Any experienced military appellate lawyer will tell you that the chances of winning on appeal can be low, depending on the issues raised in the appellate briefs. The hardest issue to have a court of criminal appeals dismiss the charges because they did not find there was enough evidence to sustain and conviction beyond reasonable doubt.

That is what happened for us and our appellate client in a just recently decision by the Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals.

The Appellant was charged with possession and distribution of CP (contraband images). The prosecution’s first attempt to get a conviction failed when the military judge abated the trial. The military judge did that because there was a lot of critical evidence that had been lost or destroyed by the police. The prosecution appealed that decision and the Air Force Court granted the prosecution’s appeal. So, the trial recommenced. After a contested trial the client was convicted.

Below is a focused summary of Truth-Telling in the Military: A Guide to Whistleblowing for Service Members by the Government Accountability Project, with particular attention to how Cave & Freeburg can help service members navigate the rules, risks, and procedural traps.
If you have made or intend to make a complaint that could be described as you being a whistleblower, read below. At that end, we have a checklist for you. Fill out the checklist and send it to us at mljucmj@court-martial.com. We will review it and schedule a time to discuss.

Executive Summary (Bottom Line)

When a Marine Gunnery Sergeant faced a life-altering court-martial at Quantico, the prosecution alleged dereliction of duty leading to death arising from an incident during an Africa deployment. The charge carried severe criminal exposure and the very real prospect of a destroyed career, lost retirement, and permanent stigma. The stakes were as high as they come in military justice.

Cave & Freeburg, LLP stepped in. What followed was a model of meticulous investigation, disciplined pretrial litigation, and aggressive courtroom advocacy—culminating in a full acquittal and the restoration of a Marine’s reputation.


Background: The Government’s Theory

If you are on active duty and married to an undocumented “alien,” you have two concerns (1) how to get your spouse “legal,” and (2) avoiding disciplinary action.

Your Legal Jeopardy

Service members often ask whether marrying or living with an undocumented spouse exposes them to court-martial. The short answer is yes, in limited and fact-specific circumstances—but the risk most often arises from paperwork and benefits errors, not from marriage itself.

Why Judicial Recusal Protects You in a court-martial

A Cave & Freeburg, Military Lawyers, Client Explainer

When you face investigation, adverse administrative action, or court-martial, one principle stands above all others: your case must be heard by a fair and impartial judge. The military justice system—like every American court—recognizes that justice collapses when a judge appears biased or influenced. Recusal, the process by which a judge steps aside, protects your right to a neutral decision-maker.

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