UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR VETERANS CLAIMS
NO. 19-0865
LEWIS R. PAGE, APPELLANT,
V.
DENIS MCDONOUGH,
SECRETARY OF VETERANS AFFAIRS, APPELLEE.
Before PIETSCH, MEREDITH, and FALVEY, Judges.
ORDER
The appellant, Lewis R. Page, through counsel appeals an October 22, 2018, Board of
Veterans' Appeals (Board) decision denying a disability rating in excess of 70% for post-traumatic
stress disorder (PTSD). Pending before the Court are the following motions: (1) the Secretary's
November 27, 2019, opposed motion to amend the record before the agency (RBA) to include
documents that had been uploaded to the Veterans Health Information Systems and Technology
Architecture (VistA) Imaging system in May 2018; (2) the appellant's February 6, 2020, opposed
motion to strike portions of the Secretary's brief referencing the 2018 VistA Imaging documents;
and (3) the Secretary's July 20, 2021, opposed motion for leave to modify the November 2019
motion to amend the RBA to also request leave to include in the RBA documents that had been
uploaded to the VistA Imaging system in January 2015.
On April 2, 2020, this matter was referred to a panel of the Court to determine whether the
Secretary should amend the RBA to include records that were constructively before the Board and,
if so, whether the Court may review them in the first instance to assess whether any alleged duty
to assist error based on the Board's failure to associate those records with the claims file was
prejudicial. The Court subsequently granted the Secretary's unopposed motion to stay proceedings
pending the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit's (Federal Circuit's) final
disposition in Euzebio v. McDonough (Euzebio II), 989 F.3d 1305 (Fed. Cir. 2021), vacating,
remanding Euzebio v. Wilkie (Euzebio I), 31 Vet.App. 394 (2019). See Aug. 7, 2020, Unpublished
Order (per curiam). After the Federal Circuit issued Euzebio II, the Court held oral argument in
this case on July 27, 2021. For the following reasons, the Court concludes that, where a party
before the Court proffers for inclusion in the RBA records that were constructively before the
Board at the time of the decision on appeal, those records should be included in the RBA.1
1
The merits of this case will be decided separately in due course.
A. The Parties' Arguments2
In his opening brief, the appellant argues that there are references in the record of
proceedings (ROP) to fee-basis treatment records that had been scanned into VistA, but because
VistA records are not automatically included in the claims file, those records were "not before the
Board as required." Appellant's Brief (Br.) at 5. He avers that, regardless of the relevance of those
records, the Board should have remanded his claim, pursuant to its duty to assist, in order to obtain
them. Id.
Prior to filing his responsive brief, the Secretary filed the November 2019 motion to amend
the RBA, in which he seeks leave to include in the RBA the fee-basis records that had been scanned
into VistA in 2018, and he attached to his motion copies of those records. Secretary's Nov. 27,
2019, Motion; Exhibit A. In support of his motion, the Secretary states that, after he served on the
appellant a copy of the RBA, he "became aware that the RBA contains references to 'fee basis'
treatment records that were received and scanned by VA, and predated the Board's decision on
appeal, but do not appear in the RBA." Id. at 1. Relying on Bell v. Derwinski, 2 Vet.App. 611, 613
(1992) (per curiam order), 38 U.S.C. § 7261(b), and this Court's Rules of Practice and Procedure
(Rules), the Secretary asserts that the VistA Imaging documents were constructively before the
Board and, therefore, "are properly a part of the RBA" in order to ensure that the Court has "a
complete record before it." Secretary's Nov. 27, 2019, Motion at 2-3.
In his merits brief, the Secretary then avers that, if the Court grants the motion to amend,
"the Court will see that the treatment records [are] not pertinent to the claim before the Board," as
the disputed records "present no pertinent information regarding [the appellant's] service-
connected PTSD." Secretary's Br. at 11-13. The Secretary concludes that, "with the benefit of
having been provided a copy of the [disputed] records that were within VA's possession, there can
be no doubt that remand for it to be added to the claims file would be futile." Id. at 13-14.
