disturbance
    against that authority is guilty of sedition; or
        (3) fails to do his utmost to prevent and suppress a
    mutiny or sedition being committed in his presence, or
    fails to take all reasonable means to inform his superior
    commissioned officer or commanding officer of a mutiny or
    sedition which he knows or has reason to believe is taking
    place, is guilty of a failure to suppress or report a
    mutiny or sedition.
    (b) A person who is found guilty of attempted mutiny,
mutiny, sedition, or failure to suppress or report a mutiny or
sedition shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 95. Article 95. Resistance, flight, breach of
arrest, and escape. Any person subject to this Code who:
        (1) resists apprehension;
        (2) flees from apprehension;
        (3) breaks arrest; or
        (4) escapes from custody or confinement;
shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 96. Article 96. Releasing prisoner without proper
authority. Any person subject to this Code who, without proper
authority, releases any prisoner committed to his charge, or
who through neglect or design suffers any such prisoner to
escape, shall be punished as a court-martial may direct,
whether or not the prisoner was committed in strict compliance
with law.
 
    Section 97. Article 97. Unlawful detention. Any person
subject to this Code who, except as provided by law or
regulation, apprehends, arrests, or confines any person shall
be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 98. Article 98. Noncompliance with procedural
rules. Any person subject to this Code who:
        (1) is responsible for unnecessary delay in the
    disposition of any case of a person accused of an offense
    under this Code; or
        (2) knowingly and intentionally fails to enforce or
    comply with any provision of this Code regulating the
    proceedings before, during, or after trial of an accused;
shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 99. Article 99. Misbehavior before the enemy. Any
person subject to this Code who before or in the presence of
the enemy:
        (1) runs away;
        (2) shamefully abandons, surrenders, or delivers up
    any command, unit, place, or military property which it is
    his duty to defend;
        (3) through disobedience, neglect, or intentional
    misconduct endangers the safety of any such command, unit,
    place, or military property;
        (4) casts away his arms or ammunition;
        (5) is guilty of cowardly conduct;
        (6) quits his place of duty to plunder or pillage;
        (7) causes false alarms in any command, unit, or place
    under control of the armed forces of the United States or
    the State military forces;
        (8) willfully fails to do his utmost to encounter,
    engage, capture, or destroy any enemy troops, combatants,
    vessels, aircraft, or any other thing, which it is his duty
    so to encounter, engage, capture, or destroy; or
        (9) does not afford all practicable relief and
    assistance to any troops, combatants, vessels, or aircraft
    of the armed forces belonging to the United States or their
    allies, to the State, or to any other state, when engaged
    in battle;
shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 100. Article 100. Subordinate compelling
surrender. Any person subject to this Code who compels or
attempts to compel the commander of any of the State military
forces of this State, or of any other state, place, vessel,
aircraft, or other military property, or of any body of members
of the armed forces, to give it up to an enemy or to abandon it,
or who strikes the colors or flag to an enemy without proper
authority, shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 101. Article 101. Improper use of countersign. Any
person subject to this Code who in time of war discloses the
parole or countersign to any person not entitled to receive it
or who gives to another, who is entitled to receive and use the
parole or countersign, a different parole or countersign from
that which, to his knowledge, he was authorized and required to
give, shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 102. Article 102. Forcing a safeguard. Any person
subject to this Code who forces a safeguard shall be punished
as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 103. Article 103. Captured or abandoned property.
    (a) All persons subject to this Code shall secure all
public property taken for the service of the United States or
this State, and shall give notice and turn over to the proper
authority without delay all captured or abandoned property in
their possession, custody, or control.
    (b) Any person subject to this Code who:
        (1) fails to carry out the duties prescribed in
    subsection (a);
        (2) buys, sells, trades, or in any way deals in or
    disposes of taken, captured, or abandoned property,
    whereby he receives or expects any profit, benefit, or
    advantage to himself or another directly or indirectly
    connected with himself; or
        (3) engages in looting or pillaging;
shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 104. Article 104. Aiding the enemy. Any person
subject to this Code who:
        (1) aids, or attempts to aid, the enemy with arms,
    ammunition, supplies, money, or other things; or
        (2) without proper authority, knowingly harbors or
    protects or gives intelligence to, or communicates or
    corresponds with or holds any intercourse with the enemy,
    either directly or indirectly;
shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 105. Article 105. Misconduct as prisoner. Any
person subject to this Code who, while in the hands of the
enemy in time of war:
        (1) for the purpose of securing favorable treatment by
    his captors acts without proper authority in a manner
    contrary to law, custom, or regulation, to the detriment of
    others of whatever nationality held by the enemy as
    civilian or military prisoners; or
        (2) while in a position of authority over such persons
    maltreats them without justifiable cause;
shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 106. Article 106. (Reserved).
 
