Authority of the Environmental Protection Agency to Hold Employees Liable for Negligent Loss, Damage, or Destruction of Government Personal Property ( 2008 )


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  •        Authority of the Environmental Protection Agency to
    Hold Employees Liable for Negligent Loss, Damage, or
    Destruction of Government Personal Property
    The Environmental Protection Agency may hold its employees liable for the negligent loss, damage, or
    destruction of government personal property or for the unauthorized personal use of agency-issued
    cell phones.
    May 28, 2008
    MEMORANDUM OPINION FOR THE ACTING GENERAL COUNSEL
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    You have asked whether the Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) may
    hold its employees liable for the negligent loss, damage, or destruction of govern-
    ment personal property or for the unauthorized personal use of agency-issued cell
    phones. We conclude that it may.
    I.
    EPA’s policy on the treatment of government personal property is contained in
    the agency’s Personal Property Policy & Procedures Manual (“Property Manual”),
    available to employees on the agency Intranet. The Property Manual constitutes
    the “authoritative reference for EPA’s management of personal property.” 
    Id. at ES-1.
    Describing itself as a “supplement” to existing federal law and regulations,
    the Property Manual “provid[es] basic policy and procedures governing the
    personal property management of EPA.” 
    Id. at ES-1
    to ES-2. Pursuant to the
    Property Manual, EPA employees are responsible for “properly caring for,
    handling, utilizing, and being accountable for EPA personal property assigned for
    their use within or away from an EPA facility,” as well as for “ensuring that
    personal property in their possession, custody or control is used only for official
    authorized duties (except as allowed per EPA Order 2100.3, ‘Policy on Limited
    Personal Use of Government Office Equipment.’).” 
    Id. § 1.3.4.
        EPA’s Property Manual expressly provides that employees may be held liable
    for any government property in their care that is lost, damaged, or destroyed
    through their negligence. The Property Manual both notifies employees of their
    duty of care and requires them to acknowledge that responsibility by completing
    certain forms before taking custody of EPA property. One form requires employ-
    ees receiving personal property, like laptops and cell phones, to “accept responsi-
    bility for the equipment,” to agree to “exercise reasonable care in protecting it,”
    and to accept that they “may be required to reimburse EPA for part or all of the
    acquisition cost” in case the property is lost, damaged, or destroyed due to
    negligence. EPA Form 1740-22 (“Personal Property Custody Card”); see also
    79
    Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 32
    Property Manual § 2.1.3 (describing the purpose of EPA Form 1740-22). Another
    form requires employees transporting property outside EPA facilities to sign a
    notice that they will be “personally responsible” for the property and “if the
    property has been lost, damaged, or destroyed because of [their] negligence, a
    Board of Survey may find [them] at fault.” EPA Form 1700-9 (“Property Pass”);
    see also Property Manual § 2.2.1 (discussing the use of short- and long-term
    property passes for taking EPA personal property offsite). A third form requires
    employees transferring EPA personal property to other areas to accept that they are
    “personally responsible for [its] return in the condition in which received, normal
    wear and tear excepted . . . [and if] because of [their] negligence, the property has
    been lost, damaged or destroyed, EPA is hereby authorized to withhold any salary
    due [the employees] until full restitution is made.” EPA Form 1740-10 (“Property
    Action Request and Memorandum Receipt”); see also Property Manual § 2.4.1
    (describing the purpose of EPA Form 1740-10).
    EPA provides its policy governing the appropriate use of cell phones in an
    administrative order entitled “Policy on Limited Personal Use of Government
    Office Equipment,” which is available to employees on the agency Intranet. EPA
    Order 2100.3 A1 (2004). The order sets the parameters of authorized use (allowing
    limited personal use during non-work time where such use causes “minimal
    additional expense to the Government” and does not “reduce . . . productivity”)
    and states that “[u]nauthorized or inappropriate use of Government office equip-
    ment may result in [adverse consequences, including] . . . financial liability,
    depending on the severity and nature of the misuse.” 
