If you break the law? Yes. If you commit a crime in the civilian world, like stealing jewelry at the mall or getting drunk in a bar and getting into a fight, you will go to a civilian jail. You will ALSO get in trouble in the military. If you commit a crime on a military post against military people - beating up another soldier or stealing another soldier's wallet - you will go to a military jail and get in military trouble.
yes
There is not any law against getting married while you are incarcerated. You will not be able to leave jail while you get married.
yes it is, while the personnell conducting/supervising the pft may not care as much while being deployed. you are still required to pass all stages of a pft while on active or reserve duty status
Yes, your retraining window does not change while deployed.
No.
If the incarcerated person was not incarcerated for the entire year, he was still an eligible dependent. Also, if the incarcerated person is under 18 and the parent's provide his support while he is incarcerated he can also be claimed as a dependent.
From my experiance, I get to see my fiance when ever I want while he is home. While he is deployed, he gets 1 midtour leave and then he comes home in a year. I'm lucky.
Bees do not leave the hive when it is dark.
While you are incarcerated yes, but most can generally gain this back once they are not incarcerated.
No.
An attorney should be contacted to rescind a guilty plea while incarcerated. A plea can be withdrawn or changed anytime before sentencing takes place.
When you're on leave from active duty, you're on leave - you're not a member of the reserve or National Guard, and you don't drill with them.