Hendrickson v. Department of Veterans Affairs

180 F. App'x 148
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedMarch 13, 2006
Docket2005-3262
StatusUnpublished

This text of 180 F. App'x 148 (Hendrickson v. Department of Veterans Affairs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hendrickson v. Department of Veterans Affairs, 180 F. App'x 148 (Fed. Cir. 2006).

Opinion

DECISION

PER CURIAM.

Kevin T. Hendrickson petitions for review of a decision of the Merit Systems Protection Board, Docket No. NY-075Affirmed2-04-0054-I-l. The Board upheld his removal from his position with the Department of Veterans Affairs (“VA”). We affirm.

BACKGROUND

In March 2003, Mr. Hendrickson, who worked as a Veterans Service Representative for the VA, was pursuing his own claim for benefits relating to a service-connected injury. In connection with that claim, he submitted a VA Form 9 to the Newark, New Jersey, Veterans Affairs Regional Office in support of his claim for retroactive benefits and an increase in his compensation level. Included with his submission were two medical statements, which were dated April 29, 2002, and were purportedly written by Dr. Boaz Rabin.

On June 10, 2003, at a hearing on his request for benefits, Mr. Hendrickson was questioned by Kenneth White, a decision review officer, regarding the authenticity of the two medical statements. Mr. White had observed that the two statements did not appear normal because they were both unsigned and were not on a preprinted form, letterhead, or memorandum. Mr. Hendrickson stated under oath that he had obtained the two statements from Dr. Rabin. Mr. Hendrickson testified that “the statements from Dr. Rabine [sic], like I said, I presented evidence to him, I requested that he provide an opinion, and he subsequently provided the opinion.” Mr. Hendrickson also testified that “I requested him to review the records, and that’s what I got back from him. I can have it signed by him, have him review it once again.... ”

Subsequently, during one of Dr. Rabin’s weekly visits to the New York Regional Office, Mr. Hendrickson approached him and asked him to sign the two medical statements. Dr. Rabin reviewed the statements and observed that they were not in his usual format. Dr. Rabin then stated that he had not authored the two statements, and he accused Mr. Hendrickson of writing them himself. Mr. Hendrickson nonetheless persisted in urging Dr. Rabin to sign the statements. When Dr. Rabin refused, Mr. Hendrickson apologized for the confusion and left. Mr. Hendrickson subsequently submitted a request to the VA that the two statements be withdrawn *150 from consideration. 1

On July 1, 2003, Special Agent Greg McLaughlin of the Office of Inspector General questioned Mr. Hendrickson about the two medical statements. Mr. Hendrickson explained that he did not know where he had obtained the statements and that he had found them amongst paperwork in his home. He denied writing the statements himself. He added that he might have received the statements from his service organization representative.

On October 26, 2003, the VA removed Mr. Hendrickson from his position as a Veteran Service Representative. The removal action was based on four charges: (1) presenting false documents in order to defraud the VA in regard to a personal claim for benefits; (2) giving false testimony under oath in order to defraud the VA in regard to a personal claim for benefits; (3) attempting to deceive a VA official into signing fraudulent documents as his own work product; and (4) making false statements in connection with an official investigation.

Mr. Hendrickson appealed the removal action to the Board. The administrative judge who was assigned to the appeal sustained the first three charges and upheld the agency’s penalty of removal. 2 The administrative judge determined that there was a sufficient nexus between Mr. Hendrickson’s misconduct and the efficiency of the service and concluded that the penalty of removal was reasonable. The administrative judge also rejected Mr. Hendrickson’s affirmative defenses, including discrimination against a veteran, disability discrimination, retaliation for having filed equal employment opportunity complaints, reprisal for whistleblowing activity, reprisal for activity as a union shop steward and EEO representative, as well as a claim of harmful procedural error.

Mr. Hendrickson’s request for review by the full Board was denied. He now petitions this court for review of the Board’s decision.

DISCUSSION

To sustain a charge of submitting false information, the agency must show by a preponderance of evidence “that the employee knowingly supplied wrong information, and that he did so with the intention of defrauding the agency.” Naekel v. Dep’t of Transp., 782 F.2d 975, 977 (Fed. Cir.1986). In response to the charge of presenting false documents in order to defraud the VA in connection with a personal claim for benefits, Mr. Hendrickson contends that he was not aware that the two medical statements were false at the time he submitted them to the VA. He therefore argues that the Board erred in finding that he intended to defraud the agency.

The administrative judge found that circumstantial evidence adequately supported *151 the agency’s conclusion that Mr. Hendrickson intended to defraud the agency. In particular, the administrative judge noted that Mr. Hendrickson “has held different positions on the unsigned statements at different times in the record.” For example, in the hearing before Mr. White, Mr. Hendrickson testified, without qualification, that the two statements had been provided by Dr. Rabin. Later, in his interview with Special Agent McLaughlin, Mr. Hendrickson claimed that he had found the two statements in paperwork at his home. Mr. Hendrickson also suggested that he may have received the documents from his service representative. Finally, at his hearing before the administrative judge, Mr. Hendrickson stated that he could not recall where he acquired the documents.

The administrative judge also found that Mr. Hendrickson “failed to provide a reasonable and satisfactory explanation for the existence of the two unsigned, typed statements.” That is, Mr. Hendrickson has not come forward with any plausible scenario that could lead to his coming into possession of the two medical statements without being aware of their origin and who authored them. For instance, if the statements had indeed been written by the service representative, it seems implausible that the service representative would have surreptitiously placed them in Mr. Hendrickson’s home without notifying Mr. Hendrickson. Consequently, the administrative judge did not err in sustaining this first charge.

Mr. Hendrickson’s response to the second charge of giving false testimony under oath in order to defraud the VA in regard to a personal claim for benefits is similarly unavailing. Mr. Hendrickson again argues that the Board erred in finding that he intended to defraud the agency. He contends that he was not aware that his testimony before Mr. White was false because he “remembered and actually met with” Dr. Rabin on April 29, 2002. In support, Mr. Hendrickson points to Dr. Rabin’s handwritten and signed medical opinion of that date.

Mr. Hendrickson’s possession of a signed, handwritten statement by Dr. Rabin tends to undermine, not support, his assertion that he justifiably believed Dr. Rabin had authored the other two statements.

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