UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
DARYL SCOTT,
Plaintiff,
v. Case No. 1:17-cv-02301 (TNM)
UNITED STATES,
Defendant.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
The plaintiff in this case seeks to overturn his court-martial conviction of rape based on
misfeasance by the DNA analyst in unrelated cases.
Daryl Scott was a hospital corpsman at the U.S. Naval Hospital in Okinawa, Japan. One
night after work in 2001, he met up with a few of his friends to go out drinking. He returned to
the naval barracks later that evening with three servicemembers, including a woman who was so
intoxicated that she could not walk unassisted. The group helped her to her room before
disbanding. Mr. Scott remained behind and saw the woman lay down on her bed. He noticed
that she was incoherent and passing in and out of consciousness. So he got in the bed and began
kissing her.
Mr. Scott claims that he does not remember what happened next. When the woman woke
up in the morning, she was covered in blood. She was wearing a pair of white boxers that were
not hers. The tampon she had been using the night before was lying on the floor. The sheets on
her bed were missing. Feeling scared and confused, she reported the incident to her chain of
command. An investigation by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (“NCIS”) found a stain
on the woman’s mattress that contained a mixture of her and Mr. Scott’s DNA.
Based on these facts, Mr. Scott pled guilty to raping the woman. He told a military judge
he had no reason to believe that the victim and witnesses were mistaken about his actions, and
that he was convinced of his guilt. After inquiring into its factual basis, the military judge
accepted Mr. Scott’s plea. He was discharged from the Navy and sentenced to seven years’
incarceration. Under a pretrial agreement, the confinement was reduced to four years. He served
this sentence and currently lives in Pine Ridge, South Dakota.
Mr. Scott now collaterally attacks his court-martial conviction. He contends that an
NCIS analyst fabricated the DNA evidence brought against him. He also believes that the
military courts violated the U.S. Constitution and the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”) by
refusing to adequately re-consider his case.
The Court disagrees. It finds that Mr. Scott has not adduced facts sufficient to support his
claim of falsified evidence. Even if he could present such facts, his guilty plea was based on
much more than just the results of DNA testing. His allegations were fully and fairly considered
by the military tribunals. And the statutory scheme created by Congress precludes an APA
review of Mr. Scott’s case. The Court will thus grant the Government summary judgment on
Mr. Scott’s constitutional claims and will dismiss his APA claims.
I.
Before accepting a guilty plea, “a military judge must conduct a thorough inquiry to
insure the accused understands the meaning and effect of the plea, that he enters it voluntarily,
and that he in fact is guilty of the offense.” United States v. Roane, 43 M.J. 93, 98 (C.A.A.F.
1995) (discussing Art. 45(a), Uniform Code of Military Justice). The purpose of this
“providence inquiry” is to establish a sufficient basis in law and fact for accepting an accused
party’s guilt. See United States v. O’Connor, 58 M.J. 450, 453 (C.A.A.F. 2003). “In this
2
respect, military practice differs from that in other federal courts that permit the accused to plead
guilty even though the defendant personally professes innocence—a so-called ‘Alford plea.’”
Roane, 43 M.J. at 98 (citing North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25 (1970)).
Consistent with this requirement, a military judge conducted an extensive providence
inquiry before accepting Mr. Scott’s guilty plea. A.R. 9-25. During the inquiry, Mr. Scott
conveyed that he had read, understood, and agreed with a stipulation of facts concerning his
conduct. A.R. 13. The stipulation stated that:
• “At no time that evening did [the woman] give [Mr. Scott] any indication that she was
interested in [him] sexually or romantically;”
• The woman “was highly intoxicated as a result of drinking alcoholic beverages that
evening and could not walk by herself to her barracks room;”
• Mr. Scott “knew that [the woman] was intoxicated . . . because [he] had seen her
consume many beers throughout the late evening and early morning;”
• Mr. Scott saw that the woman “was not coherent and passed in and out of
consciousness;”
• Mr. Scott “remember[s] lying side by side with her and kissing her;” and
• The next morning, Mr. Scott “returned to [the woman’s] room and realized that [he]
had committed a sexual act with someone who was unable to give her consent
because she was too intoxicated. [He] was scared that someone might see [him]
leaving the room, so [he] locked [her] door from the inside and left through her
window.” A.R. 34-35.
