Van Irion v. Travis McDonough, Leann Wilson, Doe 1, and Tennessee Board of Professional Responsibility

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 21, 2026
Docket3:25-cv-00001
StatusUnknown

This text of Van Irion v. Travis McDonough, Leann Wilson, Doe 1, and Tennessee Board of Professional Responsibility (Van Irion v. Travis McDonough, Leann Wilson, Doe 1, and Tennessee Board of Professional Responsibility) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Irion v. Travis McDonough, Leann Wilson, Doe 1, and Tennessee Board of Professional Responsibility, (M.D. Tenn. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE NASHVILLE DIVISION

VAN IRION, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Case No. 3:25-cv-00001 ) Judge Aleta A. Trauger TRAVIS MCDONOUGH, LEANN ) WILSON, DOE 1, and ) TENNESSEE BOARD OF ) PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM In his Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”), the operative pleading, plaintiff Van Irion seeks “declaratory relief, injunctive relief, compensatory damages, and punitive damages” against defendants Travis McDonough, Chief Judge for the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee (“EDTN”), LeAnna Wilson (named in the SAC as “Leann”), Clerk of Court of the EDTN, “Doe 1,” and the Tennessee Board of Professional Responsibility (“TBPR”). Now before the court are two separate Motions to Dismiss filed respectively by the TBPR (Doc. No. 47) and by McDonough and Wilson (Doc. No. 57). For the reasons set forth herein, both motions will be granted, and the remaining claims will be dismissed without prejudice. I. BACKGROUND The original Complaint and First Amended Complaint named as defendants the EDTN and the TBPR. (Doc. Nos. 1, 22.) Following dismissal of the EDTN on the grounds of sovereign immunity (Doc. Nos. 38, 39), Irion sought and was granted leave to amend his pleading again (Doc. Nos. 44, 45). The SAC, now the operative pleading, removed the EDTN as a defendant, maintained the claim against the TBPR, and added a claim against McDonough, Wilson, and “Doe 1,” the latter of whom has never been identified or served. According to the SAC, Irion is an attorney licensed in Tennessee who resides in Knox County, in the federal Eastern District of Tennessee. (SAC ¶ 1.) He has been admitted to practice

law before the EDTN and this court, among others. (Id. ¶¶ 3–5.) The putative basis for this lawsuit is an Order to Show Cause (“OSC”) issued by Judge McDonough on August 8, 2024, initiating disciplinary proceedings against Irion in the EDTN. Show Cause Order, In re: Irion, No 1:24-dm-00007-TRM-CHS (E.D. Tenn. Aug. 8, 2024), ECF No. 1. (See SAC ¶ 15; see also Doc. No. 64-2.) Irion “believes that said disciplinary matter was filed by Judge McDonough in retaliation against Irion.” (SAC ¶ 15.) In support of this “belief,” the plaintiff alleges that McDonough, assisted by Wilson and Doe 1, illegally altered the court’s record. He knows an alteration occurred because Document No. 1 of the disciplinary matter in the EDTN, Case No. 1:24-dm-007, as shown by the footer automatically applied by the court’s electronic filing system, begins on “PageID#9,” meaning that “Page ID#s 1–8 are completely

missing.” (SAC ¶ 80.) Irion complains that neither he nor his attorney has ever seen the “first version of the OSC that initiated his disciplinary proceeding,” “can never know what that initial disciplinary document said,” and “will never know why TNED was desperate not to allow Irion to see that first version of the initiating OSC document.” (Id. ¶ 82.) His belief that the document was substituted is substantiated by a notation on the docket stating, “Initial document replaced on 8/8/2024.” (Id. ¶ 84.) The plaintiff speculates that the docket was manipulated by McDonough in order to “misrepresent the date and time upon which the initiating document was first filed.” (Id. ¶ 86.) The plaintiff believes that the substitution was in retaliation for his having filed a complaint with the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, allegedly also on August 8, 2024, accusing McDonough of unlawful and unethical conduct. (Id.) Alternatively, the plaintiff speculates that the original OSC was altered to “eliminate information . . . that would reflect poorly upon McDonough, and/or exculpate the plaintiff.” (Id. ¶ 87; see also id. ¶ 96.) Irion claims to have evidence that the third

