John G. Gowan v. United States Department of the Air Force

148 F.3d 1182, 1998 Colo. J. C.A.R. 3945, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 16347, 1998 WL 399859
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJuly 17, 1998
Docket96-2134
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 148 F.3d 1182 (John G. Gowan v. United States Department of the Air Force) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John G. Gowan v. United States Department of the Air Force, 148 F.3d 1182, 1998 Colo. J. C.A.R. 3945, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 16347, 1998 WL 399859 (10th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

EBEL, Circuit Judge.

Retired Air Force Major John Gowan appeals the district court’s judgment against him in this Privacy Act suit. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Major John Gowan (“Major Gowan”) was an Air Force officer whose area of expertise was high-energy laser optical materials and technology. One of his duties was to keep current on technological improvements that may have military value. In 1982, Major Gowan reported to the Air Force a breakthrough improvement in the detection of structural flaws in materials — a method-known as electronic speckle pattern interferometry (“ESPI”) — which enabled the scanning of a component for. defects without having- to destroy the test subject. Major Gowan, however, was unable to interest the Air Force in evaluating ESPI for possible future use.

In 1986, while stationed at Rutland Air Force Base in New Meidco, Major Gowan requested the .privilege of off-duty employment with Applied Optical Systems, Inc. (“AOS”), a New Mexico corporation formed to research and market optical-related technologies, including ESPI. His. request was approved by Major Randall Kehl (“Major Kehl”), Deputy Staff Judge Advocate at the Kirtland Air Force Base legal office. Later in the year, following a transfer to a different department, Major Gowan. made á second request for off-duty employment with AOS. This request was approved by Major Kehl and by Major Gowan’s squadron commander, Lt. Colonel Richard Steele '(“Lt. Colonel Steele”).

Through a subsidiary AOS marketed the RETRA 1000, a device that employs ESPI technology. Eventually the Air Force expressed interest in purchasing the RETRA 1000. Major Gowan was concerned about possible - conflicts of interest. At Major Kehl’s suggestion, Major Gowan disclaimed any direct or indirect financial benefit accruing from the Air Force’s purchase of the RETRA 1000 from AOS.

*1186 Major Kehl still felt there might be a potential ethics problem. In the summer of 1987, he instigated a Kirtland Air Force Base Office of Special Investigations (“Kirtland OSI”) inquiry of Major Gowan. The Kirt-land OSI investigated Major Gowan's connections with AOS, but its report indicated no violations of law or regulations. Major Kehl, however, believed additional inquiry was necessary. He kept personal notes and legal research in a file marked “Ethics” in his desk drawer. The file did not distinguish anyone by name or other personal identifier. He also asked military attorney Major Mark Ruppert (“Major Ruppert”) to investigate Major Gowan. Major Ruppert reviewed Major Kehl’s Ethics file and the Kirtland OSI report, investigated AOS and ESPI technology, and, with the assistance of military attorney William Gampel (“Gampel”), interviewed Major Gowan’s business partner Daniel Ron-deau, also a member of the Air Force. He did not interview Major Gowan.

Major Ruppert found reason to believe Major Gowan had violated Air Force regulations regarding standards of conduct and recommended that charges be preferred against him. Gampel set up an attorney working file, kept neither by Major Gowan’s name nor his social security number, with the papers collected by Majors Kehl and Rup-pert. Lt. Colonel Steele signed the preferral of charges in January, 1988.

Major Gowan had been scheduled to retire from the Air Force on February 29,1988, but the legal proceedings delayed his retirement. As a result of the delay, the corporation which had funded AOS’s products pulled out of the agreement it had concluded with AOS. In addition, the charges became a topic of conversation at Kirtland Air Force Base. Colonel John P. Amor (“Colonel Amor”), Major Gowan’s commanding officer, disclosed the preferral of charges against Major Gow-an to certain of his staff, as well as possibly other Air Force personnel, during a telephone conference.

Knowledge of the charges also spread further than among Air Force personnel. At Kirtland, Major Gowan had befriended Dr. Thomas Hill, who was involved in litigation against the Air Force. Major Gowan became involved with Hill’s case. Just before charges were preferred against him, Major Gowan complained to the Wyoming Bar that David Hickman (“Hickman”), one of the Air Force’s attorneys in the Hill case, had tampered with a signature on a deposition. As part of the response to Major Gowan’s complaint against Hickman, the Air Force’s second attorney, George Patrick Elder (“Elder”), provided a copy of Major Gowan’s charge sheet to the Wyoming Bar to provide context in rebutting Major Gowan’s charges. Major Gowan, not knowing that Elder had released the charge sheet, also informed the bar of the charges against him.

After Major Gowan’s civilian counsel pointed out that Major Gowan had not received improper payments from AOS and that ESPI technology had been publicly available for over a decade, Lt. Colonel Brower and Gam-pel recommended withdrawing the charges. Major Kehl and Lt. Colonel Steele disagreed, but the charges were withdrawn on March 22, 1988, and Major Gowan was cleared for retirement. Because Lt. Colonel Steele was dissatisfied with the withdrawal of charges, however, he called an anonymous fraud, waste, and abuse hotline run by the Air Force Systems Command Inspector General (“AFSCIG”) and reported Major Gowan’s alleged improprieties. The call resulted in an inquiry to the Air Force Military Airlift Command Judge Advocate (“MACJA”), who in turn consulted Lt. Colonel Brower. Lt. Colonel Brower consulted the attorney working file and responded to MACJA, explaining the circumstances surrounding the preferral and withdrawal of charges against Major Gowan (“Brower letter”). AFSCIG concluded that the Steele complaint did not warrant investigation.

In 1987, 1988, and 1989, Major Gowan made a number of Privacy Act and Freedom of Information Act requests and sought amendment of many of the documents associated with the preferral proceeding. Before 1990, however, the Air Force did not permit amendment or the inclusion of statements of disagreement when the objectionable material was an opinion or subjective belief. The only entity that could change subjective material was the Air Force Board for the Cor *1187 rection of Military Records (“AFBCMR”). Air' Force regulations provide no appeal from an AFBCMR decision and state that the Privacy Act provides no remedy. Air Force policy was changed in 1990 to allow-the inclusion of statements of disagreement.

Two of' the documents Major Gowan sought to amend resulted from his seeking the assistance of members of the United States Congress. While the charges against him were pending, Major Gowan had asked Senator Sam Nunn for assistance. Nunn sent Major Gowan’s letter to the Office of the Legislative Liaison. That office’s response, authored by a Colonel Nameth, was based upon the letter Brower had written in response to MACJA’s inquiry regarding the Steele complaint (“Nameth letter”). Major Gowan requestéd, the Air Force amend the Nameth letter. Two statements ' were amended and the remainder of Major Gow-an’s request was denihd. Major Gowaii’s request'to include a statement of disagreement was deniéd as well. Major Gowan also complained to Senator Jeff Bingaman about the Air Force’s treatment of him. Senator Bingaman sent that letter to the Air Force Legislative Liaison office and was responded to by a Colonel Alison (“Alison letter”). Major Gowan requested the Air Force amend the Alison letter.

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Bluebook (online)
148 F.3d 1182, 1998 Colo. J. C.A.R. 3945, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 16347, 1998 WL 399859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-g-gowan-v-united-states-department-of-the-air-force-ca10-1998.