    Section 106a. Article 106a. (Reserved).
 
    Section 107. Article 107. False official statements. Any
person subject to this Code who, with intent to deceive, signs
any false record, return, regulation, order, or other official
document made in the line of duty, knowing it to be false, or
makes any other false official statement made in the line of
duty, knowing it to be false, shall be punished as a
court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 108. Article 108. Military property: loss, damage,
destruction, or wrongful disposition. Any person subject to
this Code who, without proper authority:
        (1) sells or otherwise disposes of;
        (2) willfully or through neglect damages, destroys, or
    loses; or
        (3) willfully or through neglect suffers to be lost,
    damaged, destroyed, sold, or wrongfully disposed of;
any military property of the United States or of any state,
shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 109. Article 109. Property other than military
property: waste, spoilage, or destruction. Any person subject
to this Code who willfully or recklessly wastes, spoils, or
otherwise willfully and wrongfully destroys or damages any
property other than military property of the United States or
of any state shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 110. Article 110. Improper hazarding of vessel.
    (a) Any person subject to this Code who willfully and
wrongfully hazards or suffers to be hazarded any vessel of the
armed forces of the United States or any state military forces
shall suffer such punishment as a court-martial may direct.
    (b) Any person subject to this Code who negligently hazards
or suffers to be hazarded any vessel of the armed forces of the
United States or any state military forces shall be punished as
a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 111. Article 111. (Reserved).
 
    Section 112. Article 112. Drunk on duty. Any person subject
to this Code other than a sentinel or look-out, who is found
drunk on duty, shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 112a. Article 112a. Wrongful use, possession,
etc., of controlled substances.
    (a) Any person subject to this Code who wrongfully uses,
possesses, manufactures, distributes, imports into the customs
territory of the United States, exports from the United States,
or introduces into an installation, vessel, vehicle, or
aircraft used by or under the control of the armed forces of
the United States or of any state military forces a substance
described in subsection (b) shall be punished as a
court-martial may direct.
    (b) The substances referred to in subsection (a) are the
following:
        (1) Opium, heroin, cocaine, amphetamine, lysergic acid
    diethylamide, methamphetamine, phencyclidine, barbituric
    acid, and marijuana and any compound or derivative of any
    such substance.
        (2) Any substance not specified in paragraph (1) that
    is listed on a schedule of controlled substances prescribed
    by the President for the purposes of the Uniform Code of
    Military Justice of the armed forces of the United States
    (10 U.S.C. 801 et seq.).
        (3) Any other substance not specified in paragraph (1)
    or contained on a list prescribed by the President under
    paragraph (2) that is listed in schedules I through V of
    Article 202 of the Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C.
    812).
 
    Section 113. Article 113. Misbehavior of sentinel. Any
sentinel or look-out who is found drunk or sleeping upon his
post or leaves it before being regularly relieved shall be
punished, if the offense is committed in time of war, by
confinement of not more than 10 years or other punishment as a
court-martial may direct, but if the offense is committed at
any other time, by such punishment as a court-martial may
direct.
 
    Section 114. Article 114. Dueling. Any person subject to
this Code who fights or promotes, or is concerned in or
connives at fighting a duel, or who, having knowledge of a
challenge sent or about to be sent, fails to report the fact
promptly to the proper authority, shall be punished as a
court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 115. Article 115. Malingering. Any person subject
to this Code who for the purpose of avoiding work, duty, or
service:
        (1) feigns illness, physical disablement, mental
    lapse, or derangement; or
        (2) intentionally inflicts self-injury;
shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 116. Article 116. Riot or breach of peace. Any
person subject to this Code who causes or participates in any
riot or breach of the peace shall be punished as a
court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 117. Article 117. Provoking speeches or gestures.
Any person subject to this Code who uses provoking or
reproachful words or gestures towards any other person subject
to this Code shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
 
    Section 118. Article 118. (Reserved).
 
    Section 119. Article 119. (Reserved).
 
    Section 120. Article 120. (Reserved).
 
    Section 121. Article 121. (Reserved).
 
