Alexander Buelna v. Department of Homeland Security , 2014 MSPB 45 ( 2014 )


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  •                          UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION BOARD
    
    2014 MSPB 45
    Docket No. DA-0752-09-0404-B-1
    Alexander Buelna,
    Appellant,
    v.
    Department of Homeland Security,
    Agency.
    June 19, 2014
    Jeffrey H. Jacobson, Esquire, Tucson, Arizona, and Lawrence Berger,
    Esquire, Glen Cove, New York, for the appellant.
    Daniela Murch, Michael W. Gaches, Esquire, and Steven E. Colon,
    Esquire, Arlington, Virginia, for the agency.
    BEFORE
    Susan Tsui Grundmann, Chairman
    Anne M. Wagner, Vice Chairman
    Mark A. Robbins, Member
    Vice Chairman Wagner issues a separate, concurring opinion.
    OPINION AND ORDER
    ¶1         The appellant has petitioned for review of the initial decision on remand
    that affirmed his indefinite suspension.   For the reasons set forth below, we
    AFFIRM the initial decision as MODIFIED by this Opinion and Order.          The
    agency’s action is SUSTAINED.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2         The appellant was formerly employed as a Federal Air Marshal (FAM) with
    the Transportation Security Administration (TSA).    Initial Appeal File (IAF),
    2
    Tab 8. As a condition of employment, a FAM is required to obtain and maintain
    a Top Secret security clearance. 
    Id.
     By memorandum dated February 20, 2009,
    the agency’s Personnel Security Division (PSD) notified the appellant that his
    Top Secret security clearance was suspended, effective immediately, pending an
    internal agency review. IAF, Tab 6, Subtab 4I. The memorandum indicated that
    the clearance suspension was based on derogatory information developed from
    the U.S. Army and the agency’s Office of Inspector General (OIG) concerning
    alleged fraudulent claims, which raised questions about his honesty, integrity,
    trustworthiness, and ability to protect national security information.     
    Id.
       The
    appellant was not provided an opportunity to contest the suspension of his
    security clearance. See 
    id.
    ¶3         By notice dated March 3, 2009, the agency proposed to indefinitely
    suspend the appellant without pay based on two charges: (1) the suspension of
    his Top Secret security clearance; and (2) the pending OIG investigation into the
    same alleged misconduct underlying the clearance suspension.           IAF, Tab 6,
    Subtab 4G.     The appellant responded orally and in writing to the deciding
    official. 
    Id.,
     Subtabs 4B, 4E. In his oral reply, the appellant requested that he
    remain in administrative leave status pending final resolution of the security
    clearance matter. See 
    id.,
     Subtab 4B.
    ¶4         By letter dated April 2, 2009, the deciding official notified the appellant
    that he was suspended without pay, effective that date, and that the suspension
    would remain in effect until the completion of the investigation and/or resolution
    of the appellant’s security clearance status. 
    Id.,
     Subtab 4B. In the decision letter,
    the deciding official stated that any review of the decision to suspend the
    appellant’s security clearance “rests exclusively with [PSD],” and that the
    “process to appeal [PSD’s] decision is separate and distinct from the process to
    reply to the proposal to suspend you indefinitely.”         
    Id.
       The parties have
    stipulated that the appellant’s indefinite suspension was based on the suspension
    of his security clearance and the investigation into his alleged misconduct, not on
    3
    the underlying merits or factual predicate for the suspension or the investigation.
    IAF, Tab 8.
    ¶5         On appeal to the Board, the appellant argued that the agency denied him
    due process 1 by failing to provide a meaningful opportunity to contest the merits
    of the security clearance suspension before placing him in nonpay status. IAF,
    Tabs 1, 11. In his initial decision, the administrative judge noted that the action
    on appeal is governed by TSA Management Directive (MD) 1100.75-3, 2 which
    authorizes the agency to impose an indefinite suspension where an employee’s
    security clearance has been suspended, denied, or revoked, and a security
    clearance is a condition of employment or is otherwise required for the
    employee’s position.    IAF, Tab 16 at 2; see MD 1100. 75-3 Handbook (2009),
    § J(1)(d) . The administrative judge then sustained the action, finding that the
    appellant’s position required a clearance, that his clearance was suspended, that
    the agency had complied with the procedures set forth in MD 1100.75-3, and that
    the suspension had a condition subsequent that would bring the action to an end.
    IAF, Tab 16 at 47. The administrative judge did not address the agency’s second
    charge or the appellant’s claim that he was denied due process under the
    Fifth Amendment.
    ¶6         The appellant filed a petition for review, in which he reiterated his due
    process claim. Petition for Review (PFR) File (I-1), Tab 1. Citing its decision in
    1
    For purposes of this decision, the term “due process” refers exclusively to the
    procedural due process guaranteed under the Fifth Amendment.
    2
    The provisions of MD 1100.75-3 and the accompanying Handbook, rather than
    chapter 75, govern disciplinary actions against TSA employees. Winlock v. Department
    of Homeland Security, 
    110 M.S.P.R. 521
    , ¶ 6 (2009), aff’d, 370 F. App’x 119 (Fed. Cir.
    2010); see 
    49 U.S.C. §§ 114
    (n), 40122(g)(2). MD 1100.75-3 and the 2009 edition of
    the Handbook are located in the record at IAF, Tab 6, Subtabs 4J and 4K, respectively.
    The Handbook was revised in 2013, but with no substantive changes pertinent to
    this appeal.
    4
    McGriff v. Department of the Navy, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 89
     (2012), issued that same
    day, the full Board held that the appellant was entitled to due process concerning
    his indefinite suspension, and that the Board had authority to review whether due
    process      was    provided.   Buelna   v.   Department   of   Homeland    Security,
    
    118 M.S.P.R. 115
     , ¶¶ 10-12 (2012) (citing McGriff, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 89
     , ¶¶ 24-25).
    Again citing McGriff, the Board further held that in determining the requirements
    of due process, it would apply the balancing test employed in Gilbert v. Homar,
    
    520 U.S. 924
     (1997), and consider the following factors: (1) the private interest
    affected by the official action; (2) the risk of erroneous deprivation of the interest
    through the procedures used, and the probable value, if any, of additional or
    substitute procedural safeguards; and (3) the government’s interest.          Buelna,
    
    118 M.S.P.R. 115
     , ¶ 11 (citing McGriff, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 89
     , ¶¶ 27-28); see Homar,
    
