Lieutenant General Charles D. Luckey assumed duty as the Chief of Army
Reserve and Commanding General, United States Army Reserve Command on 30
June 2016.
As the Chief of Army Reserve and Commanding General, United States Army
Reserve Command, he leads a community-based force of more than 200,000
Soldiers and Civilians with a "footprint" that includes 50 states, five
territories, and more than 30 countries.
The Army Reserve is a critical force provider of trained and ready units
and Soldiers providing full spectrum capabilities essential for the
Army to fight and win wars and respond to homeland emergencies on behalf
of the American people.
He was commissioned in the Army after graduating as a Distinguished
Military Graduate from the University of Virginia in 1977. He began his
military career as an Infantry Officer leading Soldiers in both
mechanized and Special Forces units until separating from active duty in
1982 to attend law school. In 1985, he returned to active duty and
served with the 82d Airborne, Ft. Bragg, NC. In 1991, he transferred to
the Army Reserve and subsequently commanded units at the battalion,
brigade, and group level, culminating with his assignment as the
Commanding General of the 78th Division (TS).
He was recalled to active duty in 2008 and selected to serve as the
Chief, Office of Security Cooperation in Baghdad, Iraq. Prior to his
current assignment, he served as the Chief of Staff, North American
Aerospace Defense Command and Northern Command and on the Joint Staff as
Assistant to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff for Reserve
Matters.
As a civilian, Lieutenant General Luckey is a litigation partner in the
firm of Blanco Tackabery & Matamoros P.A., located in Winston-Salem,
North Carolina. As a partner of the firm, he concentrates his practice
on a mixture of criminal, domestic and environmental matters in both
State and Federal courts. He is admitted to practice law in an array of
jurisdictions to include the Supreme Court of the United States.
Having served in a variety of theaters with three combat tours, his
awards, badges and decorations are consistent with those of most
Soldiers who have had the honor to serve the United States over a period
of decades and the good fortune to return safely home.
He's blissfully married to a Tar Heel, his wife Julie from Greensboro, North Carolina.
No comments:
Post a Comment