Frequently Asked Questions
So, you want to "Join the Cause!"? You're here because "We're the good guys". Or maybe it is just because you want to be able to SIT DOWN in your costume... we are sure you have a lot of questions and if the following doesn't help answer them, feel free to out to your prospective local Commanding Officer! You can find your local chapter of the Rebel Legion on the Bases/Outposts page.
Another great resource for asking questions and inquiring about your perspective costume is to contact one of the Rebel Legion Detachments. You can find them listed on the Detachments page.
Membership Questions
The Rebel Legion is an inclusive, equal-opportunity club. To join you must be at least 18 years of age and must legally be considered an adult where you live. Due to legal liability issues, the Rebel Legion cannot accept minors as members. For more information on this policy, please consult our Age Requirements F.A.Q. You must also own at least one movie-quality costume depicting a "good guy" from the Star Wars films or Expanded Universe.
For a more detailed explanation of Legion membership requirements, please refer to Article I of the Rebel Legion Club Charter. For more information on what constitutes a "professional-quality" costume, read through Article II of the Rebel Legion Club Charter and the list of Costuming Standards.
Unfortunately, there are no high-quality, commercially available costumes licensed by Lucasfilm, and store-bought Halloween costumes are not generally accepted. All members construct their own costumes, usually with the assistance of more experienced members. (The new Museum Replicas may be an exception, if altered to properly fit you) If you are interested in making a costume, we recommend you consult these resources:
Costume and Prop Making subforum
Rebel Legion Tutorials subforum
The best way to get involved is to contact your local Base or Outpost and see if you can help out as a "handler" at an event. This way you can get to know the local members and learn more about the costumes.
Members of the 501st Legion are issued unique multi-digit ID numbers, such as TK-0421. When our club was officially founded in 2000, we did have ID numbers, but dropped them in early 2002. Members felt that ID numbers were more appropriate for the 501st because they represented faceless, nameless shock troops while the Rebels were a group of individuals with names and faces. The issue has come up several times over the years, and the membership has always voted against the idea.
Some detachments, such as Rebel Legion Starfighter Command, do issue three-digit ID numbers to members of individual Squadrons.
General Questions
The Rebel Legion marches in parades, raises funds for charity, appears at conventions, visits children's hospitals, troops educational and science centers, and a wide variety of other events.
The Legion does not participate in commercial ventures or business promotions unrelated to the Star Wars franchise, nor do we campaign for political or religious causes.
Age Requirements
Because minors are not legally responsible for themselves, any minor members of the Rebel Legion would become the club's and its officers' legal responsibility at any events where their parents are not present.
In 2002, several lawyers were consulted on this matter and we were advised to bar members because we do not have the liability insurance, financial resources, or legal standing to help our club officers and members defend themselves in a lawsuit. Should we lose, any officers or members named as defendants could lose their personal savings, retirement, cars, or even their homes, and find themselves thousands or even millions of dollars in debt. Even if we were the victors in such a lawsuit, the costs involved in defending ourselves would financially devastate all involved.
Since this is just a fun hobby, this is not a risk that our members or officers are willing to take.
The lawyers that were consulted explained that liability simply cannot be waived by a parent or anyone else. A minor cannot sign anything and be liable for themselves, either. Your parents or guardians would not be legally obliged to honor any promissory note they may have signed. If you were injured at an event, you're medical insurance would attempt to recoup their expenses by suing us, regardless of your parents' decision.
Permission slips do not actually protect schools or anyone else from being sued by parents. They inform the parent/guardian of the nature of the off-campus activity and ask the parent to allow their child to participate. This can assist the school in their defense in the event of a lawsuit, but does not prevent them from being sued in the first place, nor does it prevent them from losing. Schools have lost lawsuits even when the parent signed a permission slip.
Many volunteer organizations allow minors to join their clubs despite the risks. The Rebel Legion and numerous other private social costume clubs all accepted minors before adopting the current age restrictions.
The Society for Creative Anachronism (SCA) accepts minors and they do have liability insurance, but they charge annual membership fees to pay for said insurance as well as incorporation fees, running a business office to receive legal notices, legal retainers, and so on. In the SCA, all members must sign waivers and insurance certificates must be pulled for every event, every time, and the SCA still gets sued anyway.
Other clubs use permission slips, erroneously believing that they are protecting themselves from being sued. Some simply don't take the risk seriously, figuring that nothing will happen. Most simply do not realize that they are risking all of their personal assets by allowing minors to join.
Some have proposed that we allow minors into a special "Junior League" or that minors be given a special rank such as "Cadet." Unfortunately, this is about as effective as a Superman T-shirt is against a hail of bullets from a minigun. Legally, we either allow minors to join or we don't. There is no middle ground.
If we were lucky, calling minors by a different name would simply be ignored, but it's possible that the judge or jury would view this as an attempt to exploit a loophole. Judges and juries are not so befuddled by technicalities that they cannot use their common sense. Often, people who try to exploit loop holes are punished worse for doing so.
Please have your parents check out the Galactic Academy for an alternative for minors. It was founded by Albin Johnson of the 501st to provide a safe website for children who costume. It is NOT officially a part of the 501st or Rebel Legion, but a great stepping stool for young costumers.