OPINIONS OF THE OFFICE OF GENERAL COUNSEL

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CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0
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RIPPUB
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S
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318
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December 14, 2016
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May 12, 2003
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1
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Publication Date: 
June 1, 1974
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BOOK
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Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 This is a hard bound book DOJ and Legal review(s) completed. Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/0 ; 84 00709R000300090001-0 y Ci 7 T'7f! q f 2ICS) < .~)~ ErftA !f A 3LI INTELLIGENCE AGENCY it F GENL,-.i ~'X,. COUNSEL, An ti " 111" Id FE, i a~ 974) ~! E Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CI - 00709R000300090001-0 KGRET LEGISLATIVE HISTORY of the CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 Prepared by 25 July 1967 SECRET Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION .................................................. CHAPTER I: EXECUTIVE DEVELOPMENT ......................... 5 Initiative ............................................ 5 Coordinator of Information ............................ 6 Office of Strategic Services ........................... 7 OSS Authorities ...................................... 8 Central Intelligence Group .............. ............ 11 Background "Principles" .............................. 12 "Plan" .............................................. 13 Joint Chiefs' Consideration ............................ 14 Secretaries of State, War, and Navy Consideration....... 16 Secretary of Navy .................................... 16 Secretary of War ..................................... 17 Secretary of State..... ............................. 17 Recommendations to the President......... ............. 18 Presidential Directive ................................ 19 Achievement through Executive Action ................... 22 CHAPTER II: LEGISLATIVE PROPOSALS - EXECUTIVE BRANCH.... 23 CIG Consideration ................................... 23 Presidential Recommendation to Congress ............. 30 CHAPTER III: CONGRESSIONAL CONSIDERATION OF THE NATIvNAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 .................. 33 Background ........................................ 33 Legislative Processing .............................. 36 Legislative Record on CIA ........................... 37 CHAPTER IV: NEED FOR CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE ............... 40 Senate Armed Services Committee .................... 41 House Committee ................................... 45 Committee Reports ................................. 46 Floor Discussion ....47 CHAPTER V: POSITION WITHIN EXECUTIVE BRANCH .............. 52 NSC Relationship .................................... 53 Relationship with Intelligence Community .............. 58 DCI Relationship with NSC ............................ 63 Summary ........................................ 65 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 CHAPTER VI: FUNCTIONS ....................................... 67 Senate ............................................ --68 House Committee ................................... 69 Summary ......................................... 73 CHAPTER VII:. COLLECTION ................................... _ . 75 Background ....................................... 75 House Committee .................................. 75 Summary ......................... ........ .. 81 CHAPTER VIII: CIVILIAN STATUS OF DCI ......................... 82 Background ...................................... 82 Senate ........................................... 84 House Committee ................................. 85 House Floor ...................................... 91 Conference Committee ............................ 99 Summary ........................................ 1G1 CHAPTER IX: INTERNAL SECURITY .............................. 103 House Committee Executive Session ................. 104 House Published Hearings ........................ 113 House Floor ....................................... 115 The Federal Bureau of Investigation ................... 116 Conferees ......................................... 122 Summary .......................................... 123 CHAPTER X: NATIONAL SECURITY ACT of 1947 ................... 124 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 This legislative history of the Central Intelligence Agency has been compiled in the interest of providing a better understanding of the structure and functions of the Central Intelligence Agency.I As a function of Government, foreign intelligence lies within the province of both the Legislative and Executive Branches. Not only does Congress possess the power of the purse but it has the power and responsibility to provide "...for the common Defense and general Wel- fare of the United States... Roots of relationship are even found in the power to declare war since "... the surest means of avoiding war is to be prepared for it in peace... "3 Equally clear is the responsibility of the Chief Executive to take executive action, not barred by the Constitution or other valid law of the land, which he deems necessary for the protection of the nation's security. As a matter of fact, the Central Intelligence Agency is a product of both Executive and Legislative action. This partnership of action is seen in the major evolutionary stages that occured during the period 1941 through 1949: Approved For Release 2003/05/2 ~.UP D L___ 1~,'-f84-007098000300090001-0 Executive Action 11 June 1941 Forerunner of national intelligence service established by Presidential Order (6 Fed. Reg. 3422). (Key Elements: Office of Coordinator of Information; Government-wide collection of information bearing on national security; direct reporting to the President; inter-departmental committee system. ) 23 July 1941 Coordinator of Information authorized to expend funds for certain limited purposes by Presidential letter. 