Northwest Aerospace News April | May 2019 Issue No. 8 | Page 68

A Dream Becomes a Valuable Reality Kelli Hooke’s Role as a JAG Serves Her Country Well S ometimes we do not know where a decision will take us or what many adventures that deci- sion will trigger. When I was a very young girl, I decided to be a lawyer. I didn’t know any law- yers, but I made it a goal. In high school, I decided to join the Army, but not how many of my class- mates did — I signed a Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) contract that came with a scholar- ship, which I took to the Universi- ty of Washington. Coming from a non-military fam- ily background, I was pleasantly surprised at how much I enjoyed my Army training. 68 NORTHWEST AEROSPACE NEWS And when I was commissioned as a second lieutenant in 1999, I was thrilled to go to my first assignment in Germany as a Transportation Officer. No, I was not a lawyer; those dreams were put on hold as I led a platoon of long-haul trucks that delivered cargo all over Europe. But I had not forgotten my plan. Later, I applied to an amazing opportunity called the Funded Legal Education Program (FLEP). The program selects applicants to go to law school and then become members of the Judge Advocate General Corps (JAG). I saw this as my ticket to stay in the Army family that I had grown to love and also to fulfill a girlhood dream. I found the opportunities in the JAG Corps to be incredibly diverse. First, the JAG Corps is structured such that some assignments are like working in a law firm environment and others are more similar to working as an in-house counsel. At Army installations, there is an Office of the Staff Judge Advocate (OSJA). There, a whole host of attorneys are divided up into groups based on practice area such as an Administrative Law section, a Military Justice section, a Legal Assistance section, and others depending on the size and type of installation. These attorneys work the issues that are brought to the OSJA, sending out legal advice to the command(s) at the installation.