
News From The Courts
Dillon
v. Department of Justice, Federal Circuit
Gregory Dillon was an attorney who worked as an asylum officer at the INS office
in
Dillon found there to be significant conflicts between INS policy and Ninth
Circuit rulings. However, rather than resolve his disagreements with
supervisors, on several occasions he refused to abide by their decisions. Just
before the end of his first year of employment, at which point his one-year
probationary status would have terminated, Dillon was fired. He then filed a
complaint claiming that he was fired in retaliation for engaging in protected
whistleblowing activity, specifically four instances in which he wrote letters
to supervisors complaining about the application of asylum law.
After a hearing, an administrative law judge denied Dillon’s complaint,
finding that disagreements over the application of law are not the sort of
disclosures the government sought to protect in enacting laws to protect
whistleblowers. The judge also found that given Dillon’s pattern of
disagreements and refusal to resolve them using procedures in place, he would
likely have been terminated anyway. Dillon then appealed.
The Federal Circuit found that denial of Dillon’s complaint was not an abuse
of discretion, as ample evidence supported the INS’s decision to terminate
him.
The opinion is not available online.
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