Affirmed by published opinion. Judge LUTTIG wrote the opinion, in which Judge MICHAEL and Judge GOODWIN joined.
OPINION
The legislature for the Commonwealth of Virginia has authorized the Virginia Criminal Justice Services Board to establish training, registration, and licensing requirements for the private security services industry. See Va.Code Ann. § 9-182(B). Under Virginia law, any “private security services business” operating in Virginia must obtain a state license and any Virginia “private investigator” must register with the state. 1 To obtain a license, the business must pay an initial fee of $518 and an annual renewal fee of $250.-The business must also secure a $25,000 surety bond or general liability insurance with a minimum coverage of $100,000 and $300,000, and retain a compliance agent, who must submit fingerprint cards, pay a $41 processing fee, and satisfy other criteria, including the completion of training programs at a state-approved school. See 6 Va. Admin. Code 20-170. The Board may deny any license application for “just cause.” See 6 Va. Admin. Code 20-170-110(0).
To obtain a registration, the investigator must pay an initial fee of $76 and an annual renewal fee of $35. The applicant must also (1) be at least 18 years old; (2) complete the Board’s initial and continuing training requirements; and (3) submit fingerprint cards and pay a $41 processing fee.
See
6 Va. Admin. Code 20-170. The board may deny
In 1990, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) instituted the Background Investigation Contract Services (BICS) Program, a nationwide program under which the FBI hires former federal investigators as independent contractors to conduct federal background cheeks. The FBI created the BICS program pursuant to its authority to enter into contracts for goods and services under 48 C.F.R. § 1.601. The applicable provisions of the Federal Acquisition Regulations (FAR), which govern federal procurement of goods and services, 48 C.F.R. § 1.000 et seq., mandate that, before awarding a contract, the agency must affirmatively determine that the bidder is “responsible.” 48 C.F.R. § 9.103(b). In order to make that responsibility determination, the agency must conclude that the contractor has, among other things, “adequate financial resources to perform the contract, or the ability to obtain them,” 48 C.F.R. § 9.104-l(a); “a satisfactory performance record,” 48 C.F.R. § 9.104-1(e); a “satisfactory record of integrity and business ethics,” 48 C.F.R. § 9.104-l(d); and “the necessary organization, experience, ... and technical skills, or the ability to obtain them,” 48 C.F.R. § 9.104-l(e).
FAR further requires the agency to determine that the individual is “otherwise qualified and eligible.” 48 C.F.R. § 9.104-l(g). Because of the sensitivity of the work assigned to BICS contractors, the FBI has determined that to be “otherwise qualified and eligible,” an individual must meet high standards of loyalty and trustworthiness. These standards are described in the FBI’s “Statement of Work” for the BICS Program, a document routinely issued as part of the federal procurement process to provide information to prospective bidders. J.A. at 62-67. Among other things, the Statement of Work provides that BICS contractors must be former federal investigators who have experience conducting background investigations and who qualify for a Top Secret security clearance. J.A. at 62-63, 66.
Pursuant to the FAR standards, the FBI has hired approximately 165 BICS investigators to conduct background checks in Virginia. J.A. at 81. Many of the BICS investigators working in Virginia have obtained neither a Virginia private investigator’s registration nor a Virginia private security services business license. Other BICS investigators have obtained a registration, but not a license. J.A. at 81. In January 1995, a BICS special investigator informed the head of the FBI’s BICS unit, Mr. Francis Mulhol-land, that officials at the Virginia Criminal Justice Services Board believed that all BICS investigators were required to obtain state registrations and state licenses. J.A. at 83. The FBI then inquired about the state’s position, and, in February 1995, following several conversations between state and FBI officials, an official at Virginia’s Department of Criminal Justice Services wrote a letter to Mulholland, stating that “it remains our opinion that Special Investigators of the F.B.I. who function as independent contractors are in fact subject to the licensing and/or registration requirements for private security services business in Virginia.” J.A. at 44. In July 1995, in response to a letter from the FBI’s general counsel disputing the applicability of Virginia’s regulations to BICS investigators, J.A. at 45-51, the Virginia Attorney General’s Office sent a letter to the FBI reiterating the state’s position that BICS investigators must comply with the state requirements, J.A. at 20-25.
In the fall of 1996, BICS investigators informed Mulholland that Virginia planned to initiate enforcement action against those unregistered and/or unlicensed BICS investigators working in Virginia. J.A. at 83. A
The FBI and appellee Cox commenced this lawsuit in January 1997, requesting declaratory and injunctive relief to prevent Virginia from enforcing its registration and licensing provisions against BICS special investigators based on their work for the FBI. 2 The district court held that under Supreme Court ease law, the challenged provisions of Virginia law were preempted because they “impose[d] additional requirements on individual contractors who have already been judged qualified by the FBI.” J.A. at 41. The court determined that application of the challenged provisions to BICS investigators would permit the state effectively to “review ... the FBI[’s] determination” that BICS investigators are qualified to conduct background investigations. J.A. at 41. Accordingly, the court permanently enjoined Virginia from enforcing these provisions against Special Investigators in the BICS program. J.A. at 26.
We hold, as did the district court, that Supreme Court precedent precludes the application of Virginia’s licensing and registration requirements to private investigators working solely for the FBI in the BICS program, and therefore affirm.
3
We believe that this holding is compelled by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Leslie Miller v. Arkansas,
The Supreme Court held that the Arkansas licensing law could not be applied to federal contractors because “[sjubjecting a federal contractor to the Arkansas contractor license requirements would give the State’s licensing board a virtual power of review over the federal determination of ‘responsibility1 and would thus frustrate the expressed federal policy of selecting the lowest responsible bidder.”
