OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Killian B. Swift brings this suit alleging that the government unreasonably and unlawfully denied him access to the White House to perform his duties as a stenographer, thereby violating his rights under the Administrative Procedure Act and the Constitution. Defendant has moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. For the reasons set forth below, the Court will grant defendant’s motion with respect to certain counts, and deny it with respect to the remainder.
. I.
Plaintiff Swift worked at the White House for nearly two years recording and transcribing the President’s public speeches and press conferences — first for the TTW Reporting Company and, after that company went bankrupt, for Koba Associates, Inc. (“Koba”). Both companies were under contract with the Defense Supply System (“DSS”), which required that all contractor personnel possess a White House access clearance. Plaintiff maintained such a security clearance from February 26, 1982 through January 3, 1984, except for a six-week period in 1983 between the termination of TTW’s contract with DSS and the commencement of Koba’s contract. Plaintiff alleges that in the fall of 1983, an agent of defendant, Dennis Sculimbrene, approached plaintiff’s supervisor, Marcia Baggott, and asked her whether plaintiff is homosexual. Ms. Bag-gott confirmed that, to her knowledge, he is. On January 3, 1984, defendant notified Koba that plaintiff had been determined to be a security risk and that he would no longer be permitted access to the White House complex. Immediately thereafter Koba terminated plaintiff’s employment.
Plaintiff’s mother wrote Nancy Reagan, inquiring into the reasons for the revocation of her son’s security clearance, and was advised in a letter of February 3, 1984, from Richard Hauser, Deputy Counsel to the President, that “no determination was made that your son is a ‘national security risk.’ ” Complaint, 1112. To date, defendant has refused to restore plaintiff’s security clearance, provide him or Koba any explanation for the loss of that clearance, or offer him an opportunity to clear his name.
Plaintiff alleges that defendant has never terminated a reporter/transcriber’s White House access for any reason other than a failure to perform contract obligations satisfactorily, and that this practice gave rise to a justifiable expectation of continued access to the White House amounting to a property right in such access. Defendant’s actions, he asserts, deprived him of this property right without due process, in violation of the fifth amendment. He further alleges that he was deprived of liberty without due process by virtue of defendant’s statement to Koba *598 that plaintiff is a security risk — a determination that plaintiff claims is false and which was given effect without any accompanying explanation or opportunity for a name-clearing. Plaintiff also claims that in basing the termination decision on his homosexuality, defendant violated his privacy and associational rights, and deprived him of equal protection of the laws. Finally, plaintiff contends that the revocation of his clearance was arbitrary and capricious and therefore violated his rights under the Administrative Procedure Act.
II.
A. Plaintiffs Property Interest
Defendant moves to dismiss plaintiff’s claim that he was deprived of property without due process of law on the ground that plaintiff had no legitimate property right in continued access to the White House. To possess a property interest in a given benefit, a person must have a “legitimate claim of entitlement to it.”
Board of Regents v. Roth,
In resisting deféndant’s motion to dismiss, plaintiff relies principally on two cases, which, he contends, demonstrate that “the consistent, positive action of government officials” can give rise to a property interest in continued access .to government facilities. In
Phillips v. Bureau of Prisons,
It is apparent that all parties to this case recognize the right of a journalist to a White House press pass if he has obtained House and Senate press credentials, resides in Washington, and has a need to report from the White House, unless he is a source of potential danger to the President or his family. There is no indication in the record that the Secret Service has ever denied press credentials for any other reason. Nor is the Secret Service authorized to deny credentials for non-security-related reasons. It could be argued, convincingly we believe, that in these circumstances, appellee has a justifiable expectation that the only basis for the government’s refusal to grant a White House press pass is concern for the physical security of the President or his family. While appellee’s entitlement is not created expressly by the Constitution or by positive federal law, it is created by the consistent, positive action of government officials.
Id. (citation omitted) (emphasis in original). Plaintiff contends that, like the plaintiffs in Phillips and Sherrill, he has a legitimate claim of entitlement to continued White House access based on the fact that the government has consistently granted access to stenographers such as himself, unless they fail to discharge their duties or are deemed security risks.
