ADDENDUM TO
RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS
AIR FORCE BOARD FOR CORRECTION OF MILITARY RECORDS
IN THE MATTER OF: DOCKET NUMBER: BC-2008-01427
COUNSEL: NONE
HEARING DESIRED: YES
________________________________________________________________
APPLICANT REQUESTS THAT:
1. He be directly promoted to the grade of colonel, with an
appropriate Date of Rank (DOR), as if originally selected by the
Calendar 1993A (CY93A) Colonel Central Selection Board (CSB),
with Senate confirmation.
2. He receive all back pay and allowances as an active duty
colonel up until his permanent disability retirement date of
22 Jul 97.
3. His military retirement pay be adjusted based on his
retirement grade of colonel starting from his permanent
disability retirement date of 22 Jul 97 to the present.
4. His Officer Effectiveness Report (OER) rendered for the
period 14 Mar 83 16 Feb 84 be amended to read the following:
Block II, Job Description, 1. Duty Title as In-
residence Intermediate Service School (ISS): AFSC (S1455) or
ACSC.
Block IV, Assignment Recommendation: 4, Timing:
1984/1985.
________________________________________________________________
STATEMENT OF FACTS:
On 24 Sep 99, the applicant was permanently retired in the grade
of lieutenant colonel with a compensable disability rating of
30 percent, based on avascular necrosis of the left hip and
status post left total hip arthroplasty. He was credited with
24 years, 10 months, and 2 days of active service.
On 13 Mar 06, the Board directed the following corrections to
the applicants record:
The AF Forms 77, Supplemental Evaluation Sheet, covering
the periods 9 Nov 74 through 30 Apr 75 and 17 Feb 87 through
1 Jan 88, be amended and he be considered by a Special Selection
Board (SSB) for all boards for which the AF Forms 77 were a
matter of record.
On 25 Sep 06, the applicant was considered and selected for
Professional Military Education (PME) candidacy by SSB for the
CY83 Intermediate Service School (ISS) PME Candidacy board; the
applicant was also considered for PME candidacy by the
CY87 Senior Service School (SSS) PME candidacy board, but not
selected.
On Jan 10, a similar appeal was considered and partially
approved by the Board and the applicants record was corrected
to reflect the following:
The OER rendered for the period 14 Mar 83 through 16 Feb
84, be amended in Section VI, Rater Comments, by deleting the
last two sentences and adding the sentences "He is a major and
PME selectee, recently selected to command a flight. Continue
to challenge, promote below the zone to lieutenant colonel, and
send to Air Command and Staff College now!"; and in Section
VIII, Indorser Comments, by deleting the last sentence and
adding the sentences "Ready for Air Command and Staff College in
residence now. Promote early to lieutenant colonel and groom
for command."
His record be considered for promotion to the grade of
lieutenant colonel by a Special Selection Board (SSB) for the
CY85 Below-the-Promotion Zone (BPZ) Lieutenant Colonel CSB, and
any subsequent boards for which the OER closing 16 Feb 84 was a
matter of record.
For an accounting of the facts and circumstances surrounding the
applicants appeal, and, the rationale of the earlier decision
by the Board, see the Record of Proceedings at Exhibit F.
On 15 Jun 10, the Executive Director of the AFBCMR advised the
applicant that the Boards decisional documents were forwarded
to his counsel, on 2 Mar 10; however, because no response was
received within 30 days and his application was considered by
the Board based on the available evidence of record. In
addition, he noted, that since the Board had rendered a final
decision on his case, unless he presented additional documentary
evidence, his case would remain closed (Exhibit G).
By letter, dated 26 Jul 10, the applicant provided a response to
the advisories; stating neither he or his attorney received
copies of the Air Force evaluations and had the Board been
provided the additional letters of support, with the recommended
change to his OER closing 14 Feb 84, he believes the recommended
change to the rater and additional rater comments would have
rendered more positive results (Exhibit H).
On 14 Sep 11, the Executive Director advised the applicant that
the AFBCMR had received several letters and fielded numerous
calls and emails, requesting the status of his case, with the
submission of new documentation to be added to his application.
The Executive Director reminded the applicant of the grounds for
reopening a case for reconsideration and that his case remains
closed until such evidence is submitted (Exhibit I).
By letter, dated 27 Sep 11, the applicant stated that there
appeared to be confusion with the handling of his case. He
attached previous correspondence from the AFBCMR staff; however,
in this letter he requested reconsideration and submitted
additional arguments to support his case (Exhibit J).
On 15 Nov 11, the applicant notes his disappointment in the
handling of his reconsideration request and requested a status
of his case (Exhibit K).
On 21 Nov 11, the applicant submitted a DD Form 149, which was
essentially a request for reconsideration, contending that based
on the Board granting partial relief, and the inaccuracy of the
contested report, he should be granted a direct promotion to the
grade of colonel, with an appropriate DOR for the CY93A Colonel
CSB, with all back pay and allowances.
Additionally, he believes that his corrected record of
performance should be considered by an SSB for selection to
attend in-residence PME, specifically, to attend Intermediate
Service School (ISS) for the selection boards that met in
(84,85,86, and 87). He notes that he was advised by the Air
Force Personnel Center (AFPC) that they do not have the archive
records or the promotion board data to conduct the SSBs to
consider him for ISS in-residence PME as directed by the Board.
Therefore, the Air Force cannot provide him full, fitting,
equitable and complete relief because of their inability to
conduct appropriate SSBs.
He believes the evidence he provides in support of his candidacy
for ISS and the supporting documentation from his former chain
of command warrants consideration for a direct promotion to the
grade of colonel.
In support of his appeal, the applicant provides copies of his
previous directive; retirement orders; extracts from his service
medical records; his DVA medical records, and other supporting
documents.
The applicants complete submission, with attachments, is at
Exhibit L.
________________________________________________________________
AIR FORCE EVALUATION:
AFPC/DPAPF did not provide a recommendation; however, they noted
that because there is no Air Force Instruction (AFI) provision
for an SSB for selection to ISS, and due to the non-existence of
the corresponding applicable records in question, they have no
further remedy available to the applicant with respect to in-
residence developmental education.
In addition, DPAPF noted that after thoroughly reviewing the
actions taken by the AFBCMR, to include scrutiny of the rule
sets and logic utilized, concluded that the applicant was
provided a fair remedy to his record with the correction of his
OER to reflect ISS candidacy and revised statements by the
supervisory chain. They concur that it is not appropriate to
update his record to reflect attendance at Air Command and Staff
College (ACSC), when this indeed did not occur and for the
reasons stated in the Board proceedings. There is currently no
AFI provision for supplemental consideration for designation to
ISS.
The complete DPAPF evaluation is at Exhibit M.
AFPC/DPSIDEP recommends replacing the additional raters
comments with the new comments provided. In addition, they
noted that in light of the applicants revised PME selectee
status, the PME recommendation statement on the contested report
remains inaccurate under the additional rater's block.
Therefore, the applicant is now requesting that the information
be administratively corrected and has submitted a statement with
new proposed indorsements from the additional rater to reflect
"Captain M. record of performance in the unit identifies him as
a number one candidate and he is immediately available for
selection to attend in-residence PME. Recommend that he attend
the Armed Forces Staff College or Air Command and Staff
College.
The complete DPSIDEP evaluation is at Exhibit N.
AFPC/PB did not provide a recommendation and deferred to DPAPFs
advisory. They noted that during the time frame in question,
officers who were selected as "candidates" by their central
promotion board for possible in-residence attendance at ISS
potentially went on to meet central "school designation" boards
convened by DPAPF. However, DPAPF states in their advisory that
there is no AFI provision for supplemental consideration for
school designation.
The complete PB evaluation, with attachments, is at Exhibit O.