Next, the appellant filed an opposition to the Secretary's motion to amend, countering that
Bell does not require "that certain records constructively within the Secretary's knowledge must
be made part of the record before this Court." Appellant's Dec. 11, 2019, Response at 1 (emphasis
in original). Specifically, he contends that, where the Board has actual notice of the existence of
records missing from the claims file, the Board errs in not obtaining and reviewing those records,
and the Court must remand for the Board to do so. Id. at 2 (citing Murincsak v. Derwinski,
2 Vet.App. 363, 373 (1992)). This is so, he contends, because the Federal Circuit has made clear
that this Court's review "'is limited to the record developed before the [regional office] and the
Board,'" and the Court is "'prohibit[ed] . . . from making factual findings in the first instance.'" Id.
at 3 (quoting Kyhn v. Shinseki, 716 F.3d 572, 575 (Fed. Cir. 2013)). He concludes that, after Kyhn,
this Court's Bell decision "cannot mean that the Secretary can cure the Board's failure to satisfy its
statutory duty to assist by presenting the Court [with] extra-record evidence." Id. at 4.
The appellant also filed a reply brief in which he argues that it "is always a duty to assist
error when the Board fails to obtain VA medical records or records of treatment authorized by
2
Although the Court is today addressing only the three pending motions, the parties' arguments as to both
the motions and the merits are set forth in order to provide context for the current dispute.
2
VA," without the need to show that the records were relevant. Reply Br. at 5-6. Further, he
maintains that the records the Secretary submitted to the Court are unintelligible and that they are
incomplete because they do not include VistA records from January 2015. Id. at 7. Additionally,
the appellant filed the February 2020 motion to strike from the Secretary's brief "all references to
the content of the documents he filed with his Motion to Amend the RBA." Appellant's Motion to
Strike at 5.
The Secretary opposed the motion to strike, noting that the appellant does not dispute that
the VistA records were constructively of record, and arguing that Bell explicitly requires that
records constructively before the Board be made part of the record before the Court. Secretary's
Feb. 20, 2020, Response at 2-3. He continues to assert that remand for the Board to associate the
records with the claims file is only required where the documents are relevant. Id. at 3-6. The
Secretary further disputes the appellant's reliance on Kyhn, noting that that case involved records
created after the Board decision on appeal, and were thus not before the Board, whereas the records
at issue in this case were in VA's possession prior to the Board decision. Id. at 6.
Thereafter, the parties filed citations to supplemental authority pursuant to Rule 30(b).
Specifically, the appellant advised the Court that the Federal Circuit's recent decision in Tadlock
v. McDonough, 5 F.4th 1327 (Fed. Cir. 2021), is pertinent to his arguments that "the Court cannot
determine in the first instance whether VA treatment records never reviewed by the Board warrant
a change in the outcome of an appeal." Appellant's July 16, 2021, Citation of Supplemental
Authority at 1. The Secretary, on the other hand, informed the Court that the Federal Circuit's
opinion in Euzebio II "discussed the Court's authority to review extra-record evidence in the first
instance." Secretary's July 19, 2021, Citation of Supplemental Authority at 1.
Finally, the Secretary filed the July 2021 motion in which he seeks to modify his November
2019 motion so as to also request leave to include in the RBA the January 2015 VistA records
referenced in the appellant's reply brief. Secretary's July 20, 2021, Motion at 1. Those records are
attached to the Secretary's motion. Attachment at 1-21. The appellant, for reasons outlined in his
prior pleadings, opposes that motion. Appellant's Aug. 8, 2021, Response at 1.
Following receipt of the parties' merits pleadings, as well as the three pending motions and
responses, the Court held oral argument on July 27, 2021. At oral argument, the appellant
acknowledged that the disputed VistA Imaging documents were constructively before the Board.
Oral Argument (OA) at 21:17-45, http://www.uscourts.cavc.gov/oral_arguments_audio.php.
