HR-7194-119
Became Private Law No: 119-2.
Sponsored by James Baird (R-IN)
What it does
This law authorizes the President to award the Medal of Honor to Nicholas Dockery (formerly known as Kareem N. Dockery) for acts of valor performed on October 2, 2012, while serving as a member of the U.S. Army in Afghanistan. Dockery was previously awarded the Silver Star for the same actions. The law has been enacted as Private Law No. 119-2.
Who benefits
Nicholas Dockery directly receives the nation's highest military honor, upgrading his recognition from the Silver Star. His family and community benefit from the public acknowledgment of his service. Veterans' advocacy groups and the broader military community benefit from the recognition of valor in combat. Historians and military record-keepers gain an updated official account of his service.
Who is hurt
There are no direct parties who are materially harmed by this law. Administratively, the Army and relevant military review boards bear a small procedural burden to process the award upgrade. Taxpayers bear a negligible cost associated with the award ceremony and administrative processing.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Dockery's documented acts of valor on October 2, 2012 — already recognized with the Silver Star, the third-highest military decoration — merit the nation's highest honor, and that Congress has a long tradition of individually authorizing Medal of Honor awards when the normal review process has not resulted in appropriate recognition. They contend that correcting the record ensures that extraordinary battlefield courage is not left unrewarded due to administrative or procedural gaps.
Opponents argue
Opponents of similar individual award authorization bills have argued that Congress bypassing the standard military review and upgrade process — which involves multiple layers of Pentagon evaluation — sets a precedent for political influence over what should be a merit-based military honors system. They contend that if the existing review process is inadequate, the appropriate remedy is systemic reform of that process rather than case-by-case legislative intervention.