Table of Contents

Marine Law

This is the Uniform Code of Military Justice, containing Laws and Punishments applicable to Marines and to those who interface with Marines in their areas of operation.

Verbiage: To ensure clarity within this document, certain terms are used for certain things. Here is a small list to help promote clarification.

Commanding Officer: A whitelisted Commanding Officer of a NovusCorp-approved vessel. Anything with the words Commanding Officer only applies to Whitelisted Commanding Officers. These rights cannot be transferred. This typically refers to the Captain.

Commander: The current Commander of this ship. Anything that mentions the Commander also applies to acting Commanders. These rights are transferable to any new Commander, proceeding down the Chain of Command. In the event of the Commanding Officer deploying or being off-duty, Commander rights are applied to the next in command (aboard the ship), alongside the Commanding Officer.

MP: Military police. These rights also include deputized XO’s or SO’s who are dealing with Marine Law. These rights cannot be transferred.

Officer: A person who is commissioned into the Marine Corps and thus Commissioned Officers. These rights cannot be transferred.

For all other roles and mentions, a specific person can be appointed if the specific role is not available, but the chain of command should be followed if possible. This also means these rights are transferable. Only the current Commander may appoint people to a new position.

Charges: Charges are added into an automated computer system, The Jurisdictional Automated System (JAS) decides on a timer depending on the charges selected. The JAS will decide timers fully by itself. For appeals/pardons, see the “Appeal and Pardon” section. Brig timers will not exceed 30 minutes unless in the case of a Capital Crime or when crimes are performed while jailed. If a capital crime is committed while jailed the offending person has their time upgraded to the Capital Crime punishment.

Anyone employed on a Marine-supported ship is expected to follow all aspects of Marine Law. This means civilians such as the Corporate Liaison have to remain respectful. The Heads of Staff are considered to be below the current Commander directly. Doctors and the CMO are held to their department's standing orders and should not be ordered unless the Commander wills it.

The Chief MP can only be arrested if approved by the Commander or High Command. Any MP's can only be arrested if approved by the Commander or CMP. The Commander has the final say.

Aiding, abetting, conspiring: Assisting others in committing a crime, directly or indirectly, encouraging them to commit one (including bribery), conspiring or attempting to commit a crime will be treated as having committed that crime with regards to punishment. False witness statements and testimonies also fall under this law.

Spirit of The Law

The laws written are meant as intended by their spirit and not necessarily exact wording; should MPs disagree on edge cases the Marine Law rank structure must be followed. High Command > Commanding Officer > Chief MP > Master-at-Arms > MP > MP Cadet for the purpose of this evaluation.

Optional

These can be added on to any existing charge as needed.

Charge Description Minor Punishment Major Punishment
Resisting Arrest To resist a lawful arrest or search by a Military Police officer.
Minor: Refusing to go through with a legal Search.
Major: Resisting a legal arrest by an MP.
Completion of the Search 10 Minutes
Aiding and Abetting Assisting others in committing a crime, directly or indirectly, or encouraging them to commit one. Any person Aiding and Abetting is required to be told the crimes of the person they aided. Same punishment as the crime committed
Disorderly Conduct in Confinement

Breaking a Major Law while under arrest or in Prison. | 7.5 Minutes | 15 Minutes |

Variable Crimes

Charge Description Minor Punishment Major Punishment
Damage to Government Property Damaging the ship or making any unauthorized modifications to it as outlined in Standard Operating Procedure.
Materials for Repairs should be taken from the Maintenance Storages.
Minor: Breaking the law in a minor manner includes breaking a window or damaging a wall etc.
Major: Breaking the law in a major manner includes breaking / dismantling walls or multiple windows.
Return ship to its exact previous state or 7.5 Minutes. 10 Minutes
Insubordination Failing to follow a lawful order from a superior person of rank or position. Or disrespecting someone of a higher rank or position that is not an officer.
Illegal orders do not need to be followed.
Minor: An order which is not personally directed at you. Or disrespecting someone of a higher rank or position that is not an officer.
Major: An order personally directed at a person in question using either their name or clearly communicating its meant for them.
7.5 Minutes 15 Minutes
Interference

