Defence Judge Advocate Corps (Denmark)
Military unit / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dear Wikiwand AI, let's keep it short by simply answering these key questions:
Can you list the top facts and stats about Defence Judge Advocate Corps (Denmark)?
Summarize this article for a 10 year old
The Military Prosecution Service or Judge Advocate General's Corps (Danish: Forsvarets Auditørkorps, short FAUK) is a Danish independent military prosecutor and the legal branch of the Danish military. It is a Level.I command and is under the Ministry of Defence. The Judge Advocate General (Danish: Generalauditør) heads the Defence Judge Advocate Corps. It is located at Kastellet in Copenhagen.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2015) |
Military Prosecution Service | |
---|---|
Forsvarets Auditørkorps | |
Active | 1659; 365 years ago (1659) |
Country | Kingdom of Denmark |
Branch | Joined/shared |
Role | Military justice |
Size | 30[1] |
Part of | Ministry of Defence |
Headquarters | Kastellet |
Nickname(s) | FAUK |
Website | Official FAUK |
Commanders | |
Judge Advocate General | Lars Stevnsborg |
The Judge Advocate General and Judge Advocates are members of the military system, but outside the military rank system. The Chief of Defence, otherwise the commander of all Danish military personnel, does not have authority over Judge advocates prosecutors.
In a military criminal case the Defence Judge Advocate Corps conducts investigation and decides whether or not a charge should be brought up.