ORDER
At my request, counsel in this federal employment case submitted supplemental briefs on whether the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Bush v. Lucas,
— U.S. —,
After reviewing the authorities presented, I conclude that the Tenth Circuit probably will not follow the Eleventh Circuit’s reasoning in
Dynes.
There the Eleventh Circuit held that no
Bivens
remedy should be implied for AAFES employees because of the existence of meaningful remedies against the United States. But the Eleventh Circuit did not discuss as a significant factor the difference between AAFES regulations and the extensive civil service protections reviewed in
Bush v. Lucas.
Under the rationale of
Bush,
the critical difference between civil service regulations and the AAFES regulations is that judicial review of the latter is neither provided nor available.
See Dynes,
This lack of judicial review of an AAFES employee’s constitutional claims requires that a
Bivens
remedy be implied to provide judicial review of alleged constitutional violations. There is nothing new about such a review; it derives from
Marbury v. Madison,
For these reasons, the plaintiff will be allowed to assert, against all four remaining defendants, a Bivens claim for his allegedly improper exclusion from the Air Force Academy grounds. Whether the plaintiff prevails on any of his claims of course, will be for the jury to decide.
