Sledge v. DOJ ( 2019 )


Menu:
  •         NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    JOHN PATRICK SLEDGE, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS
    NATURAL TUTOR ON BEHALF OF J. R. S. AND A.
    M. S., BRITTANY GAIL WARREN, INDIVIDUALLY,
    Petitioners
    v.
    DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE,
    Respondent
    ______________________
    2018-1919
    ______________________
    Petition for review of a decision of the Bureau of Justice
    Assistance in PSOB Claim No. 2012-079.
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    BERNADETTE STOUTE JEANSONNE,
    INDIVIDUALLY AND AS NATURAL TUTOR ON
    BEHALF OF S. M. J., AND KALE DAVID
    JEANSONNE, KONNOR VICK JEANSONNE, AND
    KRISTOPHER JEANSONNE, INDIVIDUALLY,
    Petitioners
    v.
    2                                              SLEDGE v. DOJ
    DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE,
    Respondent
    ______________________
    2018-1966
    ______________________
    Petition for review of a decision of the Bureau of Justice
    Assistance in PSOB Claim No. 2012-086.
    ______________________
    Decided: August 20, 2019
    ______________________
    MONICA VELA-VICK, Phelps Dunbar LLP, Baton Rouge,
    LA, for petitioners. Also represented by SHELTON DENNIS
    BLUNT.
    KARA WESTERCAMP, Commercial Litigation Branch,
    Civil Division, United States Department of Justice, Wash-
    ington, DC, for respondent. Also represented by JOSEPH H.
    HUNT, TARA K. HOGAN, ROBERT EDWARD KIRSCHMAN, JR.;
    JASON P. COOLEY, RAFAEL ALBERTO MADAN, Office of Gen-
    eral Counsel, Office of Justice Programs, United States De-
    partment of Justice, Washington, DC.
    ______________________
    Before PROST, Chief Judge, NEWMAN and CHEN, Circuit
    Judges.
    PER CURIAM.
    The claims for death benefits in these cases were
    brought under the Public Safety Officers’ Benefits Act
    (PSOBA) of 1976, Pub. L. No. 94-430 (codified as amended
    at 
    34 U.S.C. §§ 10281
    –10288). Bernadette Jeansonne and
    John Sledge (collectively, “Claimants”) each appeal Febru-
    ary 2, 2018, decisions by the Bureau of Justice Assistance
    (BJA) holding that Louisiana Department of Insurance
    SLEDGE v. DOJ                                             3
    (DOI) Investigators Robert Jeansonne and Kimberly
    Sledge were not “law enforcement officers” under the
    PSOBA, and therefore did not meet the PSOBA’s require-
    ment for awards of death benefits to their survivors, i.e.,
    the Claimants. Because the BJA’s decisions are supported
    by substantial evidence and it properly applied the imple-
    menting regulation, 
    28 C.F.R. § 32.3
    , defining the term
    “law enforcement officer” in the PSOBA, we affirm the
    BJA’s denials of benefits.
    BACKGROUND
    On June 7, 2011, DOI investigators Robert Jeansonne
    and Kimberly Sledge entered the offices of Melvin
    Lavergne, an insurance provider, to investigate complaints
    of insurance fraud. Jeansonne and Sledge previously in-
    vestigated Lavergne for other fraud allegations, resulting
    in Lavergne’s arrest by the Louisiana State Police. After
    discussing the current complaints and investigation with
    Lavergne and his business partner, Jeansonne and Sledge
    proceeded to collect and scan documents for the investiga-
    tion. At this point, Lavergne went into his office, emerged
    with a rifle, and fatally shot Jeansonne and Sledge. After
    shooting Jeansonne and Sledge, Lavergne killed himself.
    The families of Jeansonne and Sledge applied for ben-
    efits under 
    34 U.S.C. § 10284
     of the PSOBA. The Public
    Safety Officers’ Benefits (PSOB) office denied the claims,
    finding that neither investigator was a “law enforcement
    officer” under the PSOBA and implementing regulations.
    After holding a hearing, a Hearing Officer reached the
    same conclusion that neither Jeansonne nor Sledge’s du-
    ties, as insurance fraud investigators, entailed any law en-
    forcement authority.
    Claimants then requested review by the Director of the
    BJA. The BJA Director issued its final agency determina-
    tions denying Claimants’ claims for benefits. The BJA Di-
    rector stated that “the evidence does not establish that, at
    the time of the fatal shooting, [Jeansonne and Sledge’s]
    4                                               SLEDGE v. DOJ
    duties and responsibilities included any of the various
    types of legal authority and responsibility required by the
    definition of ‘involvement’ in 
    28 C.F.R. § 32.3
     to be consid-
    ered [] a law enforcement officer for PSOB purposes.” J.A.