    Section 122. Article 122. (Reserved).
 
    Section 123. Article 123. (Reserved).
 
    Section 123a. Article 123a. (Reserved).
 
    Section 124. Article 124. (Reserved).
 
    Section 125. Article 125. (Reserved).
 
    Section 126. Article 126. (Reserved).
 
    Section 127. Article 127. (Reserved).
 
    Section 128. Article 128. (Reserved).
 
    Section 129. Article 129. (Reserved).
 
    Section 130. Article 130. (Reserved).
 
    Section 131. Article 131. (Reserved).
 
    Section 132. Article 132. Frauds against the government.
Any person subject to this Code:
        (1) who, knowing it to be false or fraudulent:
            (A) makes any claim against the United States, this
        State, or any officer thereof; or
            (B) presents to any person in the civil or military
        service thereof, for approval or payment, any claim
        against the United States, this State, or any officer
        thereof;
        (2) who, for the purpose of obtaining the approval,
    allowance, or payment of any claim against the United
    States, this State, or any officer thereof:
            (A) makes or uses any writing or other paper
        knowing it to contain any false or fraudulent
        statements;
            (B) makes any oath, affirmation, or certification
        to any fact or to any writing or other paper knowing
        the oath, affirmation, or certification to be false; or
            (C) forges or counterfeits any signature upon any
        writing or other paper, or uses any such signature
        knowing it to be forged or counterfeited;
        (3) who, having charge, possession, custody, or
    control of any money, or other property of the United
    States or this State, furnished or intended for the armed
    forces of the United States or the State military forces,
    knowingly delivers to any person having authority to
    receive it, any amount thereof less than that for which he
    receives a certificate or receipt; or
        (4) who, being authorized to make or deliver any paper
    certifying the receipt of any property of the United States
    or this State, furnished or intended for the armed forces
    of the United States or the State military forces, makes or
    delivers to any person such writing without having full
    knowledge of the truth of the statements therein contained
    and with intent to defraud the United States or this State;
shall, upon conviction, be punished as a court-martial may
direct.
 
    Section 133. Article 133. Conduct unbecoming an officer and
a gentleman. Any commissioned officer, cadet, candidate, or
midshipman who is convicted of conduct unbecoming an officer
and a gentleman shall be punished as a court-martial may
direct.
 
    Section 134. Article 134. General Article. Though not
specifically mentioned in this Code, all disorders and neglects
to the prejudice of good order and discipline in the State
military forces and all conduct of a nature to bring discredit
upon the State military forces shall be taken cognizance of by
a court-martial and punished at the discretion of a military
court. However, where a crime constitutes an offense that
violates both this Code and the criminal laws of the state
where the offense occurs or criminal laws of the United States,
jurisdiction of the military court must be determined in
accordance with subsection (b) of Article 2 of this Code.
 
PART XI. MISCELLANEOUS

 
    Section 135. Article 135. Courts of inquiry.
    (a) Courts of inquiry to investigate any matter of concern
to the State military forces may be convened by any person
authorized to convene a general court-martial, whether or not
the persons involved have requested such an inquiry.
    (b) A court of inquiry consists of 3 or more commissioned
officers. For each court of inquiry, the convening authority
shall also appoint counsel for the court.
    (c) Any person subject to this Code whose conduct is
subject to inquiry shall be designated as a party. Any person
subject to this Code who has a direct interest in the subject
of inquiry has the right to be designated as a party upon
request to the court. Any person designated as a party shall be
given due notice and has the right to be present, to be
represented by counsel, to cross-examine witnesses, and to
introduce evidence.
    (d) Members of a court of inquiry may be challenged by a
party, but only for cause stated to the court.
    (e) The members, counsel, the reporter, and interpreters of
courts of inquiry shall take an oath to faithfully perform
their duties.
    (f) Witnesses may be summoned to appear and testify and be
examined before courts of inquiry, as provided for
courts-martial.
    (g) Courts of inquiry shall make findings of fact but may
not express opinions or make recommendations unless required to
do so by the convening authority.
    (h) Each court of inquiry shall keep a record of its
proceedings, which shall be authenticated by the signatures of
the president and counsel for the court and forwarded to the
convening authority. If the record cannot be authenticated by
the president, it shall be signed by a member in lieu of the
president. If the record cannot be authenticated by the counsel
for the court, it shall be signed by a member in lieu of the
counsel.
 
    Section 136. Article 136. Authority to administer oaths and
to act as notary.
    (a) The following persons may administer oaths for the
purposes of military administration, including military
justice:
        (1) All judge advocates.
        (2) All summary courts-martial.
        (3) All adjutants, assistant adjutants, acting
    adjutants, and personnel adjutants.
        (4) All commanding officers of the naval militia.
        (5) All other persons designated by regulations of the
    armed forces of the United States or by State statute.
    (b) The following persons may administer oaths necessary in
the performance of their duties:
        (1) The president, military judge, and trial counsel
    for all general and special courts-martial.
        (2) The president and the counsel for the court of any
    court of inquiry.
        (3) All officers designated to take a deposition.
        (4) All persons detailed to conduct an investigation.
        (5) All recruiting officers.
        (6) All other persons designated by regulations of the
    armed forces of the United States or by State statute.
    (c) The signature without seal of any such person, together
with the title of his office, is prima facie evidence of the
person's authority.
 
    Section 137. Article 137. Articles to be explained.
    (a)(1) The Articles of this Code specified in paragraph (3)
shall be carefully explained to each enlisted member at the
time of, or within 30 days after, the member's initial entrance
into a duty status with the State military forces.
    (2) Such Articles shall be explained again:
        (A) after the member has completed basic or recruit
    training; and
        (B) at the time when the member reenlists.
    (3) This subsection applies with respect to Articles 2, 3,
7 through 15, 25, 27, 31, 37, 38, 55, 77 through 134, and 137
through 139 of this Code.
    (b) The text of this Code and of the regulations or orders
prescribed under this Code shall be made available to a member
of the State military forces, upon request by the member, for
the member's personal examination, but this Code is effective
and binding upon the State military forces upon the effective
date noted in Article 999, and said regulations or orders are
effective upon proper publishing of same, pursuant to other law
or regulation.
 
    Section 138. Article 138. Complaints of wrongs. Any member
of the State military forces who believes himself wronged by a
commanding officer, and who, upon due application to that
commanding officer, is refused redress, may complain to any
superior commissioned officer, who shall forward the complaint
to the officer exercising general court-martial jurisdiction
over the officer against whom it is made. The officer
exercising general court-martial jurisdiction shall examine
into the complaint and take proper measures for redressing the
wrong complained of; and shall, as soon as possible, send to
the Adjutant General a true statement of that complaint, with
the proceedings had thereon.
 
    Section 139. Article 139. Redress of injuries to property.
    (a) Whenever complaint is made to any commanding officer
that willful damage has been done to the property of any person
or that the person's property has been wrongfully taken by
members of the State military forces, that person may, under
such regulations prescribed, convene a board to investigate the
complaint. The board shall consist of from one to 3
commissioned officers and, for the purpose of that
investigation, it has power to summon witnesses and examine
them upon oath, to receive depositions or other documentary
evidence, and to assess the damages sustained against the
responsible parties. The assessment of damages made by the
board is subject to the approval of the commanding officer, and
in the amount approved by that officer shall be charged against
the pay of the offenders. The order of the commanding officer
directing charges herein authorized is conclusive on any
disbursing officer for payment to the injured parties of the
damages so assessed and approved.
    (b) If the offenders cannot be ascertained, but the
organization or detachment to which they belong is known,
charges totaling the amount of damages assessed and approved
may be made in such proportion as may be considered just upon
the individual members thereof who are shown to have been
present at the scene at the time the damages complained of were
inflicted, as determined by the approved findings of the board.
 
    Section 140. Article 140. Delegation by the Governor. The
Governor may delegate any authority vested in the Governor
under this Code, and provide for the subdelegation of any such
authority, except the power given the Governor by Article 22 of
this Code.
 
    Section 141. Article 141. Payment of fees, costs, and
expenses.
    (a) The fees and authorized travel expenses of all
witnesses, experts, victims, court reporters, and
interpreters, fees for the service of process, the costs of
collection, apprehension, detention and confinement, and all
other necessary expenses of prosecution and the administration
of military justice, not otherwise payable by any other source,
shall be paid out of the State Military Justice Fund.
    (b) For the foregoing purposes, the State Military Justice
Fund is created as a special fund in the State treasury. The
Fund shall be administered by the Adjutant General, from which
expenses of military justice shall be paid in the amounts and
manner as prescribed by law. The General Assembly may
appropriate and have deposited into the Fund such moneys as it
deems necessary to carry out the purposes of this Code.
 