Interfering with ill intent or in a clear way to hinder the arrest being performed. | 7.5 Minutes | 15 Minutes |

Contraband

Possessing unauthorized items, weapons, or controlled substances from the ship that are not authorized. | 7.5 Minutes; Confiscation of contraband items | 15 Minutes; Confiscation of contraband items |

Minor Crimes

Charge Description Punishment
Failure to Follow Procedure Failing to follow the regulations found in the Standard Operating Procedure. 10 Minutes; Equipment confiscation
Hooliganism Behavior that is generally disruptive to the ship and crew that classifies as low-level shenanigans not deserving of more severe punishment. Things such as excessive window knocking, force-feeding other marines or failing to conduct oneself properly during the briefing, such as climbing the Briefing overview. NJP
Trespassing Unauthorized access of an area which a person does not have access to at the beginning of the shift or without command/superior approval. Escort out of the unauthorized area or 7.5 minutes.
Intoxication To consume alcohol or other substances such as alcohol or hallucinogenic drugs resulting in impaired job performance. 10 Minutes
Theft To take items (or property) from another person or entity without their express permission, or to retain possession of items that have been taken without permission. 10 minutes; item returned to the owner
Disrespecting a superior Officer Using offensive names or being directly disrespectful to someone of a Commissioned Officer of higher rank or position. 10 Minutes

Major Crimes

Charge Description Punishment
Disorderly Conduct Directly and intentionally disrupting primary operations of the ship. Fighting in the RO line, disrupting the briefing. 10 Minutes
Subterfuge Carrying out objectives or being tied to material that describe planned actions that go against NovusCorp. Strong proof is required that the individual is working against NovusCorp. 15 Minutes and Termination of ID + Discharge to planet.
Neglect of duty Failure to perform one’s role to an acceptable standard. For example, a Commander failing to properly organize and ensure his personnel are given orders, failing to follow proper procedure in detriment of one’s duties, or ship crew leaving the ship or their post without authorization from the Commander or their Department Head. 15 Minutes
Assault To threaten or use physical force against someone with ill intent, but without intent to kill. 15 Minutes
Prevarication To intentionally order the arrest of a person on false charges who is then found to be innocent, or to apply an improper or abusive NJP. This includes intentionally arresting a person on false charges, on ones own initiative without orders. 20 Minutes
Manslaughter Killing someone without malicious intent. Manslaughter may be applied if someone dies as a result of a fight where the intent was not to kill. 20 Minutes; Demotion
Assault with a deadly weapon To threaten or use physical force against someone with ill intent and with a lethal weapon such as a sidearm, blade, or rifle but not attempting to murder them. 20 Minutes
Illegal Confinement Unlawfully detaining a person against their will. Includes, kidnapping, hostage-taking, and confining people in cells without charging them for a crime. It does not apply to Prisoners of War. 20 Minutes
Cruelty to Animals Injuring or killing any domestic animal or wild life with malicious intent. Research monkeys used for chemical research, scientific purposes or hostile wildlife are exempt. 30 Minutes
Sexual Harassment Unwelcome sexual advances, verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature. Creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive work environment from the harassment. 30 Minutes

Capital Crimes

Charge Description Punishment

This takes precedence over “Unruly Prisoner.” Execution Or Permanent Confinement - Demotion |

The Marine, once cleared to be of sound mind, may be released from this particular charge.
Persons jailed for insanity may not be executed for that sole charge by itself and should not be counted for execution purposes. | Permanent Confinement - Demotion |

Attempted Murder Attempting to murder a person but failing to do so. If the evidence shows that the arrested person was clearly trying to kill someone with ill intent but failed in the action itself. Execution Or Permanent Confinement - Demotion
Murder or Unauthorized Execution Killing someone with malicious intent. This includes Synthetic units. The charge applies even if the victim is later revived. Executions are only authorized as outlined in the Execution Procedure. Execution Or Permanent confinement - Demotion
Sedition To engage in actions or refuse to follow orders as to overthrow or usurp the legitimate command structure. Creating a massive threat to the ship without the knowledge and approval of the Commander falls under sedition. Execution Or Permanent confinement - Demotion
Desertion Refusing to carry out the duties essential to one’s post or abandoning post unauthorized, without intent to return. (Retreating from the planet when the FOB is breached is not Desertion, refusing to return when ordered is). Execution Or Permanent confinement - Demotion

Note: this list is not comprehensive of all things that would violate the law. Doing so would be impossible and require an inordinate amount of time. Something that would obviously be a serious crime in the United States, e.g. Cannibalism, is still a violation of Marine Law. Clarifications are subject to situations arising.

