By Attorney Shawn Lupella, Managing Partner | Florida Bar Member Since 2004 | Former Okaloosa County Prosecutor | 10,000+ Court Appearances
Last month, a staff sergeant from Eglin Air Force Base sat in my office, completely devastated. He’d been arrested for DUI on Highway 98 near Destin. First offense. No accident. BAC of .09, barely over the legal limit. He thought he’d just pay a fine and move on.
Then his commander called him in. Reduction in rank. Loss of pay. Security clearance suspended. His entire 12-year military career was collapsing because of one night of bad judgment.
“Why didn’t anyone tell me it would be this bad?” he asked.
I’ve been a military DUI defense attorney in Fort Walton Beach for over 20 years. I’ve represented hundreds of service members from Eglin Air Force Base and Hurlburt Field facing DUI charges. The answer to “what happens if you get a DUI in the military” is always the same: you face two separate legal systems simultaneously, and both can destroy your career.
A DUI in the military isn’t just a criminal charge. It’s a career-ending event unless you handle it correctly from day one.
You’re Fighting Two Battles Simultaneously
When a service member gets arrested for DUI in Florida, two completely separate proceedings begin immediately. Most people only focus on one, usually the wrong one.
The Civilian DUI Case
This is what happens in Florida criminal court. You’ll be charged under Florida Statute 316.193 in Okaloosa County, Walton County, or Santa Rosa County depending on where the arrest occurred.
Standard civilian DUI penalties include fines ranging from $500 to $2,000, potential jail time up to six months for first offense, license suspension for 180 days to one year, mandatory DUI school, community service, probation, and ignition interlock device installation.
For most civilians, these penalties are severe. For military members, they’re just the beginning.
The Military Consequences Under UCMJ
Your command will initiate its own proceedings under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. This happens regardless of what happens in civilian court.
Even if your civilian DUI charge gets dismissed. Even if you complete pretrial diversion. Even if you’re found not guilty at trial. Your command can still pursue punishment under the UCMJ.
I’ve had clients beat their civilian DUI charges completely, only to face Non-Judicial Punishment (NJP) for the same conduct. The military doesn’t need the same level of proof as criminal court.
How Your Command Finds Out About Your DUI
Many service members think they can keep their DUI arrest quiet. They can’t.
Local law enforcement agencies in Northwest Florida have established protocols for notifying military commands when service members are arrested. Eglin Air Force Base and Hurlburt Field both have liaison officers who monitor arrests.
Your unit typically learns about your arrest within hours, not days. I’ve had cases where commanders knew about the DUI before the service member posted bond.
If you’re arrested off-base by civilian police, they notify the base. If you’re arrested on base by Security Forces, your command knows immediately. Either way, there’s no hiding it.
What Your Commander Can Do: Non-Judicial Punishment
Most military DUI cases result in Non-Judicial Punishment under Article 15 of the UCMJ. This is administrative punishment your commander can impose without a court-martial.
NJP for DUI typically means rank reduction where you can be demoted one or more ranks, losing pay grade and authority. For NCOs and officers, this is career-ending. You can lose half of your monthly pay for up to two months through forfeiture of pay. Some commanders impose this for longer periods through administrative means. Extra duty means additional work assignments on top of your normal duties, typically 45 days. Restriction to base confines you to the installation for 45-60 days. You can’t leave except for work, medical appointments, or court. A letter of reprimand is a permanent black mark in your personnel file that kills promotion opportunities.
The catch with NJP: you can refuse it and demand a court-martial instead. But most service members don’t because court-martial carries worse potential consequences. An experienced military DUI defense attorney can help you decide which option protects your career better.
Security Clearance: The Immediate Career Killer
For most service members at Eglin AFB and Hurlburt Field, security clearance is essential to their job. A DUI arrest triggers automatic review by the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency (DCSA).
Your clearance may be suspended while charges are pending. This removes you from your current position immediately. You can’t perform your duties. You can’t access classified information. You become a liability to your unit.
Even if you keep your clearance after the DUI resolves, you’ll face enhanced scrutiny for years. Any future incidents, even minor, will likely result in permanent revocation.
I’ve represented clients who kept their jobs after DUI but lost their clearances. They were eventually separated from service because they couldn’t perform their assigned duties.
Will You Get Kicked Out of the Military for a DUI?
The short answer: possibly, especially if you have prior incidents or aggravating factors.
Your command can initiate administrative separation proceedings to remove you from service. A General Discharge means you lose most veterans’ benefits but avoid the “bad” label of other discharges. Other Than Honorable (OTH) brings significant benefit restrictions and makes finding employment extremely difficult afterward. Bad Conduct Discharge via court-martial is equivalent to a felony conviction for employment purposes. You lose all VA benefits, can’t own firearms, and face severe employment barriers.
You’re more likely to be kicked out if this is a second DUI (almost guaranteed separation), your BAC was very high (.15 or above), you caused an accident especially with injuries, you refused to cooperate with police, you have other disciplinary issues in your record, you’re within your first enlistment term, or you’re an officer held to higher standards.
You might avoid separation if this is your first offense with no prior incidents, your BAC was barely over the limit, no accident or injuries occurred, you have strong performance evaluations, you immediately took responsibility and sought treatment, you have significant time in service, or you have combat deployments or awards.
Court-Martial: When DUI Becomes Criminal Under UCMJ
Serious DUI cases can result in court-martial under Article 111 (Drunk Driving) of the UCMJ. This typically happens when you caused an accident with serious injuries, this is your second or third DUI, you were driving on base, you refused to submit to testing, or you have other concurrent UCMJ violations.
