Preferral of Charges (DA Form 458): Complete Guide to Military Justice Charging Process

Overview of Preferral

Definition: Preferral of charges is the formal accusation that initiates court-martial proceedings, alleging that a service member violated specific articles of the Uniform Code of Military Justice.

Legal Effect: Preferral:

  • Formally accuses service member of UCMJ violations
  • Triggers accused’s rights to counsel and procedural protections
  • Starts timeline for disposition decisions
  • Tolls statute of limitations
  • Required before case can be referred to court-martial

RCM 307: Rule for Courts-Martial 307 governs preferral procedures, establishing requirements for who may prefer charges, form and content, oath requirements, and notification procedures.

Not Final Decision: Preferral does not mean case will go to court-martial. After preferral, convening authority decides disposition (dismissal, non-judicial punishment, court-martial referral, or other action).


DA Form 458: Charge Sheet

Purpose and Format

Official Charging Document: DA Form 458 is the Army’s charge sheet used to prefer court-martial charges. Other services use equivalent forms:

  • Navy/Marine Corps: NAVJAG Form 5800/10
  • Air Force: AF Form 3070
  • Coast Guard: CG-3307

Standardized Format: Form includes sections for:

  • Accused’s identifying information
  • Charges (UCMJ articles violated)
  • Specifications (factual allegations under each charge)
  • Accuser information and oath
  • Action blocks for various stages (preferral, referral, Article 32, trial)

Electronic vs. Paper: Most services now use electronic versions, though paper forms remain valid.

Form Sections

Block 1 – Accused Data:

  • Full name, rank, service number/social security number
  • Unit and organization
  • Pay grade
  • Status (active duty, reserve, etc.)

Block 2 – Charges:

  • UCMJ article number and title
  • Example: “CHARGE I: Violation of the UCMJ, Article 121”

Block 3 – Specifications:

  • Detailed factual allegations under each charge
  • Who, what, when, where elements
  • Must state all elements of offense

Block 4 – Preferral:

  • Accuser signature, rank, organization
  • Date of preferral
  • Oath statement

Subsequent Blocks:

  • Notification to accused
  • Disposition recommendations
  • Referral information
  • Article 32 hearing results
  • Trial and post-trial action

Who May Prefer Charges

Accuser Requirements

RCM 307(a): Any person subject to the UCMJ who has personal knowledge of, or has investigated, matters alleged may prefer charges.

Persons Subject to UCMJ:

  • Active duty members (all services)
  • Reservists on active duty or drill status
  • Cadets and midshipmen
  • Certain retirees and civilians accompanying forces

Personal Knowledge or Investigation:

  • Personal knowledge: Accuser witnessed offense or has direct information
  • Investigation: Accuser reviewed investigation (CID report, commander’s inquiry) providing basis for charges

Common Accusers:

  • Commander of accused
  • Trial counsel (military prosecutor)
  • Military criminal investigators (CID, NCIS, OSI agents)
  • Any service member with knowledge or investigation review

Commander’s Role

Authority but Not Requirement: Commanders have authority to prefer charges but need not personally prefer them.

Common Practice: Often commander directs trial counsel or other qualified person to prefer charges rather than commander personally signing as accuser.

Strategic Consideration: Having trial counsel as accuser allows trial counsel to testify about charge preparation if needed, while keeping commander separate from accusatory role.


Charges and Specifications

Charge Format

Charge Statement: Each charge identifies UCMJ article allegedly violated:

  • “CHARGE I: Violation of the UCMJ, Article 121 (Larceny and Wrongful Appropriation)”
  • “CHARGE II: Violation of the UCMJ, Article 128 (Assault)”

Multiple Charges: Accused may face multiple charges for:

  • Different UCMJ articles violated
  • Different offenses
  • Multiple incidents

Roman Numerals: Charges numbered with Roman numerals (I, II, III).

Specification Requirements

Purpose: Specifications provide factual allegations giving accused notice of what conduct is charged.

Essential Elements: Each specification must allege facts establishing all elements of charged offense.

Specificity Requirements: Must include:

  • Who: Identity of accused (by name and rank)
  • What: Conduct constituting offense
  • When: Date and time of offense (as specific as possible)
  • Where: Location of offense
  • How: Method or means (if element of offense)
  • Victim: Identity of victim or property owner (if applicable)

Multiple Specifications: Single charge may have multiple specifications:

  • Different incidents of same offense type
  • Alternative theories of single offense
  • Numbered with Arabic numerals (1, 2, 3)

Example Specification

Larceny (Article 121):

“Specification: In that Private John Doe, U.S. Army, did, at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, on or about 15 January 2024, wrongfully take, from the possession of Sergeant Jane Smith, U.S. Army, with the intent to permanently deprive, one laptop computer, Model XYZ, Serial Number 123456, of a value of about $1,500, the property of Sergeant Jane Smith.”

Elements Alleged:

  • Who: Private John Doe
  • What: Wrongfully took laptop with intent to permanently deprive
  • When: 15 January 2024
  • Where: Fort Bragg, North Carolina
  • Victim: Sergeant Jane Smith
  • Property: Laptop (described with model/serial)
  • Value: $1,500

Technical Requirements

“On or About” Language: Allows flexibility in proving exact date when precise date uncertain but approximate timeframe known.

Alternative Specifications: May allege alternative theories:

  • Specification 1: Larceny
  • Specification 2: Wrongful appropriation (if larceny not proven)

Lesser Included Offenses: Need not be separately charged; included by operation of law.

Plain Language: Specifications must be understandable, not use unnecessarily technical legal jargon.

Common Drafting Errors

Insufficient Specificity:

  • “Did commit assault” (insufficient)
  • Better: “Did strike Specialist Smith on the face with his fist, inflicting bodily harm”

Missing Elements:

  • Failing to allege intent when required
  • Omitting jurisdictional facts
  • Not specifying victim or property

Duplicative Charges:

  • Charging same conduct under multiple articles when only one applies
  • Violates multiplicity rules

Variance:

  • Specification alleges facts materially different from evidence at trial
  • Can result in conviction reversal

Preferral Procedures

Oath Requirement

RCM 307(b): Charges must be signed under oath before person authorized to administer oaths.

Oath Statement on DA Form 458: “I certify that I have personal knowledge of or have investigated the matters set forth in the charges and specifications, and that the matters set forth herein are true to the best of my knowledge and belief.”

Who Administers Oath:

  • Commissioned officers
  • Judge advocates
  • Notaries public
  • Others authorized by law

Purpose: Ensures accuser has basis for charges and swears to their truth, preventing frivolous accusations.

False Swearing: Preferring charges known to be false or without basis may constitute false swearing or false official statement (Article 107).

Notification to Accused

RCM 308: Accused must be notified of charges preferred against them.

Method: Copy of charge sheet provided to accused, typically through:

  • Personal delivery by commander or legal office
  • Certified mail if accused not available
  • Electronic delivery if authorized

Rights Advisement: When notifying accused, should advise of:

  • Right to counsel (detailed defense counsel)
  • Right to remain silent
  • Right to request Article 32 preliminary hearing (for general courts-martial)
  • Prohibition on punishing for exercising rights

Timing: Notification should occur promptly after preferral, typically within few days.

Documentation: Acknowledgment of receipt documented on charge sheet or separate document.


After Preferral: Disposition Process

Initial Review

Commander’s Review: Commander reviews charges and decides initial disposition:

  • Forward to convening authority for court-martial consideration
  • Handle through non-judicial punishment (Article 15)
  • Take administrative action
  • Dismiss charges

Legal Advice: Commander consults Staff Judge Advocate on legal sufficiency and recommended disposition.

