MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
If the government threw Amy Jo Hicks in jail because she was a member of A1 Qaeda, she would get a chance to challenge that factual assertion before a neutral arbiter. See Hamdi v. Rumsfeld,
The question here is whether that redetermination process violated the Due Process Clause. It did. The Due Process Clause ensures that people receive meaningful hearings. And meaningful hearings give people the opportunity to challenge the government’s factual assertions — at least where, as here, those assertions affect their rights.
The Court must therefore remand this case so that the SSA can give Hicks adequate process. That process need not involve a whole new mini-trial. The SSA must simply give Hicks the opportunity to challenge the basis for excluding evidence she wishes to present. That additional safeguard does not place an onerous burden on the SSA, and is necessary to assure that people do not lose their entitlements because of decisions made in the dark.
I.
A.
Back in September 2007, Hicks suffered from headaches, depression, and anxiety, as well as injuries to her right arm, neck, back, head, legs, and hips. R. 1 ¶ 4. She applied to the SSA for disability benefits, and, after testifying at an administrative hearing, received those benefits. Id. ¶ 5. The lawyer who helped prepare her application was “Mr. Social Security” himself, Eric C. Conn,
At some point, the SSA’s Office of the Inspector General (OIG) began investigating. By July 2014, the OIG discovered that at least 1,787 people — all former Conn clients — had submitted a template medical form sometime between 2007 and 2011. Id. at 18.
B.
That discovery jumpstarted an interlocking series of statutes and regulations called the redetermination process.- Under one part of the Social Security Act, “[a]s soon as the [OIG] has reason to believe that fraud was involved” in a benefits application, it “shall” refer that information to the SSA. 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-8(i). When the OIG says such things, the SSA listens. Indeed, it has to: Under another part of the Act, the SSA “shall immediately redetermine” a person’s entitlement to benefits “if there is reason to believe that fraud was involved” in that person’s application. 42 U.S.C. § 405(u)(l)(A). Further, the SSA “shall disregard any evidence” during the redetermination process “if there is reason to believe that fraud ... was involved in the providing of such evidence.” Id. § 405(u)(l)(B). In somewhat plainer English: When the OIG discovers fraud in an application, it must alert the SSA; the SSA must then redetermine whether the applicant actually deserved benefits at the time she applied for them; and in doing so, the SSA may not consider any part of the application that contains the suspected fraud.
As usual, the statute leaves something to the agency’s imagination — such as how, exactly, to make the process work. In the Social Security Administration Hearings, Appeals, and Litigation Law Manual (“HALLEX,” for short), the SSA has filled in those gaps. See HALLEX § 1-1-3-25;
The SSA will not, however, look at any part of the person’s original application that the OIG has said contains fraud. At redetermination hearings, ALJs “do not have discretion to reconsider” whether to disregard evidence the OIG has identified. Id. § I-l-3-25(C)(4)(a). According to the SSA’s internal regulations, ALJs must simply pretend that the evidence no longer
C.
Conn’s alleged scheme was just what Congress built the redetermination process to address. As required by Section 1320a-8(£), the OIG sent the SSA a referral letter identifying 1,787 applications that bore the mark of Conn. R. 25-1 at 5. With “reason to believe that fraud was involved in th[ose] applications,” the OIG saw no “objections to SSA moving forward” with the redetermination process. Id. So, as required by Section 405(u)(l)(A), the SSA moved forward: After getting word from the OIG, the SSA had no choice but to give 1,787 old applications another look. R. 25 at 16. But, as required by its own regulations, the SSA looked past the template medical forms and any other evidence that Conn’s doctors had submitted on the applicants’ behalves. HALLEX § 1 — 1—3— 25(C)(4)(b).
Facing the possibility that it was funding so many undeserving beneficiaries, the SSA worked quickly.
