Marine Law: Difference between revisions
Tunguso4ka (talk | contribs) Added Procedures Searches. |
Tunguso4ka (talk | contribs) m Added 3 new definitions. |
||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
'''Officer''' - A person who is a Commissioned Officer. These rights cannot be transfered. | '''Officer''' - A person who is a Commissioned Officer. These rights cannot be transfered. | ||
'''Department heads''' - A person who is responsible for an entire department, which includes the '''Chief Engineer''', '''Chief Medical Officer''', '''Auxiliary Support Officer''', Quartermaster, Chief of Military Police. | |||
'''CIC Personnel''' - Standard personnel whose main duties are within CIC. This includes the '''Commanding Officer''', '''Executive Officer''', and '''Staff Officers'''. | |||
'''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. | '''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. | ||
Line 35: | Line 39: | ||
'''Secure Areas''' - Must be designated by the '''Commander''' or staff officers. It is a reinforced area, where there has been no recent combat or threats. The FOB is usually a secure area until it is attacked, for example. The '''Commander''' or any CIC personnel at any point may designate an area no longer secure. | '''Secure Areas''' - Must be designated by the '''Commander''' or staff officers. It is a reinforced area, where there has been no recent combat or threats. The FOB is usually a secure area until it is attacked, for example. The '''Commander''' or any CIC personnel at any point may designate an area no longer secure. | ||
'''Field Hospital''' - Must be designated by the '''Commander''' or '''Chief Medical Officer'''. It is a reinforced area, where there has been no recent combat or threats. It is the only area aside from the '''FOB''' that the '''Chief Medical Officer''' or '''Commander''' may give permission to doctors and nurse to move to. It must be designated as a '''Secure Area'''. | |||
'''Alert Levels''': | |||
* Code '''<span style="color:lightgreen">Green</span>''': All clear. | |||
* Code '''<span style="color:lightblue">Blue</span>''': Potentially hostile activity on board. | |||
* Code '''<span style="color:red">Red</span>''': There is an immediate threat to the ship or it's crew. | |||
* Code '''Black''': Self destruct system activated. | |||
== Crimes == | == Crimes == | ||
Revision as of 14:46, 3 January 2025
The Uniform Code of Military Justice commonly known as Marine Law is the foundation of the system of military justice of the United Nations Marine Corps, It's enforced by the Military Police Corps with the Provost Marshal Office having final say in any judicial matters.
WIP, based on https://github.com/RMC-14/RMC-14/pull/3440
Definitions
These definitions are used throughout the rest of Marine Law.
Commanding Officer - An official UNMC Commanding Officer. Anything with the words Commanding Officer only applies to whitelisted Commanding Officers. These rights cannot be transferred.
Commander - The current Commander of an operation. Transferable to a new Commander, per the Chain of Command.
Duty Officer - The ranking officer in the Chain of Command who, in the temporary absence of the Commander, is placed in command of the warship. Unless explicitly stated otherwise, the Duty Officer is interchangeable with, and inherits the rights of Commander in this case.
Chief MP - The Chief of Military Police, assigned to the warship. Only transferable to a Warden by the Commander, if another MP is appointed to be acting Warden.
MP - Military Police, including personnel validly deputized by the Commanding Officer, who deal with Marine Law.
Officer - A person who is a Commissioned Officer. These rights cannot be transfered.
Department heads - A person who is responsible for an entire department, which includes the Chief Engineer, Chief Medical Officer, Auxiliary Support Officer, Quartermaster, Chief of Military Police.
CIC Personnel - Standard personnel whose main duties are within CIC. This includes the Commanding Officer, Executive Officer, and Staff Officers.
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.
Lawful Orders - Personnel are required to follow all lawful orders from their superiors and are NOT-required to follow unlawful orders. If personnel are refusing to follow an order, they must state why they believe it would break Marine Law, making it an unlawful order. Valid NJPs are not unlawful orders in the case of neglected duties.
Riot equipment:
- Flashbangs.
- Teargas.
- Riot shotguns with beanbag rounds.
- Riot shields and armor.
- Riot grenade launchers.
FOB - The Forward Operating Base. Designated by the Commander. It is a reinforced area, usually being the primary landing zone. FOBs do not have to be placed adjacent to a landing zone. However, the primary landing zone itself must at least be properly defended and guarded.
Area of Operations (AO) - The area of operations is the broad location where personnel are being deployed to conduct an operation.
Secure Areas - Must be designated by the Commander or staff officers. It is a reinforced area, where there has been no recent combat or threats. The FOB is usually a secure area until it is attacked, for example. The Commander or any CIC personnel at any point may designate an area no longer secure.
Field Hospital - Must be designated by the Commander or Chief Medical Officer. It is a reinforced area, where there has been no recent combat or threats. It is the only area aside from the FOB that the Chief Medical Officer or Commander may give permission to doctors and nurse to move to. It must be designated as a Secure Area.
Alert Levels:
- Code Green: All clear.
- Code Blue: Potentially hostile activity on board.
- Code Red: There is an immediate threat to the ship or it's crew.
- Code Black: Self destruct system activated.
Crimes
Capital Crimes
These crimes are extreme severity. All of these crimes may be punished by Permanent confinement and demotion, or execution and ID termination.
Charge | Description |
---|---|
Jailbreak/Escape | To escape, assist in an escape, attempt escape, or be willfully and knowingly broken out from a cell. |
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. |
Murder/Unauthorized Execution | This also includes refusing or preventing to revive anyone not executed by the execution procedure.
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. |
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. A Duty Officer Proclaiming allegiance to, or acting on behalf of, the supposed CLF is an act of sedition against the UN. |
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). |
Crimes against Sapience | To engage in actions that violate sapient life rights or otherwise are heinous acts against sapient life. Examples are torture, cannibalism and forced infection of any kind. |
Major Crimes
These crimes are high severity.
Charge | Description | Punishment |
---|---|---|
Disorderly Conduct | Directly and intentionally disrupting primary operations of the ship. Fighting in the requisitions line, extensively or repeatedly disrupting the briefing. | 10 Minutes. |
Subterfuge | Carrying out objectives or being tied to material that describe planned actions that go against the UNMC. Strong proof is required that the individual is working against UNMC.
A major charge of Unauthorized use of a Listening Device when such a device is also tied to a foreign government or terror organisation is additionally considered Subterfuge. |
15 Minutes, removal of ID, and 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 their 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. |
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. |
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.
This also includes failing to revive someone without a reasonable attempt, not executed by the execution procedure. |
20 Minutes, and/or demotion. |
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. |
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. |
Misuse of Authority | The exercising of power to a malicious extent by MP or deputized personnel acting as an MP.
Examples include beating a downed prisoner, excessive use of harmful or non-lethal force, or other abusive actions that led to the harm of a person in custody. Detained suspects should not have more force used on them than necessary in order to pacify them. |
20 Minutes. |
Unauthorised Deployment | To deploy into the area of operations without permission of the relevant head of department or Commander where appropriate whilst still performing assigned duties. (I.E A doctor deploying without permission, with the intentions to perform field surgery.) Deploying without intent to perform assigned duties remains desertion.
|
10 Minutes. |
Minor Crimes
These crimes are low severity, and can be punished with an NJP.
Charge | Description | Punishment |
---|---|---|
Failure to Follow Procedure | Failing to follow the regulations found in the Standard Operating Procedure. | 10 Minutes, equipment confiscation where relevant. |
Smoking in Medical Areas | Smoking in areas designated for use by medical personnel, such as the entire medbay and surgical rooms. | 10 Minutes. |
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. This can escalate to Disorderly Conduct. | NJP. |
Trespassing | Unauthorized access of an area which a person does not normally have access to or without command/superior approval. | Escort out of the area and optionally 7.5 minutes. |
Intoxication | To consume alcohol or other substances such as alcohol or hallucinogenic drugs resulting in impaired job performance. | 10 minutes, extended until the person is no longer impaired. |
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. This includes the removal of vendors from department areas without permission. | 10 minutes, and the item(s) returned to the owner. |
Disrespecting a superior Officer | Using offensive names or being directly disrespectful to a Commissioned Officer of higher rank or position. | 10 Minutes. |
False Testimony | To intentionally and willingly lie to an MP, or deputized officer, during a criminal investigation with the intent to disrupt said investigation. | 5 minutes. |
Variable Crimes
These crimes can vary in severity and have scaling punishments.
Charge | Description | Minor | Major |
---|---|---|---|
Damage to UNMC Property | Damaging the ship or making any unauthorized modifications to it as outlined in Standard Operating Procedure. Materials for repairs should be taken from maintenance storages. | Breaking a window, damaging a wall, etc.
Return the ship to it's exact previous state, or serve 7.5 minutes if not possible. |
Breaking the law in a major manner includes breaking or dismantling walls or several windows.
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.
Disrespecting a superior Officer is under minor crimes. |
An order which is not personally directed, or disrespecting someone of a higher rank or position that is not an officer.
7.5 minutes. |
An order personally directed at a person in question using either their name or clearly communicating its meant for them.
15 minutes. |
Interference | Interfering in a legal arrest being performed. | Interfering without ill intent, such as blocking the way or helping someone up.
7.5 minutes. |
Interfering with ill intent or in a clear way to hinder the arrest being performed.
15 minutes. |
Unauthorized use of Listening Devices | The use of listening devices in violation of Standard Operating Procedures. | Illegally placing a listening device in a public area such as the gym.
7.5 minutes. |
Illegally placing a listening device in a secure area, or area with privacy shutters, such as CIC or the CL's office.
If the listening device is also tied to a foreign government or terror organisation this is additionally considered Subterfuge 15 minutes. |
Optional Crimes
These crimes can be added on to existing charges where relevant.
Charge | Description | Minor | Major |
---|---|---|---|
Resisting Arrest | To resist a lawful arrest or search by a Military Police officer. | Refusing to comply with a lawful search or arrest.
5 minutes. |
Resisting a legal arrest by an MP by fleeing or using force.
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 crime committed. | |
Disorderly Conduct in Confinement | To cause disruption in a significant manner while in Brig and under arrest. This can be added on to any charge. | Breaking a Minor Law while under arrest or in Prison.
7.5 minutes. |
Breaking a Major Law while under arrest or in Prison.
15 minutes. |
Precautionary Crimes
These are used to confine people indefinitely.
Charge | Description |
---|---|
Insanity | Declared only by the CMO or a synthetic, acting in such a manner which makes the offender not sound clear of mind. The subject, once cleared to be of sound mind, may be released from this particular charge.
In the absence of a CMO or Synthetic, the Commander or Chief MP can appoint an officer of the medical department to perform an evaluation in their stead. An exception to this is in cases of verified suicide or attempted suicide, and the subject may appeal, or appeal to any medical personnel. |
Prisoner of War | Being a hostile member of a legitimate and recognised faction.
Prisoners of war cannot be executed, unless they are an active threat to others. |
Discretionary Detainment | A discretionary charge used by Commanding Officer to detain personnel for any reason - for the safety and benefit of the operation or security.
This is only appealable to the Commanding Officer, or the Provost Marshal Office, and may be lifted at any time by the Commanding Officer. |
Procedures
Arresting and Field Arrests
Should the warship get boarded by a hostile force, no arrests should be made unless the person presents a danger to the warship and/or its personnel.
Officer Ordered Arrests
Should an Officer ranked UNMC personnel order an arrest for a crime, MPs MUST arrest that person.
- Only the Commander (not a Duty Officer) and Chief MP can Officer 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.
- Before the suspect is detained, the Officer may recind the order.
- In the case of Officer Ordered arrests the Chief MP or Commander may choose to assign an NJP over the initial charge (where valid).
Arresting a Suspect
These arrests can be performed anywhere on the warship.
- Take down the Suspect if they resist and securely restrain them.
- Move the Suspect to a brig cell.
- Continue to charging procedure.
Arresting MP
- The Chief MP can only be arrested if approved by the Commander or Provost Marshall Office.
- Any MPs can only be arrested if approved by the Commander or Chief MP. The Commander has the final say.
- A Duty Officer is unable to authorize the arrest of an MP or the Chief MP.
- Ensure additional charging of Military Police procedure is followed.
Actions Against the Commander
- The MP must contact Provost Marshal Office before taking any law-related actions against the Commanding Officer.
- If there is no Commanding Officer, the Commander of the operation may be arrested, but Provost Marshal Office must be notified after the fact, through fax.
Field Arrests
Arrests that are performed in the Area of Operations.
