I personally don't want to go to hell for killing anyone or commanding another person to kill someone.Rotor wrote:SocalPizza wrote:adil91 wrote:I'm interested in being Marine JAG, a few questions
Is this a guarantee? No. There are no guarantees. However, I'd hate to see someone who really wants to serve as a JAG in the USMC hesitate because of rumors about having to go be an infantry officer for a few years.
Military Law Forum
- shepdawg
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Re: Military Law
- Patrick Bateman
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Re: Military Law
Well, good on ya. As there are still many people in this world that are perfectly willing to kill you and those you love, the Marine Corps and the rest of the Armed Forces will just keep on protecting you.shepdawg wrote:I personally don't want to go to hell for killing anyone or commanding another person to kill someone.Rotor wrote:SocalPizza wrote:adil91 wrote:I'm interested in being Marine JAG, a few questions
Is this a guarantee? No. There are no guarantees. However, I'd hate to see someone who really wants to serve as a JAG in the USMC hesitate because of rumors about having to go be an infantry officer for a few years.
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Re: Military Law
I personally don't want to go to hell for killing anyone or commanding another person to kill someone.[/quote]
Well, good on ya. As there are still many people in this world that are perfectly willing to kill you and those you love, the Marine Corps and the rest of the Armed Forces will just keep on protecting you.[/quote]
If this was facebook, I would like this comment
You seem to be the expert on JAG, do you think Marine JAGs have the same exit opportunitys as JAGs from other services?
Well, good on ya. As there are still many people in this world that are perfectly willing to kill you and those you love, the Marine Corps and the rest of the Armed Forces will just keep on protecting you.[/quote]
If this was facebook, I would like this comment
You seem to be the expert on JAG, do you think Marine JAGs have the same exit opportunitys as JAGs from other services?
- Patrick Bateman
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Re: Military Law
Well, good on ya. As there are still many people in this world that are perfectly willing to kill you and those you love, the Marine Corps and the rest of the Armed Forces will just keep on protecting you.[/quote]adil91 wrote:I personally don't want to go to hell for killing anyone or commanding another person to kill someone.
If this was facebook, I would like this comment
You seem to be the expert on JAG, do you think Marine JAGs have the same exit opportunitys as JAGs from other services?[/quote]
Short answer: Absolutely. While the officer aspect of serving as a Marine JAG differs from the other service (i.e., OCS, TBS, ability to serve in non-legal billets, etc), the attorney element is pretty similar to the other services. The precise day-to-day and assignment progression differs among the services, but if we were to observe the first 4-6 years for all JAGs, the experiences would have a lot of common elements.
Generally speaking, employers seem like former JAGs because of significant trial experience early on and significant leadership experience early on. There is nothing in the Marine JAG experience that does not lend itself to those two qualities. One might argue that the platoon commander training Marines receive at TBS makes then even better equipped in terms of leadership than their peers in the other branches.
As an Air Force JAG, if I found myself in civilian clothes and making a hiring decision on a former Marine JAG, I would not hesitate for a second to pick him/her up if they were otherwise qualified. Having worked with two Marine JAGs in the past, I can tell you they are exceptionally capable and squared away officers. I feel like I learned as much regarding officership over a six month deployment with a Marine JAG than all training the AF has thrown at me.
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Re: Military Law
Do you guys have any idea what kind of classes the board likes to see you take?
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- SocalPizza
- Posts: 58
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Re: Military Law
Are you being sarcastic? I can't tell. If not... well, I don't want to turn Military Law into a giant flaming thread. But I believe that it's better to defend yourself and your family than to just let yourselves die at the hands of a murderer. If it's OK to defend yourself and your family, then why not someone else and their family? And if not another family, why not the entire country?shepdawg wrote:I personally don't want to go to hell for killing anyone or commanding another person to kill someone.
- WhatAboutBob
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Re: Military Law
Hi all, I just registered with this site. I was selected for active duty with the Army JAGC in January but haven't heard very much from them since then. Does anyone know when we can plan on getting any more info. I did a 1L and 2L internship with army jag so I'm used to the waiting game, but I want to be sure I'm not missing anything.
Also, I can field any questions you may have about Army summer internships or applying for active duty.
Also, I can field any questions you may have about Army summer internships or applying for active duty.
- joemoviebuff
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Re: Military Law
How many boards did you go through?WhatAboutBob wrote:Hi all, I just registered with this site. I was selected for active duty with the Army JAGC in January but haven't heard very much from them since then. Does anyone know when we can plan on getting any more info. I did a 1L and 2L internship with army jag so I'm used to the waiting game, but I want to be sure I'm not missing anything.
