English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2007-07-08 16:38:09 · 15 answers · asked by Jackie SD 1 in Politics & Government Military

15 answers

If it happened off base and you case is pending civilian court, then you probably cannot deploy until after your case is adjudicated. If it happened on base, then you can receive your Article 15 punishment in the desert just as easily as the USA.

2007-07-08 17:12:27 · answer #1 · answered by Chad 5 · 1 0

1

2016-06-03 01:21:23 · answer #2 · answered by Ignacio 3 · 0 0

After 15 years i concept it could be 2d nature. That is my husbands 8th sea obligation, however his 10th deployment all together. He had 2 categorised as clandestine deployments. Out of these 15yrs we have in reality lived four 1/2 yrs regularly as a household. It is tough backside line. Lucky due to the fact that the navy deployments are usually 6 to 7 months so i do get to look my husband faster, however a ship still goes out on brief runs. Truth be informed alternatively have the lengthy deployments then the short ones. There so much households need to rectangular away before deployments. Finical, scientific, POAs and to not point out intellectual prep. I am to the point were i control everything that comes throughout the desk so as to communicate. My husband jokes he is in general on cruise control when you consider that i'm just use to taking good care of the whole lot. Which i love because he not often query my choices. But when he retires i am handing the house maintain over and going to the spa. Our household has a powerful communication between us. It's most important to stay open and optimistic in any respect time. My children at times take their dad being away rough. Just need to remind them their dad loves them and that is the job he loves doing. Would i change my married lifestyles? No. The subsequent time i will see my husband it's going to be spring of 2009. When that moment happen nothing else issues. It isn't important is he was long gone for christmas, ballet classification, gymanatics category and even to repair the clogged sink. It's happiest time and that what preserve me going.

2016-08-04 03:57:59 · answer #3 · answered by tseng 4 · 0 0

If it is not resolved by deployment time and is still a pending court case you are still under the legal jurisdiction of the court and it is a mighty rare and extreme case when the military ignores a civilian court's authority. If the military wants you to deploy then they will petition the court to temporarily remove you from their jurisdiction. But they have to promise to return you to the court's jurisdiction for any scheduled court appearances or when requested by the court. You are toast no matter what. DUI's are taken seriously by the military - no more "he just got caught doing what most of us have done." And civilian courts and judges are, for the most part, much harder on DUI's than in the past. As a commander I would be pretty unhappy with any unit member who through their own STUPID, IMMATURE, and SELFISH behavior causes unneeded problems at deployment time which detract from the unit's mission..

2007-07-08 17:31:59 · answer #4 · answered by cwomo 6 · 2 0

A DUI will not only affect deployment but your whole military career.

2007-07-08 16:50:45 · answer #5 · answered by $Bl@Ck BuTtAfLy$ 3 · 1 0

Being under General Order #1 will effect your drinking.
You trying to get out of the deployment or trying to get out of the DUI?

2007-07-08 16:42:01 · answer #6 · answered by John T 6 · 0 0

Not sure about other branches, but the Navy will take you on deployment. You will be restricted to the ship until the end of deployment. Then when you get home they will kick you out. In most cases, the courts will allow you to deploy with the ship and you will have a court date set up after you get back.

2007-07-09 11:53:24 · answer #7 · answered by Tasha 2 · 0 1

Yes, you make it worse.

Usually it means you will get kicked out of the military as well. Of course I don't think that today's military will let you get away with that. So your unit will come to your judge and tell him that you can't serve your sentence until after your deployment is over. If you haven't been tried yet, then the military will happily take over the trial (where the sentences are tougher and all jail terms are at hard labor). They will charge, and try you and if found guilty then you can probably start serving your sentence after your deployment.

Do you think the military is going to leave such an easy loophole to get out of combat?

2007-07-08 16:44:07 · answer #8 · answered by Dan S 7 · 3 0

No it won't affect your deployment. It will affect your clearance, your ability to drive Government vehicles.

Good luck in the Litterbox.

2007-07-08 16:48:38 · answer #9 · answered by Jennifer S 4 · 1 0

It'll affect the person's whole military career, possibly dishonorable discharge.

2007-07-08 16:49:04 · answer #10 · answered by Just me 5 · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers