Define what you mean by "division officer."
If you are referring to a law enforcement officer, their personnel records are sealed from idle public scrutiny unless your attorney is successful in having them subopoeana'd to court.
You would have to obtain a copy of the service member's personnel file.
The Freedom of Information act will allow you to request personnel files from the Navy. The request can be sent to the National Personnel Records Center in St. Louis, Missouri.
You don't. Such information is not made a matter of public record, for the sake of operational security.
As soon as he checks with local law enforcement, runs your record, or is notified by the arresting agency/officers.
National Personnel Records Center 9700 Page Ave. St. Louis, MO 63132
For an individual's complete military service record, you send a request to the National Personnel Records Centre in St. Louis, MO. See related link at the bottom.
For an individual's complete military service record, you send a request to the National Personnel Records Centre in St. Louis, MO. See related link at the bottom.
Your local hall of records -- the property tax division -- has a record of your purchase price.
You do the division!
Absolutely not. In fact, only medical personnel are allowed to do cavity searches. Police officers can do a strip search of someone they've arrested if they can justify why they are doing so (they saw the person shove a baggie in their pants and can't find it through traditional searching methods).
If you can find a copy in a library, see the five volume set on the 28th Division by E.S. Wallace. It is called "28th Division Pennsylvania Guard In the World War" and was published in 1923 in Pittsburgh, PA. There are more photos, lists of names and photos than you will know what to do with.
They are enlisted and officers in the US Navy. As such their pay scale is the same as all the rest of the personnel. You can pull up the pay chart and using their rank and time in service to find their base pay.