Norris v. Sec. & Exch. Comm'n, No. 11-3129 (Fed. Cir. 2012)
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Norris was an SEC trial attorney from 1992, until he was removed in 2009. He had twice previously been disciplined for exercising poor judgment and misuse of government email. The firing was based on emails expressing political views, demeaning support staff, and sending a confidential suspicious activity report to an appointed receiver in violation of SEC policies. Norris claimed that the 2008 emails were influenced by his wife becoming fully disabled, his daughter suffering from Asperger's Disorder, and his own adult AD/HD. The union submitted the removal to arbitration. During the hearing, the arbitrator received testimony that Norris had a confrontation with agency commissioners in 2007 and that he was barred from presenting cases to commissioners in the future; Norris denied the allegation. Norris testified that his personal circumstances had improved. The arbitrator affirmed the firing. The Federal Circuit vacated, holding that the arbitrator should have considered evidence of post-removal change in circumstances to determine whether the penalty was reasonable. The court cautioned the arbitrator not to consider information not included in the notice of removal the 2007 incident).
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The court issued a subsequent related opinion or order on August 22, 2012.
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