Court Martial Psychiatric Expert Witness Reports | Psychiatry Experts
Armed Forces Act 2006

Court Martial

Military Psychiatric Expert Witness Reports

Specialist psychiatric evidence for the Service Justice System. Our consultant psychiatrists provide urgent assessments, fitness to stand trial evaluations, sentencing mitigation, and service-related PTSD reports for solicitors representing service personnel in Court Martial proceedings globally.

Service Justice System
Urgent Reports Available
Service-Related PTSD
AFCLAA Rates Accepted

About Court Martial Proceedings

Court Martial is the primary forum for serious criminal and disciplinary trials within the British Armed Forces. Operating under the Armed Forces Act 2006, it has jurisdiction over all service personnel, whether serving in the UK or overseas. The court is presided over by a Judge Advocate and a board of service members.

Service Offences

  • Desertion & AWOL
  • Insubordination
  • Neglect of duty
  • Operational failures

Criminal Offences

  • Assault & GBH
  • Sexual offences
  • Theft & fraud
  • Drug-related crimes

Jurisdiction

  • Army, Navy & RAF
  • UK & Overseas bases
  • Service civilians
  • All ranks & rates

Court Martial

  • Judge Advocate & Service Board
  • Specialist military disposals
  • Focus on service discipline
  • Worldwide jurisdiction

Civilian Crown Court

  • Judge and Jury
  • Standard criminal sentencing
  • Public interest focus
  • Territorial jurisdiction

When Psychiatric Evidence Is Required

Psychiatric expert evidence is frequently instructed in Court Martial proceedings for the following purposes:

Fitness to Stand Trial

Assessing whether the service member can understand the military charges, enter a plea, and follow Court Martial proceedings.

Sentencing Mitigation

Evaluating how service-related trauma (PTSD), moral injury, or other mental disorders contributed to the offending behaviour.

Mental Health Disposals

Assessment for Section 37 hospital orders or Service Supervision and Punishment Orders as alternatives to military detention.

Operational Mental State

Retrospective assessment of mental state during operational deployments or specific service incidents (e.g. combat stress reactions).

AWOL & Desertion

Psychiatric evaluation of reasons for absence, including undiagnosed PTSD, depression, or adjustment disorders.

Service Connection

Establishing the link between military service and psychiatric injury for both Court Martial mitigation and AFCS claims.

Types of Military Psychiatric Reports

Fitness to Stand Trial

Purpose: Determine capacity to participate in the Service Justice System.

Key Questions: Understand military charges? Instruct legal team? Follow evidence?

Legal Test: Pritchard criteria applied within the Court Martial framework.

Standard 3–4 weeks | Urgent 2–5 days

Pre-Sentence Report

Purpose: Inform sentencing with psychiatric context and service history.

Contents: Service record review, PTSD/Trauma assessment, risk, and mitigation.

Disposals: Service Detention, SSPO, or Discharge with Disgrace.

Standard 4 weeks | Urgent 1–4 days

Section 37 Hospital Order

Purpose: Divert service personnel with severe mental illness to hospital treatment.

Requirements: Evidence of disorder warranting detention under the Mental Health Act.

Our Role: Assessment, clinical recommendations, and liaison with military medical wings.

Priority Service

Service Connection Report

Purpose: Link psychiatric injury to operational service for AFCS or mitigation.

Covers: Deployment history, exposure to trauma, and diagnostic formulation.

Outcome: Expert opinion on whether service caused or exacerbated the condition.

Standard 4–6 weeks

Summary Hearing Support

Purpose: Brief psychiatric assessment for lower-level disciplinary hearings.

Covers: Current mental state and suitability for summary punishment.

Context: Fast-track evidence for Commanding Officers or legal reps.

Urgent (24–72 hours)

Military Disposals in Court Martial

Disposal Description Requirements
Service Detention Custodial sentence served in military correctional facilities (MCTC) Fitness to detain assessment required if mental health is an issue
Dismissal with Disgrace Termination of service with loss of benefits and status Psychiatric mitigation can argue against this in trauma-related cases
SSPO (Supervision Order) Service Supervision and Punishment Order for lower-level offences Mental health treatment requirements can be linked
Section 37 Hospital Order Diversion to a psychiatric hospital under the Mental Health Act Two medical recommendations; bed available in military or civilian wing

Which Expert for Court Martial?