    5. 1 The BJA Director based this conclusion on the official
    job descriptions provided by the Louisiana Commissioner
    of Insurance, testimony by various DOI staff that testified
    about the roles investigators play in an insurance fraud in-
    vestigation, and the 2011 Louisiana legislation that ex-
    panded the scope of law enforcement officers under
    Louisiana state law to include investigators. Reviewing
    the record, the BJA Director concluded that “[t]here is no
    evidence that Fraud Investigators possessed both the legal
    authority and responsibility . . . to arrest, apprehend, pros-
    ecute, or adjudicate persons alleged to have violated or
    found to have violated the criminal laws.” J.A. 10.
    We have jurisdiction under 
    34 U.S.C. § 10287
    .
    DISCUSSION
    A
    On appeal, Claimants argue that the BJA Director mis-
    applied the agency’s regulation in finding that Jeansonne
    and Sledge did not qualify as “law enforcement officers” un-
    der 
    28 C.F.R. § 32.3
    . Claimants alternatively contend that
    the regulation is not entitled to Chevron deference because
    it represents an unreasonable reading of what constitutes
    a law enforcement officer under the PSOBA.
    The PSOBA directs the BJA to pay a death benefit to
    an eligible claimant if it is found that “a public safety of-
    ficer has died as a direct and proximate result of a personal
    injury sustained in the line of duty.” 
    34 U.S.C. § 10281
    (a).
    A “public safety officer” includes “an individual serving a
    1   Unless otherwise noted, all J.A. citations are to the
    joint appendix filed in the Jeansonne appeal.
    SLEDGE v. DOJ                                                 5
    public agency in an official capacity, with or without com-
    pensation, as a law enforcement officer.” 
    34 U.S.C. § 10284
    (9)(A). The Act defines a law enforcement officer as
    “an individual involved in crime and juvenile delinquency
    control or reduction, or enforcement of the criminal
    laws . . . , including, but not limited to, police, corrections,
    probation, parole, and judicial officers.”           
    34 U.S.C. § 10284
    (6). At the time of BJA’s determination, PSOB reg-
    ulations provided that “[a]n individual is involved in crime
    and juvenile delinquency control or reduction, or enforce-
    ment of criminal laws” only if he “has legal authority and
    responsibility to arrest, apprehend, prosecute, adjudicate,
    correct or detain . . . , or supervise (as a parole or probation
    officer), persons who are alleged or found to have violated
    the criminal laws.” 2 
    28 C.F.R. § 32.3
    . 3
    We review an agency’s application of its own regula-
    tions to determine “(1) whether there has been substantial
    compliance with statutory requirements and provisions of
    implementing regulations; (2) whether there has been any
    arbitrary or capricious action by government officials in-
    volved; and (3) whether substantial evidence supports the
    2    Claimants have not argued that Jeansonne or
    Sledge had duties related to “correct,” “detain,” or “super-
    vise.”
    3    Although the regulation was amended in May 2018
    to replace “legal authority and responsibility” with “legal
    authority or responsibility,” the regulation’s effective date
    was June 14, 2018, after the BJA Director’s determination.
    Public Safety Officer’s Benefits Program, 
    83 Fed. Reg. 22,367
    , 22,379 (Dep’t of Justice May 15, 2018). Under the
    PSOBA, implementing regulations apply to matters “pend-
    ing on, or filed or accruing after, the effective date specified
    in the regulations. 
    34 U.S.C. § 10287
    . As such, the lan-
    guage applying to these cases is the “legal authority and
    responsibility.”
    6                                              SLEDGE v. DOJ
    decision.” Hawkins v. United States, 
    469 F.3d 993
    , 999
    (Fed. Cir. 2006). In these cases, we review the denials of
    benefits to Claimants based on the BJA Director’s applica-
    tion of the agency’s regulation defining “law enforcement
    officer” in the PSOBA.
    The BJA Director was presented with uncontested evi-
    dence of Jeansonne and Sledge’s official duties, including
    the statement of “Duties and Responsibilities” of a DOI in-
    vestigator and testimony from current and former DOI em-
    ployees. According to the “Duties and Responsibilities,”
    Jeansonne and Sledge’s official duties included “[c]on-
    duct[ing] the most complex and highest level of investiga-
    tions in the Department of Insurance; gather[ing] and
    assembl[ing] evidence for trial or hearings,” “[c]onduct[ing]
    interviews, undercover operations, research, . . . surveil-
    lance activities gathering evidence of violations,” “[t]es-
    tif[ying] in administrative, civil, criminal, or other
    proceedings concerning investigative finds,” and more.