Non-Judicial Punishments (NJPs)

For Minor Crimes, MP’s or SEA may administer a Non-Judicial Punishment instead of an arrest or brig sentence. NJPs may not be issued to someone they wouldn't otherwise be able to arrest. This would be the Commanding Officer, CMP, MP, SEA, and so forth. If a person refuses an NJP they are to serve the original charge or a 10 minute brig sentence if none exists. Accepting the NJP requires waiving the right to appeal.

NJP's can be given to people in a cell at any point in time unless the total sentence they are serving is above 10 Minutes or a major crime. The decision to offer a NJP cannot be overruled by someone higher on the MP ranking structure.

The NJP can not take longer then the remaining time on their timer. This does not include NJPs that would be applicable to new charges.

Further Information: This may range from reprimands or PT to extra duties or reassignment to a new post, but may not be a risk to the marine’s health. The time on an NJP can not last more than the brig timer would be, and can at maximum last 10 Minutes if there is not a specified brig timer.

All punishment-related orders to perform tasks outside a marine's assigned duties are considered NJPs and require the subject to have committed a named criminal offense to be issued; the exception is the Commanding Officer’s NJP directive. Failure to comply with the non-judicial punishment will result in a resisting arrest charge in addition to the original sentence, failing to complete the NJP is not a failure to comply so long as a legitimate attempt is made.

Military Police and Lawbreaking

Breaking Marine Law as a member of the Military Police is a serious offence, and carries a serious consequence.

Should a member of the Military Police be arrested for breaking Marine Law;

They are to be charged with Neglect of Duty as an additional charge, however this does not upgrade a minor crime. Should their appeal or pardon be denied, they are to be removed from service as law enforcement.

For Minor Crimes, demotion is subject to the wishes of the Chief MP, or the Commander in their absence, and their decision cannot be altered.

Enlisted are to serve in squad roles or other assignments aboard the ship, subject to relevant Heads of Departments granting permission, or direct assignment by the Commanding Officer.

Officers are to serve in the CIC unless dismissed by the Commander to find duties elsewhere.

Application

The UCMJ applies to all personnel in the vicinity of a USCM Operation or onboard a USCM ship; this includes the Commander, Chief MP, UPP, Freelancers, PMC's, other factions and organizations. The only exceptions are specially dispatched officials from High Command or the Provost Marshal Office and Diplomatically Immune Company Executives (not the onboard Liaison). Riot MP ERT’s are also required to follow Marine law as a regular MP.

Unless stated otherwise, it can be presumed that a USCM Flag Officer (O7 or above) is immune to Marine Law, though may still be faxed about should they commit a crime.

On USCM ships and operations, the law is enforced by the MPs and Chief MP, and they operate independently from the normal command structure ONLY in matters related to the enforcement of the Law.

The Commanding Officer has the final say on law enforcement within his operational area unless overseen by higher officials of the Provost Marshal Office or High Command.

The Chief MP is the second highest authority in law enforcement, above even the Executive Officer. While he may perform arrests, it is his duty to administer the brig, ensure records are updated, timers are properly set, the procedure is observed, and to review cases and evidence.

Military Police may, at their discretion, ignore Minor Crimes unless they are ordered to enforce one. However, they should never break Marine Law themselves - Minor or Major crimes.

If the life and limb of a ship's crew or other personnel are at risk in a situation, personnel may act in a manner reasonable to preserve them even if such action would otherwise violate marine law.

Gaining entry to a room the person normally has no access to due to a person's life is in danger - for example. Breaking a window, door, or wall where there is a clear belief a person is either dying or mortally wounded on the other side - for example.

Abuse of this may be met with High Command interference ranging from Execution to payment docking.