Factors Considered:

  • Evidence strength
  • Offense severity
  • Accused’s record
  • Victim input
  • Command interests
  • Available punishments under different forums

Forwarding to Convening Authority

If Court-Martial Considered: Charges forwarded to general court-martial convening authority (GCMCA) or special court-martial convening authority (SPCMCA).

Staff Judge Advocate Review: SJA reviews charges for:

  • Legal sufficiency
  • Proper preferral procedures
  • Evidence supporting probable cause
  • Recommended forum (general vs. special court-martial)

Pretrial Advice (RCM 406): Before referring charges to court-martial, convening authority receives written pretrial advice from SJA addressing:

  • Legal sufficiency of charges
  • Evidence supporting probable cause
  • Recommended disposition
  • Forum recommendation
  • Legal issues requiring attention

Article 32 Preliminary Hearing

For General Courts-Martial: If charges may be referred to general court-martial, Article 32 preliminary hearing required (unless waived by accused).

Purpose:

  • Determine whether probable cause exists
  • Evaluate whether charges should proceed
  • Provide discovery to defense
  • Preserve testimony

Preliminary Hearing Officer: Impartial officer (typically judge advocate) conducts hearing, makes recommendations to convening authority.

Defense Participation:

  • Cross-examine government witnesses
  • Present defense evidence
  • Make legal arguments
  • Obtain discovery

Recommendations: Preliminary hearing officer recommends:

  • Whether probable cause exists
  • Whether charges should be referred to court-martial
  • Disposition alternatives

Referral to Court-Martial

Convening Authority Decision: After receiving SJA pretrial advice and Article 32 recommendations (if applicable), convening authority decides:

  • Refer charges to general court-martial
  • Refer charges to special court-martial
  • Dismiss charges
  • Return for additional investigation
  • Take alternative action

Referral: If referring to court-martial, convening authority signs referral block on charge sheet specifying:

  • Type of court-martial (general or special)
  • Date of referral
  • Signature

Effect of Referral: Referral:

  • Sets case for trial
  • Triggers speedy trial timelines (120 days under RCM 707)
  • Establishes court-martial jurisdiction
  • Allows trial to proceed

Amendments and Modifications

Before Referral

Flexibility: Before referral to court-martial, charges may be freely:

  • Amended to correct errors
  • Modified to change specifications
  • Added or dismissed
  • Downgraded or upgraded

Process: Accuser or convening authority may modify charges, with new oath if material changes.

After Referral

Minor Changes: After referral, minor changes permitted without withdrawing and re-referring:

  • Correcting typos or dates
  • Clarifying language
  • Technical corrections not affecting substance

Material Changes: Substantial changes require:

  • Withdrawing charges from court-martial
  • Preferring new or amended charges
  • Re-referring to court-martial
  • May require new Article 32 hearing

Defense Objection: Defense may object to amendments, arguing:

  • Lack of notice
  • Prejudice to defense preparation
  • Variance from evidence

Statute of Limitations

RCM 907 and Article 43 UCMJ

Five-Year General Rule: Except for offenses with no limitation period, charges may not be preferred more than five years after offense commission.

Exceptions (No Limitation):

  • Offenses punishable by death (murder, espionage)
  • Sexual assault of child (Article 120b)
  • Rape and sexual assault (Article 120)
  • Other offenses specified by law

Computation: Five-year period runs from:

  • Date of offense
  • For continuing offenses, date offense terminated

Tolling: Statute tolls (pauses) during periods when:

  • Accused was absent from jurisdiction
  • Accused was fleeing from justice
  • Time of war

Effect of Preferral on Statute

Timely Preferral: Preferring charges before statute expires preserves government’s ability to prosecute, even if trial occurs after statute would have expired.

Dismissal: If charges preferred after statute expired, must be dismissed unless exception applies.

Defense Motion: Defense may move to dismiss charges as barred by statute of limitations.