version of the OSC, the one that actually appears on the docket, was filed “weeks” after August 8, 2024 rather than on August 8, 2024. Irion apparently filed another complaint against McDonough with the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals based on the substitution of the OSC on the docket. This complaint was dismissed in an opinion authored by Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals Chief Judge Jeffrey Sutton. Irion quotes Judge Sutton’s opinion at length, which explains his factual findings after investigating Irion’s allegations about the substitution of the OSC: On the morning of August 8, 2024, the Court’s administrative lawyer entered the show-cause order. When confirming that the document was successfully uploaded, the administrative lawyer noticed that the case number on the order was incorrect. She quickly replaced the first show-cause order with a second document containing the correct case number. When the subject judge viewed the document a few hours later, he observed that the replaced document contained metadata visible to those with access to the docket. The subject judge alerted a different staff member, who scrubbed the metadata from the document and again replaced the show-cause order with a metadata-free copy. The docket shows that the original document was replaced on August 8. Because the document was twice replaced, the operative show-cause order begins at PageID#9, and not PageID#1. (Id. ¶ 97; see also Doc. No. 63-1 at .) While appearing to adopt Judge Sutton’s findings, insofar as they (according to Irion) constitute “an admission of unlawful alteration and deletion of Federal Court Records,” Irion also claims that a version of the OSC that begins on PageID#5 was served upon him at his residence via certified mail and that he and “other witnesses accessed the PageID#5 version of the OSC on TNED’s ECF system after August 25, 2024,” meaning that it could not have been filed on August 8, as McDonough claims. (SAC ¶¶ 103, 105.)1 Based on these allegations, the plaintiff continues to maintain that McDonough caused the first eight pages of the docket to be deleted to “hide his retaliation” against Irion and that

McDonough unlawfully directed Wilson “and/or Doe 1” to “permanently alter and destroy documents of Record” filed through the court’s electronic filing system. (Id. ¶¶ 125–26.) He asserts that Wilson “violated Federal law by permanently altering and destroying documents of Record” filed on the court’s electronic docket. (Id. ¶ 127.) The SAC’s First, Second, Third, and Fourth “Causes of Action” seek judicial declarations that TNED Local Rules 3.2 and 83.6, and 83.7 are unconstitutional facially and/or as applied. (SAC

1 On February 20, 2025, Judge Sutton dismissed Irion’s complaint that was based on the allegedly improper replacement of the OSC on the docket, finding generally that the plaintiff’s allegations “cannot survive the Rule 11 inquiry.” (Doc. No. 63-1 at 6.) More specifically, Judge Sutton found that Irion was simply wrong to suggest that the subject judge initiated these [disciplinary] proceedings only after [Irion] complained about the subject judge’s conduct in his en banc petition with the Sixth Circuit. All the available evidence shows just the opposite: that the court docketed the show-cause order on August 8, a day before the complainant filed his petition. Indeed, the U.S. Postal Service records show that the clerk’s office sent the complainant the show- cause order by certified mail on August 8. The complainant’s contrary theory—that the subject judge issued the show-cause order to cover up his retaliation . . . —is contradicted by objective evidence. . . . . . . . The complainant’s one claim specific to the subject judge—that he improperly replaced a document on the docket of the disciplinary proceeding—similarly fails. . . . Even if such decisions could be the basis for misconduct, the decision to remove the document’s metadata (while adding a docket notation that the document had been replaced) does not constitute misconduct.

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Bluebook (online)
Van Irion v. Travis McDonough, Leann Wilson, Doe 1, and Tennessee Board of Professional Responsibility, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-irion-v-travis-mcdonough-leann-wilson-doe-1-and-tennessee-board-of-tnmd-2026.