DocketNumber: C17-242 TSZ
Citation Numbers: 363 F. Supp. 3d 1154
Judges: Zilly
Filed Date: 1/31/2019
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/25/2022
THIS MATTER came on for trial on November 26, 2018, before the Court, sitting without a jury. Plaintiffs were represented by Neil T. O'Donnell of Cascadia Cross Border Law Group LLC. Defendant was sued in his official capacity as the Secretary of the United States Department of Defense ("DoD") and was represented by Joseph C. Dugan, Michael F. Knapp, and Nathan M. Swinton, attorneys with the United States Department of Justice. Trial proceeded for five days and ended on November 30, 2018, at which time the Court took the matter under advisement. Having considered the testimony of the witnesses,
Background
Plaintiffs are seventeen (17) United States citizens who are or were, at the time trial commenced, serving in the United States Army. They each enlisted through the Military Accessions Vital to the National Interest ("MAVNI") program, which was implemented in fiscal year ("FY") 2009 to address difficulties the DoD had experienced in recruiting individuals with either proficiency in critical foreign languages
The parties agree that plaintiffs are currently being treated differently from other citizens in two ways: (i) plaintiffs are subject to "continuous monitoring," which requires inter alia a series of National Intelligence Agency Checks ("NIAC")
The NIAC requirements are set forth in a memorandum issued on September 30, 2016, by then Acting Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness Peter Levine, which states in relevant part:
All personnel accessed through the MAVNI program since its inception in 2009 must be continuously monitored and accounted for throughout the duration of their affiliation with the Department of Defense (e.g. active duty, Reserve, government civilian, or contractor).11
....
The DoD CAF [Consolidated Adjudications Facility] is responsible for adjudicating completed personnel security background investigations to render a determination of each individual's eligibility to access classified information and may require ... [a] NIAC....
Ex. 4 at 2 & 7; see also PTO at ¶¶ 1-5. Pursuant to the Levine memorandum, if a NIAC reveals derogatory information, a counterintelligence ("CI") security interview and/or a polygraph examination may be requested. Ex. 4 at 7. Refusal to comply with such request is grounds for separation from the military.
*1160Plaintiffs ask the Court to declare that the NIAC requirements unconstitutionally discriminate against them on the basis of national origin, and they seek injunctive and equitable relief.
This dispute requires the Court to balance the equal protection rights
Discussion
When this lawsuit began, plaintiffs sought relief with respect to additional aspects of the "continuous monitoring" program and the security clearance protocols applied to MAVNI personnel,
A. Level of Review
The Court concludes that strict scrutiny must be applied to the challenged DoD policies. Government action that distinguishes among citizens on the basis of national origin is inherently suspect and subject to "strict scrutiny." See Huynh ,
In Faruki , the plaintiff challenged a provision of the Foreign Service Act of 1946, which prohibited a person from being appointed as a foreign service officer unless he or she was "a citizen of the United States and has been such for at least ten years."
1. Contemporaneous Discrimination Against Foreign Nationals
In attempting to persuade the Court to apply rational basis review
All military personnel must undergo background investigations (which do not involve NIACs), but the October 2017 policy treated lawful permanent residents and citizens differently, allowing the latter, but not the former, to ship to basic training before completion of the required investigations.
2. Discrimination Against Less Than All Members of the Class
Defendant also argues that the NIAC requirements applied only to MAVNI personnel are facially neutral because they do not extend to aliens who are lawful permanent residents or to naturalized citizens who did not enlist through the MAVNI program, and they therefore distinguish on the basis of military accession as opposed to national origin. In essence, defendant asserts that, because the discrimination is not complete, it is not subject to strict scrutiny, but defendant cites no authority to support this proposition, which runs contrary to equal protection jurisprudence. See Juarez v. Nw. Mut. Life Ins. Co. ,
In Huynh , the plaintiffs challenged a DoD regulation that denied security clearance to naturalized citizens who were born or resided for a significant period in one of 29 or 30 countries, unless they had been United States citizens for five years or United States residents for ten years.
3. Proof of Discriminatory Animus Not Required
In a different approach aimed at receiving the benefit of rational basis review, defendant asserts that, absent proof of discriminatory animus or motive, the NIAC components of continuous monitoring and security clearance protocols merely have a disproportionate impact on a protected group and cannot rise to the level of an equal protection violation. Defendant's analysis is flawed because it assumes, without demonstrating, that the continuous monitoring and more rigorous security clearance requirements are facially neutral, and it therefore relies on inapposite authorities.