3
The military judge also asked Mr. Scott to describe, in his own words, what happened
that night. A.R. 21. He did so. He also confirmed his belief that he “completed this act of
sexual intercourse and without the consent of” the woman. A.R. 23.
Though Mr. Scott claimed not to remember the details of the assault, he believed the
NCIS investigation was “accurate and reliable.” A.R. 20. He said he had no reason to doubt the
accounts of the victim and witnesses. A.R. 20-21. And he confirmed that “despite the fact that
[he] cannot remember what happened . . . [he is] still guilty of raping” the woman. A.R. 21.
Contrary to the normal procedure in federal court guilty pleas, the judge also heard
testimony from the victim. She described waking up covered in blood, wearing boxer shorts that
did not belong to her, and seeing her tampon lying on the floor. A.R. 29. Her bed sheets were
missing, and her curtain was pulled aside. This was something she never did “because [she]
live[d] on the first deck.” Id. After considering her testimony, the NCIS investigative report,
and Mr. Scott’s admissions, the military judge found him guilty of rape. A.R. 36.
Roughly two years later, Mr. Scott filed the first of several appeals contesting his
conviction. A.R. 38-46. He argued that he had “pled guilty to a rape that was alleged by nobody
and that may have never occurred,” as neither he nor the woman “remember[ed] whether he had
intercourse with her.” A.R. 39. He attacked the DNA evidence against him, suggesting that the
mixture of his semen and her blood found by NCIS “could have just have [sic] easily occurred
outside the vagina.” A.R. 42. Thus, he insisted, the military judge’s providence inquiry was
deficient, as he “failed in his duty to ask the difficult questions, the ones that would have caused
him to reject the [guilty] plea.” A.R. 44.
The Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals (“Navy Appeals Court”) rejected
these arguments. It found that he “indicated an understanding of the elements of the offense . . .
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and stated that the elements correctly described the offense he committed.” A.R. 60. Mr. Scott
also “clearly stated, in his own words, the circumstances surrounding the rape.” Id. The Navy
Appeals Court concluded that “[a]lthough the appellant was unable to remember having engaged
in intercourse with the victim, his inability to remember does not invalidate the plea where the
appellant was convinced of his guilt based on the strength of the evidence against him.” Id.
Three years after this denial, Mr. Scott tried again. He filed a writ of error coram nobis
with the Navy Appeals Court. This time, he asked for an evidentiary hearing “in light of newly
disclosed evidence of the general mishandling of [DNA] evidence” at an NCIS criminal
investigation laboratory. A.R. 62. Mr. Scott argued that the DNA results in his case were “the
only reason Appellant believed he had raped” the woman, and that if these “results were in fact
fabricated, the ‘strength’ of the evidence against Appellant would evaporate.” A.R. 64.
His challenge arose out of a memorandum issued by the laboratory. It noted that an
analyst falsified an entry on one of the DNA tests he had conducted, and that the same analyst
had once been suspended after “permitting contamination in his testing processes.” A.R. 76.
Upon discovering this issue, the laboratory began “reviewing the hundreds of cases worked on
by this examiner,” and stated that “[a]s of this writing, no false reports are believed to have left
the laboratory.” Id. Mr. Scott characterized this as “newly discovered evidence” that “sheds
new light on the reliability of Appellant’s conviction.” A.R. 65. He urged the court to order
more DNA testing through a “DuBay hearing.” See United States v. DuBay, 37 C.M.R. 411
(C.M.A. 1967). 1
1
A DuBay hearing is “essentially an evidentiary hearing to resolve collateral factual issues, usually
ordered by an appellate military court . . . to aid in appellate review.” Cothran v. Dalton, 83 F. Supp. 2d
58, 69 (D.D.C. 1999).
