TESTIMONY OF MARY C. LAWTON DEPUTY ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL OFFICE OF LEGAL COUNSEL

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CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7
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RIFPUB
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K
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17
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December 12, 2016
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November 23, 2001
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58
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Publication Date: 
April 13, 1976
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TESTIMOI?Y` Mary C. Lawtan Deputy Assistant Attaz~:ey Genera]. Office of Leg,a~: Counsel ` ~I,R, Z5~'9, R.R.. 12039 "To amend the Primacy Act of 1974" bills THE StIE~Di?~MITTEE ON GCIVERIV'1ENT IH~'~3R'"!',A?~I'Dt~i ?D IivDT.V~_DL'AL RIC~?T a OF THE +~OMMITTEE Oiv GQVLRi~'~?~'k?T OFEEATIQ~?S - HOt1SE OF REPRF:SE~vkT'IVES - APRIL 13, ~97b Approved For Release 2002/01/02 :CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 ~ ~ Y r... - .. Approved For Release 2002/01/02 :CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 Madam Chair~~o~-an and Members of the Su~~~comueittee. . We appreciate the opportunity to testify on H. R. 169 and H.R. 1~D39 and to discuss with you. various Legal issues amid practical problems involving Department of Justice files. ~~ additioaj. to our views on the two bi.~.ls you have specif- i~.lly requested that we discuss the C~INTLbPRO notification program recer.~tly announced by the Attcsrney C'eneral, the relationship of the Privacy Act to the. COIi~TELPRO files., lar~suits brought aginst the United Staters or individual officers because +of COINTELPRO,. and thy. intended resumption of the FBI.'s records destruction progr~n under its Records Control :Schedule. .. In th.e interest of time we will discuss each of these t~.tters as briefly as we can. I. ' Since H. R. I~C13'9 enco~apasses the provisions of H. R. 1b9, we will confiTM~e eaur comments to the mr~ae recently intrad~~ced bill. H.R. Y~t33'~' ~ar~ould amend the Privacy' Act ire several respects . It would re~:7is~: ~ U. S. C. 5~2a (d)~(2) (~~ (iii to specify that an individual may request not only the trection of records but expungement, ~.~pdating or supplementat~.~~n when the individual Approved For Release 2002/01/02 :CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 ,~~~ Approved For Release 2002/01/02 :CIA-RDP77M0014~R0008U0070058-7 . ~. believes the records are not "accurate, relevant,. legally maintained, timely or complete." It would add new provisions requiring agencies to notify "persons" (as distinguished from "individuals") concerning uncons.ented interception or examina- tion of communications or searches, and zaould require notice to persons who. are the subjects of fries. compiled in the course of three programs - CI-OS , COIi~LPRO , and. the Internal Revenue Service "Special Service Staff" programs. Pers~sns notified would have th4~ option ref "requiring" that agencies des tray the files. .The. bill wau~.d also eliminate the express a~zthority of the CIA and Secret Service to exempt some of their records from certain provisions of the Privacy Act. We have serious difficulties with the provisions of R.R. 12033 particular~.y in their intended relationship to existing law. A The amendmex~.t to the correc~:ion provision of the . ~'rivacy Act nat only retains the uncertainity of existing law 'but increases it. The Privacy Act nowr authorizes individuals to seek correction of agency records .~ahich the individual believes are not "accurate, relevant, timely or complete" and it does so ws.th.out exception or wi~t:.hout definition of the operative terns . Literally it could :~e read to authorize requests tc~ alter scorn state~aents, official transcripts o~? accurately recorded statements ?