13 June 1942 Office of Coordinator of Information redesignated as Office of Strategic Services and its functions (exclusive of certain foreign information activities transferred to Office of War Information) transferred to Office of Strategic Services (16 Fed. Reg. 3422). (Key Elements: Joint Chiefs of Staff jurisdiction; Director of Strategic Services appointed by the President.) 1 September 1942 Certain contracting latitude ''. . . without regard to provisions of law... granted to Director, Office of Strategic Services (Executive Order 9241). 0LJi i._.i Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 22 January 1946 First Government-wide foreign intelligence service estab- lished by Presidential directive. (Key Elements: National Intelligence Authority at Secretary-of-Department level; participation by personal representative of the President; the office of the Director of Central Intelligence (appointed by the President) Central Intelligence Group; within limits of appropriations available to Secretaries of State, War, Navy; precursor of Central Intelligence responsibilities and authorities later enacted into law. ) Legislative Action 28 June 1944 First independent appropriations for Office of Strategic Services (National War Agency Appropriations Act of 1945). (Key Elements: Appropriations in Title I covering the Executive office of the President; expenditures "for objects of a confidential nature;" certain accounting by certificate of Director of Strategic Services. 26 July 1947 Statutory basis for centralized foreign intelligence service prescribed by the National Security Act of 1947. (Key Elements: National Security Council, Office of-the Director of Central Intelligence; the Central Intelligence Agency; foreign intelligence service on a Government-wide basis.) Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 20 June 1949 Statutory basis for the administration of the CIA prescribed by the Central Intelligence Agency Act of 1949. (Key Elements: Enabling authorities for the administration of the CIA on an independent basis. ) Ececutive correspondence and orders and Congressional material, including hearings and reports and Congressional Record reporting of floor discussions on bills specifically relating to CIA are the primary sources of material used for this paper. Secondary source material and other comment are used for continuity and completeness. In -connection with past and on-going efforts to commit the Agency's history to writing, this paper provides a chronology and bibliography of legislative actions affecting the Agency, and collects the issues concerning central intelligence which were put before Congress for resolution; the alternatives considered by Congress in resolving them; and the reasons or rationale for the choices or compromises Congress ultimately approved. It is recommended that the existing CIA publication on statutes specifically relating to CIA (in text and explanation form) be reviewed in connection with this work. Approved For Release 2003/05/ W'Gl - P84-00709R000300090001-0 CHAPTER I. EXECUTIVE DEVELOPMENT Interest in the structure of the nation's foreign intelligence effort was of primary interest to the Executive Branch during the 1941 to 1946 period. In response to the pre-war, war, and post-war events spanning this period, the Roosevelt and Truman Administrations saw the establish- ment of the Coordinator of Information, the Strategic Services, and finally the Central Intelligence Group. Each served as a building block for its successor organization. Initiative The deteriorating international situation in the late 1930's sur- faced a number of problems outside of the responsibilities of any one department. Yet, it was becoming increasingly urgent that the Presi- dent receive coordinated information. The Reorganization Act of 1939 provided a basis for handling both of these problems.4 Under it, the Executive Office of the President was established. 5 The Executive Office, as a central staff, was organized into six principal divisions. One was reserved for emergency management "... in the event of a national emergency or threat of a national emer- gency. "6 This was in September of 1939. Eight months later and under a "threatened national emergency, " the Office of Emergency Management (OEM) was established. OEM was concerned with clearing information and securing maximtun "utilization and coordination of agencies and facilities... SECRET Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 In keeping with its duties to "... advise and assist the President in the discharge of extraordinary responsibilities imposed upon him by an emergency arising out of war, the threat of war, (or) imminence 8 of war... ", the functions of OEM were further refined in January of 1941. Clearly, the events which foretold the advent of the Second World War were also propelling the organization of foreign intelli- gence on a Government-wide basis. Coordinator of Information The responsibilities of a Government-wide informational channel to the President became more, explicit on 11 July 1941 when the Office of Coordinator of Information (COI) was added to the Execu- tive Office. Colonel. William J. Donovan was named to the position, The functions prescribed for the COI and those eventually enacted as duties of the Central Intelligence Agency were quite similar: "Collect and analyze all information and data, which may bear upon national security; to correlate such information and data, and to make such information and data available to the President and to such departments and agencies as the Presi- dent may determine and to carry out, when requested by the President, such supplementary activities as may facilitate the securing of information important for national security not now available to the Government. "9 Authority to fulfill this commission included the right of access to information and data within various departments and agencies as long as the duties and responsibilities of the President's regular mili- tary and naval advisers were not impaired. 