Lawful Orders

Personnel are required to follow all lawful orders from their superiors and are NOT-required to follow unlawful orders.

If personnel refuses to follow the order, the personnel must state why they believe it would break Marine Law. Unlawful orders are those orders that, when carried out, would result in a breach of Marine Law. Giving an unlawful order with ill intent or one that is carried out will see the person who gave the order be given the same punishment as the personnel who carried it out. Orders meant as punishment that would cause personnel to have to Neglect their Duties (such as “go stand here for ten minutes” or “run three laps around the hangar”) are also unlawful unless applied as NJPs.

Officer Requested Arrests

Should a Commissioned Officer order an arrest for a crime, MPs MUST arrest that person. Only the Commander and CMP can order an arrest on an MP. They may arrest and hold that person for ten minutes after they have reached the brig while they gather evidence. Should the suspect be declared innocent of all accused crimes, the requesting officer may incur a Prevarication charge. The time for any crimes the suspect committed as a result of the arrest must still be served, however. The CMP or Commander may order an arrested marine to get an NJP instead of a brig timer for Minor crimes. Should the marine already have been given the option for an NJP but refused to do it, they may not get the chance for another NJP in regard to those charges. An officer must clearly communicate that he wishes the criminal arrested, for the arrest to be compulsory.

Arrest Procedure

Arresting a Suspect

Inform the Suspect he is under arrest.

Take down the Suspect if he resists and securely restrain him.

Move the Suspect to the Brig.

Inform the Suspect of his Charges before the brig timer starts.

Inform the Suspect he may file an appeal should he wish so.

Lethal Force

During emergencies such as mutinies and boardings, or against suspects who have used a lethal weapon against law enforcement or other personnel, the Chief MP or Commander may authorize the use of lethal force. If the MP has no non-lethal weaponry, he may use lethals should the suspect be a threat to the crew or ship. The suspect should only be fired upon with lethals until they no longer can present any harm.

A suspect that has been detained and securely restrained must be kept safe from harm as they are considered to be in MP Custody.

If the CMP or Commander are not responding to hails over comms within a timely fashion or are incapacitated, the MP can use Lethals freely from Code Red and upwards.

If non-lethals prove inefficient against the target such as rogue synthetic units, the MP may use lethals from the beginning.

The synthethic unit must be given a chance to stand down.

The synthethic unit should be repaired and resurrected in a secure spot to serve its sentence once taken down. It should be released after serving its sentence.

Suspect in Area of Operations

Arrests are restricted to the FOB, dropships, and secure areas unless in “hot pursuit” - the suspect flees the MP outside the secure area. Should there be hostiles in the vicinity, the MP is required to abort the arrest and move to a secure area. MP's may travel between secure areas, but may not make arrests during these travels and must make sure the transport back with the arrested person happens safely. Should the ship get boarded by a hostile force no arrests should be made unless the person is a danger to the ship and/or its personnel.

This includes Delta Alert, and Hijack, or if Self Destruct is Activated.

Search Procedure

Searches can be performed by the Commander or any Military Police personnel as long as the following procedure is followed. If procedure is not followed it would incur an NoD charge.

Personnel

Searches must be approved by the CMP or Commander.

If waiting would cause further hazard to the ship or personnel you may gain permission after performing the search.

Should an MP witness a crime, then a search can be approved after the arrest.

Inform the person you are conducting a search and the reason.

If possible, conduct the search in the Brig or an isolated area, so nothing is stolen.

Begin the search and confiscate any illegal items; you may use non-lethal force to restrain them if they don't comply.

If illegal items are found, secure them until the search is complete. Should this be impossible, request that another MP assist you by taking the items to Evidence Storage. If the confiscated items warrant a brig sentence, follow Detainment and Brig procedures; otherwise, release them. Searches do not incur a Prevarication charge. Return items to Requisitions that are no longer needed for evidence.

Area

Searches must be approved by the CMP or Commander.

If waiting would cause further hazard to the ship or personnel you may gain permission after performing the search. Announce your intent to search the area and vacate it of personnel unrelated to the search. If someone responsible for the area is on-site, inform them of the reason.

Obtain access to the area, if nobody with access is present, request that properly trained personnel override the door.

Search the area for evidence and ensure all evidence is secured.

Restore the searched area to its previous state as closely as possible.

Reopen the area to normal traffic and take all evidence to the brig for processing.

Return items to Requisitions that are no longer needed for evidence.

Detainment and Brig Procedures

Note: If the prisoner is removed from his cell for ANY REASON, the timer is PAUSED. Time spent outside a cell does NOT count towards time being served for the crime. To properly brig a prisoner verify the following checklist in no particular order:

Set the charges and print the Prisoners Timer out from JAS.

Insert the paper containing their charges into the cell timer panel and activate it.

Put them in an orange uniform and shoes.

Give them a standard headset.

Take their ID off if possible.

Bring them inside the cell, buckle them to the bed, flash or stun them and recover your handcuffs, then exit the cell.

Search their belonging for contraband and theft.

Update their records with their “Prisoner” status, charges, and the time they are serving.

Once the timer is over, let them grab their belongings, escort them out of the brig, and set their record status to “Released”.

If a prisoner is SSD at the end of their sentence, redress them, secure their pouches, and place them in the brig Cryo. If a prisoner has been SSD for over 5 Minutes you may place them in cryo. However, should they return, they must return to serve the remaining time.

Executions

Executions are limited to those prisoners who have committed crimes with execution as a possible punishment or those whose timer exceeds one hour, such as permanent confinement. Executions must be authorized by the Commanding Officer or BOTH the Commander and the Chief MP if the Commanding Officer is absent. Permanently confined prisoners may be executed at a later date if the Alert Level is Red/Delta Alert.

Procedure for Execution:

The Commander or Chief MP must make a ship-wide announcement informing the crew of the intent to execute the prisoner, why, and the execution method.

Authorized methods of execution are either Firing Squad (handled by MPs and the Commanding Officer) or Lethal Injection (handled by the CMO).

Standard issued firearms such as rifles, sidearms, or shotguns shall only be used. No explosives or any weapons that could be considered cruel and unusual.

The CMP or Commanding Officer can determine if anyone else is allowed in the firing line. This act should be reserved for the victims of the case only.

During Delta Alert, threats mandating evacuation, or an hostile force is approaching, or onboard the ship, these procedures may be ignored but should otherwise be granted:

The Condemned can request a tobacco product, a last food type and a last drink as a final meal. The items should be easily acquirable.

The condemned may also request a blindfold for the execution.

The Condemned may request a maximum of three people to view their execution from the designated viewing room.

The Commander or Chief MP must be present at the execution.

The Condemned MUST be given a chance to give any final words, after that the execution may proceed. The condemned may use the radio for this even if their radio was taken for abuse.

If any of these take more than two minutes in total, the execution may proceed.

Prisoner Rights

The following is a list of basic rights the prisoners have. With the exception of Access to a Radio, they can NOT be denied, except in an extreme situation and only then with authorization from the Chief MP or Commander. Prisoners can fax High Command to have their rights be given back or inform of malpractice.

The Courtyard aka Common Space

All prisoners are allowed to enter the common space / courtyard by default, exception to this are permabrigged prisoners. This right can be lost in the following scenarios.

Permabrigged prisoners can be given access to the courtyard/common space with an escort as a reward for good behavior.

Mutiny, Riots, or Emergency Situations removes this right.

Active jailbreak attempts removes this right.

Should a prisoner commit a law break while in brig this right is lost. The right can be given back by the CMP or Commander.

Protection and Medical Treatment

All prisoners must be kept safe and unharmed, to this end, as long as there are prisoners in the brig, an MP or the Chief MP must remain in the brig at all times except if the only prisoners have been placed in permanent confinement or there is an Emergency Situation. Treatment should take place inside the brig when possible.

It is the arresting MP’s duty to make sure there is one person in the brig at all times to watch the prisoner. The Surgical Tray is to remain within the brig at all times unless on Red/Delta Alert.

If not, an MP must escort the prisoner to the infirmary and watch over them at all times while they are treated. Self-harm may result in being straitjacketed for the duration of the sentence.

