Official Legal Codebook

United Kingdoms of Africa
Military Code of Justice

The authoritative legal framework governing all military personnel, tribunals, and disciplinary proceedings of the UKA Armed Forces. Referenced as UKA-MCJ.

Subchapters XI
Articles 80+
Authority JAG-UKA
Status ● In Force

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Subchapter I

General Provisions

§ 101

Definitions

  • "Judge Advocate General" (JAG-UKA): The legal authority assigned to oversee all military justice matters, including appointment of legal officers, court-martial oversight, and interpretation of this Code.
  • "Commanding Officer": A commissioned officer who holds formal authority over a UKA military unit, detachment, vessel, aircraft, or facility.
  • "Superior Commissioned Officer": Any officer superior in rank or command to another, regardless of direct assignment.
  • "Legal Officer": A commissioned officer trained in military law and appointed to conduct, advise, or prosecute legal matters within a command.
  • "Accuser": A person who signs and swears to charges, directs charges to be signed, or has a personal interest in the prosecution of an accused.
  • "Cadet": A formally enrolled student of an authorized UKA military academy or officer training program.
  • "Military": Refers to all uniformed members of the UKA Armed Forces, including Army, Naval, Air, Space, and Intelligence units.
  • "Record": Includes certified transcripts, written rulings, audio/video recordings, and all documentation entered into tribunal logs.
  • "Classified Information": Any document, file, briefing, or asset designated by JAG-UKA or ASIA as restricted to authorized personnel for national defense or operational security.
  • "National Security": The defense, sovereignty, foreign relations, and classified operations of the United Kingdoms of Africa.
§ 102

Persons Subject to this Code

This Code applies to:

  • All active-duty members of any branch of the UKA Armed Forces
  • Cadets and officer trainees during enrollment and field assignments
  • Reservists while on duty, training, or under mobilization orders
  • Retired service members entitled to military pay or pension
  • Civilian contractors and advisors attached to a UKA military mission or deployment
  • Persons in custody of the UKA Armed Forces under court-martial or military investigation
  • Individuals embedded under treaty, SOFA, or allied deployment protocols
  • Anyone who voluntarily subjects themselves to UKA command authority by swearing an enlistment or service oath
§ 103

Jurisdiction to Try Certain Personnel

Jurisdiction under this Code applies to all persons identified in §102 while on UKA territory, serving abroad on assignment or deployment, traveling to or from an assignment under valid orders, or in any facility, vessel, aircraft, or base designated as UKA operational property.

Jurisdiction may also apply to former members if the offense was committed while in service, and non-UKA nationals who commit an offense on UKA-controlled bases or missions.

§ 104

Territorial Applicability

The UKA-MCJ applies throughout all UKA member states, on UKA-flagged vessels and aircraft, in all forward operating bases, temporary outposts, and joint task zones, and in any leased or allied territory where UKA personnel are lawfully present.

In cases of conflict with host nation laws, the Ministry of Defense Legal Directorate shall issue coordination instructions in line with standing treaties.

§ 105

Judge Advocates and Legal Officers

Judge Advocates shall be appointed by JAG-UKA and hold exclusive authority to interpret this Code, supervise court-martial procedures, and oversee military legal training and prosecution efforts.

Legal Officers may serve as counsel, advisors, or tribunal clerks; execute court procedures at the command level; and provide legal briefings to commanders and soldiers.

§ 106a

Investigation and Disposition of Unfit Judges

Allegations of bias, incompetence, conflict of interest, or ethical violations concerning military judges shall be reported to the Ethics Oversight Division of JAG-UKA, investigated by an impartial review panel, and handled in private unless misconduct warrants tribunal sanction.

If the panel determines the judge is unfit to serve: immediate suspension is authorized, all rulings under that judge may be subject to review or retrial, and the matter shall be recorded in the Judicial Fitness Registry (JFR).

Subchapter II

Detainment and Command Restraint

§ 201

Authority to Apprehend

Any commissioned officer, warrant officer, military police personnel, ASIA agent, or designated civilian enforcement under military orders may apprehend a person subject to this Code.

