FORT HOOD, Texas (KXXV) — Army Maj. Blaine McGraw remains in the Bell County Jail as his case moves through the military justice system, known as the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
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The process is very different from what most people know about the civilian court process.
"By analogy, every state has its own penal code," said Brian Bouffard, a criminal and military defense attorney who has practiced law for 28 years in both court systems.
The Uniform Code of Military Justice, or UCMJ, is the military's criminal law system.
"They're all a little bit different, but the fundamentals, especially the constitutional fundamentals, are the same," Bouffard said.
Criminal charges against McGraw are being preferred by the Army's Office of Special Trial Counsel, or OSTC. If he's tried, the military case will play out through the UCMJ.
"The act of drafting charges and formally serving them on an accused is called preferral, pre-referral, OK? Which means this is taking place before a referral," Bouffard said.
Unlike civilian courts, military cases don't have permanent courthouses or judges. A court-martial is created for each case and prosecution decisions go through trained military lawyers called special trial counsel.
"So just like in civilian court, an accused in a military system has a right to have his or his or her case tried by either a judge alone or a military jury. It's called a panel of court members, is the technical term for a military jury," Bouffard said.
A military jury is picked by the prosecution and consists of all active duty service members who are senior in rank to the defendant.
"The rates of pleas in the military are roughly similar to the rates of pleas in the civilian world, which is to say the vast majority of cases don't go to trial. They are handled by plea," Bouffard said.
Even if McGraw is tried through the UCMJ, he still could face criminal charges for any actions off-base from the state.
The UCMJ can have goals that sometimes go beyond prosecution.
"Under the UCMJ are certain things that are not crimes in the civilian world, but that the military has chosen for various reasons to treat as crimes in the military system," Bouffard said.
UCMJ trials are public unless they're dealing with classified information. With the charges against McGraw preferred, next steps include a preliminary hearing officer going through evidence to see if there's probable cause for each charge before referring it for trial by general court-martial.
If charges are referred, the case will be assigned to a military judge who will schedule dates for the trial.
Below is our previous coverage:
- Court documents detail home life of Maj. Blaine McGraw's children amid ongoing child custody case
- Suspended Fort Hood doctor takes stand in custody case with ex-wife
- Carlson Law Firm now representing nearly 30 alleged victims of suspended Army OB-GYN
- Several federal complaints filed against Army on behalf of suspended Fort Hood doctor's alleged victims
- Texas Congressional leaders demand Army investigation into former Fort Hood doctor misconduct allegations
- DHA responds to questions of suspended Fort Hood Army doctor's time at Fort Campbell
- 25 News sits down with former patient, Jane Doe 1, in lawsuit against former Fort Hood Army OB-GYN
- Texas Senator responds to call for accountability, investigation into Maj. Blaine McGraw, Army
- Former patients, supporters rally near Vanessa Guillen mural demanding justice against former Fort Hood OB-GYN
- 81 more alleged victims join lawsuit against suspended Fort Hood Army doctor accused of sexual assault
- Charges filed against former Fort Hood doctor accused of secretly recording 44 victims during medical exams
- Law firm demands Department of Defense investigation of former Fort Hood doctor
- Former Fort Hood medical officer held in pretrial confinement in Bell County after alleged liberty violation
- Former Fort Hood Army doctor jailed in Bell County, faces custody battle with ex-wife
- UPDATE: Former Fort Hood doctor booked into jail, the Bell County Sheriff's Office says
- Court documents reveal custody battle between former Fort Hood doctor and ex-wife
- Former Fort Hood doctor case expands to Hawaii as lawmakers demand pentagon investigation
- Fort Hood contacts 1,400 patients in investigation of former OB-GYN doctor
- 50 women represented in lawsuit filed against former Fort Hood Army OBGYN, accused of sexual assault
- Lawsuit alleges Fort Hood Army doctor secretly video-recorded patients during exams
- At least three law firms representing victims of the accused Fort Hood Army doctor
- 'This never should've happened': Dozens of women accuse Fort Hood Army doctor of sexual assault
- Law firm, accusers speak on allegations against suspended Fort Hood medical provider
- Fort Hood suspends medical provider, launches investigation
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