AFPC/DPSOO recommends denial of the request for a direct
promotion to the grade of colonel. DPSOO states that to grant a
direct promotion would be unfair to all other officers who have
extremely competitive records and also did not get promoted.
Should the Board approve the change to the OER, they recommend
approval of an SSB for any promotion board where the OER was a
matter of record. They would also recommend that the applicant
write a letter to the promotion boards to advise them of his ISS
candidacy and that through no fault of his own, he was unable to
attend in residence. Further, they noted the applicant's case
is not unique. There have been many cases where an officer has
gone through the SSB process to be relooked for candidacy, been
selected, but unable to attend because they are already outside
the window of eligibility to attend. To grant resident credit
to the applicant would be unfair to those officers who are in
the same situation. In addition, since 2005 CSBs have not been
used to select officers for resident school. If an officer is
selected for school candidacy by an SSB, there would be no
provisions to authorize an SSB for residency selection.
The DPSOO evaluation is at Exhibit P.
AFPC/JA recommends denial of the applicants request for
reconsideration, noting that the applicant has failed to meet
the prerequisites for reconsideration and that his case should
be returned without action or denied on that basis.
As pointed out in the Boards letter, this submission by the
applicant represents the latest in a line of applications and
AFBCMR decisions going back to 1994. As a result of the most
recent, the Board ordered a correction to the applicant's OER
closing 16 Feb 84, by amending the rater and indorser comments
to add a recommendation to attend Air Command and Staff College
(ACSC) in-residence, and by directing an SSB for the applicant's
below-the-zone (BPZ) and subsequent boards for which the
corrected OER was a matter of record. The applicant's requests
to be credited with in-residence attendance at ACSC and to be
directly promoted to colonel were denied by the Board.
In his letter of 22 Jul 10, which applicant styles as a request
for reconsideration of the Board's 2 Mar 10 decision, the
applicant offers two reasons in support of the request:
1) neither he nor his (previous) attorney ever received the
BCMR decision and were thus denied the opportunity to reply
to/rebut the advisory opinions therein;
2) he desires to offer what he terms newly developed
information in the form of letters from his additional rater on
the contested 1983 - 1984 OER.
JA considers the letter from the Board dated 15 Jun 10, to be
dispositive of that issue. In that letter, the AFBCMR Executive
Director, stated that the advisory opinions were sent to the
applicant's attorney in time to allow a response within the
allotted time period. No response was ever received; thus, the
case remains closed unless the applicant was to provide
additional documentary evidence in support of a request for
reconsideration. Further, the bulk of the applicant's
22 Jul 10 request is devoted to comment and rehashed argument
with respect to the advisories provided to the Board in
conjunction with its Mar 10 decision, without the benefit of any
new evidence in support thereof. The law has made clear that
"argument," defined as an effort to establish by a course of
reasoning, is not evidence. Similarly, "new or rehashed
arguments do not constitute 'new evidence' as that term is used
in the governing directives. JA opines for this reason, with
respect to that portion of his request, the applicant has failed
to meet the requisite regulatory standard for reconsideration,
and that portion of the request should therefore not be referred
to the Board.
There are also serious questions whether the remainder of the
reconsideration request meets the requisite criteria discussed
above. The letters from the former additional rater are dated
25 Jul 08, almost two years before the Board's Mar 10 decision.
It is difficult to understand why it took some two years after
the letters were signed to finally submit them to the Board.
Were they not reasonably available prior to the Board's
decision? JA suggests they were. The assertion by applicant
that he was waiting to submit them with a rebuttal to the
2008 BCMR case advisories does not change the fact they were
reasonably available for almost two years before the Board
rendered its decision. Nevertheless, they have no objection to
changing the wording from that already approved by the Board to
that now offered by the former additional rater. They do not
believe, however, that such a change constitutes a material
change that warrants additional SSB consideration. At most, it
constitutes a minor grammatical correction.