As plaintiff recognizes, however, both cases are distinguishable from the present dispute. In
Phillips,
as noted above, the plaintiff’s justifiable expectation of access arose from published regulations governing visitation rights for attorneys; those regulations created and defined the plaintiff-paralegal’s legitimate entitlement. Here, no rules or regulations define plaintiff’s right to access to the White House complex. His entitlement, therefore, hinges On his claim that the government has a consistent practice of denying access only for cause — a claim which the Court must accept as true for present purposes. In
Sherrill,
of course, the Court did not actually hold that the practice of the White House Press Office gave rise to a property right, but merely suggested that such a claim could be convincingly argued. In making this suggestion, however, the Court noted that ancillary constitutional values lent substantial force to a claim of a protected property interest. In the footnote quoted above, the Court stated that “when the substance of the property interest involves first amendment values to the degree of this entitlement to a White House press pass, it would be difficult not to infer constitutional recognition of this interest.”
Defendant characterizes this practice as simply one of inaction, and argues that the government’s prior failure to exercise its discretion and deny security clearances for reasons other than those enumerated by plaintiff cannot give rise to a property right. The Ninth Circuit, in
Bollow v. Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco,
B. Plaintiffs Liberty Interest
Defendant also moves to dismiss plaintiff’s claim that the termination of his security .clearance damaged his reputation such that he was deprived of a constitution- ■ ally protected liberty interest. To make out such a claim, plaintiff must show (1) that the government’s defamation resulted in some harm beyond damage to his reputation, and (2) that he has been stigmatized by the government’s action.
Doe v. United States Dep’t of Justice,
Plaintiff has alleged that the government’s action here has prevented him from performing his duties under Koba’s contract with DSS, and has “damaged [his] reputation, tarnishing his standing and associations in the community and threaten-, ing to foreclose future employment oppor-tunities_” Amended Complaint, 1115. This allegation of harm, however, is legally insufficient. Plaintiff must show either a loss of present or future
government
employment,
Doe v. United States Dep’t of Justice,
C. Plaintiffs Privacy Right, Freedom of Association and Equal Protection Claims
Plaintiff also alleges that his security clearance was terminated solely because he is homosexual, and that such discriminatory action deprived him of his privacy and associational rights, and denied him his right to equal protection under the.law. Defendant moves to dismiss these counts on the ground that homosexual conduct is not constitutionally protected, and thus, even if plaintiffs sexuality formed the basis of the government’s action, he is entitled to no relief. Since the parties briefed and argued this case, the Supreme Court handed down its decision in
Bowers v. Hardwick,
— U.S.-,
With respect to his associational and equal protection claims, plaintiff argues that regardless of the degree of constitutional protection afforded homosexual conduct, his claim is sufficient to withstand a motion to dismiss since he has alleged that the termination of his access was irrational and served no legitimate governmental purpose. He contends that there is simply no rational relationship between his sexual orientation and his fitness to record and transcribe the President’s speeches. Thus, even under the most deferential standard of scrutiny, the government’s action imper-missibly burdened his associational rights *602 and violated his equal protection rights by discriminating against him solely on the basis of his homosexuality.
The government has not offered any explanation as to how plaintiff’s dismissal is rationally related to a legitimate governmental purpose. Instead, defendant makes the rather remarkable argument that because this case does not involve a legislative classification, but instead a single, ad hoc decision, the equal protection clause is inapplicable. It is well established, however, that the equal protection clause protects against “arbitrary or discriminatory treatment by the Government.”