However, he continued to assert that the documents cannot be included in the record before this
Court. OA at 27:12-29:02.3
3
At oral argument, counsel for the appellant asserted for the first time that amending the RBA to include the
VistA Imaging documents is unfair because the Secretary intentionally withheld those records from the Board. OA at
1:33-58, 43:15-25. The appellant's counsel, however, did not offer any legal authority or record citations to support
his implication that the Court should find improper conduct on the part of the Secretary. See Coker v. Nicholson,
19 Vet.App. 439, 442 (2006) (per curiam) ("The Court requires that an appellant plead with some particularity the
allegation of error so that the Court is able to review and assess the validity of the appellant's arguments."), vacated
on other grounds sub nom. Coker v. Peake, 310 F. App'x 371 (Fed. Cir. 2008) (per curiam order); see also Locklear
v. Nicholson, 20 Vet.App. 410, 416 (2006) (Court unable to find error when arguments are undeveloped). And in any
event, the Court has consistently discouraged parties from raising new arguments after the initial briefing. See Carbino
3
B. Law
Pursuant to statute, "[r]eview in the Court shall be on the record of proceedings before the
Secretary and the Board" and "[i]n no event shall findings of fact made by the Secretary or the
Board . . . be subject to trial de novo by the Court." 38 U.S.C. §§ 7252(b), 7261(c); see Rogozinski
v. Derwinski, 1 Vet.App. 19, 20 (1990). The Court's Rules, in turn, provide that the RBA must
include "all materials that were contained in the claims file on the date the Board issued the
decision from which the appeal was taken" and "any other material from the record before the
Secretary and the Board relevant to the Board decision on appeal." U.S. VET. APP. R. 10(a)(1), (2).
In Bell, the Court addressed a dispute about "the content of the record on appeal" 4 that
arose when the appellant sought to include copies of documents that were not contained in her VA
claims file but had been generated by or submitted to VA prior to the Board decision on appeal.
2 Vet.App. at 612-13. The Court ultimately held that, where there is a dispute as to the content of
the record and the documents proffered by the appellant were "within the Secretary's control and
could reasonably be expected to be a part of the record," those records were "in contemplation of
law, before the Secretary and the Board and should be included in the record." Id. at 613.
As pertinent to the arguments on appeal, the Federal Circuit in Kyhn subsequently
addressed whether this Court erred in relying on affidavits generated after the Board decision on
appeal to conclude that the presumption of regularity should be applied. 716 F.3d at 574. There,
the Federal Circuit concluded that, because that evidence was not "in the record before the Board,"
it was "in contravention of the jurisdictional requirement that '[r]eview in the [Veterans] Court
shall be on the record of proceedings before the Secretary and the Board.'" Id. at 575-76 (quoting
38 U.S.C. § 7252(b)). Additionally, the Federal Circuit determined that this Court had "erred by
relying on the extra-record evidence to make a finding of fact in the first instance." Id. at 577.
More recently, the Federal Circuit reaffirmed the propriety of the constructive possession
doctrine, albeit not in the context of a record dispute. Euzebio II, 989 F.3d at 1318-26. Specifically,
the Federal Circuit explained that this "Court may, under certain circumstances, consider
'documents that were not literally before an [adjudicator] to be constructively part of a claimant's
record.'" Id. at 1318 (quoting Lang v. Wilkie, 971 F.3d 1348, 1352-53 (Fed. Cir. 2020)). The
Federal Circuit concluded that "[t]he correct standard for constructive possession, as articulated in
v. Gober, 10 Vet.App. 507, 511 (1997) (declining to review argument first raised in appellant's reply brief), aff'd sub
nom. Carbino v. West, 168 F.3d 32, 34 (Fed. Cir. 1999) ("[I]mproper or late presentation of an issue or argument . . .
ordinarily should not be considered."); see also Untalan v. Nicholson, 20 Vet.App. 467, 471 (2006); Fugere
v. Derwinski, 1 Vet.App. 103, 105 (1990). Unlike other cases in which the Court has exercised its discretion to hear
late-raised arguments, see, e.g., Crumlich v. Wilkie, 31 Vet.App. 194, 202 (2019) (addressing a late-raised argument
where "the Court was presented with a compelling allegation that the regulation VA ask[ed the Court] to apply
conflict[ed] with the appellant's statutory rights and the Secretary's concessions appeared to confirm that allegation,"
and the Court thereafter obtained a written response from the Secretary), we decline to do so under the circumstances
here.
4
At the time of Bell, the Court's Rules required the Secretary to file with the Court and serve on the appellant
a record on appeal (ROA) consisting of "a designation of all material in the record of proceedings before the Secretary
and the Board which the Secretary considers relevant to the appeal." U.S. VET. APP. R. 10(a)-(b) (effective to Mar. 31,
2008). The appellant was then afforded an opportunity to counter-designate "any additional material before the
Secretary and the Board which the appellant considers relevant to the appeal." Id.
