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Supreme Court Victory Would Support Millions of Post-9/11-Era Veterans with Expanded Educational Opportunities
RICHMOND, Va., March 13, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- In their fight to secure full educational benefits potentially worth billions of dollars for about 1.7 million post-9/11-era veterans and counting, attorneys from Troutman Pepper and Dominion Energy today filed a petition for a writ of certiorari, asking the Supreme Court to review the lower court ruling.
The case was brought by FBI Special Agent James R. Rudisill, a decorated U.S. Army veteran, against the Secretary of Veterans Affairs (VA) in 2015. It seeks to resolve how many months of educational benefits a veteran is entitled to under two different GI bills. Rudisill is represented pro bono by Troutman Pepper attorneys Timothy McHugh, Misha Tseytlin, Kevin LeRoy, Abbey Thornhill, and Trey Smith, among others, and David DePippo from Dominion Energy.
Based on nearly eight years of qualifying service, many of which occurred on active duty in combat in Iraq and Afghanistan, Rudisill separately is entitled to educational benefits under both the Montgomery and Post-9/11 GI Bills. The VA concedes as much. Despite that, in order to access the generous Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits, the VA required Rudisill to first either exhaust or forfeit his remaining entitlement to Montgomery benefits, and limited his entitlement to Post-9/11 benefits to just 10 months, instead of the 36 months the program provides. The VA concedes it has applied this same forfeit-or-exhaust-first requirement to millions of veterans.
Until a December 15, 2022, ruling by an en banc panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit reversing the ruling of a three-judge panel of the same court in July 2021, appeals courts agreed with Rudisill that the VA's forfeit-or-exhaust-first requirement was contrary to law when applied to long-serving veterans, like Rudisill, with enough service to separately qualify for benefits under both the Post-9/11 and Montgomery GI Bill programs.
"We are hopeful the U.S. Supreme Court will hear our case because, as the dissenting judges pointed out in the December ruling, the majority gave short shrift to the bulk of the statutory and regulatory text that would be rendered moot or absurd based on the majority's reading," McHugh said. "This violates the pro-veteran canon of construction that the nation's highest court has employed in practice since very soon after the Revolutionary War to recognize that veterans' benefits legislation is meant to do just that – benefit veterans and their survivors."
Under Rudisill's view, when the law is applied correctly, he would be allowed to keep his earned Montgomery benefits, as well as obtain 36 months of Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits, and use those benefits as he sees fit, subject to Congress's long-standing 48-month cap on the usage of benefits under any combination of GI Bill programs. The VA's forfeit-or-exhaust-first requirement does not benefit Rudisill or any other long-serving veteran.
"I finished my service in 1999, and used the Montgomery GI Bill to help pay for law school, to the tune of about $600 per month, in arrears. The rest of my tuition, books, and living expenses were paid by loans, which took me nearly 16 years to pay back. Today, the Montgomery benefits pay about $2,200 per month. In stark contrast, benefits under the Post-9/11 GI Bill are equivalent to a full-scholarship to college, with generous stipends for living expenses, books, and fees. In short, these are life-changing benefits for veterans—setting them up to begin their new, post-service chapters successfully, and without the staggering student loan debt impacting so many in this country," said DePippo, Assistant General Counsel at Dominion Energy and a U.S. Coast Guard veteran. "The Supreme Court granting certiorari and ruling in Jim's favor would greatly and positively impact his and his family's lives, and it would be transformative for millions of veterans, their families, and their communities."
The petition for writ of certiorari highlights the following:
Case Highlights:
About Troutman Pepper
Troutman Pepper is a national law firm with more than 1,200 attorneys strategically located in 23 U.S. cities. The firm's litigation, transactional, and regulatory practices advise a diverse client base, from startups to multinational enterprises. The firm provides sophisticated legal solutions to clients' most pressing business challenges, with depth across industry sectors, including energy, financial services, health sciences, insurance, and private equity, among others. Learn more at troutman.com.
About Dominion Energy
About 7 million customers in 16 states energize their homes and businesses with electricity or natural gas from Dominion Energy (NYSE: D), headquartered in Richmond, Va. The company is committed to safely providing reliable, affordable and sustainable energy and to achieving Net Zero emissions by 2050. Please visit DominionEnergy.com to learn more.
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SOURCE Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP
Copyright 2023 PR Newswire
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