Title 14 › Subtitle SUBTITLE I— - ESTABLISHMENT, POWERS, DUTIES, AND ADMINISTRATION › Chapter CHAPTER 3— - COMPOSITION AND ORGANIZATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - POSITIONS › § 318
The President must appoint the Coast Guard’s Judge Advocate General (JAG), with the Senate’s approval, for a term of up to 4 years. The JAG must be a Coast Guard judge advocate who is a member of the bar of a federal court or a state’s highest court and who has at least 8 years of experience doing legal work as a commissioned officer. The JAG is the main legal advisor to the Commandant and to Coast Guard officers and agencies, directs Coast Guard judge advocates, and handles the records of courts of inquiry and military commissions. The Commandant appoints the Deputy Judge Advocate General from Senior Executive Service (career reserved) civilians who meet the same qualifications. The Deputy’s term is up to 4 years and may be reappointed for another 4 years. If the JAG is absent or the job is vacant, the Deputy fills in until a successor is named. If both jobs are vacant, the Commandant must name acting officials from qualified Coast Guard judge advocates or from qualified SES civilians or GS-15s as specified. The Commandant must put these rules in place within 30 days after the law is enacted. No Department of Homeland Security employee may interfere with the JAG or judge advocates giving independent legal advice to commanders.
Full Legal Text
Coast Guard — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
14 U.S.C. § 318
Title 14 — Coast Guard
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73