Ethics for DoD Employees

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Ethics for DoD Employees Keith M. Dunn Associate Counsel Office of Counsel for the Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Financial Management & Comptroller) June 2, 2016 1

Sources 18 United States Code (criminal provisions) Ethics in Government Act of 1978, as amended, 5 USC app. 4 Executive Order 12674 of April 12, 1989 as modified by Executive Order 12731 of October 17, 1990 Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch, 5 CFR 2635 DoD Supplemental Regulation, 5 CFR 3601 Department of Defense Joint Ethics Regulation 2

Criminal Provisions 18 U.S.C. 201 Bribery of public officials and witnesses 18 U.S.C. 203 Compensation to Members of Congress, officers, and others in matters affecting the Government 18 U.S.C. 205 Activities of officers and employees in claims against and other matters affecting the Government 18 U.S.C. 207 Restrictions on former officers, employees, and elected officials of the executive and legislative branches 18 U.S.C. 208 Acts affecting a personal financial interest 18 U.S.C. 209 Salary of Government officials and employees payable only by United States 3

Applicability Military Personnel Officer and Enlisted Regular and Reserve Civilian personnel In some instances: Retired or Former Employees Special Government Employees 4

General Principles Executive Order 12674 as modified by Executive Order 12731 states 14 general principles that broadly define the obligations of public service 2 core concepts: employees shall not use public office for private gain employees shall act impartially and not give preferential treatment to any private organization or individual 5

General Provisions Public service is a public trust No conflicting financial interests No misuse of nonpublic Government information No solicitation or acceptance of improper gifts Put forth honest effort in the performance of duties Employees shall not knowingly make unauthorized commitments or promises purporting to bind the Government Act impartially and do not give preferential treatment to any private organization or individual Protect and conserve Federal property and do not use it for other than authorized activities 6

General Provisions, continued Do not engage in outside employment or activities that conflict with official Government duties and responsibilities Disclose waste, fraud, abuse and corruption Satisfy in good faith obligations as citizens, including all financial obligations Adhere to all laws and regulations regarding equal opportunity Endeavor to avoid any actions creating the appearance you are violating the law or ethical standards appearance is determined from the perspective of a reasonable person with knowledge of the relevant facts 7

Gifts From Outside Sources An employee may not accept gifts from prohibited sources offered because of the employee s official position Includes gifts given to with employee s knowledge to parents, sibling, spouse, children, or dependent relative 8

Gifts From Outside Sources Prohibited sources means any person or entity: seeing official action by the employee s agency doing or seeking to do business with the employee s agency regulated by the employee s agency substantially affected by the employee s official duties 9

Gifts From Outside Sources Gifts include any items having monetary value Excluded are: greeting cards and plaques coffee and donuts (but not full meals) loans from banks and financial institutions on terms generally available to the public opportunities and benefits (such as discounts) available to the general public, to all government employees, or to all military personnel rewards and prizes in contests open to the public pension plans from a former employer anything for which the employee pays fair market value 10

Exceptions Gifts of $20 or less per occasion, $50 max per source, per year Gifts based on a personal relationship Meritorious public service or achievement grantor not impacted by recipient s performance of duties higher approval requirements for cash or items worth more than $200 11

Exceptions Discounts and Similar Benefits offered to groups in which membership is unrelated to Government employment or offered to groups in which membership is related to Government status but the same offer is broadly available to the public through similar group Gifts based on outside business activities of employees and their spouses Free attendance provided by the sponsor of an event for the day on which an employee is speaking Free attendance provided by the sponsor of a widely attended gathering of mutual interest to a number or parties determination of agency interest 12

Limitations on the Use of the Gift Exceptions An employee shall not accept a gift in return for being influenced in the performance of official duties solicit or coerce the offering of a gift accept gifts from the same or different sources on a basis so frequent as to raise an appearance of use of public office for private gain 13

Gifts Between Employees An employee may not directly or indirectly, give a gift or make a donation towards a gift for an official superior solicit a contribution from another employee for a gift to either his or the other person s official superior An employee may not, directly or indirectly, accept gift from an employee receiving less pay than himself unless no superior-subordinate relationship and there is a personal relationship that would justify the gift 14

Exceptions On an occasional basis, including traditional gift giving situations items with value of $10 or less (no cash) food and refreshments shared in the office personal hospitality in subordinate s home host/hostess gifts On special infrequent occasions, a gift appropriate to the occasion may be given to an official superior or accepted from a subordinate or employee receiving less pay occasion of personal significance occasion that terminates the superior-subordinate relationship 15

Disposition of Improper Gifts Refuse if possible Return or pay fair market value Perishable items may be donated to charity, destroyed, or shared with the office Subsequent reciprocation not permitted 16