    520 U.S. at
    931-32 (citing Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
     , 335 (1976)). 3
    ¶7            In analyzing the “Homar factors”—more accurately, the Mathews factors—
    the Board determined that, under the circumstances presented in this case, the
    first and third factors were not dispositive, and that there were unresolved factual
    issues relating to the second. Buelna, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 115
     , ¶¶ 12-16. The Board
    found that although the agency had reasonable grounds to support its action and
    provided the appellant with the specific reasons for the security clearance
    suspension, id., ¶¶ 14-15, the evidence did not indicate that the deciding official
    had the authority to consider the merits of the clearance suspension, and also may
    have lacked authority to take other remedial action, such as temporarily
    reassigning the appellant to a position that did not require a security clearance,
    id., ¶ 17. Thus, the Board concluded, “a question exists regarding whether the
    agency afforded the appellant a meaningful opportunity to reply to the reason for
    the suspension of his security clearance before suspending him from his position,
    3
    See infra, note 7.
    5
    or whether instead the agency merely provided him with an empty formality.”
    Id., ¶ 18.    The Board further noted that even if the agency did provide due
    process, the appellant could still argue that the agency committed harmful error
    by violating its own regulations governing adverse actions.                  Id., ¶ 19.
    Accordingly, the Board remanded for further development of the record on both
    the due process and harmful error issues.
    ¶8         After    considering    the   parties’   additional   written   submissions,   the
    administrative judge again sustained the indefinite suspension. Remand Appeal
    File (RAF), Tab 14. The administrative judge found that although the deciding
    official had no authority to change the decision to suspend the appellant’s
    security clearance, he had the authority to choose an alternative to the proposed
    suspension, such as continued placement on administrative leave.            Hence, the
    administrative judge concluded, the appellant received a meaningful opportunity
    to respond to the proposed indefinite suspension, and was thereby provided due
    process.     Id. at 3-6.     Regarding the appellant’s harmful error claim, the
    administrative judge again found that the agency provided the procedures
    required under MD 1100.75-3, and that even if the agency had failed to do so, the
    appellant failed to show how it would have reached a different decision in the
    absence of the error. Id. at 6-7.
    ¶9         The appellant subsequently filed a petition for review of the remand initial
    decision. PFR File (B-1), Tab 3. The agency filed a response in opposition. PFR
    File (B-1), Tab 6. Following the issuance of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
    Federal Circuit’s decision in Gargiulo v. Department of Homeland Security,
    
    727 F.3d 1181
     (Fed. Cir. 2013), the Board invited the parties to address the
    possible application of Gargiulo to the appellant’s due process claim. PFR File
    (B-1), Tab 12. Both parties responded. PFR File (B-1), Tabs 14, 17.
    6
    ANALYSIS
    The only issues remaining to be adjudicated are whether the agency violated the
    appellant’s due process rights or committed harmful error in indefinitely
    suspending him based on the suspension of his security clearance.
    ¶10         During the initial proceedings prior to remand, the administrative judge
    issued a summary of the telephonic close of record conference, in which he stated
    that the parties were precluded from arguing any but the following issues,
    whether: (1) the appellant’s position requires a security clearance; (2) the
    appellant “lost” his security clearance; (3) the appellant “was granted minimum
    due process rights under the agency’s internal regulations”; and (4) the indefinite
    suspension had a condition subsequent that would bring the action to an end.
    IAF, Tab 14.    The administrative judge further informed the parties that any
    objections to the summary must be submitted in writing.          
    Id.
       Neither party
    objected to the summary.
    ¶11         As to issues (1) and (2), the parties have stipulated that the appellant’s
    position required a security clearance and that his clearance was suspended. IAF,
    Tab 8. The agency’s first charge is therefore sustained. See 
    5 C.F.R. § 1201.63
     .
    However, because the exhaustive list of issues to be adjudicated did not include
    the merits of the agency’s second charge, i.e., the continuing OIG investigation,
    and the parties did not object to the summary, we conclude that the agency does
    not intend to rely on that charge, and must establish that its action was warranted
    based on the first charge alone. 4 In that regard, the administrative judge correctly
    noted that an indefinite suspension based on the suspension of a required security
    clearance promotes the efficiency of the service, see Jones v. Department of the
    Navy, 
    978 F.2d 1223
     , 1226-27 (Fed. Cir. 1992), and also is expressly authorized
    4
    Because the merits of the second charge are not before us, we do not decide whether
    the holding of Gonzalez v. Department of Homeland Security, 
    114 M.S.P.R. 318
    ,
    ¶¶ 23-25 (2010), applies to indefinite suspensions taken under the TSA personnel
    system.
    7
    under the TSA personnel system, see MD 1100.75-3 Handbook (2009), § J(1)(d).
    As to issue (4), the appellant has not contested the administrative judge’s finding
    that the indefinite suspension had a condition subsequent that would bring it to an
    end, and we discern no error in his finding.
    ¶12            The outcome of this case therefore turns on the appellant’s claims that the
    agency violated his due process rights and/or committed harmful error in
    indefinitely suspending him.          It appears that in framing issue (3), the
    administrative judge initially conflated the question of whether the agency denied
    the appellant due process with the question of whether it committed harmful
    error.    The appellant raised both issues, however, and we identified both for
    consideration on remand.        Buelna, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 115
     , ¶ 20.      No other issues
    remain to be adjudicated.
    The appellant was entitled to due process concerning the indefinite suspension.
    ¶13            While it is well established that no one has a right to a security clearance or
    access to classified information, a tenured federal employee nonetheless has a
    property interest in continued employment.         King v. Alston, 
    75 F.3d 657
     , 661
    (Fed. Cir. 1996). Typically, this is so because the statutory federal employment
    scheme provides that the agency may take an adverse action against the employee
    only for unacceptable performance, pursuant to 
    5 U.S.C. § 4303
     , or for such
    cause as will promote the efficiency of the service, pursuant to 
    5 U.S.C. § 7513
     .
    Stone v. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 
    179 F.3d 1368
     , 1375 (Fed. Cir.
    1999). In this case, the adverse action on appeal is governed not by statute, but
    rather by the TSA’s personnel management system, in particular, the provisions
    of MD 1100.75-3 and the accompanying Handbook. Buelna, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 115
     ,
    ¶ 8. However, MD 1100.75-3 similarly provides that a tenured TSA employee
    may only be suspended, removed, or demoted for unacceptable performance or
    for such cause as will promote the efficiency of the service. Id., ¶ 9; IAF, Tab 6,
    Subtab 4J, § 6(E).       Accordingly, we reaffirm that the appellant’s indefinite
    suspension deprived him of a property interest cognizable under the Fifth
    8
    Amendment, and that the agency was required to provide him due process in
    connection with that action.      Buelna, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 115
     , ¶ 12; see Gargiulo,
    727 F.3d at 1185 (acknowledging that the petitioner, a FAM who was indefinitely
    suspended under the TSA personnel management system based on the suspension
    of his security clearance, had due process rights regarding his indefinite
    suspension); Kriner v. Department of the Navy, 
    61 M.S.P.R. 526
     , 532 (1994) (“It
    was the agency’s deprivation of the appellant’s property interest in his
    employment—his suspension from his job—which triggered the application of
    due process.”).
    The Board has authority to review whether the agency provided the appellant due
    process in indefinitely suspending him.
    ¶14         In Department of the Navy v. Egan, 
    484 U.S. 518
     , 530-31 (1988), the
    Supreme Court held that in an appeal of an adverse action under chapter 75 based
    on the denial or revocation of a required security clearance, the Board may not
    review the merits of the underlying clearance determination, but may review,
    inter alia, whether the position required a security clearance, whether the
    clearance was denied or revoked, and whether the agency complied with the
    procedural requirements of § 7513. 5 The holding of Egan has since been applied
    to indefinite suspensions based on the suspension of a security clearance. See,
    e.g., Cheney v. Department of Justice, 
    479 F.3d 1343
     , 1351-52 (2007). Egan also
    controls where, as here, the adverse action is taken under the TSA personnel
    system.    See Gargiulo, 727 F.3d at 1186.           In such cases, the procedural
    requirements of section 7513 are not directly applicable; however, the Board has
    authority under 
    5 U.S.C. § 7701
     (c)(2)(A) to review the agency’s compliance with
    5
    The Court further stated that in such cases the Board may review “whether transfer to
    a nonsensitive position was feasible.” 
    Id.
     However, the Federal Circuit has since
    clarified that such review is appropriate only where a statute or regulation provides the
    employee a substantive right to such reassignment. Griffin v. Defense Mapping Agency,
    