    Section 142. Article 142. Payment of fines and disposition
thereof.
    (a) Fines imposed by a military court or through imposition
of non-judicial punishment may be paid to this State and
delivered to the court or imposing officer, or to a person
executing their process. Fines may be collected in the
following manner:
        (1) by cash or money order;
        (2) by retention of any pay or allowances due or to
    become due the person fined from any state or the United
    States; or
        (3) by garnishment or levy, together with costs, on the
    wages, goods, and chattels of a person delinquent in paying
    a fine, as provided by law.
    (b) Any sum so received or retained shall be deposited into
the State Military Justice Fund or to whomever the court so
directs.
 
    Section 143. Article 143. Uniformity of interpretation.
This Code shall be so construed as to effectuate its general
purpose to make it in conformity, so far as practical, with the
Uniform Code of Military Justice, Chapter 47 of Title 10,
United States Code.
 
    Section 144. Article 144. Immunity for action of military
courts. All persons acting under the provisions of this Code,
whether as a member of the military or as a civilian, shall be
immune from any personal liability for any of the acts or
omissions which they did or failed to do as part of their
duties under this Code.
 
    Section 145. Article 145. Severability. The provisions of
this Code are hereby declared to be severable and if any
provision of this Code or the application of such provision to
any person or circumstance is declared invalid for any reason,
such declaration shall not affect the validity of the remaining
portions of this Code.
 
    Section 146. Article 146. (Reserved).
 
    Section 147. Article 147. Time of taking effect. (See
Section 999 for effective date.)
 
    Section 148. Article 148. Supersedes existing State
military justice codes. On the effective date of this Code,
this law supersedes all existing statutes, ordinances,
directives, rules, regulations, orders and other laws in this
State covered by the subject matter of this Code.
 
    Section 149. Article 149. Civilian crimes assimilated. Any
person subject to this Code who commits an offense not
enumerated in this Code, but which is an offense under the laws
of the United States, the laws of this State, or the laws of
another state, U.S. Commonwealth, Territory, Possession, or
District, while said person is subject to the jurisdiction of
this Code under Article 2, is guilty of any act or omission
which, although not made punishable by any enactment of this
State, is punishable if committed or omitted within the
jurisdiction of the laws of the United States, the laws of this
State, or the laws of another state, Territory, Possession, or
District, and said offense may be charged as an offense under
Article 134 of this Code pursuant to the substantive law of the
jurisdiction where the offense was committed, in force at the
time of said offense, and shall be punished pursuant to said
other law, subject only to the maximum punishment prescribed by
this Code.
 
    Section 150. The Illinois Administrative Procedure Act is
amended by changing Section 5-45 as follows:
 
