Military Police
Officer.
Marine Corps 5801 (Military Police Officer). 580 hours of formal training translate to 5 validated civilian career pathways with salary bands of $60K–$95K. Sourced from DoD training data and Lightcast labor signals.
Roles your code maps to.
Industry tech roles your 5801 background maps to — picked from BLS-anchored occupations using your training, cognitive skills, and systems experience.
The gap, named.
What 5801 training already gave you, and the specific gaps to close — not a generic checklist.
- 01Situational Awareness→ Threat Detection and Incident Response
- 02Procedural Compliance→ Adherence to Security Policies and Regulations
- 03Adversarial Thinking→ Vulnerability Assessment and Penetration Testing
- 04Weapons Handling and Tactics→ Understanding of security tools and infrastructure
- 05Defense Biometric Identification System (DBIDS)→ Access Control and Visitor Management systems
The concrete gap to bridge — specific to the roles above, not a generic checklist.
Vets Who Code is a free, full-time software engineering accelerator for veterans, active duty, and military spouses. We close the fundamentals — terminal, web platform, AI tooling, portfolio projects — so the rest of this list becomes specialization, not square one.
See VWC Programs →Where your code lands.
Security Manager
$95K- — Project Management
- — OSHA Safety Standards
Correctional Officer
$60KFederal Protective Service Officer
$65KPrivate Investigator
$62K- — Surveillance Techniques
- — Legal Knowledge
What the code built.
Cognitive skills your 5801 training built — and where they transfer in civilian work.
Situational Awareness
Constantly monitoring surroundings for threats, assessing crowd dynamics, and anticipating potential security breaches in dynamic environments like checkpoints or during patrols.
Maintaining heightened awareness of immediate surroundings, predicting potential risks, and quickly adapting security protocols based on real-time observations.
Rapid Prioritization
Quickly assessing and prioritizing threats, incidents, or emergencies to allocate resources effectively and respond appropriately in high-pressure situations.
Analyzing complex scenarios to determine the urgency and importance of tasks, enabling efficient decision-making and resource allocation under tight deadlines.
Procedural Compliance
Strict adherence to legal protocols, regulations, and standard operating procedures while conducting investigations, processing evidence, and maintaining order.
Meticulous adherence to rules, guidelines, and established processes, ensuring accuracy, accountability, and legal compliance in all operations.
Adversarial Thinking
Anticipating the tactics and strategies of potential adversaries to proactively identify vulnerabilities, develop countermeasures, and maintain a secure environment.
Analyzing potential risks and threats from different perspectives, enabling the development of robust security plans and preventative measures.
Roles the recruiter won't suggest.
Adjacent civilian roles your training maps to that conventional military-to-civilian advice tends to miss.
Fraud Investigator
SOC 13-2099.04You've been trained to scrutinize situations, identify anomalies, and enforce regulations. As a Fraud Investigator, you'll leverage your keen observational skills and procedural rigor to uncover financial discrepancies and prevent fraud.
Adjacent · MatchCompliance Officer
SOC 13-1041.00You've been deeply immersed in understanding and enforcing rules and regulations. As a Compliance Officer, you'll utilize your attention to detail and commitment to procedure to ensure organizations adhere to legal and ethical standards.
Adjacent · MatchEmergency Management Specialist
SOC 11-9161.00You've honed your skills in rapid decision-making and maintaining order in high-pressure situations. As an Emergency Management Specialist, you’ll use your ability to prioritize and coordinate resources to effectively respond to crises and protect communities.
Adjacent · MatchWhat you trained on.
Military Police Basic Course
Fort Leonard Wood, MOUp to 9 semester hours recommended in Criminal Justice, Law Enforcement, or Security Administration
- Military Law and Procedures
- Physical Security and Force Protection
- Traffic Management and Control
- Law Enforcement Operations
- Detention Operations
- Weapons Handling and Tactics
- Combatives and Self-Defense
- First Aid and Emergency Response
- Certified Protection Professional (CPP)65%
While military training covers security principles, investigations, and threat assessment, the CPP requires deeper knowledge of business principles, risk management, legal aspects of security, and advanced security management techniques specific to the private sector.
- Physical Security Professional (PSP)70%
Military training provides a strong foundation in physical security. Gaps include in-depth knowledge of security system design (access control, intrusion detection, CCTV), implementation, and maintenance, focusing on civilian sector applications and standards.
- Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE)Adjacent
- Project Management Professional (PMP)Adjacent
- Security+Adjacent
- Certified in Homeland Security (CHS)Adjacent
What you ran, in their words.
Military systems you operated and their civilian equivalents for your resume.
| Military System | Civilian Equivalent | Domain |
|---|---|---|
| Joint Automated Booking System (JABS) | Case management and booking software (e.g., Tyler Technologies, New World Systems) | Operations |
| Defense Biometric Identification System (DBIDS) | Access control and visitor management systems (e.g., HID Global, Envoy) | Operations |
| Military Police Reporting System (MPRS) | Incident reporting and records management systems (RMS) for law enforcement (e.g., Motorola Solutions CommandCentral, Mark43) | Operations |
| Expeditionary Mobile Tactical Radio System (EMTRS) | Two-way radio communication systems (e.g., Motorola, Kenwood) or mobile communication platforms (e.g., FirstNet) | Operations |
| Non-Lethal Weapons Systems (e.g., Taser, OC spray) | Less-lethal weapons and restraint tools used by law enforcement (e.g., Taser, PepperBall) | Weapons |
| Integrated Security System (ISS) | Physical security information management (PSIM) systems (e.g., Johnson Controls, Genetec) | Operations |
| Minehound VMR3 metal detector | Commercial metal detectors for security sweeps | Operations |
Translate 5801 into a resume that ships.
Pair this guide with the VWC AI-powered translator: drop in your service record, get back ATS-optimized civilian resume language tuned to the tech roles above.