After respondent, a cryptographic material control technician at
the National Security Agency (NSA), disclosed to NSA officials that
he had engaged in homosexual relationships with foreign nationals,
his employment was terminated pursuant to NSA personnel regulations
setting forth procedures for removal "for cause," which were
promulgated under provisions of the National Security Agency Act of
1959 (1959 NSA Act) empowering the Secretary of Defense, or his
designee, to appoint NSA employees. Claiming that the 1959 NSA Act
does not authorize removals, and that he could only be discharged
under 5 U.S.C. § 7532 -- which provides that,
"[n]otwithstanding other statutes," the head of an agency "may"
suspend and then remove employees "in the interests of national
security," so long as they have been given,
inter alia, a
preremoval hearing by the agency head or his designee -- respondent
requested a hearing before the Secretary. That request was denied
on the ground that respondent had been removed under the NSA
regulations, which do not include the right to such a hearing, and
not pursuant to the Secretary's § 7532 summary authority.
Granting summary judgment for petitioners, the Secretary and the
NSA Director, in respondent's suit challenging his removal, the
District Court held that, although NSA could have elected to
proceed under either § 7532 or 50 U.S.C. § 833 -- which
is part of the NSA Personnel Security Procedures Act, and which
provides that the Secretary "may" remove an NSA employee upon
determining that the termination procedures set forth in other
statutes "cannot be invoked consistently with national security" --
NSA could also proceed under the authority provided by the 1959 NSA
Act. The Court of Appeals reversed as to the optional application
of § 7532 and vacated the remainder of the District Court's
decision, holding that removals for national security reasons must
occur under either § 7532 or § 833, and that, because NSA
disclaimed reliance on § 833, resort to § 7532 rather
than NSA's for-cause removal regulations was mandatory.
Held: Neither § 833 nor § 7532 barred NSA
from invoking its for-cause removal mechanism adopted by regulation
pursuant to the 1959 NSA Act.. Pp.
488 U. S.
99-104.
(a) Although the 1959 NSA Act expressly confers only appointment
power upon the Secretary, and does not refer to termination,
nevertheless,
Page 488 U. S. 94
as a matter of statutory construction, the power of removal from
office is incident to the power of appointment, absent a specific
provision to the contrary.
Keim v. United States,
177 U. S. 290.
There has been no showing that Congress expressly or impliedly
indicated a contrary purpose in the 1959 NSA Act or its subsequent
amendments. P.
488 U. S.
99.
(b) That §§ 833 and 7532 are not the exclusive means
to remove NSA employees for national security reasons, but instead
contemplate alternative recourse to NSA's ordinary removal
mechanisms pursuant to the 1959 NSA Act, is established by the
express language of those sections. Thus, since § 833 provides
that the Secretary "may" terminate an employee if other statutory
removal procedures cannot be invoked consistently with national
security, it follows that recourse may, even must, be had to those
other removal procedures where those procedures do not jeopardize
national security. Similarly, § 7532 also is not mandatory
since, in providing that an agency head "may" suspend or remove an
employee "[n]otwithstanding other statutes," that section, in
effect, declares that, even though other statutes might not permit
it, the Secretary may authorize removals pursuant to § 7532
procedures, rather than those governing terminations under other
laws. This discretionary aspect of § 7532 is manifest in the
section's legislative history. Congress could not have intended
that § 7532 would be the exclusive procedure in this and like
cases, since no national security termination would then be
permissible without an initial suspension and adherence to the
standard of
Cole v. Young, 351 U.
S. 536,
351 U. S. 546,
whereby a showing of "immediate threat of harm to the
national
security'" is required in order for § 7532 to be invoked.
Indeed, when Congress later passed the NSA Personnel Security
Procedures Act, it must have intended that § 7532 not impose
such restrictions on the various affected agencies, since the
stringency of the § 7532 standard would conflict with the more
lenient provisions of that Act authorizing the revocation of a
security clearance and consequent dismissal. The Court of Appeals'
view that its construction of § 7532 is necessary to provide
employees sought to be removed on national security grounds with
procedures equivalent to those provided by that section assumes
that NSA's ordinary clearance revocation and for cause dismissal
procedures are less protective than those guaranteed by §
7532, which assumption is not borne out by the record in this case.
More significantly, the Court of Appeals' view that Congress
enacted § 7532 to extend new protections to such employees
runs counter to explicit congressional statements that the
legislation was proposed to increase agency heads' authority to
suspend and terminate employees on national security grounds. Pp.
