Military Lawyers:
A Sense of Duty
Meet
a few Wisconsin- licensed lawyers who blend civilian and military obligations.
by Dianne Molvig
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In
1999, as part of the Air Force JAG Department, Steve McManus, Milwaukee,
advised on the legality of bombing missions in Kosovo, working from
the bombers' base in England. Here, he is aboard a KC-135 refueling
aircraft. |
Like many people, Milwaukee attorney Steve McManus had no idea what military
lawyers do, until he became one seven years ago. In fact, when he was
a law student in the early 1990s, back in the days before "A Few Good
Men" hit the big screen and "JAG" made its television debut, "I didn't
even know the military had lawyers," he admits.
That lack of awareness persists among law students, as well as lawyers,
and now McManus is among those trying to dispel it. As a member of the
Air Force Reserve, he visits Wisconsin and Chicago law schools, where
he recruits future Air Force lawyers and tells students what it's like
to be a military lawyer. The picture he paints is as varied as the legal
profession itself.
A military legal career blends criminal law, general practice, and in-house
counsel responsibilities. A military lawyer might defend accused murderers,
prosecute misdemeanors, review business contracts, give advice on environmental
matters, handle labor disputes, draw up wills, counsel in divorces, and
more - all during just a few years of practice and while working for the
same employer.
In addition, military lawyers serve specialized functions. For example,
during military strikes in Afghanistan, lawyers are advising commanders
in selecting bombing targets and types of weaponry, to make sure U.S.
forces commit no violations of the Geneva Conventions.
Duties vary depending upon location, individual expertise, the world
situation, which branch of the armed services a military lawyer is in,
and whether he or she is pursuing a full-time military career or is a
member of the Reserve (federal) or National Guard (state). As reservists
or Guard members, many State Bar members serve the military part-time
while holding down full-time civilian jobs as lawyers and judges. Some
choose to take on nonlawyer roles for the military side of their lives.
For example, in the Wisconsin National Guard, Madison attorney Tom Rhatican
commands a helicopter unit, and Rock County circuit court judge James
Daley is an infantry commander. Many Bar members, however, opt to use
their legal expertise in both the military and civilian realms.
For some, joining the Guard or Reserve was a natural next step after
a stint of active duty. Others have never been full-timers, but have served
in the Guard or Reserve for years, even decades. What motivates them to
be involved? How do civilian lawyers juggle their private careers with
their part-time military duties? What happens if they're called up for
active duty for weeks or months at a time? We talked to several Bar members
to find out.
Ready and Waiting
Like many reservists, Louis Epps isn't sure what lies ahead. It's anyone's
guess if and when he'll be called to active duty now that the United States
is at war. But one thing is certain: Epps is eager to go. "I've been emailing
the Guard Bureau telling them, 'I'm here. I'm healthy. Come and get me.'"
Epps has been in the Wisconsin Air National Guard for 14 years, following
four years in the Air Force Reserve and, before that, nearly five years
as a full-time Air Force attorney. He's been deployed with his Guard unit
twice: to Japan, and to southern France, where his unit supported missions
to Bosnia. Both times Epps left his public defender job in Milwaukee for
several weeks. If he's deployed during the current conflict, he figures
he'll be gone three weeks, maybe longer. "From what I've heard recently,"
he says, "they seem to be going for longer deployments."
The uncertainty can get to you, he admits. "But I feel ready now," Epps
says, "and that relieves a lot of the stress. I know if I leave, I won't
dump on my teammates here at the office. They already have enough on their
plates."
Part of his preparation has been through his selection of cases. He's
avoided taking new long-term cases, such as homicides. And he's made sure
the status of his current cases is such that he could transfer them to
a colleague, if need be. "This is a great place to work," Epps says, "because
if you have an obligation like this, others step up and cover for you."
Still, leaving isn't easy, he concedes. "The hardest part is worrying
about clients," he says. "You form personal relationships; you feel responsible.
Even though you know someone else is going to pick up a case and do a
good job, you don't want to leave before it's done."
For 18 years, Epps has been blending his civilian and military obligations.
