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Paul Jennings

Education

Texas Tech School of Law (J.D. 2016)
Texas Tech Graduate School (M.S. P.F.P. 2016)
Saint Martins University (B.A. 2012)

Admitted to Practice

Washington State
Florida State
Western District of Washington
Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims
Board of Veterans Appeals

Paul Jennings

Founder and Managing Attorney

Paul Jennings, is the founder and managing attorney of the MilVet Law Firm. Mr. Jennings' practice is focused on assisting service members and veterans facing adverse administrative actions from either the military or Veterans Administration.

Prior to founding the MilVet Law Firm, Mr. Jennings served six years in the U.S. Army as a military police officer. During this time, Mr. Jennings deployed in support of the global war on terror to the country of Iraq on three separate occasions, twice while active duty and once when recalled from the IRR. While deployed, Mr. Jennings served in a variety of roles and performed numerous combat missions to include serving on the personal security detail for U.S. Ambassadors Paul Bremer and John Negroponte. When he was not deployed, Mr. Jennings performed law enforcement duties on Joint Base Lewis-McChord, WA as both an active duty soldier and as a federal civilian police officer.

After seeing firsthand, the trials and tribulations that service members and veterans face, Mr. Jennings felt that he was called to do more to assist his fellow comrades-in-arms. As a result, Mr. Jennings pursued and obtained his legal degree and is now proud to serve those who have served and sacrificed so much for our country.

Publications

Bypassing a Soldier’s Rights: The Messy Mixture of Investigations and Administrative Actions

18 Texas Tech Administrative Law Journal 173(2016)

This article explores the rare, but extremely detrimental situation that can occur when a flawed investigation leads to negative administrative action.

The Battle After War: Why Disabled Texas Veterans are Fighting for the Military Retirement They Deserve

17 Texas Tech Administrative Law Journal 153 (2015)

This comment explores the current legal minefield that Texas veterans navigate through in seeking to reclassify their military discharges for the military retirement benefits they were denied.

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