General Officer Representation

Inspector General Investigations - Representation of Subject |
If you are a flag or general officer in the Armed Forces, you can expect to find yourself the subject of an Inspector General investigation at least occasionally—it goes with the territory. You almost certainly have one or more judge advocates assigned to you, but you must remember that those judge advocates do not represent you in your personal capacity. Ask your judge advocate whom he or she represents in a case where you have been accused of wrongdoing—the judge advocate will give you a well-rehearsed spiel to the effect that “I represent the United States Government, not you.” You cannot form an attorney-client relationship with your staff judge advocate, and any information that you share with that judge advocate is not considered privileged. If you find yourself named in an Inspector General investigation, you have a great deal at stake—you should retain private counsel who understands the system and who represents only you. Captain Wright retired from the Navy Reserve last year, with more than 37 years of active and reserve service, including more than ten years of active duty. His military decorations include two Meritorious Service Medals, two Navy Commendation Medals, and a Joint Service Commendation Medal. His active duty assignments have included service at the Reserve Forces Policy Board, the United States 5th Fleet Headquarters (Bahrain), the Office of the Naval Inspector General, the A-12 Litigation Team, and the Office of the Judge Advocate General of the Navy. To set up a consult with Sam Wright call 202-787-1900. |
Congressional Liaison If you have been nominated to a higher grade, requiring Senate confirmation, the Department of Defense (DoD) will probably send someone to assist you, especially if opposition to your confirmation has arisen. But you must remember that the person DoD provides represents DoD, not you. If you find yourself caught up in a congressional investigation or confirmation battle, you need competent and diligent counsel who will represent your interests. Samuel F. Wright and Tully Rinckey have the experience to assist you. To set up a consult with Sam Wright call 202-787-1900. |
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Tully Rinckey PLLC
Attorneys & Counselors at Law
1800 K STREET NW SUITE 1110, WASHINGTON, DC 20006. PHONE: (202) 787-1900
441 NEW KARNER ROAD, ALBANY, NY 12205. PHONE: (518) 218-7100 FAX: (518) 218-0496
® © 2008 Tully Rinckey PLLC
