Movant-Appellant Fernando E. Mata, a former employee of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), appeals the district court’s order dismissing, for lack of jurisdiction, Mata’s motion seeking relief under Title VII 1 on grounds of retaliation for his participation, on behalf of present and former Hispanic employees, in the instant class action lawsuit against the FBI. 2 In that suit, the district court found no retaliation against any class member other than the named plaintiff, Bernardo Perez. 3
Mata alleged that, in violation of § 704 of Title VII, 4 the FBI took acts of retaliation against him by revoking his top-secret security clearance and firing him. Employment like Mata’s with the FBI requires top-secret security clearance, so the FBI’s revocation of Mata’s clearance was tantamount to firing him because his eligibility to serve terminated automatically as a result of the loss of that clearance. In response to Mata’s allegations that the revocation of his clearance and resulting firing were retaliatory, the FBI proffered, as non-discriminatory reasons for such adverse employment actions, that Mata (1) fabricated official reports, and (2) disclosed classified information to unauthorized representatives of the Cuban Government. In the ordinary Title VII situation, that would put the ball in Mata’s court to show pretext.
Observing that the essence of the retaliation asserted by Mata is the FBI’s decision to revoke his security clearance, the district court concluded that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction to review his claim and entered an order of dismissal. It is that order of the district court which is appealed herein by Mata.
Although we understand and sympathize with Mata’s frustration at not being able to obtain judicial review of his retaliation claims, we come inevitably to the same conclusion reached by the district court: Because the court would have to examine the legitimacy and the possibly pretextual nature of the FBI’s proffered reasons for revoking the employee’s security clearance, 5 any Title VII challenge to the revocation would of necessity require some judicial scrutiny of the merits of the revocation decision. 6 As *515 the Supreme Court and several circuit courts have held that such scrutiny is an impermissible intrusion by the Judicial Branch into the authority of the Executive Branch over matters of national security, neither we nor the district court have jurisdiction to consider those matters. 7
In addition to concluding that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction to address Mata’s Title VII claim, the district court also determined that it lacked such jurisdiction to address Mata’s Bivens claims under the First and Fifth Amendments. In so doing, the court correctly relied on Supreme Court and Fifth Circuit precedent to the effect that Title VII provides both the exclusive cause of action and the exclusive remedy for federal employees who wish to assert claims of employment discrimination. 8
In sum, our review of the evidence and the applicable law convinces us that the determinations of the district court are free of reversible error. We are led, therefore, to the unavoidable conclusion that neither the district court nor this court on appeal has subject matter jurisdiction to consider Mata’s Title VII or Bivens claims. The rulings of the district court regarding Mata’s motion are, therefore,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, et seq.
.
See Perez v. FBI
.
Perez,
. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a).
.
See Brazil v. U.S. Dept. of the Navy,
. We also understand the concern of federal agents, whose employment is conditioned on security clearances, that the lack of judicial review creates the potential for abuse by the agencies and bureaus employing them. This result, however, is required by the fact that security clearance determinations are "sensitive and inherently discretionary” exercises, entrusted by law to the Executive.
Department of Navy v. Egan,
.
See e.g., Department of the Navy v. Egan,
.
See Brown v. General Services Administration,
