About Joseph L. Jordan Attorney at Law — Military Defense Comanche County Oklahoma
Military defense Comanche County service members facing UCMJ charges at Fort Sill rely on Joseph L. Jordan Attorney at Law. The firm represents U.S. military service members charged with serious offenses under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, including Article 120 sexual assault, Article 134 offenses, and administrative separation boards. Attorney Joseph Jordan operates nationally from a base near Fort Sill, representing clients stationed at Fort Liberty, Fort Cavazos, and installations worldwide. Clients searching for experienced UCMJ defense find Jordan’s decades of military justice work unmatched by most civilian firms.
Joseph Jordan’s practice covers courts-martial defense, GOMOR rebuttals, administrative separation boards, and related matters across all branches of the U.S. military. His team, including Mrs. Patti and Tasha, maintains communication with clients throughout cases that often stretch 12 to 24 months. The firm’s military justice focus allows precise defense strategy from pre-charge investigation through trial, board proceedings, and appellate action if needed.
What Clients Say
Reviewers describe Joseph Jordan as extraordinarily dedicated, professional, and compassionate under the pressure of UCMJ cases where careers and freedom are at stake. Clients cleared of Article 120 charges describe full acquittals after 18+ month cases. Officers and senior NCOs facing separation describe being retained in service with careers restored. Parents of accused service members describe Jordan as the counsel their child needed after early investigators built flawed cases.
Military Defense Comanche County — Practice Areas & Services
- Courts-martial defense (general, special, summary)
- Article 120 sexual assault defense
- GOMOR (General Officer Memorandum of Reprimand) rebuttals
- Administrative separation board representation
- Defense in Article 15 non-judicial punishment
- Military appellate representation
- Representation at Fort Sill, Fort Cavazos, Fort Liberty, and worldwide
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I hire civilian counsel for a UCMJ case?
Service members have a right to free military defense counsel through Trial Defense Service (TDS), but civilian counsel with UCMJ experience can focus exclusively on your case without the caseload constraints TDS attorneys face. Many service members retain civilian counsel alongside TDS for major charges where career and freedom are at stake.
What happens at an administrative separation board?
Administrative separation boards are non-criminal proceedings that determine whether a service member should be retained or separated, and if separated, with what characterization of service. A board of three officers weighs evidence, hears witnesses, and votes. An unfavorable board result can mean loss of benefits, so representation matters significantly.
How long do courts-martial take?
General courts-martial for serious charges often take 12 to 24 months from initial allegations through trial. Pre-trial investigations, Article 32 hearings, and motions practice consume significant time. Defense counsel use this period for investigation, expert retention, and preparation that frequently determines trial outcomes.
Quick Facts: Military Defense in Comanche County, Oklahoma
- Uniform Code of Military Justice: Federal military criminal law under 10 U.S.C. Chapter 47 — 10 U.S.C. Chapter 47 (UCMJ)
- Fort Sill: U.S. Army Field Artillery and ADA installation in Comanche County, home to thousands of service members — U.S. Army
- Courts-Martial Types: Summary, special, and general courts-martial with increasing authority and consequences — Manual for Courts-Martial
Related Guide: Criminal Defense Attorneys — ReachAttorneys