    J.A. 54.
    Paul Boudreaux, a former director at the DOI, testified
    before the BJA and substantially supported the BJA Direc-
    tor’s findings. For example, Boudreaux stated that “[i]f it’s
    producer fraud, then [DOI would] handle the administra-
    tive aspect of it. If it’s criminal, producer or otherwise,
    [DOI would] refer it to State Police.” J.A. 6. Boudreaux’s
    testimony further detailed the collaborative nature of
    Jeansonne and Sledge’s roles with criminal investigations
    and the State Police, but the testimony also clearly showed
    that the roles delineated in 
    28 C.F.R. § 32.3
     (e.g., arrest,
    apprehend, prosecute, etc.) are performed by the State Po-
    lice and Attorney General rather than the DOI investiga-
    tors. J.A. 6–7.
    The implementing regulation creates a clear frame-
    work for determining which positions meet the “law en-
    forcement officer” requirement and the BJA Director
    properly applied that framework here based on the
    SLEDGE v. DOJ                                                 7
    evidence presented. Claimants argue that the BJA Direc-
    tor inappropriately focused on a law enforcement officer’s
    arrest power. Appellant’s Br. at 28. However, this focus is
    appropriate because it is one of the regulation’s specified
    responsibilities to qualify as a law enforcement officer.
    Cassella shows that the “arrest” and “apprehend” catego-
    ries ask whether a person has the power to arrest or other-
    wise stop a crime in progress. See Cassella v. United
    States, 
    469 F.3d 1376
    , 1384 (Fed. Cir. 2006) (“Mrs. Cassella
    did not have the power to arrest the violator of a traffic
    crime or to stop a traffic crime in progress.”). In Cassella,
    the claimant attempted to claim that Cassella had “indirect
    arrest power,” i.e., the Special School Zone Police Officer
    could gather information on and report criminal violations
    to other police officers so that those police officers could ar-
    rest the perpetrator. 
    Id. at 1380
    . We held this indirect role
    insufficient to establish Cassella as a law enforcement of-
    ficer. 
    Id. at 1384
    . The duties of a DOI investigator have a
    similar shortcoming with respect to 
    28 C.F.R. §32.3
    .
    As one of the categories in the BJA’s regulation, the
    BJA Director correctly analyzed whether Jeansonne and
    Sledge had a duty or authority to arrest or apprehend per-
    sons. The evidence points to the fact that Jeansonne and
    Sledge were required to have police present any time an
    arrest was necessary. J.A. 432. Despite Claimants’ at-
    tempt to insert investigating criminals into the “appre-
    hend” category, Jeansonne and Sledge did not have the
    power to stop a crime in progress. See, e.g., J.A. 494–98;
    Appellant’s Br. at 29. If they found evidence of criminal
    activity, the next step for them was to report it to the police.
    J.A. 432. Although Jeansonne and Sledge may still have
    been involved in the investigation, the arrest, i.e. the stop-
    ping of the crime, was performed by the police. 
    Id.
     In view
    of Cassella, this evidence supports the BJA Director’s de-
    termination that Jeansonne and Sledge’s duties did not fall
    within the arrest or apprehend categories. J.A. 8.
    8                                                SLEDGE v. DOJ
    With regard to “prosecute,” the BJA Director consid-
    ered the evidence and determined that Jeansonne and
    Sledge’s duties did not fall within the prosecute category.
    We find that the BJA Director properly considered the DOI
    investigator’s role in a criminal prosecution, finding that
    Jeansonne and Sledge’s roles were limited to providing ev-
    idence and testifying at trial. J.A. 7–8, 431–32. This evi-
    dence supports the BJA Director’s conclusion that
    “contribution to criminal prosecutions is not sufficient to
    establish status as a law enforcement officer for purposes
    of the PSOB Act.” J.A. 8.
    Thus, substantial evidence supports the BJA Director’s
    conclusion that Jeansonne and Sledge’s duties did not fall
    within any of the categories set forth in 
    28 C.F.R. §32.3
    .
