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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
The Chow Hall
are west point cadets considered higher ranking than enlisted?
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<blockquote data-quote="OhIIICobra" data-source="post: 10145327" data-attributes="member: 33388"><p>I know an enlisted member can't take pay. </p><p></p><p>I know of one instance where an Airman in my squadron was overpaid for about 2 years on BAS and he kept it on the down low. One day he went to finance and the NCO helping him discovered the error, so they took action to re-coupe his indebtedness...all at once, so he didn't get paid anything for over a month. He was flaming mad at finance and how an NCO garnished his pay (or so he thought). So I could see how certain pay issues may make someone think another enlisted member yields power over their pay as far as taking it.</p><p></p><p>If it was NJP for an Article-15 the most a commissioned officer who must have administrative control over the member and be on G-series orders can actually take is 1/2 base pay for 2 months. The UCMJ doesn't allow for more in terms of pay forfeiture and it would not pass legal review at any DoD JAG. </p><p></p><p>A lot of enlisted also think that any commissioned officer can impose NJP, most can only recommend just like enlisted. If a certain commander doesn't have the grade required to impose the punishment on a member that is needed, it is elevated to the next level of leadership that has the authority an is on G-series orders. Had to coordinate a few Article 15s this way when our acting commander (a Captain) on G-series orders didn't have enough bite to correct the member, so an O-6 at the Group did.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="OhIIICobra, post: 10145327, member: 33388"] I know an enlisted member can't take pay. I know of one instance where an Airman in my squadron was overpaid for about 2 years on BAS and he kept it on the down low. One day he went to finance and the NCO helping him discovered the error, so they took action to re-coupe his indebtedness...all at once, so he didn't get paid anything for over a month. He was flaming mad at finance and how an NCO garnished his pay (or so he thought). So I could see how certain pay issues may make someone think another enlisted member yields power over their pay as far as taking it. If it was NJP for an Article-15 the most a commissioned officer who must have administrative control over the member and be on G-series orders can actually take is 1/2 base pay for 2 months. The UCMJ doesn't allow for more in terms of pay forfeiture and it would not pass legal review at any DoD JAG. A lot of enlisted also think that any commissioned officer can impose NJP, most can only recommend just like enlisted. If a certain commander doesn't have the grade required to impose the punishment on a member that is needed, it is elevated to the next level of leadership that has the authority an is on G-series orders. Had to coordinate a few Article 15s this way when our acting commander (a Captain) on G-series orders didn't have enough bite to correct the member, so an O-6 at the Group did. [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
The Chow Hall
are west point cadets considered higher ranking than enlisted?
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