Hicks was one of those people. Her re-determination hearing took place on February 1, 2016. See R. 1 ¶ 9. “The relevant period for this hearing,” the ALJ explained at the outset, “is from September 1, 2007, through July 2, 2008,” the period when Hicks had applied for benefits. See Certified Administrative Record at 34. All evidence, old and new, had to pertain to that period; the ALJ was interested in the past. But he was not interested in one specific part of it — any evidence that Hicks had submitted from Conn’s doctors. Id. at 30 (“[W]e exclude evidence from certain doctors during the relevant period. I’ll issue a new decision based on the remaining evidence.”).
So Hicks once again found herself in an administrative hearing, testifying about the state of her health in 2007. But this time, she was not testifying in 2007 — she was testifying about 2007 from almost ten years in the future. According to Hicks, this was no easy task. Like many of Conn’s clients, she had been found disabled in the first place because of her “mental deficits and illnesses,” which “hamper[ed] [her] ability to recall accurately [her] medical histor[y].” R. 22 at 20. Nor was hard evidence easy to come by. What evidence she had she apparently gave to Conn, who has since “los[t]” or “destroy[ed]” it. Id. Plus, if any remained, it would have done her little good. Hicks said at oral argument, for example, that she had undergone psychological testing in 2007. The only problem was that one of Conn’s doctors had run the test. As the ALJ instructed, while Hicks told her story the second time, she had to leave any visits with, statements by, or evidence from Conn’s doctors out of it. And so, with a bad memory and little evidence, Hicks attempted to recall specific medical facts from nearly ten years before.
After the hearing, the ALJ concluded that Hicks did not have enough evidence to support her initial benefits claim. Id. at 10-22. So the SSA cancelled her benefits. See R. 1 ¶ 9. Hicks appealed, but the SSA declined to review the ALJ’s decision. Id. ¶ 9. That decision is, therefore, final, and Hicks no longer receives disability payments.
D.
By now, the SSA has held about 1,400 redetermination hearings for Conn’s former clients. R. 25 at 10. About half have kept their benefits, and about half have lost them. Id. Many in the second half— including Hicks — have now sued the SSA in this Court and others. They argue that, procedurally, the redetermination process violated the Administrative Procedure Act, the Social Security Act, and the Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause. They also argue that, substantively, the ALJs’ decisions were not supported by enough evidence. See R. 1 ¶ 11-20. The SSA moved to dismiss the procedural claims. R. 10.
The Court isolated the due-process claim for review because, above all else, agencies must follow the Constitution. R. 18 at 2. Because the claim depends largely on questions of law, which can be resolved through briefing and argument, the parties agreed to cross-move for summary judgment on the due-process claim. Id. The parties submitted their motions — plus some supplemental briefing — and the Court held a consolidated oral argument. With the briefs in and the argument over, the due-process question is now before the Court.
II.
A.
The parties agree on some basics. Due process has always required an “opportunity to be heard.” Grannis v. Ordean,
The wisdom of the halftime speech — not to mention the Due Process Clause — applies to the government, too. It’s not always what the government does that matters, but how. Whatever kind of hearing an agency might provide, that hearing must be “meaningful.” Armstrong v. Manzo,
But there is at least one absolute. Even if no two hearings are alike, all meaningful hearings provide “a fair opportunity to rebut the [government's factual assertions before a neutral decisionmaker.” Hamdi,
But as the fact at issue gets more specific, the process gets more involved. When the government asserts a fact about someone and that affects her rights, due process provides her a chance to challenge the assertion. The logic is easy enough. Imagine contesting a speeding ticket. You got the ticket on 1-75. But that day, every inch of the road within county lines was under construction — thus, the fíne for anyone speeding on that road, on that day, will be doubled. That decision rests on a general, sky-is-blue type of fact: there was construction. Because the fact has nothing to do with you in particular, your hearing will not be any more or less meaningful whether or not you get the chance to challenge it.
