Per bend enhanced Vert and Sable, a bendlet enhanced Or and in base a lion rampant, armed and langued Gules, crowned of the second.
That for regiments and separate battalions of the Army Reserve: From a wreath Or and Vert, the Lexington Minute Man Proper. The statue of the Minute Man, Captain John Parker (H.H. Kitson, sculptor), stands on the Common in Lexington, Massachusetts.
POLICE WITH HONOR.
The green and gold of the shield are the colors of the Military Police Corps. The gold bendlet denotes the unit's function upon the highways of Europe. The golden lion on a black field is taken from the corporate arms of the city of Heidelberg, where the organization has had occupation duty since World War II.
The crest is that of the United States Army Reserve.
The coat of arms was approved on 27 January 1953. It was amended to add the crest of the United States Army Reserve on 16 September 2005.