Nevada Code § 412.332

ligibility to serve on courts-martial; excusal of member; president of special court-martial
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1. Any commissioned officer of or on duty
with the Nevada National Guard is eligible to serve on all courts-martial for
the trial of any person who may lawfully be brought before such courts for
trial.
2. Any warrant officer of or on duty with
the Nevada National Guard is eligible to serve on general and special
courts-martial for the trial of any person, other than a commissioned officer,
who may lawfully be brought before such courts for trial.
3. Any enlisted member of the Nevada
National Guard who is not a member of the same unit as the accused is eligible
to serve on general and special courts-martial for the trial of any enlisted
member who may lawfully be brought before such courts for trial, but he or she
shall serve as a member of a court only if, before the conclusion of a session
called by the military judge before trial or, in the absence of such a session,
before the court is assembled for the trial of the accused, the accused
personally has requested orally on the record or in writing that enlisted
members serve on it. After such a request, the accused serviceman or
servicewoman may not be tried by a general or special court-martial the membership
of which does not include enlisted members in a number comprising at least
one-third of the total membership of the court, unless eligible members cannot
be obtained on account of physical conditions or military exigencies. If such
members cannot be obtained, the court may be convened and the trial held
without them, but the convening authority shall make a detailed written
statement, to be appended to the record, stating why they could not be
obtained. As used in this subsection, the word unit means any regularly
organized body of the Nevada National Guard not larger than a company, a
squadron or a corresponding body.
4. When it can be avoided, no person
subject to this Code shall be tried by a court-martial any member of which is
junior to him or her in rank or grade.
5. When convening a court-martial, the
convening authority shall detail as members thereof such members of the Nevada
National Guard as, in his or her opinion, are best qualified for the duty by
reason of age, education, training, experience, length of service, and judicial
temperament. No member of the Nevada National Guard is eligible to serve as a
member of a general or special court-martial when he or she is the accuser, a
witness, or has acted as investigating officer or as counsel in the same case.
6. Before a court-martial is assembled for
the trial of a case, the convening authority may excuse a member of the court
from participating in the case. The convening authority may delegate the
authority under this subsection to a judge advocate or to any other principal
assistant.
7. If within the command of the convening
authority there is present and not otherwise disqualified a commissioned
officer who is a member of the bar of the State and of appropriate rank, the
convening authority shall appoint him or her as president of a special
court-martial. Although this requirement is binding on the convening authority,
failure to meet it in any case does not divest a military court of
jurisdiction.

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