    (5 ILCS 100/5-45)  (from Ch. 127, par. 1005-45)
    Sec. 5-45. Emergency rulemaking.
    (a) "Emergency" means the existence of any situation that
any agency finds reasonably constitutes a threat to the public
interest, safety, or welfare.
    (b) If any agency finds that an emergency exists that
requires adoption of a rule upon fewer days than is required by
Section 5-40 and states in writing its reasons for that
finding, the agency may adopt an emergency rule without prior
notice or hearing upon filing a notice of emergency rulemaking
with the Secretary of State under Section 5-70. The notice
shall include the text of the emergency rule and shall be
published in the Illinois Register. Consent orders or other
court orders adopting settlements negotiated by an agency may
be adopted under this Section. Subject to applicable
constitutional or statutory provisions, an emergency rule
becomes effective immediately upon filing under Section 5-65 or
at a stated date less than 10 days thereafter. The agency's
finding and a statement of the specific reasons for the finding
shall be filed with the rule. The agency shall take reasonable
and appropriate measures to make emergency rules known to the
persons who may be affected by them.
    (c) An emergency rule may be effective for a period of not
longer than 150 days, but the agency's authority to adopt an
identical rule under Section 5-40 is not precluded. No
emergency rule may be adopted more than once in any 24 month
period, except that this limitation on the number of emergency
rules that may be adopted in a 24 month period does not apply
to (i) emergency rules that make additions to and deletions
from the Drug Manual under Section 5-5.16 of the Illinois
Public Aid Code or the generic drug formulary under Section
3.14 of the Illinois Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, (ii)
emergency rules adopted by the Pollution Control Board before
July 1, 1997 to implement portions of the Livestock Management
Facilities Act, (iii) emergency rules adopted by the Illinois
Department of Public Health under subsections (a) through (i)
of Section 2 of the Department of Public Health Act when
necessary to protect the public's health, (iv) emergency rules
adopted pursuant to subsection (n) of this Section, (v)
emergency rules adopted pursuant to subsection (o) of this
Section, or (vi) emergency rules adopted pursuant to subsection
(c-5) of this Section. Two or more emergency rules having
substantially the same purpose and effect shall be deemed to be
a single rule for purposes of this Section.
    (c-5) To facilitate the maintenance of the program of group
health benefits provided to annuitants, survivors, and retired
employees under the State Employees Group Insurance Act of
1971, rules to alter the contributions to be paid by the State,
annuitants, survivors, retired employees, or any combination
of those entities, for that program of group health benefits,
shall be adopted as emergency rules. The adoption of those
rules shall be considered an emergency and necessary for the
public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (d) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 1999 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of Public Act 90-587
or 90-588 or any other budget initiative for fiscal year 1999
may be adopted in accordance with this Section by the agency
charged with administering that provision or initiative,
except that the 24-month limitation on the adoption of
emergency rules and the provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125
do not apply to rules adopted under this subsection (d). The
adoption of emergency rules authorized by this subsection (d)
shall be deemed to be necessary for the public interest,
safety, and welfare.
    (e) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 2000 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of Public Act 91-24
this amendatory Act of the 91st General Assembly or any other
budget initiative for fiscal year 2000 may be adopted in
accordance with this Section by the agency charged with
administering that provision or initiative, except that the
24-month limitation on the adoption of emergency rules and the
provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules
adopted under this subsection (e). The adoption of emergency
rules authorized by this subsection (e) shall be deemed to be
necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (f) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 2001 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of Public Act 91-712
this amendatory Act of the 91st General Assembly or any other
budget initiative for fiscal year 2001 may be adopted in
accordance with this Section by the agency charged with
administering that provision or initiative, except that the
24-month limitation on the adoption of emergency rules and the
provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules
adopted under this subsection (f). The adoption of emergency
rules authorized by this subsection (f) shall be deemed to be
necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (g) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 2002 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of Public Act 92-10
this amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly or any other
budget initiative for fiscal year 2002 may be adopted in
accordance with this Section by the agency charged with
administering that provision or initiative, except that the
24-month limitation on the adoption of emergency rules and the
provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules
adopted under this subsection (g). The adoption of emergency
rules authorized by this subsection (g) shall be deemed to be
necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (h) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 2003 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of Public Act 92-597
this amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly or any other
budget initiative for fiscal year 2003 may be adopted in
accordance with this Section by the agency charged with
administering that provision or initiative, except that the
24-month limitation on the adoption of emergency rules and the
provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules
adopted under this subsection (h). The adoption of emergency
rules authorized by this subsection (h) shall be deemed to be
necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (i) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 2004 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of Public Act 93-20
this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly or any other
budget initiative for fiscal year 2004 may be adopted in
accordance with this Section by the agency charged with
administering that provision or initiative, except that the
24-month limitation on the adoption of emergency rules and the
provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules
adopted under this subsection (i). The adoption of emergency
rules authorized by this subsection (i) shall be deemed to be
necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (j) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the State's fiscal year
2005 budget as provided under the Fiscal Year 2005 Budget
Implementation (Human Services) Act, emergency rules to
implement any provision of the Fiscal Year 2005 Budget
Implementation (Human Services) Act may be adopted in
accordance with this Section by the agency charged with
administering that provision, except that the 24-month
limitation on the adoption of emergency rules and the
provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules
adopted under this subsection (j). The Department of Public Aid
may also adopt rules under this subsection (j) necessary to
administer the Illinois Public Aid Code and the Children's
Health Insurance Program Act. The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by this subsection (j) shall be deemed to be
necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (k) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the State's fiscal year
2006 budget, emergency rules to implement any provision of
Public Act 94-48 this amendatory Act of the 94th General
Assembly or any other budget initiative for fiscal year 2006
may be adopted in accordance with this Section by the agency