10 The COI was also empowered to obtain assistance through the appointment of various tJl._~! Z`_. i .Apprroved1ForlRelease 2003/05/2 While C -RDP84 007098000 compensation 0009000attached to the office, transportation, subsistence, and other incidental expenses were authorized. 11 Operating expenses were funded out of the Presi- dent's Emergency Fund. Under this simple but broad mandate, Colonel Donovan began building a foreign intelligence service. Office of Strategic Services Following the Declarations of War against the AXIS powers, Congress enacted the First War Powers Act, 1941, (P. L. 77-354) and conferred upon the President the authority ". . . urgently needed in order to put the Government of the United States on an immediate war footing. "12 Title I of the Act authorized redistribution of the functions of the various agencies to facilitate the prosecution of the war effort. With the nation on a "war footing, " it was clearly desirable to provide a closer link between the tested and developing capabilities of COI and the Armed Forces. On 13 June 1942 the President, as Commander in Chief, issued a military order re-designating the COI as the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) under the jurisdiction of the Joint Chiefs. 1.3 (Foreign information activities of COI were transferred to the newly created Office of War Information. 14) The charge for OSS was to., "a. Collect and analyze such strategic information as may be C required by the United States Joint Chiefs of Staff. " Plan and operate such special services as may be directed by the United States Joint Chiefs of Staff. ". The President appointed Colonel Donovan as Director of Strategic Approved For Release 2003/0 43 . j-I P84-00709R000300090001-0 Services "... under the direction and supervision of the United States Joint Chiefs of Staff." OSS Authorities OSS was forced to adjust to a number of problems which had not faced COI. COI had received secure support in the form of funding, contracting and other services from the Executive Office. This arrange- ment could not be continued indefinitely. Consequently, OSS needed and was granted certain specific authority. The President extended to OSS the same privilege to enter into contracts "... without regard to the provisions of law relating to the marking, performance, amendment, or modification of contracts... as had been earlier granted to the War Department, the Navy Department, and the United States Maritime Commission under the First War Powers Act of 1941. 15 During the first Fiscal year of operation (194Z-43), OSS was supported out of allocations from the President's Emergency Fund. Significantly, and to the extent determined by the President, these Funds could be expended "... without regard to the provisions of law regarding the expenditure of Government funds or the employment of persons in the Government service... " In addition, the President. could authorize certain expenditures "... for objects of a confidential nature and in any such case the certificate of the expending agency as to the amount of the I expenditure and that it is dcterminded inadvisable to specify the nature Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 y .. Approved For Release 2003/({/2jql-2DP84-007098000300090001-0 thereof shall be deemed a sufficient voucher for the sum therein expressed to have been expended. x+16 OSS became independent of the President's Emergency Fund during the second fiscal year of its operation (1943-44). The National War Agencies Appropriation Act of 1944, 17 as it pertained to OSS, read as follows: OFFICE OF STRATEGIC SERVICES Salaries and expenses: For all expenses necessary to enable the Office of Strategic Services to carry out its functions and activities, including salaries of a Director at $10, 000 per annum, one assistant director and one deputy director at $9, 000 per annum each; utilization of voluntary and uncompensated services; procurement of necessary services, supplies and equipment without regard to section 3709, Revised Statutes; travel expenses, including (1) expenses of attendance at meetings of organizations concerned with the work of the Office of Strategic Services, (2) actual transportation and other neces- sary expenses and not to exceed $10 per diem in lieu of sub- sistence of persons serving while away from their homes without other compensation from the United States in an advisory capa- city, and (3) expenses outside the United States without regard to the Standardized Government Travel Regulations and the Sub- sistence Expense Act of 1926, as amended (5 U. S. C. 821-833), and section 901 of the Act of June 29, 1936 (46 U. S. C. 1241); preparation and transportation of the remains of officers and employees who die abroad or in transit, while in the dispatch of their official duties, to their former homes in this country or to a place not more distant for interment, and for the ordinary expenses of such interment; purchase and exchange of lawbooks and books of reference; rental of news-reporting services; pur- chase or rental and operation of photographic, reproduction, duplicating and printing machines, equipa-ient, and devices and radio-receiving and radio-sending equipment and devices; maintenance, operation, repair, and hire of motor-propelled or horse-drawn passenger-carrying vehicles and vessels of all kinds; printing and binding; payment of living and quarters allowances to employees with official headquarters located abroad in accordance with regulations approved by the President Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 on December 30, 1942; exchange of funds without regard to section 3651. Revised Statutes (31 U. S. C. 543); purchase and free distribution of firearms, guard uniforms, special