Also, I can field any questions you may have about Army summer internships or applying for active duty.
- WhatAboutBob
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Re: Military Law
I went through one board in November '10joemoviebuff wrote:How many boards did you go through?WhatAboutBob wrote:Hi all, I just registered with this site. I was selected for active duty with the Army JAGC in January but haven't heard very much from them since then. Does anyone know when we can plan on getting any more info. I did a 1L and 2L internship with army jag so I'm used to the waiting game, but I want to be sure I'm not missing anything.
Also, I can field any questions you may have about Army summer internships or applying for active duty.
- Esquire
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Re: Military Law
Former 1L intern here selected AD FY10. I'm still waiting, too. Can you PM me your identity? I can email you from my school email. It'd be nice to have someone to keep in touch regarding this process.WhatAboutBob wrote:Hi all, I just registered with this site. I was selected for active duty with the Army JAGC in January but haven't heard very much from them since then. Does anyone know when we can plan on getting any more info. I did a 1L and 2L internship with army jag so I'm used to the waiting game, but I want to be sure I'm not missing anything.
Also, I can field any questions you may have about Army summer internships or applying for active duty.
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Re: Military Law
I am going to OCS this summer and I am part of the USMC PLC law program.... I cant stand reading this junk about Marine Jags doing non legal work. if you know anything about the program you know it is veryvery very unlikely.... YEs you go to oCS yes you go to the basic school but you need to realize after basic school they are sending all the Marines to another specialty .... if you do not go to infantry school they do not expect you to take lead as an infantry officer... yes you are unrestricted as a line officer but more than anything this is to give you latitude incase you want to take a break from law and do recruiting or be a liason or something other than law... you are trained as a rifleman because Marine JAGS go where ever Marines go and that can sometimes mean in harms way.... can you find yourself on a patrol where you come underfire yes... but i promise you no JAG is going to be asked to go take that hill or clear that cave... there is not a gunnysrgt in the world who would allow this to happen to his men... Marine JAgs are trained to be JAGS... the marines have invested money in their legal education in most cases and even more so if the Marine is in his 2nd tour and gets the law repayment money... so do not let this scare you its a bunch of crap
- SocalPizza
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Re: Military Law
You haven't worked as a USMC JA or even commissioned yet. For you to come on and post angrily about how we don't know what we're talking about when we say nothing is guaranteed because you're an unrestricted line officer... please just tell me you have a better source than your recruiter. I qualified my statement that you're an unrestricted line officer by saying I don't know what actual USMC JA's are doing now or will do in the future. I have to imagine you're in the same boat as me, though, unless you're dad is a JA or something like that. If that is the case, please let us know what your JA source said is going on right now, because that would actually be illuminating.trayball23 wrote:I am going to OCS this summer and I am part of the USMC PLC law program.... I cant stand reading this junk about Marine Jags doing non legal work. if you know anything about the program you know it is veryvery very unlikely.... YEs you go to oCS yes you go to the basic school but you need to realize after basic school they are sending all the Marines to another specialty .... if you do not go to infantry school they do not expect you to take lead as an infantry officer... yes you are unrestricted as a line officer but more than anything this is to give you latitude incase you want to take a break from law and do recruiting or be a liason or something other than law... you are trained as a rifleman because Marine JAGS go where ever Marines go and that can sometimes mean in harms way.... can you find yourself on a patrol where you come underfire yes... but i promise you no JAG is going to be asked to go take that hill or clear that cave... there is not a gunnysrgt in the world who would allow this to happen to his men... Marine JAgs are trained to be JAGS... the marines have invested money in their legal education in most cases and even more so if the Marine is in his 2nd tour and gets the law repayment money... so do not let this scare you its a bunch of crap
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Re: Military Law
I am not angry I just would hate for people to be misled by bad info...I did my homework I have spoken with 5 active and 4 retired USMC JA and none of them had any experiences other than what I described .... They actually made it sound absurd when I asked the question because of the lack of experience they would have in doing something infantry related... the way it was described for me is you are trained to be ready for anything but there are so many people other than JAG who are better prepared for combat missions that it just doesnt happen.... in cases of extreme emergencies i can understand but even a PFC whos been in the field for a while would have far more combat experience than a JAG...
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Re: Military Law
Does anyone have thoughts on joining JAG after working in a firm? I'm a 3L from a top school going to a pretty selective firm. But I'm already thinking about what I want to do after. Joining the military has been something I've thought about doing for a long time. I want the training, leadership experience, and to do public service.
Based on my research, I'm inclined to choose the Marines. To me, the physical training and possibility of combat is a plus, even if it is remote. I mean, the impetus for wanting to join the military for me is unrelated to being a lawyer. It's just that it seems silly to put myself through law school/law firm hell and then not make use of that experience in the military.
So... is this crazy? What would be the mechanics? Direct Commission? OCS? West Point? Also, does the fact that I'm pretty leftist matter? And what would be my chances at that point (i.e. 3 years in a good firm, no military experience, good school, good grades)?
Based on my research, I'm inclined to choose the Marines. To me, the physical training and possibility of combat is a plus, even if it is remote. I mean, the impetus for wanting to join the military for me is unrelated to being a lawyer. It's just that it seems silly to put myself through law school/law firm hell and then not make use of that experience in the military.
So... is this crazy? What would be the mechanics? Direct Commission? OCS? West Point? Also, does the fact that I'm pretty leftist matter? And what would be my chances at that point (i.e. 3 years in a good firm, no military experience, good school, good grades)?
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Re: Military Law
Ok, so I've done a little more and it seems OCS is the pathway... but the 28 year old age limit is a problem. The website says exceptions are made--does anyone have insight into this? I'm 26 now.tsquare wrote:Does anyone have thoughts on joining JAG after working in a firm? I'm a 3L from a top school going to a pretty selective firm. But I'm already thinking about what I want to do after. Joining the military has been something I've thought about doing for a long time. I want the training, leadership experience, and to do public service.
Based on my research, I'm inclined to choose the Marines. To me, the physical training and possibility of combat is a plus, even if it is remote. I mean, the impetus for wanting to join the military for me is unrelated to being a lawyer. It's just that it seems silly to put myself through law school/law firm hell and then not make use of that experience in the military.
So... is this crazy? What would be the mechanics? Direct Commission? OCS? West Point? Also, does the fact that I'm pretty leftist matter? And what would be my chances at that point (i.e. 3 years in a good firm, no military experience, good school, good grades)?
- Patrick Bateman
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Re: Military Law
I'll let the Devil Dogs weigh in on the bulk of this but I can at least rule West Point out for you. West Point, aka the United States Military Academy, is the service academy (read: undergraduate) for Army officers. Marine officers that commission through a service academy do so through the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis. The direct reason for this is that there is no Department of the Marine Corps - USMC is administered by the Navy and while the branches are independent in many respects, they are symbiotic in others.tsquare wrote:Does anyone have thoughts on joining JAG after working in a firm? I'm a 3L from a top school going to a pretty selective firm. But I'm already thinking about what I want to do after. Joining the military has been something I've thought about doing for a long time. I want the training, leadership experience, and to do public service.
Based on my research, I'm inclined to choose the Marines. To me, the physical training and possibility of combat is a plus, even if it is remote. I mean, the impetus for wanting to join the military for me is unrelated to being a lawyer. It's just that it seems silly to put myself through law school/law firm hell and then not make use of that experience in the military.
So... is this crazy? What would be the mechanics? Direct Commission? OCS? West Point? Also, does the fact that I'm pretty leftist matter? And what would be my chances at that point (i.e. 3 years in a good firm, no military experience, good school, good grades)?
I'm an active duty Air Force JAG, happy to answer questions should you find yourself looking to cross into the wild blue yonder. That said, this thread has a vault of invaluable information already in it. Dig through the previous posts and you will learn tons on all four service branches.
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Re: Military Law
I can weigh in on the age waivers regarding USMC PLC-LAW.
At OCS this last summer, my rackmate was 30 and the other guy next to me was 29. Neither was a PLC-Law candidate. From what I heard though, 30 is pretty much a brightline past which age waivers aren't granted. There may be age waivers for lawyers past 30, but I wouldn't count on it. If you'll commission by the time you're thirty and you can PT, you'll be good to go.
Also to reiterate something someone else was saying earlier. In the Marine Corps, infantry is the most competitive job. They don't just throw a JAG in charge of an infantry platoon. Other people who are better qualified compete for that job.
Edit: OCS with the OCC program is the only realistic option.
At OCS this last summer, my rackmate was 30 and the other guy next to me was 29. Neither was a PLC-Law candidate. From what I heard though, 30 is pretty much a brightline past which age waivers aren't granted. There may be age waivers for lawyers past 30, but I wouldn't count on it. If you'll commission by the time you're thirty and you can PT, you'll be good to go.
Also to reiterate something someone else was saying earlier. In the Marine Corps, infantry is the most competitive job. They don't just throw a JAG in charge of an infantry platoon. Other people who are better qualified compete for that job.
Edit: OCS with the OCC program is the only realistic option.
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Re: Military Law
Thanks tothepain and patrick bateman.
Can anyone comment on the wisdom of going from top firm-->JAG? Long term, I'm thinking back into the private world, or possibly government. I wouldn't be averse to a long military career though... which leads me to wonder, how do JAGs rise through the ranks, if at all, and what's the ceiling?
Can anyone comment on the wisdom of going from top firm-->JAG? Long term, I'm thinking back into the private world, or possibly government. I wouldn't be averse to a long military career though... which leads me to wonder, how do JAGs rise through the ranks, if at all, and what's the ceiling?
- El_Gallo
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Re: Military Law
There is some really great posts in this thread. Thanks to everybody that has contributed!
Hey sorry if this question has already been answered somewhere in this massive thread. Does anybody know if most school's LRAPs take into account the food and housing allowances that JAGS receive? If the allowances push an individual over the LRAP salary cap then would they be out of luck?
Hey sorry if this question has already been answered somewhere in this massive thread. Does anybody know if most school's LRAPs take into account the food and housing allowances that JAGS receive? If the allowances push an individual over the LRAP salary cap then would they be out of luck?
- Patrick Bateman
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Re: Military Law
All depends on your priorities and goals in life. In terms of financial wisdom, you obviously will not be making BigLaw money as an officer. That said, if you had to read a Wikipedia article on a lawyer, which would you pick?tsquare wrote:Thanks tothepain and patrick bateman.
Can anyone comment on the wisdom of going from top firm-->JAG? Long term, I'm thinking back into the private world, or possibly government. I wouldn't be averse to a long military career though... which leads me to wonder, how do JAGs rise through the ranks, if at all, and what's the ceiling?
1. 20 years in BigLaw, partner, helped giant corporations do things with/to other giant corporations, 2200+ hour billables, etc.
2. 20 years of active military service during a time of war, several deployments around the world, assignments around the country/world, opportunity to attend professional military education like the respective War Colleges while earning a master's degree in strategic studies, opportunity to earn an LLM on the govt's dime, etc.
This was more or less the analysis I went through when I was deciding between BigLaw and the JAG Corps. There are plenty of drawbacks to military life, but at the end of the day, I could never see myself being excited to work at a law firm. I get a charge each morning I put on my uniform.
In terms of career progression, we promote like all the other officers. For those career minded, most retire at O-5, the fast burners make O-6. There are general/flag officer positions, but going in with an expectation of a star is a like starting as a 1L and expecting to be a law professor. USAF/USA/USN each have a three star that leads the Corps. I believe USMC has a one star that is the SJA to the Commandant.
- Patrick Bateman
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Re: Military Law
As a general rule, LRAP only considers taxable, W-2, income. For JAGs, that is your basic pay and any bonuses you may get. All allowances, from BAH/BAS to Hardship Duty and Hostile Fire, are not income. Hence the classification as an "allowance" versus "pay." The IRS has a publication out there that clearly establishes that military allowances are not considered income.El_Gallo wrote:There is some really great posts in this thread. Thanks to everybody that has contributed!
Hey sorry if this question has already been answered somewhere in this massive thread. Does anybody know if most school's LRAPs take into account the food and housing allowances that JAGS receive? If the allowances push an individual over the LRAP salary cap then would they be out of luck?
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Re: Military Law
How long do you have to be in the service for them to pay for your LLM?
- Patrick Bateman
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Re: Military Law
For the Air Force: Majors and Major Selects, so about 6-7 years in. It is a competitive selection and you have to get it in something "useful" for the Air Force - environmental, labor, acquisitions/procurement, space law, national security, etc.adil91 wrote:How long do you have to be in the service for them to pay for your LLM?
- DMBFan
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Re: Military Law
Sorry if this has been covered, I couldn't find anything.
How does prior service affect chances of getting JAG? How about prior enlisted vs. officer? Is it possible to switch branches, and would you retain your prior rank (if officer, obviously). Thanks.
How does prior service affect chances of getting JAG? How about prior enlisted vs. officer? Is it possible to switch branches, and would you retain your prior rank (if officer, obviously). Thanks.
- msmossie
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Re: Military Law
Finally "pending board decision." Now I can relax for a bit.
Seriously? What are you waiting for?
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