- Field arrests are restricted to the FOB, dropships, and secure areas unless in pursuit.
- If a suspect flees outside the above areas or are witnessed by the MP, they may be pursued.
- If there are hostiles in the vicinity, the MP must abort the arrest and move to a secure area.
- MPs may move between secure areas.
- Squad Leaders may detain marines of their squad that violate the law, but must detain marines of their squad by orders of the Chief MP, Commander, or any commissioned officer. This may also apply to personnel that are deploying unauthorized.
- Marines and personnel detained by the Squad Leaders should be passed onto the MP in a secure area when possible.
Charging and sentencing
Upon arrest, the arresting MP must transfer the suspect to the brig, where they will have the suspect charged with the crimes committed, by another member of the Military Police.
General Charging Procedure
- Brig timers must not exceed 30 minutes unless in the case of a Capital Crime, or if extended by crimes performed while jailed.
- Charging is to be done, in order of availability, by the Military Warden, the Chief MP, an uninvolved MP, the arresting MP.
- If any of these are present they may explicitly defer to the next in-line if their attention is required elsewhere. This right should be used reasonably.
- If any of these are present they may explicitly defer to the next in-line if their attention is required elsewhere. This right should be used reasonably.
- The person issuing the charges should also determine a sentence.
- Inform the Suspect of their Charges before the brig timer starts.
- Inform the Suspect they may file an appeal should they wish so.
- Ensure to follow prisoner rights and the right to appeal.
Additional charging of Military Police
- Always ensure you are permitted to arrest them, first.
- They are to be charged with neglect of duty as an aditional crime. This does not upgrade minor crimes to major.
- Should their appeal or pardon be denied, they are to be demoted, following the MP demotion procedure.
Brigging checklist
- Apply the charges and activate the brig timer.
- Remove all their belongings, including ID card and headset.
- Put them in the orange uniform, if available, else their original uniform.
- Give them a standard headset of common channel, if available.
- Place them inside the cell, buckled to the bed, then flash or stun them and recover your handcuffs.
- Search their belongings for contraband and theft.
- When the time is over, let them grab their belongings, escort them out of the brig.
- If the prisoner is SSD at the end of their sentence, return their belongings and place them in brig cryo.
- If a prisoner has been SSD for over 5 minutes you may place them in cryo, but they must serve the rest of their time if they return.
Medical Experiments
A prisoner may waive their rights to participate in medical experiments. Researchers performing approved medical experiments may not be held liable for damages inflicted on the subject within the approved parameters of the experiment.
- All experiments require the signed (or stamped) approval of either the Commander (But not Duty Officer) or the CMO.
- Prisoners can request to be used as subjects. The prisoner's brig time must continue to run while they are being used, and are free to go when it expires and are not obligated to continue.
- Medical experiments that will result in death must only be offered to prisoners who are to be executed, or if execution is one of the listed punishment options for their crime. It is otherwise illegal, and will result in a Attempted Murder, or Murder charge where relevant.
Non-judicial punishments (NJPs)
These may be issued and observed by the MP or SEA instead of an arrest and/or brig sentence where valid.
General usage:
- NJPs should not risk the person's health.
- If the NJP offer is refused, they are to serve the original sentence, or a 10 minute brig timer if none exists.
- Accepting the NJP waives the right to appeal. The suspect or prisoner should be informed of this.
- Failure to comply to an accepted NJP will result in an additional charge of [bold]resisting arrest[/bold] with the original charges.
- Failure to complete an NJP is not considered failure to comply if a legitimate attempt is observed.
- NJPs are a one-time offer. The same NJP for the charges cannot be accepted once denied.
- The decision to offer or not offer a NJP may be overruled by a higher ranking MP.
- In the case of officer ordered arrests the Chief MP or Commander may choose to assign an NJP over the initial charge (where valid).
Brig Usage:
- A NJP may be offered to a prisoner in a cell at any point, unless they were offered and denied one already, or their sentence total is above 10 minutes or a major crime.
- NJPs cannot take longer than their remaining brig time.
Examples:
- Ordering a marine to clean the preparation areas of squads.
- Ordering a marine to do laps around the warship.
Searches
- Searches must be approved by the Chief MP or Commander.
