Lead Opinion
Concurring opinion filed by Circuit Judge Tatel.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation revoked appellant Kaiser Gill’s security clearance after he, while employed as a special agent,'' conducted unauthorized searches of a Bureau database. Gill filed suit,' alleging that the revocation of his security clearance violated the equal protection and due process clauses of the Constitution, ' as well as the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. The district court concluded that Gill’s claims failed or were otherwise barred and dismissed the case. Although following a slightly different path, we reach the same destination and affirm.
I.
A decorated veteran and Pakistani immigrant, Kaiser Gill worked for the Federal'Bureau of Investigation (FBI) as a special agent until 2006, when the Bureau revoked his security clearance after he conducted unauthorized searches óf its Automated Case Support system. Gill sought review of this decision with the Department of Justice’s Access Review Committee (ARC), where he admitted his misconduct and, claiming that the “risk of him engaging in similar misconduct ... was miniscule,” asked that he be given “another opportunity to perform his duties as an FBI agent.” Memorandum from Mari Barr Santangelo, ARC Chair, to Alex J. Turner, Assistant Director, FBI Security Division, at 4 (Apr. 2, 2014) (“ARC Opinion”). Although the ARC recognized Gill’s-remorse, it emphasized that his “admitted misconduct in accessing sensitive information for personal reasons ... raise[d] straightforward concerns regarding his ability to safeguard classified information.” Id, Citing applicable , guidelines requiring that any doubt be resolved in favor -of national security, the ARC affirmed the FBI’s revocation of Gill’s security clearance.
The government moved to dismiss under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6), asserting several defenses, including that under the Supreme Court’s decision in Department of the Navy v. Egan,
II.
We begin with Gill’s claim that the FBI violated FISA. Under that statute, the Attorney General may, in certain circumstances, authorize electronic surveillance without court order. 50 U.S.C. § 1802. But before information obtained through such surveillance may be used in any “trial, hearing, or other proceeding,” FISA requires that the surveilled person and the court (or other authority) be notified. Id. § 1806(c). In this case, Gill alleges that the FBI used information gained through FISA-authorized surveillance in the ARC proceeding without the required disclosure.
The district court dismissed Gill’s FISA claim, explaining that “[t]here must be a valid waiver of the United States’ sovereign immunity for ... Gill to bring claims against an agency of the United States,” and that he had identified “no [such] waiver.” Gill v. Department of Justice, No. 15-824,
We can just as quickly resolve Gill’s claim that the FBI’s revocation of his security clearance violated his rights under the due process clause. Conceding that he had no constitutionally protected property interest in his security clearance, Gill argues that the revocation infringed a liberty interest. Doe v. Cheney,
Repurposing his FISA argument, Gill claims that the ARC proceeding could not have satisfied the requirements of due process because it was tainted by the alleged FISA violation. As the district court explained, however, “Gill’s misconduct was uncovered through a security unit interview, not electronic surveillance authorized by FISA.” Gill,
Gill also argues that the ARC proceeding failed to comply with principles of due process because the Committee based its decision on “the perceived foreign influence by [Gill’s] foreign bom relatives who are naturalized U.S. citizens” in violation of applicable guidelines. Appellant’s Br. 24. Gill misreads the ARC decision. Although the ARC does mention Gill’s “ties to his foreign-born relatives,” that reference appears in its synopsis of the FBI’s arguments. ARC Opinion at 4. In its own analysis, the ARC made no mention of Gill’s relatives. Id. Instead, it relied on the “straightforward concerns” Gill’s “admitted misconduct” raised regarding his trustworthiness. Id.
Gill claims that the ARC proceeding violated due process for still another reason—the Committee took five years to issue its decision. As our court has explained, however, an agency’s delay in issuing an otherwise valid decision does not offend principles of due process without some showing of harm caused by the delay. Zevallos v. Obama,
We come now to Gill’s equal protection claims. Specifically, he argues that his equal protection rights were violated in two ways: because he received a harsher penalty for his admitted misconduct than
As interesting as this issue is, we need not reach.it because, even if Gill’s equal protection claims are not barred by Egan, they fail for other reasons. His claim that the ARC inappropriately took account of his family members’ foreign-born status rests, as we have explained, supra at 681-82, on a misreading of the Committee’s decision. The ARC relied not on any concerns about Gill’s family, but rather on his “admitted misconduct” and the “straightforward concerns”-it raised regarding his trustworthiness. ARC Opinion at 4;.
