Courts martial are military courts. When soldiers commit crimes such as desertion of duty, collaboration with the enemy etc., they are not tried in civilian courts, they are tried in special military courts, under military rules.
Trial counsel and Defense counsel.
summary court martial, special court martial, and general courtmartial
summary court martial, special court martial, and general courtmartial
Indian Air Force deserter can never apply for a govt job.. till he is punished as per IAF laws by courtmartial...
Special, General, Summary
Unbecoming conduct (criminal or immoral activity), AWOL, poor service record, basically anything that is deemed to put the military in a bad light could be grounds for a dishonorable discharge. In cases of criminal conduct you could be subject to military courtmartial if committed on post or while engaged in military activity. You would then be sentenced to military prison, and after serving time would be dishonorably discharged.
He served 2 years in Allied prison after WWII. Testimony of his character by Allied prisoners at Stalag LuftIII saved him from the death penalty. He was well respected by the prisoners and was invited to and attended their 25th reunion. Further info the escape can be found http://www.usafa.af.mil/ under the Library section. Ted. Friedrich Wilhelm von Lindeiner genannt von Wildau's long list of friends arranged a swift courtmartial that reduced his rank to that of "private" at the age of 64. He was then sent to the front lines to a penal battalion. Reportedly, after two years in an Allied prison, he was sent to England to provide his accound of the escape from Stalag Luft III. After the war he was brought to Britain for testimony regarding the escape and its aftermath. He was released thereafter. He died in 1963 at the age of 82. I'm told his memoirs can be found in the archives of the U.S. Air Force Academy. Tom
The cast of The Woman from Monte Carlo - 1932 includes: Oscar Apfel as Dr. Rabeouf Reginald Barlow as Defense Attorney Frederick Burton as President of Courtmartial Allan Cavan as Officer at Trial Albert Conti as A Man of the World Jack Curtis as Boatswain Lil Dagover as Lottie Corlaix Maude Eburne as Dowager Party Guest Walter Huston as Captain Corlaix Tiny Jones as Toulon Townswoman Jack Kennedy as Admiral Frank Leigh as Pilot Kenneth MacDonald as Orderly Frank McClure as Seaman at Trial Francis McDonald as Karkuff Matt McHugh as Chief Petty Officer Vincent Alberto Morin as Officer of the Watch Clarence Muse as Tombeau Paul Porcasi as Undetermined Supporting Role Terrance Ray as Seaman Warner Richmond as Fourdylis Dewey Robinson as Cook Jack Rutherford as Verguson Robert Warwick as Morbraz Eleanor Wesselhoeft as Anna John Wray as Cmdr. Brambourg
in 1844, Richard Greener, the first African-American graduate of Harvard, was born. His unusual education was made possible by several wealthy Bostonians, who saw potential in the young man working as a night watchman. With their financial support, he completed college preparatory courses and entered Harvard. After graduating with honors in 1870, he began a successful academic career. He later distinguished himself as a lawyer and foreign service officer. He returned from overseas just as the movement for black empowerment was splitting into two factions. He backed the more conservative faction, headed by his old friend Booker T. Washington, and spied on the other. When his duplicity was discovered, he lost the trust of both groups.Richard Theodore Greener graduated from Harvard College in 1870, the first African American to do so. Gifted, hardworking, and ambitious, Greener followed this achievement with a lifetime of accomplishment as an educator, scholar, lawyer, politician, and diplomat. He also contended with painful choices about how best to survive and prosper in a country that denied people of color respect and equal rights.Greener was born in 1844 in Philadelphia. After his father disappeared in Gold Rush-era California, his mother moved the family to the Boston area in search of educational opportunities for her children. Richard attended a Cambridge school until he was 14, when he left to help support his family.Working as a porter and night watchman, he came to the attention of several of his employers, who recognized how bright he was. They arranged for him to be admitted to the college preparatory program at Oberlin. After three years there, Greener returned to Massachusetts and completed his college preparation at Phillips Academy in Andover. With financial support from a group of wealthy Bostonians, Richard Greener entered Harvard in the fall of 1865, at the age of 21. A prize-winning student, he graduated in 1870.For the next several years, Greener was a teacher and administrator at segregated schools in