clothing, and other personal equipment; the use of and payment for compartments or other superior accommodations considered necessary by the Director of Strategic Services or his desig- nated representatives for security reasons or the protection of highly technical and valuable equipment; $35, 000, 000 of which amount such sums as may be authorized by the Director of the Bureau of the Budget may be transferred to other depart- ments or agencies of the Government, either as advance pay- ment or reimbursement of appropriation, for the performance of any of the functions or activities for which this appropriation is made: Provided, That $23, 000, 000 of this appropriation may be expended without regard to the provisions of law and regula- tions relating to the expenditure of Government funds or the employment of persons in the Government service, and $21, 000, 000 of such $23, 000, 000 may be expended for objects of a confiden- tial nature, such expenditures to be accounted for solely on the certificate of the Director of the Office of Strategic Services and every such certificate shall be deemed a sufficient voucher for the amount therein certified. Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 From its inception, OSS operated under two unusual rules relating to the expenditure of Government monies. One permitted latitude concerning the purpose for which funds could be expended. The other protected against the unauthorized disclosure of the pur- pose and details of certain expenditures. The Director of OSS enjoyed the confidence of Congress in the exercise of this broad grant of authority and this confidence in him was sustained in subsequent appropriation acts. 18 Central Intelligence Group While the Office of the Coordinator of Information and the Office of Strategic Services were forerunners of a Government- wide foreign intelligence service, the Presidential Directive of 22 January 1946 was the capstone of Executive action. It established the National Intelligence Authority, the Central Intelligence Group, and the position of the Director of Central Intelligence. Nearly two years of study and discussion preceded the issu- ance of the Directive. While a number of different approaches were advocated, the need for a fully coordinated intelligence system was never questioned. The influence of the Presidential Directive of 22 January 1946 on what was eventually enacted in the foreign intelligcnce section of the National Security Act of 1947 cannot be overemphasized. ,-Z.t; iI?, 1 12 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Background "Principles" In October of 1944 Donovan, by now a General, presented President Roosevelt with a document entitled "The Basis for a Permanent United States Foreign Intelligence Service. " The need, as seen by General Donovan, was an organization "which will procure intelligence both by overt and covert methods and will at the same time provide intelligence guidance, determine national intelligence objectives, and correlate the intelligence material collected by all Government agencies. "19 General Donovan formulated ten governing principles in this presentation: "That there should be a central, overall Foreign Intelligence Service which (except for specialized intelli- gence pertinent to the operations of the armed services and certain other Government agencies) could serve objectively and impartially the needs of the diplomatic, military, economic, and propaganda service of the Government. "That such a Service should not operate clandes- tine intelligence within the United States. "That it should have no policy function and should not be identified with any law-enforcing agency either at home or abroad. "That the operations of such a Service should be primarily the collection, analysis, and dissemination of intelligence on the policy or strategy level. "That such a Service should be under a highly qualified Director, appointed by the President, and be administered under Presidential direction. "That, subject to the approval of the President, the policy of such a Service should be determined by the Approved For Release ld 7l: CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Director, with the advice and assistance of a board on which the Department of State and the Armed Services should be represented. "That such a Service, charged with collecting intelligence affecting national interests and defense, should have its own means of communication and should be responsible for all secret activities, such as: (a) Secret intelligence (b) Counter-espionage (c) Crypto-analysis (d) Clandestine subversive operations "That such a Service be operated on both vouchered and unvouchered funds. "That such a Service have a staff of specialists, professionally trained in analysis of intelligence and possessing a high degree of linguistic, regional, or functional competence to evaluate incoming intelligence, to make special reports, and to provide guidance for the collecting branches of the Agency. "It is not necessary to create a new agency. The nucleus of such an organization already exists in the Office of Strategic Services. " The document was returned to General Donovan on 31 October 1944 with a comment that an adviser had informed the President that a better and cheaper intelligence system was possible. However, there was also an accompanying request that General Donovan con- tinue his work on a post-war intelligence organization. In keeping xith the President's request, General Donovan submitted a more detailed plan to the President. In transmittal, Donovan recommended that "... intelligence control be returned to Approved For Release 2003/05/27 CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 the supervision of the President (with a) central authority reporting directly to you (the President), with responsibility to frame intelli- gence objectives and to collect and coordinate the intelligence material required by the Executive Branch in planning and carrying out national policy and strategy. "20 The plan took