Is there an equivalent of the Army official histories for legal cases? Since JAGs rotate as defense and prosecution, they must have to study actual cases as part of their education. So I'm assuming there must a series of some kind.
I'm wondering, for instance, about the Capt. Medina case and how that verdict came about. I'd love to read up on it, if there's anything worth a darn to read.
Is there an equivalent of the Army official histories for legal cases? Since JAGs rotate as defense and prosecution, they must have to study actual cases as part of their education. So I'm assuming there must a series of some kind. I assume they do something like that in JAG induction training. New JAGs go through about a semester of post-law school training (Army at the University of Virginia, Navy at Newport, RI, Air Force in Alabama I think).