    864 F.2d 1579
    , 1580 (Fed. Cir. 1989).
    9
    its own procedures, which include the similar provisions of MD 1100.75-3. See
    Romero v. Department of Defense, 
    527 F.3d 1324
     , 1328-29 (Fed. Cir. 2008).
    ¶15          The Court did not have occasion in Egan to decide if the Board was
    authorized to consider a claim that an agency denied due process in taking an
    adverse action based on a security clearance determination. We have long held,
    however, that the Board is authorized to review such claims. See, e.g., McGriff,
    
    118 M.S.P.R. 89
     , ¶ 25; Kriner, 61 M.S.P.R. at 532-33. The Federal Circuit also
    has implicitly recognized that due process claims are reviewable in this context.
    See Hesse v. Department of State, 
    217 F.3d 1372
     , 1381-82 (Fed. Cir. 2000)
    (finding that the agency did not deny the petitioner due process regarding an
    indefinite suspension based on the suspension of a security clearance).               This
    result is not contrary to Egan, because review of the due process protections
    afforded does not require the Board to second guess security determinations
    committed to agency discretion.          Weissberger v. U.S. Information Agency,
    
    39 M.S.P.R. 370
     , 374 (1988). 6 We therefore reaffirm our authority to determine
    whether an agency afforded an appellant due process in taking an adverse action
    based on a security clearance determination. For the reasons discussed below,
    however, we must reconsider the question of what due process requires in such
    a case.
    6
    Indeed, we need not consider any factual issues that are not also involved in
    determining an agency’s compliance with the procedures set forth at 
    5 U.S.C. § 7513
    , a
    matter which lies squarely within our review authority under Egan. Whether an agency
    provided due process is in certain respects a distinct inquiry, in that the requirements of
    constitutional due process are not conditioned on statutory procedures, and furthermore
    are not subject to the harmful error test. Stone, 
    179 F.3d at 1375, 1377
    . Nonetheless,
    section 7513 has been drafted so that its procedural protections include, inter alia, the
    due process rights independently guaranteed under the U.S. Constitution, such as notice
    and a meaningful opportunity to respond to the proposed action. Chavies v. Department
    of the Navy, 
    104 M.S.P.R. 81
    , ¶ 10 (2006). The same is true of the similar provisions of
    MD 1100.75-3. See Buelna, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 115
    , ¶ 9.
    10
    In determining the general requirements of due process concerning an indefinite
    suspension based on the suspension of a security clearance, the Board will apply
    the Mathews factors.
    ¶16         Due process requires, at a minimum, that an employee being deprived of
    his property interest be given “the opportunity to be heard ‘at a meaningful time
    and in a meaningful manner.’” Mathews, 
    424 U.S. at 333
     (quoting Armstrong v.
    Manzo, 
    380 U.S. 545
     , 552 (1965)). However, due process “is flexible and calls
    for such procedural protections as the particular situation demands.” Id. at 334
    (quoting Morrissey v. Brewer, 
    408 U.S. 471
     , 481 (1972)). As previously stated,
    to determine the specific dictates of due process, we consider: (1) the private
    interest affected by the official action; (2) the risk of erroneous deprivation of the
    interest through the procedures used, and the probable value, if any, of additional
    or substitute procedural safeguards; and (3) the government’s interest. Id. at 335.
    ¶17         These considerations are not limited in their application to indefinite
    suspension actions, such as the one at issue in Homar, but apply generally to the
    deprivation of any property interest.       For example, in Cleveland Board of
    Education v. Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. 532
     (1985), issued more than a decade before
    Homar, the Supreme Court relied on the Mathews factors in determining what
    process was due a public employee who, under state law, could be removed only
    for cause. 
    Id. at 538-39, 542-45
    . After considering the factors in turn, the Court
    concluded that a tenured government employee is entitled to “notice of the
    charges against him, an explanation of the employer’s evidence, and an
    opportunity to present his side of the story” prior to the deprivation of his
    property right to continued employment. 
    Id. at 546-48
    . We have since applied
    the holding of Loudermill to removals of federal employees. See, e.g., Alford v.
    Department of Defense, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 556
     , ¶¶ 2, 6 (2012).
    ¶18         We find occasion here to conduct a new Mathews factors analysis. We do
    so in part because, as the Court noted in Homar, it cannot be assumed that in all
    cases Loudermill will apply in full to the temporary deprivation of a suspension
    11
    without pay. See 
    520 U.S. at 929-32
    . More to the point, our recent analysis of
    the Mathews factors in McGriff and related decisions, including our previous
    decision in this case, requires clarification. 7 As with Loudermill and its progeny,
    our conclusions here may be applied to similar appeals without reiterating the
    Mathews analysis in each case.
    We may rely on Loudermill and its progeny in determining whether the
    appellant’s predeprivation hearing was meaningful.
    ¶19         In considering the first Mathews factor, i.e., the private interest affected by
    the action, we must consider the length and finality of the deprivation. Homar,
    
