Abstract

The paper justifies the importance of observance of principles of unity of command and subordination in the Russian military service, which has become especially relevant after the start of the special military operation. The object of the study is major structural segments of the constituent elements of a crime stipulated by Art. 332 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation as amended and supplemented. The authors note the absence of unified approaches to the legal evaluation of some key concepts and definitions (order, commander, interests of the military service, etc.), which makes it difficult to qualify the committed act and results in fragmented law enforcement practice. The article identifies conflicts of and gaps in applicable criminal laws in this sphere and brings forward recommendation to eliminate them.

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