In Kentucky a special attorney, called a Warning Order Attorney (WOA), is appointed to notify the soldier of the action once it is filed. A time period of 50 days is given for the soldier to contact the WOA to let the WOA know his/her position on the dissolution action. It is time consuming and takes a lot of paperwork, but it is not impossible. Go and interview with as many attorneys as you can. Most initial appointments are free and the advice is priceless.
It is possible. Good example is; - Soldier was a Combat Medic for a Ranger Battalion. - Soldier deployed with unit to the Gulf War and received the CMB - Soldier later reclassed to Infantry - Soldier then deployed with an infantry unit to GWOT and received CIB. Type your answer here...
Yes. A person can file for divorce at any time during a marrage.
You may only file taxes for a deployed soldier if. A) you have a power of Attorney, specifically allowing it. B) you are the Head of Household over the deployed soldier. C) You are the deployed soldier. A general power of attorney does give you the right to file a tax return in the service members name, and the military does provide free tax filing overseas. The deployed service member may also defer filing his taxes until after he returns from deployment if he so chooses without any penalties from the IRS. -Morreale, Keith D. SGT US Army
No of course not!
my Question is do I have to registration to talk to a United States Army soldier deployed in West Africa if I do is there a fee
a soldier, military force, etc., deployed to maintain or restore peace
the only one i can think of right now is they were fighting on their home land
No. Priority mail is discounted but not free.
You said soldier. From the Japanese flag angle it was entirely a Naval and Naval air force battle. Ground troops were not deployed or landed.
The chances of getting a divorce, while your spouse is in the military, are very slim. There is alot of red tape, especially if they are currently deployed in a war. The laws were created so that men that were at war, wouldn't desert, after receiving divorce papers. There are several names for this, but the one I know it by is, "The Dear John". The Soldier's and Sailor's Civil Relief Act might make it difficult to have him served with the papers to sign. Additonally, while he is in an active theater of operation, it will be next to impossible. You will need to contact his command, but I suspect it will be next to impossible to complete this while he is deployed. Regardless, since you filed the waiver, the SSCR Act might make the divorce void when he returns if he fights back, since civil action against a service member cannot legally be processed due to the Act. Your best solution is to wait. He will be redeployed Stateside eventually, where this all becomes much easier.
Yes they can. The military commitment takes precedence over civilian commitments. If the soldier is called to court they can write to the court with a copy of their orders and reference the soldier and sailors relief act that will delay any court actions until they return.
More information is necessary. Has the soldier ALREADY left for deployment and is out of the jurisdictional area of the court? If so, the soldier should contact his unit's JAG Officer and advise them, and ask for guidance. When the court that issued the BW is notified by the military that you are deployed the BW will probably be withdrawn. However, if the soldier had not yet deployed by the court date and could have attended, the BW was issued properly. Although the BW can be served by the civil authorities, it also could have been delivered to the military authorities who would have compelled the soldier to appear.