Philadelphia and Washington. At the same time, he wrote articles for The New National Era, edited by Frederick Douglass.In 1873 Greener accepted a position as Professor of Mental and Moral Philosophy at South Carolina College (later the University of South Carolina), where he also assisted in Latin, Greek, mathematics and constitutional history classes. At the close of the Civil War, South Carolina had been the first college in the South to admit black students. As the school's first black faculty member, Greener established a reputation as a brilliant scholar and teacher. In 1877, however, white conservatives regained power in South Carolina and closed the integrated college. When it reopened, it was an agricultural school for whites only. Greener and all other faculty member who had taught black students were dismissed.Richard Greener had earned a law degree while teaching at SCC. In 1877 he moved to Washington, D.C. and joined the faculty of Howard University Law School; two years later, he was appointed the school's dean. He left Howard in 1881 to open a private law practice and soon became known for defending victims of injustice and discrimination. One of his most famous cases involved a black West Point cadet who was found beaten, mutilated, and tied to his bed. Claimed that the young man had faked his own attack, the Academy moved to expel and courtmartial him. Greener mounted a skillful defense, but the power of West Point and of public sentiment was so great that the student was found guilty and dishonorably discharged from the Army.During his years in Washington, Greener became active in national affairs. He forged a deep and lasting friendship with Booker T. Washington, a leader in the movement to improve the condition of black people in the United States. Greener also had friends among white power brokers. His success as an African American professional made him popular with members of the McKinley and Roosevelt administrations. Beginning in 1898, he was appointed to a series of diplomatic positions in India, Russia, and China.When he returned to the United States in 1905, Greener was immediately caught up in the conflict between his old friend, Washington, an essentially conservative reformer, and the younger, more radical W.E.B. DuBois.Booker T. Washington advocated training black men for practical work in the trades and profession; this, he believed, was the best way for African Americans to attain economic security and, eventually, to earn the respect of whites. W.E.B. DuBois, born in the Berkshires and the first African American to earn a Ph.D. from Harvard, had a different view. He embraced higher education, agitation, and protest as a way of bringing about racial equality. He was openly critical of Washington's position and insisted that black Americans demand and be prepared to fight for social, economic and political equality. The black leadership split into two factions.Greener anguished before throwing his support to Washington, his friend of more than 20 years. He even became a sort of spy, attending meetings of the Niagara Movement, organized by DuBois in 1905, and reporting back to Washington. When this was discovered, Greener found that both sides mistrusted and rejected him. Without a meaningful role to play in the struggle for black empowerment, he retired to Chicago where he lived alone until his death in 1922.His wife had divorced him in the 1890s and taken their children to live in Princeton, N.J. Light-skinned and green-eyed, Mrs. Greener dropped the final "r" in the family name; she and the children began to pass as white.His daughter Belle became, in the words of her biographer, "arguably the most powerful woman in the New York art and book world." Beginning in 1906, she was employed by financier J. Pierpont Morgan to organize his world famous collection of rare books and manuscripts and later to run his museum and library. Her reputation as "both society girl and serious scholar" rested on her repudiation of her father -- and her race.
Frederick Burton has: Played Col. Benham in "Arizona" in 1918. Played Cousin Egbert Floud in "Ruggles of Red Gap" in 1918. Played Matthew Cuthbert in "Anne of Green Gables" in 1919. Played Duke Mordryn in "The Career of Katherine Bush" in 1919. Played Doctor Varney in "The Teeth of the Tiger" in 1919. Played Amos Bussard in "Getting Mary Married" in 1919. Played George Brockton in "Cheating Cheaters" in 1919. Played Heliotrope Harry Hasdock in "Heliotrope" in 1920. Played Jim Carson in "The Fear Market" in 1920. Played Horatio Browning in "The Fortune Teller" in 1920. Played Donald Vane in "Yes or No" in 1920. Played Middleton in "The Education of Elizabeth" in 1921. Performed in "Bits of Life" in 1921. Played Otis Grimley in "Back Home and Broke" in 1922. Played Mr. Fisk in "Anna Ascends" in 1922. Played Bruce Webster in "The Man She Brought Back" in 1922. Played Oliver Cromwell in "The Fighting Blade" in 1923. Played Augustin Daly in "Broadway Broke" in 1923. Played Leyton Carter in "The Rejected Woman" in 1924. Played Henry Porter in "Back to Life" in 1925. Played Pa Bascom in "The Big Trail" in 1930. Played Samuel Griffiths in "An American Tragedy" in 1931. Played Major at Executions in "Mata Hari" in 1931. Played John Macey in "Freighters of Destiny" in 1931. Played General Randolph in "Secret Service" in 1931. Played Pop Blake in "Sweepstakes" in 1931. Played Opera House Architect in "Silver Dollar" in 1932. Played Mr. Neuchard in "The All-American" in 1932. Played Judge in "The Night of June 13th" in 1932. Played Judge in "Two Seconds" in 1932. Played Judge Hardy in "Too Busy to Work" in 1932. Played President of the University in "Alias the Doctor" in 1932. Played Major Randolph in "The Wet Parade" in 1932. Played Asst. Dist. Atty. Gifford in "The Age of Consent" in 1932. Played President of Courtmartial in "The Woman from Monte Carlo" in 1932. Played Bridges in "The Famous Ferguson Case" in 1932. Played Second Trial Judge in "Lawyer Man" in 1932. Played Mr. Platt in "Fireman, Save My Child" in 1932. Played Southern Prison Official in "I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang" in 1932. Played The Doctor in "One Way Passage" in 1932. Played Judge Larson in "The Working Man" in 1933. Played Marcus P. Talbart in "Blood Money" in 1933. Played Governor in "King for a Night" in 1933. Played Robert North, Sr in "Broadway Bad" in 1933. Played Mr. Van Buren in "Whistling in the Dark" in 1933. Played Anderson in "No Other Woman" in 1933. Played Undetermined Role in "Shanghai Madness" in 1933. Played Mr. Rigby Crayfield in "Counsellor at Law" in 1933. Played Judge Goodhue in "Golden Harvest" in 1933. Played Hospital Superintendent in "Bedside" in 1934. Played Colonel Claybourne in "Belle of the Nineties" in 1934. Played Judge Halliday in "The Secret Bride" in 1934. Played Gen. Landacre in "Flirtation Walk" in 1934. Played Judge in "Smarty" in 1934. Played Uncle Snowden in "Sadie McKee" in 1934. Played Howard - Impresario in "One Night of Love" in 1934. Played Houston Sims in "The Big Shakedown" in 1934. Played Barbwire in "Love Birds" in 1934. Played Butterfield in "The Farmer Takes a Wife" in 1935. Played James B. Strong in "The Calling of Dan Matthews" in 1935. Played Major Marshall in "Transient Lady" in 1935. Played Adm. Fred Graves in "Shipmates Forever" in 1935. Played Judge in "One-Way Ticket" in 1935. Played Governor Wyatt in "Theodora Goes Wild" in 1936. Played Judge Daniel Hopkins in "Fury" in 1936. Played The Warden in "The Voice of Bugle Ann" in 1936. Played Governor in "The Accusing Finger" in 1936. Played Ned Trent in "Wife vs. Secretary" in 1936. Played Judge in "The Devil Is Driving" in 1937. Played Parke Lewis in "The Man in Blue" in 1937. Played J.D. Jones in "Love Is News" in 1937. Played Boston Editor in "The Last Gangster" in 1937. Played Arnold Corbin in "The Duke Comes Back" in 1937. Played Conspirator in "Air Devils" in 1938. Played Presiding Bank Officer in "Kentucky" in 1938. Played First Director in "Jezebel" in 1938. Played William Valcross in "The Saint in New York" in 1938. Played Governor in "I Am the Law" in 1938. Played Pilsbury - Cabot Executive in "My Lucky Star" in 1938. Played Gen. Darrow in "Flight to Fame" in 1938. Played Senator Dearhorn in "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" in 1939. Played Bishop Bannon in "Joe and Ethel Turp Call on the President" in 1939. Played Governor in "Risky Business" in 1939. Played Tom Hamilton in "Silver on the Sage" in 1939. Played Mr. Halsey in "The Old Maid" in 1939. Played U.S. District Court Judge in "Confessions of a Nazi Spy" in 1939. Played Thomas in "Hollywood Cavalcade" in 1939. Played Johnson in "Go West" in 1940. Played Mr. Thompson in "Third Finger, Left Hand" in 1940. Played Dr. George Winters in "Bowery Boy" in 1940. Played Governor Prentiss in "Before I Hang" in 1940. Played Campbellite religious leader in "The Man from Dakota" in 1940. Played Dean Lawford in "Washington Melodrama" in 1941. Played Mr. Milford in "The Man Who Lost Himself" in 1941. Played Mr. Morris in "Babes on Broadway" in 1941. Played Dr. Hartley in "Silver Queen" in 1942. Played Col. Mitchell in "Junior G-Men of the Air" in 1942. Played Senator in "Tennessee Johnson" in 1942. Played Hobart Bennett in "Man with Two Lives" in 1942. Performed in "A Gentleman After Dark" in 1942. Played Senator in "Wilson" in 1944. Played Dr. Hendricks in "The Town Went Wild" in 1944. Played Colonel Ames in "Hands Across the Border" in 1944. Played Rev. Dean in "Casanova Brown" in 1944. Played Creole Gentleman in "The Foxes of Harrow" in 1947.