5
The court declined to do so. The basis for Mr. Scott’s request, it noted, “is the
misconduct in other cases of the laboratory technician who conducted the DNA test in the
appellant’s case.” A.R. 102. It found that Mr. Scott “offers no evidence that the DNA results in
his case were tainted or false” and that he “did not seek independent testing of the evidence at the
time of his court-martial.” Id. The court also found that “during the providence inquiry, [he]
cited a variety of factors in support of his believe that he was guilty of the offense and not just
the results of a DNA test.” Id.
Undeterred, Mr. Scott filed a third challenge eight years later. He again asserted that his
conviction “was based solely on DNA evidence” tested by Phillip Mills, the examiner whose
misconduct was the subject of the laboratory’s memorandum. A.R. 104. He claimed to have
“recently discovered that Dr. Mills destroyed the DNA samples in this case in violation of
standard operating procedures, preventing them from being re-tested.” Id. Based on this
purported discovery, he again sought a DuBay hearing. He also pointed to an email that a special
agent investigating his case once sent to someone in the NCIS laboratory. This email suggested
that Mr. Scott “would never have been charged had it not been for the work you all put into it at
the lab. We had nothing else.” A.R. 106.
The Navy Appeals Court denied this petition too. It began by reiterating that Mr. Scott
pled guilty to rape “[r]elying in part upon DNA evidence.” A.R. 199 (emphasis added). The
court found that the petition was “merely an attempt to reevaluate previously considered
evidence or legal issues,” and that it “decline[d] to do either.” A.R. 201. Mr. Scott’s argument
“that because Mills falsified test results in other cases means that he did so in [this] case,” it
explained, “was rejected by this court in 2007.” Id.
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The court then assessed a declaration from a laboratory employee, made under the
penalty of perjury, which refuted the contention that Mr. Mills destroyed Mr. Scott’s DNA
samples. Id. The employee explained that the laboratory “has neither the mission nor the
capacity for a long-term evidence storage facility . . . Mr. Mills was not accused of destroying
evidence and there was not an intention to suggest such.” Id. The court found that this
declaration was “supported by documents submitted by [Mr. Scott] which indicate the evidence
was destroyed by NCIS, not by Mr. Mills.” A.R. 202. It thus concluded that a DuBay hearing
was unnecessary “as the record as a whole ‘compellingly demonstrates’ the improbability of the
petitioner’s assertion.” Id. (quoting United States v. Ginn, 47 M.J. 236, 243-44 (C.A.A.F.
1997)).
Finally, the court considered the special agent’s email. It rejected the notion that the
DNA test results were the only evidence available to the prosecutors. A.R. 202. It noted, for
instance, that “other witnesses put [Mr. Scott] in the room alone with the unconscious victim,”
that the victim testified in detail about what she observed when she woke up, and that Mr. Scott
“was seen outside of the victim’s room, using the female [bathroom] because he ‘didn’t feel like
going upstairs’ to the male [bathroom] early the next morning.” A.R. 202-203. The court was
“simply not persuaded that the email the petitioner has produced supports the drastic remedy he
now requests.” A.R. 203. It therefore denied his petition. Mr. Scott then filed a motion for
reconsideration with the Navy Appeals Court and a request for review to the Court of Appeals
for the Armed Forces. Both were denied. See A.R. 202-206; A.R. 207-312.
Mr. Scott now challenges what he calls the Navy’s “continued failure to re-examine the
case.” Compl. 11. The decisions not to order a DuBay hearing or a new trial, he argues, were “a
far cry from the standards laid out by the Supreme Court and this Court for rectifying unfair
7
trials based on fabricated testimony and newly discovered evidence.” Id. at 13. He also
contends that the “decision of the Judge Advocate General of Navy not to set aside or re-examine
the case . . . was grossly irresponsible, arbitrary[,] and capricious” in violation of § 706(2) of the
APA. Id. at 17.
