The system of anti-retaliation protections for federal employees who blow the whistle or speak out about their agency’s conduct is infamously weak. Under the Whistleblower Protection Act (WPA) and other laws, federal employees seeking relief for an adverse action taken against them for whistleblowing must rely on the Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB). This quasi-judicial entity is plagued by delays and threatened by politicization.

However, there are several potentially effective but under-utilized legal precedents that can permit federal employees facing retaliation to obtain relief in federal court and not solely rely on the WPA for relief. These precedents have been established by the U.S. Courts of Appeal for the District of Columbia and Fourth Circuits, and offer novel ways to have cases heard in federal court or otherwise bolster retaliation complaints. By utilizing these methods, federal employees can feel more confident and in control, knowing they have better chances of gaining meaningful relief if they face retaliation for whistleblowing, oppose discrimination, prevent the violation of their privacy, and enforce their rights to engage in outside First Amendment protected speech.

First Amendment Rights for Federal Employees

The landmark 1995 case Sanjour v. EPA upheld the First Amendment rights of federal employees to criticize the government in activities outside their employment. This created a legal precedent that provides a strong shield for federal employees to make First Amendment challenges to agency regulations stifling whistleblowing when made outside of work. The case permits federal employees at the GS-15 level or below (higher level federal workers were not discussed in the decision, as the applicant for relief was at the GS-15 level) to seek pre-enforcement injunctive relief if a rule or regulation (which would include an Executive Order) has an improper chilling effect on First Amendment protected speech of an employee’s outside speaking or writing.

William Sanjour was the branch chief of the Hazardous Waste Management Division within the EPA who challenged rules written by the Federal Office of Government Ethics that restricted EPA workers’ rights to speak to environmental community groups.

Because the EPA had warned Sanjour that his acceptance of a cost reimbursement for travelling to North Carolina to give a speech critical of EPA policies concerning waste incineration was in violation of a regulation and could result in adverse action, Sanjour could challenge the “chilling effect” on speech of the government’s rule. The D.C. Circuit upheld the constitutional challenge to a regulation that had a chilling effect on First Amendment protected speech.

If he had waited until he was subjected to retaliation he would have been required to use the WPA to remedy the adverse action. But because Sanjour was challenging an unconstitutional chilling effect of a government regulation, he could obtain injunctive relief directly in federal court and avoid the long delays and other problems when pursuing a case before the presidentially appointed MSPB.

The key precedent established in Sanjour v. EPA, by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, was that the Court could issue a nationwide injunction preventing the implementation of the regulation because of its chilling effect on the First Amendment right of employees to criticize the federal government. The court recognized that federal employee speech to the public on matters of “public concern” was protected under the First Amendment, and served a critical role in alerting the public to vital issues:

“The regulations challenged here throttle a great deal of speech in the name of curbing government employees’ improper enrichment from their public office. Upon careful review, however, we do not think that the government has carried its burden to demonstrate that the regulations advance that interest in a manner justifying the significant burden imposed on First Amendment rights.”

The precedent in Sanjour v. EPA means that federal employees who plan on making public statements (outside speaking or writing on matters of public concern) can seek a federal court injunction preventing future retaliation based on their First Amendment rights, if they have a reasonable basis to believe that their government employer would take adverse action against them if they made the public disclosures or violated the regulation. Significantly, First Amendment protected speech should cover criticisms of government policy. Policy disagreements alone may not even be covered under the WPA. 

The Sanjour case covers outside speaking and writing, not workplace activities. It affirms a federal employee’s right to engage in conduct such as TV interviews, writing op-eds, and speaking before public interest groups, even if the speech engaged in is highly critical of the government or their government-employer. However, employees would have to give a disclaimer making sure that the public understood they were speaking in their private capacity, and the employee could not release confidential information.

Mixed Cases Combining Title VII Discrimination with Whistleblower Retaliation 

  Precedent established by two landmark federal employee whistleblower retaliation cases holds that federal employees may have their WPA retaliation case heard in federal court in instances where it is a “mixed case” that also involves discrimination or retaliation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. The scope of retaliation covered under Title VII is broader than the coverage under the WPA, and by combining both claims a federal employee can significantly increase both their procedural and substantive rights.

Specifically, when an employee is a member of a protected class (Title VII covers race, religion, sex, national origin, among other classes) it is often hard to distinguish whether retaliation originates from their membership in a protected class, their filing complaints of retaliation under Title VII, or their filing complaints of retaliation covered by the WPA. There is often significant overlap in these types of cases.

