Legal Disclaimer: This article provides general legal information about the Uniform Code of Military Justice. It is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Every case involves unique facts and circumstances. If you are facing charges under the UCMJ, consult with a qualified military defense attorney immediately.
Both Article 97 and Article 125 involve restricting another person’s liberty, but they differ in scope and severity. Article 97 Unlawful Detention addresses wrongful confinement or restraint of another person without legal authority. Article 125 Kidnapping addresses seizing and holding a person against their will, often with movement or additional criminal purposes. One is about illegally holding someone; the other involves forcibly taking them.
The Conduct Distinction
Article 97 Unlawful Detention addresses:
Confining or restraining someone
Without legal authority
The wrongful deprivation of liberty
Holding someone against their will
Article 125 Kidnapping addresses:
Seizing and holding a person
Against their will
Often involving movement (asportation)
Frequently for ransom, as a shield, or for other purposes
Different Severity
Unlawful detention is serious but typically:
Involves holding someone in place
May not involve significant movement
May not involve additional criminal purposes
Is treated as a significant but not capital offense
Kidnapping is more severe because:
It involves forcible seizure
It often involves movement to another location
It may be committed for ransom or as a hostage situation
It’s treated as one of the most serious offenses
Article 97: Unlawful Detention Elements
Unlawful detention requires:
Detention or confinement. Physically restraining someone’s liberty.
Another person. The victim must be someone other than the accused.
Wrongfulness. Without legal authority or justification.
Knowledge. The accused knew the detention was unlawful.
This often arises when military authority is exceeded or abused.
Article 125: Kidnapping Elements
Kidnapping requires:
Seizing and holding. Physically taking control of a person.
Against their will. Without consent.
For a prohibited purpose or with aggravating circumstances. Such as for ransom, as a shield, for sexual purposes, or to avoid lawful custody.
The forcible nature and purpose distinguish it from simple detention.
The Movement Question
Unlawful detention doesn’t require movement:
Locking someone in a room
Refusing to release someone from confinement
Keeping someone restrained in one location
Kidnapping traditionally involves movement:
Taking someone from one place to another
Forcing someone into a vehicle
Moving someone to a secondary location
However, modern interpretations may focus less on distance moved and more on the seizure itself.
Typical Fact Patterns
Clear unlawful detention (Article 97):
A military police officer, without authority, keeps someone in a holding cell after they should have been released. Unlawful detention by exceeding authority.
An NCO locks a subordinate in a supply room for hours as “punishment” without any lawful basis. Unlawful detention.
A service member won’t let their roommate leave their shared quarters during an argument. Potentially unlawful detention depending on duration and circumstances.
Clear kidnapping (Article 125):
A service member forces someone into their car at gunpoint and drives them to a remote location. Forcible seizure with movement.
Someone grabs a person and holds them while demanding money for release. Kidnapping for ransom.
A service member takes someone and holds them as a shield during a confrontation with police. Kidnapping to use as a shield.
The distinction:
Keeping someone locked in a room against their will: Unlawful detention
Grabbing someone and taking them somewhere against their will: Kidnapping
When Authority Is Exceeded
Article 97 often involves abuse of official authority:
Military police who detain without proper basis
Commanders who confine without authority
Guards who refuse lawful release
Anyone who uses apparent authority to illegally restrain
The military context makes unlawful detention particularly concerning because service members may exercise apparent authority.
Punishment Comparison
Article 97 (Unlawful Detention):
Dishonorable discharge, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, confinement for 3 years
Article 125 (Kidnapping):
Dishonorable discharge, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, confinement for life (or death if certain aggravating factors exist)
Kidnapping carries dramatically higher punishment reflecting its greater severity.
The Authority Question
For unlawful detention:
Legal authority to detain is a complete defense
The question is whether detention was authorized
Exceeding authorized scope makes detention unlawful
For kidnapping:
No legal authority exists to kidnap
Even law enforcement can’t “kidnap” under color of authority
The seizure is inherently criminal
Defenses
For unlawful detention:
Legal authority existed for the detention
The accused reasonably believed they had authority
The victim consented
No actual detention occurred
The detention was brief and de minimis
For kidnapping:
Consent (though this is very limited)
Legal authority (such as lawful arrest, though this is narrow)
The accused didn’t participate in the seizure
Mistaken identity
Relationship to Other Offenses
Unlawful detention often accompanies:
False imprisonment allegations
Abuse of authority
Assault (if force was used)
Kidnapping often accompanies:
Sexual assault (if that was the purpose)
Robbery (if taking property was involved)
Murder (if the victim was killed)
Assault with weapons
Both offenses can be part of larger criminal schemes.
The Consent Issue
For unlawful detention:
Consent negates the offense
If someone voluntarily stays, they’re not detained
Apparent consent that’s coerced doesn’t count
For kidnapping:
Consent is also a defense in theory
But seizure against will is the essence of the offense
Fraudulently obtained “consent” may not protect
Duration Considerations
Unlawful detention:
Even brief detention can be criminal
Duration affects severity but not the offense itself
Longer detention is more serious
Kidnapping:
Duration may affect punishment
Brief seizures may still be kidnapping
The act of seizing is key, not how long held
Military-Specific Concerns
Both offenses have unique military dimensions:
Chain of command abuse. Using military authority to illegally restrain.
Brig and confinement authority. Exceeding lawful confinement powers.
Overseas locations. Jurisdictional issues when detention occurs abroad.
Operational context. Distinguishing lawful detention in combat from criminal conduct.
Frequently Asked Questions
If I have authority to detain someone but hold them longer than authorized, is that unlawful detention?
Potentially. Lawful authority to detain doesn’t extend indefinitely. If you’re authorized to hold someone for a specific period or until a specific event, exceeding that authorization makes continued detention unlawful. Military police authorized to hold someone pending commander notification can’t keep them indefinitely without further authorization. The detention might have started lawfully but become unlawful when authority expired. The key is whether your authority covered the full period of detention. Document your authority and release promptly when required.
What’s the difference between unlawful detention and false imprisonment?
In military law, Article 97 covers what civilians might call false imprisonment. The terms are essentially equivalent: both describe wrongfully confining or restraining someone without legal authority. Article 97 uses “unlawful detention” as the military term for this offense. The elements are the same: holding someone against their will without legal justification. If you’re looking for false imprisonment charges in military law, Article 97 is where you’ll find them.
Can restraining someone briefly during an argument be unlawful detention or kidnapping?
It depends on the circumstances. Very brief restraint during an argument (blocking a doorway momentarily) might not rise to criminal detention. However, physically restraining someone for any significant period, locking them in a room, or preventing their departure could be unlawful detention. If you grab them and move them against their will, kidnapping elements might be satisfied. The line between momentary physical contact during an argument and criminal restraint depends on duration, force used, whether movement occurred, and the overall circumstances. When in doubt, don’t physically restrain anyone.