- If waiting would cause further harm to the ship or personnel, you may gain approval after performing the search.
- Searches can be performed by the Commander or any MP, as long as the following procedure is followed.
- If procedure is not followed, the offender can be charged with Neglect of Duty.
- Searches cannot incur a Prevarication charge should no illegal items be found.
Personnel
- Inform the person you are going to conduct a search and the reason for the search.
- Use non-lethal force to restrain them if they do not comply.
- Where possible, conduct the search in the brig or any isolated area so nothing is stolen.
- Begin the search, confiscate any illegal items, and secure them.
- If the items warrant a sentence, follow arrest and brig procedures, otherwise release the personnel.
- Items that are no longer needed for evidence can be returned to requisitions.
Areas
- State your intent to search the area, then vacate it of any personnel unrelated to the search.
- If someone responsible for the area is available at the area, inform them of the reason.
- If nobody with access to the area is present, request trained personnel to temporarily override the doors.
- If you cannot gain access to the area, and no personnel can override the doors, forceful entry may be performed. (Personnel with access in the area will be liable for the reasonable damage to the ship.)
- Search and secure any evidence.
- Restore the searched area to its previous state as closely as possible.
- Reopen the area to normal traffic, then move all evidence to brig for processing.
- Items that are no longer needed for evidence can be returned to requisitions.
Demotions
General Procedure
- A person who has been demoted is moved to a lower position in their department, or if no such position exists, a rifleman.
- Demotions are limited to crimes where demotion is explicitly listed as an option, with the Commanding Officer.
- If the arrested person is a department head, the Commander must give the permission.
- The Commander may turn any demotion to a termination instead, making the person a civilian. A Duty Officer does not have this permission.
Riflemen Procedure
- Riflemen who are demoted are to be discharged and treated as civilian passengers.
- Their access to equipment should be restricted as such.
MP Procedure
- If they are of enlisted rank, they are to serve in squad roles, other assignments by permission of the Heads of departments, or direct assignment by the Commanding Officer.
- If they are of Officer rank, they are to serve in CIC unless dismissed by the Commander to find duties elsewhere.
Lethal Force
- Lethal force should always remain a last resort.
- During emergencies such as mutinies and boardings, or against suspects who have used lethal weapons against personnel prior, the Chief MP or Commander may authorize lethal force.
- MP may use lethal force should suspects be an active threat to the crew or ship. The suspect should only be fired upon until they can no longer present any harm.
- A suspect that has been detained and restrained must be kept safe from harm, as they are in MP custody.
- If the Chief MP and Commander are not responding to comms within a reasonable amount of time, or are incapacitated, MP may use lethal force freely while on code red or higher.
- MP may use lethal force against targets that are unaffected by non-lethals, such as synthetics.
Executions
Authorization
- Executions are limited to prisoners who have committed crimes with execution as a possible punishment.
- They must be authorized by the Commanding Officer.
- In the event the Commanding Officer is absent, BOTH the Chief MP and Commander must give the authorization.
- A Duty Officer is unable to authorize an execution.
- Executions may be delayed if the alert level is RED or DELTA.
- A prisoner that is permanently confined may request to be executed in place of their confinement, but must still be authorized.
Authorized methods of execution
Authorized methods of execution must be used in executions and are listed below.
- Lethal injection handled by the current Chief Medical Officer.
- Firing squad by the MP or Commanding Officer. This must be done with standard issue firearms, and not with explosives or weapons considered cruel. The Chief MP or Commander may permit only the victims of the prisoner's crimes to join the firing line.
Procedure
- The Chief MP or Commander MUST make a ship-wide announcement informing the crew of the intent to execute, the reason/crime, and the execution method.
None of the below steps should each exceed 5 minutes to fully process, otherwise they may be skipped if the prisoner was warned prior to the time expiring.
- The prisoner may request a tobacco product, and a food and drink as a last meal. The items should be reasonably acquirable, else they should be provided an alternative.
- The prisoner may request a blindfold for the execution if available.
- Up to three people may be requested by the prisoner to view the execution.
- The prisoner is given a chance to give final words. The prisoner may use the radio for this.
- The execution may proceed.
