Involuntary Recall from the Individual Ready Reserve (IRR)
Bill Meili has a proven track record of success fighting involuntary recalls. Click here for a relevant case study, or contact the firm for help with your situation at 214-363-1828, or our 24-Hour Helpline: 214-536-3888.
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Army IRR Mobilization
Are you affected by involuntary mobilization orders to members of the IRR? Click here to learn more.
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Marine IRR Screening
What to do if you’re a Marine holding a screening order, wondering if you even qualify for an exemption or delay from the involuntary recall? Click here to learn more.
How We Can Help
We have a proven track record of success in IRR cases.
The Delay and Exemption (D&E) process can be daunting. The regulation doesn’t offer much in the way of specific help or guidance for the individual attempting to navigate the system. Deadlines are a key issue, communication with HRC is virtually impossible, and certainly so on substantive issues, and of course, everything is ramped up emotionally with a report date looming, and the near certainty that duty will be in Iraq or Afghanistan. Add to all this the fact that involuntary mobilization orders never come at an opportune moment in the life of the IRR officer, or his or her family, and you get a taste of how difficult it can be to craft a winning D&E packet.
Please read the IRR Delay and Exemption Client Testimonial #1, IRR Delay and Exemption Client Testimonial #2, and IRR Delay and Exemption Client Testimonial #3 for the client's account of his/her own experience with this type of case.
If you need help, or if you know someone who has received orders who you feel has a valid claim of extreme hardship, sufficient to warrant an exemption, please contact us.
If you have already submitted a Delay and Exemption packet yourself, or if you know someone who has, and that packet has been denied, or you feel it might be denied, you have the right to appeal. Our firm has handled such cases on appeal, and been fortunate each time to have the appeal authority reverse the original adverse decision and grant the officer’s exemption and honorable discharge.
Despite what you may have read about IRR recalls and the D&E process generally, exemptions and delays are granted. Appeals are granted and do succeed. Often a person’s medical history and condition can be critical to success in these Delay and Exemption cases, but you will not necessarily know that from a cursory look at the regulations. If you are in doubt about any aspect of the process, or if you need more information to make an informed decision, I would be more than happy to discuss your case with you. Together we can look at all the issues, and then determine the best course to take.
Contact us today for more information about how we can help.
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