The ruling stunned veterans and their families. In a 7–2 decision, the Supreme Court just made it harder for disabled veterans to overturn denials of life-sustaining benefits. A quiet legal phrase—“benefit of the doubt”—was stripped of its last safety net in federal court. Now, thousands of PTSD and disability claims hang in the balan… Continues…
The Supreme Court’s decision in Bufkin v. Collins closes a crucial door many veterans thought they still had. By ruling that appellate courts need not reweigh how the VA applied the benefit-of-the-doubt rule, the justices effectively locked most challenges to the VA’s judgment behind a “clear error” wall. Veterans can no longer rely on a fresh judicial look when the evidence is close; they must instead prove that the VA’s fact-finding was plainly wrong, not just debatable.
For many, this shifts the battlefield from the courtroom back to the initial claim. It makes early medical documentation, detailed service records, and strong advocacy more important than ever. The ruling may bring consistency to the system, but it also means that when evidence is murky—as it so often is in PTSD and Gulf War illness cases—veterans must win at the VA level or risk never winning at all.