The Case in Brief
The Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals decided United States v. Benton, No. 202400332, on June 5, 2026. A military judge sitting alone at a special court-martial at Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point convicted Private First Class Benton, contrary to his pleas, of breaching restriction under Article 87b, UCMJ, and of attempting to escape from custody under Article 80, UCMJ. The escape charge arose at the base medical clinic. While two brig escorts walked Benton through pre-confinement screening, he kept pushing the revolving door, exited back into the parking lot, sprinted to a friend’s waiting car, and climbed in. A gunnery sergeant stepped in front of the car and ended the attempt.
The military judge sentenced Benton to fourteen days of confinement and credited him with eleven days of pretrial confinement. Critically, the judge also awarded day-for-day Article 13, UCMJ, credit after ruling that the commanding officer “inappropriately imposed punishment on the accused prior to trial” and that the CO’s justification for pretrial confinement “was unreasonable.” On appeal, Benton argued that the conviction for attempting to escape could not stand because the underlying custody was illegal. NMCCA affirmed the findings and sentence.
Court-Martial Trial Practice Blog