charged with administering that provision or initiative,
except that the 24-month limitation on the adoption of
emergency rules and the provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125
do not apply to rules adopted under this subsection (k). The
Department of Healthcare and Family Services may also adopt
rules under this subsection (k) necessary to administer the
Illinois Public Aid Code, the Senior Citizens and Persons with
Disabilities Property Tax Relief Act, the Senior Citizens and
Disabled Persons Prescription Drug Discount Program Act (now
the Illinois Prescription Drug Discount Program Act), and the
Children's Health Insurance Program Act. The adoption of
emergency rules authorized by this subsection (k) shall be
deemed to be necessary for the public interest, safety, and
welfare.
    (l) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the State's fiscal year
2007 budget, the Department of Healthcare and Family Services
may adopt emergency rules during fiscal year 2007, including
rules effective July 1, 2007, in accordance with this
subsection to the extent necessary to administer the
Department's responsibilities with respect to amendments to
the State plans and Illinois waivers approved by the federal
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services necessitated by the
requirements of Title XIX and Title XXI of the federal Social
Security Act. The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (l) shall be deemed to be necessary for the
public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (m) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the State's fiscal year
2008 budget, the Department of Healthcare and Family Services
may adopt emergency rules during fiscal year 2008, including
rules effective July 1, 2008, in accordance with this
subsection to the extent necessary to administer the
Department's responsibilities with respect to amendments to
the State plans and Illinois waivers approved by the federal
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services necessitated by the
requirements of Title XIX and Title XXI of the federal Social
Security Act. The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (m) shall be deemed to be necessary for the
public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (n) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the State's fiscal year
2010 budget, emergency rules to implement any provision of
Public Act 96-45 this amendatory Act of the 96th General
Assembly or any other budget initiative authorized by the 96th
General Assembly for fiscal year 2010 may be adopted in
accordance with this Section by the agency charged with
administering that provision or initiative. The adoption of
emergency rules authorized by this subsection (n) shall be
deemed to be necessary for the public interest, safety, and
welfare. The rulemaking authority granted in this subsection
(n) shall apply only to rules promulgated during Fiscal Year
2010.
    (o) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the State's fiscal year
2011 budget, emergency rules to implement any provision of
Public Act 96-958 this amendatory Act of the 96th General
Assembly or any other budget initiative authorized by the 96th
General Assembly for fiscal year 2011 may be adopted in
accordance with this Section by the agency charged with
administering that provision or initiative. The adoption of
emergency rules authorized by this subsection (o) is deemed to
be necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare. The
rulemaking authority granted in this subsection (o) applies
only to rules promulgated on or after the effective date of
Public Act 96-958 this amendatory Act of the 96th General
Assembly through June 30, 2011.
    (p) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 97-689,
emergency rules to implement any provision of Public Act 97-689
may be adopted in accordance with this subsection (p) by the
agency charged with administering that provision or
initiative. The 150-day limitation of the effective period of
emergency rules does not apply to rules adopted under this
subsection (p), and the effective period may continue through
June 30, 2013. The 24-month limitation on the adoption of
emergency rules does not apply to rules adopted under this
subsection (p). The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (p) is deemed to be necessary for the public
interest, safety, and welfare.
    (q) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Articles 7, 8, 9, 11, and
12 of Public Act 98-104 this amendatory Act of the 98th General
Assembly, emergency rules to implement any provision of
Articles 7, 8, 9, 11, and 12 of Public Act 98-104 this
amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly may be adopted in
accordance with this subsection (q) by the agency charged with
administering that provision or initiative. The 24-month
limitation on the adoption of emergency rules does not apply to
rules adopted under this subsection (q). The adoption of
emergency rules authorized by this subsection (q) is deemed to
be necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (r) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 98-651 this
amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, emergency rules to
implement Public Act 98-651 this amendatory Act of the 98th
General Assembly may be adopted in accordance with this
subsection (r) by the Department of Healthcare and Family
Services. The 24-month limitation on the adoption of emergency
rules does not apply to rules adopted under this subsection
(r). The adoption of emergency rules authorized by this
subsection (r) is deemed to be necessary for the public
interest, safety, and welfare.
    (s) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Sections 5-5b.1 and 5A-2 of
the Illinois Public Aid Code, emergency rules to implement any
provision of Section 5-5b.1 or Section 5A-2 of the Illinois
Public Aid Code may be adopted in accordance with this
subsection (s) by the Department of Healthcare and Family
Services. The rulemaking authority granted in this subsection
(s) shall apply only to those rules adopted prior to July 1,
2015. Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, any
emergency rule adopted under this subsection (s) shall only
apply to payments made for State fiscal year 2015. The adoption
of emergency rules authorized by this subsection (s) is deemed
to be necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (t) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Article II of Public Act
99-6 this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly,
emergency rules to implement the changes made by Article II of
Public Act 99-6 this amendatory Act of the 99th General
Assembly to the Emergency Telephone System Act may be adopted
in accordance with this subsection (t) by the Department of
State Police. The rulemaking authority granted in this
subsection (t) shall apply only to those rules adopted prior to
July 1, 2016. The 24-month limitation on the adoption of
emergency rules does not apply to rules adopted under this
subsection (t). The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (t) is deemed to be necessary for the public
interest, safety, and welfare.
    (u) (t) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the Burn Victims Relief
Act, emergency rules to implement any provision of the Act may
be adopted in accordance with this subsection (u) (t) by the
Department of Insurance. The rulemaking authority granted in
this subsection (u) (t) shall apply only to those rules adopted
prior to December 31, 2015. The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by this subsection (u) (t) is deemed to be necessary
for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (v) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of this amendatory Act of the
99th General Assembly, emergency rules to implement the changes
made by this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly may be
adopted in accordance with this subsection (v) by the Adjutant
General. The adoption of emergency rules authorized by this
subsection (v) is deemed to be necessary for the public
interest, safety, and welfare.
(Source: P.A. 98-104, eff. 7-22-13; 98-463, eff. 8-16-13;
98-651, eff. 6-16-14; 99-2, eff. 3-26-15; 99-6, eff. 1-1-16;
99-143, eff. 7-27-15; 99-455, eff. 1-1-16; revised 10-15-15.)
 
