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USCG Administrative Law Judge Case

U.S. Coast Guard vs. William Tee Coffy

The available record says the Coast Guard charged or alleged William Tee Coffy with use of or addiction to a dangerous drug. The case outcome is recorded as Proved.

Disposition

Revocation

Posture

Appeal

Sanction

Judge

What the Record Shows

Case Summary

The Coast Guard charged or alleged William Tee Coffy with use of or addiction to a dangerous drug.

The January 7, 2013 case record is tied to docket 2012-0275, procedural posture: Appeal, disposition: Revocation.

The available record identifies an appeal posture, so the case page should focus on the reviewing decision and avoid expanding beyond the issues stated in that source.

The recorded outcome or sanction is Proved.

Based on public docket metadata and available source documents. Allegations are described as allegations, not findings of fact or admissions.

Outcome

Proved

Case Timeline

  1. Jan 7, 2013

    Revocation

    Loaded source record for 2012-0275.

Case Metadata

Docket Number
2012-0275
Enforcement Activity Number
Dispositive Order Date
Jan 7, 2013
Dispositive order
Judge
Source Era
1999–2022 Published Decisions
Dispositive Order Type
Revocation
Allegation
Use of or Addiction to a Dangerous Drug

Sources, Context, and Method

What This Record Does and Does Not Show

Coast Guard suspension and revocation cases are administrative proceedings about a merchant mariner credential. They generally begin when a Coast Guard investigating officer files a complaint with the ALJ Docketing Center. Unless the case goes to a hearing and an ALJ finds the complaint allegations proved in a written decision and order, the allegations should be understood as allegations, not findings.

A settlement agreement or consent order can end the proceeding without an admission of the alleged conduct. This page therefore separates what the Coast Guard alleged from what an ALJ, Commandant appeal decision, default order, settlement order, dismissal, or other public record actually decided.

MLAA builds these pages from public Coast Guard ALJ docket data, official Coast Guard source documents, preserved docket-source proof, and available orders or decisions. We preserve source records where we can, label allegations as allegations, avoid treating docket categories as factual findings, and invite source-backed corrections when a record needs to be fixed.

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MLAA builds this docket from public records and source documents. If a name, date, docket number, summary, or document link appears wrong, please send us the correction and any source that helps verify it.