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GROUNDBREAKING FEDERAL APPEALS COURT RULING!
COURT RULES FOR
VETERAN IN VA BENEFITS "DUE PROCESS" CASE
"We conclude that such entitlement to benefits is a property
interest protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fifth
Amendment to the United States Constitution."

by Larry Scott, VA
Watchdog dot Org
-------------------------
We have a landmark decision from
the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit which
could impact hundreds of thousands of veterans.
The Claimant-Appellant, Philip
E. Cushman, described it to me this way in an email:
U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Federal Circuit, [has] recognized a PROPERTY RIGHT INTEREST in a
VA claim, thus triggering the legal protections of DUE PROCESS OF
LAW which mandates a FAIR and IMPARTIAL VA adjudication process.
This [is] a HUGE victory for the [nearly] MILLION veterans now
caught up in VA backlogged claims denial mill.

The Court stated:
This case involves an alleged
violation of a veteran’s right to due process under the Fifth
Amendment to the United States Constitution, where the medical
record on which his service-connected disability claim was
evaluated contained an improperly altered document. In contending
that a veteran has a protected property interest requiring fair
adjudication of his claim for disability benefits, the Appellant
raises a constitutional issue of first impression for this court.
For the reasons discussed below, we find that a veteran alleging a
service-connected disability has a due process right to fair
adjudication of his claim for benefits. We further find that Mr.
Cushman’s due process rights were violated in this case by the
consideration of tainted medical evidence. We vacate the contrary
decision of the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims (“Veterans
Court”) and remand the case with instructions for a new hearing.
The Court added:
Veteran’s disability benefits
are nondiscretionary, statutorily mandated benefits. A veteran is
entitled to disability benefits upon a showing that he meets the
eligibility requirements set forth in the governing statutes and
regulations. We conclude that such entitlement to benefits is a
property interest protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fifth
Amendment to the United States Constitution.
An attorney who practices
veterans' law chimed in:
As you may recall, I have
been mumbling for some time that the delays in the VA system,
including at the Veteran's Court, are approaching "constitutional
dimensions." This ruling makes it clear (at least to me) that the
Constitution protects veterans claimants and the failure to
provide due process (i.e., altering documents, shredding
documents, failure to process, etc.) is a constitutional
violation.
It is now a matter of how long a delay in processing has to be
before VA violates the constitution, not whether. Find me someone
who has not heard from the VA for 2 years or more and I am
prepared to find out the answer.
The same attorney went on to
explain how this could impact many veterans:
The Court's unequivocal
statement that Veterans' Benefits are protected property rights is
important because it slams the door on the VA's defense of last
resort that it is a federal agency and no one (not a vet or a
court) can tell it how long to take in doing its job. Now that
excuse is no longer available. the Constitution requires "due
process" and that process is well-established for veterans. It
also requires that the process that is due actually gets done at
some point.
With backlogs approaching a million, initial processing times
measured in years, and total appeal times approaching a decade,
the Constitution, not VA, becomes the measure (as it should be)
regarding whether VA is providing adequate "process." Think this
is odd or unique? Ever hear of school desegregation, prison
overcrowding, or voter rights? Same deal - the government(s) would
not enforce the rights of the individuals to attend school, have
humane prison conditions, or vote without intimidation. The
federal courts gave the states some time to enforce Brown v. Board
of Education (ordering desegregated schools) then ordered those
who refused to do so under threat of court order. Can you imagine
what would have happened if an individual seeking admission to a
particular school had been waiting 10 years for a decision on his
or her admission and filed a lawsuit to enforce Brown, but the
federal court ruled that while 10 years seemed like a long time,
you had to keep things in perspective???? All heck would have
happened, that's what.
Well read the very first substantive decision by the Veterans
Court, Erspamer v. Derwinski. Mrs. Erspamer filed a petition
asking the Veterans Court to make VA issue a decision on her claim
for DIC. She had waited more than 10 YEARS without VA action. 10
years!!! The Court stated that while "ten years is an undeniably .
. . long time" the court did NOTHING but tell Mrs. Erspamer that
she could renew her request in six months if the VA did not issue
a decision!!! And what happened - NOTHING.
I do not think that this type of "process" will meet
constitutional, rather than VA standards.
This case must also be very sweet for Gordie Erspamer, Mrs.
Erspamer's son, and the attorney in that case, as well as the
current PTSD litigation in California. The attorney who argued the
Cushman case is a member of Gordie's law firm.
In sum, as I see it, veterans now have a means to challenge
outrageous delays, either at the VARO, the Board, or the Court. VA
can no longer just keep pushing everything out until they get
around to it. I am sure VA will fight this to the last man or
woman, but somewhere, sometime, some court is going to find some
period of delay crosses the line of due process into a
constitutional violation AND order the VA to do whatever was
supposed to be done. That is the big difference.
I suspect that one of the first targets for a challenge may be the
new GI Bill process. As I see it, those applying and meeting the
eligibility list are guaranteed the benefit of tuition for the
upcoming semester. In other words a property right protected by
the Constitution. Failure of VA to pay that benefit on time will
mean no school unless the school is willing to take an IOU from VA
or the student (unlikely as most schools are cash-strapped
already). No amount of money later can recover the lost semester.
So if VA cannot process the claims on time or will not pay the
tuition up front and review the application later, I see a whole
lot of process coming due on the Secretary in a few weeks.
The entire Court decision makes
for some very interesting reading ... and should be read by any
veteran who has an active claim.
The decision is here for viewing or download.
-------------------------
TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
lawsuit, Cushman, Due Process, Constitution |

click for more information -- a disabled veteran
owned business
-------------------------
posted by Larry Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
-------------------------
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