His reasons for doing the latter? "I don't know how to put this so it
doesn't sound corny," he notes, "but I grew up in Milwaukee. We were poor.
I can't think of many other places in the world where I would have had
the opportunity to go to college and become a lawyer. This state and this
country have been good to me."
Landing in JAG
Steve McManus considered attending the Air Force Academy after high school
- until he hit an obstacle. "I'm color blind," he explains, "so that prohibited
me from flying. I dropped the idea altogether." Instead, he eventually
ended up in law school in Arizona. After graduating in 1993, he discovered
that the military has full-time lawyers; one of his fellow bar exam-takers
had been a Marine attorney. McManus saw a route to a military career,
after all. He gained acceptance to the Air Force JAG (Judge Advocate General's)
Department in 1994.
He spent six-and-a-half years stationed in New Mexico and England, gaining
"incredible experience," he says, in multiple aspects of practicing law.
As just one example, "within my first three months, I was trying a fully
litigated court martial," McManus says. "I got trial experience right
away." In 1999, in the latter part of his active duty tour, his job was
to advise on the legality of bombing missions in Kosovo, working at a
base in England, from where the bombers flew their missions.
Now McManus describes his experiences to law students, as part of his
recruiting duties as an Air Force reservist. In addition, like all active
reservists (as opposed to inactive members, who merely keep their names
on a roster), McManus reports for an annual two-week tour of duty plus
12 additional days throughout the year. During this time, he performs
diverse tasks, as is typical for JAGs. For instance, he advised security
police at the base at General Mitchell Field on developing new gate inspection
procedures, and he handled a labor law case involving a civilian employee.
Meanwhile, he's also a full-time associate at an 11-attorney Milwaukee
firm. "When I did my two weeks of duty, I was at the base every day, 7
to 4," McManus says. "I came to my office each evening to stay on top
of things here. My firm is willing to work with me." He's betting he won't
be activated because of the Afghanistan war. If he is, his assignment
probably would be to substitute for a full-time attorney at the Milwaukee
base who gets deployed overseas.
McManus feels ready for whatever happens. That stems in part from his
days as a full-time Air Force lawyer. "In the military," he explains,
"someone is always leaving for a new assignment, and someone else comes
in. So you constantly have to be able to hand off information to the next
person. That's how I've learned to operate."
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Jim
Chereskin, now a sole practitioner in Florida and member of the Naval
Reserve, served much of his Navy active duty in the Philippines. |
Outside Help
Jim Chereskin's connection to the military began right after high school.
He joined the Marines because, coming from a northern Wisconsin farm family,
he needed financial help to attend college. After a tour in Vietnam, he
came back to his home state to go to college and the U.W. Law School,
from which he graduated in 1986. While a second-year law student, he called
a Navy JAG Corps recruiter one day "on a whim," applied, and got in. "I
had a job waiting for me when I graduated," Chereskin says.
Then came six years of active duty, split between the Philippines and
Diego Garcia, an island in the middle of the Indian Ocean. "If somebody
had told me in law school," he says, "that someday I'd be cabled down
onto a frigate to meet a client, or that I'd be hopping in an airplane
to fly 22 hours to see a client, I would have said 'you're crazy.'"
His last duty station was an Orlando, Fla., Navy boot camp. Now, nearly
a decade after his release from active duty, Chereskin remains in Florida,
where he's a civil litigation sole practitioner and a State Bar of Wisconsin
member. He's also in the Naval Reserve, with a status called "individual
ready reserve," which involves no ongoing training requirements. The Navy
would activate him only if a large-scale mobilization were to occur. He's
in the process, however, of transferring to active status in the Army
Reserve. Should he get a call from the latter, "I probably would be doing
legal assistance for Army personnel in central Florida who are being activated
and shipped overseas," he says.
He can't predict how long his activation might last, but for a sole
practitioner, even a few-weeks' stint would require turning over at least
some of his usual load of 50 active cases to someone else. He's lined
up two attorneys to help, if needed. What happens to his practice if he's
gone for several months? "Realistically," he says, "I'd have to start
over. It's one of those things; if it happens, it happens."
Gone
in 48 Hours
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