~f third-party opinion and to Approved For Release 2002/01/02 :CIA-RDP~l71h'100144R000800070058-7 Approved For Release 2002/01/02: CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 require that closed files of historic interest be reopened ~o add near material wzrelated to the original subject matter. By revising the provision to refer not only to correction but . also to expungement, updating or supplementation - without defining the intent of these concepts or the original language: - the interpretive problems are exaserbated. Is it intended, for example, that I be allowed to demand expungement of any unfavorable comzaents of third parties in my background investigation file or s+~~ek to "update" last year''s perfara~anee rating by substituting this year's? Could an equal employment opportunity complainant "supplement" an affidavit filed earlier subst~ntia.l?y altering-its content? These questions have already arisen under the existing law and the bill does not resolve them. " + As you 'know, we 'have taken -the pe~sition that the correction. `provision of the Privacy Act encompasses the right to seek expungement in apprapriate cases. prifiary concern is that neither the present Act nor its proposed amendment suggests what are - or are nat - apprapriate cases. " The notification provisions ~f ~.R. 12Q39, in our view, sweep too brs~adly and conflict w~.th existing law without addressing such conflicts. 2~areover,. they pose serious problems for effective law enforcement and the protect~.:r~~i of Approved For Release 2002/01/02: CIA-RDP77MOg144R000800070058-7 ' taped with the victim s consent. Coup-led w~.th the.destruct~on ~~ provisions, the bill could even be read to authorize a de- ? fendant to "require" that the tapes be destroyed prior to his kidnapping.trial. The Title 18 provisions on interception were designed to avoid such problems. H.R. 12033 would appear Approved For Release 2002/01/02: CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 -- national security. . Proposed paragraph (e)(12)(l~)would rewire notice to both sender and receiver of wire communications that have been intercepted without a warrant or without the consent of both parties to the communication. The requirement is inconsistent.~~ith provisions of 18 U.S.C. 2510. et se which exclude interception with one-party consent from the warrant provisions, permit emergency interception ran a limited basis ~+rithout warrant, and provide discretion to-the court to alter the notificatia~n requirements related to interception. . F`or example, the provision would appear to require notice to a kidnapper that his ransom demands on his vaotims had been to amens Title 18 without any direct reference to it. ~e might also note that the b.ll's.sweeping provisirn on interception could be: read to require the Ped:eral Co-nmunic - bores Commissimn~ to provide notice of radio monitoring under Ithe Communicat~.ons Act, 47 U.S.C. 605,. yet it makes no _ 4 Approved For Release 2002/01/02: CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 !~ftf~ ~~a~~i~~~,~~~~ii~I~~Ri~~:~~~~~~~~i~~i~ip to the proposed Privacy Act amendments. ,The provision refers to the "e.~aminatie~n" of various types of communications, including written communications, and requires notification whenever there is neither a warrant nor both-party consent. It is not clear whether this language ~.s intended to encompass "mail covers" or customs eYamina- bons for contraband for which no-warrant is legally re- quired. The "examination" Iangua~.e also raises the ques- tion whether law enforcement authorities examining threatening, or extortionate communications turned over by the intended victim would be-requi:red to notify the potential defendant ,and even destroy the evidence at his reques-t. - The provision requires notice. to the occupant, resident +~r o4mer ofpremises or vehicles searched without a warrant +ar without consent. Zt is not clear whether actual notice to any one of the three, present at the tiaa,e.of the search, is sufficient or whether separate notice tv any or all of these is required. Many warrantless vehicle searches will anvolve occupied vehicles and the occupant will, therefore, already have actual notice of the search. Cf. Carroll v. ~Bnited States, 267 U.S. I23 (Z925~1. Simi7.arly, warrantless searches contemporaneous with"a~est, by their very nature, will involve actual notice to an occupant of the premises. Approved For Release 2002/01/02: CIARD~7IM00144R000800070058-7 ~~pro~~c~.