Strategic Defense When Your Commission and Retirement Are at Risk
If you are searching for a Board of Inquiry Lawyer, you are likely facing one of the most serious administrative proceedings available against a commissioned officer.
A Board of Inquiry (BOI) determines whether an officer should be:
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Retained
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Separated
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Separated with an adverse characterization
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Separated in lieu of court-martial
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Recommended for dismissal
For many officers, the stakes are not limited to continued service.
A Board of Inquiry can determine:
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Whether you lose retirement eligibility
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Whether years of service are forfeited
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Whether your professional reputation is permanently damaged
National Security Law Firm represents officers nationwide in Board of Inquiry proceedings across all branches of the Armed Forces.
When your commission is on the line, strategy matters.
What Is a Board of Inquiry?
A Board of Inquiry is the officer equivalent of an Administrative Separation Board.
It is a formal administrative hearing convened to determine whether an officer should be involuntarily separated from service.
Unlike informal administrative actions, a BOI involves:
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A panel of senior officers
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Presentation of evidence
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Witness testimony
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Cross-examination
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Legal argument
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Formal findings and recommendations
The board makes findings regarding:
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Whether misconduct occurred
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Whether separation is warranted
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What characterization of service is appropriate
The outcome can define the remainder of your career.
Why You Need a Board of Inquiry Lawyer
A Board of Inquiry is not a paperwork review.
It is adversarial.
The government will present:
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Investigative findings
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Prior adverse actions
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Performance evaluations
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Witness testimony
You must present:
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Legal defenses
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Factual challenges
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Mitigating evidence
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Service record strength
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Retirement equities
A qualified Board of Inquiry Defense Attorney evaluates:
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Whether the evidence supports separation
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Whether procedural errors occurred
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Whether retention arguments are viable
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Whether discharge characterization can be mitigated
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Whether retirement protection arguments apply
This is structured litigation — not informal discussion.
Retirement Exposure and Years of Service
For senior officers, a Board of Inquiry may directly impact retirement eligibility.
In some cases:
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Officers near 20 years of service risk losing retirement
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Partial service credit may be affected
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Benefits may be altered depending on characterization
Strategic BOI defense must evaluate retirement exposure carefully.
Retention strategy often hinges on:
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Total years of honorable service
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Awards and decorations
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Operational history
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Prior performance evaluations
A Board of Inquiry Lawyer must frame the case within the full context of your career.
Insider Advantage: Former Military Judges
National Security Law Firm includes several former military judges who have presided over military proceedings and understand how officer panels evaluate evidence.
That perspective informs:
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Presentation of mitigation
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Credibility framing
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Risk assessment
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Panel psychology
Former judges understand how findings are written and how recommendations are structured.
That knowledge shapes strategy.
Former Prosecutors: Understanding Command Escalation
Board of Inquiry proceedings often arise from:
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GOMORs
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Court-martial convictions
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Adverse investigations
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Alleged misconduct
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Integrity concerns
Former military prosecutors understand:
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How command builds separation cases
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How patterns of misconduct are framed
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How aggravating factors are emphasized
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How risk narratives are constructed
Understanding how the case was built is critical to dismantling it.
Board of Inquiry vs Court-Martial
A Board of Inquiry is not a criminal trial.
However, it may follow:
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Court-martial proceedings
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Criminal investigations
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Administrative reprimands
An officer may face:
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Simultaneous criminal and administrative exposure
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Separation in lieu of court-martial
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Adverse administrative findings after acquittal
Understanding the interplay between criminal and administrative exposure is essential.
Common Grounds for Board of Inquiry Proceedings
Boards of Inquiry are commonly convened for:
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Serious misconduct
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Integrity violations
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Adverse GOMORs
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Security clearance concerns
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Professional misconduct
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Failure of leadership
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Loss of confidence determinations
Even when no criminal conviction occurs, administrative separation may proceed.
Discharge Characterization for Officers
Unlike enlisted personnel, officers are typically separated by dismissal or administrative discharge.
Characterization and findings may impact:
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Retirement
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Post-service federal employment
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Professional licensing
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Security clearance eligibility
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Civilian reputation
Mitigation strategy is central to Board of Inquiry defense.
Security Clearance Implications
Officers often hold sensitive positions requiring security clearances.
A Board of Inquiry finding may:
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Trigger clearance revocation
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Affect eligibility for future federal roles
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Impact contracting opportunities
National Security Law Firm evaluates BOI exposure within the broader clearance framework.
Administrative action and clearance action frequently move together.
How to Prepare for a Board of Inquiry
Preparation typically includes:
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Full review of investigative record
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Assessment of command recommendations
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Identification of evidentiary weaknesses
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Development of witness strategy
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Framing of service record
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Retirement equity presentation
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Anticipation of panel questions
A Board of Inquiry Lawyer approaches preparation as structured litigation.