the form of a draft directive and incorporated the principles General Donovan had earlier prescribed and several additional functions and duties including: "Coordination of the functions of all intelligence agencies of the Government... ; collection, either directly or through existing Government departments and agencies, of pertinent information... ; procurement, training, and supervision of its intelligence personnel; subversive operations abroad, and determination of policies for and coordination of facilities essential to the collection of information. ?21 Certain administrative authorities were also included in the Donovan Plan, "to employ necessary personnel and make provision for necessary supplies, facilities, and services ' (and) to provide for the (Agency's) internal organization and management... in such man- ner as its Director may determine. " 22 Joint Chiefs' Consideration The Donovan plan of 18 November 1944 was distributed to various Cabinet officials and the Joint Chiefs. On 24 January 1945, the Donovan plan and an alternate proposal by the Joint Intelligence Approved For Release 2003/05/27: CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Committee were covered in a report of the Joint Strategic Survey Committee to the Joint Chiefs. 23 Approximately a month after the war had ended, the recom- mendations in that report were incorporated into a Joint Chiefs of Staff report. 24 The Joint Chiefs disagreed with Donovan's concept that the centralized service should exist under the direct supervision of the President. They felt that this would "over-centralize the National Intelligence Service and place it at such a level that it would control the operation of departmental intelligence agencies without responsi- bility, either individually or collectively to the heads of departments concerned."25 The structure recommended by the Joint Chiefs included a National Intelligence Authority (NIA) composed of the Secretaries of State, War, and Navy and a representative of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The Authority was to he responsible for overall intelligence planning and development as well as the inspection and coordination of all Federal intelligence activities. It was to assure the most effective accomplishment of the intelligence mission as it relates to national security. A Central Intcilir once Agency with a Director appointed by the President was to be responsible to the NIA and assist in its mission. An Intelligence Advisory Board made up of the heads of the principal military and civilian agencies having functions related to the national security was to advise the Director of Central Intelligence. Sf, ell Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 With one exception, an independent budget for the National Intelligence Authority, the substance of the Joint Chiefs' report was to be eventually recommended to the President by the Secretaries of State, War, and Navy. Secretaries of State, War, and Navy Consideration To General Donovan the task of central intelligence was to assure that "... the formulation of national policy both in its political and military aspects is influenced and determined by knowledge (or ignorance) of the aims, capabilities, intentions, and policies of other nations. '26 Consideration by the customers, the Secretaries of State, War, and Navy, was needed before further progress could be made. Secretary of Navy Following the release of the Joint Chiefs' report, Secretary of the Navy, James Forrestal, in a memorandum to the Secretary of War, dated 13 October 1945, commented upon subjects of mutual interest including: "Joint Intetligence. The Joint Chiefs of Staff, as you know, made a recommendation to the President for a national intelligence organization, the general outline of which provides for intelligence supervision by the War, State, and Navy Departments, with a director charged with the working responsibility functioning under these indi- viduals as a group. I think this is a subject which should have our close Approved For Release V}38t7 CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 17 attention. The Joint Chiefs of Staff paper seerris to me soundly con- ceived and, if you agree, I think we should push it vigorously at the White House. " Secretary of War Assistant Secretary Robert Lovett was placed in charge of a committee in the War Department to study the matter. After consider- ing the opinions of a number of people experienced in wartime intelli- gence, 27 the Lovett Committee submitted a report 28 to the Secretary of War for a centralized national intelligence organization similar to that which had been recommended by the Joint Chiefs six weeks previously. Secretary of State As a parallel development and in keeping with his preeminence in the field of foreign affairs, the Secretary of State was directed by the President to "take the lead in developing the comprehensive and coordinated foreign intelligence program for all Federal agencies concerned with that type of activity. . . through the creation of an inter- departmental group, which would formulate plans for (the President's) approval. "29 The Secretary of State submitted his plan to the. Secretaries of War and Navy on 10 December 1945. 30 The State plan provided for a National Intelligence Authority consisting of the Secretary of State (Chairman) and the Secretaries of vi_v; 1!