4
Bell and later Lang, . . . is relevance and reasonableness." Id. at 1321. The Federal Circuit also
noted that Kyhn does not "preclud[e] all consideration of 'extra[-]record evidence' in the course of
[this Court's] review of Board decisions." Id. at 1323 (quoting Euzebio I, 31 Vet.App. at 400). The
Federal Circuit explained that the prohibition against this Court finding facts "does not . . . preclude
the Veterans Court from taking judicial notice of extra-record evidence . . . or in accordance with
and in furtherance of its review of Board and VA decisions." Id. at 1323.
Finally, section 7261 provides that "the Court shall review the record of proceedings before
the Secretary and the Board" and shall "take due account of the rule of prejudicial error." 38 U.S.C.
§ 7261(b)(2). The Supreme Court has held that the harmeless-error analysis applies to the Court's
review of Board decisions. Shinseki v. Sanders, 556 U.S. 396, 409 (2009). The Federal Circuit
recently addressed "to what extent [this Court] may make findings of fact in the course of
considering whether an error of the Board . . . was prejudicial," Tadlock, 5 F.4th at 1330, and held
that "[section] 7261(b)'s command that the Veterans Court 'give due account of the rule of
prejudicial error' does not give it the right to make de novo findings of fact or otherwise resolve
matters that are open to debate," id. at 1337.
C. Discussion
Given the parties' arguments, resolving whether the documents at issue should be included
in the record for purposes of proceedings before the Court requires the Court to address (1) whether
the Court's constructive possession caselaw contemplates that documents proferred in the context
of a record dispute should be included in the RBA if they were constructively in the record before
the Board, and (2) if so, whether that caselaw has been abrogated by Federal Circuit precedents
addressing limits on the Court's authority to review extrarecord evidence and resolve findings of
fact in the first instance.
1. Constructive Possession Doctrine
As an initial matter, the Court stresses that it is undisputed that the VistA Imaging
documents at issue here were constructively before the Board. OA at 21:17-45; Secretary's
Nov. 27, 2019, Motion at 2-3. The appellant nevertheless avers that the constructive possession
doctrine established in Bell does not require "that certain records constructively within the
Secretary's knowledge must be made part of the record before this Court." Appellant's Dec. 11,
2019, Response at 1 (emphasis in original).
However, that is in part the relief that Bell provided. As outlined above, Bell resolved "a
dispute as to the content of the [ROA]." 2 Vet.App. at 612. Specifically, the Court held that certain
items not actually contained in the record of proceedings before the Board were nonetheless
"available to the [Board] as part of . . . records maintained by the VA," such that they were part of
the record "before the Secretary and the Board" pursuant to section 7252(b). Id. at 612, 613. The
Court concluded that, because the proffered documents were "within the Secretary's control and
could reasonably be expected to be a part of the record 'before the Secretary and the Board,' such
documents . . . should be included in the [ROA]." Id. at 613. Since then, the Court has issued
numerous decisions applying Bell in resolving disputes as to the content of the record for purposes
of proceedings before this Court. See, e.g., Blount v. West, 11 Vet.App. 32, 33 (1998) (per curiam
5
order) (granting the appellant's motion to supplement the ROA with "two VA-generated,
pre-[Board]-decision records"); Simington v. Brown, 9 Vet.App. 334, 335 (1996) (per curiam
order) (addressing the Secretary's opposition to including in the ROA certain records proffered by
the appellant and noting that the relevant documents should be "included in the ROA if they were
in the Secretary's 'control' so as to charge him with either actual or constructive knowledge").
The appellant essentially contends that, rather than follow that caselaw, the Court should
conclude that the Board's failure to obtain and consider the VistA Imaging records constitutes a
violation of the duty to assist and that such an error cannot be cured or shown to be harmless by
the Secretary's proffer of the extrarecord evidence. Appellant's Dec. 11, 2019, Response at 2-4;
Appellant's Feb. 6, 2020, Motion at 2-5. In that regard, he contends that Murincsak supports the
notion that, if the Board had actual notice of unobtained records, the appropriate recourse is to
remand pursuant to the duty to assist rather than to include the records in the RBA pursuant to the
constructive possession doctrine. Appellant's Dec. 11, 2019, Response at 2.