Additionally, as noted in the DPAPF advisory, there is no
process in place to "do over" an in-residence service school
selection. Even if there were, the passage of time has resulted
in the destruction of records that would likely have been used.
Notwithstanding, they do not believe the applicant has been
unfairly prejudiced by the inability of the Air Force to now
conduct a new consideration for in-residence service school.
Moreover, even if the applicant were somehow now selected, he
could not attend. Therefore, they agree with DPAPF that under
these circumstances it would constitute an undeserved windfall
to give the applicant credit in his record for completing in-
residence service school that he never attended, let alone
completed. The AFBCMR obviously agreed with this conclusion in
its Mar 10 Record of Proceedings and made it part of its
decision. Given that the Board in that decision had also
granted the applicant a correction to his 1983-1984 OER by
adding rater and additional rater recommendations for ACSC--
essentially the same request being made now with the tender of
the retired colonel's letters-nothing in this reconsideration
request warrants a change to that 2010 determination. For the
same reasons, it also does not warrant new SSB consideration.
Finally, they agree with DPSOO that even if applicant had
completed in-residence ISS, it would not have guaranteed
promotion, as it constituted just one of multiple factors
utilized in the whole person concept.
On a final note, the applicant was denied a direct promotion in
the Mar 10 BCMR decision and the facts and circumstances
supporting that decision have not changed. Both then and now,
the applicant has utterly failed to establish any basis for a
direct promotion.
The complete JA evaluation is at Exhibit Q.
________________________________________________________________
APPLICANT'S REVIEW OF AIR FORCE EVALUATION:
On 11 Jul 12, the applicant requested an extension to provide a
response to the Air Force evaluations and his case was again
closed without prejudice.
On 8 Jan 13, the applicant responded. In his rebuttal, the
applicant provides additional evidence to support his appeal,
including letters from senior officers who served on active duty
during the period under review. He believes the statements and
experience of these senior officers would be extremely valuable
to the Boards deliberation on his case. He states that the
statements support his case and contends that:
1. If he had been properly identified as a candidate for
selection to attend ISS in 1984, he would have been selected for
in-residence ISS attendance.
2. At the completion of ISS, his Air Force career would
have been significantly different and he would have been
assigned to high visibility, career-enhancing positions that led
to early promotions, in-residence Senior Service School (SSS),
selected for key command positions, and possibly considered for
promotion to general officer.
3. At a minimum, his original Colonel CSB would have
selected him for promotion to colonel in 1993.
In addition, he amended his application as noted earlier in his
request.
He disagrees with the JA advisory and has provides evidence that
he believes meets the criteria for reconsideration, especially,
in light of the Executive Directors letter which extended that
option to him. Additionally, he provides statements from other
senior officers of the significance of having being selected as
a candidate for ISS and a subsequent selection to ISS would have
had on his career and promotion potential.
DPSOO has provided no evidence that had he been selected as a
candidate appropriately, he would not have been selected to
attend ISS, and put his career on a significantly different path
of progression.
The comments from DPSIDEP and their support of his request are
noted; however, he believes in totality that his case is so
unique that it can only be remedied by a direct promotion to the
grade of colonel.
In further support of his appeal, the applicant provides copies
of letters of support from his former rater, additional rater,
and indorser; letters of support from several senior officers,
and various other supporting documents.
The applicants complete response, with attachments is at
Exhibit S.
___________________________________________________________________
THE BOARD CONCLUDES THAT:
1. In an earlier finding, the Board determined that the
applicant's OER should be amended in Sections VI and VIII and
that he received SSB consideration for promotion to the grade of
colonel. On 25 Sep 06, the applicant was selected for PME
candidacy by SSB for the CY83 ISS. The Board also determined
there was insufficient evidence to warrant changing his records
to reflect that he was credited with in-residence attendance at
ACSC or that he be directly promoted to the grade of colonel.