_ i Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 War and Navy. I-leads of other departments and agencies would be subject to call to participate in matters of special interest to them. While the State plan did not preclude "centralized intelligence operations" its primary emphasis was on interdepartmental committees and organization. It did not envisage an independent agency with a separate budget. This approach was advanced as one which would ". . . avoid publicity and... reduce competition among the central agency 31 and the intelligence organizations of existing departments and agencies." The State plan fitted a group, not an agency, concept. Under it, if the Authority determined that a centralized intelligence opera- tion was necessary the Authority would appoint an executive and hold him responsible for the effective conduct of the operation. Operational support would be shared with ".. , personnel (including the Executive), funds and facilities... provided by the departments and agencies par- ticipating in the operation, in amounts and proportions agreed by them and approved by the Authority, based upon the relative respon- ,,32 sibilities and capabilities of the participating departments and agencies. Recommendations to the President On 7 January 194( the Secretaries of State, War, and Navy jointly recommended that the President establish a National Intelligence Authority and a Central Intelligence Group. 33 The recommendation was identical to the Joint Strategic Survey Committee report which had Approved For Release 2003/05/27?: CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090 been submitted almost a year earlier to the Joint Chiefs with one major exception: the Secretaries did not recommend an independent budget. While an independent budget had been basic to the proposals advocated by the Secretary of War and Navy, the apprehensions advanced by the Department of State prevailed and "it seemed to be the consensus... of the three Secretaries that an independent budget should be avoided for security reasons. 34 Funds for the National Intelligence Authority were to be provided by the participating departments in: amounts and proportion agreed upon by the members of the Authority. Within the limits of funds made available, the Director of Central Intelligence was to "employ necessary personnel and make provisions for necessary supplies, facilities and services. 1135 Presidential Directive The National Intelligence Authority, the office of the Director of Central Intelligence and the Central Intelligence Group were established by Presidential Directive on 22 January 1946. The Direc- tive was substantially similar to the Secretaries' proposal although it contained no specific reference to the collection of intelligence by the Director. It has been suggested that this function was omitted solely to avoid mention of intelligence collection in a published docu_ ment. 36 Approved For Releasq,2,09q/05127 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 ?ic.~J~11... COPY THE WI-IITE HOUSE WASIIINGTON January 22, 1946 To The Secretary of State, The Secretary of War, and The Secretary of the Navy. 1. It is my desire, and I hereby direct, that all. Federal foreign intelligence activities be planned, developed and coordinated so as to assure the most effective accomplishment of the intelligence mission related to the national security. I hereby designate you, together with another person to be named by me as my personal representative, as the National Intelligence Authority to accomplish this purpose. 2. Within the limits of available appropriations, you shall each from time to time assign persons and facilities from your respective Departments, which persons shall collectively form a Central Intelli- gence Group and shall, under the direction of a Director of Central Intelligence, assist the National Intelligence Authority. The Director of Central Intelligence shall be designated by me, shall be responsible to the National Intelligence Authority, and shall sit as a non-voting member thereof. 3. Subject to the existing law, and to the direction and control of the National Intelligence Authority, the Director of Central Intelli- gence shall: a. Accomplish the correlation and evaluation of intelligence relating to the national security, and the appropriate dissemination within the Government of the resulting strategic and national policy intelligence. In so doing, full use shall be made of the staff and facilities of the intelligence agencies of your Departments. b. Plan for the coordination of such of the activities of the intelligence agencies of your Departments as relate to the national security and recommend to the National Intelligence Authority the establish-iient of such over-all policies and objectives as will assure the most effective accomplishment of the national intelligence mission. c. Perform, for the benefit of said intelligence agencies, such services of common concern as the National Intelligence Authority determines can be more efficiently accompli shed centrally. Approved For ReldaYe"9O61d5/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 d. Perform such other functions and duties related to intelligence affecting the national security as the Presi- dent and the National Intelligence Authority may from time to time direct. 4. No police, law enforcement or internal security functions shall be exercised under`'his directive. 5. Such intelligence received by the intelligence agencies of your Departments as may be designated by the National Intelligence Authority shall be freely available to the Director of Central Intelli- gence for correlation, evaluation or dissemination. To the extent approved by the National Intelligence Authority, the operations of said intelligence agencies shall be open to inspection by the Director of Central Intelligence in connection with planning functions. 6. The existing intelligence agencies of your Departments shall continue to collect, evaluate, correlate and disseminate depart- mental intelligence. 7. The Director of Central Intelligence shall be advised by an Intelligence Advisory Board consisting of the heads (or their representatives) of the principal military and civilian intelligence agencies of the Government having functions related to national security, as determined by the National Intelligence Authority. 8. Within the scope of existing law and Presidential direc- tives, other departments and agencies of the executive branch of the Federal Government shall furnish such intelligence information relating to the national security as is in their possession, and as the Director of Central Intelligence may from time to time request pursuant to regulations of the National Intelligence Authority. 