Why Service Members Must Take Control of Their Discharge Story Before It’s Too Late

When a service member leaves the military, the final paperwork does more than close a chapter, it defines what comes next. Benefits, healthcare, employment, dignity, and recognition of sacrifice all hinge on what is written, or omitted, in those final records.

A 2025 report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office makes one thing clear: the system designed to review and correct discharge decisions is inconsistent, often unclear, and heavily dependent on documentation that may never have been properly recorded in the first place.

That reality places a burden where it should never have been, on the service member to ensure their story is preserved before separation.

A System Built on Records—Even When Records Are Incomplete

The military discharge process is not simply administrative. It is evidentiary.

According to GAO-25-107354, service members who receive anything less than an honorable discharge may face lasting barriers to employment, healthcare, and earned benefits.

While review boards exist to correct injustices, the GAO found:

  • Inconsistent application of standards across branches
  • Uneven consideration of PTSD, TBI, and military sexual trauma
  • Limited explanation of decisions
  • Delays and unpredictable timelines

Between 2018 and 2024, more than 21,000 discharge upgrade cases were reviewed, with approval rates ranging widely from 18% to 49%.

This is not just a gap in process. It is a gap in certainty.

The Most Dangerous Gap: What Never Gets Documented

For many service members, the greatest risk is not what happened in service, but what was never written down.

Injury is minimized. Symptoms are pushed aside. Trauma is endured silently.

But discharge boards rely heavily on existing documentation, service treatment records, personnel files, and VA records. If those records are incomplete, the system rarely fills in the gaps.

That means:

  • Late diagnoses carry less weight
  • Personal statements may be discounted without corroboration
  • Behavioral issues tied to trauma may be judged without context

Your record becomes your voice. And silence in that record can follow you for decades.

Your Rights in the Discharge Process

  1. The Right to Accurate Medical Documentation

You have the right to seek medical evaluation and ensure all conditions are documented before separation.

This includes:

  • Physical injuries
  • Mental health conditions such as PTSD or anxiety
  • Chronic or recurring pain

Without documentation, these conditions may not be considered later, even if they are service-related.

  1. The Right to Raise Contributing Conditions

Department of Defense policy requires “liberal consideration” for cases involving trauma or mental health.

But the GAO found this standard is not consistently applied.

That means you must:

  • Document the condition
  • Connect it clearly to service
  • Ensure it is reflected in your official records

 

  1. The Right to Access and Retain Your Records

Before separation, every service member should obtain:

  • DD Form 214 (review carefully before signing)
  • Complete service treatment records
  • Full personnel file

Do not assume these records will be preserved accurately or be easy to retrieve later.

  1. The Right to Challenge an Unjust Discharge

You may apply to:

  • Discharge Review Boards (within 15 years)
  • Boards for Correction of Military Records

But GAO findings confirm:

  • Outcomes vary widely
  • Timelines are inconsistent
  • Decisions are not always clearly explained

Correction is possible, but it is not predictable.

The Reality: Build Your Record Before You Need It

The lesson is simple, and urgent:

Do not wait.

Document injuries. Report symptoms. Request evaluations. Review your records.

Because once you leave service, you are no longer building your record, you are trying to overcome it.

And the system does not make that easy.

Every service member carries a story of service and sacrifice.

But the system does not preserve stories. It preserves records.

And in the end, it is the record, not the memory, that determines what comes next.

 

About the Law Offices of David P. Sheldon, PLLC

The Law Offices of David P. Sheldon, PLLC, based in Washington, DC, represents military service members, veterans, and federal employees worldwide. The firm focuses on military justice, discharge upgrades, medical retirement, security clearance defense, and federal employment rights, advocating for those who serve.

Disclaimer

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Each case is unique, and individuals should consult qualified legal counsel regarding their specific circumstances.

Veteran Military Attorney Karen Hecker Rejoins the Law Offices of David P. Sheldon, PLLC

Karen Hecker joins Law Offices of David P Sheldon, PLLC

Veteran Military Attorney Karen Hecker Rejoins the Law Offices of David P. Sheldon, PLLC

Washington, D.C. – The Law Offices of David P. Sheldon, PLLC proudly announces the return of Karen Hecker, a distinguished military and federal litigation attorney, who brings more than four decades of combined legal experience in military justice, appellate defense, and federal agency counsel service.

Before retiring from federal service in 2025, Ms. Hecker served for 21 years as an Associate General Counsel with the Department of Defense Office of General Counsel, where she managed complex, high-impact litigation on behalf of the Department and its senior leadership. Her work spanned international law, personnel and health policy, fiscal matters, and military justice under the Uniform Code of Military Justice.

Karen’s government career followed 24 years as an Air Force Judge Advocate (JAG), culminating in her retirement as a Colonel in 2017 after service on active duty and in the Reserves. Her military tenure included three years as a trial defense counsel, which also involved representing cadets as Military Cadet Counsel at the United States Air Force Academy, followed by eight years as an appellate defense counsel, representing service members before both the Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals and the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces.

She later served as Deputy Staff Judge Advocate and Staff Judge Advocate at two operational bases, and ultimately as a judge on the Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals, where she presided over military appellate cases. Before her retirement, Karen also served as agency counsel for the Air Force Board for Correction of Military Records and during Officer Grade Determination reviews.

Returning to the firm where she previously practiced from 2001 to 2004, Karen joins as a Senior Litigation Attorney, bringing exceptional insight and experience to the firm’s representation of military and federal employees across all branches of service.

“Karen’s return to our firm is a tremendous asset for our clients,” said David P. Sheldon, founder and principal attorney. “Her depth of experience, leadership, and integrity exemplify our mission—to deliver justice and restore honor to those who serve.”

In her personal time, Karen enjoys boating on the Chesapeake Bay and volunteering with a local animal rescue organization.