TrustCast Show
What happens when a seventh grader buries a time capsule in 1993 saying he wants to play football as long as his body allows, join the army, and become an attorney — and then 25 years later his teacher digs it up and sends him a note saying he did exactly that — after commanding troops in combat as a field artillery officer in Iraq, redesigning a cavalry troop from scratch, deploying to Europe, writing the military criminal jurisdiction playbook for the entire European theater at V Corps, and then building a solo firm in Kentucky where his children asked to stay because they had never met people as kind anywhere else in the world? In this episode of the Trustcast Show, Zane Myers speaks with Joey Comley, founder of The Soldier's Advocate, about the single most dangerous thing running through a soldier's head the moment CID shows up or a command pulls them aside — the belief that the truth will set them free — and why every attorney who has ever represented someone in a criminal context would agree that it is dramatically harder to help a client who has already made a statement. Joey explains what an Article 15 actually is and why getting one does not automatically mean getting busted down in rank, when a soldier should use their free appointed military counsel and when they need to pick up the phone and call private counsel, and how military police have exactly the same legal authority to lie to a suspect that civilian police do. They also discuss the SHARP case where the alleged victim had told witnesses she knew how to get any leader removed from her supervision by filing a complaint — a case that had to be unwound through a board proceeding, a reconsidered 15-6 investigation in Mississippi, the Department of the Army Suitability Evaluation Board, and the desk of the Chief of the National Guard Bureau — how security clearance investigations interact with criminal cases and why losing a clearance can cost a transitioning soldier 20 to 30% of their annual earning potential, the joint terrorism task force interview where Joey had to physically stop his client from talking on no less than four or five occasions, the bench trial where the judge started packing up his things before the verdict and Joey's response from the podium that prompted an immediate not guilty on all charges, and why the most experienced NCOs in any formation almost always had at least one Article 15. Joey Comley is the founder of The Soldier's Advocate, a military criminal defense and federal investigation firm based in Kentucky, practicing worldwide under the UCMJ. Connect with Joey Comley: thesoldiersadvocate.com Phone: 270-360-0142 Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Joey Comley 00:55 The first thing running through a soldier's head when CID knocks — and why it gets them in the most trouble 01:45 The truth will not set you free — what the investigator's version of events actually is 02:36 The joint terrorism task force interview — physically stopping a client from talking four or five times 03:54 From field artilleryman to judge advocate — what a seventh grade time capsule predicted 05:22 ROTC scholarship, freedom from dad, and a first duty station in Schweinfurt Germany 06:28 Iraq, Operation Iraqi Freedom 2, and redesigning a cavalry troop from scratch 07:20 The funded legal education packet — why his boss said he had no shot and why he was wrong 08:46 What a typical client looks like and how they find him — zero advertising budget 11:10 The firm is intentionally one of one — why he does everything himself 12:23 Military criminal defense is about 80% of the practice 13:25 Does being willing to go to trial change how opposing counsel treats you 14:24 How attorneys poke at each other and why rising above it brings the managing partner to the table 15:59 A soldier finds out they're under investigation — the two or three moves that determine everything 17:20 Free military legal counsel — what it covers and what it cannot do 19:44 Are military prosecutors actually after the truth — and does it differ from civilian practice 21:37 A prosecutor who called after the preliminary hearing to say he no longer had probable cause 22:45 The bench trial — the judge packing up his things, the statement from the podium, and a not guilty from the bench 24:33 Can military police lie to a suspect the same way civilian police can 24:52 Article 15 — what it actually is, what it means, and why rank loss is not automatic 27:22 When should a soldier use appointed counsel and when should they call private counsel #JoeyComley #TheSoldiersAdvocate #TrustcastShow #MilitaryCriminalDefense #UCMJ #ArticleFifteen #SecurityClearance #SHARPcase #MilitaryLaw #JudgeAdvocate
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