    Claimants argue that the BJA Director’s decision was
    arbitrary and capricious because a DOI investigator’s du-
    ties “overlap” with those of police officers. For example,
    Claimants explain that DOI investigators work in a task
    force with the Louisiana State Police and Louisiana Attor-
    ney General to investigate criminal insurance fraud. As
    such, the investigators perform duties that police officers
    also perform, such as investigating crime, going under-
    cover, serving cease-and-desist letters, and more. How-
    ever, overlap of certain duties with police officers does not
    make an official a “law enforcement officer.” Indeed, we
    have explicitly found that some of the duties typically at-
    tributed to police officers do not qualify that official as a
    law enforcement officer under PSOBA. See Cassella, 
    469 F.3d at 1384
     (finding that delegating traffic control powers
    to a school zone traffic officer did not qualify the officer as
    a “law enforcement officer”). The BJA’s regulation specifi-
    cally lists the duties that qualify an official as a “law en-
    forcement officer,” and the BJA Director’s application of
    the regulation was not arbitrary or capricious and was sup-
    ported by substantial evidence when finding that Jean-
    sonne and Sledge’s official duties did not meet any of those
    categories. 
    28 C.F.R. § 32.3
    .
    SLEDGE v. DOJ                                              9
    The BJA Director’s determination that serving cease-
    and-desist letters and conducting administrative proceed-
    ings did not constitute arrest, apprehension, or prosecution
    is not arbitrary or capricious and is supported by substan-
    tial evidence. Our precedent interpreting the PSOBA is
    clear that the duty must involve criminal law. Hawkins,
    469 F.3d at 1000–03; Cassella, 
    469 F.3d at 1384
    . Serving
    a cease-and-desist letter is derived from the DOI’s admin-
    istrative powers to enforce the civil law. See J.A. 557.
    Claimants argue that the cease-and-desist letters function
    similar to a warrant and have the effect of stopping crimi-
    nal activity. Appellant’s Br. at 27. Regardless, our prece-
    dent recognizes a key distinction between criminal and
    civil law for PSOBA purposes and cease-and-desist letters
    are for the enforcement of civil law. See J.A. 557. Conduct-
    ing administrative proceedings is also an enforcement of
    the civil law. See, e.g., J.A. 431–32 (distinctly separating
    the actions taken for administrative and criminal proceed-
    ings).
    Claimants further criticize the BJA Director for not
    giving deference to the Louisiana law that was amended to
    include DOI investigators as law enforcement officers un-
    der state law. Appellant’s Br. at 32–38. The law was
    passed after the deaths of Jeansonne and Sledge and was
    specifically designed to grant the investigators’ families
    state benefits. 
    Id.
     Claimants rely on Winuk v. United
    States, 
    77 Fed. Cl. 207
     (2007), to assert that the BJA Direc-
    tor should have deferred to this Louisiana statute. Appel-
    lant’s Br. at 33. But the determination of whether the facts
    establish an official as a “law enforcement officer” under
    the PSOBA is a conclusion of law based on federal law, not
    state law. Cf. Amber-Messick v. United States, 
    483 F.3d 1316
    , 1325 (Fed. Cir. 2007) (“[W]e find unpersuasive Mrs.
    Amber–Messick’s contention that the fact she received ben-
    efits under the Pennsylvania Emergency Law Enforcement
    Personnel Death Benefits Act supports her claim under
    PSOBA.”).
    10                                            SLEDGE v. DOJ
    Winuk is not persuasive in these cases. First, Winuk
    addressed a special provision of the PSOBA “allowing for
    automatic payment of benefits to the survivors of public
    safety officers who were injured or died in the line of duty
    in relation to the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.”
    Winuk, 77 Fed. Cl. at 214. This “automatic payment” was
    triggered when a public agency certified that an official
    was a public safety officer injured or killed in connection
    with the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Id. While
    Winuk included a state statute, the statute only served as
    the certification required to trigger the automatic pay-
    ments under the special provision of the PSOBA. Id. at
    221.
    The BJA Director here, however, was not bound by the
    special provision. The BJA Director properly considered
    whether DOI investigators qualify as law enforcement of-
    ficers under the PSOBA, and determined that the Louisi-
    ana statute’s inclusion of duties, such as “conducting
    investigations . . . or collecting evidence” went beyond the
    scope of the PSOBA and 
    28 C.F.R. § 32.3
    , which do not in-
    clude such duties. J.A. 9–10.
    There is no evidence that the BJA Director has applied
    this framework in a piecemeal way. Rather, the BJA has
    enumerated the responsibilities required to qualify as a
    “law enforcement officer,” and the record before us shows
    that the BJA Director properly applied that framework.
    The BJA Director’s Determinations were therefore not ar-
    bitrary or capricious, and were supported by substantial
    evidence because none of Jeansonne and Sledge’s duties
    fell under the categories set out in 
    28 C.F.R. § 32.3
    .
    B
    We also find unpersuasive Claimants’ arguments that
    the BJA’s interpretation of “law enforcement officer” is un-
    reasonable. When the parties challenge an agency’s inter-
    pretation of a statute, such as the phrase “law enforcement
    officer,” we proceed with the two-step Chevron analysis.
