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SFC Chris Dunsmore
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Ill be going the 3rd week in Jan. Any insight, recommendations or guidance would be helpful.
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Cpl Casey Meyer
Cpl Casey Meyer
>1 y
My recommendation is to do as much research on JASTA as possible so you have all the intelligence needed. If you type it in to a search engine and read up on the different views and form your own perspective on it, the main issue is the status of forces agreement, which protects service members from civil action on foreign soil. JASTA effectively, albeit unintentionally, throws SOFA out the door.
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SFC Chris Dunsmore
SFC Chris Dunsmore
>1 y
Thanks. I've been reading as much as I can. There's a lot of articles talking about what's wrong. But very few with way to fix it. Cpl Casey Meyer -
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Cpl Casey Meyer
Cpl Casey Meyer
>1 y
That's why they want us out there, to stand in front of congressional committee and let them know. Personally I believe there needs to be an amendment that protects the individual soldier. JASTA won't be repealed, but needs to offer protection for individuals, meaning the suite can be against a nation, but not a single servicemember. The gravity of this opens the door for ANY of us, still serving or not, to be the recipient of a suit for acts committed in war, and it's as simple as them just picking a name because your Facebook says you served in combat. We need protection, JASTA does not afford that.
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Cpl Casey Meyer
Cpl Casey Meyer
>1 y
There also needs to be an amendment protecting each nation, and what I mean by that is it needs to be like our laws in that the burden of proof lies on the plaintiff. If there is no proof of a wrong committed, the suit cannot go forward, otherwise it's all just a crap shoot. There has to be physical evidence, and a chain of custody for said evidence.
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