Richard Reiter v. Troy Meink

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 17, 2026
Docket25-5410
StatusUnpublished

This text of Richard Reiter v. Troy Meink (Richard Reiter v. Troy Meink) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richard Reiter v. Troy Meink, (6th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 26a0177n.06

Case No. 25-5410

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Apr 17, 2026 KELLY L. STEPHENS, Clerk

RICHARD B. REITER, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE Plaintiff - Appellant, ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE MIDDLE v. ) DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE ) ) DR. TROY E. MEINK, Secretary of the Air ) OPINION Force ) Defendant - Appellee. )

Before: CLAY, McKEAGUE, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.

McKEAGUE, Circuit Judge. Richard B. Reiter filed this lawsuit against the Secretary of

the United States Air Force1 after he was denied a promotion. Reiter claims the Air Force violated

the Administrative Procedure Act when it rejected his attempts to correct a record in his personnel

file, and then relied on this allegedly erroneous record to deny his promotion. The district court

ruled for the Secretary. Seeing no error, we AFFIRM.

1 Reiter originally filed this suit against Frank Kendall III in his official capacity as the Secretary of the Air Force. Both parties agree that Dr. Troy E. Meink, the current Secretary of the Air Force, is now the proper defendant. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 25(d). No. 25-5410, Reiter v. Meink

I. BACKGROUND

Reiter served in the Air Force from December 27, 1993, to August 31, 1998. He then joined

the Air Force Reserves. In 2016, while serving as a Judge Advocate within the Air Force Judge

Advocate General’s Corps, Reiter was eligible for a potential promotion.

Per the Air Force’s promotion process, Lieutenant General Stayce Harris served as Reiter’s

Senior Rater. In that capacity, Harris filled out a Promotion Recommendation Form

(“Recommendation Form”) for Reiter and submitted it to the Air Force Reserve Line and Nonline

Colonel Promotion Selection Board (“Promotion Board”), the entity that would approve or reject

Reiter’s promotion.

Air Force regulations require a Senior Rater to provide the ratee a copy of the submitted

Recommendation Form before the Promotion Board makes a decision. So when Reiter received a

Recommendation Form in the mail (that bore what appeared to be Harris’s signature) ranking him

as the top candidate for promotion, he was expecting to hear good news. Instead, he soon learned

that he was not selected for the promotion. He also learned that the Recommendation Form

submitted to the Promotion Board was different than the one he received in the mail—it listed

Reiter as the second choice for promotion rather than the first.

A. First Attempt To Correct Recommendation Form

Reiter went to the Air Force Board for Correction of Military Records (“Correction Board”)

for a remedy. He requested the Air Force convene a Special Selection Board to reconsider his

candidacy using the version of the Recommendation Form that he received (which listed him as

the top candidate for promotion) rather than the version the Promotion Board received (which

listed him as the second choice). The Correction Board sought an advisory opinion from the Air

Reserve Personnel Center on how to proceed.

The advisory opinion recommended denying Reiter’s request. The Promotion Board only received one version of the Recommendation Form—the version that listed Reiter as the second

2 No. 25-5410, Reiter v. Meink

choice. And Reiter did not provide any documentation establishing that the Recommendation Form

he received in the mail was the correct version. The Correction Board forwarded Reiter the

advisory opinion and gave him an opportunity to respond.

Reiter took issue with the advisory opinion in two ways. In a letter to the Correction Board,

Reiter first argued that he should not have to shoulder the burden of providing evidence that the

Recommendation Form his Senior Rater submitted was incorrect. To Reiter, the fact that he

received a copy of a Promotion Form—with what appeared to be his Senior Rater’s signature—

should be sufficient to prove its validity. Second, Reiter argued that regardless of which

Recommendation Form was correct, he was never provided a copy of the version that the

Promotion Board actually considered—a violation of the Air Force’s regulations that provide the

candidate an opportunity to review the Promotion Form and address any perceived errors. See AFI

36-2504 §§ 1.6, 1.7 (Jan. 9, 2003), amended by AFI 36-2504 (Aug. 4, 2023).2

The Correction Board denied Reiter’s request and adopted the advisory opinion’s reasoning

and recommendation. The Air Force’s regulations instruct the Promotion Board to consider the

Recommendation Form submitted by the Senior Rater, id.; see also Mar. 19, 2018 Corr. Bd. Op.,

R.19-1 at PageID 129 (explaining that the Promotion Board only accepts Recommendation Forms

from Senior Raters), and Reiter did not provide evidence that Harris submitted the wrong version. However, the Correction Board gave Reiter an avenue for further reconsideration: “[s]hould

[Reiter] provide documentation from his senior rater stating the incorrect [Recommendation Form]

was submitted, [the Correction Board] may be willing to reconsider his request.” Mar. 19, 2018

Corr. Bd. Op., R.19-1 at PageID 130.

2 This citation refers to the Air Force regulations in effect at the time of Reiter’s attempted promotion. The provisions detailing the process by which a Senior Rater submits a Recommendation Form have moved to sections 2.7 and 2.8 of the regulations. See AFI 36-2504 (Aug. 4, 2023).

3 No. 25-5410, Reiter v. Meink

B. Second Attempt To Correct Recommendation Form

Reiter took the Correction Board’s opinion to heart and filed another request for a Special

Selection Board to reconsider his promotion, this time attaching multiple exhibits. One exhibit

showed email exchanges between Air Force personnel. In one of the email exchanges, Colonel

Jeffrey Van Dootingh—who worked closely with Reiter—reached out to Harris on Reiter’s behalf.

Van Dootingh sent Harris the conflicting Recommendation Forms and sought clarification as to

which version she submitted to the Promotion Board. In response, Harris explained that she “was

able to resolve right away that the correct [Recommendation Form] for [Reiter]” listed him as the

second choice. Email Exchange, R.19-1 at PageID 151. Looking through her own files, Harris

located the signed Recommendation Form listing Reiter as the second choice for promotion and

the signed Recommendation Form listing a different candidate as her first choice. Harris also stated

that she “ha[d] no idea how [Reiter] received what he shares is my signature on the

[Recommendation Form] he states he received in the mail . . . distressing.” Id. (ellipses in original,

not used for an omission). Reiter argued that this email exchange did not prove which version of

the Recommendation Form was correct, suggesting that Harris was merely communicating her

inability to locate certain files without commenting on the validity of the version Reiter received.

He also attached affidavits from Van Dootingh and Colonel Douglas Strawbridge (who also worked closely with Reiter), asserting that these supervisors “corroborated” his version of the

Recommendation Form “as authentic.” Reiter reiterated his previous arguments, claiming he was

entitled to either immediate promotion or a Special Selection Board that should reconsider his

candidacy using the version of the Recommendation Form he received.

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