Access to a Radio

Unless the prisoner has abused the radio (such as spamming it for help after being asked to stop), they are authorized a standard headset. If any MP believes that it is being abused, this right can be denied after a warning has been given on what is considered abuse and giving the Prisoner a chance to stop.

Prisoners may request an appeal as much as they want.

Prisoners can be denied a radio if a mutiny is ongoing, but only until the mutiny is over.

Right to appeal

An appeal is the process in which a case is reviewed by a higher authority. Appeals function as a process for error correction, but they may not be used to add on new charges or punishments after a brig timer has been set.

Appeal Sentence in a timely manner

Anyone under the jurisdiction of Marine Law has the right to appeal their punishment to their choice of the CMP or the Commander, who can both designate someone else to handle it in their place. Should either be involved, they must designate an uninvolved MP or uninvolved commissioned officer.

The one handling the appeal has final say. In general, witnesses/victims, anyone ordering the arrest, choosing the charges, or picking the time of a prisoner of a crime should not be doing the appeal.

The person who handles the appeal can establish a charge as valid, modify a charge to a lower charge, reduce the punishment for a charge up to the minimum punishment, and remove a charge that the prisoner is found innocent for. A charge cannot be removed if the prisoner is guilty.

Should an appeal not be started within 10 Minutes, or 30 Minutes for people permanently brigged after a request of it has been made, the prisoner is to be released.

It must be clearly communicated to either an MP, the CMP or Commander. Should the person receiving the request for an appeal fail to take appropriate action on it they are to be given a NoD charge.

Appeals must be handled before Executions, Demotions and NJP's. Appealing personnel will have their brig timers (if any) set and running while the appeal is concluded.

Appeals can not influence other punishments. A marine may be placed in holding awaiting their appeal if it carries no brig sentence.

Suspending Appeals

During Delta Alert, threats mandating evacuation, or an hostile force is approaching, or onboard the ship, riots or jailbreaks, appeal rights become suspended. Appeals may be postponed in these situations as well.

The marine needs medical treatment and is not conscious.

There is another appeal that was requested before this appeal.

The marine has escaped and is unreachable in person.

Examples of invalid reasons to postpone appeals.

The Commander and CMP are busy doing other tasks.

The prisoner is ruled to be insane.

Proper Appeal procedure

To ensure appeals are done properly, the following set of procedure is to be followed.

All charges should be listed one by one by with the punishment the prisoner got for each charge listed as well.This may be done by any MP, or person handling the appeal.

Appeals are done in person. They cannot be done through remote communication. This only counts for the person handling the appeal and not for witnesses.

The appeal handles the crimes as listed towards the accused. If charges were applied incorrectly they must be removed. Appeals can not add on new charges or punishments after a brig timer has been set, even if the wrong charges were applied through a procedural mistake.

The outcome of the appeal should be decided on individual charges. One should not give a general reply on the entire appeal. One must give the outcome per charge. When the appeal is done the punishment should be the punishment for the remaining charges.

The person handling the appeal is the one who decides the outcome. They cannot be ordered or forced to handle an appeal a certain way.

The person handling the appeal cannot be retaliated against in any way by anyone for either handling the appeal or the outcome of the appeal.

Exception being a neglect of duty charge if the appeals procedure was not followed correctly.

Appeals checklist

The following checklist is recommended for the appeal.

Are you there in person with the accused?

Have the charges and their punishments been stated?

Did you check the story of the accuser(s)?

Did you check the story of any witnesses?

Did you check the story of the accused?

Did you check any extra evidence?

Did you check if the evidence supports the charges? And the stories?

Have you handled mitigating circumstances?

Have you decided on the appeal?

Have you informed the accused of your decision on a per charge basis?

Did you adjust the punishment of the accused?

Have you informed the prisoner of their right to fax HC for an additional appeal?

