DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY BOARD FOR CORRECTION OF NAVAL RECORDS 701 S. COURTHOUSE ROAD, SUITE 1001 ARLINGTON, VA 22204-2490 Docket No: 0224-19 Ref: Signature Date This is in reference to your application for correction of your naval record pursuant to Title 10, United States Code, Section 1552. After careful and conscientious consideration of the entire record, the Board for Correction of Naval Records (Board) found the evidence submitted was insufficient to establish the existence of probable material error or injustice. Consequently, your application has been denied. Although your application was not filed in a timely manner, the Board found it in the interest of justice to waive the statute of limitations and consider your application on its merits. A three-member panel of the Board, sitting in executive session, considered your application on 8 January 2020. The names and votes of the members of the panel will be furnished upon request. Your allegations of error and injustice were reviewed in accordance with administrative regulations and procedures applicable to the proceedings of this Board. Documentary material considered by the Board consisted of your application, together with all material submitted in support thereof, relevant portions of your naval record, as well as applicable statutes, regulations, and policies. You enlisted in the Marine Corps and began a period of active duty on 30 April 1976. You subsequently completed this enlistment with an Honorable characterization of service on 27 March 1979 and reenlisted on 28 March 1979. On 10 February 1981, you were convicted by special court-martial (SPCM) of an unauthorized absence for the period from 26 June 1979 to 15 May 1980. As punishment, you were awarded reduction in rank, confinement, and discharge from the naval service with a bad conduct discharge (BCD). After the BCD was approved at all levels of review, you were discharged on 3 August 1982. The Board carefully weighed all potentially mitigating factors in your case, including your desire to upgrade your discharge. The Board considered your contention that when you came home on leave after being overseas, you found your mother to be terminally ill; your mother was a cancer patient; your siblings were younger than you; and no one was caring for your mother. You felt it was your “obligation to break [your] oath to the United States, go AWOL, and stay home to care for the one who bore [you] into this world.” The Board has no authority to set aside a court­martial conviction and must limit its review to determining whether the sentence should be modified as a matter of clemency. Your request was fully and carefully considered by the Board in light of the Secretary of Defense’s 25 July 2018 memorandum, “Guidance to Military Discharge Review boards and Boards for Correction of Military/Naval Records Regarding Equity, Injustice, or Clemency Determinations.” The Board determined that no clemency is warranted in your case. In this regard, the Board considered your contentions and was sympathetic to the circumstances surrounding your mother but concluded that there was insufficient evidence to warrant clemency given the severity of your misconduct that resulted in a BCD. In its review, the Board discerned no material error or injustice in your discharge, nor did it find that clemency was warranted. It is regretted that the circumstances of your case are such that favorable action cannot be taken. You are entitled to have the Board reconsider its decision upon the submission of new matters, which will require you to complete and submit a new DD Form 149. New matters are those not previously presented to or considered by the Board. In this regard, it is important to keep in mind that a presumption of regularity attaches to all official records. Consequently, when applying for a correction of an official naval record, the burden is on the applicant to demonstrate the existence of probable material error or injustice. Sincerely, 1/24/2020