Gift from Foreign Governments Gifts greater in value than the minimum value (currently $375) may be retained by the employing component of the recipient for official use. 5 USC 7342 DoDD 1005.13 DoD SOCO has opined gifts such as jewelry and watches are not regarded as suitable for official use. May not be retained to be worn at a function the donor is expected to attend May be retained to display in a manner or location that will afford employees or the public the maximum opportunity to view 17

Fundraising General Rule: No fundraising on Government property Exceptions: CFC Emergency and disaster appeals Military Relief Societies 18

Conflicting Financial Interests An employee is prohibited by criminal law from participating personally and substantially in an official capacity in any particular matter in which, to his knowledge he, or any person whose interests are imputed to him has a financial interest. Imputed financial interests include those of spouse minor child a general partner an organization in which the employee serves as an officer, director, trustee, general partner, or employee a person or entity with whom the employee is negotiating or has an arrangement concerning prospective employment 19

Impartiality in Performing Official Duties If an employee determines that a reasonable person with knowledge of relevant facts would question his or her impartiality in a particular matter involving specific parties which will affect the financial interests of a member of his or her household or involves a person with whom he or she has a covered relationship Then that employee shall disqualify himself or herself from participation in that matter unless authorization is received 20

What is a covered relationship? An employee has a "covered relationship" with the following persons: a person with whom the employee has or seeks a business, contractual or other financial relationship a person who is a member of the employee's household or is a relative with whom the employee has a close personal relationship a person for whom the employee's spouse, parent or dependent child serves or seeks to serve as an officer, director, trustee, general partner, agent, attorney, consultant, contractor or employee any person for whom the employee has within the last year served as officer, director, trustee, general partner, agent, attorney, consultant, contractor or employee, or any organization (other than a political party) in which the employee is an active participant. 21

Seeking Other Employment An employee who is seeking employment or who has an arrangement concerning prospective employment must disqualify himself in advance from taking official action in matters affecting the financial interests of the prospective employers An employee is seeking employment when: engaged in negotiations making unsolicited employment contact (including sending a resume) responding to an unsolicited proposal with anything other than an unconditional rejection Meals, lodging, transportation customarily offered may be accepted 22

Disqualification To avoid violation: Take no action Written notice to supervisor (JER 2-204) Supervisor response: written shielding procedures copy to Ethics Counselor 23

Termination of Seeking Employment An employee is no longer seeking employment when: either party rejects the possibility of employment and all discussions have terminated two months have passed after mailing a resume and you have received no response 24

Outside Activities and Employment An employee may not have outside employment or be involved in an outside activity that conflicts with the official duties of the employee s position. An activity conflicts with official duties if it is prohibited by statute or by the regulations of the employee's agency, or if the activity would require the employee to be disqualified from matters so central to the performance of the employee's official duties as to materially impair the employee's ability to carry out those duties. Prior approval required for financial disclosure filers working for prohibited sources 25

Teaching, Speaking, Writing May not be paid for outside teaching, speaking and writing if the activity related to official duties Exception for teaching a course at an accredited educational institution May not use official title or position (except as part of a biography or for identification as the author of an article with appropriate disclaimer) to promote a book, seminar, course, program, etc. 26

Use of public office for private gain inducement or coercion of benefits imply Government sanction endorsements Use of nonpublic information to further a private interest Use of Government property includes office supplies, telephones, computers, copiers and any other property purchased with Government funds Use of official time employee s own time time of a subordinate Misuse of Position 27

Military Personnel Political Activities DoDD 1344.10, Political Activities by members of the Armed Forces Civilian Employees 5 USC 7321-7326 5 CFR 733, 734; JER Chapter 6 28

Key Definitions Political Activity: activity directed toward the success or failure of a political party, candidate for partisan political office or partisan political group Nonpartisan elections: An election in which none of the candidates is to be nominated or elected as representing a political party An election involving a question or issue not specifically identified with a political party 29

Political Activities by Members of the Armed Forces Members on Active Duty should not engage in partisan political activity and members not on active duty (reserve/retired) should avoid inferences that their political activities imply or appear to imply official endorsement. DoDD 1344.10, para 4 Members of the Armed Force may not wear the uniform during or in connection with furthering political activity or when an inference of official endorsement for the activity maybe drawn. DoDI 1334.10; DoDI 1334.01. Unique issues for reservists on active duty as nominees or candidates for political office and holding or exercising the functions of a political office 30

DOD Civilian Employees Different rules for different groups Further Restricted employees Group 1 (further restricted by DOD policy) Presidential Appointees confirmed by the Senate (PAS) Non-Career members of the Senior Executive Service (SES) Group 2 Career members of the SES Contract Appeals Board members Employees of NSA, DIA, and NGA Groups 1 and 2 expressly are prohibited from taking an active part in partisan political management or political campaigns Less Restricted employees All other DOD civilian employees including Schedule C appointees 31