Believe it or not, Ulysses S. Grant actually owned slaves, and Robert E. Lee did not. It is so sad that so many people just follow the crowd instead of truly looking for the truth on the Civil War. Both were very good, wise, and noble men, fighting a war that was over so much more than slavery. As i mentioned at the beginning , if the north's main general owned slaves and the south's did not, was the Civil War really about slavery, or about something more than that? You answer the question. Ulysses was a god man and especially a good president, I am not prejudice against him; but Robert E. Lee was so much more, for he fought for a cause hidden today, and still kept going. *** I disagree. Does anyone really believe that 620,000 men, two per cent of the population of the entire United States prior to the Civil War, died over "... so much more than Slavery" ? THAT is the position of the crowd --- THAT is what has been taught in our schools since the close of the first decade following the Civil War Did the South lose 280,000 plus men, and have one-fourth to one-third of its surviving soldiers with at least one limb missing, over the issue of Tariffs (which was a major bone of contention between the increasingly industrial North and the Agricultural South) ? Please. Did the average Confederate soldier fight to defend slavery ? We are asked. Did the average Union soldier fight to free the slaves ? Let me respond to those questions by asking some of my own. Did the US Soldier, Sailor, Marine, Coast Guard fight in World War II to free France, to save Britain, to help those poor Belgians ? Did we fight in Vietnam to guarantee the freedom of the South Vietnamese ? In Iraq to liberate the Iraqis ? In all those instances, the answer is, essentially, No --- but that is what they did (the South Vietnamese government's failure of nerve led to the victory of the Vietcong.) When the Union private slogged his way through the Wilderness in 1864; when his Confederate counterpart routed the Army of the Potomac at Chancellorsville a year earlier, they were mostly fighting for their state, their country, or both --- But it was the issue of Slavery that put them there. Without the existence of Slavery, there would have been no Civil War. That is the essential element at the core of the conflict. To contend otherwise, as we have been doing for the past 140-150 years, is simply wrong. *** Grant was a terrible President. His ownership of slaves was circumstantial and relatively fleeting. As for Lee, if you could go back in time and talk to General Pickett, you'd get a vastly different opinion of Robert E. Lee than we normally hear. General Lee was a risk taker who against all reasonable judgment sent Pickett's forces to their death... simply because Lee's "blood was up." Generals Montgomery and Eisenhower, touring the Gettysburg Battlefield after WWII, both agreed that Lee and Meade should have been subject to courtmartial for their actions during those pivotal three days of July 1-3, 1863. They called Grant a butcher, but every time Grant outmaneuvered Lee during the 1864 campaign, and it was more frequent that one would expect, Lee successfully sped his forces through territory with which he was familiar and turned to face Grant again. If Grant was a butcher, so was Lee. Robert E. Lee was a patrician and he wears well. Grant was not, and grates on our sense of civility. Remember this though, Lee defeated every Union general he faced, until he came up against Grant. Of course, Grant had been used to that throughout the entire war.
