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Fix Our Military “Justice” System! | R. Davis Younts - S.O.S. #227

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Manage episode 509514053 series 3512165
Content provided by Theresa Carpenter. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Theresa Carpenter or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

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Justice should not depend on who’s most afraid of a headline. We sit down with nationally recognized trial lawyer and former Air Force JAG Davis Younts to examine where military justice goes off the rails—and how to bring it back on track. Davis shares the moment a 15‑minute acquittal at the Air Force Academy changed his career path from prosecution to defense, revealing what happens when allegations gain momentum and no one can find the off‑ramp.
We dig into the uneasy balance between command authority and legal oversight, why the Office of Special Trial Counsel (OSTC) is slowing cases while pulling commanders away from discipline, and how political risk trains leaders to push weak cases to court rather than make hard calls. You’ll hear specific, practical fixes: raising the evidentiary bar to open administrative investigations, creating an affirmative defense for leaders who are strictly enforcing published standards, and finally training investigating officers to recognize bias, weigh credibility, and document decisions with rigor.
On the UCMJ side, Davis makes the case to restore Article 32 preliminary hearings as a real evidentiary gate that protects true victims from re‑traumatization and the innocent from trials doomed by thin evidence. We also spotlight the “titling” trap—when simply being investigated can plant a damaging FBI record without charges or notice—along with common‑sense safeguards like notification and appeals. The through line is standards: physical readiness, professional conduct online, and the moral clarity to seek peace through strength without rewarding victimhood or punishing honest leadership.
If you care about due process, warrior ethos, and a military that can command trust at home and deterrence abroad, this conversation is for you. Listen, share with a teammate, and tell us where you think reform should start. And if this resonates, follow the show, leave a review, and pass it to someone who needs to hear it.

🔗 Connect with Davis: https://yountslaw.com/

Support the show

Visit my website: https://thehello.llc/THERESACARPENTER
Read my writings on my blog: https://www.theresatapestries.com/
Listen to other episodes on my podcast: https://storiesofservice.buzzsprout.com
Watch episodes of my podcast:
https://www.youtube.com/c/TheresaCarpenter76

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Opening & Guest Introduction (00:00:00)

2. From Prosecutor to Defense Advocate (00:02:05)

3. Academy Cases and a 15‑Minute Acquittal (00:06:15)

4. Command Authority vs. Legal Oversight (00:10:45)

5. OSTC: Promise, Politics, and Delays (00:15:30)

6. The Career Risk of Saying “No” (00:19:40)

7. False Allegations and Real Victims (00:23:55)

8. Administrative Investigations as Punishment (00:28:30)

9. Weaponized Complaints and Zero‑Defect Culture (00:33:40)

10. Standards, Fitness, and Warrior Ethos (00:39:20)

11. Fixing Admin Processes: Evidence and Defenses (00:44:30)

12. Training Investigating Officers (00:50:05)

13. UCMJ Reforms: Restore Article 32 (00:54:20)

14. “Titling” and Hidden FBI Records (00:58:40)

15. Conviction Pressure and Rollbacks (01:03:20)

16. Case Reviews and Integrity Units (01:07:10)

17. Closing, Resources, and Upcoming Shows (01:11:00)

240 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 509514053 series 3512165
Content provided by Theresa Carpenter. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Theresa Carpenter or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Send us a text

Justice should not depend on who’s most afraid of a headline. We sit down with nationally recognized trial lawyer and former Air Force JAG Davis Younts to examine where military justice goes off the rails—and how to bring it back on track. Davis shares the moment a 15‑minute acquittal at the Air Force Academy changed his career path from prosecution to defense, revealing what happens when allegations gain momentum and no one can find the off‑ramp.
We dig into the uneasy balance between command authority and legal oversight, why the Office of Special Trial Counsel (OSTC) is slowing cases while pulling commanders away from discipline, and how political risk trains leaders to push weak cases to court rather than make hard calls. You’ll hear specific, practical fixes: raising the evidentiary bar to open administrative investigations, creating an affirmative defense for leaders who are strictly enforcing published standards, and finally training investigating officers to recognize bias, weigh credibility, and document decisions with rigor.
On the UCMJ side, Davis makes the case to restore Article 32 preliminary hearings as a real evidentiary gate that protects true victims from re‑traumatization and the innocent from trials doomed by thin evidence. We also spotlight the “titling” trap—when simply being investigated can plant a damaging FBI record without charges or notice—along with common‑sense safeguards like notification and appeals. The through line is standards: physical readiness, professional conduct online, and the moral clarity to seek peace through strength without rewarding victimhood or punishing honest leadership.
If you care about due process, warrior ethos, and a military that can command trust at home and deterrence abroad, this conversation is for you. Listen, share with a teammate, and tell us where you think reform should start. And if this resonates, follow the show, leave a review, and pass it to someone who needs to hear it.

🔗 Connect with Davis: https://yountslaw.com/

Support the show

Visit my website: https://thehello.llc/THERESACARPENTER
Read my writings on my blog: https://www.theresatapestries.com/
Listen to other episodes on my podcast: https://storiesofservice.buzzsprout.com
Watch episodes of my podcast:
https://www.youtube.com/c/TheresaCarpenter76

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Opening & Guest Introduction (00:00:00)

2. From Prosecutor to Defense Advocate (00:02:05)

3. Academy Cases and a 15‑Minute Acquittal (00:06:15)

4. Command Authority vs. Legal Oversight (00:10:45)

5. OSTC: Promise, Politics, and Delays (00:15:30)

6. The Career Risk of Saying “No” (00:19:40)

7. False Allegations and Real Victims (00:23:55)

8. Administrative Investigations as Punishment (00:28:30)

9. Weaponized Complaints and Zero‑Defect Culture (00:33:40)

10. Standards, Fitness, and Warrior Ethos (00:39:20)

11. Fixing Admin Processes: Evidence and Defenses (00:44:30)

12. Training Investigating Officers (00:50:05)

13. UCMJ Reforms: Restore Article 32 (00:54:20)

14. “Titling” and Hidden FBI Records (00:58:40)

15. Conviction Pressure and Rollbacks (01:03:20)

16. Case Reviews and Integrity Units (01:07:10)

17. Closing, Resources, and Upcoming Shows (01:11:00)

240 episodes

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