The applicant is again requesting changes to his OER and that he
be directly promoted to the grade of colonel with back pay and
allowances. As such, he believes this, coupled with the
evidence from his former chain of command warrants consideration
for a direct promotion to the grade of colonel. However, after
thoroughly reviewing the additional documentation submitted in
support of his appeal and the evidence of record, we do not
believe the applicant has overcome the rationale expressed in
the previous Board's decision. We note the Board has, on
several occasions, found the applicant has received fair
consideration for promotion through the SSB process. Therefore,
we find no basis upon which to circumvent the SSB process and
direct his promotion to the grade of colonel. While several Air
Force Offices of Primary Responsibility (OPRs) recommend his
records reflect ISS candidacy and the revised statements by his
supervisory chain again be considered by an SSB, we disagree.
As pointed-out by JA, given the Board previously granted the
applicant a correction to his 1983-1984 OER by adding a rater
and additional rater recommendations for ACSC--essentially the
same request being made now, there is nothing in this
reconsideration request that warrants a change to that
2010 determination. For the same reasons, it also does not
warrant a new SSB consideration. Further, we recognize that in
all cases, we cannot make an officer completely whole and
therefore, strive to provide substantial equity. In this
regard, we note the applicant has benefited greatly from the
correction of records process. As a result of several previous
applications to this Board; an OER closing 1 Jan 88 was voided
and he received SSB consideration by the CY92, CY93, and CY94
Colonel Boards; his nonselections for promotion to the grade of
colonel were declared void, and he received SSB consideration
with a reaccomplished Promotion Recommendation Form (PRF) with a
"Definitely Promote" recommendation; an OER closing 30 Apr
75 was declared void and he again received SSB consideration for
promotion to the grade of colonel, and AF Forms 77, Supplemental
Evaluation Sheets, closing 30 Apr 75 and 1 Jan 88 were amended
and he received SSB consideration; all in all he has been
reconsidered for promotion to the grade of colonel on numerous
occasions by an SSB. Over the course of its adjudication of his
requests for almost 20 years, the Board has gone to great
lengths to ensure his records are correct in order to provide
him fair and equitable consideration for promotion. In view of
this and noting the previous corrections to his records, we are
not inclined to favorably consider his requests. Therefore, we
agree with the opinions and recommendations of JA and DPPPO and
adopt their rationale as the bases for our conclusion the
applicant has failed to sustain his burden that he has suffered
an error or an injustice. In the absence of evidence to the
contrary, we find no basis to recommend granting the relief
sought in this application.
2. 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 the evidence presented did not
demonstrate the existence of material error or injustice; the
application was denied without a personal appearance; and 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 AFBCMR Docket
Number BC-2008-01427 in Executive Session on 16 July 2013, under
the provisions of AFI 36-2603:
The following documentary evidence pertaining to AFBCMR Docket
Number BC-2008-01427 was considered:
Exhibit F. Record of Proceedings, dated 2 Mar 10,
w/atchs.
Exhibit G. Letter, AFBCMR, dated 15 Jun 10, w/atchs.
Exhibit H. Letter, Applicant, dated 26 Jul 10, w/atchs.
Exhibit I. Letter, AFBMCR, dated 14 Sep 11, w/atchs.
Exhibit J. Letter, Applicant, dated 27 Sep 11, w/atchs.
Exhibit K. Letter, Applicant, dated 15 Nov 11, w/atchs.
Exhibit L. DD Form 149, dated 17 Nov 11, w/atchs.
Exhibit M. Letter, AFPC/DPAPF, dated 11 May 12.
Exhibit N. Letter, AFPC/DPSIDEP, dated 21 May 12, w/atchs.
Exhibit O. Letter, AFPC/PB, dated 1 Jun 12, w/atch.
Exhibit P. Letter, AFPC/DPSOO, dated 15 Jun 12.
Exhibit Q. Letter, AFPC/JA, dated 21 Jun 12.
Exhibit R. Letter, SAF/MRBR, dated 2 Jul 12.
Exhibit S. Letter, Applicant, dated 24 Dec 12.
Panel Chair
3
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