99- 488 U. S.
104.
261 U.S.App.D.C. 96, 820 F.2d 1275, reversed and remanded.
WHITE, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
Page 488 U. S. 95
JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The issue in this case is whether the National Security Agency
(NSA) invoked the proper statutory authority when it terminated
respondent John Doe, an NSA employee. The Court of Appeals held
that NSA did not -- a decision with which we disagree. We first
describe the statutes relevant to this case.
Section 7532 of Title 5 of the United States Code, on which the
Court of Appeals relied, was passed in 1950 and reenacted and
codified in 1966, as part of Chapter 75 of Title 5, the Chapter
that deals with adverse actions against employees of the United
States.
See 5 U.S.C. § 7532. The section provides
that the head of an agency "may suspend without pay" an employee
when he considers such action "necessary in the interests of
national security,"
see § 7532(a), and "may remove"
the suspended employee if such action is "necessary or advisable in
the interests of national security." § 7532(b). Subsection (c)
of § 7532 specifies the procedural protections to which a
suspended employee is entitled prior to removal. [
Footnote 1]
Page 488 U. S. 96
The National Security Agency Act of 1959 (1959 NSA Act) empowers
the Secretary of Defense, or his designee, to establish NSA
positions and appoint employees thereto "as may be necessary to
carry out the functions of such agency." 50 U.S.C. § 402 note.
By virtue of the 1959 NSA Act, NSA employees who are not preferred
eligible veterans are in the "excepted" service, hence not covered
by the removal provisions of the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978.
5 U.S.C. §§ 7511-7513. Pursuant to the Defense Department
Directive No. 5100.23 (May 17, 1967), as printed in App. in No.
86-5395 (CADC), p. 60, the Secretary delegated his 1959 NSA Act
appointment authority to the NSA Director, who promulgated internal
personnel regulations.
See National Security Agency
Central Security Service Personnel Management Manual 30-2 (PMM),
Ch. 370 (Aug. 12, 1980), App. to Pet. for Cert. 36a. Chapter 370 of
these regulations describes procedures for removing employees, and
states generally that removal is permissible for "such cause as
will promote the efficiency of the service," § 3-4, App. to
Pet. for Cert. 39a. Dismissals proposed under Chapter 370 guarantee
employees various procedural protections, such as 30-day advance
notice, an opportunity to respond and to have legal representation,
and a written final decision. Although Chapter 370 assigns to some
employees the further right to appeal an adverse action to the
Merit Systems Protection Board, nonveterans like Doe at NSA do not
have this right; nor does Chapter 370 provide for a hearing or
review by the Secretary of Defense.
In 1964, Congress amended the Internal Security Act of 1950 by
passing an Act relating to "Personnel Security Procedures in the
National Security Agency." 78 Stat. 168, 50 U.S.C. §§
831-833 (NSA Personnel Security Procedures Act). Section 831
requires the Secretary of Defense to promulgate regulations
assuring that no person will be employed
Page 488 U. S. 97
or continue to be employed by NSA or have access to classified
information unless such employment or access is "clearly consistent
with the national security." The Secretary's determination is
final. The Secretary's authority under § 831 has been
delegated to the NSA Director and implemented through regulations,
including a regulation requiring security clearance for employment
at NSA.
See PMM, Ch. 371, §§ 1-1, 1-3. Section
832(a) proscribes NSA employment to any person not subjected to a
full field investigation and "cleared for access to classified
information." In addition, Congress directs that boards of
appraisal are to assist in appraising the loyalty and suitability
of persons for access to classified information in those cases
where the NSA Director doubts such suitability. § 832(b).
Section 833(a) gives the Secretary authority to terminate the
employment of any NSA officer or employee whenever he considers
that action "to be in the interest of the United States" and
determines that the procedures stated in other provisions of the
law "cannot be invoked consistently with national security."
This case began in 1982, when John Doe, a cryptographic material
control technician at NSA for 16 years, disclosed to NSA officials
that he had engaged in homosexual relationships with foreign
nationals. Doe was notified of his proposed removal pursuant to
Chapter 370 of the PMM, which governs NSA's procedures for removal
for cause. The notification letter of Virginia C. Jenkins, Director
of Civilian Personnel, was dated November 23, 1982, and explained
that Doe's "indiscriminate personal conduct with unidentified
foreign nationals" makes impossible his continued -- and essential
to NSA employment -- access to classified information.