~n~-1Re~ea~s,~~~$~/~~a.C1A3~~P~711~001~~6~0(~Q~30058~s it con- - tempY.ated that subsequent .notice must be given as well? Must awners or residents, not present at the~time of the search, be separately notified? The bill is unclear in this respect. Even more serious than the law enfca.rcement problems posed by the bill are the problems created in the counter- inte~.Iigence field. Notice to foreign, agents engaged in espicanage that their identity or operations have been determined by means o.E interceptions would effectively paral~ze the counterintelligence efforts o.f this country. The bill even goes so far as to substitute the word "person" for the word "individual," now used anal. defined in the Pri~aacy Act, suggesting. that notice would be required to be given to fareign nationals as well as U_S. citizens. It might,'even be read to authorize foreign nationals to require" the destruction of the infar~atiara obtained. As the Attorney General has made clear in his- testimony on - - - natit~nal security wiretap legislation, we are not opposed to judicial review of national security interceptions but we consider notice provisions, such as this, totally .inconsistent with nati_anal security. finally, we note ghat proposed paragraph X12) would require agencies to aciv.se persons of theig rights under the Approved For Release 2002/01/02: CIA-RDP7gMD0144R000800070058-7 Approved For Release 2002/01/02: CIA=RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 Freedom of Information Act and provide such persons with the option of "requiring" that agencies destroy the file. Aside from the problems already alluded to, this provision fails to address the relationship between its apparent destruction requirement and the record-keeping requirements caf the Federal Records provisions, 44 ~T.S.C,-.:2103, 33171 or ;a U.S.C. 251$(&). Nor dons it ma~.~e exception for files which may be the subject of pending litigation. Certainly, files relating to litigation should not be destroyed until the case. is resolved and we question whether individuals should have a personal right to override the historic records requirements or judicial supervision o~f electronic intercep- Lion requirements of existing law. As recent experience indicates, such a destruction requirement may. also be in- caansistent with congz?essianal interest in th,e preservation ~f certain files. The notificati.an provisions relating to specific. pro,g,rams,.such as CCZNTELPRO, involve somewhat different considerations . We will confine our c.ornrQents to CCINTELPRt3 ;itself, deferring to the CIA. and Internal Revenue Service with respect to ?the other programs. _ As you are. aware, we have~na theoret~.cal objection to the concept of notification of individuals who may have been Approved For Release 2002/01/02: CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 - 7 - " ~ Approved For Release 2002/01/02: CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 . .? affected by COINTELPRO and we have already-taken-the ?position that the current Privacy Act permits individuals to request destruction of files ~:hic~i may not properly be maintained under i~he Privacy Act. Our concern is that the provisions of H.R. 12039 do not adequately address-the complex issues raised by notification and destruction. Indeed, we seriously question whether the issues can be adequately addressed in legislation. ~ ? Z`'f~te term COIZITELPRO, as we use it, refers to a program cif particular tactics directed at individuals or organiza- tions under investigation. The tactics used, proper or. ~tproper, are separate and apart from the question whether the investigations themselves were undertaken for valid haw enfo~?cement purposes. This distinction is important in deterrnining~~the scope of notice to be given, the degree of information to be provided, and the extent to which ~for~z~a.tion may be subject to destruetior~ under the Privacy .pct . I1r is also important to make the distinction between ~struction of records and the Privacy Act's prohibitions crrt agex~cy maintenance of records. H.~t.. 12039 appears to g Approved For Release 2002/01/02: CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 ,?. Approved For Release 2002/01/02: CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 authorize destruction, at individual request, regardless of the nature of the records involved. As we read the Privacy Act, it pral~ibits agency maintenar.~~e of certain records but permits the Archives to maintain those portions of the records it finds to be of historicsignificance. ` ~ U.S.C. 552a~1). E3ur experience indicates that the Archives is primarily interested in presera?'ng the historic fact of agency acticn, proper or improper, but is willing to permit destruction of personal data acquired in the oourse of agency action. Notification and possible destruction of information relating to programs such as COINTELPIt~}, in our judgment, requires these fine d:istixzctions as well as consideration of such matters as the preservation of documents relating to litigation. Likewise we have had ~:n recent years the added consideration, of congressional requests far the preservation of such. documents. All of~these complexities suggest. the need for case-by-case rev~.