Prisoners Rights
This is a list of rights prisoners have. They cannot be denied, with the exception of radio access, except in extreme situations with authorization from the Chief MP or Commander. Prisoners can fax provost to have their rights be given back.
Common Space
All prisoners are permitted to enter the common space by default. Permabrigged prisoners do not have this right, but can be given access with an escort for good behavior.
This right can be lost in the event of:
- Mutiny, riots, emergencies
- Jailbreaking
- Committing a crime within the brig. If this happens, the right can be given back by the Chief MP or Commander.
Protection and Medical Treatment
- If there are prisoners, a member of the MP must remain in the brig at all times except if the only prisoners are in permanent confinement or there is an emergency.
- Prisoners must be kept safe and unharmed.
- A surgical tray is to remain within the brig at all times, unless there is an emergency.
- Treatment should take place within the brig when possible. If not, a MP must escort the prisoner to the medbay and watch over them while they are treated.
- Self-harm may result in being constrained for the duration of the sentence.
Access to a Radio
Prisoners are authorized a standard headset with the common channel.
- If any MP believes that it is being abused, they can revoke this right after a clear warning of the behavior.
- Prisoners may appeal this.
- Prisoners may have their radio revoked if a mutiny is active until the mutiny is over.
Appeals
Right to Appeal
- Accepting an NJP waives the right to appeal.
- Appeals are used to correct errors, but may not be used to add new charges or punishments if a brig timer was already set.
- Appeals must be handled before executions, demotions, and NJPs. Appealing prisoners should have their brig timers set and running while the appeal is being processed.
- Personnel may be placed in holding awaiting their appeal if it had no brig sentence.
- Whomever is handling the appeal has the final say in the outcome of the appeal.
Appeal a Sentence in a timely manner
If an appeal process has not started within 10 minutes, or 30 minutes for permanently brigged, after a request to appeal has been clearly communicated to any MP, Chief MP, or Commander;
- The prisoner must be released.
- The person whom received the request, if failing to take appropriate action, are to be given a Neglect of Duty charge.
Who can handle an appeal
- Anyone under the jurisdiction of marine law has the right to appeal their punishment to their choice of either the Chief MP or the Commander, who may also choose to designate someone else to handle the appeal in their place. If either person picked is involved in the crimes, they should designate an uninvolved MP or commissioned officer.
Ideally, these people should not be handling the appeal;
- Witnesses/victims.
- Anyone who ordered the arrest.
- The person who set the charges or punishment.
Appeal outcomes
A charge cannot be removed by appeal if the prisoner is found guilty, however, the person who handles the appeal can process the appeal as;
- A valid charge, no modification.
- Modify the charge to a lower charge.
- Reduce the punishment of a charge up to the minimum punishment.
- Remove a charge the prisoner is found innocent for.
Suspending Appeals
Appeals may be postponed in these situations;
- Threats requiring evacuation.
- A hostile force approaching or onboard the ship.
- Riots or jailbreaks.
- The person requiring medical treatment and is not conscious.
- There being an already processing appeal.
- The person having escaped or is unreachable in person.
Appeals may not be suspended for these examples;
- The Commander and Chief MP being busy with other tasks.
- The prisoner being declared insane.
Appeals Procedure
- The appeal processor must be present and in person.
- The charges should be listed along with their punishment one by one. This may be done by any MP or the appeal processor.
- A discussion including witness accounts, the story of the accused, evidence, and mitigating circumstances is recommended.
- If charges were applied incorrectly they must be removed. No new charges may be added as a result if a brig time has been set.
- An appeal outcome should be given for each listed charge individually.
- The final punishment should be for the remaining crimes.
- The appeal processor decides the outcome. They may not be ordered or forced otherwise.
- The appeal processor cannot be retaliated against by anyone for any part of the appeal, unless it is a neglect of duty charge due to the appeal procedure not being followed correctly.
Appeals to the Provost Marshal Office
- The prisoner may request another appeal to the Provost Marshal Office.
- This may be done if their appeal is denied, or done instead of a standard appeal.
- If the Provost Marshal Office does not reply to the appeal in 10 minutes, the appeal is considered denied.
- The prisoner must be provided a pen and paper to write a fax to the Provost Marshal Office.
- If the prisoner is a threat to themself or others if unrestrained, they have the right to dictate the fax and have it written by any MP.