But now imagine that you had skipped school and were driving your father’s 1961 Ferrari GT California. And the judge tells you not even to bother arguing, about speed — she’s seen enough to know for a fact that anyone who skips school to drive their father’s Ferrari always goes ten miles over the speed limit, and, thus, that you were driving ten miles over the limit when you got the ticket. That assertion is about you. It affects your rights. And you very well might have unique evidence to debunk it. Anyone would say that you got some kind of a hearing. But absent any chance to challenge the judge’s speed assertion, no one would say that you got a very meaningful one.
Although logic alone would suffice, cases are useful, too. Below is a non-exhaustive list of controlling precedent, which illustrates this core element of due process. Consider it a Brief Tour of “Meaningful Hearings” Through the Years.
First up is Interstate Commerce Commission v. Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co.,
That principle shows up again in Greene v. McElroy,
In Mathews v. Eldridge, the Court dealt with a state that seemed, at first glance, contrary to Goldberg.
Greene, Goldberg, and Mathews are the tour’s main attractions — all later cases apply, and must apply, the due-process principles that those three laid down. For example, in Vlandis v. Kline,
Which brings the tour to its final stop: Hamdi v. Rumsfeld. The government detained Yaser Hamdi — without a hearing — on the ground that he was an enemy combatant affiliated with the Taliban.
The parties have filed extra briefs specifically addressing how Hamdi applies to the present case. The SSA argues, mainly, that Hamdi is “fundamentally different.” R. 30 at 3. True enough — all of the above cases have their differences. In some, the stakes were higher than in others. See Hamdi,
At the core of the present case, then, is a question about what the government can and cannot do without process. One thing it cannot do, according to Ham-di and its predecessors, is make a decision about you, not explain its reasons, and not let you challenge the decision. But here, that is exactly what the government did. The OIG made an assertion: “there [wa]s reason to believe fraud or similar fault was involved in [Hick’s] application for benefits.” R. 1-1 at 1. Given the SSA’s internal regulations, nobody — not Hicks, not the ALJ, not the SSA’s appeals board — could question the assertion. So the assertion became as good as fact. Because of that supposed fact, the SSA excluded Hick’s main source of medical evidence. And because it did, Hicks lost her benefits. She was unable to re-develop enough evidence, almost ten years after the fact, to re-prove her entitlement. Thus, the government has made an “important decision! ]” (to cancel Hicks’s benefits), which “turned on a question of fact” (that Hick’s medical evidence is fraudulent and therefore invisible), without giving her an “opportunity to confront” its view of the facts. Goldberg,
Nevertheless, one might be inclined to ask: So what? The point of a redetermination hearing is not to find out whether certain evidence really was fraudulent. The point is to find out whether someone really deserves her benefits. Since Hicks got to present evidence about the ultimate fact, why should she get to challenge an ancillary fact (the fraud assertion), too? Because, under the circumstances, that fact was not ancillary — her rights depended upon it. The information in Conn’s medical report was, clearly, material to the SSA’s determination. When the SSA considered that report, Hicks won social-security benefits; when it did not, she lost them. Moreover, although Conn might have used a healthy dose of fraud to produce the form, the form might still have held information — like the narrative account of Hicks’s visit(s) with Conn and/or his doctors — that was not, itself, false. Hicks certainly argues that it does. And without that evidence, Hicks was left without much evidence at all. Thus, Hicks could not make her case about the ultimate fact without making her case about the ancillary fact, too. In other words, unless she could argue that the ALJ should have considered her medical evidence, regardless of the doctor who signed it, her benefits claim was doomed.
But, the so-whatters might continue, this case in not quite like those from the “tour.” In those, the government made irrebuttable assertions about the ultimate fact at issue: He is a member of the Taliban. She lied on an employment form. That student is from out of state. Here, by contrast, the SSA held off on declaring Hicks unentitled to her disability benefits until it gave her a chance to rebut that ultimate fact. The only irrebuttable assertion it made was about a narrower, eviden-tiary issue.
