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UCMJ (Uniform Code of Military Justice; formerly the articles of war under the WAR DEPARTMENT; now called the Defense Department), trial procedures & court martial reviews.
code of conduct
The UCMJ is the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Article 91 of this code is directed towards the insubordination toward a warrant officer.
punitive peace can backfire
Article 91-Insubordinate conduct toward warrant officer, NCO, or PO
There are 62 Punitive Articles of the UCMJ.
There are 134 Articles in the Uniform Code of Military Justice, of these 88 are non-punitive.
146 articles
This offense falls under the Punitive Articles of the Uniform Code of Military Jurisdiction (UCMJ), specifically the General Article, #134.
Are there articles under the UCMJ that outline deviating from the Chain of Command?
TRUE
It was called "Rocks and Shoals" or more properly "Articles for the Government of the United States Navy."
true
true
That will not be an issue these days--local law enforcement WILL tell your chain of command for you. I just went through the punitive articles of the UCMJ...if they were going to charge you with something, Article 134 is about the only thing that covers "failure to notify" (although under Shrub Bush's devastation wreaked upon Article 134, where there are now about a hundred specific crimes in it, that may no longer be the case). However! Since the local authorities are guaranteed to tell the military, expect at minimum a General Officer Letter of Reprimand in your file.
What article of the UCMJ covers fraternization
(UCMJ) Means The Uniform Code of Military Justice