    Id. EPA’s Property
    Manual sets forth specific administrative procedures for re-
    viewing claims that employees should be held liable for the loss, damage, or
    destruction of agency property (referred to in the Manual as “LDD”). Under these
    procedures, a Board of Survey, composed of three to five EPA employees
    appointed for three-year terms, “serves as a fact-finding body charged with
    determining the circumstances and conditions of each case in which EPA property
    is declared LDD.” Property Manual § 1.3.2. The Board “must ensure that facts are
    fully disclosed, government interests are fully served, and the rights of the
    employee(s) involved are fully protected.” 
    Id. § 3.8.4.
    The Board must consider
    the available evidence, including a custodial report “describing the circumstances
    of the LDD,” 
    id. § 3.8.2,
    and must interview the “employee(s) assigned responsi-
    bility for the property and/or their supervisor,” 
    id. § 3.8.4.
    Following such
    consideration, the Board must issue “comprehensive” written findings and
    recommendations, including a determination of whether the employees were “at
    fault” for the loss, damage, or destruction. 
    Id. § 3.8.6.
    The Board’s findings and
    recommendations then must be reviewed by a senior-level EPA official (“Pro-
    gram/Regional leadership”), 
    id. § 3.8.7,
    and if the senior official disagrees, a
    specified agency property officer must act as an advisor to “facilitate resolution of
    the case between all parties,” 
    id. 80 Authority
    of EPA to Hold Employees Liable for Loss or Damage of Property
    II.
    Federal departments and agencies may appeal to several sources of authority to
    promulgate rules concerning their employees’ care for government property. Most
    directly, 5 U.S.C. § 301 provides the heads of “Executive departments” with a
    general “housekeeping” authority to prescribe rules for the conduct of their
    department’s employees and “the custody, use, and preservation of its records,
    papers, and property.” Although EPA is not an “Executive department” within the
    meaning of section 301, see 5 U.S.C. § 101 (2006) (defining “Executive depart-
    ments”), we conclude that the Administrator of the EPA has the same “housekeep-
    ing” authority under EPA’s organic statute.
    Under 5 U.S.C. § 301, “[t]he head of an Executive department or military
    department may prescribe regulations for the government of his department, the
    conduct of its employees, the distribution and performance of its business, and the
    custody, use, and preservation of its records, papers, and property.” 5 U.S.C. § 301
    (2006). Commonly referred to as a “housekeeping statute,” section 301 gives
    “authority to [an] agency to regulate its own affairs.” Chrysler Corp. v. Brown,
    
    441 U.S. 281
    , 310 (1979). “[T]he antecedents of 5 U.S.C. § 301 go back to the
    beginning of the Republic, when statutes were enacted to give heads of early
    Government departments authority to govern internal departmental affairs.” 
    Id. at 301.
    This Office has interpreted section 301 to allow agencies not only to set rules
    for employee conduct while on the job, but also to regulate employee conduct
    outside the workplace that “may undermine the efficient operation of the Depart-
    ment or the effectiveness of employees in the performance of their duties.”
    Authority to Prescribe Regulations Limiting the Partisan Political Activities of the
    Commissioned Officer Corps in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Admin-
    istration, 
    28 Op. O.L.C. 102
    , 104 (2004) (“Authority to Prescribe Regulations”).
    If section 301 applied to the EPA, we would have no difficulty concluding that
    it would confer authority to “prescribe regulations” setting standards of care for
    employee use of government property and to impose liability for breaches of those
    standards. The Property Manual and EPA Order 2100.3 regulate both the “custo-
    dy, use, and preservation of . . . [EPA] property” and “the conduct of its employ-
    ees.” 5 U.S.C. § 301. These rules thus concern “internal departmental affairs,”
    
    Chrysler, 441 U.S. at 301
    , and would constitute a proper exercise of “administra-
    tive power” pursuant to the statute, United States v. George, 
    228 U.S. 14
    , 20
    (1913), which includes the authority to establish penalties for violations of agency
    regulations, see Mourning v. Family Publ’ns Serv., Inc., 
    411 U.S. 356
    , 372, 376
    (1973) (holding that an agency’s authority to regulate certain conduct included the
    authority to impose penalties, such as a civil fine, for violating agency regula-
    tions). For this reason, several departments and agencies have cited section 301
    81
    Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 32
    expressly as a source of authority for rules subjecting employees to liability for
    losses due to violations of internal personnel and property rules. 1
    The difficulty here, however, is that section 301 confers regulatory authority
    only on the “heads of Executive departments and military departments,” and not
    the heads of other executive agencies, such as EPA. 5 U.S.C. § 301; see also
    5 U.S.C. § 101; Authority of the Office of Government Ethics to Issue Touhy
    Regulations, 
    25 Op. O.L.C. 13
    , 15 (2001) (recognizing that section 301 authority
    is limited to the listed departments). In considering whether the EPA Administra-
    tor may exercise housekeeping authority equivalent to that under section 301, we
    must consider whether such authority has been conferred under EPA’s organic
    statute.