The Government moved to dismiss Mr. Scott’s complaint or, in the alternative, sought
summary judgment based on the administrative record. See Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss, ECF No. 9
(“Def.’s Mot.”). It urges the Court to find that the military tribunals followed all applicable legal
standards, and that they gave Mr. Scott’s many arguments adequate consideration. See id. It
also argues that the APA specifically provides for the non-reviewability of courts martial and
military commissions. Id. at 1. Mr. Scott has filed a cross-motion for summary judgment. See
Pl.’s Cross-Mot. for Summ. J., ECF No. 10 (“Pl.’s Cross-Mot.”).
II.
To prevail on a motion for summary judgment, a movant must show that “there is no
genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of
law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a); see also Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 247 (1986).
A factual dispute is material if it could alter the outcome of the suit under the substantive
governing law. Anderson, 477 U.S. at 248. A dispute about a material fact is genuine “if the
evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.” Id. “[A]
party seeking summary judgment always bears the initial responsibility of informing the district
court of the basis for its motion, and identifying those portions of the pleadings, depositions,
answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, which it
believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.” Celotex Corp v. Catrett,
477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986). Once the movant makes this showing, the non-moving party bears the
8
burden of setting forth “specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.” Anderson,
477 U.S. at 250.
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1), a court must dismiss a claim if it lacks
subject matter jurisdiction. The plaintiff bears the burden of proving that the court may hear the
claim. See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 561 (1992). The reviewing court “may
consider materials outside the pleadings in deciding whether to grant a motion to dismiss for lack
of jurisdiction.” Jerome Stevens Pharms. v. FDA, 402 F.3d 1249, 1253 (D.C. Cir. 2005). But it
must still “accept all of the factual allegations in the complaint as true.” Id. (cleaned up).
III.
Federal district courts have limited and deferential jurisdiction over decisions of military
tribunals. Convicted servicemembers who are still in custody may seek habeas review of their
court-martial proceedings. Sanford v. United States, 586 F.3d 28, 31 (D.C. Cir. 2009). Mr.
Scott, of course, is now free. A district court has federal question jurisdiction “to review the
validity of court-martial proceedings brought by non-custodial plaintiffs who cannot bring
habeas suits.” Id. at 32 (cleaned up). Thus, the Court can review the constitutionality of the
decisions in Mr. Scott’s case.
The standard of review to apply is, as the D.C. Circuit has recognized, “tangled.” United
States ex rel. New v. Rumsfeld, 448 F.3d 403, 406 (D.C. Cir. 2006) (“New II”). The Supreme
Court has held that “when a military decision has dealt fully and fairly with an allegation raised
in [a habeas petition], it is not open to a federal civil court to grant the writ simply to re-evaluate
the evidence.” Burns v. Wilson, 346 U.S. 137, 142 (1953). Rather, the court is limited to
determining whether “the military have given fair consideration to each of [the plaintiff’s]
claims.” Id. at 144.
9
For non-custodial plaintiffs like Mr. Scott, collateral relief is “barred” unless the district
court finds that the military tribunals’ “judgments were void.” Schlesinger v. Councilman, 420
U.S. 738, 748 (1975). This means that any error in their decision-making “must be
fundamental.” Sanford, 586 F.3d at 32. Whether a decision is “void” turns on “the nature of the
alleged defect and the gravity of the harm from which relief is sought.” Schlesinger, 420 U.S. at
753.
The Supreme Court “has never clarified the standard of full and fair consideration, and it
has meant many things to many courts.” Kauffman v. Sec’y of the Air Force, 415 F.2d 991, 997
(D.C. Cir. 1969). Nor is the precise level of deference due during a “void” review clear. See
New II, 448 F.3d at 407. In any event, the D.C. Circuit has expressed “serious doubt [that] the
judicial mind is really capable of applying the sort of fine gradations in deference” that the two
standards may indicate. Id. at 408. Indeed, while the Circuit has sometimes engaged in a Burns-
style fairness inquiry in the context of non-custodial plaintiffs, other times it has not. Compare
Kauffman, 415 F.2d at 996-1000, with Priest v. Sec’y of the Navy, 570 F.2d 1013, 1015 (D.C.