~:w s~f issues such as notification and. destruction rather than a sweeping legislative approach- ~~e suggest that. our announced COI~tTELPRO notification. program offers a batter approach Approved For Release 2002/01/02: CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 Approved For Release 2002/01/02 :CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 than H.R. 12039. II. Before dYSCUSSing our COINTELPRO a~otification program, a brief bac~.ground may be helpful. I'he several programs carried out by the FBI and described by the term CO+INTELPRO Caere the subject of successful Freedom of Information Act requests, by journalists and individuals affected by COINTELPRO, puior to Attorney General Saxbe's public description of the programs. After the. Department 4 s release of its report on CI:}INTELPRO additior~al FCT requests for this material Caere received. Appro:~ima~:ely 50 to 70 s~:ch requests b,ave Keen or are being processed anal others may be included within the FOI backlog of 6,000 ~rec~uests. _ ~. . ~o the best of our knowledge there has-not been a class action suit moiled on behalf of all th.a~~se who may have been tie victims of C?INTELPRO activities. Haw~:ver, the complaints in a number s~f pending suits against the g?~vernment were amended so as to include allegations exf harm from specific actions ~,ahich znay be related to COINT':LFRC. Muhammad Kenyatta, et ~l: v, Clarence M. Keile~, Civ. No. 71-25A5 (E, g, pa,) ; Emily Ha~-rss , et al. v. Charles- SJ. Bates , et ~.1. , Civ. No. CV-760034-ALS-~C.D. Cal.); Peter Bol~mer, et al. v. Richard M. Dixon, et a2. , Civ. No. 7~-xa---T (S:D. Cal.) ; Approve or a ease 2002/01/02 :CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 - 10 - Approved For Release 2002/01/02 :CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 3nsti.tute for Policy Studies, et al. a~. John N. Mitchell, et asl. , Ci.v?:- ~o. 74-~3i~i (U. S . D. C. D. C.) ; Abdeen M. Jabara o, ~., Patriek Gray, III, et al., Civ. No. 39065 (E.D. Mich.); Soc~.alist ~~arkers Party, et al. v. Att?rney General, et al., 73 Giv. 3100 (S.D.N.Y.); American Civil Liberties Union, et al. v. City of Chic moo, et a7.., No. 75 C 3295; Richard Dhoruba Moa~re ~. Edward Levi, et al., Civ. No. 75-C-6203 (S.I~.N.Y.) ; Jane Fonda v. ~L Patr~.ck Gray, et al. , Civ. ~To. ~3-2442-t~~I..; Charles Koen v. Estate. of ,~, Edgar Hoover, et. a3. , No. 7.5~-2076 (D._ D.:C, )_: . ~'li.e reve3ations concerning COI~~TELFP.O raised serious +questions concerning what obligation. the .Iustice Department might have to individuals injured. by COIN~I~'RO activities. It is~app~.rent that some of these activities may have been ~uprvper or - i~.legal ? A number of thew may have resulted 3.n injuries to individuals, including possible economic damage or ~~ to personal reputations. Eowever, due to the covert nature of these activities, many cif those ? affected by ar'~;uably :improper actions might still be unaware that. such a.ct~.ons were-taken and are thereby unable to seek whatever remedy might be appropriate. after a. number of preliminary dissussi.ons, the Attorney General asked ~~ex E. Lee, Assistant Attorney General, Civil Approved For Release 2002/01/02 :CIA-FZDF~-7~TM00144R000800070058-7 Division, to prepare a. recvrrr~endation with respect to an appropriate Justice Department response to this problem. Early in this year, Mr. Lee recomrnencled that the .Justice Department iaaitiate a notification program with. respect to individuals who were the subjects of arguably improper CDINTELPRO activities. After further discussions and review of the scope and nature of the prable~.,, the Attorney General announced on .~pril 1 that he had -estab-fished a special. review committee to notify individua~.s who may have been. personally harmed by improper CO~INT%LPRG~~actavities, that they were the .:subjects of such acti-vities,.and to advise them that they may seek further information from the ~?.epartment as they wish. - ~ ~ ~~ ~ . T'he process of reviewing COTNTELP'~?3 fi~.es in preparation of notification is already under may. Actual notification ~cari be expected to begin with~.n 6th days. The notification process will hopefully be completed within three months. Notification w~.ll be made ire all those instances where the following criteria are met: ~I) the specific COINTELPRO: activity was improper, (2) actual har~x may have occurred, and (3) the subjects are not already aware that they were the targets of