Under the circumstances, however, that distinction makes little difference. For Hicks, the ultimate and the evidentiary questions were largely the same, seeing as her right to social-security depended, largely, on the template form. The first time through, that form was the basis for her claim. The second time, it was the only evidence she could reasonably get her hands on. To prove, in 2016, that she deserved benefits in 2007, she needed to use — or at least to argue that she should be able to use — her best evidence from that time. If the ALJ had considered the form, Hicks might have kept her benefits. If he did not, she would not.
When a right turns on a fact, due process demands the opportunity to establish or to dispute that fact. See Louisville & Nashville R.R. Co.,
What else could the SSA insulate from dispute? Currently, the answer seems to be: Anything the OIG says. Whether true or false, if the OIG announces a “reason to believe” that part of an application is made-up, then forevermore that part will be known and treated as fraud — -just as, after the Mobbs Declaration, Yaser Hamdi was known and treated as a terrorist. The slope is a slippery one.
But it is also one that the Due Process Clause prevents the SSA from going down. To summarize: The OIG made a factual assertion about Hicks’s application. That assertion was crucial because it removed the only medical records Hicks could reasonably access, nearly ten years down the road. To defend her benefits, therefore, Hicks needed a chance to challenge the assertion. But she never got one. Because she did not, her hearing was not meaningful. And because her hearing was not meaningful, the redetermination process violated the Constitution.
B.
The SSA responds in a number of ways.
1.
First, the SSA argues that it has already given Hicks all the process she could want. See R. 25 at 20. Hicks got a hearing. The point of that hearing was to determine whether she deserved her benefits. To that point, she could have “testified],” “submit[ted] any new evidence that is new [and] material,” and “s[ought] assistance with developing records that are new [and] material.” Id. And if she wanted the ALJ to consider any other evidence, the SSA said at oral argument, it was her “responsibility” to present it.
Yes, Hicks got a hearing. But she might as well have arrived in a DeLorean.
So, yes, Hicks got a hearing, but not a “fair opportunity” to present her ease. Hamdi,
2.
Second, the SSA argues that it does not have permission to give Hicks more process. R. 25 at 32. According to the SSA, it merely followed' Congress’s orders. And those orders were to “disregard any evidence” when the SSA has “reason to believe” that the evidence is fraudulent. 42 U.S.C. § 405(u)(l)(B).
Excluding fraudulent evidence is one thing. Forming a reason to believe that the evidence is in fact fraudulent, however, is another. Although the statute demands the former, it says nothing of the latter. Congress’s intent on that score is, therefore, open to interpretation. As discussed above, the SSA’s interpretation would make the redetermination statute unconstitutional. That then is one interpretation that the Court must avoid. See Antonin Scalia & Bryan Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 247 (2012) (“A statute should be interpreted in a way that avoids placing its constitutionality in doubt.” (citing U.S. ex rel. Att’y Gen. v. Del. & Hudson Co.,
As the SSA concedes, courts must presume that Congress follows the Constitution. See R. 25 at 32. The Constitution includes a due-process clause. That clause guarantees Hicks a chance to challenge factual assertions that affect her rights, like the OIG’s assertion about her principal medical evidence. Thus, the redetermi-nation statute must honor that guarantee and leave the SSA room to provide beneficiaries the process they are due.
3.
Third, the SSA argues that its interpretation of the statute should control, regardless of what the Court thinks. R. 25 at 17. Under Chevron, courts defer to an agency’s reasonable interpretation of an ambiguous statute, at least when the agency codifies that interpretation in a binding regulation. Chevron v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc.,
No doubt, the SSA has endeavored to interpret and apply the redetermi-nation statute reasonably. For the most part, it has succeeded. But location is key. The interpretation at issue — that the OIG’s assertion is not open to challenge— resides only in the HALLEX manual and a later policy statement. “[I]nterpretations contained in policy statements, agency manuals, and enforcement guidelines” have not gone through the notice-and-comment process, and thus “lack the force of law.” Christensen v. Harris Cty.,
And no matter how much power those materials have to persuade, the Court must still follow the Constitution. A court can defer all it wants, but, in the end, it cannot adopt an unconstitutional interpretation. See, e.g., Stinson v. United States,
4.
Fourth, the SSA argues that Hicks has no right to additional process. R. 25 at 13. True, “due process does not require an automatic right to challenge every SSA evidentiary decision,” all the above case law notwithstanding. Id. But under that case law, due process does require some opportunity to challenge decisions about facts that affect people’s rights. See, e.g., Hamdi,
The principal case on which the SSA relies — Flatford—simply applies that rule. In Flatford, the Sixth Circuit held that the SSA need not allow a disability recipient to cross-examine experts who submit reports after his hearing. Flatford v. Chater,
5.
Fifth, the SSA argues that Hicks has no right to the specific type of additional process she seeks. See R. 25 at 29-30. As the SSA pointed out at oral argument, Hicks’s hearing was not a criminal trial. The OIG never found that Hicks herself had committed the fraud — it only asserted a “reason to believe” that her lawyer had done so, which compelled the SSA only to redetermine her right to benefits. The OIG’s assertion, says the SSA, merely initiated a process; it was not a “finding” that had anything to do with Hicks, who has no need — or right — to challenge the immaterial.
How Orwellian. Although the OIG never said Hicks put the fraud in her application, it did believe that there was fraud in her application — and it said so. Maybe the OIG did not mean for that statement to be taken as a fact, but the SSA took it as one anyway. We cannot look at fraud, the SSA has consistently argued, and the OIG thinks this is fraud; thus, we cannot look at it. If the OIG’s assertion was not a “finding,” it sure acted like one. And that finding had everything to do with Hicks— indeed, her “rights depended upon” it.
As the SSA would have it, however, agencies could evade due process with indirect phrasing. And worse still, beneficiaries could get better hearings by committing the fraud themselves. If the government said, “Hicks defrauded,” she could challenge that assertion. But if the government said, “fraud was involved in her case,” she could not. Such is the danger of the passive voice.
This case would be different if Hicks merely wanted to challenge the government’s allegations against Conn. Those allegations indeed have little to do with her — Hicks was just one-one-thousand-seven-hundred-and-eighty-seventh of a piece of his alleged scheme. But she does not want to clear Conn’s name. At the end of the day, the name on her application was not Eric Conn, but Amy Jo Hicks. Saying that her application contains fraud necessarily implicates her, too. She simply wants to challenge that alleged “fact,” which the SSA relied upon when it redetermined, and ultimately revoked, her disability benefits. Due process affords her that opportunity.
6.
Finally, the SSA argues that additional process would be too expensive— and thus, that it gave Hicks enough process, all things considered. R. 25 at 23-32. This good-enough argument relies on the so-called Mathews test, which courts normally use to measure how much process is due, and which this Court has avoided using until now. When the naked eye can see that process falls short of the mark, courts need no measuring tape.
In any event, the tape confirms what the eye can see. Under Mathews, the Court must consider (1) the private interest at stake, (2) the risk that the government might erroneously deprive someone of that interest, and (3) the government’s interest in providing a particular level of process. See Mathews,
a.
First, does Hicks have a significant interest at stake? Yes. Courts “have frequently recognized the severity of depriving a person of the means of livelihood.” Loudermill,
As. to nature, the SSA argues that Hicks has an interest only “in having a meaningful opportunity to show” that she deserved benefits at the time she applied for them. R. 25 at 20. That argument misreads Mathews, where the Court was clear that “interest” meanst a liberty or property interest, and that social-security benefits count as a property interest.
As to significance, the SSA argues that, as a disability recipient, Hicks does not enjoy the same “heightened” interest as welfare recipients do under Goldberg. R. 25 at 31. That may be. Under Goldberg and Mathews, however, welfare and disability recipients alike get a meaningful hearing. Hicks, still, has not.
Also as to significance, the SSA argues that Hicks’s interest has got nothing on the “unassailable principle that individuals should not receive benefits” they do not deserve. R. 25 at 20. The SSA is absolutely correct on this point. Equally unassailable, however, is the principle that the government should not take people’s things without giving them due process. Whether or not the government thinks she should, Hicks has an interest in keeping what has, until recently, been hers.
And as to scope, the SSA argues that Hicks has no interest in a better redeter-mination process because she has other ways to get her benefits back — like filing a new application or asking the SSA to fore-go reclaiming her past payments. R. 30 at 8. For someone in Hicks’s position, however, filing an entirely new application or defending past payments is itself a burden. And the hope of recovering her benefits someday, of course, does not help her now. Hence why agencies must provide due process the first time around.
Granted, under Mathews, an agency may wait to give someone a hearing until after terminating her disability benefits. But Mathews must be understood in context. And in that context, the plaintiff eventually got a meaningful hearing, including the opportunity “to challenge directly the accuracy of [the] information” the government had used against him.
The point is, property comes with process. Owning a house does not just provide shelter, stability, and a school district, but also a guarantee that the government will not take the house without just compensation. When that property is social security, the rule remains the same: Those who are entitled to receive benefits are also entitled not to have them taken without due process. Loudermill,
b.
Second, is there a risk that the SSA erroneously deprived Hicks of her interest? Yes. If the OIG was wrong that Hicks’s medical form was fraudulent, then the ALJ was wrong to exclude that evidence. And if the ALJ wrongly excluded evidence, then the SSA might have wrongly terminated Hicks’s benefits.
And the OIG might well have been wrong that Hicks’s medical form was fraudulent. This case could be different if the OIG had asserted something objective and easy to verify about Hicks — as in, “She has been indicted before.” See Gilbert v. Homar,
Likewise, without context — and without even the “discretion” to consider the context — an ALJ cannot know whether Hicks’s application really contained a lie. HALLEX § I — 1—3—25(C)(4)(a). Maybe the template medical form happens to be aceu-rate as to her. Maybe one of Conn’s doctors really did examine her. When an issue “is inherently subject to factual determination and adversarial input” in this way, due process guarantees a chance to share one’s own side of the story. Yamasaki,
The SSA responds that, even if the template form is true for Hicks, she would be “the needle in the haystack.” R. 25 at 27. To be sure, if providing more process would help only the “rare exceptions,” the second Mathews factor weighs against providing more process. Mathews,
The question, then, is not whether Hicks will win her benefits back. See Loudermill,
Moreover, a redetermination hearing is not just a hunt for needles in the hay. In the hearing, ALJs must assess whether “there is [ ]sufficient evidence to support” an application. Id. § 405(u)(3). Even if she was no needle, Hicks might still have put the template form to good use. Maybe the form includes some true information, even if the rest is false. Maybe the form bolsters Hicks’s other evidence. Or maybe the form is her only evidence — a possibility that, for many Conn clients, is more than just a hypothetical. See R. 22 at 20.
In short, the “probable value” of an “additional procedural safeguard[]” — specifically, a chance to contest the OIG’s fraud assertion — is high. Mathews,
Finally, does the SSA have a significant interest in denying additional process? No. The SSA argues that “administrative costs would soar” if it were to “conduct hundreds of mini-trials on the issue of fraud.” R. 25 at 25. In general, costs are a legitimate concern. See Mathews,
Far be it from this Court to tell them how to do so here. But an adequate process might look something like this: The SSA calls an OIG agent to the redetermi-nation hearing. The agent testifies about
Granted, such a hearing will take a little longer than the one Hicks got. But that “burden,” if it is one, is not heavy enough to tip the Mathews scales. Indeed, this is the very process that the SSA provides in cases where the SSA — rather than the OIG — -is the one to discover the fraud. In that case, an ALJ may consider evidence allegedly tainted by fraud. At least, the beneficiary can object “to the disregarding of certain evidence,” and the ALJ can hear the objection. HALLEX § 1-1-3-25(C)(4)(b). If the ALJ “is satisfied” that the evidence is not fraudulent, “he or she will consider the evidence.” Id. The SSA has offered no reason why the process becomes any more costly when the OIG gets involved.
Aside from costs, the SSA argues that legislative history and public policy compel the Court to bless the SSA’s procedural choice. As the legislative history reflects, Congress was interested in cutting undeserving beneficiaries off the government’s payrolls, and fast. See R. 25 at 24-25 (discussing 140 Cong. Rec. H4750-03). But when Congress confers property interests — like social-security benefits — it may not force beneficiaries to take the “bitter with the sweet,” i.e., trade in due process for a disability payment. Loudermill,
Should Congress choose to scrap the program altogether, nothing in the Constitution would stop it. As long as it chooses to provide social-security benefits, however, Congress must pair those benefits with due process. As discussed earlier, due process entails the right 'to challenge the OIG’s fraud determination, a right that this Court assumes Congress meant to preserve. And as discussed here, that right is not such a large wrench that it will slow the redetermination process down much, if at all. Congress certainly has a legitimate interest in “assuring a fiscally responsible system.” Himmler v. Califano,
As for policy, the SSA offers two arguments. First, it contends that allowing Hicks to challenge the fraud assertion would require opening the “OIG’s investigative file” on Conn’s thousands of clients, “severely prejudicing the [gjovernment’s ability to prosecute” Conn. R. 25 at 27. Why Hicks would need information on thousands of people, in a hearing about just one, is unclear. Regardless, the government only began to prosecute Conn a year after it began to redetermine the rights of his victims. It cannot use that delay for its own benefit now — especially since the redetermination statute itself provides a clear way to safeguard information related to a prosecution; which the government, apparently, chose not to follow. See 42 U.S.C. § 405(u)(l)(A) (allowing a prosecutor to halt the redetermination process).
Second, the SSA argues that allowing Hicks to challenge the fraud assertion might cause the “fundamentally unfair” result that she keeps her benefits while others do not. Id. at 26. Indeed — that is how hearings work. Some claimants will win,
d.
Bringing it all together: The SSA has deprived Hicks of a property interest. Because the SSA forbade Hicks from so much as mentioning the template forms, the SSA might have deprived her erroneously. And the SSA fails to identify any governmental interests that an “additional” — not to mention constitutionally required — -“safeguard” would upset. Mathews,
III.
Under 42 U.S.C. § 405(g), the Court can affirm, modify, or reverse an SSA decision “with or without remanding the cause for a rehearing.” A rehearing is appropriate here. Because of its unconstitutional internal guidelines, the SSA did not consider all the evidence it should have. Hence, the Court cannot know if the SSA’s decision was right or wrong. Depending on whether the ALJ ultimately considers the template form — and how much weight he thinks it deserves — Hicks might or might not have sufficient evidence to warrant benefits. Rather than guess at the facts, the Court will give the professionals a chance to determine them.
Even though remand is the “most natural remedy,” Hicks argues that the remedy is “not suitable” here and that the Court should reverse the redetermination deeision outright. R. 22 at 18. Like a car with a “faulty transmission,” “bent frame,” and “blown head gasket,” Hicks says, the whole process is unsalvageable. Id. But to be clear, the Court only considers one part of the redetermination process unconstitutional. That is the paragraph in the HAL-LEX manual providing, in relevant part: “[Adjudicators do not have discretion to reconsider the issue of whether the identified evidence should be disregarded when based on an OIG referral of information or a referral based on information obtained during a criminal or other law enforcement investigation.” HALLEX § 1 — 1—3— 25(C)(4)(a). To resolve the due-process problem on remand, therefore, the ALJ does not need to redo the entire hearing, but rather hold a supplemental hearing in which Hicks has an opportunity to discuss the evidence from the medical template form. If the ALJ believes that the evidence deserves some weight, then he must reconsider the redetermination decision — and if he does not, then he need not. The Court sees no reason to doubt that this simple fix will make the process “street legal.”
Accordingly, it is ORDERED as follows:
(1) Hicks’s cross-motion for partial summary judgment on the due-process claim, R. 22, is GRANTED.
(2) The SSA’s cross-motion for summary judgment on the due-process claim, R. 25, is DENIED.
(3) This case is REMANDED to the SSA for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. See The Conn Law Firm, http://www. mrsocialsecurity.com/.
. Available at https://www.ssa.gov/OP_Home/ hallex/I-01/1-1-3-25 .html.
. More quickly, in fact, than the government worked to prosecute Eric Conn. It got around to that about a year later. See United States v. Conn, No. 5:16-cr-22-DCR, D.E. 1 (E.D. Ky. Apr. 1, 2016) (indictment).
. See generally Back to the Future (Universal Pictures 1985) ("Marty: Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Doc, uh ... Are you telling me you built a time machine ... out of a DeLorean? Doc: The way I see it, if you're gonna build a time machine into a car, why not do it with some style?”).
. But see Charles J. Cooper, Confronting the Administrative State, 25 Nat’l Affs. 96, 102-04 (2015) (“[O]ur constitutional order has been subverted, perhaps irreversibly ... the administrative state has the last word, binding even on the Supreme Court, on what ambiguous statutory provisions mean[.]”).
. The SSA mentions three other cases, none persuasive here. Yancey, which the SSA cites as a Sixth Circuit case but is actually from the Second Circuit, merely adopts Flatford. See Yancey v. Apfel,
. The Court applies the Mathews test while at the same time recognizing that it has lived under substantial — and persuasive — criticism, almost since the day that the Supreme Court created it. See generally Jerry L. Mashaw, The Supreme Court’s Due Process Calculus for Administrative Adjudication: Three Factors in Search of a Theory of Value, 44 U. Chi. L. Rev. 28 (1976). This case exemplifies one of the test’s many problems. Nowhere does the test allow the Court to weigh the plain old value of process itself, i.e., of simply knowing why the government has decided to take action against you. And part of what Hicks seeks is simply a chance to know. In a democracy, that interest is significant. See id. at 45 (‘‘[Government action] can be legitimized only by invoking either authority or consent. In a democracy consent is undoubtedly the preferable justification. Its procedural approximation would seem to be the fullest possible participation in the decisional process.”). As scholars have argued more recently, Mathews is better understood not as a rigid algorithm, but as a framework for crafting fair procedures. See generally Gary Lawson et al., “Oh Lord, Please Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood!’’: Rediscovering the Mathews v. Eldridge and Penn Central Frameworks, 81 Notre Dame L. Rev. 1 (2005).
. This is yet another problem with Mathews: It sets the wrong baseline. Extending the logic of the second prong, all process is, potentially, up for sale. But due process includes certain features that cannot get bargained away. That principle should be the starting point— and if a party wants any additional process, then Mathews can apply. Otherwise, the government could simply remove fundamental procedures — like the one it denied Hicks— just because they might be costly or ineffectual in a particular line of cases. And otherwise — applying the same logic to a different branch- — courts could simply throw away all the pro se habeas petitions they receive, including, for example, Clarence Gideon’s. See Gideon v. Wainwright,
. The Court is aware that two judges from this district have reached the opposite conclusion. See Carter v. Colvin, No. 0:16-cv-00017-DCR, D.E. 24 (E.D. Ky. Oct. 6, 2016); Griffith v. Colvin, No. 7:16-cv-00101-DCR, D.E. 34 (E.D. Ky. Oct. 6, 2016); Perkins v. Colvin, No. 7:16-cv-00035-JMH, D.E. 46 (E.D. Ky. Oct. 6, 2016). Although thorough and thoughtful, those opinions do not change the Court’s conclusion here.