Apprehension may occur upon observation of a criminal act, receipt of credible evidence of a violation, tribunal-issued arrest warrants, or orders from commanding officers with documented cause.

Apprehending personnel must identify themselves and their authority, notify the apprehended of the general nature of the offense, and transfer custody within 8 hours unless in combat or crisis.

§ 202

Apprehension of Deserters

A deserter is any person subject to this Code who willfully leaves their assigned duty location without intent to return, or refuses to comply with deployment or mobilization orders.

The officer receiving a deserter shall log the time and location of recovery, notify the individual's original command authority, and refer the case for immediate tribunal intake or review.

Deserters located in foreign jurisdictions may be retrieved under SOFA or treaty protocols and shall be held accountable under UKA-MCJ unless extradited under allied agreement.

§ 203

Imposition of Restraint

Forms of restraint include: Administrative hold (temporary movement restriction pending investigation), Pre-trial confinement (secured detention prior to court-martial), and Command restriction (duty reassignment, curfew, or location limits).

A record of restraint must be submitted to the Judge Advocate assigned to the unit and the Ethics Oversight Division if exceeding 72 hours.

§ 204

Conditions of Detainment

All detained persons must be treated humanely and without abuse. While in custody, detainees retain the right to medical care, legal counsel access, religious accommodation (when possible), and protection from retaliation, coercion, or hazing.

Interrogations must comply with §602 and must be recorded or documented with full transparency.

§ 205

Transfer and Release Procedures

A detainee may only be transferred by written order of a commanding officer, tribunal directive, or emergency reassignment authorized by operational control.

Release may be granted when no charges are filed within the required timeline, medical or humanitarian need is verified, or tribunal grants bail or release upon review. All transfers must include a chain-of-custody log, medical clearance if confined over 72 hours, and tribunal liaison notification if charges are pending.

§ 206

Prohibition of Pre-Trial Punishment

No person may be punished before lawful conviction by court-martial or tribunal. While restrained or confined, the individual may not be subjected to degrading treatment or humiliation, denied sleep, food, water, or medical care, forced into labor, training, or confession, or publicly displayed or interrogated beyond legal boundaries.

Violations shall be punishable under §1003 (Abuse of Command), §1007 (Cruelty and Maltreatment), or referred to tribunal under §802 for sentence enhancement.

§ 206(e)

Foreign Civil Coordination

If detainment occurs on foreign soil or involves dual-jurisdiction suspects, UKA authorities shall immediately notify the host nation's law enforcement or legal office, provide a statement of jurisdiction, and invoke standing SOFA or treaty terms.

If the detainee is subject to both UKA and civil law, a joint custody agreement may be established and trial sequencing negotiated by the Ministry of Defense Legal Directorate. Detainees held abroad must be visited weekly by UKA liaison officers and ensured safety and human rights by the detaining state.

Subchapter III

Non-Judicial Punishment (NJP)

§ 301

Summary Punishment Authority

A Commanding Officer may impose Non-Judicial Punishment (NJP) when the alleged offense does not warrant tribunal referral, is minor in nature and does not compromise national security or public safety, and the accused agrees to receive NJP rather than be tried by court-martial.

NJP does not constitute a conviction and shall not be treated as one on personnel records, unless the individual accepts the punishment in writing.

§ 302

Rights of the Accused in NJP

Before NJP is imposed, the accused must be informed of the alleged offense and supporting evidence, their right to demand a court-martial instead, and the maximum punishment allowed under NJP.

Refusal to accept NJP automatically triggers referral to JAG for tribunal review and suspension of all NJP proceedings until legal counsel is assigned.

§ 303

Limitations of NJP and Review Procedure

NJP may include verbal or written reprimand; extra duty not exceeding 10 consecutive days; restriction to quarters not exceeding 7 days; loss of non-essential privileges for up to 14 days; reduction in rank by one grade (enlisted only); or forfeiture of pay not exceeding 5 days' base salary.

