MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
This matter is here again on defendant’s motion to dismiss.
See also Rattigan v. Gonzales (“Rattigan I
”), No. 04-CV-2009,
The sole remaining issue in this case is whether plaintiffs employer retaliated against him, in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e
et seq.
(“Title VII”), for complaining that OIO officials had discriminated against him on the basis of his race and national origin. Defendant has now moved to dismiss the case for lack of jurisdiction pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1), claiming that it just learned that the Court lacked jurisdiction to proceed. (Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss for Lack of Jurisdiction [“Mot. to Dismiss”] [Dkt. No. 97] at 1.) Despite the fact that defendant made this motion almost five years after the initial complaint was filed and only one business day before trial is set to commence, “[a] litigant generally may raise a court’s lack of subject-matter jurisdiction at any time in the same civil action,” and “a court’s subject-matter jurisdiction cannot be expanded to account for the parties’ litigation conduct....”
1
Kontrick v. Ryan,
*91
As this is the fifth dispositive motion filed by defendant, the Court need not repeat the facts and procedural history which are set forth in
Rattigan II,
Defendant contends that “courts do not have jurisdiction to adjudicate a claim that the initiation of a security investigation is an act of discrimination or retaliation under Title VII.... ” (Mot. to Dismiss at 1.) In support, defendant cites three circuit court decisions:
Becerra v. Dalton,
The D.C. Circuit similarly held in
Ryan v. Reno,
In the case at bar, however, plaintiffs security clearance was not revoked. To the contrary, the Security Division deemed the security concerns documented in the Leighton EC to be unfounded. Accordingly, neither Egan, Ryan, Bennett, nor any of the cases cited by defendant directly govern this case. 2 As this appears to be a question of first impression, the Court will more closely examine the Supreme Court’s decision in Egan in order to determine whether its reasoning is applicable to the facts presented here.
Egan
explained that the President, as commander-in-chief of the armed forces and head of the executive branch, is constitutionally vested with the authority “to classify and control access to information bearing on national security and to determine whether an individual is sufficiently trustworthy to occupy a position in the Executive Branch that will give that person access to such information.... ”
As in this case, plaintiffs in
Becerra, Hill,
and
Panoke
argued that their supervisors had been motivated by unlawful animus and made knowingly false accusations about them. But unlike this case,
Becerra^ Hill,
and
Panoke
also involved agency decisionmakers who reviewed those accusations and reached a conclusion, committed to their discretion by law, that the plaintiffs’ reported conduct or characteristics were inconsistent with the interests of national security. By examining the motives for — and potentially casting doubt upon— the initial accusations, the courts in those cases would have been in the position of “second-guess[ing]” the decisionmakers who, pursuant to the Executive Orders that delegate the President’s authority to control access to classified information, saw fit to credit those accusations when deeming the plaintiffs unfit to access such information.
Hill,
Here, the Court — and the jury — need not engage in any such second-guessing. The Security Division, and not the OIO, is the FBI, entity charged with “ ‘assuring] the loyalty, reliability, suitability, and trustworthiness of applicants, employees, and others who work with, will work with, or have access to sensitive or classified [FBI] information and material.’”
Rattigan III,
Rather, the only remaining question in this litigation is the legitimacy of the referral,
by those who have no role in security clearance decisions,
that triggered the Security Division’s fact-gathering interviews. In other words: was the drafting and editing of the Leighton EC and its referral to the Security Division motivated by unlawful retaliatory animus? Unlike
Becerra, Hill,
and
Panoke,
the answer to this question will not cast doubt on any wholly discretionary judgment that plaintiff was unworthy of a security clearance, for no such judgment was ever made. The OIO personnel whose actions are at issue here were not in a position to determine plaintiffs suitability for access to sensitive national security information — hence their need to refer the Leighton EC to the Security Division, because only the latter could make such a “[p]redictive judgment.”
Egan,
Indeed, the record is clear that OIO personnel were in no position to reach
any
authoritative judgment on the merits about plaintiffs conduct or characteristics, even those unrelated to national security. This is demonstrated by the internal debate as to whether Leighton’s concerns were more properly referred to the Security Division or to the Employee Assistance Program (“EAP”) for a multidisciplinary evaluation and by the facts that Pyszczymuka may have instructed Leighton to documents his observations in an EC (as opposed to Pyszczymuka simply determining plaintiffs fitness for himself) and that Pyszczymuka and Smith may have instructed Leighton to refer the matter to the Security Division.
See Rattigan III,
Pyszczymuka’s ultimate decision to refer the Leighton EC to the Security Division is distinct from and antecedent to the Security Division’s investigation, and thus, unlike
Ryan,
the referral to the Security Division is not “tantamount to [a] clearance denial[ ]....”
The Court’s conclusion is further buttressed by the concern that dismissing plaintiffs claim as non-justiciable would permit future agency officials who do not make security clearance determinations to immunize themselves from challenge based on claims of discrimination or retaliation. Such officials could present spurious national security allegations about a disfavored employee to another agency official who is, in fact, responsible for clearance determinations, and thereby insulate themselves from Title VII review in a situation where the security clearance decisionmaker ultimately rejects the allegations as unfounded.
For the foregoing reasons, defendant’s motion to dismiss [Dkt. No. 97] is DENIED. Plaintiff’s motion to adjourn the trial [Dkt. No. 98] is also DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Court notes that defendant’s failure to raise this jurisdictional issue until this late date demonstrates a total disregard for both the Court and opposing counsel, and since the seminal case in this area of the law dates back to 1988,
see Dep't of the Navy v. Egan,
. Defendant does not invoke Title VII's national security exemption for certain employment actions. That exemption provides that "it shall not be an unlawful employment practice for an employer to fail or refuse to hire and employ any individual ... [or] discharge any individual from any position ... if the occupancy of such position ... is subject to any requirement imposed in the interest of the national security of the United States under any security program ... and such individual has not fulfilled or has ceased to fulfill that requirement.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(g). This provision deprives a court of jurisdiction over a Title VII claim based on a failure to hire or a discharge premised upon the plaintiff's inability to obtain or maintain a security clearance.
See Bennett,
. Had the Security Division decided instead that the observations of the Leighton EC were meritorious, the next step would appear to have been the communication of that conclusion to the FBI’s Security Programs Manager, who could have instituted established procedures for revoking plaintiff's clearance and suspending his access to classified information. (See Reply, Ex. B (reprinting regulations).) In that event, plaintiff's claim would be indistinguishable from those at issue in the cases cited by defendant, and the validity of the ultimate decision regarding revocation would not be reviewable by a court.
. This case is therefore more analogous to
Jones
and
Delgado,
since the challenged action here, like the suitability determinations in those cases, is at least one step removed from the security clearance process and did not lead to a judgment that plaintiff was unworthy of a clearance.
See Jones,
. In other contexts, courts have recognized that the mere fact that a plaintiff’s claim is tangentially related to the issue of a security clearance determination does not, on its own, bar judicial review. For example, courts have permitted plaintiffs to challenge other adverse actions that have arisen from the revocation of their security clearance.
See, e.g., Ranger v. Tenet,
