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

I met this man in the air force who told me that he was a staff sargeant, but I found out that he isn't anywhere near that status. Can he get in trouble for that? Could he also get in trouble for cheating on his girlfriend?

2007-11-12 16:45:53 · 10 answers · asked by greatdame53209 1 in Politics & Government Military

can i turn him in for lying?

2007-11-12 17:05:47 · update #1

10 answers

yes.. its illegal to impersonate an NCO. ive seen soldiers get in trouble for it many times.

as for cheating on a girlfriend.. no. cant get in trouble for that. You can get in trouble for cheating on a wife, but not a girlfriend.. unless the girl he was cheating with was married.

2007-11-12 16:50:43 · answer #1 · answered by kickrocks54 4 · 1 0

Lying about his job? Sorry, no he's not going to get into trouble for lying about his rank to a civilian. That's what guys do! They make themselves sound more important than they are to pick up girls. Any guy... not just military guys!

Cheating on his girlfriend... again, no, not in trouble with the AF unless it interferes with his job. He's more in trouble with you, though! Kick him to the curb and find a better one!

Turn him in for lying? No, it won't do any good. And you'll just irritate people!

2007-11-13 08:51:35 · answer #2 · answered by usafbrat64 7 · 1 0

He can't get "in trouble" for cheating on a girlfriend. What is this, high school?

If he was married, then that is a different issue.

If he is in the bar, trying to get the pants of some female, and claims he won the medal of honor and was promoted to general, the military would LAUGH if you tried to get him "in trouble" for that. They would laugh harder if you fell for it.

Now, it is possible to get in trouble for impersonating a person of a different rank. If he wore the uniform, or attempted to access military areas, then yeah.

But just clowning around trying to impress females? No way.

2007-11-13 01:02:27 · answer #3 · answered by powhound 7 · 1 0

Unfortunately, although extremely unethical, no he cant. If she were his wife then yes he would actually be able to get into trouble for that. Its quite common for guys in the military to exagerate about who they are and what they do. His peers in the military will take care of him though if they find out about him saying he is a higher rank than he really is.

2007-11-13 01:00:27 · answer #4 · answered by Charming Gentleman 3 · 1 0

if he says he is, but not wearing any of the rank insignia's, then I'd have to say no, he can't get in trouble. I can say I'm a general to anyone I meet, but if I go around with a general's rank, uniform on, and I'm in the military, then I'd have to guess I could get in trouble. (Only a guess, I'm not in the military)

I'd also guess he can't get in trouble for cheating on his girlfriend

2007-11-13 00:50:08 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

If he was wearing false rank on his uniform, then yes he can get in trouble. But can he get in trouble for cheating on his g/f? No, if he's not married the military doesn't care.

2007-11-13 09:48:53 · answer #6 · answered by mrshernandez 2 · 1 0

not unless he tried to pass himself off in an official capacity. bragging in bars doesn't count.

he would only get in trouble for cheating on his girlfriend if she found out, the militray will not get involved unless it concerns them fraternization: an Officer and Enlisted person having undue relations.

2007-11-13 10:40:16 · answer #7 · answered by Mrsjvb 7 · 0 0

If he was not doing anything in the line of duty and my guess is that he wasnt if he cheated on his g/f with you??? Then no, he cant get in trouble. And its not considered adultery unless your married.

2007-11-13 00:50:03 · answer #8 · answered by Mommy to 1+triplets 6 · 1 0

turn his sorry @$$ in, contact the Air Force!

2007-11-13 00:54:14 · answer #9 · answered by Charlie Choo Choo 2 · 0 1

nope and this is from a navy man

2007-11-13 14:29:58 · answer #10 · answered by Jack 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers