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#23 has just "Discharged" entered and# 28 has just "Misconduct" entered. #26 is separation code and JKO is entered. Philip Douglas Cave Military Law Attorney in Washington, DC
Send the lawyer a certified letter outlining the agreement, the efforts to contact the office (noting no return contact), the promise to file within 2 weeks, and that based on the failure to do the work as promised and the ethical violation of no communication, you no longer want the lawyer to work on the case and you expect a full refund (or you will seek the assistance of the State Bar of ...
R. Jason de Groot, Esq. We do not have an attorney-client relationship. I am not your lawyer. The statements I make do not constitute legal advice.
www.court-martial.com; www.court-martial.us.com; [email protected] 703-298-9562, 800-401-1583. Answering your question does not create an attorney-client relationship.
It appears that you and your husband reside in Texas. Because Texas is a community property state, upon the death of either you or your husband, all property -- irrespective of whose name it is titled -- is presumed to be community property (i.e., one-half your and one-half his).
Ms. Spencer's answer, as usual, is very thorough and accurate. I just wanted to add one clarification. The Fair Employment and Housing Act does provide some protection related to marital status which prevents an employer from having or enforcing a policy against employing spouses in the same company.
I received an entry level seperation from the Air Force , I did not complete boot camp but injured my knee while training for para rescue combat control, I was taken to med hall and seen by the doctor a colonial who said it looked like a meniscus tear, I was then taken to talk to some one else who asked if I could of done this playing sports before I entered military I said I had played ...
The father is a stranger to the child and has made little efforts to get to know the child and I have raised our daughter by myself.
The burden of proof for showing a violation of probation is lower. It is only preponderance of the evidence. Also, the court is more lax on allowing hearsay and you have no right to a jury trial for a probation violati
The simple answer is yes. The same charges can be brought against you again after they were dismissed or reduced, unless they were dismissed with prejudice (which is very rare), or they were dropped after jeopardy had attached (in other words, if they dropped the charges after the trial had already begun: after witnesses were sworn in a bench trial, or after the jury was impaneled at a jury ...