RCMs: Initiation of Charges; Apprehension; Pretrial Restraint; Related Matters Flashcards

1
Q

Who may report an offense under the UCMJ?

A

Anyone, military or civilian.

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2
Q

Who may receive a report of an offense under the UMCJ?

A

Any military authority.

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3
Q

To whom should a report of an offense under the UCMJ be forwarded to?

A

The immediate commander of the suspect.

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4
Q

Another word for “arrested” in military terminology is what?

A

Apprehension

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5
Q

Apprehension must be based on what?

A

Probable cause.

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6
Q

Investigative detention is another word for what?

A

Detained for questioning in civilian terminology.

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7
Q

Does investigative detention require probable cause?

A

No. You may be detained for questioning on less than probable cause, i.e. some evidence.

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8
Q

When can the police engage in an extensive search of a person?

A

When that person is apprehended, i.e. arrested. Not when they are detained for questioning.

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9
Q

Can a local or state civilian police officer arrest a servicemember for a violation of the UCMJ?

A

No

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10
Q

Are barracks considered a private dwelling for the purposes of search and seizure?

A

No

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11
Q

When a servicemember is accused or suspected of committing an offense triable by court-martial, the commander of the servicemember must first do what?

A

Cause a preliminary inquiry to occur into the matter.

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12
Q

Who can conduct a preliminary inquiry?

A

The commander or members of the command, as well as criminal investigative services.

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13
Q

When must criminal investigative services be called to perform a preliminary inquiry?

A

Where a report has been received of a sex-related offense.

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14
Q

What are the four types of pretrial restraint?

A

Conditions on Liberty
Restriction
Arrest
Confinement

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15
Q

What are examples of conditions on liberty?

A

Military Protective Order
Order not to go to a specific place
Orders to report periodically to a particular person

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16
Q

A person has been given an MPO ordering them not to go near a victim. Has the speedy trial clock begun?

A

Yes, assuming charges have not yet been preferred. This is because conditions on liberty (an MPO) is a form of pretrial restraint, which starts the speedy trial clock. Had charges been preferred prior to the imposition of the MPO, the clock would have started when the charges were preferred.

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17
Q

What is the difference between restriction in lieu of arrest and arrest?

A

Restriction allows an accused to perform normal military duties. Arrest does not. Both of them require the accused to remain within certain boundaries.

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18
Q

Who may order pretrial restraint for a civilian or officer?

A

Only the commanding officer to whose authority the officer or civilian is subject.

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19
Q

Who may order an enlisted person into pretrial restraint?

A

Any commissioned officer. No warrant officers.

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20
Q

How must a person be informed of their being subject to pretrial restraint?

A

They must be informed orally or in writing, except for pretrial confinement, which requires the person be delivered to the place of confinement.

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21
Q

When a person is placed under restraint, what information must they be given?

A

The nature of the offense which is the basis for the restraint.

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22
Q

When does pretrial restraint terminate?

A

When the sentence is adjudged, the accused is acquitted of all charges, or all charges are dismissed.

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23
Q

An accused was subject to pretrial restraint. The government broke the 120-day clock and the accused was released from pretrial restraint. If the government re-prefers charges, can he be placed back on pretrial restraint?

A

Yes

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24
Q

Does an accused have the right to select their military counsel for an IRO hearing?

A

No.

25
Q

Who may direct that a confinee be released from pretrial confinement before charges are referred to a court-martial?

A

The commanding officer of the detainee; OR a military judge if the defense moves for an Art. 30a hearing and asks that the accused be released from pretrial confinement.

26
Q

Who may direct that a detainee be released from pretrial confinement after charges are referred to a court-martial?

A

A military judge.

27
Q

What must happen within 24 hours of a detainee being placed in pretrial confinement?

A

Their commander must be given a report detailing their basic information, the charges, and the person who ordered the confinement.

28
Q

What must happen within 48 hours of a detainee being placed in pretrial confinement?

A

A neutral, detached officer must determine whether there is probable cause to continue pretrial confinement.

29
Q

What must happen within 72 hours of a detainee being placed in pretrial confinement?

A

The commander must write a memo explaining why the elements of RCM 305(h)(2)(b) are met and therefore require the continued pretrial confinement of the detainee.

30
Q

What is the standard for determining whether a reviewing officer may extend the 7-day review period to ten days?

A

Good cause.

31
Q

When may the 7-day reviewing officer reconsider his approval of pretrial confinement?