Appeals to Provost Office

An alternative to a normal appeal is an appeal to high command, this is an extra appeal a prisoner may do after having their appeal denied. If the prisoner is to be set up for execution, the Provost Office has 10 Minutes to send a reply back. Should no reply arrive within the given time-frame, the execution may commence. It may also be used in stay of a standard appeal, however should the prior time-frame expire, the appeal is still considered denied. When this right is invoked, this grants the prisoner the right to a pen and a paper to write a fax with to the Provost Office. If the prisoner has to be restrained due to, for example, self-harm, they have the right to dictate the fax but should not have their restraints removed. This fax, once written has to be faxed as soon as possible. During Delta Alert, threats mandating evacuation, or an hostile force is approaching, or onboard the ship this right may be denied.

Special Provisions

Medical Experiments

An individual may waive their rights in order to participate in a medical experiment. Researchers performing approved medical experiments may not be held liable for harm inflicted on the subject within the approved parameters of the experiment. All experiments require the signed approval of either the Commander or Chief Medical Officer.

Prisoners can request to be used for medical experiments as a subject. The prisoner’s timer continues to run while they are being used as a medical experiment.

Should the Prisoner’s timer be concluded while undergoing a medical experiment, they are free to go and are no longer obligated to continue the experiment.

Insanity

Unsoundness of mind or lack of the ability to understand that prevents one from having the mental capacity required by law to perform one's required duties or tasks. Insanity can only be declared by the CMO or Synthetic. The Synthetic can not be forced to declare someone insane.

Mutinies and arresting the Commander

Attempting to overthrow legitimate command staff is obviously illegal, and MPs must do everything in their power to prevent it. MPs must contact High Command for approval and get approval before taking any action against the Commanding Officer. If there is no Commanding Officer, the Commander of the operation may be arrested, but High Command must be notified after the fact through fax.

Should a mutiny be successful and the Commander is deposed or surrenders, MPs should hold the deposed person in confinement if their freedom would reignite the conflict.

Self-Defense and the Defense of Others

Criminal charges are not to be applied to those who use force on others when defending themselves from illegal use of force, so long as they defend themselves with proportional force. This right extends to the defense of others, should there be a reason to believe they are in lethal danger. This provision does not apply to lawful killings such as executions.

Proportional Force

Punching against being punched.

Melee weapons against melee weapons.

Guns against guns.

The person defending should only return with lethal force until the other person is unable to attack the defendant. The defendant should notify MP’s or his command about the use of self-defense.

The person being attacked should also look to get away from the other attacker if possible, and alert the MP’s.

Emergency Situations

In emergency situations such as a significant boarding action or a compromised brig imprisoned personnel may be released by the CMP if they have reason to believe they will not be a threat or hindrance to USCM personnel during the course of the emergency, particularly so if they consistently displayed good behavior. If the imprisoned personnel are denied the release or are clearly too dangerous or detrimental to the survival of the crew if released, they are to be either escorted to an escape pod while in the custody of a commissioned officer or MP charged with maintaining their safety. A normal Red Alert is not sufficient reason for a release unless the ship is being overrun by a large hostile force.

Commanding Officer Provisions

Arrest Immunity

The Commanding Officer is not above Marine Law. However, they may not be arrested without the explicit permission of High Command. Should the Commanding Officer break Marine Law, High Command may be contacted via fax for permission to arrest the Commanding Officer. The right to contact High Command may not be denied. If the Commanding Officer has been deposed due to a mutiny, the MPs should hold the deposed Commanding Officer in confinement if their freedom would reignite the conflict; once a Commanding Officer has been deposed, they lose their arrest immunity and are no longer considered the Commander.

Execution Privileges

The Commanding Officer may perform Battlefield Executions. This means they may personally execute anyone under their authority on the ship or Area of Operations without warning or procedure unless in MP Custody, provided their words or actions fulfill one of the following conditions:

High Command (Provost Admiralty or USCM General Staff), Fleet Command (CO Council dispatched by staff) and Event Characters (as defined by the event running admin) inherit the power to Battlefield Execute following normal guidelines.

A threat to your command. Credibly attempting to or threatening to undermine your command, or attempting to remove your command through illegal means. (Minor insults, disagreements, or being faxed about to high command is not undermining your command. Countermanding or refusing to follow orders is.)

A threat to persons. Credibly threatening and attempting to do harm to the Commanding Officer or to someone while in the Commanding Officer's presence.

A threat to the ship or operation. Credibly threatening or attempting to do damage to the ship, the USCM, or operation while in the Commanding Officer’s presence.

