United States Department of State v. Picur

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedOctober 16, 2024
DocketCivil Action No. 2018-0041
StatusPublished

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

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United States Department of State v. Picur, (D.D.C. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF STATE, et al., Case No. 1:18-cv-00041 (JMC) Plaintiffs,

v.

GREGORY PICUR,

Defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Defendant Gregory Picur is a former Foreign Service criminal investigator for the Office

of Inspector General of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID OIG). 1

For more than a decade, Picur and Plaintiffs—the United States Department of State (the

Department) and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID)—have been

embroiled in a dispute over the Department’s calculation of Picur’s retirement annuity. This is the

Parties’ second time before this Court. The Court last saw them in Picur v. Kerry (Picur I), 128 F.

Supp. 3d 302 (D.D.C. 2015), where it vacated the Foreign Service Grievance Board (FSGB)’s

decision limiting Picur’s retirement annuity and remanded the case for further consideration. The

dispute returns to this Court on Plaintiffs’ challenge to a subsequent FSGB decision.

Plaintiffs ask this Court to review the FSGB’s decision and set it aside as arbitrary,

capricious, and not in accordance with law under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA),

1 Unless otherwise indicated, the formatting of quoted materials has been modified throughout this opinion, for example, by omitting internal quotation marks and citations, and by incorporating emphases, changes to capitalization, and other bracketed alterations therein. All pincites to documents filed on the docket are to the automatically generated ECF Page ID number that appears at the top of each page.

1 5 U.S.C. §§ 701–706. They argue that the FSGB misinterpreted the relevant retirement annuity

statute, 22 U.S.C. § 4046, and inflated Picur’s annuity in two respects. First, Plaintiffs argue, the

FSGB’s decision applied an erroneously high multiplier to the income Picur received during his

USAID OIG employment when calculating Picur’s annuity payments. Second, Plaintiffs contend

that the income to which that multiplier was applied was itself too high because it included

additional income that Picur received beyond his base salary, in violation of statutory

requirements. The Court agrees with Plaintiffs on both fronts and thus GRANTS Plaintiffs’ cross-

motion for summary judgment, VACATES the challenged FSGB decision, and REMANDS the

matter for further consideration consistent with this opinion. Picur’s motion for summary judgment

is accordingly DENIED.

I. BACKGROUND

Gregory Picur is a retiree with an extensive career in the federal government. This case

turns on the particular retirement systems in which Picur was enrolled during his 25-year tenure

as a federal employee and the retirement annuity benefit to which he is entitled by statute as a

result. To understand Picur’s predicament requires disentangling four distinct—though, at times

over the decades, interrelated—retirement systems available to employees like Picur.

First is the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS). The CSRS, created in 1920, provides

a defined-benefit retirement compensation scheme for certain federal employees. U.S. Office of

Personnel Management, CSRS Information, https://perma.cc/P4FU-54DD. The CSRS’s retirement

annuity plan provides payments in retirement, and requires employee contributions during their

working years, pursuant to the provisions of 5 U.S.C. §§ 8301 et seq. In November of 1983, Picur

entered federal employment as an accounting clerk with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and

enrolled in the CSRS. ECF 8-19 at 26.

2 In 1986, Congress established a new retirement system, the Federal Employees’ Retirement

System (FERS), for the classes of employees originally covered by the CSRS. See Federal

Employees’ Retirement System Act of 1986, Pub. L. 99-335, 100 Stat. 514. FERS’s retirement

benefits are governed by the provisions of 5 U.S.C. §§ 8401 et seq. One of the central purposes of

the legislation was to better integrate federal retirees’ benefits with the Social Security system,

since federal retirees had originally been excluded from Social Security benefits. See Wilmer L.

Kerns, Federal Employees’ Retirement System Act of 1986, 49 Soc. Sec. Bulletin Vol. 11, at 6

(1986). Whereas the CSRS provided one main retirement benefit, the retirement annuity, FERS

provided for three complementary benefits: Social Security benefits, a supplemental annuity

similar to the CSRS’s, and a thrift savings plan (a tax-deferred, matched savings vehicle). Id. In

short, although the CSRS and FERS required comparable employee contributions and sought to

provide broadly comparable benefits, see id., they differed in meaningful ways. For example, the

size of the typical annuity payment under the CSRS is calculated as 1.5% to 2% of the employee’s

average annual base pay multiplied by the number of years of federal service. See 5 U.S.C.

§ 8339(a). By contrast, payments under the FERS basic annuity begin at 1% of the employee’s

average annual pay multiplied by the total years of service—a significantly lower baseline

payment. See 5 U.S.C. § 8415(a).

Though FERS went into effect on January 1, 1987, it generally applied to employees who

began a covered federal service position on January 1, 1984, or later. ECF 8-19 at 26. Certain

employees who entered federal service prior to January 1, 1984—and were enrolled in the old

CSRS system—could elect to stay enrolled in the CSRS, with its distinct retirement benefit and

contribution provisions, rather than switching to FERS. Id.; see Federal Employees’ Retirement

System Act of 1986 § 301, 100 Stat. 599.

3 On July 8, 1984, Picur was appointed to a law enforcement position within the IRS, where

he continued to be covered by the CSRS. ECF 8-19 at 27. Because he began his IRS employment

prior to January 1, 1984, he had the right under the 1986 Act to remain in the CSRS rather than

switch to FERS. He elected to remain in the CSRS. Id. He continued in an IRS law-enforcement

role for ten years and participated in CSRS throughout that period. Id. Then, in August 1994, Picur

left the IRS and joined the USAID OIG as a Civil Service criminal investigator. Id. In that role,

too, he continued to be covered under the CSRS. Id. In 1998, however, Picur converted to the

Foreign Service and was appointed to a Foreign Service criminal investigator position within

USAID OIG. Id. When Picur joined the Foreign Service, his retirement was converted from the

CSRS to its Foreign Service equivalent, the Foreign Service Retirement and Disability System

(FSRDS)—the third federal retirement benefit system at issue here. Id.

The FSRDS, established in the Foreign Service Act of 1980, Pub. L. 96-465, 94 Stat. 2071,

provided broadly similar retirement annuity benefits and contribution requirements to the CSRS,

but for Foreign Service employees. The FSRDS’s features are governed by the distinct statutory

provisions of 22 U.S.C.

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