11:04:09 AM MR. DOEHL turned attention to enabling legislation [HB 126 Code of Military Justice; Appeals, introduced in the First Session of the Twenty-Ninth Alaska State Legislature and currently held in the House Judiciary Standing Committee]. Mr. Doehl provided an update on behalf of Captain Forrest Dunbar, recalling that HB 126 passed from the House Special Committee on Military and Veterans' Affairs to the House Judiciary Standing Committee (HJUD) in April of 2015. The following four significant changes are expected: 1) the punitive article, which identifies what is a sanctioned offense, would now be in statute instead of in regulations in order to provide better checks and balances between the legislative and executive branches of government; 2) junior officers and junior enlisted soldiers demand the prosecution of some offenses such as sexual assault and driving under the influence (DUI) even when civilian prosecutors choose not to do so; 3) the scope of coverage would be expanded to 24/7; fix maximum punishments. He provided the committee with a written summary of the changes, noting that DMVA has been actively testing the legal aspects of the proposed provisions with positive results. CHAIR HERRON, speaking from personal experience, expressed his appreciation of the change to expand military jurisdiction to 24/7. 11:08:32 AM REPRESENTATIVE LEDOUX recognized Captain Dunbar's work on the proposed legislation. Speaking as chair of HJUD, she said she anticipates hearing the bill during [the Third Special Session of the First Session of the Twenty-Ninth Alaska State Legislature], although the bill could not be passed out of committee. Further, she opined the purpose of HB 126 was to give the leadership of the National Guard tools; however, tools are only as effective as the leadership of the guard. Representative LeDoux cautioned that although there is excellent leadership now, leadership can fail, and rules need to be in place "when things go wrong." MR. DOEHL assured the committee that there is a commitment from the leadership of DMVA and Governor Walker to "full, engaged leadership addressing those things and making the hard calls ...."