Cir. 1977).
That said, “non-habeas review is if anything more deferential than habeas review of
military judgments.” New II, 448 F.3d at 408. Thus, a military court’s judgment cannot be
considered void “if it satisfies Burns’s ‘fair consideration’ test.” Id. Recent cases suggest that
the latter inquiry has two steps: “(1) a review of the military court’s thoroughness in examining
the relevant claims, at least where thoroughness is contested; and (2) a close look at the merits of
the claim, albeit with some degree of deference . . . .” Sanford, 586 F.3d at 32. Here, the Navy
Appeals Court thoroughly evaluated Mr. Scott’s claims. And the Court finds no reason to
disturb its decisions on the merits of these claims.
10
IV.
Mr. Scott’s Complaint features two causes of action. First, he alleges that the actions of
the military tribunals were “unconstitutional because they do not conform to Supreme Court
standards as articulated in federal cases such as Mesarosh v. United States and United States v.
Giglio.” Compl. 12. Second, he contends that the “administrative decisions of the Department
of the Navy and the service courts to uphold” Mr. Scott’s conviction were “arbitrary and
capricious” in violation of the APA. The Government is entitled to judgment as a matter of law
for the first cause of action and dismissal for the second.
A.
Mr. Scott’s constitutional claims rest on a series of conclusory statements. He suggests
that he was “unjustly convicted” based on “false incriminating evidence.” Compl. 12-13. He
believes the military courts “decided to ignore and suppress the evidence” of the DNA analyst’s
misconduct. Compl. 17. And he sees himself as a victim of “a highly charged atmosphere of
hostility towards clemency and exoneration in military sexual assault cases.” Compl. 13.
Nothing in the record supports these statements. As a result, Mr. Scott’s case is readily
distinguishable from cases like Mesarosh and the principles they stand for. In Mesarosh v.
United States, the Government told the Supreme Court it had “serious reason to doubt the
truthfulness” of its own witness. 352 U.S. 1, 4 (1956). In a separate proceeding, this witness had
provided “bizarre testimony . . . concerning sabotage, espionage, handling of arms and
ammunition, and plots to assassinate Senators, Congressmen, and a state judge . . . .” Id. at 8.
The Government suggested that “none of [this testimony] is worthy of belief.” Id. In fact, the
11
Solicitor General suggested that the untrue statements “might have been caused by a psychiatric
condition” that “may have arisen subsequent to the time of this trial.” Id.
The Mesarosh Court granted the petitioner a new trial because of the unreliability of the
witness’s testimony. But it explicitly cabined its holding, noting that
“[i]t must be remembered that we are not dealing here with a motion for a new trial
initiated by the defense . . . presenting untruthful statements by a Government
witness subsequent to the trial as newly discovered evidence affecting his
credibility at the trial. Such an allegation by the defense ordinarily will not support
a motion for a new trial, because new evidence which is ‘merely cumulative or
impeaching’ is not, according to the often-repeated statement of the courts, an
adequate basis for the grant of a new trial.”
Id. at 9 (citation omitted).
Indeed, several courts have recognized the narrow scope of Mesarosh. See, e.g., United
States v. Burns, 495 F.3d 873, 875 (8th Cir. 2007) (noting that the holding “has no application to
the present case because there is no evidence whatever that [the witness] was a practiced perjurer
or suffered from some disqualifying mental condition. There was, moreover, no evidence that he
perjured himself in [this] trial.”); United States v. Vogel, 251 Fed. Appx. 399, 401 (9th Cir. 2007)
(describing “Mesarosh and its progeny” as being limited to the rare case in which a “critical
witness committed perjury or otherwise demonstrated a complete lack of reliability.”); United
States v. Anderson, 933 F.2d 1261, 1275 (5th Cir. 1991) (“No one has presented any proof that
[the witness] gave false testimony about material facts, and there has been no recantation of
testimony as to material facts.”).