Gill’s second claim—that the FBI revoked his security clearance because he is Muslim—suffers from a different, equally fatal defect: Gill failed to raise it before the ARC. In.its decision, the Committee thoroughly summarized his arguments against affirmance—i.e., his remorse and request for mercy—and that summary mentions no equal protection challenge. Moreover, nowhere in his complaint or briefing before this court has Gill alleged that the ARC ignored his constitutional challenges. Accordingly, Gill has forfeited this equal protection claim. “Simple fairness to those who are engaged in the tasks of administration, and to litigants, requires as a general rule that courts should not topple over administrative decisions unless the administrative body not only has erred but has erred against objection made at the time appropriate under its practice.” United States v. L.A. Tucker Truck Lines, Inc.,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s grant of the government’s •motion to dismiss.
So ordered.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
1 Although I agree with the court’s disposition of Gill’s claims, I write separately to explain why, were his equal protection claims viable, they would, contrary to the government’s argument, be barred neither by the Supreme1 Court’s decision in Department of the Navy v. Egan,
Gill makes two equal protection claims. First, he alleges that he was treated differently on the basis “of.his race, religion and ethnic origin.” Compl. ¶ 45. Specifically, he claims that “[n]on-Muslim agents who wrongfully accessed the FBI computer system were not terminated, nor [were] their security clearance[s] revoked. Instead, non-Muslim agents were given suspensions and letters of reprimand.” Id. ¶ 47. Second, repurposing one of his due process claims, Gill argues that the ARC denied him equal protection by treating his
According to the government, both claims are barred by the Supreme Court’s decision in Egan. There, the Court considered whether the1 Merit Systems Protection Board could review the Navy’s denial of a security clearance.
Although Egan rests in part on the “express language” and “structure .of the statutory scheme” at .issue in that case, id. at 580,
The government insists that this court has “never suggested in any of its decisions dismissing Title VII- claims on Egan grounds' that plaintiffs could bring the same claim of discrimination under the Constitution.” Appellee’s Br. 32.- That is incorrect. When dismissing statutory challenges as barred by Egan, our court has repeatedly distinguished between statutory and constitutional claims. In Ryan, for instance, we “emphasize[d] that our holding [was] limited to Title VII discrimination actions and [did] not apply to actions alleging deprivation of constitutional rights.”
This distinction between statutory and constitutional claims finds support in the Supreme Court’s decision in Webster v, Doe,
Relying on Webster, our court explained in National Federation of Federal Employees v. Greenberg,
Other circuits have also recognized limitations on Egan's, reach. The Third Circuit, noting that “not all claims arising from security clearance revocations violate separation of powers,” has held that constitutional claims may proceed. Stehney v. Perry,
The government counters that even if some constitutional challenges may proceed, Gill’s cannot for two reasons. First, equal protection challenges are, according to the government, especially likely to implicate Egan because “a court cannot determine in an equal. protection claim whether the agency was motivated by valid security reasons or discriminatory animus.” Appellee’s Br. 23. An inquiry into “whether an agency’s security-based reasons for revoking a security clearance are valid or pretextual,” the government insists, would “‘run[] smack up against Egan.’ ” Id. (quoting Ryan,
But not every equal protection challenge will involve reviewing “discretionary judgments regarding a particular employee’s security clearance.” Greenberg,
Gill alleges that he was treated differently based on his religion and his family’s national origin. See supra at 679-80. In my view, if Gill could show that the government has a policy or practice of treating Muslims or naturalized citizens differently, his equal protection claims, like the claims at issue in Greenberg, would not be barred by Egan.
The government next argues that, even if courts may review some security clearance—related equal protection claims, Gill’s are precluded by Title VII because he alleges discrimination in employment and under Brown v. General Services Administration,
To be sure, two circuits have held otherwise. See Brazil v. U.S. Department of the Navy,
