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California Military Lawyer
If you need an California Military Lawyer then contact
Mr. Bruzzo at (714) 547-4636.
All active duty military personnel are subject to the Uniform
Code of Military Justice (UCMJ). The UCMJ applies to active
duty military personnel 24-hours a day anywhere in the world,
on ships and in the air.
The UCMJ only applies to reserve military personnel when
they are on duty; if they are on duty for a weekend then
it should only apply while they are at the drill center between
drill hours.
On some occasions the military will permit civilian authorities
to prosecute a case involving a military person; it is up
to the military command of the individual how this is handled.
If a service member is charged with a crime he has the right
to a military defense counsel appointed to him in the same
fashion that a public defender defends a civilian; however,
in addition to the military counsel the service member can
hire a civilian counsel. Notably, the military counsel will
remain on the case to help the civilian counsel at no charge
to the service member. Thus the service member can get two
attorneys for the price of one.
The military member will initially be read the charges against
him then sent down to the Staff Judge Advocate to speak to
an attorney.
The service member is entitled to a court-martial of his
peers which in the case of a military person is other military
persons. An enlisted person subject to court martial is entitled
to have 1/3 of the members of his court-martial (jury) be
enlisted persons.
In a military court martial a conviction only requires that
2/3 of the members (jurors) concur on the conviction.
The maximum sentence for a special court-martial is 1 year
in jail; a general court-martial has unlimited punishment
to include death. (Summary Court-Martials are very rare and
will not be discussed here.)
Some times a service member’s command will offer Non-Judicial
Punishment (NJP in the Navy and Marine Corps) or Article
15 (Army and Air Force) instead of a court-martial. This
sort of process is not considered judicial in nature thus
there is no conviction and the service member cannot be incarcerated
although he can lose rank, pay and be restricted to the barracks.
Another military procedure is the administrative separation
process. This procedure is guided by the separations manual
of the various services. An individual can be separated for
many different matters to include: a pattern of misconduct
(two or more NJPs or Article 15s); a positive urinalysis
for a controlled substance; one serious act of misconduct;
sexual orientation and good of the service among others.
The possible discharge categories available are honorable,
general under honorable conditions and an other then honorable
discharge (OTH). IF YOU RECEIVE ANYTHING LESS THEN AN HONORABLE
DISCHARGE YOU WILL LOSE MOST BENEFITS TO INCLUDE THE GI BILL.
The most common crime service members are accused of is
positive urinalysis for a controlled substance Article 112(a)
UCMJ. This is generally charged as a special-court martial.
Mr. Bruzzo has successfully represented many military service
members charged with this offense and more serious charges.
Mr. Bruzzo rose to the rank of Major in the US military;
he has successfully
defended many individuals in many types
of cases both when he was on active duty and since becoming
a civilian attorney. Contact him if you need an experienced California military lawyer.
California Military Lawyer
William W. Bruzzo
Xerox Centre
1851 E. First Street, 9th Floor, Suite 900
Santa Ana, CA 92705
714 547-4636
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