Bruce Gray has: Played Owen Madison in "The Edge of Night" in 1956. Played George Blyth (1987) in "General Hospital" in 1963. Played Russ in "Adulterous Affair" in 1966. Played Tim Stanton (1969) in "Strange Paradise" in 1969. Played Wyatt Coles (1975) in "All My Children" in 1970. Played Dr. Warren Parker (1974) in "Somerset" in 1970. Played Mark Wilcox in "The Young and the Restless" in 1973. Played Elliot Pearson in "CBS Daytime 90" in 1974. Played Mr. Hillary in "Happy Days" in 1974. Played Dr. Robert Miles in "Quincy M.E." in 1976. Played Professor Kreiger in "Lou Grant" in 1977. Played Greg Noyes in "The Paper Chase" in 1978. Played Harrison Cole in "The Incredible Hulk" in 1978. Played Dr. Neal Chapman in "High Hopes" in 1978. Played David Stanley in "Dallas" in 1978. Played Dr. Alan Cosby in "Dallas" in 1978. Played Richard Mertz in "Dallas" in 1978. Performed in "Dallas" in 1978. Played Vic in "Breaking Up" in 1978. Played T.J. Escott in "Knots Landing" in 1979. Played Lawyer in "Knots Landing" in 1979. Played Senator Riker in "Knots Landing" in 1979. Played Co-Pilot in "The Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo" in 1979. Performed in "Flamingo Road" in 1980. Played Liam Farley in "Dynasty" in 1981. Played Patrick Degan in "Nero Wolfe" in 1981. Played Andrew Price in "Falcon Crest" in 1981. Played Phil Manning in "Silver Spoons" in 1982. Played Austin Morrow in "Drop-Out Father" in 1982. Played Col. Harvey Blackwell in "St. Elsewhere" in 1982. Played Sen. Forbes in "Knight Rider" in 1982. Played Mr. Barnes in "Boone" in 1983. Played Admiral Goddard in "Emerald Point N.A.S." in 1983. Played Maj. Nordoff in "For Love and Honor" in 1983. Played Major Nordoff in "For Love and Honor" in 1983. Played R. L. Pierson in "Murder, She Wrote" in 1984. Performed in "Call to Glory" in 1984. Played Senator Steven Houston in "Airwolf" in 1984. Played Dean Merrill in "Murder, She Wrote" in 1984. Played Ted Hartley in "Murder, She Wrote" in 1984. Played Group Therapist in "Night Court" in 1984. Played Dr. Glass in "Santa Barbara" in 1984. Played Larry Ferris in "Invitation to Hell" in 1984. Played Powell in "A Death in California" in 1985. Played David Soames in "The Colbys" in 1985. Played Bryan Holland in "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" in 1985. Played Gower Champion in "Odd Birds" in 1985. Played Billy Pearson in "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" in 1985. Played Mr. Reese in "Matlock" in 1986. Performed in "L.A. Law" in 1986. Played Dr. Enric Engen in "Head of the Class" in 1986. Played Henry Payne in "The Campbells" in 1986. Played James Hamilton in "Matlock" in 1986. Played Admiral Chekote in "Star Trek: The Next Generation" in 1987. Played Mayor Parvin in "Dragnet" in 1987. Played Dr. Stuart Power in "Captain Power and the Soldiers of the Future" in 1987. Played Lt. Col. Dalby in "Tour of Duty" in 1987. Played Mentor in "Captain Power and the Soldiers of the Future" in 1987. Played Herb Galloway in "Street Legal" in 1987. Played Bob in "The Oldest Rookie" in 1987. Played Judge Morrissey in "The Bold and the Beautiful" in 1987. Performed in "LBJ: The Early Years" in 1987. Played Senator Hyden in "Murphy Brown" in 1988. Performed in "Drop-Out Mother" in 1988. Performed in "Nightingales" in 1989. Played Dr. Stuart Power in "Captain Power: The Beginning" in 1989. Played Frank Webster in "Doogie Howser, M.D." in 1989. Played Phillip Webb (1989) in "Generations" in 1989. Played Reverend in "Wings" in 1990. Played Reed Harvey in "Beverly Hills, 90210" in 1990. Performed in "Beverly Hills, 90210" in 1990. Played Louis Calvatier in "DEA" in 1990. Played Father in "Eye of the Storm" in 1991. Played Wesley Picard in "Sisters" in 1991. Played George Davies in "The Hidden Room" in 1991. Played William Aaronwald in "A Murderous Affair: The Carolyn Warmus Story" in 1992. Played Governor Steve Cowper - State of Alaska in "Dead Ahead: The Exxon Valdez Disaster" in 1992. Played Mr. Fenn in "Picket Fences" in 1992. Played Fred Zinneman in "Sinatra" in 1992. Played Tom in "Melrose Place" in 1992. Played Courtmartial panel