How Much Does a Board of Inquiry Lawyer Cost?
The cost of hiring a Board of Inquiry Lawyer depends on:
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Complexity of allegations
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Years of service involved
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Number of witnesses
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Travel and hearing location
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Related criminal or clearance exposure
BOI defense requires significant preparation and coordination.
We provide transparent consultation discussions tailored to your case.
When Should You Contact a Board of Inquiry Defense Attorney?
Immediately upon receiving:
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Show cause notification
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Board initiation memorandum
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Separation recommendation
Early involvement preserves options and strengthens retention strategy.
Frequently Asked Questions About Board of Inquiry Proceedings
What is a Board of Inquiry?
A Board of Inquiry is a formal administrative hearing to determine whether a commissioned officer should be involuntarily separated from military service.
Is a Board of Inquiry a criminal proceeding?
No. It is an administrative proceeding, but it can follow criminal investigations and may have career-ending consequences.
Can an officer be retained after a Board of Inquiry?
Yes. The board may recommend retention depending on the evidence, service record, and mitigation presented.
Does a Board of Inquiry affect retirement?
Yes. Officers nearing retirement eligibility may risk losing retirement benefits depending on the board’s findings and recommendations.
Do I need a civilian Board of Inquiry Lawyer?
You have the right to retain civilian counsel. Many officers seek experienced Board of Inquiry representation to protect their commission and retirement.
Facing a Board of Inquiry?
If you are facing a Board of Inquiry, this is not the time for guesswork.
The decisions you make early — what you say, who you speak to, whether you demand trial, whether you hire civilian counsel — can permanently affect your freedom, career, retirement, and reputation.
Before you move forward, review our full Court Martial Lawyer practice page:
👉 Court Martial Lawyer | Military Defense & UCMJ Attorneys Nationwide
There, you’ll learn:
- How General, Special, and Summary Courts-Martial differ
- What happens at an Article 32 hearing
- Why hiring a civilian military defense lawyer changes leverage
- How former military judges and prosecutors evaluate cases
- How court-martial exposure intersects with separation, GOMORs, and security clearances
- What makes a defense team structurally stronger than the government
When you are facing the full power of the United States military justice system, experience matters — but structure matters more.
The government is organized.
Your defense must be stronger.
Why Service Members Nationwide Choose National Security Law Firm
When you are facing the power of the United States government, experience alone is not enough.
Structure matters.
Perspective matters.
Authority matters.
National Security Law Firm was built differently.
We are not a solo former JAG practice.
We are not a volume-based intake firm.
We are not a one-attorney operation.
We are a litigation team.
Former Prosecutors. Former Military Judges. Federal Trial Leadership.
Our military defense practice includes:
- Former military prosecutors who built UCMJ cases
- Several former military judges who presided over courts-martial and decided criminal cases
- A former United States Attorney who led federal prosecutions at the highest level
That depth of institutional insight is extraordinarily rare in military defense practice.
We understand how cases are charged.
We understand how judges evaluate credibility.
We understand how prosecutors assess risk.
That perspective informs every strategy decision we make.
A Firm Structure Designed to Win Complex Cases
Most military defense firms operate as individual practitioners.
National Security Law Firm operates as a coordinated litigation unit.
Significant cases are evaluated through our proprietary Attorney Review Board, where experienced attorneys collaborate on strategy before critical decisions are made.
You are not hiring one lawyer in isolation.
You are retaining the collective insight of a structured defense team.
Full-System Defense — Not Just Trial Representation
A court-martial rarely exists in isolation.
It can trigger:
- Administrative separation proceedings
- Boards of Inquiry
- Security clearance investigations
- Federal employment consequences
- Record correction or discharge upgrade issues
National Security Law Firm uniquely operates across these interconnected systems.
We do not defend your case in a vacuum.
We defend your career.
Nationwide and Worldwide Representation
We represent service members:
- Across the United States
- Overseas installations
- Every branch of the Armed Forces
Your duty station does not limit your access to elite civilian defense.
If you need a court martial lawyer, a UCMJ attorney, or a military defense lawyer, we can represent you wherever you are stationed.
4.9-Star Reputation Built on Results
Our clients consistently trust us with the most serious moments of their careers.
You can review our 4.9-star Google rating here.
We do not take that trust lightly.
Speak With a Board of Inquiry Lawyer Today
If you are facing a Board of Inquiry, do not treat it as administrative routine.
It can determine your career, your retirement, and your professional future.
Consult with an experienced Board of Inquiry Lawyer today.
Schedule a free consultation today.
National Security Law Firm: It’s Our Turn to Fight for You.