See
App. in No. 86-5395 (CADC), p. 83. The notice also advised Doe of
his adjudicatory rights to contest the decision, which rights he
exercised through counsel, including in his answer the results of a
psychiatric evaluation as to his security threat. Pursuant to 50
U.S.C. § 832(b), the NSA Director convened a board of
appraisal, which ultimately concluded
Page 488 U. S. 98
that Doe's access to classified material was "clearly
inconsistent with the national security."
See App. in No.
5395 (CADC), p. 108. After a hearing before the Director, Doe was
notified that his security clearance was being revoked. Because
this clearance is a condition of NSA employment, the Director,
pursuant to the authority delegated to him under the 1959 NSA Act,
removed Doe. Relying on 5 U.S.C. § 7532, Doe then requested a
hearing before the Secretary of Defense, claiming that the 1959 NSA
Act does not authorize removals, and that he could only be
discharged by the Secretary after a hearing before that official or
his designee. Both the Secretary and the Director replied that
Doe's removal was "for cause" under Chapter 370 of the PMM, and was
not pursuant to the Secretary's § 7532 summary authority.
Doe brought suit in the District Court challenging his removal
on constitutional and statutory grounds. He charged,
inter
alia, that the 1959 NSA Act's appointment authority delegated
by the Secretary of Defense to the NSA Director does not include
the authority to remove employees; hence NSA is required to apply 5
U.S.C. § 7532's termination procedures that guarantee NSA
employees a preremoval hearing before the Secretary or his
designee, the NSA Director. The District Court denied this argument
and granted summary judgment for petitioners. Acknowledging that
the NSA Director could have elected to proceed under either §
833 or § 7532 summary authority, the court held that the
Director could also proceed under the authority provided by the
1959 NSA Act.
Doe v. Weinberger, Civ.Action No. 85-1996
(DC, Apr. 25, 1986).
The Court of Appeals reversed as to the optional applicability
of § 7532 and vacated the remainder of the District Court's
decision.
Doe v. Weinberger, 820 F.2d 1275 (1987). The
Court of Appeals was of the view that the chronology of
congressional action indicates that § 7532, which predates the
establishment of NSA, must control NSA employee dismissals
Page 488 U. S. 99
on national security grounds. The Court acknowledged §
833's parallel summary removal scheme, but held that, because the
NSA Director disclaimed reliance on that section, remand to NSA for
compliance with § 7532 was obligatory. We granted the
Secretary's petition for certiorari. 485 U.S. 904 (1988).
The 1959 NSA Act authorizes the Secretary of Defense, or his
designee, "to establish such positions, and to appoint thereto,
without regard to the civil service laws, such officers and
employees, in the National Security Agency, as may be necessary to
carry out the functions of such agency." 50 U.S.C. § 402 note.
The Secretary, in turn, issued Defense Department Directive No.
5100.23 to delegate this appointment authority to the NSA Director,
which authority was implemented by regulations covering both the
hiring and removal of NSA employees. Although the 1959 NSA Act does
not refer to termination, the Court has held, as a matter of
statutory interpretation, that, absent a "specific provision to the
contrary, the power of removal from office is incident to the power
of appointment."
Keim v. United States, 177 U.
S. 290,
177 U. S. 293
(1900);
see also Crenshaw v. United States, 134 U. S.
99,
134 U. S. 108
(1890);
Cafeteria Workers v. McElroy, 367 U.
S. 886,
367 U. S. 896
(1961). Neither the Court of Appeals nor respondent questions this
general proposition, nor have they shown that Congress expressly or
impliedly indicated a contrary purpose in the 1959 NSA Act or its
subsequent amendments.
The Court of Appeals, however, held that removals for national
security reasons must occur under either 5 U.S.C. § 7532 or 50
U.S.C. § 833, and that, because NSA disclaimed reliance on
§ 833, resort to § 7532, rather than NSA's for-cause
removal regulations, was mandatory. In our view, however, §
833 and § 7532 are not the exclusive means to remove NSA
employees for national security reasons, but instead contemplate
alternative recourse to NSA's ordinary removal mechanisms pursuant
to the 1959 NSA Act. This discretionary aspect
Page 488 U. S. 100
of §§ 833 and 7532 is manifest in both the express
statutory language and also the legislative history of these
provisions.
Section 833(a) states: "[N]otwithstanding sections 7512 and 7532
of title 5, or any other provision of law," the Secretary of
Defense "may" remove an employee provided that he finds that
"the procedures prescribed in other provisions of law that
authorize the termination . . . cannot be invoked consistently with
the national security."