Accused’s Rights After Preferral

Right to Counsel

Detailed Defense Counsel: Upon preferral, accused entitled to detailed defense counsel at no cost:

  • Appointed from Trial Defense Service, Defense Service Office, or Area Defense Counsel
  • Certified judge advocate qualified in criminal defense
  • Independent from command

Individual Military Counsel: Accused may request any judge advocate on active duty as individual counsel (if reasonably available, provided at no cost).

Civilian Counsel: Accused may hire civilian attorney at own expense to represent alongside military counsel.

Right to Remain Silent

Fifth Amendment and Article 31: Accused has right to remain silent:

  • Cannot be compelled to incriminate self
  • Cannot be punished for exercising right
  • Prosecution cannot comment on silence at trial

Consultation Before Statements: Should consult defense counsel before:

  • Speaking to investigators
  • Making statements to command
  • Responding to interrogation

Right to Speedy Trial

RCM 707: After referral to court-martial, trial must commence within 120 days unless:

  • Delay requested by defense
  • Delay caused by unavailability of essential witness or evidence
  • Other good cause exists
  • Accused waives speedy trial right

Remedy: If speedy trial right violated, charges may be dismissed (though dismissal not automatic; depends on prejudice to accused).

Pretrial Confinement

Authority: Commander may order pretrial confinement if probable cause exists that offense committed and confinement required because accused:

  • Will not appear at trial
  • Will engage in serious criminal misconduct
  • Will interfere with investigation or trial

48-Hour Review: Within 48 hours of confinement, neutral officer must determine whether probable cause and necessity exist.

7-Day Review: Within 7 days, commander must review whether continued confinement necessary.

Continuing Reviews: Reviewed at least every 7 days thereafter.

Credit: Time in pretrial confinement credited against sentence if convicted.


Strategic Considerations

For Prosecutors

Charge Selection:

  • Charge offenses supported by admissible evidence
  • Avoid overcharging (charging every possible offense)
  • Consider lesser-included offenses
  • Anticipate defense theories

Specification Drafting:

  • Provide sufficient notice to accused
  • Include all essential elements
  • Avoid unnecessary detail that prosecution might not prove
  • Use alternative specifications strategically

Timing:

  • Consider statute of limitations
  • Prefer promptly to avoid speedy trial issues
  • Allow adequate investigation before preferring

For Defense

Early Involvement:

  • Consult with accused before charges preferred if possible
  • Advise on rights during investigation
  • Review evidence before preferral if accessible

After Preferral:

  • Obtain complete copy of charges
  • Advise accused of rights
  • Evaluate legal sufficiency of charges
  • Begin investigation and case preparation
  • Consider Article 32 strategy (waive or participate)
  • Identify potential motions (dismiss, suppress, etc.)

Communication:

  • Explain charges and potential penalties to accused
  • Discuss forum selection (judge alone vs. panel)
  • Explore pretrial agreement possibilities
  • Prepare accused for process ahead

Common Issues and Challenges

Multiplicity

Problem: Multiple specifications charge same conduct under different theories, violating prohibition against multiple punishments for single offense.

Test: Two specifications are multiplicitous if:

  • Each does not require proof of fact not required by other, AND
  • Same conduct charged under each

Remedy: Defense moves to dismiss duplicative specification(s). Judge determines which specification should proceed.

Unreasonable Multiplication of Charges

Problem: Charging multiple separate specifications for conduct that should be charged as single offense artificially inflates charges.

Test: Whether separate charges unreasonably increase:

  • Stigma to accused
  • Severity of potential punishment
  • Difficulty of defense

Remedy: Judge may consolidate specifications or dismiss as unreasonably multiplied.

Variance

Problem: Proof at trial substantially differs from facts alleged in specifications.

Test: Whether variance:

  • Misleads accused in preparing defense
  • Exposes accused to surprise
  • Affects finding of guilty

Remedy: Acquittal if variance material, or specification may be amended to conform to proof.