    520 U.S. at 932
    . Here, as in Homar, the appellant has suffered only a temporary
    suspension, rather than a permanent deprivation of his property interest in
    continued employment. See 
    id.
     In drawing that distinction, the Court paid no
    particular attention to the precise duration of the suspension, see 
    id.,
     and we need
    not do so here. For purposes of the Mathews analysis, it is sufficient to observe
    that, while a suspension is a temporary deprivation, it is nonetheless “likely to cut
    off subsistence income and to prevent one from obtaining other gainful
    employment,” and has “great practical impact” on the employee.           Engdahl v.
    Department of the Navy, 
    900 F.2d 1572
     , 1575 (Fed. Cir. 1990).
    ¶20         Regarding the third Mathews factor, the government has a compelling
    interest in withholding national security information from unauthorized persons.
    Buelna, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 115
     , ¶ 13 (citing Egan, 
    484 U.S. at 527
    ). It is true the
    7
    To the extent our analysis below is inconsistent with Hairston v. Department of
    Defense, 
    119 M.S.P.R. 162
     (2013); Diehl v. Department of the Army, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 344
    (2012); Gaitan v. Department of Homeland Security, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 180
     (2012);
    Gargiulo v. Department of Homeland Security, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 137
     (2012), aff’d on other
    grounds, 
    727 F.3d 1181
     (Fed. Cir. 2013); Buelna, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 115
    ; and McGriff,
    
    118 M.S.P.R. 89
    , these decisions are hereby modified. To the extent our prior due
    process analysis of these appeals under Gilbert v. Homar, 
    520 U.S. 924
     (1997),
    suggested that we engaged in a review of the merits of agency security clearance
    determinations, we hereby clarify that this was not our intent.
    12
    hazard may be temporarily avoided by keeping the employee in a paid non-duty
    status. See Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. at 544-45
    . However, the government’s interest
    in the efficiency of the service is sufficiently strong to permit an indefinite
    suspension    without   pay   pending    completion    of   the   security     clearance
    adjudication. See Jones, 
    978 F.2d at 1226
    .
    ¶21         In considering the second and decisive Mathews factor, our focus is on the
    need to ensure that the procedures used provide adequate assurance that the
    agency had reasonable grounds to support the adverse action.                    Buelna,
    
    118 M.S.P.R. 115
     , ¶ 14 (citing Homar, 
    520 U.S. at 933-34
    ); see Fuentes v.
    Shevin, 
    407 U.S. 67
     , 80-81 (1972) (the purpose of the right to be heard is not
    only to provide “abstract fair play,” but also “to minimize substantively unfair or
    mistaken deprivations of property”). 8     Because the appellant was afforded an
    opportunity to respond to the proposed action prior to being suspended, it is clear
    the hearing occurred at a “meaningful time” for these purposes, see Mathews,
    
    424 U.S. at 333
    , and we need not decide whether a postdeprivation hearing might
    have satisfied the requirements of due process.         However, it remains to be
    determined whether the appellant was heard in a “meaningful manner” that
    provided sufficient protection against an erroneous deprivation of his property
    interest. 
    Id. at 333, 335
    .
    ¶22         When the Court in Loudermill considered the second Mathews factor, it
    explained that for the purpose of reaching an accurate decision, the opportunity to
    respond to a proposed removal is important for two reasons.                  Loudermill,
    
    470 U.S. at 542-46
    . First, an adverse action will often involve factual disputes
    and consideration of the employee’s response may clarify such disputes.             Id.;
    Stone, 
    179 F.3d at 1376
    .       Second, “[e]ven where the facts are clear, the
    8
    Our inquiry here is limited to the procedures used in the adverse action proceedings,
    and does not extend to the merits of the underlying clearance suspension. See Gargiulo,
    727 F.2d at 1186-87.
    13
    appropriateness or necessity of the [penalty] may not be,” and in such cases the
    employee must receive a “meaningful opportunity to invoke the discretion of the
    decision maker.” Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. at 543
    . Thus, “the employee’s response
    is essential not only to the issue of whether the allegations are true, but also with
    regard to whether the level of penalty to be imposed is appropriate.”         Stone,
    
    179 F.3d at 1376
    . Although the appellant in this case was not removed, we find
    the same considerations described in Loudermill are present in determining
    whether he received an adequate opportunity to contest his proposed suspension.
    We address them in turn.
    For purposes of responding to the charge, due process does not require an
    opportunity to contest the merits of the clearance suspension.
    ¶23         As to the facts underlying the agency’s charge, it is well established that
    the suspension of a security clearance, pending a final decision on whether to
    revoke or restore it, may serve as a basis for imposing an indefinite suspension.
    Jones, 
    978 F.2d at 1226-27
    ; see also MD 1100.75-3 Handbook (2009), § J(1)(d).
    This is so even where, as in Jones, the agency ultimately determines that the facts
    warrant restoration of the clearance. See 
    978 F.2d at 1224, 1227
    . Consequently,
    where an agency proposes to indefinitely suspend an employee based on the
    suspension of his security clearance, the only relevant factual disputes that could
    be raised regarding the charge are whether the position required a security
    clearance and whether the clearance was suspended.         Indeed, the parties have
    stipulated that the appellant’s indefinite suspension was based on the suspension
    of his clearance, not the merits or factual predicate of the clearance suspension.
    IAF, Tab 8.
    ¶24         The Board has previously held that in an indefinite suspension action based
    on the suspension of a security clearance, due process requires that the employee
    be provided an opportunity to contest the underlying security determination.
    Gaitan, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 180
     , ¶ 23 (due process requires only that the appellant
    receive a meaningful opportunity to respond to someone with authority to change
    14
    the outcome of the security clearance determination in either the security
    clearance proceeding or the adverse action proceeding); Gargiulo, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 137
     , ¶ 20 (same).    That holding was incorrect because an employee has no
    property interest in a security clearance. Gargiulo, 727 F.3d at 1185. Failure to
    provide an opportunity to contest a clearance suspension prior to placement in a
    nonpay status may constitute harmful error, if such a procedure is required under
    an agency’s own regulations concerning adverse actions based on personnel
    security determinations. See Ulep v. Department of the Army, 
    120 M.S.P.R. 579
     ,
    ¶ 5 (2014). It does not, however, constitute a due process violation, because the
    merits of the agency’s charge do not hinge on any factual disputes concerning the
    merits of the clearance suspension. 9
    For purposes of responding to the charge, constitutional due process does not
    require notice of the factual basis for the clearance suspension.
    ¶25         Constitutional due process does not necessarily require that the employee
    be notified of the factual basis underlying the security clearance suspension.
    Gargiulo, 727 F.3d at 1186; contra Hinton v. Department of the Navy,
    
