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Read Antonin Scalia's report to the Royal Commission into Certain Activities of the RCMP in the 1970s, with related documents from Library and Archives Canada.
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Save The Scalia file For Later CONFIDENTIAL : CONFIDENTIEL
7h, Sis) ni | 0 bn
tats| RoparorUNITED STATES INTELLIGENCE LAWUNITED STATES INTELLIGENCE LAW
Antonin Scalia*
It is impossible, in a paper of the size here contemplated,
to do justice to the entire subject of intelligence activities by
the United States Government, and it may be well at the outset to
indicate the areas that will be slighted. It is, first of all,
not our intent to describe in any detail the nature of intelligence
gathering in recent years by the various federal agencies. Such
information-~and particularly data concerning alleged and documented
abuses--may well be useful to the Commission, by providing examples
of what {ts proposals should be designed to avoid. The broad out-
lines of such information, however, have recurrently been reported
in the popular press; and if more detail is desired, it is exhaus-
tively (and perhaps somewhat exaggeratedly) set forth in the Final
Report of the Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Opera-
tions with Respect to Intelligence Activities (the so-called “Church
Committee Report")! which is at the Conmission's disposal. Thus,
while some concrete examples of intelligence-gathering prograns
will be alluded to in the course of other discussion, they will
not thenselves occupy the focus of our attent{on.
Also slighted will be analysts of the institutional structure
of the United States intell igence-gathering apparatus. This, and
reconmendations for its inprovenent, are again set forth with great
clarity in the Church Committee Report--to which factor there maybe added the lack of any distinctive qualification on the part of
this author to evaluate and analyze the subject. It needs the
knowledge and experience of an intelligence administrator rather
than a lawyer, except with respect to one point, which I shall make
here and be done with: From the standpoint of assuring due observance
of civil rights, it obviously makes sense to avoid commingling
within a single agency responsibilities which differ substantially
with regard to the means lawful for their performance. That is to
say, the unit which regularly performs warrantless electronic
surveillance and warrantless physical searches for the purpose of
gathering foreign intelligence is likely to develop a more cavalier
attitude towards such practices in its ordinary police work, if that
is also part of its responsibility.
What will be the focus of the present paper is the law
governing intelligence-gathering activities by United States officials
and agencies. Even this modest subject {s, however, exceedingly
difficult to present in any easily cognizable form, for a number
of reasons. It is an amalgam of constitutional restrictions,
developed in a case-by-case fashion by the courts; legislative
prescriptions of unusually vague and ambiguous characters and
administrative directives, many of which are not publicy known.
The constituttonal portion of the mix is, as will be seen, still
indeterminate in some of the most fundamental respects because the
Supreme Court has not had occaston to, or has not seen fit to,
address the relevant issues. And both the legislative and adninis~
trative portions are in the process of undergoing massive change.The proposed scheme of discussion is as follows: Part I
will analyze the constitutional and statutory law applicable to,
successively, the various extraordinary techniques comonly used
in intelligence-gathering operations. In addition to existing
statutes, we will discuss in sone detail the application of the
proposed Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act,” which has the
support of the Administration, has been reported to the Senate
floor, and seens quite likely of passage. Part II will describe
briefly the administrative Taw governing intelligence activities--
beginning with @ discussion of constitutionally required delegation
within the administrative structure, and proceeding to examination
of the substance of the few publicly known administrative prescriptions--
principally those issued by the President and by the Attorney
General. Finally, Part III will deal with the crucial but often
overlooked issue of sanctions, without which the prescriptions of
the law may be ineffective.
1 Application of the Constitution and Laws to
Particular Intelligence Techniques
A.__Wiretapping
Many legal issues are common to a number of intel] igence-
gathering techniques. In considering United States law and practice,
it makes sense to discuss these issues first in the context of
wiretapping--because it is in that area that the relevant law, both
Judicial and statutory, is the clearest and most fully developed.It also makes sense to treat the subject, at least briefly, from
an historical standpoint, since the (in sone respects strange and
uncertain) state of the current law can only be understood in light
of the explosive evolution it has undergone over the past fifty
years.
