Insubordination.
Before becoming a wrestler, Orton enlisted with the United States Marine Corps out of high school. Orton was dishonorably discharged about a year later after going AWOL on two occasions, the first time for eighty two days, and disobeying an order from a commanding officer, under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Private First Class Orton was convicted under a special court-martial, and was put into a military prison for thirty eight days. As this was before the law changed in 2002, Orton did not become a felon as a result.
If you are not employed in the military, then you don't ever have to obey an order (unless you are on a military base or installation). If you are in the military, then any order given to you by a higher-ranked officer or NCO, or by your commanding officer, must be followed unless it violates the law. You can't ever decide to simply disobey an order just because of rank; doing so would get you court-martialled.
Randy Orton served 38 days in a military prison. He went AWOL twice and was arrested for this crime and for disobeying an order from his commander.
During World War II many Japanese Americans were forced into internment camps. This was the result of a Presidential order allowing any part of the U.S. to be declared a military zone.
He/she would be subject to martial court and depending on the circumstances, may be dishonorably discharged. The court will determine whether or not the soldier had a right to disobey such orders he/she felt were worth disobeying. There are situations where a soldier may legally disobey orders of a higher ranking officer, an example would be if the soldier were ordered to kill innocent civilians and refused
Lucifer was exiled from Heaven. He became Satan.
many Japanese Americans were moved to internment camps.
Disobey is already a verb. This is because the word disobey portrays an action.Other verbs are disobeys, disobeying and disobeyed."I will disobey the order"."The citizens are disobeying"."The servant disobeyed and quit".
A deliberate violation of a judge's order is known as contempt of court. This can include actions such as disobeying a court order, disrupting court proceedings, or showing disrespect towards the judge. Contempt of court can result in penalties such as fines, imprisonment, or other sanctions.
No. Commanding Officer or not, they don't have authority over the civilian courts, and would be better to just cope - trying to stiff one's ex- against a court order won't look good to those who determine the future of that officer's career.
Are you an officer who is 'resigning his commission? PCS (Permanent Change of Station) orders are transfers from one military organization to another. Enlisted persoonel do not "resign" from the military they are discharged, which is a completely different type of order.