Interesting. A mental hospital stay, particularly involuntary, is also a disqualifying event.
And the USAF, where Kelley was drummed out of, doesn’t have WOs.
Unless the note is from a Bohemian corporal.
Interesting. A mental hospital stay, particularly involuntary, is also a disqualifying event.
And the USAF, where Kelley was drummed out of, doesn’t have WOs.
Unless the note is from a Bohemian corporal.
This is a key point on me understanding the meaning of the “bad things”–>BC and “very bad things”–>DD.
These “things” being done to be admitted in a court-martial–they must be done in what capacity (which includes, I’m guessing, the capacity, e.g., of not violating being “an officer and a gentleman,”–but even for enlisted?
Meaning: If the domestic assault charges–real charges of assault, but not, of course, of a fellow soldier–are not weighed in as to his conduct, why not other real charges?
Guy goes on leave, kills someone. I get that by the time he gets out of prison he probably will have been declared AWOL, which is “a bad thing” as termed above. But that’s it as far as his discharge is concerned?
And then they take him to an open 4th story window?