
Sean F. Mangan
Top Attorney for Military Personnel and Families
Unmatched Experience. For 30 years I've worked criminal cases, on the streets and in the courtroom, civilian and military, and at local, state, and federal levels. I've been a law enforcement officer, Soldier, prosecutor, defense counsel, magistrate, appellate counsel, law professor, and judge. As a retired Army JAG Lieutenant Colonel, with prior MP and Special Operations experience, I bring a superior range of skills, knowledge, and abilities to serve you.
My services are reserved for those who serve our country and communities: military personnel, veterans, first responders, and their families. If everything you've built and worked so hard to achieve is at risk, don't take chances. Your service deserves the best defense.
Learn more about me at:
www.defendyourservice.com (and)
www.ucmj-defender.com/sean-mangan
I am also proud to be affiliated with the Law Office of Jocelyn C. Stewart.
We are ready to fight for you.
- Army Command & General Staff College
- ILE-CC (2011) | Leadership
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- Intermediate Leadership - Core Curriculum (Fort Lee Campus)
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- TJAGLCS
- LL.M. (2009) | Military Law, Criminal Law Cert.
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- University of Oregon School of Law
- J.D. (2003) | Law, Criminal Law Specialty Cert.
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- Honors: Superior Advocate, Mock Trial
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- Gonzaga University
- B.A. (1996) | Sociology & Philosophy
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- Honors: Cum Laude
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- Legal Counsel
- Independent
- - Current
- Private Legal Counsel, available to represent military personnel and their families. 100+ clients served to date
- Criminal Law Policy Attorney
- US Army
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- Senior Policy Attorney for Criminal Law Division, Office of the Judge Advocate General, Headquarters, U.S. Army. Involved in edits of Manual for Courts-Martial and the rewrite of Army criminal law regulation (AR 27-10). Advised on issues of criminal law and corrective-action policies for senior Army leadership.
- Trial Judge
- US Army
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- Military Judge, U.S. Army Trial Judiciary. Handled the full range of offenses, legal issues, and hearings in military justice trials, including presiding as judge-alone court and sentencing authority.
- Regional Defense Counsel
- US Army
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- Senior and supervising defense counsel for Southwest Continental United States (SW-CONUS). Led and managed 30 defense counsel (and their support staffs) responsible for all military justice matters in SW-CONUS, approximately 25% of all Army courts-martial trials.
- Professor of Criminal Law
- TJAGLCS (DOD)
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- Faculty at the DOD's only ABA-Accredited / LLM-granting law school: The Judge Advocate General's Legal Center and School (TJAGLCS). Taught the full range of topics in criminal law and procedure to a variety of resident and non-resident courses, with students ranging from newly-commissioned military attorneys to military judges.
- Special Operations Legal Counsel (Deployed)
- DOD/Joint Task Force
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- Led a Joint/Multinational Team of Intel Agents, Law Enforcement Agents, Attorneys, Paralegals, and Iraqi Legal Personnel in direct support to Tier-1 US SOF Task Force, warranting and prosecuting high-value terrorism suspects in foreign courts.
- LLM Candidate
- US Army
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- LLM in Military Law, with Special Certificate in Criminal Law and Military Justice
- Supervising Appellate Counsel
- US Army
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- Supervised a Branch of 8 Appellate Attorneys in the Defense Appellate Division, US Army Legal Legal Services Agency
- Appellate Counsel
- US Army
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- Appellate Defense Counsel, US Army Legal Services Agency. Appealed court-martial convictions and legal issues to the Army Court of Criminal Appeals, Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, and Supreme Court of the United States.
- Chief of Military Justice
- US Army
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- Senior and Supervising Prosecutor for JRTC & Fort Polk, LA. 50 courts-martial and 300+ adverse legal actions per year.
- Special Assistant United States Attorney
- DOJ
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- Chief of Administrative Law
- US Army
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- Senior and Supervising Counsel for all admin/civil legal issues on JRTC & Fort Polk: ethics, employment, environmental, contract, admin investigations, etc.