    The Reorganization Plan establishing the EPA vests the Administrator with
    authority equivalent in many respects to that enjoyed by the head of an executive
    department. Reorganization Plan No. 3 of 1970, § 1(b), 84 Stat. 2086, 2086
    (July 9, 1970) (codified at 5 U.S.C. app. 189 (2006)). 2 The Reorganization Plan,
    which names the Administrator the “head of the agency,” 
    id., transfers to
    the
    Administrator functions previously vested by law in the heads of other executive
    departments, including functions of the Secretary of the Interior and the Secretary
    of Health, Education, and Welfare. 
    Id. § 2(a)(1)–(4).
    The Administrator’s authority
    is not limited to those designated functions but also includes “[s]o much of the
    functions of the transferor officers and agencies” that are “incidental to or
    1
    See, e.g., Dep’t of Justice, Order 2400.3 (Aug. 6, 1998) (citing section 301 as legal authority for its
    policy providing that “[a]ll employees . . . [s]hall be liable for violation of their [property management]
    responsibilities when they result in losses to the Government through gross negligence”); Bureau of Land
    Management Manual § 1520 (providing that “[e]mployees may be held financially liable for loss, damage,
    destruction, or theft of property items” and citing 5 U.S.C. § 301 for authority) (available at www.blm.gov/
    pgdata/etc/medialib/blm/wo/Information_Resources_Management/policy/blm_manual.Par.53408.File.dat/
    1520.pdf, last visited ca. 2008); National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Policy Directive 2540.1F,
    § 1.g (May 25, 2005) (“Unauthorized or improper use of Government office equipment could result in . . .
    criminal penalties, and/or employees/contractors being held financially liable for the cost of improper
    use.”) (invoking 5 U.S.C. § 301) (available at http://code210.gsfc.nasa.gov/NPD2540001F.pdf, last visit-
    ed Aug. 12, 2014). Other agencies have adopted similar rules without expressly citing 5 U.S.C. § 301. See
    U.S. Agency for International Development (“USAID”), ADS Chapter 518—Personal Property
    Management (Domestic) (revised May 5, 2007) (available at www.usaid.gov/policy/ads/500/518.pdf, last
    visited ca. 2008); Dep’t of the Interior, Interior Property Management Directive 114-60.808-1 (available at
    www.doi.gov/pam/114-60-8.html, last visited ca. 2008) (stating that “employees will be held financially
    liable when a thorough investigation determines . . . [t]hat the property loss was a result of [misuse] . . . or
    ordinary neglect or negligence”) (emphasis in original); U.S. Forest Service Manual § 6500.2 (clarifying
    that “[i]ndividuals are liable to the Government . . . [if] [t]he Government suffers a pecuniary loss due to
    their willful or unauthorized acts”); U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Manual, 310 FW 1 (June 13, 1996)
    (available at www.fws.gov/policy/310fw1.html, last visited ca. 2008) (“Employees who have been
    determined by a Board of Survey to be negligent in the use of such property may be held personally liable
    to make financial restitution to the Government for any incurred loss”).
    2
    Reorganization Plan No. 3 was transmitted to Congress on July 9, 1970, and became effective on
    December 2, 1970, pursuant to chapter 9 of title 5, 5 U.S.C. §§ 901 et seq.
    82
    Authority of EPA to Hold Employees Liable for Loss or Damage of Property
    necessary for . . . the performance of,” or “primarily related to,” such functions. 
    Id. § 2(a)(9).
    This ancillary authority includes “authority, provided by law, to
    prescribe regulations relating primarily to the transferred functions.” 