    61 M.S.P.R. 692
     , 695-96 (1994). Such notice is required under 
    5 U.S.C. § 7513
     ,
    which provides that an employee facing an adverse action be notified of the
    specific reasons for the proposed action.      See Cheney, 
    479 F.3d at 1352
     (the
    employee must be given enough information to enable him to make a meaningful
    reply); King, 
    75 F.3d at 661-62
    ; see also MD 1100.75-3 Handbook (2009),
    9
    We further note that in cases where the employee does receive an opportunity to
    contest the clearance determination prior to the adverse action proceedings, that
    opportunity alone is insufficient to satisfy due process with respect to the proposed
    adverse action. Contra Gaitan, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 180
    , ¶ 23; Gargiulo, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 137
    ,
    ¶ 20. Due process requires that the employee have the “opportunity to present reasons,
    either in person or in writing, why proposed action should not be taken.” Loudermill,
    
    470 U.S. at 546
     (emphasis added). In an adverse action, there is no “proposed action”
    for due process purposes until the agency issues its proposal notice. Hodges v. U.S.
    Postal Service, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 591
    , ¶ 6 (2012).
    15
    § I(2)(a)(i) (requiring that the notice of proposed adverse action include “[t]he
    charge(s) and specification(s) for each charge, including a description of the
    evidence that supports the charge(s)”).     However, as the court explained in
    Gargiulo, the right to such notice is not constitutional, but statutory, or in this
    case, a matter of agency policy. 717 F.3d at 1186. Hence, as to the charge, the
    agency was not obliged as a matter of constitutional due process to notify the
    appellant of the specific reasons for the suspension of his security clearance. Id.
    Rather, it was sufficient for the agency to inform the appellant that his position
    required a security clearance, and that he could no longer hold his position once
    he had lost his clearance.       See Hesse, 
    217 F.3d at 1381-82
    .     The appellant
    received adequate notice of these essential facts, see IAF, Tab 6, Subtab 4G, and
    there is no indication that he would have been denied the chance to contest those
    facts had he been so inclined.
    If there are viable alternatives to indefinite suspension, due process requires that
    the employee be afforded an opportunity to invoke the discretion of a deciding
    official with authority to select such alternatives.
    ¶26         Regarding the penalty, the appellant has argued that he was denied a
    meaningful opportunity to persuade the deciding official to take an action other
    than the proposed indefinite suspension.       In Gargiulo, our reviewing court
    declined to address what due process would be required had the petitioner in that
    case claimed entitlement to a penalty other than suspension without pay. See
    727 F.3d at 1185 n.4. Because the appellant in this case has asserted that the
    agency denied him due process concerning the penalty imposed, that question is
    now before us.
    ¶27         As the Court recognized in Loudermill, the right to invoke the deciding
    official’s discretion exists only “in such cases” where there is doubt as to the
    appropriateness or necessity of the penalty. 
    470 U.S. at 543
    . For example, there
    is no due process right “to insist on a hearing in order to argue that the
    decisionmaker should be lenient and depart from legal requirements.” 
    Id.
     at 543
    16
    n.8 (citing Dixon v. Love, 
    431 U.S. 105
     , 114 (1977)); see, e.g., Delong v.
    Department of Health & Human Services, 
    264 F.3d 1334
     , 1342-43 (Fed. Cir.
    2001) (where the petitioner’s criminal record required her removal pursuant to
    
    25 U.S.C. § 3207
     , due process did not require that she be afforded a hearing on
    the issue of her fitness for service in a covered position). Due process does not
    demand that the deciding official consider alternatives that are prohibited,
    impracticable, or outside management’s purview.
    ¶28         However, to the extent there may have existed viable alternatives to
    suspension without pay, e.g., placement on administrative leave, the appellant
    had a due process right to invoke the discretion of a deciding official with
    authority to select such alternatives. See Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. at 543
    . Here, the
    deciding official declared under penalty of perjury that he had authority under the
    agency’s discipline procedures to choose alternatives to the proposed indefinite
    suspension, including the appellant’s requested outcome of continued placement
    on administrative leave.    RAF, Tab 13 (Declaration).      The appellant has not
    rebutted that evidence, and we conclude that he was afforded an opportunity to
    invoke the discretion of a deciding official with authority to change the outcome
    of the proposed action to the extent that may have been feasible.
    Due process requires notice of the facts underlying the clearance suspension to
    the extent those facts are considered in determining the penalty.
    ¶29         The appellant asserts that he was nonetheless denied a meaningful
    opportunity to invoke the deciding official’s discretion because he was not
    provided with all of the information on which the deciding official relied in
    deciding to indefinitely suspend him. PFR File (B-1), Tab 3 at 6-7. In particular,
    he cites the deciding official’s declaration that he “considered the facts regarding
    [the appellant’s] alleged fraudulent time and attendance reports in reaching [the]
    decision to indefinitely suspend [the appellant].”    RAF, Tab 13 (Declaration).
    Based on that statement, the appellant concludes that the deciding official
    “apparently” considered evidence regarding the alleged fraudulent claims beyond
    17
    what he was provided in the proposal notice and the notice of his clearance
    suspension. PFR File (B-1), Tab 3 at 7.
    ¶30         To enjoy the right to be heard, an individual must first be notified.
    Fuentes, 
    407 U.S. at
    80 (citing Baldwin v. Hale, 
    68 U.S. 223
     , 
    1 Wall. 223
    , 233
    (1863)); see Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. at 546
     (“The essential requirements of due
    process . . . are notice and an opportunity to respond.”).      In Stone, 
    179 F.3d at 1376
    , our reviewing court held that introduction of new and material
    information to the deciding official through ex parte communications undermines
    the due process guarantee of notice and an opportunity to respond because the
    employee is no longer on notice of all the reasons for the action and/or the
    evidence relied upon by the agency. In determining if an ex parte communication
    introduces new and material information, the Board considers, among other
    factors, whether: (1) the ex parte communication merely introduces cumulative
    information or new information; (2) the employee knew of the error and had a
    chance to respond to it; and (3) the ex parte communications were of the type
    likely to result in undue pressure upon the deciding official to rule in a particular
    manner. 
    Id. at 1377
    . Ultimately, the inquiry is whether the deciding official’s
    consideration of the additional material was so substantial and so likely to cause
    prejudice that no employee could fairly be required to be subjected to a
    deprivation of property absent an opportunity to respond. 
    Id.
    ¶31         Concerning the charge, any additional information the deciding official
    may have considered could not have been new and material because the only
    information material to the charge was that the appellant’s position required a
    security clearance and that his clearance was suspended. For purposes of the
    Stone analysis, however, there is no basis for distinguishing between those
    ex parte communications relating to the charge and those relating to the penalty.
    Ward v. U.S. Postal Service, 
    634 F.3d 1274
     , 1280 (Fed. Cir. 2011). As the court
    explained in Ward, “if ex parte communications influence a deciding official’s
    penalty determination, contributing to the enhancement of the penalty . . . the
    18
    communications    impact   the   employee’s    property   interest   in    continued
    employment no less than if they relate to the underlying charge.” 
    Id.
     To the
    extent the deciding official’s penalty determination was influenced by the factual
    basis for the underlying security clearance determination, the appellant was
    entitled to notice of the information on which he relied, even if due process
    would not have required such notice regarding the charge alone.
    ¶32         The appellant has not shown, however, that his due process rights were
    compromised by ex parte communications. First, it is unclear that any ex parte
    communication in fact took place.     The deciding official’s statement that he
    “considered the facts regarding [the appellant’s] alleged fraudulent time and
    attendance reports” is vague, and could refer to nothing more than the fact that
    PSD cited those alleged fraudulent reports as a basis for suspending the
    appellant’s security clearance. That information had already been provided to the
    appellant in the proposal notice.   Moreover, even if the deciding official did
    consider additional information concerning those reports, beyond what was
    included in the proposal notice, the appellant has not established that the
    information considered was new and material. Accordingly, we find the appellant
    has not shown that he was denied a meaningful opportunity to invoke the
    deciding official’s discretion regarding the penalty determination. In sum, we
    conclude that the appellant has not shown that he was denied due process.
    The appellant did not establish that the agency committed harmful error.
    ¶33         To prove harmful procedural error, an appellant must prove that the agency
    committed an error in the application of its procedures that is likely to have
    caused the agency to reach a conclusion different from the one it would have
    reached in the absence or cure of the error. See 
    5 C.F.R. § 1201.56
     (c)(3). The
    relevant procedures in this case are set forth in the MD 1100.75-3 Handbook,
    which provides, inter alia, that an employee facing an adverse action receive
    written notice stating the charges and specifications and a description of the
    evidence that supports the charge. MD 1100.75-3 Handbook (2009), § I(2)(a)(i).
    19
    The directive further provides that the employee is entitled to see the materials
    relied upon to support each charge and specification.         Id., § I(2)(a)(x).   In
    addition, the employee must be provided an opportunity to respond orally and in
    writing to a deciding official who will consider the replies and decide the
    outcome based on all of the evidence of record and the applicable Douglas
    factors.   Id., § I(2)(c).   The appellant asserts that the agency violated its
    procedures because the decision to indefinitely suspend him was based on
    information that the agency failed to disclose, and that the agency failed to
    provide him a meaningful opportunity to address the underlying accusations
    before indefinitely suspending him. PFR File, Tab 3 at 7-8.
    ¶34         Where an agency indefinitely suspends an employee under chapter 75
    based on the suspension of a security clearance, 
    5 U.S.C. § 7513
     requires that the
    appellant be provided sufficient information to make an informed reply, including
    a statement of the reasons for the clearance suspension. See Cheney, 
    479 F.3d at 1352-53
    ; Alston, 
    75 F.3d at 662
    .      The same general principles apply in
    determining whether the agency committed harmful error concerning the similar
    notice requirement of MD 1100.75-3.       See Buelna, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 115
     , ¶ 19.
    Here, the notice suspending the appellant’s security clearance, coupled with the
    notice proposing his indefinite suspension, informed him of the basis for the
    suspension of his security clearance, i.e., the alleged fraudulent claims. We find
    this was sufficient information to allow for an informed response, as required
    under agency procedures.     See Alston, 
    75 F.3d at 662
     (finding that the agency
    provided the employee with sufficient information to make an informed reply
    when it notified him that his security clearance was being suspended because of
    “a potential medical condition” and then informed him that he was being
    indefinitely suspended from duty based on the suspension of his security
    clearance); cf. Cheney, 
    479 F.3d at 1353
     (finding that the employee was not
    provided with the opportunity to make a meaningful response to the notice of
    20
    proposed suspension where he had to guess at the reasons for his security
    clearance suspension).
    ¶35            Furthermore, as mentioned above, the appellant has not shown by
    preponderant evidence that the agency failed to provide any additional evidence
    on which the deciding official relied.     Moreover, assuming arguendo that the
    agency did commit procedural error in that regard, the appellant has not shown
    that the agency was likely to have reached a different decision in the absence of
    that error.     Finally, as discussed above, the appellant was provided the
    opportunity to respond orally and in writing to a deciding official with authority
    to decide the outcome of the proposed indefinite suspension. We therefore affirm
    the administrative judge’s finding that the appellant failed to establish harmful
    error.    Accordingly, we AFFIRM the administrative judge’s determination to
    sustain the appellant’s indefinite suspension.
    ORDER
    ¶36            This is the final decision of the Merit Systems Protection Board in this
    appeal. Title 5 of the Code of Federal Regulations, section 1201.113(c) ( 
    5 C.F.R. § 1201.113
     (c)).
    NOTICE TO THE APPELLANT REGARDING
    YOUR FURTHER REVIEW RIGHTS
    You have the right to request review of this final decision by the United
    States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. You must submit your request to
    the court at the following address:
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    717 Madison Place, N.W.
    Washington, DC 20439
    The court must receive your request for review no later than 60 calendar days
    after the date of this order. See 
    5 U.S.C. § 7703
     (b)(1)(A) (as rev. eff. Dec. 27,
    2012). If you choose to file, be very careful to file on time. The court has held
    21
    that normally it does not have the authority to waive this statutory deadline and
    that filings that do not comply with the deadline must be dismissed. See Pinat v.
    Office of Personnel Management, 
    931 F.2d 1544
     (Fed. Cir. 1991).
    If you need further information about your right to appeal this decision to
    court, you should refer to the federal law that gives you this right. It is found in
    Title 5 of the United States Code, section 7703 ( 
    5 U.S.C. § 7703
     ) (as rev. eff.
    Dec. 27, 2012). You may read this law as well as other sections of the United
    States     Code,     at   our    website,     http://www.mspb.gov/appeals/uscode/htm .
    Additional         information     is       available   at   the    court's   website,
    www.cafc.uscourts.gov . Of particular relevance is the court's "Guide for Pro Se
    Petitioners and Appellants," which is contained within the court's Rules of
    Practice , and Forms 5, 6, and 11.
    FOR THE BOARD:
    ______________________________
    William D. Spencer
    Clerk of the Board
    Washington, D.C.
    CONCURRING OPINION OF ANNE M. WAGNER
    in
    Alexander Buelna v. Department of Homeland Security
    MSPB Docket No. DA-0752-09-0404-B-1
    ¶1        I agree with the majority’s description of the background and issues to be
    decided in this case (Majority Opinion, ¶¶ 2-12) and their findings that:         the
    appellant was entitled to due process concerning his indefinite suspension (Id.,
    ¶ 13); the Board has authority to review whether the agency provided the
    appellant due process in indefinitely suspending him (Id., ¶¶ 14-15); due process
    required that the deciding official have the authority to select alternative penalties
    other than suspension without pay (Id., ¶ 28); due process required notice of the
    facts underlying the clearance suspension to the extent that those facts were
    considered in determining the penalty (Id., ¶¶ 29-32); and, the appellant did not
    establish that the agency committed harmful error (Id., ¶¶ 33-35). Furthermore, I
    conclude, as does the majority, that the agency did not violate the appellant’s due
    process rights in indefinitely suspending him based upon the suspension of his
    security clearance. However, I fundamentally disagree with my colleagues as to
    their delineation of the process to which the appellant was entitled under the Fifth
    Amendment.
    ¶2        In Gargiulo v. Department of Homeland Security, 
    727 F.3d 1181
     , 1185
    (Fed. Cir. 2013), the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit recognized
    that the appellant, a Federal Air Marshal, “had due process rights with respect to
    his indefinite suspension.” It did not, however, define what those rights entailed.
    Rather, the court noted that, under Egan v. Department of the Navy, 
    484 U.S. 518
    (1988), the Board’s review of an adverse action based on a security clearance
    revocation is limited to whether a security clearance was denied and was a
    requirement of the position and whether the 
    5 U.S.C. § 7513
     procedures were
    followed. Id. at 1186. It thereafter found that the Board erred in holding
    2
    as a matter of constitutional due process, that Mr. Gargiulo was
    entitled to notice of the reasons for the suspension of his security
    clearance and an opportunity to make a meaningful response
    regarding those reasons to someone in the agency with the authority
    to affect that decision. While this court’s cases hold that section
    7513 grants those rights . . . we have not held that those rights are
    guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment.
    Id. at 1186. Thus, the question remains as to what exactly the constitutional right
    to due process ensures when a tenured federal employee is deprived of a property
    interest in that employment based upon security clearance determinations.
    ¶3         Before reaching that question, however, I note my agreement with the
    majority that we should clarify our recent decisions involving indefinite
    suspensions based on a suspension of a security clearance.           In Gargiulo, the
    Federal Circuit found that the Board reached the merits of the underlying security
    clearance action in its analysis of the appellant’s due process claim and, thereby,
    exceeded its authority. Id. at 1187. Our discussion of due process in Gargiulo,
    and in our prior decision in this appeal, was originally articulated in McGriff v.
    Department of the Navy, 
    118 M.S.P.R. 89
     (2012).
    ¶4         In McGriff, the Board cited Gilbert v. Homar, 
    520 U.S. 924
     (1997), which
    analyzed the factors set forth in Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
     (1976), to
    determine what constitutional process is due a public employee suspended from
    employment. 
    118 M.S.P.R. 89
     , ¶ 27.         While not erroneous, that analysis was
    unnecessary for two reasons.         First, in Cleveland Board of Education v.
    Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. 532
     (1985), the U.S. Supreme Court had already distilled
    the Mathews factors to arrive at the fundamental contours of due process, i.e.,
    notice and meaningful opportunity to respond, when a public employee is
    deprived of a property interest in employment. * Moreover, the Board long ago
    *
    For this reason, I believe that the majority’s discussion (Majority Opinion, ¶¶ 16-22)
    of Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
     (1976), and particularly, its application of the
    3
    applied Loudermill in cases involving indefinite suspension from employment
    based on a suspension of access to security areas or information. See Byerline v.
    Department of the Navy, 62 M.S.P.R 279 , 283 (1994). Second, we ostensibly
    cited Homar for the proposition that constitutional due process may not, in every
    circumstance, require predeprivation notice and opportunity to respond.
    
    118 M.S.P.R. 89
     , ¶ 27; Kriner v. Department of the Navy, 
    61 M.S.P.R. 526
     , 531
    (1994).   However, the process afforded Mr. McGriff occurred prior to his
    indefinite suspension, thus, making its timing irrelevant to the question of
    whether it satisfied the constitutional requirements under Loudermill.
    ¶5        Beyond being unnecessary, our discussion of the second Homar factor also
    unfortunately suggested that the Board was engaged in a review of the merits of
    the agency’s security clearance determination.       I believe that Homar was not
    essential to the resolution of the appellant’s due process claim and our discussion
    of it in our prior decisions here and elsewhere risks perpetuating the
    misapprehension that the Board lacks a proper understanding of our authority in
    reviewing adverse actions based on security clearance determinations. Therefore,
    I would modify our prior decisions only to eliminate the discussion of Homar and
    Matthews altogether and to examine the appellants’ due process claims solely
    under Loudermill.
    ¶6        In King v. Alston, 
    75 F.3d 657
     , 659 (Fed. Cir. 1996), the Federal Circuit
    reviewed a Board decision finding that the agency violated constitutional due
    process in placing the appellant on enforced leave after suspending his access to
    classified information. The court recognized that, while no one has a right to a
    security clearance or access to classified information, an employee as defined by
    
