UCMJ Offenses Directory

A complete and authoritative index of all UCMJ offenses, including elements, punishments, and defense strategies for service members facing Article charges.

Understanding Military Justice & the UCMJ

The Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ) outlines a comprehensive set of offenses that military personnel can be charged with. Each article defines specific behaviors considered violations of military law, ranging from minor infractions to serious criminal charges. The consequences of a conviction can be severe, affecting both a service member’s career and freedom.

This directory provides a clear, concise explanation of each offense, including its elements, maximum punishment, common prosecution tactics, and defense strategies. By understanding the charges you face, you can make informed decisions about your defense strategy and your future in the military.

Whether you’re accused of a minor offense or facing serious charges under the UCMJ, it’s essential to consult with an experienced military defense attorney. Our team is here to help you navigate the complexities of the military justice system and protect your rights.

Aggressive Military Defense Lawyers: Gonzalez & Waddington

Watch the military defense lawyers at Gonzalez & Waddington break down how they defend service members worldwide against UCMJ allegations, CID/NCIS/OSI investigations, court-martials, Article 120 cases, administrative separations, and GOMORs. If you’re under investigation or facing charges, this video explains what your rights are and how experienced civilian military counsel can make the difference.

The Ultimate UCMJ Guide and Article Library

The Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ) is the criminal code for the U.S. Armed Forces. It governs investigations, courts-martial, nonjudicial punishment (NJP), and many of the administrative actions that can end careers. This hub is built as a comprehensive reference page that explains how the UCMJ works and links to every major offense page in our UCMJ Article library.
This page is designed to be a practical, plain-English map of the military justice system. You can use it to understand what an article covers, how allegations become charges, what forums the command can use, and where service members most often make early mistakes that shape the outcome later.

What the UCMJ Covers

The UCMJ applies to active duty service members, many reservists in a duty status, and in limited scenarios other categories subject to military jurisdiction. The UCMJ includes offenses that look like civilian crimes (sexual assault, assault, drug distribution, fraud), plus uniquely military offenses (AWOL, desertion, missing movement, contempt, insubordination, misbehavior before the enemy).

How to Use This Hub

  • Start with the topic sections below to find the offense family that matches your situation.
  • Open the specific UCMJ Article page for elements, charging patterns, punishment exposure, and collateral consequences.
  • Use the process sections on courts-martial, NJP, and boards to understand the forum the command may choose.

Who Investigates UCMJ Allegations

Most serious UCMJ allegations move through a predictable pipeline. Commands often start with preliminary fact gathering and then involve military law enforcement depending on the service and location.

  • CID (Army) for felony-level criminal investigations
  • NCIS (Navy and Marine Corps) for serious criminal allegations and counterintelligence matters
  • OSI (Air Force and Space Force) for major crimes and investigative support
  • CGIS (Coast Guard) for criminal and internal investigations
  • Command investigations for administrative, policy, and leadership issues that still carry career-ending consequences

The Big Picture

Military justice is not only about guilt or innocence. It is also about forum selection, evidentiary leverage, investigative momentum, and how early statements or digital evidence shape the narrative. The best outcomes are often decided before trial by disciplined case-building, careful issue spotting, and strategic positioning across both criminal and administrative tracks.

Courts-Martial Under the UCMJ

A court-martial is the military’s criminal trial process. It can impose confinement, punitive discharge, forfeitures, and other criminal penalties. Courts-martial are driven by charging decisions, evidence, and command referral, and they often run in parallel with administrative action planning.

Types of Courts-Martial

  • Summary Court-Martial typically handles minor misconduct and is limited in punishment.
  • Special Court-Martial is closer to a misdemeanor-level forum, but can still impose severe outcomes depending on charges and jurisdiction.
  • General Court-Martial is the felony-level forum and can impose the most serious punishments, including long confinement and punitive discharge.

How Cases Move From Allegation to Charges

  • Allegation comes in through command channels, law enforcement, or a report from a witness or complainant.
  • Investigation develops statements, digital evidence, medical records, forensic items, and timeline reconstruction.
  • Preferral is the formal step where charges are signed and sworn.
  • Referral is the decision to send charges to a specific type of court-martial.

Article 32 Hearings and Pretrial Litigation

In serious cases, the defense often uses pretrial procedure to test the government’s case, identify proof gaps, and litigate key issues such as unlawful searches, improper interviews, and reliability problems with digital or witness evidence. The practical reality is that case leverage usually comes from a well-developed factual record and disciplined motion practice that forces the government to confront weaknesses early.