    Id. At the
    time of the Reorganization Plan, such ancillary authority included the housekeep-
    ing authority conferred by 5 U.S.C. § 301 on the heads of those departments to
    enable their subordinates to carry out efficiently the statutory functions transferred
    to the Administrator of EPA. See 5 U.S.C. § 301 (Supp. II 1966). To perform those
    transferred functions, the Reorganization Plan further provides that the Director of
    OMB shall transfer to EPA “personnel, property, records, and unexpended
    balances of appropriations . . . used, held, available, or to be made available in
    connection with the functions transferred to the Administrator or the Agency.”
    Reorganization Plan No. 3 of 1970, § 4(a).
    Taken together, these provisions convey to the Administrator all of the house-
    keeping authority available to other department heads under section 301, including
    authority to adopt property management regulations. Congress has vested the
    Administrator with the authority to run EPA, to exercise its functions, and to issue
    regulations incidental to the performance of those functions. This grant includes
    the authority to assign responsibility to others within the agency and to issue
    regulations prescribing the standards by which those functions are to be per-
    formed. The effective and efficient management of the agency’s personnel and
    property is plainly “incidental to” and “necessary for” the performance of the
    functions that the Administrator is charged with performing. Indeed, the Reorgani-
    zation Plan specifically recognizes this authority by providing the Administrator
    not only with transferred functions but with the personnel and equipment neces-
    sary for the effective performance of those functions. The Administrator’s
    authority to prescribe standards for the care and use of agency property also
    includes the authority to enforce those standards by holding employees liable for
    losses that occur due to the breach of those standards. See 
    Mourning, 411 U.S. at 372
    . Accordingly, we conclude that the Administrator has the regulatory authority
    to issue property management regulations. 3
    3
    In view of this conclusion, we need not discuss at length EPA’s authority under the two other
    sources identified in your letter: (1) 5 U.S.C. § 7301 (2006), which recognizes the President’s authority
    to “prescribe regulations for the conduct of employees in the executive branch,” and (2) the common
    law principle of bailment. See EPA Letter at 3. Both sources remain potential avenues under which
    EPA could seek to impose liability on its employees, albeit subject to certain procedural hurdles.
    Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. § 7301, the President has delegated to the Office of Government Ethics (“OGE”)
    the authority to ensure that federal employees “protect and conserve Federal property” and do “not use
    it for other than authorized activities.” Exec. Order No. 12731, §§ 101(i), 201 (Oct. 17, 1990), 3 C.F.R.
    306 (1990 Comp.). OGE in turn has issued a series of regulations authorizing agencies to issue
    supplementary property regulations, 5 C.F.R. § 2635.105(a), with which employees must comply or
    face “corrective action,” which can include restitution, 
    id. § 2635.103.
    To rely on these OGE
    regulations to support its existing property regulations, EPA would have to submit those regulations for
    OGE’s approval and have them published alongside OGE regulations in the Federal Register. See
    83
    Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 32
    We also conclude that the rules contained within the Property Manual and EPA
    Order 2100.3 constitute binding and enforceable regulations. If EPA had submit-
    ted these rules for notice and comment and published them in the Federal
    Register, there would likely be little ambiguity about whether they constituted
    regulations binding within the agency. EPA has not done so in this case, however,
    because the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”) expressly exempts rules
    related to internal agency governance from those procedural requirements. 4 See
    5 U.S.C. § 552(b) (2006) (exempting from disclosure requirements “matters that
    are . . . related solely to the internal personnel rules and practices of an agency”);
    
    id. § 553(a)
    (2006) (providing that formal rulemaking requirements, such as notice
    and comment procedures, are not required “to the extent that there is involved . . .
    a matter relating to agency management or personnel or to public property”); see
    also Authority to Prescribe 
    Regulations, 28 Op. O.L.C. at 105
    –07 (concluding that
    a regulation concerning government employees’ political activities was not a
    “substantive rule” subject to APA procedural requirements because it “would
    govern only the conduct of government employees and would not directly affect
    the rights and obligations of private parties pursuant to the regulatory jurisdiction
    of the Department”). Accordingly, the fact that EPA’s rules were not promulgated
    in a notice and comment rulemaking process does not deprive them of legal effect;
    rather, as courts have held in analogous circumstances, an agency personnel
    manual may constitute a “regulation” that is binding within an agency even if “it
    was not promulgated and published in accordance with the requirements of the
    APA.” Hamlet v. United States, 
    63 F.3d 1097
    , 1103 (Fed. Cir. 1995).
