in
San Diego, California The
United States military's equivalent to the county jail, in the sense of "holding area" or "place of brief incarceration for petty crimes" is known colloquially as the
guardhouse or
stockade by the
United States Army and
Air Force and
brig by
naval and
marine forces. Members of the U.S. Armed Forces are subject to the
Uniform Code of Military Justice and are convicted to confinement via
courts-martial. The U.S. Armed Forces currently maintain several regional
prisoner-holding facilities in the U.S. In the
United States, differential treatment seems to be suggested, but by no means mandated, by the
Founding Fathers in the
Fifth Amendment to its constitution. In former times, criminals in the naval service were sent to the once-infamous
Portsmouth Naval Prison, which was closed in 1974.
Organization Today's American military prison systems are designed to house people who commit a criminal offense while in service. There is a distinction in the male and female prison organization system. Male military prisons have a tier system that is based on the length of a prisoner's sentence. Tier I prisoners have been sentenced up to one year. The
army does not operate any tier I prisons. Tier II prisoners, with sentences of up to seven years, make up 65% of the incarcerated.
Composition Data from the Bureau of Justice Statistics breaks down military prisoners by five different military branches. As of 2020 the confined population by branch was 557 prisoners from the Army, 253 prisoners from the Marine Corps, 156 prisoners from the Navy, 7 prisoners from the Coast Guard, and 227 prisoners from the Air Force. 44 of these prisoners were military officers. A significant number of these prisoners are males, with only 54 being female. A plurality were Caucasian, followed by African Americans and Hispanics. Most of the crimes committed by military prisoners are violent offenses, with violent sexual crimes being 41.1% of the crime. The next most frequent crimes committed by military prisoners are drug-related offenses, followed by property offenses, such as theft. There are a small percentage of other crimes committed, such as military offenses.
Military offense examples are disrespect,
insubordination, and false offense statements. The most recent data from 2020 of military prisoners has shown a small drop from 1214 prisoners in 2019 to 1180 in 2020. ==Incarceration of prisoners-of-war==