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 108 and Article 109 address damage to property, but they protect different things. Article 108 specifically addresses military property: selling, losing, damaging, or destroying government equipment. Article 109 addresses willful destruction of any property, including civilian property. One protects military readiness through equipment preservation; the other protects all property from intentional destruction.
The Property Distinction
Article 108 Military Property addresses:
Military property specifically
Government equipment, supplies, and material
Items issued to or in the custody of service members
Selling, losing, damaging, destroying, or wrongfully disposing
Article 109 Property Destruction addresses:
Any property (military, civilian, personal)
Willful or wanton destruction
Damage regardless of property ownership
General property crimes
Different Protected Interests
Article 108 protects:
Military readiness and capability
Government investment in equipment
Accountability for military supplies
The logistical foundation of military operations
Article 109 protects:
Property rights generally
Protection from intentional destruction
Both government and private property
General order and discipline
Article 108 is uniquely military; Article 109 parallels civilian property crime laws.
Article 108: Military Property Elements
Military property offenses include:
Selling or disposing of military property. Getting rid of government equipment without authority.
Willfully damaging or destroying. Intentionally harming military property.
Losing through neglect. Allowing property to be lost through carelessness.
Willfully suffering loss or damage. Allowing damage or loss to happen intentionally.
All apply specifically to military property.
Article 109: Property Destruction Elements
Property destruction requires:
Willful and wrongful destruction or damage. Intentional harm to property.
Any property. Not limited to military property.
Not one’s own. Property belonging to others (though destroying your own property might still be charged if it’s military property under Article 108).
Wanton damage. In some formulations, reckless or malicious damage.
When Each Applies
Article 108 clearly applies:
Losing your issued weapon through negligence
Selling military equipment
Intentionally breaking military vehicles or equipment
Allowing your gear to be damaged through carelessness
Article 109 clearly applies:
Smashing another service member’s personal vehicle
Destroying a civilian’s property off-base
Damaging property in the barracks that belongs to others
Intentionally breaking non-military items
Both might apply:
Intentionally destroying military property could be charged under both articles, though prosecutors typically choose the more specific (Article 108) for military property.
The Mental State Difference
Article 108 covers various mental states:
Willful damage (intentional)
Negligent loss (careless)
Willfully suffering damage (allowing it to happen)
Selling without authority
Article 109 requires willfulness:
The destruction must be intentional
Negligent damage alone isn’t Article 109
The act must be wrongful
Article 108 can be charged for negligence (losing equipment carelessly); Article 109 requires intent.
Typical Fact Patterns
Clear Article 108 (military property):
A service member pawns military-issued night vision goggles for cash. Selling military property.
A service member leaves sensitive equipment unsecured and it’s stolen. Losing through neglect.
A service member, angry at a supervisor, smashes government computers. Willfully destroying military property.
Clear Article 109 (non-military property):
A service member keys a colleague’s personal car in the parking lot. Willful destruction of another’s property.
During an argument, a service member smashes furniture in a friend’s off-base apartment. Destruction of civilian property.
A service member breaks windows in a civilian business. Article 109 property destruction.
Overlap scenario:
A service member destroys barracks furniture (government property) out of anger. This could be Article 108 (destroying military property) or Article 109 (willful destruction). Prosecutors typically charge Article 108 because the property is military.
Punishment Comparison
Article 108 (Military Property):
Selling or disposing: dishonorable discharge, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, confinement for 10 years
Willful damage: bad-conduct discharge, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, confinement for 1 year
Through neglect: varies based on circumstances
Article 109 (Property Destruction):
Dishonorable discharge, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, confinement for 5 years
Maximum can increase if the value destroyed exceeds certain thresholds.
The Accountability System
Article 108 reflects military property accountability:
Service members sign for equipment
Hand receipts create responsibility
Losing accountable property creates liability
The system tracks every item of military value
This accountability culture makes Article 108 offenses particularly significant.
Defenses
For Article 108:
The property wasn’t military property
The loss wasn’t due to negligence (reasonable care was exercised)
Authorization existed for the sale or disposal
The accused wasn’t responsible for the property
Theft by others (though this may shift to failure to secure)
For Article 109:
The destruction wasn’t willful (accidental)
The property was the accused’s own
Authorization or consent existed
No actual damage occurred
Self-defense or necessity (very limited)
Financial Liability
Beyond criminal charges:
Both articles can result in financial liability for the value of damaged property.
UCMJ punishment may include forfeiture.
Administrative action can require repayment.
Debt for damaged property may be collected from pay.
The criminal consequences are separate from financial restitution requirements.
The Government Contractor Issue
What about government contractor property?
Contractor equipment used for military purposes may qualify as military property
The relationship between contractor and government matters
Destruction of contractor property might be Article 109 or Article 108 depending on the property’s status
The analysis considers who owns and controls the property.
Combat and Training Context
Property damage in operational contexts:
Authorized destruction (demolition, tactical necessity) isn’t criminal
Training damage within normal bounds isn’t criminal
Negligent damage during training may still be Article 108
Intentional destruction without authorization is criminal regardless of context
The question is whether the damage was authorized or necessary.
Frequently Asked Questions
If I accidentally broke military equipment, can I be charged under Article 108?
It depends on the circumstances. Pure accidents with no negligence typically aren’t criminal. However, if the “accident” resulted from negligence (failing to follow proper procedures, carelessness in handling, inadequate care), Article 108 applies because it covers losses through neglect. The question is whether you exercised reasonable care. If you handled equipment properly and it still broke, that’s different from breaking equipment because you were careless or violated handling procedures. Document the circumstances of any property damage and report it immediately through proper channels.
What’s the difference between “willfully damaging” and “losing through neglect” under Article 108?
Willful damage requires intent to harm the property. You meant to break it, or you acted knowing damage would result. Losing through neglect involves carelessness without intent to cause loss. You didn’t mean for the property to be lost or damaged, but your failure to exercise proper care caused it. Willful damage is punished more severely because it involves deliberate misconduct. Negligent loss is still criminal but recognizes that the person didn’t intend the harm. Both are Article 108 offenses, but the mental state affects severity.
Can I be charged with property destruction for damaging my own property in the barracks?
If the property is truly yours (personal items you bought), generally no. Article 109 applies to damaging property “not your own.” However, if your destruction of personal property caused collateral damage to government property (the walls, furniture, or other items), you could face charges for that damage under Article 108. Also, destructive behavior in the barracks, even targeting your own property, might support other charges like disorderly conduct if it disturbed others. And if the property was issued to you (military equipment), it’s not “yours” to destroy regardless of who has possession.