What happens if i go ua
Select personalised content. Create a personalised content profile. Measure ad performance. Select basic ads. Create a personalised ads profile. Select personalised ads. Apply market research to generate audience insights. Measure content performance. Develop and improve products. List of Partners vendors. Learn about our editorial policies. Once you are in an AWOL status, it is important that you contact your command and voluntarily return as soon as possible.
Do not make the mistake and think that the military will not find you. At some point, you will be found. You cannot put your head in the sand. Armed Forces since the Revolutionary War!
You are mistaken if you think you can hide from the U. If the U. Military can locate and capture Saddam Hussein and Osama Bin Laden, they can and will locate and arrest you. While the military may not be using a Predator drone to locate and target you like a Taliban insurgent, you are in a national data base and ultimately when you least suspect it you will be apprehended and returned to the military to face charges for being AWOL.
Barthel can use his knowledge and military experience to assist you and coordinate your return to your command or to the nearest deserter processing facility in your area.
Barthel is available at any time, to deploy to your defense at any post, camp, or station worldwide. Barthel has the skills, experience and resources to help you return to military control and get your AWOL status resolved while doing all in his power to reduce the consequences and fallout as much as possible.
For legal representation, Contact Gary S. Barthel, Lt. USMC Ret. Actual punishments can vary from nothing at all to General Court-Martial, which could include a sentence of dishonorable discharge a felony level conviction and also could include years of jail time. Typically, punishments range in between these two extremes. Note: while many people have been told that desertion during a time of war is punishable by death, OIF and OEF are recognized as police actions rather than as congressionally declared wars and no one has received such punishment in decades.
These rumors generate fears and consequently many absent GIs are reluctant to return to the military and resolve the issue. For many people the fears are increased by the mistaken idea that they are the only person in their situation, when in reality thousands of others have done it. Most cases are resolved without court-martial.
The specific punishments that any one person will face depend on a number of factors, all of which can be discussed with a GI Rights Hotline counselor:. Because of the factors involved and the uncertainty of all things involving the military, no one can ever predict a guaranteed outcome for a specific situation. The military reserves the right to handle offenses case by case. However, because the GI Rights Hotline handles thousands of cases each year, its counselors can normally give an accurate picture of likely outcomes.
Sometimes the military has given helpful information, but in many cases the information given was inaccurate.
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