[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 32, Volume 5]
[Revised as of July 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 32CFR719.142]

[Page 201-204]
 
                       TITLE 32--NATIONAL DEFENSE
 
                   CHAPTER VI--DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY
 
PART 719_REGULATIONS SUP PLE MENT ING THE MANUAL FOR COURTS-MARTIAL
--Table of Contents
 
                     Subpart E_Miscellaneous Matters
 
Sec. 719.142  Suspension of counsel.

    (a) Report of Allegations of Misconduct or Disability. When 
information comes to the attention of a member of a court-martial, a 
military judge, trial or defense counsel, staff judge advocate, member 
of the Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review or other directly 
interested or concerned party that a judge advocate or civilian who is 
acting or is about to act as counsel before a proceeding conducted under 
the UCMJ or MCM is or has been unable to discharge properly all the 
duties of his or her position by reason of mental or physical disability 
or has been engaged in professional or personal misconduct of such a 
serious nature as to demonstrate that he or she is lacking in integrity 
or is failing to meet the ethical standards of the profession or is 
otherwise unworthy or unqualified to perform the duties of a judge 
advocate or attorney, such information should be reported to the 
commanding officer of that judge advocate or, in the case of civilian 
counsel, to the officer exercising general court-martial jurisdiction 
over the command

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convening the proceedings or to the Judge Advocate General.
    (b) Form of Report. The report shall:
    (1) Be in writing, under oath or affirmation, and made and signed by 
the individual reporting the information.
    (2) State that the individual reporting the information has personal 
knowledge or belief or has otherwise received reliable information 
indicating that:
    (i) The counsel is, or has been, unable to discharge properly all 
the duties of his or her office by reason of mental or physical 
disability; or
    (ii) The counsel is or has been engaged in professional or personal 
misconduct of such a serious nature as to demonstrate that he or she is 
lacking in integrity or is failing to meet the ethical standards of the 
profession; or
    (iii) The counsel is unworthy or unqualified to perform his or her 
duties;
    (3) Set forth the grounds of the allegation together with all 
relevant facts; and
    (4) Be forwarded to the appropriate authority as set forth in 
paragraph (a).
    (c) Consideration of the Report--(1) Action by the Commanding 
Officer of a judge advocate. Upon receipt of the report, the commanding 
officer:
    (i) Shall dismiss any report relating to the performance of a judge 
advocate more properly appealed under law or any report that is 
frivolous, unfounded, or vague and return it to the reporting 
individual;
    (ii) May make further inquiry into the report at his or her 
discretion to determine the merits of the report. The commanding officer 
may appoint an officer to investigate informally the allegations of the 
report to determine whether further action is warranted. Any officer so 
appointed should be a judge advocate senior in rank to the judge 
advocate being investigated;
    (iii) May take appropriate action to address and dispose of the 
matter being mindful of such measures as warning, counseling, caution, 
instruction, proceedings in contempt, therapy, and other punitive or 
administrative action; or
    (iv) Shall, if the commanding officer is of the opinion that 
evidence of disability or professional or personal misconduct exists, 
and that remedial measures short of suspension or decertification are 
not appropriate or will not be effective, forward the original 
complaint, a written report of the inquiry or investigation, all other 
relevant information, and his or her comments and recommendations to the 
officer in the chain of command exercising general court-martial 
authority.
    (2) Action by Officer Exercising General Court-Martial Authority. 
(i) Upon receipt of a report of an allegation of misconduct or 
disability of a counsel, the officer exercising general court-martial 
convening authority:
    (A) May take the action authorized by subsections (c)(1)(i), (ii) or 
(iii); or
    (B) Shall, if he or she considers that evidence of disability or 
professional or personal misconduct exists and that other remedial 
measures short of suspension or decertification are not appropriate or 
will not be effective, appoint a board of officers to investigate the 
matter and to report its findings and its recommendations. This board 
shall be comprised of at least three officers, each an Article 27(b), 
Uniform Code of Military Justice, certified judge advocate. If 
practicable, each of the officers of the board should be senior to the 
judge advocate under investigation. If the counsel is a member of the 
Marine Corps, a majority of the members of the board should be Marine 
Corps judge advocates. The senior officer of the board shall cause 
notice to be given to the counsel, judge advocate or civilian 
(respondent), informing him or her of the misconduct or other 
disqualification alleged and affording him or her the opportunity to 
appear before the board for a hearing. The respondent shall be permitted 
at least ten (10) days' notice prior to the hearing. Failure to appear 
on a set date after notice shall constitute waiver of appearance, absent 
good cause shown. The respondent shall be generally afforded the rights 
of a party as set out in section 0304 of this Manual, except that, in 
the event the judge advocate respondent wishes to have military counsel 
appointed, he or she shall not have the right to select or identify a 
particular military counsel. A civilian respondent may not be 
represented by military counsel, but may be represented by civilian 
counsel at no expense to the

