CHRISTOPHER R. COOPER, United States District Judge.
On November 5, 2009, Nidal Malik Hasan, an Army medical officer, went on a shooting spree at Fort Hood, a military post in Texas, killing 13 people and injuring 30 others. Former Army Staff Sergeant Joshua Berry was stationed at Fort Hood that day and, during the attack, was in a briefing room inside one of its buildings. Hasan at some point fired 30 to 40 rounds just outside that building. Berry told others in the room to get down on the floor. He then heard bullets strike the room's exterior metal doors, leapt over a desk to take cover and, in doing so, dislocated his shoulder.
Joshua's father believes that his son — who died in 2013 — should have received a Purple Heart for his injury. Unlike other military decorations, which are awarded only upon the recommendation of a commander, the Purple Heart is given to any servicemember who meets certain regulatory criteria. Army Reg. 600-8-22, ¶ 2.8(c). The Army's regulations provide that a servicemember is entitled to the Purple Heart if he is wounded as the result of a terrorist attack committed by a foreign terrorist organization. 10 U.S.C. § 1129a; Army Reg. 600-8-22, ¶ 2-8(b)(10).
Initially, the Army declined to award the Purple Heart to servicemembers injured or killed in the Fort Hood attack because, though Hasan admitted that he was inspired by Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and was in contact with one of its senior recruiters, the terrorist group was not understood to be formally behind the attack. But Congress clarified in a 2015 statute that servicemembers injured during attacks inspired by foreign terrorist organizations and committed by individuals who were in communication with such organizations could qualify for the Purple Heart. 10 U.S.C. § 1129a(b); Army Reg. 600-8-22, ¶ 2-8(b)(10)(b). In turn, the Secretary of the Army determined that servicemembers injured or killed in the Fort Hood attacks were eligible for the Purple Heart if they met the other regulatory criteria.
Shortly after that announcement, the plaintiff applied for his son to receive the award. The U.S. Army Decorations Board denied his application in March 2015 on the ground that the attack did not directly cause Berry's injury. A.R. 6. In doing so, it
The Decorations Board informed the plaintiff of its decision by letter and explained that he could apply to the Army Board for Correction of Military Records if he felt the decision was unjust. He did so. Along with his application for review, he filed witness statements his son had made to investigators and a statement from another individual indicating that Hasan had indeed shot at the building inside which Berry had been injured. A.R. 7-9.
By a 2-to-1 vote, the Corrections Board recommended that Berry receive a Purple Heart. A.R. 10. The Board found it clear that Berry's injury "met the basic medical criteria" for award of the Purple Heart — i.e., that he suffered a qualifying "wound" during the attack. A.R. 9;
On this point, the Board began by citing the regulations' examples of injuries that would warrant a Purple Heart, including those incurred "while making a parachute landing from an aircraft that had been brought down by enemy fire" or "as a result of a vehicle accident caused by enemy fire."
But a few months later, the Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Army — exercising the Secretary's authority to override the Correction Board's recommendations — found to the contrary. She registered her disagreement in a single paragraph of a one-page letter:
A.R. 2.
Berry's father challenges that denial under the Administrative Procedures Act ("APA"). He claims that the Deputy Assistant Secretary's decision was "arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law," and that it was "unsupported by substantial evidence." 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A), (E). The Court agrees that the decision violates the APA, and it will remand this matter to the Army for reconsideration.
Challenges to agency decisions under the APA are properly resolved on motions for summary judgment — which the parties have both filed here. Unlike with a typical summary judgment motion, however, the relevant question is not whether the record creates a material dispute of fact. Instead, the court's job is to review the decision in light of the record before the agency and to decide whether it complied with the APA.
To be sure, courts are "unusually deferential" toward military decisions regarding
The denial letter provides no hints. In turn, the Court cannot meaningfully evaluate the reasoning behind it. That is enough to warrant remand. The deference accorded to military personnel decisions does not totally shield them from review.
That is the case here. In the face of an eight-page Board recommendation that provided a reasoned basis for awarding a Purple Heart, the Deputy Assistant Secretary summarily disagreed. The Court could not grant deference to that change of course if it tried.
Not to say that summary denials must always be set aside under the APA. If, for example, the Board had written a denial decision and the Deputy Secretary summarily affirmed it, the Court could fairly presume (even if not with certainty) that she was adopting the Board's reasoning. In that case, "the agency's path" might "reasonably be discerned."
At a minimum, Berry's case presents a more complicated issue of causation — whether an injury incurred while taking cover from gunfire outside a building was "caused" by the gunfire — than the Deputy Assistant Secretary's summary denial suggests. The government's arguments that this issue was properly resolved against Berry are efforts to rationalize the Army's cursory denial. The APA demands that the Army itself — acting through its officers — explain its resolution of the issue.
The Court will thus grant the plaintiff's motion for summary judgment and deny the defendants' motion. A separate order accompanies this memorandum opinion.