Adult General Psychiatrist

For trauma-related cases

  • Service-related PTSD
  • Depression & adjustment disorders
  • Sentencing mitigation (non-violent)

Why: Clinical expertise in combat-related psychiatric injury.

Neuropsychiatrist

For brain injury cases

  • Blast injury (TBI) assessments
  • Cognitive operational failures
  • Organic personality changes

Why: Essential where physical head trauma impacts behaviour or capacity.

Our Process

1

Urgent Instruction

Contact us with case details — we understand deadlines

2

Expert Match

We identify available Section 12 approved psychiatrist

3

Rapid Assessment

Face-to-face or video assessment (often within days)

4

Report Delivered

Written report provided to meet court deadline

5

Court Attendance

Expert available for oral evidence if required

6

Hospital Liaison

For S.37 cases, we assist with bed finding

Turnaround Times

Report Type Standard Urgent
Pre-Sentence3–4 weeks1–4 days
Fitness to Stand2–3 weeks2–5 days
Section 37N/ASame week
AWOL Assessment2 weeks48–72 hrs
Summary SupportN/ASame day

Funding Options

Military Legal Aid (AFCLAA)

Armed Forces Criminal Legal Aid Authority rates accepted.

Private Funding

Fixed fees for service personnel and their families.

MOD Commissioned

Direct billing to the Ministry of Defence where authorized.

Legal Framework

Armed Forces Act 2006 Court Martial Rules Mental Health Act 1983 Criminal Justice Act 2003 Human Rights Act 1998 CPR Part 19 Compliant

All reports are prepared in accordance with the Court Martial Rules and relevant Service Justice System protocols, ensuring they are admissible and court-ready for Judge Advocates.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you provide psychiatric reports for service personnel based overseas?

Yes. We regularly conduct psychiatric assessments for personnel based in Germany, Cyprus, the Falklands, and other global installations. These can be performed via secure video link (increasingly accepted by Court Martial) or by our experts travelling to the location if required. We are familiar with the logistical needs of the Service Justice System.

How does fitness to stand trial differ in Court Martial?

The legal test is substantially the same as the civilian Pritchard criteria — focusing on the defendant’s ability to understand charges, enter a plea, and instruct counsel. However, the expert must apply this within the specific context of the military environment and the unique nature of service offences. Our forensic psychiatrists are experienced in this specialist application.

Do you accept AFCLAA funding for military psychiatric reports?

Yes. We accept instructions funded by the Armed Forces Criminal Legal Aid Authority (AFCLAA). We provide the necessary CVs and quotes to support your application for prior authority, ensuring costs are within prescribed limits while maintaining high clinical standards.

Can a Court Martial impose a Hospital Order?

Yes. Under the Armed Forces Act 2006, a Court Martial has the power to impose a Section 37 Hospital Order if the criteria under the Mental Health Act are met. This requires two medical recommendations. Our experts can provide the necessary evidence and assist in identifying a suitable military or civilian psychiatric bed.

How do you assess ‘Service Connection’ in psychiatric injury?

Our experts review service medical records (FMed 4), operational history, and conduct a detailed clinical interview. We look for evidence of combat exposure, moral injury, or traumatic incidents. We provide a reasoned opinion on whether the psychiatric condition (such as PTSD) is attributable to or exacerbated by military service.

Is the report confidential from the chain of command?

When instructed by a solicitor, the psychiatric report is subject to legal professional privilege. It is provided directly to the legal team. Disclosure to the court or the chain of command is a matter for the legal representative and the defendant, though the report’s purpose is usually to be used as evidence in the proceedings.

Do your experts give oral evidence at Bulford or Catterick?

Yes. Our psychiatrists and psychologists regularly attend the permanent Court Martial centres at Bulford and Catterick, as well as other locations, to give oral evidence. We are familiar with military court etiquette and the requirements of the Service Justice System.

Need a Psychiatric Report for Court Martial?

Specialist military expert evidence. Urgent reports in 1–4 days. AFCLAA rates accepted. Global assessment capability.

Related Service & Military Forums

Service Civilian Court Summary Appeal Court Court Martial Appeal Court AFCS Tribunals
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