Dobyns v. United States

CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedSeptember 11, 2025
Docket08-700C
StatusPublished

This text of Dobyns v. United States (Dobyns v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Dobyns v. United States, (uscfc 2025).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Federal Claims

JAY ANTHONY DOBYNS,

Plaintiff, No. 08-700 v. Filed under seal: August 27, 2025 Reissued: September 11, 2025 THE UNITED STATES,

Defendant.

James B. Reed, Udall Shumway PLC, Mesa, Arizona, for plaintiff.

William J. Grimaldi, Civil Division, United States Department of Justice, Washington, DC, for defendant.

OPINION AND ORDER Denying Mr. Dobyns’s motion for attorney fees and denying Mr. Dobyns’s motion for referral

This case was filed in 2008 and concerns events that took place even longer ago than that.

After litigation in this court and on appeal, the government prevailed on the case that the plaintiff,

Jay Dobyns, brought, and Mr. Dobyns defeated a counterclaim from the government. Over the

course of the case, Mr. Dobyns has argued, and the court has investigated, allegations of miscon-

duct by government attorneys and officials with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms.

There are other twists and turns to the history of the case, which the court will discuss, as relevant. 1

Mr. Dobyns now seeks attorney fees under the Equal Access to Justice Act for his success

in defeating the government’s counterclaim in this court. This court initially denied Mr. Dobyns’s

fee motion based on a timeliness argument, and the Federal Circuit reversed, finding his fee motion

1 There have been at least three judges assigned to this case over the years. The case was assigned to me in 2024, after the Federal Circuit’s second remand.

1 timely based on equitable tolling. Mr. Dobyns thus also seeks attorney fees for his successful ap-

peal to the Federal Circuit on the equitable tolling of his original fee motion. Mr. Dobyns further

requests that the court refer alleged misconduct by the government’s attorneys in litigating this

case to either the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia or to the Inspector General for the

U.S. Department of Justice for criminal investigation.

Mr. Dobyns is not entitled to fees under the government-specific fee-shifting provision

because the government’s case on the merits was substantially justified. Under more general fee-

shifting principles, Mr. Dobyns would have to show that the government engaged in bad-faith

conduct when it took specific positions. Mr. Dobyns has not demonstrated that the government

acted in bad faith in either of the specific positions he raises: the government’s choices in pursuing

a counterclaim or the parties’ mutual misunderstanding regarding this court’s processes. The court

will therefore deny Mr. Dobyns’s motion for attorney fees.

Mr. Dobyns’s motion for a criminal referral is meritless. He reraises issues that have been

thoroughly reviewed by this court and affirmed by the Federal Circuit. Any referral would also be

futile because the allegations have been thoroughly investigated, including by the Inspector Gen-

eral and the DOJ Public Integrity section, and the statute of limitations has passed to prosecute any

allegations related to the government attorneys’ conduct. Thus, the court will deny Mr. Dobyns’s

motion for referral.

I. Background

A. Events leading up to Mr. Dobyns’s suit

Mr. Dobyns began his career as a special agent with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Fire-

arms, and Explosives (ATF) in 1987. ECF No. 293 at 4. 2 From early 2001 to July 2003, as part of

2 ECF No. 293 is the public version of the court’s opinion deciding the case after trial. Where possible, the court cites public, redacted versions throughout this opinion. Also, the court will

2 an ATF operation, Mr. Dobyns posed as an undercover member of the Hells Angels Motorcycle

Club. Id. The undercover operation was successful and ended with raids and 36 arrests. Id. During

the trial of some of those who were arrested, Mr. Dobyns’s identity was disclosed in court. Id.

Between 2003 and 2007, Mr. Dobyns and his family received threats from members of the Hells

Angels and others who were arrested as part of Mr. Dobyns’s undercover work. Id. at 5. ATF

investigated and found credible threats against Mr. Dobyns and his family. Id. ATF relocated Mr.

Dobyns and his family. Id. at 5-6.

In 2006, Mr. Dobyns filed a grievance, alleging that ATF insufficiently investigated the

threats and that, after relocating him, ATF did not provide enough security, putting him at risk in

the new location. ECF No. 293 at 6-7. In late 2006, the ATF deputy director denied Mr. Dobyns’s

grievance claim. Id. at 7. In early 2007, ATF conducted an updated threat assessment for Mr.

Dobyns and his family, concluded that there were “no current indicators of a credible threat,” and

designated the threat level for Mr. Dobyns as “medium.” Id. at 7-8.

In September 2007, Mr. Dobyns entered into a settlement agreement with ATF to resolve

his employment complaints. ECF No. 293 at 8-9. The settlement agreement “fully resolve[d] and

settle[d] any and all issues and disputes arising out of Mr. Dobyns’s employment with ATF, in-

cluding, but not limited to the Agency Grievance filed by [Mr. Dobyns], [Mr. Dobyns’s] com-

plaints to the Office of Special Counsel, and his complaints to the Department of Justice’s Office

of Inspector General.” ECF No. 25-1 at 1. ATF agreed to “comply with all laws regarding or

otherwise affecting [Mr. Dobyns’s] employment by the agency.” Id. at 3-4. ATF also agreed to

summarize the findings of fact that are relevant to this decision, except where those findings were called into question by later reversals on appeal.

3 reassign Mr. Dobyns to a position in Tucson, Arizona, to review the threat assessment and to de-

termine whether the threat level required relocating him or providing other security measures. Id.

at 1-4. Mr. Dobyns agreed that he would “comply with Agency requirements” and would “seek

permission for any outside employment, including speaking, writing, teaching or consulting.” Id.

at 2. ATF agreed that it would “handle such requests in a manner consistent with Agency practice

and procedure.” Id. Mr. Dobyns was directed to “notify the Director, Department of Justice Equal

Employment Opportunity Staff, Justice Management Division, in writing” if he believed ATF had

violated the agreement. Id. at 4.

Shortly after executing the settlement agreement, ATF transferred Mr. Dobyns to a branch

in Tucson, Arizona. ECF No. 293 at 10. Mr. Dobyns sought to renew some expiring covert vehicle

registrations. Id. ATF decided not to renew Mr. Dobyns’s covert registrations, withdrew his covert

identifications, and ordered that he return the documents that had been issued to him and his fam-

ily. Id. at 10-11. Mr. Dobyns returned those documents by mid-2008. Id. at 11.

Later in 2008, Mr. Dobyns’s house was burned down. ECF No. 293 at 11-20. Local ATF

agents investigated the burning as arson. Id. During the investigation, ATF agents interviewed Mr.

Dobyns and recorded those conversations without his knowledge and without authorization. Id. at

18. A later internal investigation determined that ATF’s response to the arson was inadequate and

that certain ATF personnel had targeted Mr. Dobyns as a suspect despite his being cleared by other

evidence. Id. at 22-23. The report concluded that the improper targeting of Mr. Dobyns led to

ATF’s ignoring credible suspects and caused delays in the investigation. The report recommended

that two ATF agents be fired for their involvement. Id.

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