Salvatore Giove v. Department of Transportation

230 F.3d 1333, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 27101, 2000 WL 1618319
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedOctober 31, 2000
Docket99-3159
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 230 F.3d 1333 (Salvatore Giove v. Department of Transportation) 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
Salvatore Giove v. Department of Transportation, 230 F.3d 1333, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 27101, 2000 WL 1618319 (Fed. Cir. 2000).

Opinion

LINN, Circuit Judge.

Salvatore Giove seeks review of an arbitrator’s decision in grievance number NM-98-GJT-02, denying Giove’s grievance and *1336 thereby upholding his removal from the Federal Aviation Administration (“FAA”), an agency of the Department of Transportation (“DOT”). Because the arbitrator’s decision is in accordance with law and supported by substantial evidence, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

Giove began working as an air traffic controller with the FAA in 1986. In October 1992, while Giove was not on duty, a plane crash occurred in the area served by the Grand Junction, Colorado control tower where he worked. Giove suspected that the controllers might have failed to advise the pilot of the contents of a Notice to Airmen (“NOTAM”) posted at one of the consoles in the tower, and that such a failure might have had something to do with the plane crash. Giove assumed that the NOTAM was still in effect. A NO-TAM is a published notice containing information for a specified airport and any pilot flying to that airport is expected to be familiar with the NOTAM.

The record reveals, and the arbitrator found, that this particular NOTAM informed pilots not to fix their position with their distance measuring equipment as they approached the Grand Junction airport. However, Giove admits that he did not know exactly what this NOTAM meant. To rectify his ignorance, Giove alleges that within one to three months after the crash he asked several of his coworkers and his manager what the NO-TAM meant but that they were unable to tell him; however, the arbitrator did not believe that Giove sought this input from others. Giove also alleges that, several days after asking his manager what the NOTAM meant, he saw his manager remove the NOTAM. The arbitrator made no finding regarding this assertion by Giove, but noted that Giove acknowledged that he did not know what his manager did with the NOTAM thereafter. The record also reveals that the manager regularly removed NOTAMs that were out of date.

After the alleged removal of the NO-TAM but still within the one to three month period after the crash, Giove called Cooling & Herbers, a law firm involved in the litigation over the plane crash, and anonymously informed them of the NO-TAM and his understanding of its meaning. Giove followed his phone call up by typing some of the information from the NOTAM and mailing that extraction, along with an actual copy of the NOTAM, to Cooling & Herbers. He also drafted and mailed a letter explaining his understanding of the NOTAM and the NOTAM’s origin. All of Giove’s contact with Cooling & Herbers occurred within one to three months of the crash.

Approximately four and one-half years after the crash, a trial court determined that the crash had been caused by pilot error. After hearing about the trial’s outcome, Giove began making inquiries. In or around May 1997, Giove, again acting anonymously, called Alpine Air, which is the manufacturer of the plane, and Cooling & Herbers, and discovered that neither of them were still involved in the litigation. The record reveals, and the arbitrator found, that in his phone call to Alpine Air, Giove accused the FAA of destroying the NOTAM in an effort to conceal it. Around the same time, Giove anonymously called Magana, Cathcart & McCarthy, the plaintiffs law firm, and informed it of the NO-TAM. The record also shows that Cooling & Herbers sent to Magana, Cathcart & McCarthy the information and documents it had received from Giove in 1992-93.

After receiving this information, Maga-na, Cathcart & McCarthy filed a motion for a new trial. As a result of its further discovery, however, it determined that the NOTAM had been canceled prior to the accident, that the NOTAM was not a relevant factor in the accident, and that the FAA had not improperly destroyed information.

Magana, Cathcart & McCarthy’s motion for a new trial alerted the FAA to the evidence that Giove had anonymously supplied. As a result, the FAA began its own inquiry to determine the accuracy of the *1337 allegations. The record shows that the purposes of the inquiry included: (1) determining whether the NOTAM had in fact been posted at the tower and, if so, whether it was valid and in effect; (2) determining if the NOTAM had been removed or destroyed after the accident; and (3) determining who had provided the documents to Cooling & Herbers.

As these purposes reveal, the FAA’s investigation at this time was at a preliminary stage. Although the disclosed information focused attention on the tower, the FAA was initially concerned with verifying the accuracy of that information. The arbitrator, characterizing the FAA’s position, stated that the investigation was concerned with “identifying the documents and truth around the statements made regarding the ATC actions on the day of the crash.”

The FAA assigned Special Agent Roberts to perform the inquiry, which involved, among other things, interviewing the controllers at the Grand Junction facility. On July 17, 1997, Special Agent Roberts interviewed Giove without advising him of any right to union representation. At that interview, Giove denied that he was the source of the anonymously sent information. The arbitrator found, and Giove does not deny, that the FAA had no individualized suspicion at the time of the interview that Giove was the source of the disclosures.

In addition to being interviewed by Special Agent Roberts, Giove and the other controllers were also deposed by Magana, Cathcai't & McCarthy as part of the discovery related to the motion for a new trial. During Giove’s deposition, in November 1997, Giove told the truth about his disclosures, admitting that he had anonymously sent the documents to Cooling & Herbers. All of the controllers, including Giove, had been informed of their right to have an attorney represent them during their depositions, and to have a union representative assist them in preparing for their depositions. Although Giove admits that he consulted two attorneys prior to the deposition, he chose not to be represented during the deposition.

In March 1998, the manager of the Grand Junction tower received a copy of Giove’s deposition. The manager arranged a meeting with Giove to discuss the matter and to get Giove’s side of the story. The manager told Giove that Giove was entitled to union representation or a lawyer at the meeting, but Giove declined both options. At the meeting, Giove did not deny lying during the interview conducted by Special Agent Roberts on July 17.

In August 1998, the FAA proposed removing Giove based on his actions in connection with the crash. The record reveals that the FAA provided Giove with several opportunities to respond to the FAA’s proposal to remove him. Giove availed himself of these opportunities but he was, nevertheless, removed in September 1998. The removal was based on: (1) intentional falsification/concealment of a material fact in lying to Special Agent Roberts; (2) creating a disturbance to FAA personnel and operations by disclosing the information to Cooling & Herbers, Alpine Air, and Magana, Cathcart &

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Bluebook (online)
230 F.3d 1333, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 27101, 2000 WL 1618319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salvatore-giove-v-department-of-transportation-cafc-2000.