COIITELPRC) activities . A special concern of the notification cr~mmittE.e is that no rights to privacy be Approved For Release 2002/01/02 :CIA-RDP7j~10a144R000800070058-7 ~. ?? Approved For Release-2002/01/02: CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 infringed by the notification process and specific pro- cedures to implement this concern are still being developed. Those notified pursuant to this progr~~ krill be directed to contact a special office established to process any requests .for further informat3_on on a priority basis. Notification ~Iecisions under these criteria will b~ made by~the special review corrsnittee which has been set up under the Office cif Professional Responsibility-with. the assistance, where required, of a special advisory committee ~a:de up of twa E9-ssistant Attorney Generals and the Legal Counsel of the PBI. III .. ~ ~ . The final subject we have been as~Ced to discuss is the resumption of the FBT.'s records disposal program. ,As you are aware, tY~e Senate leadership and the Senate Select committee Nava advised the Attorney Ge~nera.l that they have ato abjection to the resumption of this prr~gram. .: .. The records disposal program to be resumed involves ply those records approved for destetioaz by the National archives and Records Service under the established Records ~ntrol Schedule. These include certain ,administrative records and identification records n? lonb,er needed; records Approved For Release 2002/01/02 :CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 ' Approved For Release 2002/01/02: CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 of criminal cases in t~hich tl~.ere has been no prosecution authorized, no investigation bec`use of a lack of federal jurisdiction. or an unsubstantiated allegation, or property cases in which no suspect has been identified; original records of criminal cases which have been closed for ten years, which have been micrafilmed; and records~af field office criminal cases which have been closed and of ~~~hich summaries are maintained at headquarters. In an abundance of caution, FBI Headquarters halted all .files destruction in response to the request of the Senate leadership~in January 1975. Whixe the standard microfilmin; process conti.~ued on closed files relating to criminal cases involving stolen motor vehicles, interstate transportation of stolen prt~gerty and similar property matters, the originals of the documents were preserved as well. There are presently 240th files drawers full of these original files being preserved even though the cases have been closed .for 1G~ years.Similarly, the FBI is current3.y retaining.l05 six- draw file cabi~zets full of criminal matters involving 't~ntsubstantiated charges or a1].~gations outside federal juris- diction, all aver ~ ten years ~rld. Inna~serable administrative Approved For Release-2002/01/02: CIA-RDP7~00144R000800070058-7 .- Approved For Release 2002/01/02: CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 files relating to time and attendance records, auto accident reports, personnel transfers, travel requisitions, applicant files, tour arrangements, etc. are beang maintained long beyond their normal destruction period. It is of these files which we propane to resu-~e~normal destruction in order to alleviate the space and manpower burdens of retaining them. Under the Archives Records Contra~I Schedule., files re- lating to domestic security, racial matters,. extremist matters, counterintelligence and foreign intelligence are to be main- tained indefinitely. The Control Schedule is, of course, binding on the Department and there .is no intent to undertake raa~.tine destruction of such files. Even .with respect to the criminal `files subject to destruction under. the Control Schedule microfilm copies wou:Ld remain availab~.e indefinitely.. The resumption of the destruction program would merely serve _ t? redaace the storage burdens of a Ia~ge volume of original and dai~alicate records, it would not eliminate any records of FBI activity which may be of interes~ ty historians, the courts, the Congress or the public g+~~f~rally. We hope, IYladam Chairwoman, that wa: have addressed, at 1-east in summary fashion,. the subjects listed in your Apri'_ 2~ letter concernin these hearings. We will be happy to respond Approved For Release 202/01/02: CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7 - 1S - z ?~p~~ ?~t'~~~~~s20~~~1/~3~~~~?'~~~'~?~~~~~.4~0070058-7 - 16 - .- Approved For Release 2002/01/02 ~:.CIA-RDP77M00144R000800070058-7