In fact, the applicability of Mesarosh to the conduct of Mr. Mills, the DNA analyst at
issue, has been considered and rejected by a court in this district in a strikingly similar case
brought by another hospital corpsman contesting his court-martial for sexual assault. In Luke v.
United States, Judge Contreras held that the military tribunals “did not act unreasonably in
12
determining that the plaintiff was not entitled to a new trial because Mill’s misconduct did not
undermine the integrity of the conviction.” 942 F. Supp. 2d 154, 168 (D.D.C. 2013). He added
that the analyst was “not entirely discredited in the same way the witness in Mesarosh was.” Id.
And, as in this case, the court found “no evidence in the plaintiff’s specific conviction that Mills
utilized improper procedures, cross-contaminated samples, or perjured himself in any way.” Id.
Mr. Scott suggests his case is distinguishable from Luke. Pl.’s Mot. at 13. It is not.
True, the plaintiff in that case was provided a DuBay hearing by a military court. See Luke, 942
F. Supp. 2d at 165-166. But there is “no case law suggesting that [Mr. Scott] has a right under
either constitutional or military law to such a hearing or that the convening officer may not
conduct a more limited form of investigation.” Cothran v. Dalton, 83 F. Supp. 2d 58, 69 (D.D.C.
1999). Rather, the question is whether the officers that heard his claims evaluated them
thoroughly and fairly. They did.
The Navy Appeals Court carefully considered each of Mr. Scott’s arguments. It rejected
as unsubstantiated speculation the contention that the testing in his case was tainted or false.
A.R. 102. It reviewed, for example, the laboratory’s “remediation project report.” A.R. 201.
The report noted that the laboratory re-tested 68 of the 435 cases that Mr. Mills worked on from
1995 – 2005. USACIL Quality Manager’s Final Report at 68, ECF No. 14-1. In 65 out of the 68
re-tested cases, or roughly 96%, Mr. Mills’ DNA conclusions were confirmed. Id. The court
noted that “[w]hile this report may provide evidence that Mr. Mills falsified DNA results . . . in
some of the cases on which he worked, the petitioner offers no evidence the DNA results in his
case were tainted or false.” A.R. 201.
The tribunal also highlighted several documents “compellingly” demonstrating the
improbability of the notion that Mr. Mills destroyed Mr. Scott’s DNA samples. A.R. 202. It
13
evaluated the declaration of Anece Baxter-White, the laboratory’s attorney-advisor. A.R. 165-
66. This declaration made clear that “[n]o evidence is maintained or retained at the laboratory.”
A.R. 165. It also confirmed that “Mr. Mills was not accused of destroying evidence and there
was not an intention to suggest such.” A.R. 166. The court found that documents submitted by
Mr. Scott corroborated this declaration, as they showed that “the evidence was destroyed by
NCIS, not by Mr. Mills.” A.R. 202. Mr. Scott, the court added, “neither offers evidence, nor
argues, that NCIS’s destruction of the evidence was improper.” Id. n.6.
Most importantly, the Navy Appeals Court found that Mr. Scott’s conviction was not,
contrary to his contention, based solely on DNA evidence. See, e.g., A.R. 199; A.R. 203. Mr.
Scott maintains that “the only evidence that a victim was ‘raped’ . . . was the fake DNA lab
testing . . .” Compl. 3. Not so. The circumstantial evidence of a rape occurring and him being
the perpetrator is considerable:
• Mr. Scott was the last person seen with the victim that night. A.R. 35;
• He admitted to initiating physical contact with the victim after she was no longer
conscious. Id.;
• Her used tampon was removed and found on the floor of her barracks room, which is
certainly suggestive of sexual intercourse. Id.;
• Mr. Scott admitted that he was “scared that someone might see [him] leaving the
room, so [he] locked [the victim’s] door from the inside and left through her
window.” Id.;
• He was spotted in a nearby women’s bathroom in the morning. Id.;
• She awoke in someone else’s boxer shorts. A.R. 29; and
14
• The bedsheets were missing in the morning and there was blood and what appeared to
be semen on her mattress. A.R. 35.