Battlefield Executions should not be done in such a way it creates collateral damage or risks involving innocent parties or persons, they should be performed in person and target each individual individually. For example, the Orbital Cannon may not be used for BE's. Upon completion of a battlefield execution, an announcement must be made within a reasonable time explaining why the person was executed and noting their name and position. The Commanding Officer may not Battlefield Execute a person in custody of the MPs (securely restrained or brigged) unless performing a normal execution is not possible (such as during a Delta Alert). Additionally, the Commanding Officer may request permission to execute prisoners in ways different from Firing Squad or Lethal Injection to High Command or authorize nonstandard methods of execution in emergencies where the normal procedure is impossible.

Escort Missions

The Commanding Officer can request up to two MP’s to escort him planetside, no more may participate. Should the Commanding Officer be incapacitated then the escorting MP's are to try and recover the Commanding Officer's body. Should this not be possible they are to return shipside. During the escort mission it is required the Commanding Officer and MP's follow the Escort mission rules written below:

Deployed MP’s focus is to keep the Commanding Officer Secure at all times. Not enforce Marine law. MP's have to remain within Line of Sight to the Commanding Officer at all times to the best of their ability.

If the Commanding Officer orders the MP to do something that would put the MP outside line of sight, the MP may not do it.

There has to be at least one MP on the ship at all times. The CMP must always remain onboard and can be counted as the needed MP for Escort missions.

Pardons

The Commanding Officer may exceptionally pardon criminals by name, and which crimes they are being pardoned for if they believe it is in the best interests of the operation. Only Minor and Major crimes may be pardoned. Capital offenders may not be pardoned except in special circumstances with the permission of High Command. The Chief MP or, in their absence, an MP may appeal pardons to High Command via fax. The Commanding Officer may be held responsible for further criminal actions committed by those they pardon, and should High Command reverse the decision; they must ensure the condemned return to serve their time without incident. Failure to do so may result in removal and arrest at the discretion of High Command. If any MP thinks the pardon was wrongfully done they should inform High Command about it as well as the CO Council.

When anyone of the rank Commanding Officer or above performs a pardon, they must know the crimes committed and roughly when they were committed.

The person performing the Pardon must announce it, the reason to why they are being pardoned, name of the marine and the crimes the marine was pardoned from. As long as the announcement is made, the Commanding Officer does not need to be there for the release itself.

Demotion Clause

The Commanding Officer may demote or discharge USCM personnel below his position if the personnel have commited a major crime. The demotion should fit with the severity and remain within the department. One can not demote someone from an engineering position to a medical one.

This is not the same as a Demotion Punishment for Capital Crimes, or Major Crimes such as Manslaughter, which can be performed by anyone with permission from the subject's Department Head or the Commander should the subject be a Department Head.

General Article NJPs

The Commanding Officer may issue NJPs at any time should they find a marine’s behavior inappropriate or contrary to good order and conduct and deserving of punishment even if they have not committed a crime as specified in Marine Law, such as for comporting themselves in an unprofessional manner, failing to complete a job in satisfactory conditions or failing to uphold standards of good order.

Deputizing

The Commanding Officer may deputize the Executive Officer or Staff Officers to make arrests and enforce Marine Law should MPs be unavailable or unable to respond in a timely manner. When Deputized, one is required to follow Marine Law like an MP.

USCM Provost Office

The Provost

Members of the USCM Provost Office hold significant weight on how Marine Law is handled in their operational areas. In the event that Marine Law is being mishandled aboard a USCM Vessel or within the AO of a USCM Vessel, USCM High Command may see fit to dispatch a Provost Team. This team may range from an Inspector and their escort visiting the site and laying down the law, or a team of Enforcers showing why breaking the law is a bad idea.

Authority

Members of the Provost Office obey only their direct superiors and are not beholden to the Marine Chain of Command. Provost Inspectors and above are the final word on Marine Law in their AO.

Provost Advisors do not hold any direct authority themselves, however they are expected to ensure Marine Law is correctly handled.

Provost Marshals are not required to follow Marine Law, with the exception of making announcements regarding Battlefield Executions.