When the government classifies persons on the basis of race, national origin, or similar immutable characteristic, a plaintiff challenging such action in a lawsuit "need not make an extrinsic showing of discriminatory animus ... to trigger strict scrutiny." Mitchell v. Washington ,
In the Seattle School District case, the voter initiative at issue, Initiative 350, provided that "no school board ... shall directly or indirectly require any student to attend a school other than the school which is geographically nearest or next nearest the student's place of residence ... and *1166which offers the course of study pursued by such student."
Indeed, an internal DoD document, which has become public, Tr. (Nov. 28, 2018) at 202:10-11, 204:4-12 (docket no. 189), supports the conclusion that the DoD itself correlated MAVNI status with national origin. In an "Action Memo" prepared in May 2017 by Stephanie Miller, Director of Accessions Policy for the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, who was called by defendant as a witness at trial, the Secretary of Defense was informed that, with respect to MAVNI personnel who (like plaintiffs) had been naturalized as citizens, "[t]here are significant legal constraints to subjecting this population to enhanced screening without an individualized assessment of cause." Ex. 59 at 2; see also Tr. (Nov. 28, 2018) at 130:2-4, 197:22-198:20 (docket no. 189). This evidence shows that the DoD was aware of the equal protection violations that would arise if naturalized MAVNI soldiers were treated differently from other citizens,
4. The Evidence Establishes Any Required Animus
Under both Mitchell and the Seattle School District case, strict scrutiny must be applied in this case because the policies at issue are not facially-neutral rules that merely disproportionately impact a protected class, but rather affect every MAVNI enlistee affiliated with the DoD who is a United States citizen,
In Arlington Heights , faced with a challenge to the Village's denial of a rezoning request, the Supreme Court observed that, when a discriminatory purpose has been a motivating factor in a decision, the legislative or administrative body is no longer entitled to judicial deference.
While raising the specter of Arlington Heights , defendant did not, in his trial brief or closing argument, conduct the necessary inquiries, and the Court cannot take seriously defendant's assertion that the continuous monitoring and security clearance policies at issue are entitled to the type of judicial deference accorded under rational basis review. Contrary to defendant's suggestion, even if the Court found that the challenged DoD policy is facially neutral, the equal protection analysis would not end. Rather, the Court would proceed to evaluate whether the Arlington Heights factors evidence an improper motive warranting strict scrutiny.
Having performed the additional work required by Arlington Heights , the Court concludes that the considerations articulated by the Supreme Court do not support defendant's view that, assuming the MAVNI regulations at issue are facially neutral, they were implemented without any of the motives that would give rise to strict scrutiny. Indeed, the historical background of the biennial NIAC requirements and the sequence of events leading up to the Levine memorandum indicate that national origin was at least "a motivating factor" in the DoD's actions.
B. Applying Strict Scrutiny
1. Compelling Interest
Plaintiffs do not quarrel with the concept that national security is a compelling governmental interest, but they have cast doubt on the value of certain evidence on which defendant has relied in alleging a threat to national security. In a declaration filed in connection with motion practice, the DoD's Chief of Personnel Security, Roger Smith, indicated that "a number of individuals accessed into the military [through the MAVNI program] based on receiving fraudulent visas to attend universities that did not exist." Smith Decl. at ¶ 25 (docket nos. 131-1 & 132-1). The only example Mr. Smith could provide at trial concerned the University of Northern New Jersey, see Tr. (Nov. 29, 2018) at 60:14-23 (docket no. 190), which was a fake school created by the Department of Homeland Security as part of a "sting" operation aimed at trapping brokers who were unlawfully referring foreign students to academic institutions for a fee, see Tr. (Nov. 27, 2018) at 173:10-17 (docket no. 188). The Court is unimpressed with any assertion that MAVNI recruits who were deceived *1169by an agency of the United States into believing that they were enrolled in, or engaged in either curricular or optional practical training through, a legitimate school constituted a threat to national security.
Mr. Smith's declaration also referenced a MAVNI enlistee who said he would "voluntarily help China in a crisis situation." Smith Decl. at ¶ 25 (docket nos. 131-1 & 132-1). During trial, Mr. Smith agreed that this individual was the subject of a DoD PowerPoint slide, which indicated that this person declined to become a naturalized United States citizen (and thus, is not similarly situated to plaintiffs), admitted to being a communist and loving socialism, identified himself as Josef Stalin, wore old foreign military (Nazi) apparel, and was removed from campus housing and suspended from a university after a search revealed several non-functioning firearms and a bayonet. See Ex. 98 at 11; Tr. (Nov. 29, 2018) at 66:20-67:14 (docket no. 190). While this person (and others like him) might pose a risk to community safety, defendant has not shown how he or similar individuals would escape detection through the MAVNI, or even the more lax non-MAVNI, enlistment protocols, and thus, defendant's reliance on this example as evidence that MAVNI soldiers constitute a national security threat is unpersuasive.
At trial, defendant's witnesses were asked about Chaoqun Ji, a Chinese national who attempted to access through the MAVNI program, but did not advance out of the Delayed Entry Program or ship to basic training. See Tr. (Nov. 29, 2018) at 45:1-5, 45:19-20, 153:2-7 (docket no. 190). Mr. Ji was arrested and is currently facing prosecution, as a result of an investigation dating back to 2015 or 2016, conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Id. at 46:4-6, 143:17-144:2. Although the charges against Mr. Ji seem to support some alarm about the efforts of other governments to infiltrate the United States military, the record also reflects that Mr. Ji was unsuccessful in avoiding detection, even before extraordinary screening protocols were set in motion by the Levine memorandum. In addition, defendant's witnesses acknowledged that no MAVNI soldier who has become a naturalized citizen has ever been charged or convicted of espionage or any other criminal offense or been denaturalized. See Tr. (Nov. 28, 2018) at 186:4-187:2 (docket no. 189); Tr. (Nov. 29, 2018) at 54:10-55:18 (docket no. 190); see also
Although plaintiffs have managed to combat the unclassified materials on which defendant has relied, neither they nor the Court is in a position to question whether the DoD's concerns about infiltration of the MAVNI program or the co-opting of MAVNI enlistees by foreign operatives are justified by information that remains classified and is not part of the record in this matter. During the course of this litigation, defendant has mentioned, but has not produced to plaintiffs or offered as evidence, a 2017 DoD Inspector General "classified review," a 2017 Defense Intelligence Agency "classified assessment," and a 2016 DoD classified "security review" concerning the MAVNI program. Miller Decl. at ¶ 4 (docket nos. 141-3 & 159-2); Smith Decl. at ¶ 24 (docket nos. 131-1 & 132-1); see Tr. (Nov. 29, 2018) at 33:19-34:1 (docket no. 190). At trial, defendant's witnesses summarized these classified documents as bringing to the DoD's attention "direct *1170threats for espionage within the [MAVNI] program," including attempts by "hostile governments" to either "place known assets into the program to access into the military" or "develop assets who had accessed into the program." Tr. (Nov. 28, 2018) at 144:18-22, 145:3-9 (docket no. 189); see Tr. (Nov. 29, 2018) at 17:4-20, 38:25-40:8, 42:7-15, 119:10-17, 121:3-10 (docket no. 190). According to Stephanie Miller, the DoD also learned from these classified reports that the investigatory tools it had been using might not be sufficient or might not have been consistently applied with respect to individuals who accessed through the MAVNI program. Tr. (Nov. 28, 2018) at 144:23-145:1, 148:2-17 (docket no. 189). Ms. Miller further indicated that the classified information raised concerns about aggressive attempts to obtain security clearances, unusual questions about equipment and information technology, deliberate omissions about foreign travel, unexplained wealth, and unreported contacts with persons identified as intelligence operatives or members of foreign governments.
After hearing the testimony of defendant's witnesses and the closing arguments of counsel, the Court decided not to request that the classified documents at issue be provided for in camera review, expressing concerns about such ex parte presentation of evidence, as well as the probability that the materials would offer an incomplete understanding of the national security situation. See Tr. (Nov. 30, 2018) at 53:14-22 (docket no. 191); see also Tr. (Nov. 29, 2018) at 38:7-16, 177:20-25 (docket no. 190). The Court remains persuaded that it need not examine the DoD's undisclosed materials regarding the MAVNI program or determine whether they demonstrate the types of vulnerabilities to which defendant's witnesses generally alluded at trial because, even if defendant has carried his burden of establishing a compelling governmental interest, the NIAC policies challenged in this litigation do not satisfy the "necessary" and "precisely tailored" prongs of the strict scrutiny standard.
2. Neither Necessary Nor Precisely Tailored
Plaintiffs contend that the "continuous monitoring" program and the enhanced security clearance protocols for MAVNI personnel are both overbroad and under-inclusive, and thus, do not bear a sufficiently narrow relationship to national security. The Court agrees. The Court notes that plaintiffs, who all accessed after February 2012, already underwent investigations that were beyond what anyone else seeking the highest levels of security clearance must endure,
In this litigation, plaintiffs do not question the DoD's authority to conduct additional security investigations on an individualized basis, see Tr. (Nov. 28, 2018) at 188:3-12 (docket no. 189), and the issues before the Court concern only whether the DoD may, without any indication of wrongdoing or cause for concern, routinely subject a group of citizens born outside the United States to a higher level of scrutiny than other citizens. More vetting and more monitoring will certainly reveal more information, see Tr. (Nov. 29, 2018) at 159:13-16 (docket no. 190), but the DoD's approach, which is, according to defendant's witness Stephanie Miller, to obtain the information first and then decide whether individualized review is warranted, see Tr. (Nov. 28, 2018) at 199:16-200:22, 201:15-18 (docket no. 189), puts the proverbial cart before the horse. Defendant simply has not shown why the DoD needs to conduct a NIAC every two years, as a matter of course, on the entire MAVNI population, and therefore, has not refuted plaintiffs' challenge of overbreadth.
Defendant has instead provided a meaningless comparison, indicating that 13% of MAVNI soldiers had been deemed unsuitable for military service or ineligible to have access to classified information, while only 1% of the non-MAVNI population were denied a security clearance. See Smith Decl. at ¶ 27 (docket nos. 131-1 & 132-1); see also Tr. (Nov. 29, 2018) at 51:25-52:4 (docket no. 190). When asked by the Court at trial, Roger Smith conceded that he was unable to recite separate figures for (i) the number or percentage of MAVNI recruits who (unlike all but one
Defendant has offered no reason for believing that MAVNI personnel who have successfully navigated the rigorous enlistment requirements (i.e. , received a favorable MSSD based on SSBI/Tier 5, NIAC, and CIFSR results), and who have become United States citizens, constitute any higher risk to national security than other members of the DoD population. Nevertheless, defendant requires all MAVNI soldiers, even those who have no access to classified information, to undergo biennial NIACs, while imposing no similar condition on the maintenance of "secret," "top secret," or even "top secret/SCI" clearance by non-MAVNI personnel. Defendant does not subject any other members of the military to the MAVNI level of monitoring,
For example, in the absence of individualized suspicion, no periodic NIAC is performed on individuals who were United States citizens or nationals at birth, but never resided in the United States before joining the military, on aliens who were lawful permanent residents at the time of their enlistment, or on persons who remain citizens of the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, or Palau during their entire career in the armed forces. Cf. Faruki ,
The imposition of a NIAC every two years displays a general lack of trust and a concomitant desire to monitor MAVNI soldiers without needing to identify a basis for suspicion. The Court agrees with plaintiffs that this stigmatizing persistent vetting protocol constitutes impermissibly unequal treatment of United States citizens on the basis of national origin. It is inconsistent with the representations made to plaintiffs upon their enlistment that they would be "treated like any other Soldier" and that they would enjoy "all the same opportunities afforded to ... any other Soldier" in the United States Army, see Ex. 15 at §§ E & R; Exs. 69 & 90 at §§ E & Q; Ex. 71 at §§ E & P, and it violates the military's own principles against discrimination based on immutable characteristics like national origin, see Ex. 37 at ¶ 3(e) ("The DoD shall not discriminate nor may any inference be raised on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability, or sexual orientation."); see also Ex. 36 at § 3.1(c) ( Exec. Order No. 12,968 ). It deals unfairly with citizens who have volunteered to serve their nation by enduring extreme hardships and lengthy deployments, during which they are often separated from family and friends, and by preparing each and every day to make the "ultimate sacrifice of their lives if necessary" to protect our country, its people, and the constitutional rights we hold so *1173dear. See Kuang ,
Conclusion
The Court hereby summarizes its findings of fact and conclusions of law and ORDERS relief as follows:
(1) The United States Department of Defense requires all individuals who enlisted in the United States Army through the Military Accessions Vital to the National Interest program and who remain affiliated with the DoD (on active duty, in a reserve position, as a government-employed civilian, or while working for a private defense contractor) to participate in "continuous monitoring," defined as being enrolled in the continuous evaluation system and being subject to a series of National Intelligence Agency Checks every two years and to either a Passive Analytical Counterintelligence and Security Assessment or a Counterintelligence-Focused Security Review;
(2) The DoD requires all MAVNI personnel to have an up-to-date NIAC (i.e. , a NIAC performed within the prior two years), among other prerequisites, before their security clearance eligibility will be adjudicated;
(3) Plaintiffs joined the Army through the MAVNI program after February 12, 2012, and before September 30, 2016, have been naturalized as United States citizens, and were still affiliated with the DoD as of the date that trial commenced;
(4) United States citizens and/or nationals who were recruited into the Army in a manner other than the MAVNI program are not subject to the biennial NIAC requirements related to continuous monitoring and security clearance determinations;
(5) The NIAC components of the DoD's "continuous monitoring" program and security clearance protocols discriminate against plaintiffs on the basis of national origin;
(6) Defendant has not met his burden of proving that using the suspect classification of MAVNI status, which is synonymous with having a national origin outside the United States, is both "necessary" and "precisely tailored" to serve the articulated compelling governmental interest of national security;
(7) The Court ENTERS the following permanent injunction: Defendant and the United States Department of Defense are hereby ENJOINED from requiring, in the absence of individualized suspicion, a biennial series of National Intelligence Agency Checks for continuous monitoring or security clearance eligibility purposes with respect to any citizen affiliated with the DoD who accessed into the United States Army through the Military Accessions Vital to the National Interest program after February 12, 2012, and before September 30, 2016;
(8) The Clerk is DIRECTED to enter judgment consistent with this Order, to send a copy of the Judgment and this *1174Order to all counsel of record, and to CLOSE this case.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
The following individuals testified in person: Naomi B. Verdugo, Ph.D., Sergeant Valdeta Mehanja, Sergeant Sandeep Singh, Sergeant Seung Yoon Yang, Lieutenant Colonel (Retired) Margaret D. Stock, Latrice McSwain, Stephanie Pilcher Miller, Roger Andrew Smith, Jr., and Joseph Alias Simon. The following individuals testified by deposition, viewed at least in part in video format: Lieutenant Kirti Kumar Tiwari, Mary J. Dandridge, Curtis Earl Kingsland, and Daniel Edward Purtill.
Plaintiffs' Exhibits 1-2, 4-13, 15-33, 35-39, 42, 46-47, 49-50, 52-53, 58-59, 62-64, 69, 71, 73-86, and 90-98, as well as Defendant's Exhibits 200-225, were admitted into evidence.
Any conclusion of law misidentified as a finding of fact shall be deemed a conclusion of law, and any finding of fact misidentified as a conclusion of law shall be deemed a finding of fact.
According to Dr. Verdugo, in connection with the MAVNI program, between 35 and 45 strategic foreign languages were identified on a list that varied from year to year. Tr. (Nov. 26, 2018) at 30:8-25 (docket no. 187); see also Ex. 29 at 23-24. The Court finds Dr. Verdugo's testimony, which was primarily factual in nature, credible, and denies the deferred portion of defendant's motion in limine, docket no. 154, to exclude her as an expert witness.
Every person born within the United States is a citizen of the United States. U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1 ; see
During the years that the MAVNI program existed, nonimmigrant aliens with the following designations were eligible to participate: E, F, H, I, J, K, L, M, O, P, Q, R, S, T, TC, TD, TN, U, and V. Ex. 84 at 4; see Ex. 33 at 105-06 (Table A.1); see also
Any person who, "while an alien or a noncitizen national," has served honorably in the selected reserve or on active duty during a period designated by executive order of the President as one in which the military is engaged in "operations involving armed conflict with a hostile foreign force," is eligible for naturalization.
When a NIAC is performed, the following databases are checked: (i) JPAS - Joint Personnel Adjudication System; (ii) DCII - Defense Central Index of Investigations; (iii) Scattered Castles - an intelligence community personnel security database; (iv) CENTS - the Central Intelligence Agency's External Name Trace System; (v) PORTICO - the DoD's counterintelligence database; (vi) FBI NNC - Federal Bureau of Investigation National Name Check; (vii) NCIC - National Crime Information Center; (viii) FTTTF - Foreign Terrorist Tracking Task Force; and (ix) CLIP - Contract Linguist Information Program. Tr. (Nov. 26, 2018) at 63:21-64:12 (docket no. 187); see Ex. 97 at 4 n.1; see also Ex. 27 at 39.
The DoD restricts access to classified information and considers unauthorized disclosure of such material to be harmful to national security. Tr. (Nov. 29, 2018) at 7:7-15 (docket no. 190). To have access to classified documents, a person must have the requisite security clearance and be in a duty position for which the person has a "need to know" the information.
The parties agree that "affiliation with the Department of Defense" includes work as a civilian with a private company performing work for the military. See Tr. (Nov. 30, 2018) at 6:12-7:19, 40:4-14, 41:5-18, & 50:7-11 (docket no. 191); see also Tr. (Nov. 27, 2018) at 101:23-102:3 (docket no. 188); Tr. (Nov. 28, 2018) at 47:4-22 (docket no. 189). According to defendant's witnesses at trial, the "continuous monitoring" requirement would apply to an individual who accessed through the MAVNI program, completed his or her military service, and went to work as a truck driver for the Boeing Company, a defense contractor, even though the person had no access to classified information. Tr. (Nov. 29, 2018) at 156:23-157:1 (docket no. 190); see Tr. (Nov. 28, 2018) at 189:22-191:21 (docket no. 189) (indicating that a former MAVNI soldier working for Amazon.com, Inc. on a DoD project would be subject to "continuous monitoring," but non-MAVNI personnel employed in a similar fashion would not undergo such monitoring).
The Levine memorandum implemented certain other discriminatory policies that were later countermanded, including a prohibition on MAVNI soldiers obtaining security clearance or access "until the completion of first enlistment." Ex. 4 at 7. MAVNI personnel are required to serve a total of eight years in the military, in some combination of active duty, a troop program unit, selected reserve, and/or individual ready reserve, depending on whether they were language-skill recruits or healthcare professionals. Ex. 96 at 5. Plaintiffs commenced this lawsuit in February 2017, asserting that the ban on security clearances for MAVNI personnel during their initial terms of enlistment was "crippling their military careers" and constituted unlawful national-origin-based discrimination. Compl. at ¶ 1 (docket no. 1). On June 21, 2017, while a motion for preliminary injunction was pending in this matter, A.M. Kurta, who was then performing the duties of the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, revoked the embargo on security clearances, stating that, "[e]ffective immediately, individuals enlisted under the MAVNI Pilot Program who have successfully completed basic military training/boot camp ..., and have become naturalized U.S. citizens based on their military service, may be considered for a security clearance under the same terms, conditions, and criteria as any other U.S. citizen." Exs. 11 & 207. Despite the issuance of the Kurta memorandum, the Court entered a preliminary injunction, in light of evidence indicating that MAVNI soldiers were not in fact being treated the same as other United States citizens with regard to the grant of interim security clearances. See Order (docket no. 122). The Court directed the DoD Secretary to consider requests for interim security clearance eligibility for naturalized MAVNI personnel in the same manner as for any other soldier who is a United States citizen.
Plaintiffs originally sought attorney's fees and costs under the Equal Access to Justice Act, but they have since waived all such monetary remedies, including any right to expert witness fees. See Tr. (Nov. 16, 2018) at 20:5-13 (docket no. 180); see also Tr. (Nov. 30, 2018) at 26:20-25 (docket no. 191).
"The liberty protected by the Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause contains within it the prohibition against denying to any person the equal protection of the laws." United States v. Windsor ,
Plaintiffs were born in several different countries, including the Republic of Cameroon, the People's Republic of China, the Republic of India, the Republic of Indonesia, the Republic of Kenya, the Republic of Korea, the Republic of Kosovo, the Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal, the Republic of the Philippines, and the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. PTO at ¶¶ 6-22. Many plaintiffs speak multiple languages, most have undergraduate degrees, and some have graduate degrees.
Each plaintiff in this matter enlisted after February 16, 2012, when the Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence issued a memorandum requiring all MAVNI applicants to undergo a Single Scope Background Investigation, also known as a Tier 5 Background Investigation ("SSBI/Tier 5"), a NIAC, and a Counterintelligence-Focused Security Review ("CIFSR"). See Exs. 78, 97, & 203; see also Ex. 84 at 5-6; Ex. 204 at ¶¶ 3-4. The SSBI/Tier 5, NIAC, and CIFSR results were to be considered in making a Military Service Suitability Determination ("MSSD"), and failure to obtain a favorable MSSD rendered a MAVNI recruit ineligible for enlistment or continued military service. Ex. 84 at 6. In this case, plaintiffs have not challenged the heightened screening protocol applied to them upon enlistment into the Army, when they were not yet United States citizens. They did, however, assert claims regarding two other policies, namely (i) the requirement that they undergo a Passive Analytical CI and Security Assessment ("PACSA") as part of the "continuous monitoring" program, which was imposed in a memorandum dated October 13, 2017, on all "incumbent" MAVNI soldiers (like plaintiffs), meaning service members who completed security and suitability screening before the Levine memorandum was issued on September 30, 2016, see Ex. 49; and (ii) the requirement that anyone affiliated with the DoD who accessed through the MAVNI program be subjected to a CIFSR in connection with the adjudication of security clearance eligibility. Neither the PACSA nor the CIFSR is routinely performed on other personnel, even those seeking or holding the highest level of security clearance. On the fourth day of trial, Roger Smith, Chief of Personnel Security for the DoD, and Joseph Simon, Senior Counterintelligence Advisor to the Army G2 and to the Chief of Staff of the Army, each testified that PACSAs and/or CIFSRs have been completed for all MAVNI personnel. Tr. (Nov. 29, 2018) at 57:2-11, 134:8-135:21 (docket no. 190). During closing argument, based on his understanding that the DoD has "no plans to repeat these investigations," plaintiffs' counsel conceded that the constitutionality of compelling a PACSA in connection with continuous monitoring, or a CIFSR when a MAVNI enlistee is being considered for "top secret" or "secret" clearance, is now moot. Tr. (Nov. 30, 2018) at 2:6-12 (docket no. 191).
Because the only investigative tool that remains in dispute in this litigation is the NIAC, the Court has consolidated its analysis of the "continuous monitoring" program and the security clearance protocols for MAVNI personnel, both of which involve a biennial NIAC. The Court is satisfied that defendant's arguments regarding standing do not require differentiation between continuous monitoring and security clearance requirements. Defendant asserts that, with respect to the up-to-date NIAC needed for security clearance, all but seven plaintiffs' claims are moot because they have already received "top secret/SCI" or "secret" clearance, and that two other plaintiffs' claims are unripe because no request for security clearance has been made on their behalf. These contentions do not, however, establish a lack of standing because security clearances expire and must be renewed, see supra note 10, plaintiffs with only "secret" clearance might soon need a higher level of clearance, and plaintiffs who have not yet sought clearance might in the near future need to do so. Plaintiffs have a "reasonable expectation" that they will (again or for the first time) be subject to the challenged NIAC policy, and they might receive the requested security clearance before the merits of their claim can be addressed. Plaintiffs have therefore presented the type of situation "capable of repetition yet evading review" that establishes the "case or controversy" necessary for Article III jurisdiction. See , e.g. , Am. Civil Liberties Union of Nev. v. Lomax ,
If a classification does not burden a fundamental right or target a protected group, then it will be upheld as long as it bears a "rational" relationship to some "legitimate" governmental purpose. Romer v. Evans ,
Defendant's argument is reminiscent of an assertion made by the then Governor of Indiana in support of the State's refusal to pay for certain services provided to refugees whose country of origin was Syria, to which the Seventh Circuit responded:
He argues that his policy of excluding Syrian refugees is based not on nationality and thus is not discriminatory, but is based solely on the threat he thinks they pose to the safety of residents of Indiana. But that's the equivalent of his saying (not that he does say) that he wants to forbid black people to settle in Indiana not because they're black but because he's afraid of them, and since race is therefore not his motive he isn't discriminating. But that of course would be racial discrimination, just as his targeting Syrian refugees is discrimination on the basis of nationality.
Exodus Refugee Immigration, Inc. v. Pence ,
Defendant's reliance on McDaniels v. Stewart ,
When asked at trial whether the memorandum she had drafted expressed her concern that "standardized extraordinary screenings" on MAVNI soldiers who were United States citizens might be unconstitutional, Ms. Miller replied, "I would not characterize it that way," and explained, "We recognized that some may view that there was litigation risk." Tr. (Nov. 28, 2018) at 202:17-21 (docket no. 189). The Court finds this testimony less than forthcoming, particularly in light of the wording of the document, which described the "legal constraints" as "significant." See Ex. 59 at 2.