In short, it was reasonable to decide that the weight of the non-DNA evidence and Mr.
Scott’s admissions of guilt during the providence inquiry were sufficient to sustain his
conviction. And it was reasonable to arrive at this decision without conducting a DuBay hearing.
The record reveals no genuine issues of material fact that permit the Court to conclude otherwise.
The actions of the military tribunals that evaluated Mr. Scott’s claims were not unconstitutional.
B.
The Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to consider Mr. Scott’s two APA arguments.
First, he contends that the “decision of the Judge Advocate General of Navy not to set aside or
re-examine the case pursuant to Article 69 [of the Uniform Code of Military Justice] was grossly
irresponsible, arbitrary and capricious.” Compl. 17. Second, he suggests that the decisions of
“the Article I administrative appellate courts” were “fundamentally defective.” Compl. 18.
To begin with, the APA provides for the non-reviewability of “courts martial and military
commissions.” 5 U.S.C. § 701(b)(1)(F). See also McKinney v. White, 291 F.3d 851, 853 (D.C.
Cir. 2002). Thus, to the extent that Mr. Scott seeks APA review of the decisions made by the
military tribunals, the Court lacks jurisdiction to engage in this review, and dismissal is
warranted under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1). Indeed, he appears to concede this in
his briefing. See Pl.’s Mot. at 13 (noting that the APA “specifically excludes courts-martial from
it [sic] purview).
But he argues that the APA does not “exclude all administrative actions taken by NCIS
agents and military justice officials before and after a court-martial. Pl.’s Mot. at 13. True, it
“does not expressly preclude review of Judge Advocate General decisions reviewing courts
15
martial pursuant to [Article 69].” McKinney, 291 F.3d at 853. But the D.C. Circuit has found
that “Congress’ establishment . . . of a separate judicial system for courts martial review is . . .
convincing evidence that Congress could not have intended Judge Advocate General review of
courts martial to fall within APA review of agency decisions.” Id. In other words, “Congress’
preclusion of APA review of courts martial reaches the Judge Advocate’s decision” where it
directly concerns a court martial. Id. at 855.
The decisions in question here do so. Article 69 of the Uniform Court of Military Justice
permits the Judge Advocate General to set aside the findings or sentence in a court-martial case.
See 10 U.S.C. § 869. If he does, he may also order a rehearing. Id. Mr. Scott asks the Court to
review decisions not to set aside his conviction and/or order a DuBay hearing. Compl. 18. This
is precisely the type of review barred by the APA.
Lastly, Mr. Scott attacks what he calls the “failure of the [Judge Advocate General] to . . .
provide information and discovery to the detailed appellate defense counsel.” Pl.’s Mot. at 13.
In his Complaint, Mr. Scott details several requests he made to the Office of the Judge Advocate
General for information about his case and appeals. See Compl. 9-10. But the Complaint itself
demonstrates that the Office responded to each of these requests or identified for Mr. Scott the
appropriate procedural mechanisms to obtain the information he sought. Id. Thus, Mr. Scott has
not sufficiently alleged any decision by the Judge Advocate General that this Court may review
under the APA, and his claims will be dismissed. See Schmidt v. U.S. Capitol Police Bd., 826 F.
Supp. 2d 59, 65 (D.D.C. 2011) (“In deciding a motion to dismiss challenging the Court’s subject-
matter jurisdiction under Rule 12(b)(1) courts are not required to accept inferences unsupported
by the facts or legal conclusions that are cast as factual allegations.”) (cleaned up).
16
V.
For these reasons, the Government’s Motion to Dismiss or in the Alternative, Motion for
Summary Judgment will be granted. Mr. Scott’s Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment will be
denied. A separate order will issue.
2018.12.18
14:37:16 -05'00'
Dated: December 18, 2018 TREVOR N. McFADDEN
United States District Judge
17