While federal employees’ retaliation cases under the WPA are forced to remain with the MSPB, under the Civil Service Reform Act, discrimination cases (and cases of retaliation based on protected activities or whistleblowing covered under Title VII) may be removed to federal court if the MSPB does not issue a final ruling within 120 days. 

Dr. Duane Bonds was a top researcher at the National Institutes of Health on sickle cell disease who blew the whistle on the unauthorized cloning of participants’ cells. Dr. Bonds faced retaliation for blowing the whistle, including sex discrimination, harassment in the workplace, and eventual termination. 

In 2011, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit ruled in Bonds v. Leavitt that Dr. Bonds’ retaliation and discrimination complaint must be considered a “mixed case” and heard together. Under the Civil Service Reform Act, the court allowed Dr. Bonds to pursue her mixed discrimination and retaliation case before a federal court, and she was not required to continue to pursue her WPA case before the MSPB.

In its ruling in Bonds v. Leavitt, the Fourth Circuit cited an earlier D.C. Circuit ruling in Ikossi v. Department of Navy, which similarly allowed a female whistleblower to pursue a “mixed case” alleging both retaliation and discrimination in federal court. Kiki Ikossi was retaliated against after filing complaints to the Navy Research Lab HR Office for workplace gender discrimination in the early 2000s. 

The Bonds and Ikossi decisions are controlling precedent in both the District of Columbia and Fourth Circuit judicial circuits. Thus, these precedents would be binding of federal courts in the District of Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia. 

The precedents in Bonds v. Leavitt and Ikossi v. Department of Navy mean that federal employees who face discrimination in addition to retaliation may combine their complaints and pursue their case in federal court if the MSPB delays a ruling (which is the norm given its backlog of cases). However, the rules permitting a mixed case are complex, and require employees to identify their invocation of that right when filing an initial complaint. By carefully following the complex timing and filing requirements mandated under both the WPA and Title VII an employee can have his or her whistleblower case can be heard in federal court, and avoid many of the problems associated with cases pending before the MSPB.

Privacy Act Rights for Federal Employees

Linda Tripp is most famous for her role in the impeachment of President Clinton. However, her retaliation case established a strong precedent protecting federal employees under the Privacy Act. Tripp successfully challenged the Department of Defense when it illegally released confidential information from her security clearance file.

The illegally released file was an act of retaliation for her role in presidential impeachment proceedings. However, Tripp did not seek relief under the WPA. Instead, she was able to bring a Privacy Act complaint before a federal court. The Privacy Act covers requests for information concerning yourself, and federal employees are covered under the law with the same rights as other non-government employees. The Privacy Act prevents federal agencies from collecting or maintaining information based on an individual’s First Amendment activities, it prevents the improper disclosure of information to various persons, including any personal information a government employee or manager may provide to individuals outside of the federal government.

The Privacy Act requires the federal government to provide applicants access to all government records related to the applicant that are not restricted from access under very specific exemptions. Once obtaining the documents a the requestor can request correction of any inaccurate information, or inclusion into a file of the requestor’s statement as to why the documents are not accurate. It requires agencies to maintain a record of who they share information with. The law prohibits improper leaks of information. Moreover, of particular interest to whistleblowers, the law prohibits the government from maintaining records related to any person’s First Amendment protected activities.

The law provides all persons, including federal employees, the right to file a lawsuit in federal court to obtain access to their files and seek damages for the actual harm caused by any leaks or violations of the law. A court can also order an agency to correct information in government files that are inaccurate and prevent agencies from maintaining information in violation of law. Persons who filed successful Privacy Act complaints are entitled to attorney fees and costs related to their lawsuit. 

Thus, the Privacy Act offers numerous potential avenues for a whistleblower to use those provisions to obtain protection, information, and relief. For example, as in the Tripp case, when the federal government leaked information covered under the Privacy Act to discredit her, Tripp successfully pursued a Privacy Act for damages and fees. She could attack the illegal retaliation caused by the leak of information through the Privacy Act, and avoid the many limitations of the WPA. 

Conclusion

For decades, attempts to reform the WPA and give federal employees the right to have whistleblower retaliation cases heard in federal courts have stalled. Over the years, however, legal challenges to retaliation that avoid the limits of the WPA have produced strong precedents allowing specific federal employees to pursue cases in federal courts as long as they strictly follow the correct technical procedures required under each of the specific law or Constitutional provision.

Federal employee whistleblowers are essential to rooting out fraud, abuse, and misconduct throughout the government. Leveraging these strong legal precedents, which can supplement remedies offered under the WPA, can offer critical avenues to protect federal employees from retaliation and ensure they receive the proper relief when it occurs.

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