NJP may not include confinement, public shaming, forced labor, weapon confiscation without legal basis, or suspension of legal or medical rights.

Subchapter IV

Court-Martial Jurisdiction and Authority

§ 401

Classification of Courts-Martial

  • General Court-Martial (GCM): For serious offenses, including capital or long-term confinement cases. May try any person subject to this Code. Requires convening by a flag officer or civilian equivalent of the Ministry of Civil Order.
  • Special Court-Martial (SPCM): For intermediate-level offenses. May impose up to 2 years confinement, rank reduction, and forfeiture of pay. Convened by division-level or brigade-level command authorities.
  • Summary Court-Martial (SCM): For minor violations and expedient field justice. May impose restriction, demotion, and brief confinement (up to 30 days). Presided over by a single officer.
§ 402

Jurisdictional Scope

Courts-martial may exercise jurisdiction over any person described in §102. Jurisdiction shall include offenses committed on or off duty, acts committed during deployment, training, or garrison assignment, and violations committed outside UKA territory if involving UKA property, personnel, or treaty obligations.

§ 403

Jurisdiction by Time and Location

The Code applies on all UKA bases, vessels, and operational facilities; during transit to or from assignments; and within allied states if permitted by treaty or agreement. A lapse in geographic location does not void jurisdiction if the act occurred under official military orders or the accused was acting in uniformed or authorized capacity.

§ 404

Right to Tribunal by Class

The classification of court shall match the severity of the offense. No one may be tried under a lower court classification for a higher offense unless the prosecution drops major charges or a plea agreement is entered and approved by the presiding judge.

§ 405

Emergency Tribunal Powers

In conditions of war, civil collapse, or command isolation, field commanders of Tier III or higher may convene Emergency Courts-Martial. Emergency courts must be documented in the command operations log, include at least one certified legal officer (unless unreachable for 72+ hours), and record all proceedings for future review by JAG-UKA.

Emergency tribunals may not carry out capital punishment or sentence beyond 10 years unless later reviewed by a General Court-Martial board.

Subchapter V

Tribunal Composition and Appointments

§ 501

Tribunal Convening Authority

The following authorities may convene a tribunal: The President of the UKA (for national security-level cases); the Supreme Military Council; any flag officer (Tier IV or above); or designated legal or operations officers delegated by JAG-UKA. Emergency field tribunals (§405) may be convened by Tier III officers if communications are compromised.

§ 502

Tribunal Member Requirements

A General or Special Court-Martial shall be composed of a presiding judge (Tier IV or appointed legal officer), at least 3 impartial tribunal officers of equal or superior rank to the accused, a trial counsel (prosecutor), a defense counsel (assigned or retained), and a tribunal recorder/transcriber appointed by JAG.

In classified or ASIA-affiliated cases, tribunal members must hold appropriate security clearance and sessions may be sealed in accordance with ASIA Directive 71-C.

§ 503

Detail of Legal Counsel

Trial Counsel (Prosecution) must be certified by JAG-UKA, may not have prior personal involvement in the investigation, and is responsible for presenting all lawful charges.

Defense Counsel shall be appointed within 48 hours of charge issuance, may request resources for investigation and expert testimony, and may challenge jurisdiction, evidence, or tribunal composition at any stage before verdict.

§ 504

Record of Proceedings

All tribunal proceedings must be recorded and transcribed by certified clerks, stored in the Military Tribunal Registry (MTR) with time/date stamp, and reviewed by the presiding judge before ruling is rendered. Failure to record proceedings invalidates the tribunal outcome unless an emergency tribunal was convened per §405 and loss of data was unavoidable.

§ 505

Disqualification and Conflict of Interest

Tribunal members must be disqualified if they are in the direct chain of command of the accused, participated in the investigation, have a personal or professional bias toward any party, or have been subject to disciplinary action in the past 12 months.

Failure to disqualify or replace compromised tribunal members shall result in a mistrial if discovered before verdict, or an automatic appeal under §903 if discovered after sentencing.