The Court is not persuaded that the instant record dispute is controlled by caselaw
concerning the duty to assist. As for Murincsak, which was issued prior to Bell, the Court addressed
on the merits whether VA violated the duty to assist by failing to obtain VA medical records of
ongoing treatment. Murincsak, 2 Vet.App. at 372. In responding to the Secretary's argument that
the duty to assist requires obtaining VA medical records only if VA personnel "have been informed
of the existence and relevance" of those records, id., the Court concluded that the Board "had actual
notice of the possible existence and relevance of the veteran's ongoing treatment . . . sufficient to
trigger the duty to assist . . . by acquiring and considering such records." Id. at 373. Although the
Court also noted that the medical records "were not included in the [ROA], because they were not
reviewed by the [Board] prior to the decision on appeal," id. at 372, and that the Court "need not
reach the issue of whether the [Board] should be charged with constructive notice of all medical
records in the possession of the VA under all circumstances," nothing in that opinion suggests that
the Court was adjudicating a dispute as to the content of the record before the Court. See R.A.V.
v. City of St. Paul, 505 U.S. 377, 386 n.5 (1992) ("It is of course contrary to all traditions of our
jurisprudence to consider the law on this point conclusively resolved by broad language in cases
where the issue was not presented or even envisioned."); Adams v. Texas, 448 U.S. 38, 45 n.3
(1980) ("We do not treat the question as foreclosed [by a prior opinion], however, because the
issue was not explicitly raised in that case."); see also McDaniel v. Sanchez, 452 U.S. 130, 141
(1981) ("[D]ictum unnecessary to the decision in [a] case. . . . [is] not controlling in this case
. . . .").
On the other hand, Sims v. West is instructive in these circumsatnces. 11 Vet.App. 237
(1998) (per curiam order). There, the Court rejected the Secretary's contention that the appellant's
counter-designated VA medical records need not be part of the ROA because they were not
determinative of the claim on appeal. Sims, 11 Vet.App. at 238-39. The Court explained that "Bell
does not state that only records that are determinative of a claim are to be in the ROA before this
Court"; rather, the disputed documents "should be a part of the [ROA]" because they predated the
Board decision, were generated by VA, and could reasonably be expected to be a part of the record
before the Board and, "if they are determinative of the claim," then a merits remand is required.
Id. at 238-39 (emphasis in original); see Dunn v. West, 11 Vet.App. 462, 466-67 (1998) (first
concluding that relevant VA treatment records predating the Board decision were "constructively
6
part of the record on appeal," and then remanding because the Board failed to obtain and consider
those documents).5 Similarly here, the initial question before the Court is whether—in ruling on
the Secretary's motion to amend the RBA—the VistA Imaging documents should be included in
the RBA, not whether the records warrant remand.
In sum, if disputed documents proffered in the context of a record dispute were
constructively before the Secretary and the Board, they should be included in the record for
purposes of proceedings before this Court regardless of whether the records may warrant a
remand.6 Having reached that conclusion, the Court will next address the appellant's suggestion
that, to the extent that our caselaw allows such documents to be included in the record before the
Court, it has been abrogated by Federal Circuit precedents addressing limits on the Court's
authority to review extrarecord evidence and resolve findings of fact in the first instance.
2. Kyhn and Tadlock
As reflected above, the appellant asserts that Kyhn established a "bright-line rule" that this
Court may not review "records possessed by the agency that the Board never saw" and that, after
Kyhn, this Court's Bell decision "cannot mean that the Secretary can cure the Board's failure to
satisfy its statutory duty to assist by presenting the Court [with] extra-record evidence." Appellant's
Dec. 11, 2019, Response at 3, 4; see Appellant's Feb. 6, 2020, Motion at 4-5. He additionally avers
that Tadlock is pertinent to the arguments that "the Court cannot determine in the first instance
whether VA treatment records never reviewed by the Board warrant a change in the outcome of
an appeal." Appellant's July 16, 2021, Citation of Supplemental Authority at 1. Given that these
arguments are raised in the context of a record dispute, the appellant appears to contend that,
because the Court cannot make initial factual findings based on extrarecord evidence in order to
assess the merits of the appeal, that evidence must necessarily be excluded from the record before
this Court. The appellant's arguments are not persuasive.
Even assuming that Kyhn could be read as broadly precluding this Court from reviewing
any extrarecord evidence, that opinion does not address what impact, if any, such a holding would
have on the constructive possession doctrine generally, nor does it address specifically whether
records in the Board's constructive possession may be included in the record before this Court.