    5 U.S.C. § 7501
     “has a property right in his continued employment.” 
    Id.
     at 661
    (citing Loudermill).    It thereafter affirmed that such employees “cannot be
    Mathews factors to define what constitutional process is due under these circumstances
    to be unnecessary.
    4
    deprived of that interest without the procedural protections provided by 
    5 U.S.C. § 7513
     (b).”   It went on to hold that “section 7513(b) entitles an employee to
    notice of the reasons for the suspension of his access to classified information
    when that is the reason for placing the employee on enforced leave pending a
    decision on the employee’s security clearance.         Such notice provides the
    employee with an adequate opportunity to make a meaningful reply to the agency
    before being placed on enforced leave.” 
    Id. at 661-62
    .        It further held that
    “[m]erely providing the employee with information that his access to classified
    information is being suspended, without more, does not provide the employee
    with sufficient information to make an informed reply to the agency before being
    placed on enforced leave.” 
    Id. at 662
    .
    ¶7        In Gargiulo, the court expressly recognized that the appellant had due
    process rights with respect to his indefinite suspension. 727 F.3d at 1185. At the
    same time, it found that the Board erred in holding that the appellant was entitled
    as a matter of constitutional due process to notice of the reasons for the
    suspension of his security clearance and an opportunity to make a meaningful
    response regarding those reasons to someone in the agency with the authority to
    affect that decision. Id. at 1186. This designation of error seems to me to be at
    odds with King v. Alston, which plainly, albeit tacitly, equated the constitutional
    due process afforded a federal employee facing deprivation of his property
    interest in continued employment with the right to notice and opportunity to
    respond under section 7513(b). Moreover, the court’s insistence in Gargiulo that
    the rights “to notice of the reasons for the suspension of his security clearance
    and an opportunity to make a meaningful response regarding those reasons to
    someone in the agency with the authority to affect that decision” derive solely
    from 
    5 U.S.C. § 7513
     (b) seems to imply that these rights do not also comprise the
    elements of constitutional due process. Id. at 1186. If constitutional due process
    demands something less than what the statute compels in these cases, then how
    5
    does one define it consistent with Loudermill’s dictate for notice and meaningful
    opportunity to respond? The court has left this question unanswered.
    ¶8        I disagree with the majority’s answer—that it is sufficient for due process in
    this context “for the agency to inform the appellant that his position required a
    security clearance, and that he could no longer hold his position once he lost his
    clearance”—because it renders the process utterly void of meaning and is
    contrary to Loudermill.    It also inexplicably departs from longstanding Board
    precedent.   In Kriner, the Board held that “[w]hen a suspension is based on
    restriction of the employee’s security access, the agency is required to provide
    the employee a meaningful opportunity to respond to the reasons for the
    suspension by ensuring that either in the advance notice of that action, or in the
    earlier access determination, the employee has been notified of the cause that led
    to the access determination.” 61 M.S.P.R. at 533. Similarly, in Byerline, the
    Board concluded that “where an indefinite suspension is based on the revocation
    of access to security areas or information, the agency must provide the appellant
    with a meaningful opportunity to respond to the reasons for the indefinite
    suspension by ensuring that either in the advance notice of that action, or in the
    earlier access determination, he has been notified of the cause that led to the
    access determination.” 62 M.S.P.R. at 283 (emphasis added). The Board went
    on to say that “only in this manner does the agency assure that the appellant is
    afforded meaningful due process with respect to his constitutionally protected
    property interest in his employment.”       Id.   Likewise, in Alston, the court
    recognized that when an adverse action is based upon the suspension of a security
    clearance, merely providing the employee with notice of the clearance action,
    without more, does not “provide the employee with sufficient information to
    make an informed reply to the agency” as to the adverse action. Id. at 662.
    ¶9        The majority cites Gargiulo in finding that the agency “was not obliged as a
    matter of constitutional due process to notify the appellant of the specific reasons
    for the suspension of his security clearance.” Majority Opinion, ¶ 25. I do not
    6
    believe that Gargiulo compels that conclusion. Rather, the court objected to the
    characterization of the statutory rights to notice and opportunity to respond as a
    constitutional guarantee that the Board “may delineate and enforce” as contrary
    to precedent holding that there are no due process rights attaching to security
    clearance determinations. 727 F.3d at 1186. However, its criticism is essentially
    premised on the notion that, by recognizing the constitutional dimension of these
    rights, the Board improperly presumed the authority to review the merits of the
    security clearance decision in derogation of Egan. However, in Alston, the court
    reviewed a similar claim by the Office of Personnel Management that, by
    recognizing the appellant’s right to notice of the reasons for the security
    clearance action, the court and the Board were reviewing the merits of the
    agency’s decision to suspend his clearance or to review the procedures used in
    denying such access. 
    75 F.3d at 662
    . As the court explained, Egan “does not
    foreclose board review of the procedures used by the agency” in effecting the
    adverse action. 
    Id. at 662-63
    . Similarly, in Kriner, the Board fully reconciled
    the limitations on its review under Egan with the constitutional due process
    demands of Loudermill:
    In security clearance cases, the Board’s authority to determine
    whether the agency has provided minimum due process is made clear
    when the Supreme Court’s decisions in Egan and Loudermill are read
    together, as they must be.       The right to a full, evidentiary
    post-termination hearing recognized by Loudermill does not confer a
    right to merits review by the Board in these cases because under
    Egan the commitment by law of security clearance determinations to
    the discretion of the employing agency precludes review by an
    outside body like the Board. However, nothing in Egan excused the
    employing agency from providing the employee the pre-termination
    opportunity to be heard which Loudermill requires, and as, as noted
    above, Egan recognized the Board’s authority to review whether the
    agency has done so.
    Review by the Board of the agency’s procedures in a case such as
    this one does not require the Board to inquire into substantive
    matters of national security or to second-guess the agency’s
    judgment concerning whether a particular employee is fit for access
    7
    to classified information. Rather, the Board need only make the kind
    of determinations it routinely makes: whether the agency has given
    the employee an opportunity to reply to its charges and whether its
    notice was adequate to give the employee a meaningful opportunity
    to respond.
    61 M.S.P.R. at 531-32.
    ¶10        Although Alston held that section 7513 provides the employee with an
    adequate opportunity to make a meaningful reply, it does not follow that “[t]hat
    right . . . is . . . not [also] constitutional.” Gargiulo, 727 F.3d at 1186. That is,
    Alston’s holding that the right to make a meaningful reply is embodied in section
    7513 must be read consistently with Loudermill’s holding that the right to make a
    meaningful reply is guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment. If merely providing the
    employee with notice of the clearance action, without more, fails to provide the
    employee with sufficient information to make an informed reply under section
    7513(b), see Alston, 
    75 F.3d at 662
    , it also fails to provide the employee with
    sufficient information to make a meaningful reply under the Fifth Amendment,
    see Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. at 546
    .
    ¶11        I believe that the only logical conclusion that can be reached from
    Loudermill    and       King   v.   Alston   is   that   an    appellant    with   a
    constitutionally-protected property interest in employment cannot be indefinitely
    suspended pending a security clearance determination without being afforded the
    due process guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment and that the essential elements
    of that constitutional due process are the notice and opportunity to respond
    described in 
    5 U.S.C. § 7513
     (b). I also believe that Gargiulo does not expressly
    define constitutional due process as anything other than what the court said it was
    in Alston. But even if it did, then I believe that the Board is obliged to follow
    Alston pursuant to the Federal Circuit’s judicial practice wherein the precedential
    decision of the court is the first decision that was issued unless overruled by an
    en banc decision. See Bosley v. Merit Systems Protection Board, 
    162 F.3d 665
     ,
    672 (Fed. Cir. 1998).
    8
    ¶12        Regardless of my disagreement with the majority on these issues, I concur
    with the decision to sustain the appellant’s indefinite suspension because I
    believe the record shows that the agency provided the appellant with notice and
    opportunity to respond to the proposed indefinite suspension by providing him
    with the specific basis for the suspension of his security clearance and by
    delegating the proposed action to a deciding official with the authority to change
    the outcome of a proposed indefinite suspension. Accordingly, the appellant was
    afforded the minimum due process required by the Constitution.           McGriff,
    
    118 M.S.P.R. 89
     , ¶ 33.
    ______________________________
    Anne M. Wagner
    Vice Chairman