    5 C.F.R. § 2635.105(b). The common law doctrine of bailment also may allow an agency to hold
    employees liable for damage to property caused by their misuse or neglect. See United States v.
    Thomas, 82 U.S. (15 Wall.) 337, 344 (1872); see also 3 General Accounting Office, Principles of
    Federal Appropriations Law 13-160 (2d ed. 1994) (“Redbook”) (recognizing that “the concept of
    bailment” provides “the legal basis” for employee liability for damage to government personal
    property). There is some question, however, whether recovery on a theory of bailment would be
    available in the context of an employment relationship. See, e.g., Elwood v. Bolte, 
    403 A.2d 869
    (N.H.
    1979) (explaining that “because [the employer] retained elements of control [over his property], a
    master-servant relationship was created rather than a bailment”); see also Am. Jur. 2d, Bailments § 17
    (2d ed. 2007) (citing cases). Even if recoupment were appropriate, agencies likely would have to seek
    recovery through administrative procedures, either through informal agency adjudications or through
    the assistance of the Office of Personnel Management.
    4
    As a general matter, regulations that “directly affect the rights and obligations of private parties”
    or regulate the “citizenry at large” constitute “substantive rules” under the APA and usually must be
    promulgated in accordance with notice and comment procedures. Authority to Prescribe 
    Regulations, 28 Op. O.L.C. at 107
    . In contrast, agency rules “govern[ing] only the conduct of government
    employees” are not substantive rules within the meaning of the APA and are specifically excluded from
    publication and notice and comment requirements. 
    Id. The EPA
    policies at issue here pertain solely to
    the conduct of EPA employees and have no application to the “citizenry at large.” Those policies are
    therefore not “substantive rules” that must be published under the APA.
    84
    Authority of EPA to Hold Employees Liable for Loss or Damage of Property
    Whether statements contained within agency policy manuals constitute binding
    agency regulations is a question that has arisen in a variety of contexts. Although
    not every agency statement constitutes a binding regulation, “the general consen-
    sus is that an agency statement, not issued as a formal regulation, binds the
    agency . . . if the agency intended the statement to be binding.” Farrell v. Dep’t of
    Interior, 
    314 F.3d 584
    , 590 (Fed. Cir. 2002); see also Thorpe v. Housing Auth. of
    Durham, 
    393 U.S. 268
    , 276 (1969) (holding that a circular issued by the Depart-
    ment of Housing and Urban Development constituted an administrative regulation
    where it “was intended to be mandatory”); Service v. Dulles, 
    354 U.S. 363
    , 376
    (1957) (holding that removal of employee was invalid because it violated proce-
    dures for removal set forth in a State Department manual that was binding on the
    Department); Doe v. Hampton, 
    566 F.2d 265
    , 280–81 (D.C. Cir. 1977) (holding
    that unpublished provisions within an agency personnel manual may be “binding if
    so intended by the Commission” in question). Applying this standard here, we
    believe that the EPA rules in question bind both the agency and its employees. The
    Property Manual describes itself as constituting the “authoritative reference for
    EPA’s management of personal property” and states that it “provid[es] basic
    policy and procedures governing the personal property management of EPA.” 
    Id. at ES-1
    (emphasis added). The Manual also expressly notes that it is a “supple-
    ment to the portions of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) and the Federal
    Management Regulations (FMR)” that provide the legal framework for the
    treatment of federal property. 
    Id. at ES-1
    to ES-2. Similarly, EPA Order 2100.3
    A1 states that it “provides the EPA policy permitting limited personal use of
    Government office equipment during non-work time” and replaces “any previous
    memoranda and policies regarding personal use of Government office equipment.”
    (Emphasis added.) Like the Property Manual, EPA Order 2100.3 A1 describes its
    status as on par with other binding legal authorities. 
    Id. (stating that
    the order
    “supplements but does not supersede any statutes, regulations, or collective
    bargaining agreements on the authorized use of Government office equipment”).