A

When there is “significant information” not previously considered.

32
Q

At what point can a military judge review the propriety of pretrial confinement for the accused?

A

After charges have been referred to a court-martial.

33
Q

A military judge may release a detainee from pretrial confinement if he determines the 7-day reviewing officer’s decision was what?

A

An abuse of discretion.

34
Q

What is the remedy for an accused who was subjected to pretrial confinement and who is later released as a result of a military judge’s review?

A

Administrative credit against the sentence adjudged.

35
Q

What is the remedy for an accused when the requirements that a 48-hour review and 72-hour memo are not abided by?

A

Administrative credit against the sentence adjudged.

36
Q

An accused is subjected to pretrial confinement for 20 days. At a later hearing, the military judge determines the IRO officer abused his discretion. Additionally, it was discovered that the procedures for pretrial confinement requiring a 48-hour determination and a 72-hour memo were not followed. What is the number of days administrative credit that the judge can give to the accused?

A

There is no limit. The rule states that the MJ can give credit for time served as a result of abuse of discretion or unusually harsh circumstances in addition to credit given as a result of noncompliance with the rule.

37
Q

A person who is released from pretrial confinement by a military judge may only be placed back into pretrial confinement if what?

A

If new evidence comes to light; or

If new offenses have been committed.

38
Q

Who has discretion to dispose of cases?

A

Commanders have discretion to dispose of offenses by members of their command.

39
Q

What does it mean to withhold discretion to dispose of offenses?

A

A superior commander withholds the ability of a subordinate commander to be able to determine whether charges will be preferred and to what forum they will be referred.

40
Q

If a superior commander has not withheld discretion of an inferior commander to dispose of offenses, are there any limitations on the inferior commander’s discretion to dispose of the offense?

A

No.

41
Q

In what ways can offenses (no charges preferred yet) be disposed of?

A

The commander can take no action, can take administrative actions, can NJP the offender, prefer charges against the accused.

42
Q

In what ways can charges that have been preferred be disposed of?

A

Preferred charges may be disposed of by dismissing them, forwarding them to a higher commander, or referring them to a summary, special or general court-martial.

43
Q

When a particular commander does not possess the authority to refer charges to what they believe is an appropriate forum, what can they do?

A

Forward the charges to a higher authority who possesses that power.

44
Q

Who can prefer charges?

A

Anyone subject to the UCMJ.

45
Q

What is another name for the person who prefers charges?

A

An accuser.

46
Q

On a charge sheet, if there is only one charge, does it need to be numbered?

A

No

47
Q

If there are multiple charges on a charge sheet, what numerals are used?

A

Roman numerals. (Charge I, Charge II, Charge III, etc.)

48
Q

How are additional charges numbered?

A

Roman numerals, the same way original charges are.

49
Q

If there is only one additional charge, does it need to be numbered?

A

No

50
Q

When do additional charges have to have a separate trial from the original charges?

A

When they are preferred after the accused was arraigned on the original set of charges.

51
Q

Can both an offense and a lesser included offense be separately charged?

A

No

52
Q

After charges are preferred against an accused, what must occur?

A

The immediate commander of the accused must cause the accused to be informed of the charges preferred against them, the accuser, and the person ordering the accuser to prefer charges. This is noted in Box 12 of the charge sheet.

53
Q

What is the remedy for failure to inform the accused of the charges preferred against them?

A

A continuance or recess of sufficient length to allow the accused to prepare a defense.

54
Q

What must the accused show in order to be granted a remedy for failure to notify them of charges preferred against them?

A

That the failure to notify the accused was “hindered in the preparation of a defense.”

55
Q

Article 30a hearings apply to what type of matters?

A

Pre-referral matters.

56
Q

What type of pre-referral matters can a MJ approve or disapprove at an Art. 30a hearing?

A

Pre-referral investigative subpoenas;
Pre-referral warrants or orders for wire or electronic communications;
Requests for relief from subpoena or other process; and
Pre-referral matters referred by an appellate court.

57
Q

What involvement does the defense have in pre-referral matters under Art. 30a?

A

The defense may request the government to make applications for pre-referral investigative subpoenas or pre-referral warrants or orders for wire or electronic communications.

58
Q

On what grounds will a judge quash a pre-referral investigative subpoena or warrant for electronic/wire communications?

A

That compliance with the request/subpoena/warrant is unreasonable, oppressive, or prohibited by law.