Subchapter VI

Pre-Trial Procedure and Evidentiary Process

§ 601

Charges and Specifications

Charges must identify the article of the Code violated, a clear statement of the offense, and the time, place, and factual circumstances of the alleged violation. They must be signed and sworn by the accuser, reviewed by a legal officer for legal sufficiency, and forwarded to the presiding authority for tribunal assignment.

§ 602

Rights of the Accused

The accused has the right to presumption of innocence, the right to remain silent, the right to legal counsel, and protection from unlawful search, seizure, or coercion.

No person shall be compelled to testify against themselves. Interrogations must be conducted with rights read aloud, be recorded when possible, and cease immediately upon request for counsel.

§ 603

Investigation of Charges

Pre-trial investigations are required for GCM and SPCM level offenses, confinement periods exceeding 10 days, and charges involving high-ranking officers, classified material, or death/injury. The Tribunal Review Officer shall rule to dismiss charges, proceed to tribunal, or recommend NJP under §301.

§ 604

Scheduling and Notice

After charges are confirmed, tribunal must be scheduled within 30 days (GCM), 21 days (SPCM), or 10 days (SCM), unless extensions are granted due to deployment, security restrictions, or unavailability of personnel.

§ 605

Witness Identification and Summons

A tribunal summons shall be issued in writing, delivered no less than 5 days prior to tribunal, and include security instructions if classified testimony is required. Witnesses who fail to appear may be held in contempt under §1009 or referred for investigation.

§ 606

Evidence Exchange Protocol (Discovery)

Prosecution must deliver to defense all evidence to be used at trial, all exculpatory materials, and witness statements and records. Defense must disclose expert reports, witness lists, and notice of special defenses. Discovery must be complete at least 72 hours prior to the opening session.

§ 607

Pre-Trial Motions and Hearings

Pre-trial motions may include motion to dismiss, motion to suppress evidence, motion to change tribunal classification, and motion to exclude witnesses or evidence. Motions must be filed no later than 48 hours before tribunal unless urgent or waived by judge.

§ 608

Tribunal Opening Procedures

On the opening day, the presiding judge shall call roll and confirm the tribunal is lawfully convened, read charges and confirm accused understands them, ask all members to reaffirm their Oath of Impartiality, and confirm all discovery has been exchanged. Any unresolved motions or procedural defects must be addressed before evidence is presented.

§ 609

Opening Statements and Burden of Proof

Trial counsel shall make the first opening statement, followed by defense. The prosecution bears the burden of proof: beyond a reasonable doubt (GCM/SPCM) or clear and convincing evidence (SCM). Tribunal members shall not draw conclusions from the accused's silence.

Subchapter VII

Tribunal Procedure and Testimonial Protocol

§ 701

Rules of Evidence and Testimony

Only relevant, authenticated evidence shall be admitted. Evidence may include sworn witness statements, audio/video recordings, forensic and operational records, and chain-of-custody–verified physical items.

Inadmissible evidence includes hearsay without corroboration, illegally obtained materials, and confessions made under duress or without legal counsel.

§ 702

Cross-Examination and Witness Protection

Witnesses shall be subject to direct examination by the calling party and cross-examination by the opposing party. Special protections apply to child witnesses, sexual assault victims, whistleblowers, and classified informants. Protection methods may include anonymization, sealed testimony, voice or visual shielding, or use of written questions submitted through the judge.

§ 703

Objection Rules and Judicial Rulings

Legal counsel may object on grounds of relevance, speculation, hearsay, improper character evidence, or leading questions on direct examination. The presiding judge may sustain, overrule, or reserve ruling. Objections must be made verbally on the record. A pattern of frivolous objections may be sanctioned.

§ 704

Closing Arguments and Tribunal Deliberation

After all evidence is presented, trial counsel presents closing argument first, followed by defense counsel's rebuttal. Deliberations must occur privately without influence from non-members.

Verdict rules: GCM: Unanimous verdict required. SPCM: 2 of 3 members must agree. SCM: Presiding officer rules alone.