    Section 153. The Military Code of Illinois is amended by
changing Section 90 and by adding Section 34.1 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 1805/34.1 new)
    Sec. 34.1. Separation; discharge; Illinois National Guard.
    (a) Members of the Illinois National Guard shall be
separated from the active service in accordance with federal
laws and regulations as made applicable to the National Guard,
except as otherwise provided herein or in the Illinois Code of
Military Justice.
    (b) Members of the Illinois National Guard who are
discharged from the Illinois National Guard, in the case of
officers with a dismissal or in the case of enlisted personnel
with a dishonorable discharge, shall be ineligible to hold any
elective or appointive office, position, or employment in the
service of this State, any county, or any municipality thereof,
for a period of 5 years unless such disability shall be removed
by the Governor.
 
    (20 ILCS 1805/90)  (from Ch. 129, par. 220.90)
    Sec. 90. (a) If any member of the Illinois National Guard
is criminally prosecuted by civil authorities of the United
States or any state, commonwealth, or territory of the United
States, or criminal action for any act or omission determined
by the Attorney General to have been within the scope of the
member's military duties, performed or committed by such
member, or for any an act or omission caused, ordered, or
directed by such member to be done or performed within the
scope of military duty, the member shall be entitled to defense
representation by the Attorney General or, if the Attorney
General determines it appropriate, by a qualified private
defense attorney of the member's choice subject to the approval
of the Attorney General at State expense. In that case all
costs in furtherance of and while in the performance of
military duty, all the expense of the defense, of such action
or actions civil or criminal, including attorney's fees,
witnesses' fees for the defense, defendant's court costs and
all costs for transcripts of records and abstracts thereof on
appeal by the defense, shall be paid by the State; provided,
that the Attorney General of the State shall be first consulted
in regard to, and approve of, the selection of the attorney for
the defense: And, provided, further, that the Attorney General
of the State may, if he see fit, assume the responsibility for
the defense of such member and conduct the same personally or
by any one or more of his assistants.
    (b) Representation and indemnification of Illinois
National Guard members in civil cases arising out of their
military training or duty shall be in accordance with the State
Employee Indemnification Act. The fees and expenses in criminal
cases, as provided for in this Section, shall be paid by the
Adjutant General out of appropriated funds, upon vouchers and
bills approved by the Attorney General.
(Source: P.A. 85-1241.)
 
    (20 ILCS 1805/34 rep.)
    (20 ILCS 1805/47 rep.)
    (20 ILCS 1805/Art. XIV rep.)
    (20 ILCS 1805/Art. XV rep.)
    (20 ILCS 1805/89 rep.)
    Section 155. The Military Code of Illinois is amended by
repealing Sections 34, 47, and 89 and Articles XIV and XV.
 
    Section 156. The State Finance Act is amended by adding
Section 5.875 as follows:
 
    (30 ILCS 105/5.875 new)
    Sec. 5.875. The State Military Justice Fund.
 
    Section 999. Effective date. This Act takes effect January
1, 2017.