Id.
at 190,
the immunity of the instruments of the United States from state control in the performance of their duties extends to a requirement that they desist from performance until they satisfy a state officer upon examination that they are competent for a necessary part of them and pay a fee for permission to go on. Such a requirement does not merely touch the Government servants remotely by a general rule of conduct; it lays hold of them in their specific attempt to obey orders and requires qualifications in addition to those that the Government has pronounced sufficient. It is the duty of the Department to employ persons competent for their work and that duty it must be presumed has been performed
Leslie Miller,
The Court reaffirmed the holding of
Leslie Miller
in
Sperry v. Florida,
The facts of
Leslie Miller
cannot be distinguished in any relevant way from the facts of this case. The federal regulatory schemes at issue are virtually identical in every important respect. FAR, like ASPA, expressly require agencies to determine that their contractors are “responsible.” Both FAR and the implementing regulations for ASPA enumerate certain criteria for agencies to consider in making the “responsibility” determination, and, indeed, the criteria outlined in FAR are identical in many respects to those set forth in the ASPA regulations.
5
Moreover, just as ASPA directed the armed services to award contracts to “that responsible bidder whose bid, conforming to the invita
Given the near identity of the federal and state regulatory schemes at issue in
Leslie Miller
and this ease,
Leslie Miller
compels the conclusion that — by adding to the qualifications necessary for an investigator to do background checks for the FBI — the Virginia regulatory scheme frustrates the objectives of the federal procurement laws by allowing the state to “second-guess” the FBI’s responsibility determination and by giving the state licensing board “a virtual power of review over the federal determination of ‘responsibility.”’
7
Indeed, Virginia’s explicit rationale for enforcing its regulatory scheme against BICS investigators underscores the interference with federal objectives that would result if such enforcement were allowed. The Virginia Attorney General’s Office emphasized in its letter to the FBI that Virginia wants to enforce its requirements against BICS investigators so that it can “ensure [their]
continued
competence,” J.A. at 22 (emphasis in original), thus implying that the state believes that the FBI’s assessment of its investigators’ competence is inadequate because it does not ensure their continuing competence and confirming that the
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. A private security services business is defined as “any person engaged in the business of providing, or who undertakes to provide ... private investigators ... to another person under contract, express or implied.” Va.Code Ann. § 9-183.1. A "private investigator” is defined as
any person who engages in the business of, or accepts employment to make, investigations to obtain information on (i) crimes or civil wrongs; (ii) the location, disposition, or recovery of stolen property; (iii) the cause of accidents, fires, damages, or injuries to persons or property; or (iv) evidence to be used before any court, board, officer, or investigative committee.
Id.
. The district court rejected Virginia’s argument that the lawsuit was not justiciable, and held that there was a ripe case or controversy because of the statements by state officials, including the Attorney General, to the FBI that the state provisions apply to BICS investigators and because of the alleged report by a BICS investigator that Virginia was planning to enforce the challenged provisions. J.A. at 33-34.
. Because the Virginia Attorney General has repeatedly informed the FBI that it believes that BICS investigators are subject to its regulations and that it has the power to enforce those regulations against BICS investigators, we also agree with the district court that BICS investigators faced a reasonable threat of criminal prosecution and that there is thus a ripe case or controversy for this court to adjudicate.
Cf. Public Utilities Comm’n v. United States,
. Contrary to Virginia’s intimation, see Appellant's Brief at 29, there is no indication that the Court believed that the fact that the federal contractor was being hired to work on federal facilities or on a federal enclave was in any way relevant to its decision.
.
Compare Leslie Miller,
. The similarity of the ASPA and FAR regulatory schemes reveals one of the many flaws in Virginia’s argument that it may, without conflicting with FAR, apply its regulations to the BICS investigators because Virginia’s requirements do not interfere with open competition in the bidding process and the purpose of FAR is to ensure such competitive bidding — not to ensure that federal agencies hire only contractors they deem “responsible.” However, it is apparent that, just like the regulatory scheme at issue in Leslie Miller, FAR, in combination with the other federal procurement statutes cited above, requires not just that the federal government select the most "competitive" bid, but also that it first narrow the pool of potential bidders to those who are "responsible,” as determined by the agency in accordance with the statutorily prescribed criteria. Thus, ensuring contractor responsibility and ensuring a competitive bidding process are both objectives of the federal procurement statutes, and allowing the state to second-guess the federal government’s “responsibility determination” frustrates at least the first of these objectives.
. Rather than casting doubt on the continued validity of
Leslie Miller,
as Virginia contends, the Supreme Court’s plurality disposition in
North Dakota v. United States,
In reaffirming Leslie Miller in the face of its holding that the North Dakota liquor control laws were a valid exercise of the state’s power, the Court undoubtedly recognized the significant differences between North Dakota’s laws and Arkansas' laws, insofar as their effects upon the decisional processes of the federal government are concerned. While the North Dakota regulations may have effectively altered the attractiveness of the bids placed by different suppliers through forced price increases, the regulations did not attempt to alter the criteria under which the federal government made its decision. Nor did those regulations prevent the federal government from selecting the bid it believed was most competitive or otherwise enable the state to second-guess the federal government's judgment as to who should supply the federal enclave. The contrast between the incidental effect of the Norlh Dakota regulations on the federal government’s decisional processes and the direct interference of the Arkansas regulations in Leslie Miller (and the Virginia regulations in the present case) with those processes is stark indeed.