§ 705

Sentencing Phase and Post-Trial Motions

If found guilty, tribunal reconvenes for the Sentencing Phase. Prosecution may recommend sentence range, defense may offer mitigating evidence, and the accused may offer a final statement or remain silent.

Post-trial motions may include motion for reconsideration of sentence, motion to vacate based on trial irregularity, and motion to stay sentence pending appeal. The judge may issue sentence immediately or take under advisement for no more than 72 hours.

Subchapter VIII

Sentencing Guidelines and Penalty Enforcement

§ 801

Sentencing Principles

  • Justice: Ensure the sentence matches the gravity of the offense.
  • Accountability: Hold personnel responsible for their actions.
  • Restoration: When possible, provide opportunity for rehabilitation and reintegration.
  • Deterrence: Discourage misconduct within the ranks.
  • Lawful Limits: Prohibit cruel or inhumane punishments.

Sentencing shall be applied without discrimination based on rank, background, affiliation, or personal history.

§ 802

Sentencing Matrix by Offense Class

ClassTribunalPenalty Range
Class IGCM10 years – life, expulsion, or permanent discharge
Class IIGCM / SPCMUp to 8 years, demotion, restriction, pay forfeiture
Class IIISPCM / SCMUp to 1 year, reprimand, reassignment, temporary suspension

Class I includes: Treason, espionage, sexual assault, murder, armed desertion.

Class II includes: Fraud, insubordination, dereliction of duty, assault, theft.

Class III includes: AWOL under 72 hours, intoxication on duty, negligent behavior, verbal misconduct.

§ 803

Enforcement and Oversight

Upon sentencing, the presiding judge must issue a Formal Sentence Order (FSO) with start date, custody terms, and sentence structure. Enforcement shall be managed by the Military Confinement Authority (MCA) in cooperation with Internal Affairs and the Ministry of Civil Order.

§ 804

Sentence Reduction, Parole, and Rehabilitation

Parole eligibility: available after 50% of sentence served, contingent on non-violent classification and completion of a rehabilitation plan.

Parole conditions may include movement restriction, weekly reporting, job reassignment, and public apology. Violation of parole conditions triggers return to confinement, loss of all reduction credits, and possible additional charges.

§ 805

Closure of Tribunal Docket and Finality

A sentencing case is closed when the sentence order has been issued, no appeal is filed within the allowed time, and enforcement has begun or been delegated. Closure must be recorded in the Military Tribunal Registry (MTR) with full judgment transcript and post-trial records.

Subchapter IX

Appeals and Sentence Review

§ 901

Right to Appeal

Any individual convicted under this Code shall have the right to appeal the conviction or sentence unless they have knowingly waived that right in writing or received only Non-Judicial Punishment (§301).

Deadlines for filing: GCM: 30 days. SPCM: 21 days. SCM: 10 days (if confinement imposed).

§ 902

Appeals Board Structure and Review

The UKA Tribunal Appeals Board (UTAB) shall review all formal appeals, composed of a Chief Appeals Judge, two Associate Judges from different military branches, a tribunal clerk (non-voting), and an ethics liaison when applicable.

UTAB may affirm the ruling, modify the sentence, reverse the conviction, or remand the case for retrial.

§ 903

Emergency Rehearings and Wrongful Conviction Review

Emergency review may be triggered if new exculpatory evidence is discovered, false testimony is uncovered, or procedural violations occurred (e.g., denied rights, illegal evidence). The Emergency Rehearing Board may set aside the conviction, re-open the case, or issue an immediate release or retrial.

§ 904

Post-Appeal Sentence Enforcement and Exoneration Rights

If conviction is overturned, the accused shall be immediately released, all legal records updated to show exoneration, and the individual may request rank restoration, pay reinstatement, and public clearing of record.

§ 905

Extraordinary Appeals and Override

A Special Override Tribunal (SOT) may be convened by the President of the UKA, the Supreme Military Council, the Minister of Civil Order, or the African Court of Regional Justice (under treaty). The SOT may issue a permanent pardon, expunge convictions, or enact judicial reform orders. SOT decisions are final and override UTAB jurisdiction.