Section 605 of the Federal Communications Act
Federal statutory law concerning the permissible limits
of wiretapping by law enforcenent officials and intelligence agencies
is most noteworthy for its late development. The entire area was
permitted to languish in an enornous degree of uncertainty for
many years--and in some respects continues to do so today. Except
for a few flukeish interludes in connection with federal seizure
of telephone and telegraph systems during World War 1° and in
connection with enforcenent of the National Prohibition Act,* it
is the amazing fact that there was no federal statute prohibiting
wiretapping by anyone until 1934; and that the three-line provision
‘then adopted, enacted without any separate congressional deliberation
or debate, and copied almost verbatim from an earlier statute governing
radio comunications,° renained the totality of federal statutory
Jaw on the subject until 1968. Section 605 of the Federal Communications
Act of 1934 included the following provision: “No. person not being
authorized by the sender shall intercept any conmunication and divulge
or publish the existence, contents, substance, purport, effect or
meaning of such intercepted conmunication to any person."© Federal
agents originally operated on the assumption that this prohibitionid not apply to the government and its officers, but such an inter-
pretation was definitively rejected by the Suprene Court in the
first Nardone case in 1937, at least insofar as divulging or publication
in court was concerned.’ The result of this decision was that no
wiretap could form the basis of a criminal conviction in federal
court. Two years later, in the second Nardone case, the Court
went a step further, and held that even the "fruits" of a wiretap
(i.e. incriminating evidence discovered as a result of information
overheard in the tap) had to be excluded.®
These decisions, while adequate to discourage the use of
wiretapping by federal agents in ordinary criminal cases, where
prosecution was the primary object of the investigation, did not
terminate its use in those cases (such as espionage and national
security cases) in which detection without prosecution would be
a significant gain. This was so for two interconnected reasons:
(1) The statute required both interception and disclosure for a
violation; and while presentation of the tap in court had been held
to constitute disclosure, the Justice Departnent took the position
that the mere dissemination of the information among law enforcement
9
officials did not.” (2) The principal sanction other than exclusion
of the evidence was criminal prosecution by the Justice Department
itsert,!? and since the Department would of course not prosecute
what it did not consider violations, there was no ready means by
which the validity of the Department's interpretation could be
1
challenged in the courts.!! thus, as Attorney General Brovnel16
wrote in 1954, Justice Department policy “favored and authorized"
wiretapping, not only in security cases, but also in connection with
wl2
"other heinous crimes such as kidnapping."’* This policy was continued
until mid-1965, at which tine President Johnson limited federal
wiretapping to "national security" cases?
The confusion which existed under Section 605 1s compounded
when one considers law enforcenent activities at the state rather
than federal level. Of course prior to 1937 (Nardone I) state Taw
enforcenent officials had believed, Tike federal law enforcement
officials, that the prohbiition of Section 605 did not apply to them.
After Nardone I, state wiretapping continued,!* apparently on a
theory sinmflar to that which the Justice Department used--that disclosure
within a state Taw enforcenent agency did not constitute the
"divulging" necessary for violation of the federal statute. The
existence of this state practice was by no means kept secret--indeed,
in sone states by statute the taps had to be authorized by judicial
orders!®
yet there 1s no record of a Justice Department prosecution.
By @ queer development of law, state wiretaps for a long period of
‘time had an advantage over federal wiretaps: they were admissible
in court. Not until 1957 did the Supreme Court require federal
courts to exclude wiretap evidence acquired by state law enforcement
officials; '® and in 1952 it specifically negated the existence of
‘any federal prohibition upon state courts admission of wiretap
evidence obtained by state officials.!7
The latter decision was
overruled in 1968," but from 1937 (the year Nardone I was decided)
until 1968 there actually existed a regime in which, although disclosurein state court was unlawful under Section 605, such unlawful disclosure
id not (under federal law) have to be prevented by state courts,
was never prosecuted by federal officials, and was sanctioned and
encouraged by state wiretapping statutes which (through @ require-
ment that officials obtain prior court orders for wiretaps) even
involved the judiciary in the taps thenselves.19
Congress sought to bring some order to this chaotic area
in 1968, with the enactment of Title IIT of the Onnibus Crine Controt
and Safe Streets Act of 1968°° (hereinafter referred to as "Title III"),
which remains, as slightly modified, the governing legislation.22
Before describing the text of the statute, however, it is necessary
to discuss briefly sone applicable principles of United States
constitutional Taw.
The Katz Case
The Fourth Amendment to the Constitution wes part of the
B11 of Rights proposed by Congress in the very first year of the
republic, and ratified by the requisite nunber of states two years
later, It was a reaction against the general warrants and writs of
assistance which had been issued by British officials to sanction
random searching of colonists' hones for smuggled goods. It reads
as follows:
The right of the people to be secure in their
persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable
Searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no
warrants shall issue, but upon propable cause, supported
by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the
Place to be searched, and the persons or things to be
seized.When the Supreme Court first considered the issue in 1928,
it held that the Fourth Anendment did not prohibit law enforcenent
officials from conducting wiretapping without judicial warrants the
Prohibition, the Court said, applied only to the search of natertal
things--not intangibles such as conversation; and so Tong as no
Physical trespass was involved, wiretapping was not covered.2@
Sugsequent cases, however, represented @ continuous retreat from
that interpretation until, in 1967, in the landnark Katz case,
the Court flatly announced that that principle "can no longer be
regarded as controlling,” and adopted in its place the doctrine that
the Amendment “protects people, not places" and that the essence
of its violation {s an invasion of "privacy upon which {a person)
Justifiably retied,"23
It might be thought--and indeed there are many who do think--
that the effect of the Katz decision would be to iTlegitinate alt
warrantless wiretapping by government officials. Yet warrantless 7
federal wiretapping was continued, and continues to this day,
under a theory whose understanding is central to a grasp of the
current state of affairs in this country. A close reading of the
Fourth Amendment, quoted above, will reveal that it does not actually
prohibit warrantless searches. Its first clause prohibits unreasonable
searches, and its second clause establishes the conditions upon
which warrants will issue. A Tong line of Supreme Court cases
establishes that, while in most situations proceeding to search
without a warrant 1s 4pso facto "unreasonable," and thus in violation
of the Fourth Anendnent,”* yet this is not always so. Exceptionsto the warrant requirenent include search in the course of “hot
pursuit" of a suspect,” search of the person incident to a lawful
arrest,”® and search to prevent the iminent destruction of evidence.2”
In such situattons, and others, the circumstances render it not
unreasonable to proceed without awaiting prior judicial approval.