Defective Specifications

Problem: Specification fails to allege all elements of offense or is otherwise legally insufficient.

Remedy: Defense moves to dismiss for failure to state offense. If specification truly deficient, must be dismissed or corrected.


Frequently Asked Questions

What happens after charges are preferred against me?

Immediate Effects:

  • You are formally accused of UCMJ violations
  • You have right to defense counsel who should contact you promptly
  • Your command will decide whether to confine you, restrict you, or allow normal duties pending disposition
  • Case proceeds to convening authority for disposition decision

Next Steps:

  • Convening authority reviews charges and decides: refer to court-martial, dismiss, handle through Article 15, or take other action
  • If referred to general court-martial, Article 32 preliminary hearing may occur
  • If referred to court-martial, trial preparation and eventually trial

Timeline: Process from preferral to trial typically takes 3-6 months, though varies based on case complexity and scheduling.

Can I see the charges against me?

Yes: You are entitled to copy of charge sheet (DA Form 458) showing:

  • All charges and specifications
  • Who preferred charges
  • Date of preferral

How to Obtain:

  • Your commander or legal office should provide copy
  • Your defense counsel will obtain complete charges
  • You have right to know exactly what you’re accused of

Can charges be dropped after they’re preferred?

Yes: Charges may be dismissed at several stages:

  • Before referral: Commander or convening authority may dismiss
  • At Article 32 hearing: Preliminary hearing officer may recommend dismissal
  • By convening authority: May dismiss before or after referral
  • By military judge: May dismiss for legal insufficiency, statute of limitations, or other grounds
  • On appeal: Appellate courts may dismiss

Reasons for Dismissal:

  • Insufficient evidence
  • Legal defects in charges
  • Statute of limitations
  • Witness unavailability
  • Interests of justice
  • Constitutional violations

What is the difference between preferral and referral?

Preferral:

  • Formal accusation (filing of charges)
  • First step in court-martial process
  • Done by accuser (commander, trial counsel, investigator)
  • Gives accused notice and triggers rights

Referral:

  • Convening authority’s decision to send case to court-martial for trial
  • Occurs after preferral and SJA review
  • Sets case for trial before specific type of court-martial
  • Triggers speedy trial timeline

Analogy: In civilian system:

  • Preferral = filing of criminal complaint or indictment
  • Referral = arraignment or setting case for trial

Can charges be changed after preferral?

Yes:

  • Before referral: Charges may be freely amended, added, or dismissed
  • After referral: Minor corrections permitted; material changes require withdrawing and re-referring
  • At trial: Judge may allow amendments if not prejudicial to accused

Common Changes:

  • Correcting dates or locations
  • Adding or removing specifications
  • Changing charged UCMJ article
  • Clarifying language

Defense Rights: You must be notified of changes and given adequate time to prepare defense to amended charges.


Conclusion

Preferral of charges on DA Form 458 formally initiates court-martial proceedings by accusing a service member of UCMJ violations through sworn charge sheet specifying offenses and factual allegations. The accuser (typically commander, trial counsel, or investigator with personal knowledge or investigation review) prefers charges under oath, and accused receives copy triggering rights to counsel, preliminary hearing, and other procedural protections. After preferral, convening authority decides disposition (dismissal, non-judicial punishment, or referral to court-martial) based on Staff Judge Advocate advice and Article 32 recommendations. The charge sheet format requires proper identification of accused, specification of charges with UCMJ article citations, detailed factual specifications alleging all offense elements with sufficient specificity to provide notice, and proper execution with oath by qualified accuser. Understanding preferral procedures and requirements is essential for military justice participants to ensure proper processing of charges and protection of accused’s rights.


Legal Disclaimer

This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Preferral of charges involves complex procedural requirements and has serious consequences. Service members facing preferred charges should immediately contact Trial Defense Service, Defense Service Office, or Area Defense Counsel for confidential legal representation. Do not make statements or take action without consulting defense counsel.