Cautionary Note The Office of Special Counsel (OSC) has exclusive jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute Hatch Act Violations Serious business prior to January 27, 2013, the presumptive penalty was removal Hatch Act Modernization Act of 2012 (Pub. L. No. 112-230) modified penalty structure to a range of disciplinary actions from reprimand to removal, debarment from Federal service, and/or civil fines OSC aggressively pursues violations involving supervisor coercion For uniformed personnel, violations of DODD 1344.10 are punishable under UCMJ Article 92, Failure to Obey Order or Regulation 32

Political Activities Prohibited for All DOD Civilian Employees Using official authority or influence to interfere with or affect the results of an election Soliciting, accepting or receiving political contributions (24/7 restriction) Running as candidate for partisan political office (employees may run as independent candidates in local elections in localities designated by OPM) Participating in political activity while on-duty, in a government office or building, while using a government vehicle or equipment, or while wearing a uniform or insignia identifying the employees office or position on duty means when employee is (1) in a pay status other than paid leave, comp time, credit hours, or excused or authorized absence or (2) representing an agency in an official capacity 33

Political Activities Prohibited for all DOD Civilian Employees Soliciting or discouraging the participation in any political activity of any person who has business/matters pending before the employee s office Soliciting or discouraging the participation in any political activity of any person who is the subject of or a participant in any ongoing audit, investigation, or enforcement action being carried out by the employee s office 34

Political Activity in a Federal Building or While on Duty Use of Government e-mail for political activity prohibited (OSC estimates that 70% of violations today are electronic) may not send partisan email from government computer (on or off duty) No water cooler exception Not a violation to receive a partisan political email at work. Must delete or forward to personal email address. May not forward email to others 35

Political Activity in a Federal Building or While on Duty Bumper sticker on personal car in government lot or private lot for which employee receives a subsidy is okay Employees may not display picture of partisan candidate in office, have a partisan screen saver on work computer, wear a partisan political button or t-shirt in a federal building Exception for official photographs of the President Exception for employee s personal photographs of a candidate 36

Fundraising Further Restricted employees may not: organize or speak at a political fundraiser notify others of a political fundraiser have their names appear on an invitation to a political fundraiser as a sponsor, host or point of contact May attend but not actively participate in a political fundraiser hosted by spouse 37

Fundraising All DOD employees are prohibited from soliciting, accepting or receiving contributions on behalf of a partisan candidate (24/7) no linking to a campaign s fundraising site All DOD employees are prohibited from inviting a subordinate to a political fundraiser would be considered soliciting would be considered using official authority to influence or affect result of election (inherently coercive) 38

Fundraising Less Restricted employee may not: - Have their names appear on an invitation to a political fundraiser as a sponsor, host or point of contact (soliciting) - Notify others about a political fundraiser Less restricted employee may: - Help organize a political fundraiser - Speak at a political fundraiser in a personal capacity provided he does not solicit contributions 39

Campaign Activities All DOD employees may contribute to the campaign of a partisan political candidate or to a partisan political party or organization All DOD employees may write a letter to the editor or post a comment on a blog endorsing a partisan candidate provided: not done on duty or while in a federal building do not use their official title or make reference to their official position endorsement may not contain a request for a political contribution or information about where voters may contribute 40

Campaign Activities Less Restricted employees may volunteer (off duty and outside of the Federal workplace) to work for the campaign of a partisan political candidate Further Restricted employees may not take an active part in partisan political management or political campaigns may not engage in any political activity which is in concert with a partisan political part, group or candidate 41

Campaign Activities Less Restricted employees may work at the polls on election day for a political party or partisan political candidate Further restricted employees may not work at the polls on election day for a political party or partisan political candidate They may, however, work on a non-partisan Get Out the Vote drive or as a non-partisan poll watcher or election judge 42

Use/Access of Installation Facilities by Candidates No use of DoD facilities for partisan political activities Installation visits by candidates Distinguish official government visits from political campaigning DoD facilities as polling places no unless grandfathered prior to 2000. Work closely with PAO on requests for access 43

Social Media Guidance for use of social media for political purposes by members of the Armed Forces is provided in DOD Public Affairs Guidance Concerning Political Campaigns and Elections Guidance for use of social media for political purposes by civilian employees is provided in OSC s Frequently Asked Questions at osc.gov (updated November 2015) 44

Notable Changes to OSC s FAQs Federal employees may display campaign logos or candidate photos as their header on personal Facebook or Twitter accounts If a federal employee displays a campaign logo or candidate photo as their profile picture they may not post, share, tweet, or retweet any items on Facebook or Twitter while in the workplace Note: no federal employee may like a post soliciting for partisan political contributions at any time 45