member in "The Adventures of Brisco County Jr." in 1993. Played Dr. John Harris in "Diagnosis Murder" in 1993. Played Alex Kirk in "J.F.K.: Reckless Youth" in 1993. Played Admiral Chekote in "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine" in 1993. Played Mr. Atkins in "Getting By" in 1993. Played Ted in "Rapture" in 1993. Played First Gentleman in "RoboCop" in 1994. Played Carter Board member in "ER" in 1994. Played Dr. Munch in "ER" in 1994. Played Admiral in "Roswell" in 1994. Played Amos Moore in "A Perry Mason Mystery: The Case of the Lethal Lifestyle" in 1994. Played Mr. Wynn in "Chicago Hope" in 1994. Played Interrogator in "Babylon 5" in 1994. Played Brig. Gen. Sawyer in "JAG" in 1995. Played Dr. Gilmore in "Nowhere Man" in 1995. Played James Harding in "The Outer Limits" in 1995. Played Ed Holm in "Legacy of Sin: The William Coit Story" in 1995. Played Mr. Gillespie in "My Family" in 1995. Played Rudolph Kendall in "Legend" in 1995. Played Adam Cunningham in "Traders" in 1996. Played Bruce McCord (Director) in "Eraser - Turnabout" in 1996. Played The President in "Spy Hard" in 1996. Played Jack Kileen in "Tracey Takes On..." in 1996. Played Sen. Fisher in "Stargate SG-1" in 1997. Played CNN Newscaster in "The Peacemaker" in 1997. Played Edward Gale in "Earth: Final Conflict" in 1997. Played Sky Marshall Dienes in "Starship Troopers" in 1997. Played Male Elder in "Charmed" in 1998. Played Dennis Weston in "Made in Canada" in 1998. Played Mr. Fuller in "Becker" in 1998. Played Fielding in "Life of the Party: The Pamela Harriman Story" in 1998. Played Sen. Rockefeller in "Thanks of a Grateful Nation" in 1998. Played Kheel in "Charmed" in 1998. Played Colonel Harry in "Dangerous Evidence: The Lori Jackson Story" in 1999. Played Uncle George in "Dementia" in 1999. Played Judge J.E. Reilly in "Passions" in 1999. Played Ephraim Quince in "Happy Face Murders" in 1999. Played Otis in "The West Wing" in 1999. Played Headmaster Clayton Ford in "Judging Amy" in 1999. Played Robert Dooling in "Girlfriends" in 2000. Played Dr. Matthews in "When Andrew Came Home" in 2000. Played George Schickel in "Queer as Folk" in 2000. Played Governor Paul L. Greene in "The Last Debate" in 2000. Played Surak in "Enterprise" in 2001. Played Donald Meyer in "A Glimpse of Hell" in 2001. Played Mr. Miller in "Two for One" in 2001. Played John Langtry in "The Division" in 2001. Played Rodney Miller in "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" in 2002. Played Mr. Haines in "Without a Trace" in 2002. Played Colonel Thomas H. Maguire in "Cube 2: Hypercube" in 2002. Played Final Game Referee in "The Red Sneakers" in 2002. Played Third Trial Judge in "Torso: The Evelyn Dick Story" in 2002. Played Ed Kramer in "A Killing Spring" in 2002. Played Dean Baker in "Married to the Kellys" in 2003. Played Mr. Majelis in "Las Vegas" in 2003. Played Mr. Richard Segerstrom in "S.W.A.T." in 2003. Played Dr. Milton Thayer (2003) in "Cold Case" in 2003. Played CIA Assistant Director Jonathan Overmeier in "NCIS: Naval Criminal Investigative Service" in 2003. Played Gene Wilbanks in "Playmakers" in 2003. Played Summerville in "Dark Waters" in 2003. Played Milton in "Wall of Secrets" in 2003. Played Philip Laughton in "Chasing Freedom" in 2004. Performed in "LAX" in 2004. Played Dr. Earl Roberts in "Boston Legal" in 2004. Played Yuthers in "How I Met Your Mother" in 2005. Played Colonel Maguire in "Re-Entering the Nightmare" in 2005. Played Dr. Wagner in "Criminal Minds" in 2005. Played TV Executive in "Monster-in-Law" in 2005. Played Billboard Manager in "Big Love" in 2006. Played Earl MacDuff in "Live Once, Die Twice" in 2006. Played Congressman Hughes in "Evan Almighty" in 2007. Played Justice Anthony Kennedy in "Recount" in 2008. Played Dr. Hacker in "Sons of Anarchy" in 2008. Played Charles Carson in "Castle" in 2009. Played Dr. Lawson in "Anatomy of Hope" in 2009. Played Proctor in "Water for Elephants" in 2011. Played Uncle Scott in "Falling Skies" in 2011. Performed in "The Firm" in 2012. Played Lawyer in "Crazy Eyes" in 2012. Played Stan Kucharski in "All That Remains" in 2013.