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  | Public Act 099-0796 
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| | SB2861 Enrolled | LRB099 20640 KTG 45234 b | 
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| 
 
   | 
|     AN ACT concerning military justice.
  
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|     Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
  | 
| represented in the General Assembly:
  
 
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|     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. 
   |