§ 906

Restitution and Apology for Wrongful Convictions

Any individual wrongfully convicted shall be entitled to a formal Declaration of Exoneration, financial restitution based on time confined, career loss, or reputational damage, and access to counseling, relocation support, and reintegration services.

Case files shall be sealed and marked as EXONERATED and cleared from tribunal public logs unless public release is authorized by the accused.

Subchapter X

Punitive Articles Register

§ 1025

Unauthorized Absence (AWOL)

Fails to report to duty, post, or assignment without permission for 24 hours or more, or leaves duty station early without command approval.

PenaltyUp to 2 years confinement. Loss of leave privileges and pay forfeiture.
§ 1026

Misuse of Government Funds

Misappropriates or redirects UKA financial resources, or falsifies logs, receipts, or purchasing reports.

PenaltyRestitution plus 5–15 years confinement. Immediate finance role disqualification.
§ 1027

Assault of a Fellow Service Member

Physically attacks another member outside of lawful self-defense or sanctioned training. Engages in hazing, unauthorized punishments, or revenge attacks.

PenaltyConfinement up to 10 years. Mandatory psychological review.
§ 1028

Cyber Intrusion or Unauthorized Access

Hacks or accesses UKA networks without permission, extracts/deletes/manipulates data from secure systems, or deploys unauthorized software into operational infrastructure.

PenaltyLoss of clearance. Confinement up to 12 years. Referral to ASIA digital crimes division.
§ 1029

Improper Handling of Classified Materials

Transports, stores, or discloses classified material in violation of protocols. Fails to report the loss or breach of secured documents.

PenaltyDemotion. Confinement up to 7 years.
§ 1030

Disobedience During Crisis or Combat

Fails to follow lawful orders during crisis, evacuation, or combat. Engages in unauthorized retreat or obstructs response teams during declared emergencies.

PenaltyMinimum 8 years confinement. Ineligible for frontline redeployment.
§ 1031

Improper Treatment of Prisoners or Detainees

Abuses, humiliates, or violates the rights of enemy combatants or civilian detainees. Fails to report acts of abuse by others.

PenaltyCourt-martial under GCM. 10–25 years confinement. Referral to international tribunal if applicable.
§ 1032

Forgery of Official Documents

Forges orders, IDs, pay slips, awards, or certifications for personal benefit.

PenaltyConfinement up to 6 years. Forfeiture of all forged privileges.
§ 1033

Weapon Smuggling or Unauthorized Arms Transfer

Sells, trades, or gifts UKA weapons or ammunition to unauthorized persons or groups. Fails to report stolen munitions or tampering.

PenaltyMandatory expulsion. Minimum 10 years confinement.
§ 1034

Sabotage of Operational Readiness

Deliberately disables or disrupts operational vehicles, systems, or tools prior to or during deployment.

PenaltyConfinement up to 20 years. Referral to ASIA oversight.
§ 1035

Retaliation Against Whistleblowers

Retaliates against a subordinate for reporting misconduct or violations. Initiates demotion, punishment, or slander campaigns post-report.

PenaltyConfinement up to 10 years. Disqualification from leadership roles.
§ 1036

Inciting Disloyalty or Disunity

Publishes or speaks in favor of rebellion, secession, or anti-UKA ideology while in service. Attempts to radicalize or recruit others into seditious groups.

Penalty5–12 years confinement. Discharge and clearance revocation.
§ 1037

Improper Hazarding of a Vessel or Aircraft

Operates a UKA naval, air, or space asset with reckless disregard for safety or navigation.

PenaltyLoss of operational license. Confinement up to 8 years.
§ 1038

Abuse of Medical Authority

Issues false diagnoses or uses their position to influence tribunal outcomes or cover up abuse.

PenaltyRevocation of license. Tribunal referral. Up to 5 years confinement.
§ 1039

Deliberate Disruption of Tribunal or Trial

Interrupts or obstructs the function of a court-martial. Refuses lawful summons or disrupts justice in session.

