31B vs 31D
Military Police (USA) vs CID Special Agent (USA)
Same DFAC, same 0630 formation, same NCO who's been "about to retire" for six years — completely different jobs behind the camo.
On one side of the military: you'll stand at a gate checking IDs in weather that would make a meteorologist cry, break up barracks fights at 0200, and respond to domestic calls that are heartbreaking and never-ending. The law enforcement skills are real — civilian departments do hire MPs, and federal agencies look favorably on the experience. Hard cut to the other career: your 'investigative training' is legitimate — USACIDC doesn't play around — and your cases range from straightforward theft to things that belong in a true crime podcast. You'll process crime scenes in barracks rooms, interview suspects who are either terrible liars or disturbingly good ones, and write reports that could determine whether someone goes to Leavenworth. The ratings below are from people who actually did these jobs. The blurb above is from us. Trust the ratings.
After the Uniform
The part the recruiter skips: what each job actually translates to once you're a civilian — and what it pays.
Salary data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program. A guide, not a guarantee.
Recruiter vs. Reality
The pitch versus what people who actually did the job report back.
“As a Military Police officer, you'll enforce the law, protect military installations, and conduct tactical operations. You'll earn law enforcement certifications, master investigative techniques, and build a career foundation for federal law enforcement agencies like the FBI, DEA, and Secret Service.”
You will write tickets on post for people going 27 in a 25 and they will look at you like you just keyed their car. You'll stand at a gate checking IDs in weather that would make a meteorologist cry, break up barracks fights at 0200, and respond to domestic calls that are heartbreaking and never-ending. Nobody is happy to see you. Ever. Not even at the DFAC. You're either ruining someone's day or arriving at the worst moment of theirs. The law enforcement skills are real — civilian departments do hire MPs, and federal agencies look favorably on the experience. But nobody warns you that 'police work' on a military installation means you see the same troubled soldiers on repeat until they either get help or get discharged. It wears on you differently than the recruiter mentioned.
“As a Criminal Investigation Special Agent, you'll be the Army's detective — conducting felony investigations, working undercover operations, and solving complex crimes. You'll earn federal law enforcement credentials and build expertise that leads directly to careers at the FBI, NCIS, and major law enforcement agencies.”
You are a CID agent, which means you investigate crimes while people actively try to not cooperate, lie to your face, and then ask if they're in trouble. Your 'investigative training' is legitimate — USACIDC doesn't play around — and your cases range from straightforward theft to things that belong in a true crime podcast. You'll process crime scenes in barracks rooms, interview suspects who are either terrible liars or disturbingly good ones, and write reports that could determine whether someone goes to Leavenworth. Your peers in civilian law enforcement will be impressed by your caseload and horrified by your pay. But you carry a badge and a gun, and the cases you solve matter to real victims. That part never gets old.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 31B on the left, 31D on the right.
Gate guard duty, patrol, traffic enforcement, investigations, desk sergeant shifts, and training. Shift work is the norm — expect nights, weekends, and holidays. Some 31Bs do criminal investigation support or work with CID.
Investigating felony-level crimes — homicides, sexual assaults, fraud, drug trafficking, and other serious offenses. Interviewing witnesses and suspects, processing crime scenes, writing reports, and coordinating with military prosecutors and civilian law enforcement agencies. CID agents carry a badge and credentials and operate with significant autonomy.
AIT at Fort Leonard Wood (MO) is about 20 weeks. Covers law enforcement fundamentals, use of force, investigations, traffic management, and detention operations. Practical exercises including simulated crime scenes and patrols. You'll earn a military police credential.
The CID Special Agent Course at Fort Leonard Wood (MO) is about 16 weeks. Covers criminal investigation, crime scene processing, interview and interrogation techniques, forensics, and report writing. Entry requires prior service (typically E4+ with a bachelor's degree or significant experience). This is not an entry-level MOS.
Moderate. Patrolling on foot, vehicle operations, detainee handling, and use-of-force situations. More demanding on deployment when running security operations in full kit.
Low to moderate. Investigative work is primarily desk and field interviews. Some physical demand during crime scene processing, surveillance operations, and occasional protective service missions.
Military police is one of the most direct civilian translations in the Army — law enforcement is law enforcement. The recruiter will talk up the investigative work and the career path to federal agencies, and those opportunities are real but competitive. What they won't mention: you will spend a lot of time on gate guard duty. A LOT. Shift work is brutal on relationships and sleep. And being the person who enforces rules on other soldiers doesn't make you popular. The upside is real though: CID experience is gold for federal agencies, and many departments give hiring preference to veterans with MP experience. Just go in with eyes open about the gate duty and shift work.
CID is the Army's version of a federal law enforcement agency, and the experience is genuinely world-class. You investigate real felonies — the same crimes civilian detectives handle — with the added complexity of military jurisdiction. The recruiter (for reclassification) will highlight the detective work, and it is exactly that. What they won't emphasize: the caseload can be overwhelming, sexual assault investigations dominate the workload (which takes a psychological toll), and CID agents are sometimes resented by units who see them as outsiders coming to investigate their soldiers. The civilian translation is exceptional: CID alumni are scattered across every federal law enforcement agency and many police departments. If you want to be a federal agent, CID is one of the best pipelines in the entire military.
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