9. Nothing herein shall be construed to authorize the making of investigations inside the continental limits of the United States and its possessions, except as provided by law and Presidential directives. 10. In the conduct of their activities the National Intelligence Authority and the Director of Central Intelligence shall be responsible for fully protecting intelligence sources and methods. Sincerely yours, Is/ Harry Truman Approved For Release 200~/ON 711:I,C A-RDP84-007098000300090001-0 Achievement through Executive Action The 22 January 1946 Directive was a major breakthrough for the concept of a Government-wide foreign intelligence system. Respon- sibility for national intelligence had been clearly fixed on the office of the Director of Central Intelligence. It provided for direction and control from the President's chief advisers in international and mili- tary affairs. It provided a focal point for the correlation of foreign intelligence, its proper coordination and dissemination, and for all other needs affecting national intelligence. Clearly, central intelli- gence as an entity now existed. The Directive was a compromise of diverse views which had been articulated for two rears within the Executive branch. While the fledgling organization was deprived of certain attributes of independence, i. e. independent budget and authority to hire personnel, its charter was sufficiently flexible to permit it to "feel its evolutionary way and handle obstacles only in such order as it deemed best. "37 The details of the organization were to be worked out in the first instance by the officials responsible for its performance. 38 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 CHAPTER II. LEGISLATIVE PROPOSALS - EXECUTIVE BRANCH As early as 1944, legislation for a permanent post-war intelligence organization was seen as desirable. 39 In 1946 the Secretaries of State, War, and Navy believed that the preparation of organizational plans to "include drafts of all necessary legislation"40 should be the first order of business following the establishment of central intelligence by Executive action. GIG Consideration Six months following the Presidential directive, Clark M. Clifford, Special Assistant to the President, was reviewing draft enabling legisla- tion for a proposed Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). General Hoyt S. Vandenberg, USAAF, then the Director of Central Intelligence, in trans- mitting a revision of the draft to Mr. Clifford, wrote that the "current draft has been expanded in the light of the experiences of the last ten months and the administrative facilities available. However, it does not materially change interdepartmental relationships conceived in the original Presidential letter of January 22, 1946. ?41 The CIG's coi-aprehensive legislation proposal contained a state- ment of policy that "foreign intelligence activities, functions, and services of the Government be fully coordinated, and, when determined in accordance with the provisions of this act, be operated centrally for the accomplishment of the national intelligence mission of the United ?1 r-' Approved For Release 2003/05/27 ? bfP~jDPI4-00709R000300090001-0 States. " The GIG proposal referred to programs for collecting; "... foreign intelligence information by any and all means deemed effective, " disseminating "... to the President and the appropriate departments and agencies of the Federal Government of the intelli- gence produced, " and for planning and development ". . . of all foreign intelligence activities of the Federal Government. Further, the National Intelligence Authority was to be statutorily prescribed and the Director of Central Intelligence was to sit as a non-voting member. The CIA was to provide the Secretariat. This followed the structural relationships established under the 22 January 1946 Directive. The GIG proposal also sought administrative authority sufficient to the autonomy envisaged. The authority to hire personnel directly and an independent budget had been denied CIG. These were important deficiencies to be overcome. 42 Other key elements were: a. appointment of the Director from either civilian or military life at $15, 000 per annum (equivalent to the salary estab- lished by the Atomic Energy Act of 1946 for the Comnisioners). b. a Deputy Director who "shall be authorized to sign such letters, papers, and documents, and to perform such other duties as may be directed by the Director... and to act as Director in the Director's absence..: c. authority to employ personnel including retired personnel of the Armed Forces. Jtwvf ~,.~ , Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/ 71._,c~A-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 t~Vzit_; d. authority for the DCl "in his absolute discretion to, notwithstanding the provisions of other law, -terminate the employment of personnel in the interest of the United State... " (The latter was in keeping with a similar provision in the Department of State- Appropriation Act of 1947, also 50 USC 1156, 1940, Secretaries of War and Navy, P. L. 79-470.) e. control of information in line with Section 10 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1946. (At the time the Department of Justice was also reviewing a proposal to revise the espionage laws as recommended by the War and Navy Departments and the FBI. ) f. appropriations authority. The proposed draft was fully representative of a permanent authoriza- tion for a Central. Intelligence Agency. As events transpired, provisions relating to CIA's functional responsibility as well as its structural relationship within the Executive Branch would be enacted in 1947, while administrative authorities, for the most part, would be enacted in 1949. Comprehensive enabling legislation for a Central Intelligence Agency was subordinated iu early 1947 to the more pressing need of obtaining unification of the military departments. Unification legislation vas accorded the highest priority within the Executive Branch. e i- T'= 26 Approved For Release 20030' II : A-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 The concept of central intelligence was not overlooked in the unification proposals, however. President Truman's second plan for military unification envisioned a single defense establishment served by a number of coordinating agencies, some for inter-military departmental coordination and others for military-civilian coordination. 