    SLEDGE v. DOJ                                             11
    Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 
    467 U.S. 837
     (1984). We first determine “whether Congress has di-
    rectly spoken to the precise question at issue.” Chevron,
    
    467 U.S. at 842
    . If “Congress either had no intent on the
    matter, or [] Congress’s purpose and intent is unclear,” we
    consider whether the agency’s interpretation is based on a
    permissible construction of the statutory language at issue.
    Delverde, SrL v. United States, 
    202 F.3d 1360
    , 1363 (Fed.
    Cir. 2000); see also Chevron, 
    467 U.S. at 843
    . For the sec-
    ond step, “the court need not conclude that the agency con-
    struction was the only one it permissibly could have
    adopted to uphold the construction.” Chevron, 
    467 U.S. at
    843 n.11. So long as the agency’s construction of the term
    in the statute is reasonable, Chevron “requires a federal
    court to accept the agency’s construction . . . even if the
    agency’s reading differs from what the court believes is the
    best statutory interpretation.” Nat’l Cable & Telecomms.
    Ass’n v. Brand X Internet Servs., 
    545 U.S. 967
    , 980 (2005).
    The parties agree that Congress’s intent regarding the
    term “law enforcement officer” for these cases is ambigu-
    ous. See Appellant’s Br. at 21 (“Congress has not specifi-
    cally spoken to this precise issue.”). For purposes of these
    cases, we accept the parties’ contention that the statute is
    unclear as to whether an insurance fraud investigator
    qualifies as a “law enforcement officer.”
    But first we note that, at least based on the current
    record, this appears correct. The PSOBA defines a law en-
    forcement officer as “an individual involved in crime . . .
    control or reduction, or enforcement of the criminal
    laws . . . including, but not limited to police, corrections,
    probation, parole, and judicial officers.” 
    34 U.S.C. § 10284
    .
    Any individual employed by a police department or another
    agency who assists police officers in the performance of
    their duties, directly or indirectly, could be regarded in a
    broad sense as “involved in” crime control or reduction. But
    our precedent makes clear that a law enforcement officer
    must be “obligated to fight crime or perform criminal law
    12                                               SLEDGE v. DOJ
    enforcement duties.” Hawkins, 
    469 F.3d at 1003
    ; Cassella,
    
    469 F.3d at 1384
     (same). No matter how crucial many in-
    dividuals’ jobs are to the police department, other agencies,
    or criminal law enforcement as a whole, not every one of
    those employees fights crime or performs criminal law en-
    forcement under the PSOBA. See Cassella, 469 F3d at
    1379–86. While the PSOBA provides a non-exclusive list
    of exemplary officials (“police, corrections, probation, pa-
    role, and judicial officers”) that qualify as “law enforcement
    officers,” the statute does not explain which duties make
    these officials “law enforcement officers.” Congress’s intent
    is therefore unclear with regard to what duties qualify an
    individual as a law enforcement officer, and we proceed to
    step 2 of the Chevron analysis.
    Based on the record before us and our prior caselaw,
    we find 
    28 C.F.R. § 32.3
     reasonable. Claimants argue that
    the regulation should include investigative authority as an
    additional category of responsibility to the definition of
    “law enforcement officer,” beyond the power to “arrest, ap-
    prehend, prosecute, adjudicate, correct or detain” or “su-
    pervise.”    Appellant’s Br. at 18–20, 27.          Although
    Claimants’ proposal may be a reasonable interpretation of
    the PSOBA, Claimants were required to show why the ac-
    tual regulation was unreasonable. Otherwise, Chevron “re-
    quires a federal court to accept the agency’s
    construction . . . even if the agency’s reading differs from
    what the court believes is the best statutory interpreta-
    tion.” Nat'l Cable & Telecomms., 
    545 U.S. at 980
    . Here,
    the regulation’s itemized responsibilities, including arrest,
    apprehend, and adjudicate authority, are entirely con-
    sistent with the statutory language, as well as an apt de-
    scription of the responsibilities performed by the officials
    identified in the statute as being law enforcement officers,
    including police officers, parole officers, and judicial offic-
    ers. We recognize that Jeansonne and. Sledge were tragi-
    cally killed while performing their duties as insurance
    fraud investigators and those duties assist the police
    SLEDGE v. DOJ                                          13
    department in its efforts to fight crime. Yet Claimants
    have not shown why drawing the line at the duties listed
    in the BJA’s implementing regulation is unreasonable. Ac-
    cordingly, Chevron requires us to give deference to the
    BJA’s interpretation.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the BJA Director’s Determi-
    nations denying benefits under the PSOBA to Claimants
    are
    AFFIRMED
    No costs.