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Government. Upon ascertaining the relevant facts after notice and 
hearing, a written report of the findings and recommendations of the 
board shall be made to the officer who convened the board. In all cases, 
a written copy of the board's findings and recommendations shall be 
provided to the respondent. The respondent shall be given an opportunity 
to comment on the report in writing.
    (ii) Upon receipt of the report of the board of investigation, the 
officer exercising general court-martial authority shall:
    (A) Return the report to the board for further investigation, if the 
investigation is determined to be incomplete; or
    (B) Forward the report of the board of investigation to the Judge 
Advocate General together with comments and recommendations concerning 
suspension of the counsel involved.
    (3) Action by the Judge Advocate General. (i) Upon receipt of a 
report of an allegation of misconduct or disability of a counsel, the 
Judge Advocate General:
    (A) May take the action authorized by subsections (c)(1)(i), (ii), 
or (iii);
    (B) May appoint a board of officers for investigation and hearing in 
accordance with subsections (c)(2)(i)(B) or
    (C) May request the officer exercising general court-martial 
jurisdiction over the command of the respondent (if judge advocate 
counsel) or over the proceedings (if civilian counsel) to take the 
matter for investigation and hearing in accordance with subsection 
(c)(2)(i)(B).
    (ii) Upon receipt of the report of the investigating board, the 
Judge Advocate General:
    (A) May determine whether the respondent is to be suspended or 
decertified and, if so, whether for a stated term or indefinitely;
    (B) May determine that the findings of the board do not warrant 
further action; or
    (C) May return the report to the sending officer with appropriate 
instructions for further inquiry or action. The Judge Advocate General 
may, sua sponte, or upon petition of the respondent, modify or revoke 
any prior order of suspension or dismissal of a report. Further, if the 
Judge Advocate General suspends counsel, the Judge Advocates General of 
the other armed forces will be notified.
    (d) Grounds justifying suspension of counsel or suspension or 
decertification of a Judge Advocate. (1) Suspension or decertification 
is to be employed only after it has been established that a counsel has 
been unable to discharge properly all the duties of his or her office by 
reason of mental or physical disability or has been engaged in 
professional or personal misconduct of such a serious nature as to 
demonstrate that he or she is lacking in integrity or is failing to meet 
the ethical standards of the profession or is otherwise unworthy or 
unqualified to perform the duties of a counsel Action to suspend or 
decertify should not be initiated because of personal prejudice or 
hostility toward counsel, nor should such action be initiated because 
counsel has initiated an aggressive, zealous or novel defense, or the 
apparent misconduct stems from inexperience or lack of instruction.
    (2) Specific grounds for suspension or decertification include, but 
are not limited to, the following:
    (i) Demonstrated incompetence while acting as counsel before, during 
or after a court-martial.
    (ii) Preventing or obstructing justice, including the deliberate use 
of frivolous or unwarranted dilatory tactics.
    (iii) Fabricating papers or other evidence.
    (iv) Tampering with a witness.
    (v) Abusive conduct toward the court-martial, the Navy-Marine Corps 
Court of Military Review, the military judge, or opposing counsel.
    (vi) Flagrant or repeated violations of any specific rules of 
conduct prescribed for counsel in the Manual for Courts-Martial.
    (vii) Conviction of an offense involving moral turpitude or 
conviction for violation of article 48, UCMJ.
    (viii) Disbarment by a State Bar, Federal Court, or the United 
States Court of Military Appeals.
    (ix) Suspension as counsel by the Judge Advocate General of the 
Navy, Army, or Air Force or the General Counsel of the Department of 
Transportation.

[[Page 204]]

    (x) Flagrant or repeated violations of the Uniform Rules of Practice 
Before Navy-Marine Corps Courts-Martial as outlined in appendix A-1-p(1) 
of the Manual of the Judge Advocate General.
    (xi) Flagrant or repeated violations of the provisions of section 
0134 of this Manual of the Judge Advocate General dealing with the 
Release of Information Pertaining to Accused Persons; Spectators at 
Judicial Sessions.
    (xii) Failure to meet the rules set forth in the ABA Code of 
Professional Responsibility and the ABA Standards on Fair Trial and Free 
Press and The Prosecution Function and the Defense Function. In view of 
the unique mission and personal requirements of the military, many of 
the rules and principles of the ABA Code or Standards are not applicable 
to the military lawyer. Accordingly, the rules are to be used as a guide 
only, and a failure to comply with the specific wording of a rule is not 
to be construed as a violation of the rule where common sense would 
indicate to a reasonable person that there is a distinction between the 
civilian context, which the codes were drafted to embrace, and the 
unique concerns of the military setting, where the codes serve as a 
general guide.

[50 FR 23801, June 6, 1985]