RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS
AIR FORCE BOARD FOR CORRECTION OF MILITARY RECORDS
IN THE MATTER OF: DOCKET NUMBER: 98-00925
INDEX CODE: 135.02, 135.03
COUNSEL: None
HEARING DESIRED: Yes
_________________________________________________________________
APPLICANT REQUESTS THAT:
1. He be returned to the ready Reserve in the position as Superintendent
of the Pararescue Section, or a comparable position in terms of pay and
grade.
2. He be granted back-pay, allowances, and participation points from 1
May 1993, the date he was denied participation in the Reserves, to the
present.
3. He be granted back-pay from the civilian position he has been denied
since 26 May 1995.
_________________________________________________________________
APPLICANT CONTENDS THAT:
His involuntary transfer to the standby Reserve was unjust for four main
reasons. First, the adverse personnel action was contrary to the intent
and provisions of AFI 36-2115. Second, the 939 RQW/CC used alleged
misconduct from a prior enlistment as evidence that he failed to meet Air
Force military standards in the adverse personnel action. Third, in
examining the two remaining incidents that allegedly occurred during the
current enlistment, he was not in a military status. Fourth, the
conclusion that the AFRES/CC’s decision to reassign him was proper because
it was based on his failure to meet military standards although he met Air
Force standards is ludicrous. There is no precedent for any distinction
between Air Force and military standards. The adverse personnel action was
contrary to the intent and provisions of AFI 36-2115. AFI 36-2115 sets
forth the requirements for involuntary reassignment to the standby Reserve.
The 939 RQW/CC failed to follow the fundamental requirements of the
instruction. No alternative actions were attempted. He was not counseled
during the entire period of alleged misconduct and mismanagement.
Therefore, of course, there is no documented record of counseling.
Furthermore, he was not reprimanded until after the first involuntary
reassignment was initiated. The only administrative action taken was an
attempt to deny him reenlistment. He appealed the decision to deny his
reenlistment. A board of three officers concluded that the allegations
against him were not substantiated. The attempt to distinguish between Air
Force standards and military standards and the insinuation that Air Force
standards are lower than military standards cannot be taken seriously.
Because there is no distinction between Air Force and military standards,
the decision to transfer him must be reversed. For the foregoing reasons,
he respectfully requests that the decision to transfer him to the standby
Reserve be reversed. Any one of the above reasons standing alone would
require the reversal of his transfer. However, together these reasons make
reversing the AFRES/CC decision essential to ensure fundamental fairness
and preserve the integrity of the Air Force.
In support of the appeal, applicant submits his appeal of the Board
Findings, dated 30 December 1993; Letter of Notification, dated 4 November
1994; Memorandum/Recommendation for Involuntary Reassignment to the standby
Reserve, dated 13 January 1995; Letter from General Fogleman, dated 2
September 1996; and Response by attorney, dated 4 May 1995, w/atchs.
Applicant's complete submission is attached at Exhibit A.
_________________________________________________________________
STATEMENT OF FACTS:
On 17 September 1965, the applicant enlisted in the Regular Air Force for a
period of 4 years. On 10 January 1969, he was honorably discharged and
transferred to the Air Force Reserves (AFRes). He served a total of 3
years, 3 months, and 24 days of active duty.
On 1 July 1980, the applicant was promoted to the Reserve grade of chief
master sergeant (CMSgt).
On 11 August 1988, the applicant applied for a Ready Reserve assignment.
On 12 September 1988, the applicant was assigned as an Air Reserve
Technician (ART) and Superintendent of the Pararescue (PJ) Section, 304th
Rescue Squadron (RQS), AFRes, Portland International Airport (IAP),
Portland, OR.
On 19 August 1992, the applicant was recommended and selected for
reenlistment in the grade of CMSgt.
On 30 January 1993, during a night-time High Altitude, Low Opening (HALO)
free-fall jump, a member of the 304th RQS landed downwind, outside of the
designated drop zone in a freshly cut wooded area and collided headlong
into a pile of logs. He was
rendered a quadriplegic and later died of his injuries. A subsequent
ground mishap investigation revealed that the injured pararescue was
unqualified to jump on the evening in question and an audit of all
pararescue records revealed that only 20 of the 41 PJs assigned to the
section were current with their jump requirements. Based on these
findings, the applicant was removed as superintendent of the PJ Section.
On 1 May 1993, the applicant was not recommended for reenlistment. The
applicant appealed the decision to deny his reenlistment and the non-
recommendation was presented to an Appeals Board.
On 30 December 1993, the Appeals Board recommended the applicant’s appeal
be approved.
On 12 September 1994, the applicant reenlisted in the AFRes for a period of
6 years in the grade CMSgt.
On 4 November 1994, the applicant was notified of the 939 RQW/CC’s
recommendation for his involuntary reassignment to the standby Reserve in
accordance with AFI 36-2115. The basis for his proposed action was the
applicant failed to meet Air Force standards and that he failed to meet
military conduct standards. The specific reasons for the proposed action
were:
a. On or about 26 October 1994, the applicant was reprimanded for
being drunk and disorderly on station during September 1994, and again on
20 October 1994. Both incidents occurred while the applicant was in
civilian status, at the Columbia Pointe Club at Portland IAP, OR, in the
presence of a junior noncommissioned officer (NCO) and a female club
employee. During the September 1994 incident he became angry and broke a
glass; during the October 1994 incident he urinated in the bar area into a
beer glass.
b. On or about 29 April 1993, while on station, in civilian status
as an ART supervisor, and while in the presence of a junior enlisted person
in his section, the applicant made the following statements regarding the
commander of the 939 RQW: “I’ve got a bullet with T---’s name on it...I’ve
had it for over a year...I just (can’t) roll over....”
c. On or about 21 July 1993, while on station in civilian status,
the applicant made a written statement to the 939 RQW/CC that he was “to
blame” for various management shortcomings identified in the section he
(applicant) had supervised, that he was “running a kangaroo court” and that
command was “beyond the leadership capability of a navigator” and that he
had “established a new floor in military leadership.”
d. On or about 3 June 1992, the applicant violated AFR 30-30 by
using five pararescue technicians, four of which were then on active duty
and another who was in civilian ART status to help him move his household
goods during duty hours.
e. On 6 and 8 June 1992, the applicant was reprimanded for
negligently maintaining time cards for civilian employees in the section he
managed, for negligently failing to report injuries sustained in the
performance of duty, and for negligently allowing a member of his section
to be away without appropriate leave.
f. The applicant failed to adequate supervise the day-to-day
operations of the pararescue section, as evidenced by the discrepancies
identified in various audit reports created during May 1993.
On 4 November 1994, the applicant acknowledged receipt of the letter of
notification.
On 23 March 1995, the applicant was notified of his Proposed Removal
(disqualified from ART). One of the requirements to be an ART is to
maintain status in the active Reserve.
On 7 April 1995, the applicant was involuntarily reassigned to the inactive
Reserve for failure to meet military conduct standards.
On 26 May 1995, the applicant was terminated from his ART position and
Federal service.
On 7 September 1995, the applicant’s appeal to the Merit Systems Protection
Board was dismissed.
EPR profile since 1992 reflects the following:
PERIOD ENDING EVALUATION OF POTENTIAL
23 Feb 92 5 (Rater)
4 (Rater’s Rater)
_________________________________________________________________
AIR FORCE EVALUATION:
The Staff Judge Advocate, HQ AFRC/JA, reviewed this application and states
that the claim for relief in the form of back pay for his civilian
employment is not addressed due to the fact the Merit Systems Protection
Board has already dismissed that claim, and it is not a properly placed
request. In his first argument, the applicant asserts that his transfer to
the standby Reserve was contrary to the intent and provisions of AFI 36-
2115. The applicant attempts to cite the first provision of Chapter 4 of
AFI 36-2115, disallowing involuntary transfer without first exhausting all
administrative and disciplinary actions, in
support of his argument. However, he failed to include language allowing
involuntary transfer to the standby Reserve, without exhausting
administrative and disciplinary actions. The AFI goes on from where the
applicant left off to state, “Consider exceptions to these policies on a
case-by-case basis. HQ AFRC/DP must consider the best interests of the Air
Force before granting waivers to any of these policies.” In other words,
if the best interests of the Air Force are served by transferring an
individual to the standby Reserve for cause, before exhaustion of all other
administrative and disciplinary actions, the involuntary transfer can and
should occur. The applicant’s actions and misconduct discovered as a
result of the death of one of his subordinates, as enumerated in various
reports, investigations, and memorandums, clearly indicate that the best
interests of the Air Force would be served by transferring the applicant.
In further support of his argument that the involuntary transfer to the
standby Reserve was unjust, the applicant sets out facts which, on their
face, appear to warrant relief. However, when examined closely, these
facts are half-truths, shaded to fit his scenario of perceived abuse of the
system. For example, the applicant states the “IG concluded that there was
a ‘lack of procedural compliance by HQ AFRES during the course of
processing his involuntary transfer to the inactive reserves’.” However,
the reference made by the Chief is simply to the IG restating the
allegation as framed in the original complaint. The IG summary goes on to
state that “[T]he transfer of the applicant to the inactive Reserve was
found to be appropriate and in accordance with governing regulations.”
Both reasons cited for claiming the transfer to the standby Reserve was
unjust are not grounded in fact nor in the instructions purporting to be
cited by the applicant. Secondly, the applicant alleges his commander did
not have the legal right to use misconduct from a prior enlistment to
support the involuntary transfer to the standby Reserve. The applicant is
combining two different instructions to arrive at the result he desires.
While it is true that AFI 36-3209 does not allow misconduct from a prior
enlistment to be used as a basis for discharge, it does not speak to
involuntary transfers to the standby Reserve. That procedure is governed
by AFI 36-2115, which is silent on whether misconduct from a prior
enlistment can be used as a basis for involuntary transfer. The IG summary
puts forth the proposition that the same rule should be followed for
involuntary transfers, but there is no legal support for such a
proposition. Furthermore, AFIs should be followed by their terms as
written, until such time that interim changes are announced. Third, the
applicant claims that because he was not in a military status at the time
of his alleged misconduct, that misconduct cannot serve as a basis for his
involuntary transfer to the standby Reserve. The applicant’s argument
assumes his involuntary transfer was
based solely on two incidents of misconduct occurring at the all-ranks
club. However, as stated above, there is no requirement that reviewing and
decision authorities consider only those acts of misconduct occurring in
the current enlistment. His commanders were entitled to consider all facts
arising out of the many investigations into the actions of the applicant.
He was found to have carried on an open and notorious affair with a member
of the Security Forces, he failed to comply with standards of military
bearing, he was routinely disrespectful, drunk, and disorderly, and was a
causal factor of the death of one of his subordinates. Under these
circumstances, it was clearly in the best interest of the Air Force to
transfer the applicant to the standby Reserve. Fourth, the applicant
claims that because there is no distinction between “Air Force standards”
and “military standards” the decision to transfer him must be reversed.
Although the logic of the argument is not apparent, there is in fact a
distinction between “Air Force standards” and “military standards” found in
AFI 36-2115, Table 5.1, Rules 19 and 22. If the applicant’s complaint is
alleging it was improper for reviewing authorities to distinguish between
the two, and therefore, the basis for the decision to involuntarily
transfer him to the standby Reserve was based on an erroneous distinction,
this complaint must fail. Such a distinction does exist, and either
failure to meet “military standards” or failure to meet “Air Force
standards” can serve as a basis for the involuntary transfer. Balancing
the equities in the case can only lead to the conclusion that the applicant
was properly transferred to the standby Reserve. He was able to subvert
authority for quite some time, and to his benefit, most of his conduct was
not discovered until late in his career. This accounts for delays cited by
the applicant as “unjust;” however, the further investigators looked into
his misconduct, the more there was to investigate. The applicant has
repeatedly performed below standards required of Air Force members, causing
bodily harm to at least one member of his squadron. Furthermore, his
documented off-duty behavior can only be described as service-discrediting.
While it is true that no person ordered the applicant into alcohol
counseling, it is also true that the applicant never took any
responsibility for his own treatment or recovery. The decision to
involuntarily transfer the applicant into the standby Reserve was found to
be proper by two separate commanders, and the Inspector General. The
reasons cited in support of reversing this decision are not supportable in
the law, in equity, or in fact. Furthermore, when the applicant’s actions
are measured against the best interest of the Air Force, it becomes clear
that his transfer was proper. Under these circumstances, the decision to
involuntarily transfer the applicant into the standby Reserve should not be
reversed, and the relief requested should be denied.
A complete copy of the evaluation is attached at Exhibit C.
_________________________________________________________________
APPLICANT'S REVIEW OF AIR FORCE EVALUATION:
The applicant reviewed the advisory opinion and states that the involuntary
transfer requires a waiver unless “all appropriate disciplinary and/or
administrative actions have been taken and documented.” The obvious
administrative actions that should have been considered include oral
counseling, a referral to social actions, or a denial of reenlistment. Of
these three potential actions, the 939 RQW/CC attempted the most punitive,
a denial of reenlistment, on 7 September 1993. Contrary to the AFI, the
involuntary reassignment was not used as a last resort. Instead, the 939
RQW/CC used the involuntary transfer as the first option. Despite the fact
that all other disciplinary and/or administrative actions are required to
be taken and documented, no other options were even considered. Because
the regulation states that a waiver is required and the waiver was never
requested nor received from the waiver authority the adverse personnel
action must be reversed. The reason that AFI 36-2115 requires all other
remedies be pursued first, and involuntary reassignment is used only as a
last resort is the protection afforded the member visa vis the due process
requirements of a denial of reenlistment or a court-martial. The reason
that the 939 RQW/CC never pursued a second denial of reenlistment or a
court-martial is because there is no evidence sufficient to support either
of those actions and the commander knew it. Because the commander did not
exercise other available options before resorting to the involuntary
reassignment, the reassignment must be reversed. Even if, for the sake of
argument, that all alleged misconduct from his entire career was
reviewable, he would have to have been in military status at the time of
every alleged misconduct. Since he was not on active duty during any of
the periods of alleged misconduct, the appropriate disciplinary agent is
his civilian supervisor. The civilian supervisor could have taken any
appropriate civilian action. AFRC/JA states that there were “...many
investigations into the actions of [applicant].” In fact, he was
investigated twice: one was an Article 32 investigation and one was an
investigation the IG determined was illegal. AFRC/JA then states that he
(applicant) “carried on an open and notorious affair with member of the
security forces....” In fact, he was separated, then divorced from his
former spouse, and was married 3 September 1993 to the woman with whom
AFRC/JA states he was having an affair. His military record reveals that
he is a highly decorated NCO who achieved the highest enlisted rank, and
earned all “9s” on every one of his Airman Performance Reports (APRs), with
the exception of one “8” in 1991. He was also the Senior Enlisted Advisor
to two different commands and nominated to become the Chief Master Sergeant
of the Air Force Reserve. AFRC/JA states that he was a “causal factor” in
the death of one of his subordinates. This highly inflammatory allegation
has no basis in fact and stands in stark contrast to the findings of the
Accident Investigation Board. He was not on duty as a civilian or a
military member. He warned Colonel T--- that he needed to devote more
resources to training pararescuemen or risk them becoming non-current.
Colonel T--- did nothing to alleviate the increasing problem of PJ
proficiency despite his warnings. The findings of the Accident
Investigation Board point to Colonel T--- as culpable, not him (applicant).
AFI 36-3115 simply states the failure to meet Air Force or military
standards can be a basis for discharge. The use of the word “or” in this
context is meant to explain that they are interchangeable, not that there
is a distinction.
Applicant's complete response, with attachment, is attached at Exhibit D.
_________________________________________________________________
ADDITIONAL AIR FORCE EVALUATION:
The Board requested the Letter of Notification for Involuntary Reassignment
to the Standby Reserve, dated 4 November 1994, with the 15 attachments, be
obtained and the entire application be forwarded to the Chief, General Law
Division, Office of the Judge Advocate General, HQ USAF/JAG, for review and
comment. The applicant provided the requested documentation and the
application was forwarded to USAF/JAG as the Board requested. HQ USAF/JAG
states that Air Force policy permits the use of prior enlistment misconduct
as a basis for involuntary transfer to the standby Reserve; the AFI in
effect when applicant’s transfer action occurred did not require a waiver
from AFRC/DP; and non-duty status misconduct, that has a military
connection, may be used as a basis for involuntary transfer to the standby
Reserve.
A complete copy of the evaluation is attached at Exhibit E.
_________________________________________________________________
APPLICANT'S REVIEW OF ADDITIONAL AIR FORCE EVALUATION:
The applicant reviewed the Air Force evaluation and provides detailed
comments. In short he states that he stands on his arguments set forth in
his original memorandum. Moreover, he argues that it is contrary to Air
Force policy and common sense to use alleged misconduct from a prior
enlistment in an involuntary transfer.
Applicant's complete response, with attachments, is attached at Exhibit G.
_________________________________________________________________
THE BOARD CONCLUDES THAT:
1. The applicant has exhausted all remedies provided by existing law or
regulations.
2. The application was timely filed.
3. Insufficient relevant evidence has been presented to demonstrate the
existence of probable error or injustice. Applicant’s contentions are duly
noted; however, we find no evidence of error in this case and after
thoroughly reviewing the documentation that has been submitted in support
of applicant’s appeal, we do not believe he has suffered from an injustice.
In the absence of evidence showing that the commander abused his
discretionary authority, we find no basis upon which to recommend the
relief requested be granted. Applicant’s contentions are duly noted.
However, in our opinion, they have been adequately addressed by the Air
Force and we adopt its rationale as the basis for our conclusion that the
applicant has not been the victim of an error or injustice. Therefore, in
the absence of substantial evidence to the contrary, we find no compelling
basis to recommend granting the relief sought in this application.
4. The applicant's case is adequately documented and it has not been
shown that a personal appearance with or without counsel will materially
add to our understanding of the issue(s) involved. Therefore, the request
for a hearing is not favorably considered.
_________________________________________________________________
THE BOARD DETERMINES THAT:
The applicant be notified that the evidence presented did not demonstrate
the existence of probable material error or injustice; that the application
was denied without a personal appearance; and that the application will
only be reconsidered upon the submission of newly discovered relevant
evidence not considered with this application.
_________________________________________________________________
The following members of the Board considered this application in Executive
Session on 16 February 1999 and 2 September 1999, under the provisions of
AFI 36-2603:
Ms. Charlene M. Bradley, Panel Chair
Mr. Mike Novel, Member
Mr. Philip Sheuerman, Member
Ms. Gloria J. Williams, Examiner (without vote)
The following documentary evidence was considered:
Exhibit A. DD Form 149, dated 2 Apr 98, w/atchs.
Exhibit B. Applicant's Master Personnel Records.
Exhibit C. Letter, AFRC/JA, dated 23 Jul 98.
Exhibit D. Applicant’s Response, undated, w/atchs.
Exhibit E. Letter, HQ USAF/JAG, dated 3 Jun 99.
Exhibit F. Letters, AFBCMR, dated 31 Aug 98 and 9 Jun 99.
Exhibit G. Applicant’s Response, 8 Aug 99 w/atchs.
CHARLENE M. BRADLEY
Panel Chair
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