Maine Revised Statutes
Chapter 5: MAINE CODE OF MILITARY JUSTICE
37-B §415-A. Nonjudicial punishment

§415-A. Nonjudicial punishment
1.  Disciplinary punishment.  A commander may, in addition to or in lieu of admonition, reprimand or extra training, impose disciplinary punishments for minor offenses without the intervention of a court-martial as follows.  
A. A company grade officer commander or warrant officer commander may impose one or more of the following punishments:  
(1) Forfeiture of up to one day's pay;  
(2) Up to 4 hours of extra duties; or  
(3) Prohibition of promotion of up to one year.   [PL 2001, c. 662, §48 (NEW).]
B. A field grade officer commander may impose one or more of the following punishments:  
(1) Forfeiture of up to 3 days' pay;  
(2) Up to 8 hours of extra duties; or  
(3) Prohibition of promotion of up to one year.   [PL 2001, c. 662, §48 (NEW).]
C. An officer with the rank of colonel in the chain of command of an individual being considered for nonjudicial punishment may impose one or more of the following punishments:  
(1) Forfeiture of up to 5 days' pay;  
(2) Up to 16 hours of extra duties;  
(3) Prohibition of promotion of up to one year; or  
(4) Reduction of one grade for enlisted members.   [PL 2013, c. 251, §5 (AMD).]
D. Only a general officer commander may impose punishments upon officers.   [PL 2001, c. 662, §48 (NEW).]
E. An individual being considered for nonjudicial punishment has the right to consult counsel prior to receiving disciplinary punishment under this section.   [PL 2001, c. 662, §48 (NEW).]
[PL 2013, c. 251, §5 (AMD).]
2.  Suspend; reduce.  The commander who imposes disciplinary punishment, or successor in command, may at any time suspend or reduce, or both, disciplinary punishment imposed.  
[PL 2001, c. 662, §48 (NEW).]
3.  Appeal.  A person punished under this section may appeal, through the proper channels, to the next higher commander. The appeal must be promptly forwarded and decided; in the meantime all disciplinary punishment is stayed. The commander to whom the appeal is referred may suspend or reduce, or both, the disciplinary punishment. Before ruling, the commander who is to act on the appeal may refer the case to a judge advocate for consideration. The commander to whom the appeal is referred shall submit the case to a judge advocate for review when the appeal is from a reduction in grade or forfeiture of 3 or more days of pay.  
[PL 2001, c. 662, §48 (NEW).]
4.  Increase.  Once nonjudicial punishment has been imposed, it may not be increased upon appeal or otherwise for the same offense.  
[PL 2001, c. 662, §48 (NEW).]
5.  Right to counsel.  A person that has disciplinary punishment imposed under this section has the right to assistance of military counsel in filing an appeal. There is no right to appeal the imposition of disciplinary punishment under this section to the civilian courts.  
[PL 2001, c. 662, §48 (NEW).]
6.  Serious crime.  The imposition and enforcement of disciplinary punishment under this section for any act or omission is not a bar to trial by court-martial or to a trial in the civilian courts of this State, another state or the United States for a serious crime or offense growing out of the same act or omission that is not properly punishable under this section. The fact that a disciplinary punishment has been enforced may be shown by the accused at trial and must be considered in determining the measure of punishment to be adjudged in the event of a finding of guilty.  
[PL 2001, c. 662, §48 (NEW).]
7.  Records.  The Governor may prescribe the form of records to be kept of proceedings under this section and may prescribe that the records must be in writing.  
[PL 2001, c. 662, §48 (NEW).]
8.  Enforcement.  A fine imposed pursuant to this section may be enforced as a money judgment in accordance with Title 14, chapter 502.  
[PL 2001, c. 662, §48 (NEW).]
9.  Pay.  For the purposes of this section, a "day's pay" means that pay a member is entitled to for one unit training assembly, also known as one drill period.  
[PL 2001, c. 662, §48 (NEW).]
SECTION HISTORY
PL 2001, c. 662, §48 (NEW). PL 2013, c. 251, §5 (AMD).

Structure Maine Revised Statutes

Maine Revised Statutes

TITLE 37-B: DEFENSE, VETERANS AND EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT

Chapter 5: MAINE CODE OF MILITARY JUSTICE

37-B §401. Title

37-B §402. Definitions

37-B §403. Persons subject to the Code

37-B §404. Places where applicable

37-B §405. Judge advocates

37-B §406. Apprehension

37-B §407. Arrest or confinement

37-B §408. Designated jails

37-B §409. Probable cause

37-B §410. Information on charges; speedy trial

37-B §411. Quelling of disorders

37-B §412. Receiving prisoners

37-B §413. Report of persons held

37-B §414. Application of the United States Manual for Courts-Martial

37-B §415. Nonjudicial punishment (REPEALED)

37-B §415-A. Nonjudicial punishment

37-B §416. Court-martial

37-B §417. Sentences

37-B §418. Jurisdiction

37-B §419. Convening a court-martial

37-B §420. Composition of court-martial

37-B §421. Military judge

37-B §422. Counsel

37-B §423. Court reporters

37-B §424. Members of court-martial

37-B §425. Pretrial procedures

37-B §426. Limitation of charges

37-B §427. Witnesses

37-B §428. Execution of sentences

37-B §429. Record of trial

37-B §430. State judge advocate's opinion

37-B §431. Approval of findings and sentence

37-B §432. Reconsideration

37-B §433. Appeal

37-B §434. Judicial review

37-B §435. Approval by the Governor

37-B §436. New trial

37-B §437. Restoration of rights

37-B §438. Included offenses

37-B §439. Attempts

37-B §440. Conspiracy

37-B §441. Desertion

37-B §442. Absent without leave

37-B §443. Missing movement

37-B §444. Disrespect to officer

37-B §445. Striking or disobeying an officer

37-B §446. Striking or disobeying a noncommissioned officer

37-B §447. Failure to obey order

37-B §448. Mutiny; sedition

37-B §449. Breaking arrest

37-B §450. Under influence of alcohol or drugs on duty

37-B §451. Sentinels

37-B §452. Feigning illness to avoid duty

37-B §453. False testimony

37-B §454. False official statements

37-B §455. Cruelty and maltreatment

37-B §456. Military property of United States or State; sale, loss, damage, destruction or wrongful disposition

37-B §457. Wrongful possession of controlled substance

37-B §458. Larceny and wrongful appropriation

37-B §459. Assault

37-B §460. Behavior that is prejudicial to good order and discipline of military forces or that discredits military forces

37-B §461. Sexual assault

37-B §462. Operating under the influence

37-B §463. Harassment