Scott v. Macy,
Defendant also claims that because plaintiff is not entitled to a statement of reasons for the revocation of his security clearance under the fifth amendment’s property or liberty clauses, “it is difficult to see how defendant can be required to provide a ‘rational basis’ and a ‘legitimate government interest’ for that same decision under the equal protection clause.” Defendant's Reply at 19. The Court, however, does not share. defendant’s difficulty. Regardless of this Court’s conclusion that plaintiff has not been deprived of any liberty interest, it is simply untenable for the government to suggest that the fifth amendment’s due process and equal protection clauses are coterminous, and that the unavailability of relief under the former somehow forecloses redress through the latter. The two clauses do not even provide the same protections or, where violations are made out, the same relief. Had plaintiff been able to demonstrate a deprivation of a protected liberty interest he might only have been entitled to some type of name-clearing hearing. A showing that defendant denied him equal .protection of the laws, on the other hand, may warrant declaratory or injunctive relief. In any event, the Court cannot accept defendant’s argument that because certain relief may not be available under the due process clause, there can be no claim brought under the equal protection clause. Homosexual conduct may not be protected under the right of privacy, and homosexuals may not qualify as a suspect class. Nonetheless, the government may not discriminate against homosexuals for the sake of discrimination, or for no reason at all. Defendant’s motion to dismiss, therefore, is denied with respect to counts four and six of the complaint.
D. Plaintiff’s APA Claim
Defendant seeks to dismiss plaintiff’s claim under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) on the grounds that the APA does not apply to the White House and that termination of plaintiff’s access to the White House was a matter committed entirely to the White House’s discretion. In response, plaintiff argues that such a motion is premature at this stage of the proceedings because he has not determined which agency or officials terminated his clearance. The decision may have been made by the Secret Service, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Department of Defense or an official within the White House itself. Plaintiff does not yet know, thus he made no allegation charging the White House with responsibility for the decision. Defendant does not suggest that the other agencies that plaintiff has identified as possibly responsible for the decision are not subject to the review under the APA. Until such time as the appropriate agency or official has been identified, therefore, this Court declines to dismiss this portion of plaintiff’s complaint, or to address defendant’s contention that the ac *603 tions of the White House are not subject to audit under the APA. 5 Accordingly, defendant’s motion to dismiss count one of the complaint is denied.
For all the foregoing reasons, therefore, it is this 5th day of December, 1986,
ORDERED that defendant’s motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted be and it hereby is granted with respect to counts two and three of plaintiff’s amended complaint, and it hereby is denied with respect to counts one, four, five and six.
SO ORDERED.
ORDER
It is hereby ORDERED by the Court that the above-entitled case be, and it hereby is, referred to the United States Magistrate for discovery proceedings.
Unless otherwise ordered by the Court, contested preliminary motions within Rule 3-8 of the Rules of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia will also be heard by the Magistrate. All other motions will be heard by the Court.
Notes
. Plaintiff attempts to distinguish Bollow on the ground that in that case the plaintiff was an employee-at-will. This distinction is irrelevant. It was precisely because he could be terminated *600 at the will of his employer that Bollow attempted to demonstrate that he had a property interest in his job. The Court, however, made no mention of his at-will status in concluding that he had no property right in continuing his employment.
. Judge Bork’s concurrence was more critical. He wrote that the plaintiffs claim of a protected property interest was “insubstantial" and opined that had the lower court’s finding been appealed it was “highly likely that no process would have been found due.”
. Plaintiff argues that the public benefit loss need not rise to the level of a protected entitlement, citing
Doe v. United States Dep’t of Justice,
. In response to a letter submitted by plaintiff, the government attempts to distinguish Doe on three grounds: (1) that the agency action in Doe was only subject to judicial review because a statute limited the authority of the Central Intelligence Agency to discharge employees; (2) the plaintiff in Doe was a federal employee; and (3) the "arguable claim” presented in Doe was whether the agency could bar all homosexuals from employment. None of these distinctions has any merit. Regardless of whether a given agency action is reviewahle under the Administrative Procedure Act or is instead committed to agency discretion, no agency has the discretionary authority to violate constitutional rights. The fact that plaintiff here was not a federal employee is likewise irrelevant, since the government is no more free to violate the constitutional rights of private citizens then its own employees. Finally, nothing in Doe suggests that while uniform discrimination against homosexuals on the basis of their sexual orientation is arguably illegal, random discrimination on the same basis is somehow permissible.
. The Court similarly declines to decide at this time whether the relief requested — an injunction — renders this case non-justiciable. Injunc-tive relief may lie against an agency or other official. The Court cannot say based on the present record and need not speculate at this time.