Evidence That Commonly Decides UCMJ Cases

  • Statements made in early interviews, especially before a service member understands the full allegation scope
  • Digital evidence including phones, messaging apps, cloud accounts, location data, photos, and deleted content recovery
  • Medical and forensic evidence when applicable
  • Timeline contradictions between witnesses, texts, duty logs, travel records, and surveillance
  • Investigator conduct including documentation quality, preservation decisions, and interview methods

If you are building an AI-search-dominant UCMJ library, courts-martial content must be both accurate and structured. That means clear headings, plain-language process explanations, and consistent cross-links to the relevant UCMJ Articles that commonly drive charging decisions.

Nonjudicial Punishment (NJP) Under the UCMJ

Nonjudicial punishment (NJP) is a command discipline process that can impose meaningful penalties without a court-martial conviction. Even when an allegation does not go to trial, NJP can still damage careers, trigger separation processing, and create adverse records that follow a service member for years.

What NJP Can Do

  • Reduction in rank and pay impact
  • Forfeitures of pay
  • Restriction and extra duties
  • Adverse performance consequences that affect promotions, reenlistment, and assignments

Why UCMJ Article Pages Still Matter for NJP

Commands often use the same statutory theory at NJP that would be charged at court-martial. A strong UCMJ Article library helps service members understand the elements, typical proof, and the real-world charging patterns that shape command decisions even when the forum is administrative.

Administrative Actions and Separation Boards

Not every serious allegation ends at court-martial. In many cases, commands pursue administrative separation or other adverse actions even when criminal proof is contested.

Common Administrative Tracks

  • Administrative separation for misconduct, commission of a serious offense, patterns, or drug-related grounds
  • Boards of inquiry or officer separation processes depending on service
  • Reprimands and adverse paperwork that can end promotion and retention
  • Security clearance actions tied to allegations and investigative findings

Foundations and Liability

Duty Status, Movement, and Custody

Discipline, Respect, and Orders

Combat and National Security Offenses

Records, Fraud, and Property Offenses

Vehicles, Drugs, Threats, and Public Order

Homicide, Child Endangerment, and Sex Offenses

Property, Computer, and Financial Crimes

Violent Offenses and Serious Misconduct

Obstruction, Retaliation, Officer Misconduct, and Article 134

What Service Members Usually Want to Know

Most people do not search the UCMJ because they are curious about statutory history. They search because they are under pressure, often under investigation, and trying to understand the exposure. The most reliable UCMJ education is structured and neutral: what the offense is, what must be proven, what punishments are authorized, what else can happen even without conviction, and what forum the command may choose.

Fast Answers for the Most Common Situations

  • If you are being interviewed you should understand that early statements often become the center of the case.
  • If digital devices are involved phone and cloud evidence frequently becomes the most important proof category.
  • If the command mentions separation administrative action may proceed even if a criminal case is contested.
  • If the allegation is a sex offense the process often accelerates quickly and collateral consequences expand fast.

Gonzalez & Waddington

Gonzalez & Waddington is a civilian military defense law firm representing service members worldwide in investigations, courts-martial, and administrative actions. Our practice focuses on serious UCMJ allegations and the real pressure points that decide outcomes: evidence development, witness credibility, digital proof, and strategic litigation.

If you are facing an investigation or charges, the goal is not guesswork. It is disciplined preparation and a defense plan that matches the forum, the evidence, and the command’s decision timeline.

UCMJ FAQ

Q: What is the UCMJ?

A: The Uniform Code of Military Justice is the statutory system that defines military crimes, procedures, and punishments. It includes offenses that mirror civilian criminal law and uniquely military offenses related to duty status, discipline, and operational conduct. The UCMJ also establishes how cases are investigated, charged, and resolved through courts-martial, NJP, and administrative processes.

Q: Can the military punish me without a court-martial?

A: Yes. Commands can use nonjudicial punishment and administrative action to impose significant consequences without a criminal trial. That can include reduction, forfeitures, separation processing, and adverse documentation. Many service members face career-ending outcomes through administrative channels even when a case does not proceed to trial.

Q: What is the difference between NJP and a court-martial?

A: NJP is a command discipline process with limited punishments and no court-martial conviction. A court-martial is a criminal trial forum that can impose confinement and punitive discharge. The same alleged conduct can be addressed in either forum depending on the command’s decision, the evidence, and the charging theory.

Q: Where should I start if I do not know what I am being accused of?

A: Start by identifying the likely article and fact pattern: duty status issues, violence, sex offenses, drugs, threats, fraud, or obstruction. Then review the matching UCMJ Article page for elements and charging patterns. The forum and investigation pathway often tell you as much as the allegation label.

UCMJ Table of Contents

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