716 F.3d at 575-78. Indeed, the evidence at issue in Kyhn had been generated after the Board
decision on appeal. See id. at 574. Moreover, in Euzebio II, the Federal Circuit expressly rejected
that Kyhn created such a bright-line rule, holding that this Court may "tak[e] judicial notice of
extra-record evidence that is 'generally known' or 'from sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably
be questioned' . . . or in accordance with and in furtherance of its review of Board and VA
decisions," 989 F.3d at 1323; see id. ("[T]he Veterans Court misreads our decision in Kyhn as
precluding all consideration of 'extra[-]record evidence' in the course of [this Court's] review of
Board decisions." (quoting Euzebio I, 31 Vet.App. at 400)). Similarly, the Federal Circuit rejected
5
The Court is not suggesting that the Court must generally consider whether unobtained documents should
be made part of the RBA before addressing a duty to assist violation; rather, this discussion is limited to the
circumstances present here, where a party proffers constructively possessed documents for inclusion in the record.
6
In light of this conclusion, the Court need not address the appellant's contention that, where the Board has
actual notice of the unobtained documents, remand is warranted without first resolving the record dispute. Appellant's
Dec. 11, 2019, Response at 2-3.
7
the Government's contention that the constructive possession doctrine is contrary to section
7252(b) "because it construes 'the record of proceedings before the Secretary and the Board' to
include documents that were not before VA adjudicators." Id. at 1321-22. Rather, as discussed
above, Euzebio II explicitly upheld the constructive possession doctrine and concluded that Bell
articulates the appropriate standard. Id. at 1321. Overall, nothing in Euzebio II supports the
conclusion that the record for purposes of proceedings before this Court cannot contain documents
constructively possessed by the Board.
Finally, Tadlock, in addressing whether this Court "may make findings of fact in the course
of considering whether an error of the Board . . . was prejudicial," did not discuss the constructive
possession doctrine or what may be included in the record before this Court. 5 F.4th at 1330.
Although Tadlock held that "[section] 7261(b)'s command that the Veterans Court 'give due
account of the rule of prejudicial error' does not give it the right to make de novo findings of fact
or otherwise resolve matters that are open to debate," id. at 1337, the Federal Circuit also
recognized that this Court "may affirm on a ground not considered by the Board . . . if it is clear
that the factual basis for such conclusion is not open to debate and the Board on remand could not
have reached any other determination," id. at 1336. Tadlock thus does not suggest that the Court
must omit from the record before the Court evidence that the Board has not explicitly reviewed.
D. Conclusion
After consideration of the parties' pleadings and oral argument, the Court holds that, where
a party in the context of a record dispute proffers for inclusion in the RBA documents that were
constructively before the Board, those records should be included in the RBA. Based on the
appellant's concession that the VistA Imaging documents at issue here were constructively part of
the record before the Board, the Court will grant the Secretary's motions and allow him to amend
the RBA to include the January 2015 and May 2018 VistA Imaging documents.7 Furthermore,
because those documents are properly part of the RBA, the Court will deny the appellant's motion
to strike portions of the Secretary's brief referencing those records. To the extent the appellant
argues that the Court may not review these records in the first instance, those arguments pertain to
the merits of the appeal and are separate considerations from what must be included in the RBA.
Cf. Bell, 2 Vet.App. at 612-13; Sims, 11 Vet.App. at 239.
Upon consideration of the foregoing, it is
ORDERED that the Secretary's July 20, 2021, motion for leave to amend the November 27,
2019, motion is granted. It is further
ORDERED that the Secretary's amended November 27, 2019, motion to amend the RBA
is granted. It is further
ORDERED that the appellant's February 6, 2020, motion to strike portions of the
Secretary's brief is denied. It is further
7
In light of this conclusion, the Court need not address whether section 7261(b)(2) or Sanders require that
the record for purposes of proceedings before the Court include documents that were constructively before but not
reviewed by the Board.
8
ORDERED that, not later than 7 days after the date of this order, the Secretary serve on
the appellant, and file notice of such service with the Court, an amended RBA including the VistA
records attached to the November 27, 2019, and July 20, 2021, motions. It is further
ORDERED that, not later than 7 days after the date of this order, the Secretary file an
amended ROP to include the VistA records attached to the November 27, 2019, and July 20, 2021,
motions.
DATED: January 14, 2022 PER CURIAM.
9