Court-martial penalties for DUI can include confinement (military prison) up to 18 months, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, reduction to lowest enlisted grade (E-1), Bad Conduct Discharge or Dishonorable Discharge, and a federal conviction on your record (worse than state conviction).
A court-martial conviction is a federal criminal conviction. It’s not a state misdemeanor. The consequences follow you for life.
The Promotion and Career Advancement Problem
Even if you avoid separation after a DUI, your career advancement stops.
For enlisted personnel, negative counseling statements from NJP make competitive evaluation points nearly impossible to achieve. You won’t get promoted. Your peers will pass you by. Eventually, you’ll be forced out under “high year tenure” rules when you can’t advance.
For officers, the damage is even worse. The “up or out” promotion system means if you don’t get promoted on schedule, your career ends. A DUI on your record makes promotion boards reject you automatically.
I’ve represented senior NCOs with 15+ years of service who lost everything because one DUI destroyed their promotion potential. They couldn’t re-enlist because they couldn’t advance. They lost their pensions because they couldn’t reach 20 years.
Defense Strategies for Military DUI Cases
As both a former prosecutor and an experienced DUI defense attorney who specializes in military cases, I approach these situations strategically on both fronts.
We fight your Florida DUI charge by challenging the traffic stop if police lacked reasonable suspicion, challenging field sobriety tests for improper administration or medical conditions, challenging breath test results for machine calibration or observation period violations, negotiating reduced charges where reckless driving avoids DUI conviction, and pursuing diversion programs for first-time offenders.
The goal is avoiding a DUI conviction on your civilian record. No conviction means weaker military case.
Simultaneously, we work to minimize military consequences by communicating with your command to present mitigating circumstances early, documenting your value through performance evaluations and awards, preparing for NJP by knowing your rights and negotiating terms, challenging security clearance suspension by working with clearance attorneys, and coordinating with JAG for additional support.
The key is acting on both tracks simultaneously from day one. Waiting to address the military side until after your civilian case resolves leaves you defenseless when your commander moves forward with NJP.
What You Should Do Immediately After Arrest
The first 72 hours after a DUI arrest determine how badly this damages your military career.
Don’t explain anything to police without an attorney. Don’t discuss it with your commander yet. Don’t talk to your chain of command until you’ve consulted with experienced military defense counsel. Everything you say can be used in both civilian court and military proceedings.
Write down exactly what happened while it’s fresh. Where you were, what you drank, over what time period. Why you were stopped. What tests were administered. What the officer said and did. Names of witnesses. Give this information only to your attorney.
Call an attorney who understands both systems immediately. We need time to preserve evidence, interview witnesses, and begin building your defense before prosecutors and commanders solidify their positions.
Immediately schedule a substance abuse evaluation and begin any recommended treatment. Commanders view this as taking responsibility. It demonstrates you’re addressing the problem proactively rather than being forced into it. This can be the difference between retention and separation.
Work with your attorney to notify your chain of command in a way that doesn’t provide ammunition for military prosecution. You have a duty to report, but how you report matters tremendously.
The Reality of Military DUI Cases
After 20 years defending service members from Eglin and Hurlburt, I can tell you that a DUI doesn’t automatically end your military career. But it will if you handle it wrong.
I’ve successfully defended service members who kept their careers, maintained their clearances, and continued serving. I’ve also watched people lose everything because they didn’t take it seriously or didn’t get proper legal help fast enough.
The difference between those outcomes comes down to immediate, aggressive defense on both the civilian and military fronts.
Got arrested for DUI while serving at Eglin AFB or Hurlburt Field? Call (850) 362-6655 immediately. We defend military DUI cases throughout Okaloosa, Walton, and Santa Rosa Counties.
Frequently Asked Questions
What crimes can kick you out of the military?
Serious crimes that typically result in separation include any felony conviction, multiple DUIs, domestic violence convictions (automatic separation under Lautenberg Amendment due to firearm restrictions), drug offenses, sexual assault or harassment, theft or fraud, and any offense resulting in court-martial conviction. Even misdemeanor convictions can lead to administrative separation depending on your command’s decision and your prior record. The military holds service members to higher standards than civilian employment.
Can you get a waiver for a DUI in the military?
If you’re trying to join the military after a civilian DUI, you may qualify for a waiver after 2-5 years if you have no other criminal history, completed all court requirements, and can demonstrate rehabilitation. However, waivers aren’t guaranteed. Each branch maintains discretion. If you’re already serving and get a DUI, there’s no “waiver” that erases it. You face military consequences regardless of how your civilian case resolves. Your command may show leniency for first offenses, but that’s discretionary, not a formal waiver process.
How does the military find out about DUI?
The military learns about DUI arrests through direct notification from civilian law enforcement to military liaison officers, Security Forces reports for on-base arrests, routine background checks and security clearance investigations, self-reporting requirements (you’re required to notify your command), and court records that are publicly accessible. In Northwest Florida, local police departments notify Eglin Air Force Base and Hurlburt Field within hours of arresting service members. Trying to hide a DUI from your command always fails and makes consequences worse.
Is a DUI a dishonorable discharge?
A DUI alone rarely results in dishonorable discharge, which is reserved for the most serious offenses via general court-martial (typically felonies like murder, rape, or desertion). However, DUI can result in Bad Conduct Discharge through special court-martial for serious cases or repeat offenses, Other Than Honorable discharge through administrative separation (most common for DUI), or General discharge (best-case scenario if you’re being separated). The characterization depends on your overall service record, the severity of the DUI, and whether it’s a repeat offense. Even a General discharge eliminates most VA benefits and severely limits future employment opportunities.