Petitioners correctly argue that, where the for-cause procedures
for removal under § 7512 or under the regulations adopted
under the 1959 NSA Act do not jeopardize national security,
recourse may, even must, be had to those other procedures.
[
Footnote 2]
Section 7532 also is not mandatory. It provides that,
"[n]otwithstanding other statutes," the head of an agency "may"
suspend and remove employees "in the interests of national
security." This language declares that, even though other statutes
might not permit it, the Secretary may authorize removals pursuant
to § 7532 procedures, rather than those governing terminations
under those other laws. The Court of Appeals did not expressly
address the permissive character of the section, and construed the
statute to require the Secretary, in all cases of removal based on
national security, to resort to the removal procedures of §
833 or § 7532, notwithstanding other available statutory
removal regimes.
Page 488 U. S. 101
The Court of Appeals reached this conclusion by relying on two
sentences from the House Report on the bill that ultimately became
the predecessor to § 7532. These sentences state that the bill
guarantees employees in various agencies, including the Department
of Defense, the right to appeal to the head of the department in
removal cases covered by § 7532. [
Footnote 3] This passage, however, does not indicate that
§ 7532 procedures are the
exclusive means for
removals on national security grounds, or that § 7532
displaces the otherwise applicable removal provisions of the
agencies covered by the section. [
Footnote 4] Read as the Court of Appeals understood them,
the two sentences confound the permissive language of the statute,
and are inconsistent with other evidence from the legislative
history. [
Footnote 5]
Page 488 U. S. 102
Congress enacted the § 7532 and § 833 summary removal
measures to supplement, not narrow, ordinary agency removal
procedures. Section 7532, like § 833, applies to a special
class of national security cases, and authorizes summary suspension
and unreviewable removal at the Secretary's personal initiative
after a hearing of unspecified scope. The removal provisions apply
only to an employee who has been suspended. An employee so removed
is ineligible for employment elsewhere in the Government without
approval by the Office of Personnel Management.
See 5
U.S.C. § 7312. The Court has held that, in light of its
summary nature, Congress intended § 7532 to be invoked only
where there is "an immediate threat of harm to the
national
security'" in the sense that the delay from invoking "normal
dismissal procedures" could "cause serious damage to the national
security." Cole v. Young, 351 U.
S. 536, 351 U. S. 546
(1956). Were § 7532 the exclusive procedure in this case and
like cases, no national security termination would be permissible
without an initial suspension and adherence to the Cole v.
Young standard. We are unconvinced that Congress intended any
such result when it enacted § 7532.
Indeed, when Congress passed the NSA Personnel Security
Procedures Act in 1964, 50 U.S.C. §§ 831-833, Congress
must have intended that § 7532 did not impose this restriction
on the various affected agencies. The stringency would conflict
with the provisions of that Act that require the Secretary to apply
general security considerations in selecting NSA employees. Just as
the Secretary need only find "inconsistency" with national security
to reject an applicant seeking the necessary NSA clearance for
classified information,
see § 831, so too the boards
of appraisal that assist in this determination are authorized to
recommend denial or cancellation of such clearance if the NSA
Director "doubt[s]" that clearance is consistent with national
security.
See
Page 488 U. S. 103
§ 832(b). The Secretary, in turn, must adhere to a board's
recommendation unless he makes the affirmative finding that
clearance is in the national interest.
See ibid. Under the
construction adopted by the Court of Appeals, however, the
revocation of a security clearance ordered by NSA pursuant to a
board's recommendation will not suffice for the dismissal mandated
by § 832(a), but rather would require further review by the
Secretary under the more stringent standard imposed by §
7532.
The Court of Appeals was of the view that its construction of
§ 7532 is necessary to provide employees sought to be removed
on national security grounds with procedures equivalent to those
provided by that section. This approach assumes that NSA's ordinary
clearance revocation and for-cause dismissal procedures are less
protective than those guaranteed by § 7532. This is a doubtful
proposition, to say the least. The section, as we have said,
provides for summary suspension without pay, affords a hearing of
undefined scope before the agency head, and attaches to a removal
order the sanction that the employee is ineligible for other
governmental employment. NSA's for-cause removals neither are
preceded by suspension nor entail a collateral bar from federal
employment. In this case, Doe was on the payroll until removed, and
the record does not indicate that the hearing Doe received, or the
other procedural protections accorded to him, were inferior to
those that would have been available under § 7532. Indeed, in
Department of the Navy v. Egan, 484 U.