A limited number of individuals were allowed to enlist in the Army through the MAVNI program each year. See Ex. 33 at 18. The annual caps remained steady in FYs 2009-2010, increased in FYs 2013-2016, and decreased in FY 2017.
According to Lt. Col. (Ret.) Margaret Stock, the mass shooting that occurred in November 2009 at Fort Hood, Texas, which was perpetrated by Nidal Malik Hasan, an Army psychiatrist, forced the MAVNI program into a two-year hiatus. Tr. (Nov. 27, 2018) at 159:3-23 & 161:3-5 (docket no. 188). Although Hasan was an American at birth, many people thought he was a MAVNI soldier because he had a foreign-sounding name.
In addition to the internal "Action Memo" acknowledging the "significant legal constraints" associated with subjecting naturalized MAVNI soldiers to enhanced screening without individualized cause, Ex. 59, the administrative record includes two reports touting the benefits of the MAVNI program and the superior quality of MAVNI recruits. The Army commissioned both the Human Resources Research Organization ("HumRRO") and the RAND Corporation to evaluate the MAVNI program. See Exs. 29 & 33. HumRRO produced an interim evaluation in November 2011 and a final assessment in February 2013. Ex. 29 at 1 & 15. The RAND report was issued in July 2017. Ex. 33 at 1. The HumRRO study focused on whether the Army was meeting its goals for the MAVNI program, how MAVNI recruits compared with other soldiers, and whether the attitudes of MAVNI personnel changed over time. Ex. 29 at 15-22. The RAND investigation was aimed at analyzing the relative performance and relative cost of MAVNI and non-MAVNI service members, estimating the size of the future pool of potential MAVNI recruits, and assessing the security risk associated with the MAVNI program. Ex. 33 at 21. Defendant has attempted to undermine the conclusions stated in the RAND report by indicating that the RAND researchers were not given access to classified information, see Miller Decl. at ¶¶ 4-5 (docket nos. 141-3 & 159-2), but this criticism applies to the examination of security risk, and does not diminish the credibility of either the HumRRO or the RAND report regarding the cost-effectiveness of the MAVNI program in producing high-quality Army enlistments.
Nothing prevented the DoD or the Army from investigating on an individual basis the MAVNI service members who were duped by the Government's "sting" operation.
For example, to be deemed eligible for "top secret" clearance, non-MAVNI personnel (e.g. , individuals who were United States citizens at birth) must successfully complete an SSBI/Tier 5, but not a NIAC or a CIFSR, and to be eligible for "secret" clearance, a non-MAVNI soldier must pass only a Tier 3 review (formerly called a National Agency Check with Law and Credit), which requires responses to a questionnaire known as Standard Form 86 (or SF 86), an exemplar of which was admitted into evidence as Exhibit 22. See Tr. (Nov. 26, 2018) at 38:15-39:6 (docket no. 187); Tr. (Nov. 28, 2018) at 96:5-9, 98:11-14 (docket no. 189). In contrast, a MAVNI recruit who enlisted after February 2012 needed an SSBI/Tier 5, a NIAC, and a CIFSR, supra note 16; see also Ex. 27 at 17, and to obtain either "secret" or "top secret" clearance, an individual who accessed at any time through the MAVNI program must also undergo all three investigations, see Tr. (Nov. 28, 2018) at 95:25-96:4, 98:6-10 (docket no. 189); see also PTO at ¶ 3.
Plaintiff Xi (Tracy) Cui, a native of China, who enlisted on May 15, 2015, and was naturalized on March 10, 2016, received an unfavorable MSSD on September 22, 2017. PTO at ¶ 13.
To be clear, all individuals affiliated with the DoD who hold a security clearance must, by the end of 2021, be enrolled in the "continuous evaluation" system. Tr. (Nov. 29, 2018) at 29:21-31:2 (docket no. 190). Continuous evaluation is one of the three components of continuous monitoring, id. at 31:16-18, but because continuous evaluation applies uniformly to all members of the military, plaintiffs make no equal protection claim with respect to continuous evaluation.
The Court is satisfied that entry of this permanent injunction will operate in favor of all MAVNI personnel who are similarly situated to plaintiff. The Court therefore DECLINES to certify a class. See DiFrancesco v. Fox ,