United States v. Rogers
United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces
54 M.J. 244 (2000)
- Written by Angela Patrick, JD
Facts
The United States Air Force issued a written instruction that senior and junior members of the same chain of command, same unit, or closely related units should not engage in personal relationships. In his role as a military commander, Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Shelley Rogers (defendant) had experience dealing with his subordinates’ intraunit and interunit personal relationships and had engaged in many discussions with another officer about the standards governing military professionalism and personal relationships. Rogers then entered into a personal relationship with a female first lieutenant under his command. Rogers was charged with the crime of conduct unbecoming an officer and convicted. On appeal, Rogers argued that the charge against him was unconstitutionally vague because it did not identify a specific service custom or regulation that he had allegedly violated.
Rule of Law
Issue
Holding and Reasoning (Cox, J.)
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