The federal Executive Branch argued that @ sinilar exception to the
General warrant requirement applied to searches and seizures authorized
by the President not to gather evidence for specific criminal
prosecutions, but to gather intelligence for the protection of the
national security; here, 1t was urged, @ warrant requirement would
obstruct the President's performance of his constitutional duty,
Would inject the courts into an area in which they lack the necessary
knowledge and techniques, and would compromise highly secret
information. “2
Title 11] and the Keith Case
To revert, now, to discussion of the statutory situatfon: As
noted above, Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets
‘Act was adopted in 1968 and remains, substantially unamended, the
fundamental law in this field, Its full text 1s attached as Appendix
A. For present purposes, the most significant feature of this law
4s {ts accomodation of the Executive Branch position concerning
warrantless wiretaps. 18 U.S.C, $2511(3) reads as follows:
Nothing contained in this chapter or in section
605 of the Conmunications Act of 1934... shall linit
the constitutional power of the President to take such
measures as he deems necessary to protect the Nation
against actual or potential attack or other hostile actsts
of @ foreign power, to obtain foreign intelligence
information dened essential to the security of the
United States, or to protect national security infor-
mation against foreign intelligence activities. Nor
shall anything contained in this chapter be deemed to
limit the constitutional poner of the President to
take such measures as he deens necessary to protect
the United States against the overthrow of the Govern-
ment by force or other unlawful means, or against any
other clear and present danger to the structure or
existence of the Government. The contents of any
wire or oral conmunication intercepted by authority
of the President in the exercise of the foregoing
Powers may be received in evidence in any trial
hearing, or other proceeding only where such inter-
ception’was reasonable, and shall not be otherwise
Used or disclosed except as is necessary to implement
that power.
The meaning of this provision--and the existence of the warrantless
“constitutional power" to which it referred--were first considered
by the Supreme Court in 1971,°° in the Keith case,2° involving
wiretaps directed against a domestic group which had dynamited an
office of the Central Intelligence Agency. The Court held, first,
that {2511 did not constitute "a recognition or affimance of a
constitutional authority in the President to conduct warrantless
domestic security survefliance,"*! but was rather “a congressional
disclaimer and expression of neutrality"®2 on the point. It held,
secondly, that no such constitutfonal power exists. And finally,
it strongly enphasized several important limitatfons upon its
decision: (1) that, while not enabling the President to proceed
without a warrant in donestic security cases, the Fourth Amendment
may allow congresstonally prescribed standards and procedures for
warrants in such cases which are more permissive than those required
for ordinary criminal investigations;°? and (2) that the negationof constitutional authority for the President to proceed without a
warrant applies to “only the domestic aspects of national security.
We have not addressed, and express no opinion as to, the issues
which may be involved with respect to activities of foreign powers
or their agents."*4
By reason of the last-quoted statement, the category of
“national security investigation"=-which used to be comon in United
States law-enforcement parlance, and which evidently remains a
meaningful classification in Cenada--ceased to exist. The criterion
of legality (or at least possible legality) for warrantless activity
‘is not whether an attack upon the structure of government or the
national defense 1s at issue, but rather whether the investigation
involves “activi
ies of foreign powers or their agents." For the
remainder of this discussion, therefore, we will refer to the "foreign
intelligence" exception to the warrant requirement. (The term is
meant to include both intelligence and counterintel ligence activities.)
By way of an aside, it is worth noting that many of the more publicized
instances of unlawful warrantless activities by the FBI--for example,
‘those undertaken against Martin Luther King, black separatist groups
and the ku Klux Klan?®--dated from the period prior to Keith, when (as
the text of §2511 demonstrates) it was thought within the Executive
Branch that domestic "national secutiry" investigations could make
use of the same extraordinary Presidential powers as foreign intelligence
investigations.
Of course the Supreme Court in the Keith case did not