This offense falls under the Punitive Articles of the Uniform Code of Military Jurisdiction (UCMJ), specifically the General Article, #134.
134
Primarily Article 134.
Article 134 is the primary article. It may also be covered under Articles 80 and/or 92.
That is covered in Army Pamplet 600-35 - RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN SOLDIERS OF DIFFERENT RANKS
Uniform Code of Military Justice, Article 134 - Adultery
Answer The Uniform Code of Military Justice is the law by which the military services operate. It is the Constitution, Bill or Rights and the law for the soldier. It is used to punish criminals in the military.
It defines who is subject to the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ)
Not a good idea, the military has a no fraternization rule between officers and enlisted. Fraternization falls under Article 134 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The actual offense can be more clearly defined by the individual services and by local unit and base regulations. It is not necessarily going to be punished, but it can be. The Marine Corps is much less lenient on the charge, partially because of the smaller number of individuals involved.
The UCMJ is the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Article 91 of this code is directed towards the insubordination toward a warrant officer.
The UCMJ is the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Article 91 of this code is directed towards the insubordination toward a warrant officer.
Article 134
Answer The Uniform Code of Military Justice is the law by which the military services operate. It is the Constitution, Bill or Rights and the law for the soldier. It is used to punish criminals in the military.
UCMJ. Uniform Code of Military Justice.