PenaltyFine, reprimand, or confinement up to 2 years.
§ 1040

Conduct Unbecoming of a UKA Officer

Acts in a manner that publicly embarrasses the service or violates dignity, decorum, or traditions of honor.

PenaltyReprimand, forced retirement, or up to 3 years confinement.
§ 1041

Failure to Report a Known Violation

Has credible knowledge of a crime or violation under this Code and fails to report it to a commanding officer or tribunal authority.

PenaltyConfinement up to 2 years. Administrative penalty or probation.
§ 1042

Desecration of UKA Symbols or Flag

Burns, destroys, or publicly insults the UKA flag or military insignia while in uniform or representing the service.

PenaltyConfinement up to 3 years. Mandatory cultural reorientation.
§ 1043

Gambling and Financial Fraud on Duty

Engages in gambling while on duty or defrauds peers through betting, schemes, or Ponzi operations.

PenaltyConfinement up to 4 years. Debt restitution.
§ 1044

Misuse of Emergency Equipment or Alarms

Activates sirens, fire systems, or lockdowns without cause. Uses emergency materials for non-operational purposes.

PenaltyDisciplinary action or confinement up to 18 months.
§ 1045

Unauthorized Disclosure of Strategic Operations

Leaks or discusses classified strategy, mobilization, or drills. Posts such data to public forums, social media, or communicates without clearance.

PenaltyCourt-martial referral. 10–15 years confinement.
§ 1046

Smuggling or Trafficking Across UKA Borders

Transports uninspected or undeclared goods in/out of UKA bases or enables contraband through official routes.

PenaltyAsset seizure. Confinement up to 10 years.
§ 1047

Interference with Rescue or Medical Response

Blocks medical teams, rescue units, or evacuation personnel from duty. Delays or obstructs emergency deployment.

PenaltyUp to 5 years confinement. Mandatory reassignment.
§ 1048

Threatening or Assaulting Tribunal Officers

Threatens, harms, or attempts violence against a judge, tribunal clerk, or legal counsel while proceedings are active or pending.

Penalty12–20 years confinement.
§ 1049

Violating Conditions of Parole or Reintegration

Breaks parole rules under §804 or engages in restricted conduct while under conditional release.

PenaltyRevocation of parole. Full sentence reinstatement with no reduction.
§ 1050

General Offense Clause

Violates military honor, disrupts command order, or constitutes conduct not listed above but found harmful through tribunal review.

PenaltyDetermined at tribunal discretion, not exceeding Class II maximums unless reclassified.
Subchapter XI

Miscellaneous Provisions

§ 1101

Authority to Administer Oaths and Affirmations

Any commissioned officer, Judge Advocate, designated legal officer, tribunal clerk during authorized sessions, or ASIA officer with national security investigation authority may administer oaths. Oaths may be administered for testimony before tribunals, affidavits and depositions, or induction, enlistment, or commissioning purposes.

False statements made under oath are punishable under §1009 (False Testimony and Obstruction).

§ 1102

Delegation of Authority

Powers granted to a commanding officer, tribunal presiding judge, or JAG officer may be delegated to subordinate officers if the delegation is in writing, the subordinate is equal or superior in rank to the parties affected, and the matter does not involve sentencing exceeding 2 years confinement without tribunal authorization. Delegations must be filed with the Military Tribunal Registry (MTR).

§ 1103

Appeals to Civil Jurisdiction (International or Treaty Claims)

Where a civilian, allied military partner, or foreign government raises legal challenges to tribunal outcomes involving joint exercises, SOFA, or cross-jurisdiction investigations, such claims shall be coordinated by the Ministry of Civil Order and JAG-UKA International Law Division. Military tribunal rulings shall be presumed valid unless a treaty or international court explicitly voids or alters jurisdiction.

§ 1104

Amendments and Revisions to the UKA-MCJ

Amendments require 2/3 majority approval by the Supreme Military Council, formal publication in the Military Justice Bulletin, and a 90-day review and comment period unless emergency national defense urgency is declared.

Emergency amendments may be enacted immediately for wartime operational needs, discovery of major legal gaps, or treaty compliance requirements.