S. 518,
484 U. S. 533
(1988), we rejected the argument that § 7532 would have
provided more protections than the Navy's ordinary for-cause
removal procedures. More significantly, the Court of Appeals' view
that Congress enacted § 7532 to extend new protections to all
employees sought to be dismissed on national security grounds runs
counter to explicit congressional statements that the legislation
was proposed
"to increase the authority of the heads of Government
departments engaged in sensitive activities to
Page 488 U. S. 104
summarily suspend employees considered to be bad security risks,
and to terminate their services if subsequent investigation
develops facts which support such action."
S.Rep. No. 2158, at 2;
see also H.R.Rep. No. 2330, at
2.
We thus agree with the conclusion of the Merit Systems
Protection Board in a similar case that "section 7532 is not the
exclusive basis for removals based upon security clearance
revocations,"
Egan v. Department of the Navy, 28 M.S.P.R.
509, 521 (1985), and with the Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit that
"[t]here is nothing in the text of section 7532 or in its
legislative history to suggest that its procedures were intended to
preempt section 7513 procedures whenever the removal could be taken
under section 7532. The language of section 7532 is
permissive."
Egan v. Department of the Navy, 802 F.2d 1563, 1568
(1986).
Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed,
and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion. [
Footnote 6]
So ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
5 U.S.C. § 7532(c) accords the suspended employee the
following procedural rights before removal:
"(A) a written statement of the charges against him within 30
days after suspension, which may be amended within 30 days
thereafter and which shall be stated as specifically as security
considerations permit; (B) an opportunity within 30 days
thereafter, plus an additional 30 days if the charges are amended,
to answer the charges and submit affidavits; (C) a hearing, at the
request of the employee, by an agency authority duly constituted
for this purpose; (D) a review of his case by the head of the
agency or his designee, before a decision adverse to the employee
is made final; and (E) a written statement of the decision of the
head of the agency."
[
Footnote 2]
See Defense Department Directive No. 5210.45, p. 3 (May
9, 1964), as printed in App. in No. 86-5395 (CADC), p. 75 (emphasis
added), which reads:
"When the two conditions [in § 833 --
i.e., (1)
other statutory removal provisions, which (2) will safeguard the
national security -- ] do not exist, the Director, NSA shall, when
appropriate, take action pursuant to other provisions of law, as
applicable, to terminate the employment of a civilian officer or
employee. The Director shall recommend to the Secretary of Defense
the exercise of the authority of [§ 833]
only when
the termination of the employment of a civilian officer or employee
cannot, because of paramount national security interests, be
carried out under any other provision of law."
[
Footnote 3]
The relevant sentences in the House Report state:
"Under the present law, with respect to [the Departments of
State and Defense,] the officer or employee who is suspended or
terminated as a security risk is not entitled as a matter of right
to an appeal to the head of the agency concerned. This legislation
extends this appeal right to employees [of these agencies]."
H.R.Rep. No. 2330, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., 3 (1950).
[
Footnote 4]
The Court of Appeals also noted that 5 U.S.C. § 7533
provides that § 7532 does not
"impair the powers vested in the Atomic Energy Commission [AEC]
-- or the requirement -- that adequate provision be made for
administrative review"
of a termination by that Agency, yet does omit any similar
exception for the preexisting powers of any other agency. The Court
of Appeals extrapolated that except in the case of the AEC, §
7532 supplants the removal authority of all agencies covered by the
section in all cases involving national security. This conjecture
extracts far more meaning than is warranted from the special
mention by Congress that it intended to preserve the unique,
expansive removal powers of the AEC, particularly in light of
§ 7532's language indicating that its applicability is
permissive.
[
Footnote 5]
Numerous congressional reports and statements indicate that
§ 7532 and its legislative antecedents were proposed as
extraordinary, supplementary measures to enable the Secretary of
Defense, and other agency heads responsible for United States
security, to respond to rare, urgent threats to national security.
See, e.g., S.Rep. No. 2158, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., 2, 6
(1950); H.R.Rep. No. 2330, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., 2, 6 (1950);
S.Rep. No. 1155, 80th Cong., 2d Sess., 2 (1948); Hearing on S. 1561
and S. 1570 before the Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on
Armed Services, 80th Cong., 2d Sess., 2-3, 4 (1948).
[
Footnote 6]
Respondent defends the result reached by the Court of Appeals on
the alternative ground that NSA violated its own regulations in
removing Doe. That claim, as well as others argued to the Court of
Appeals, was not passed on by that court, and we prefer to leave
the matter to the Court of Appeals in the first instance.