    Accordingly, the EPA policies at issue make clear “that they were designed to be
    binding on the agency” and on employees alike. 
    Farrell, 314 F.3d at 591
    . Those
    policies therefore qualify as regulations enforceable by EPA when agency
    property is damaged due to employee negligence or additional costs are incurred
    due to unauthorized use. 5
    5
    You also have asked whether EPA’s authority to impose liability on its employees for the misuse or
    neglect of government property would be consistent with the Comptroller General’s decision in Matter of
    Department of Defense—Authority to Impose Pecuniary Liability by Regulation, B-280764, 
    2000 WL 812093
    (May 4) (“Matter of DoD”). We believe that it is, because Matter of DoD addressed the specific
    rules governing “accountable officers,” rather than the general standards for other federal employees. (The
    decisions of the Comptroller General are not binding on the Executive Branch, although we do consider
    them useful sources on appropriations matters. See Use of General Agency Appropriations to Purchase
    Employee Business Cards, 
    21 Op. O.L.C. 150
    , 151 (1997).) The Comptroller General traditionally has
    85
    Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 32
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that EPA’s rules regarding employee
    liability for loss, damage, or destruction of government personal property and for
    the unauthorized use of government personal property are supported by EPA’s
    housekeeping authority. 6
    STEVEN A. ENGEL
    Deputy Assistant Attorney General
    Office of Legal Counsel
    recognized that agencies may adopt regulations holding their employees liable for damage to property
    caused by employee negligence or misuse. See 3 Redbook at 13-159. At the same time, the Comptroller
    General has recognized the existence of specialized liability standards governing so-called “accountable
    officers,” those federal officers responsible for certifying and disbursing government funds. 
    Id. at 13-157.
    Insofar as accountable officers may be responsible for certifying and disbursing government funds and
    traditionally have been held to the highest standards of care, GAO has recognized that the specific terms
    governing that liability are set by statute.
    In Matter of DoD, the Comptroller General addressed whether an agency could hold employees who
    are not accountable officers liable for contributing to the wrongful disbursement of government funds. The
    Comptroller General explained that, while Congress had singled out certifying officers, 31 U.S.C. § 3528,
    and disbursing officers, 31 U.S.C. § 3325, as officials who would be strictly liable for improper payments,
    “significantly, [Congress had not] extended liability beyond these officers to governmental employees
    whose work support[ed] these functions.” 
    2000 WL 812093
    , at *5. The Comptroller General thus reasoned
    that because Congress had specifically considered which officers could be liable for erroneous disburse-
    ments in this context, the omission of certain officers signaled Congress’s intent that those officers not be
    held liable as accountable officers. In this regard, Matter of DoD expressly repudiated two prior decisions
    of the Comptroller General, both of which involved liability for accountable officers, 
    id. at *5,
    but gave no
    indication that it intended to overrule the long line of Comptroller General decisions holding, as a general
    matter, that employees may be held liable for property damage based upon agency regulations. Likewise,
    GAO’s subsequent discussion of Matter of DoD provides no indication that Matter of DoD worked a sea
    change in GAO’s understanding of agencies’ ability to assess liability against employees absent specific
    statutory direction. See 2 Redbook at 9-11 (3d ed. 2006) (recognizing that Matter of DoD simply departed
    from the view that the government could “impose accountable officer status and liability” by administra-
    tive action). Accordingly, we believe that Matter of DoD is consistent with our conclusion that EPA may
    enforce its regulations imposing liability on employees for misuse or neglect of government property.
    6
    Because EPA’s policy may result in a deprivation of an employee’s property, EPA’s procedures
    for determining employee negligence or misuse of property and assessing liability also must satisfy the
    constitutional requirement of due process. See Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
    , 335 (1976) (holding
    that due process requires balancing an individual’s property interests and the risk of an erroneous
    deprivation against the government’s interests, “including the function involved and the fiscal and
    administrative burdens that the additional or substitute procedural requirement would entail”). We note
    that as detailed in the Property Manual, EPA’s procedures for assessing liability provide notice and an
    administrative hearing before a Board of Survey prior to the imposition of any liability, see Property
    Manual §§ 1.3.2, 3.8.3–3.8.4, two factors that the Supreme Court has identified as significant to the due
    process analysis.
    86