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Is the Commander in Chief subject to the UCMJ when dealing with
military matters? An inquiring mind (me) wants to know. Walt BJ |
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No. He's a civilian.
JB "WaltBJ" wrote in message om... Is the Commander in Chief subject to the UCMJ when dealing with military matters? An inquiring mind (me) wants to know. Walt BJ |
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Is the Commander in Chief subject to the UCMJ when dealing with
military matters? An inquiring mind (me) wants to know. Walt BJ Who would convene proceedings on him? The way the framers dealt with misconduct in the executive was by including the imeachment process. Of course the framers never thought the Congress would be so lame or partisan as the one we have right now. Walt |
#4
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WaltBJ wrote:
Is the Commander in Chief subject to the UCMJ when dealing with military matters? An inquiring mind (me) wants to know. No, he is not. While the President is the commander-in-chief, he is not actually a member of the armed forces. The UCMJ lays out explicitly who is actually subject to its provisions, and the President does not fit: http://usmilitary.about.com/library/...cmjsubject.htm. -- Tom Schoene Replace "invalid" with "net" to e-mail "Our country, right or wrong. When right, to be kept right, when wrong to be put right." - Senator Carl Schurz, 1872 |
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If the CinC was subject to the UCMJ slick willy would have got it for
adultery. "WalterM140" wrote in message ... Is the Commander in Chief subject to the UCMJ when dealing with military matters? An inquiring mind (me) wants to know. Walt BJ Who would convene proceedings on him? The way the framers dealt with misconduct in the executive was by including the imeachment process. Of course the framers never thought the Congress would be so lame or partisan as the one we have right now. Walt |
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Subject: Question - CinC and UCMJ
From: "DavidG35" Date: 6/26/2004 5:28 PM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: 8soDc.449$nc.414@fed1read03 If the CinC was subject to the UCMJ slick willy would have got it for adultery. "WalterM140" wrote in message ... Is the Commander in Chief subject to the UCMJ when dealing with military matters? An inquiring mind (me) wants to know. Walt BJ Who would convene proceedings on him? The way the framers dealt with misconduct in the executive was by including the imeachment process. Of course the framers never thought the Congress would be so lame or partisan as the one we have right now. Walt Clinton was not in the military therefore he could not have been tried under the UCMJ. Milligan vs. United States 1865 Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#7
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![]() Is the Commander in Chief subject to the UCMJ when dealing with military matters? An inquiring mind (me) wants to know. I don't think that a sitting president is subject to any law for acts related to his presidential powers. That's what we have impeacment for. (And it's why, when Nixon resigned, Gerry Ford gave him a blanket pardon, so he wouldn't face criminal prosecution for Watergate--or anything else, for that matter.) Obviously there are limits. Clinton was disbarred by the Arkansas bar association for lying under oath, even though the impeachment trial on this matter failed in the Senate. But the bar association wasn't imposing criminal sanctions, just withdrawing a permission it had accorded him some years earlier. all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put Cubdriver in subject line) The Warbird's Forum www.warbirdforum.com The Piper Cub Forum www.pipercubforum.com Viva Bush! weblog www.vivabush.org |
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