- Military Magistrate
- US Army
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- Part-time military magistrate: issued warrants, reviewed and approved pretrial confinement
- Administrative Law Attorney
- US Army
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- Handled the full range of government administrative law issues
- Intern Prosecutor
- Lane County Prosecutor's Office
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- Solo-tried multiple criminal cases, assisted on major felony cases
- Intern Prosecutor
- US Army
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- While in law school, assisted during summer months at the Fort Lewis (JBLM) Military Justice Shop, prepping cases and leveraging my law enforcement experience to aid in criminal prosecutions.
- Officer
- US Army Military Police
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- Commissioned Officer of US Army MP Corps. Served in both law enforcement and tactical roles, in both action and leadership positions. Later served in support of Army Prosecutor offices in case-support role, prior to becoming a licensed attorney and Army Judge Advocate.
- Army Regulation 27-10 (current edition)
- US Army
- Crimes and Defenses Deskbook
- TJAGLCS-ADC
- Military Justice Overview & Update, Seattle, Wa
- Washington Bar Association - Military Law Section (LAMP)
- UCMJ Article 27B
- DOD - Practice in Courts-Martial for all Services of the US Armed Forces
- Bronze Star Medal
- DOD
- Superior Advocate Award - Mock Trial
- University of Oregon School of Law
- Washington Defenders Association
- Member
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- International Association of Military Criminal Defense Lawyers
- Member
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- Washington State Bar Association
- Member
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- Oregon State Bar  # 035465
- Member
- - Current
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- American Bar Association
- Member
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- Ct. of Appeals for the Armed Forces
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- Oregon
- Oregon State Bar
- ID Number: (Currently Inactive Member)
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- UCMJ / Military Justice System
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- Washington
- Washington State Bar Association
- ID Number: 55286
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- Army Court of Criminal Appeals
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- U.S. Supreme Court
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Free Consultation
Free confidential legal consultation available, to be scheduled upon request. - Credit Cards Accepted
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Rates, Retainers and Additional Information
Primarily flat fees to give clients clarity and control. Only current action/phase is billed. Billing handled through LawPay, with electronic invoice & secure link sent directly to client.
- Military Law
- Criminal Law
- Criminal Appeals, Drug Crimes, Fraud, Gun Crimes, Internet Crimes, Sex Crimes, Theft, Violent Crimes
- Gov & Administrative Law
- Administrative Law
- Employment Law
- Employment Discrimination, Sexual Harassment, Whistleblower, Wrongful Termination
- White Collar Crime
- Domestic Violence
- Domestic Violence Criminal Defense, Domestic Violence Restraining Orders, Victims Rights
- DUI & DWI
- Family Law
- Restraining Orders
- Military Justice and Adverse Actions (all services)
- English
- Q. If I am a former prisoner at a military correctional facility am I allowed to contact other former inmates?
- A: It depends on the conditions of your release. For service members who served a longer sentence (those over 10 years and usually those over 20) there is the possibility of early release through a parole system. When released, those individuals may carry similar conditions on release that limit who they have contact with. If you served your sentence fully and was released, then normally there is no prohibition on who you contact with. (However, there may be other orders/authorities from the military or other jurisdictions, depending on your case, that could impact you.)
- Q. Does only the judge have to sign a temporary custody agreement due to military deployment (this is after he deployed)
- A: A custody agreement may be formed between parties without the involvement of a court, but it carries no enforcement mechanism if a court is not involved. When co-parents are getting along, these are routinely formed without a court's involvement. In some cases the agreement is entered as a court-filing and then approved by the judge, which gives it force of law. Your situation seems to involve a non-amicable relationship, and a out-of-court agreement is unlikely, and even if one were to be formed it would lack enforcement. As for the military deployment angle, the Servicemember Civil Relief Act gives some protections when a deployed service member is able to respond to an action, but that would turn on the specifics of the situation.
- Website
- Mangan Law - Main Page