43 The existing National Intelligence Authority was seen as the mechanism for linking military and foreign policy and it followed that its subordi- nate agency, CIG, would serve as mechanism for coordinating civilian- military intelligence. A team for drafting the National Security Act of 1947 was assembled within the White I-louse. It included Mr. Clark M. Clifford (Special Counsel to the President), Mr. Charles S. Murphy (Adminis- trative Assistant to the President), Vice Admiral Forrest P. Sherman (Deputy Chief for Naval Operations), and Major General Lauris Norstad (Director of Plans and Operations, War Department General Staff). The team's prime objective was unification. While there was support for prescribing the Central Intelligence Agency in the National Security Act, it was felt the administrative authorities for the Agency should be dealt with in separate legislation. The second White House draft of the proposed National Security Act of 1947, dated 25 January 19417, covered the CIA as follows: "SEC. 302 (a) There is hereby established under the National Security Council a Central Intelligence Agency with a Director of Central Intelligence, who shall be the head thereof, to be appointed from civilian or military life by the President, Approved For Release 2003/05/27': bleu- $tP64-00709R000300090001-0 by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. The Director shall receive compensation at the rate of $15, 000 per annum. (b) Subject to existing law, and to the direction and control of the National Security Council, the Central Intelligence Agency shall perform foreign intelligence functions related to the national security. 44 (c) Effective when the Director first appointed under subsection (a) has taken office - (1) The functions of the National Intelligence Authority (established by Directive of the President, dated January 22, 1946) are transferred to the National Security Council, and such Authority shall cease to exist. (2) The functions of the Director of Central Intelligence, and the functions, personnel, property, and records of the Central Intelligence Group, established under such directive are transferred to the Director of Central Intelligence appointed under this Act and to the Central Intelligence Agency, and such Group shall cease to exist. Any unexpended balances of appropriations, allocations, or other funds available or authorized to be made available in like manner for expenditure by the Agency. " In a 28 January 1947 memorandum to Mr. Clark M. Clifford, General Vandenberg summarized earlier exchanges of views on language for CIA in the National Security Act as "(a) setting forth a working basis for a Central Intelligence Agency to the merger; and (b) eliminating from the proposed National Security Act any and all controversial material insofar as it referred to central intelligence which might in any way hamper the successful passage of the Act. " While deferring to the higher priority of military unification, General Vandenberg urged the incorporation of three additional provisions in the final draft. First, "... the DCI shall serve as the JEVf fit- Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 adviser to the Council on all matters pertaining to national intelligence and in this capacity, will attend meetings of the Council at its discretion but shall take no part in the decisions thereof. (It is recalled that the 22 January 1946 Directive provided that the Director sit as a non-voting member of the National Intelligence Authority.) Second, rather than merely transferring the functions of the DCI and CIG under the Presidential Directive to the DCI and CIA under the proposed legislation through incorporation by reference, General Vandenberg recommended making at least a specific statement on CIA's functions such as: "... the CIA shall coordinate the Nation's foreign intelligence functions which can be efficiently performed centrally. " An earlier draft had included a provision that CIA "... subject to existing law... shall perform foreign intelligence functions related to the national security. " However, this provision was dropped because of the confusion surrounding the meaning of the introductory qualification "subject to existing law. Third, General Vandenberg wanted a Deputy Director of Central Intelligence to be appointed from civilian or military life by the President and with the advice and consent of the Senate "... to provide continuity of action in the absence of the Director or should there be a vacancy in that office. The Deputy Director should be a man of such caliber and stature as adequately to serve as operations deputy to Approved For Release 2003/ r-Oi DP84-00709R000300090001-0 While General Vandenberg's recommendations were not included in the proposed "National Security Act of 1947, " the points were discussed. Excerpts follow from a memorandum45 covering the discussion at the time: DCI as Intelligence Adviser In a CIG conference preceding the first meeting with the White House drafters-- "... the Director also indicated his desire to have included a provision that he would serve as the adviser to the Council on National Dcfense (later changed to National Security Council) on matters pertaining to intelligence, and that in this capacity he would attend all meetings of the Council. It was agreed that the Director should take no part in the decisions of the Council as this was a policy- making body, and it had long been agreed that central intelligence should not be involved in policy making. At the White I-louse meeting with the drafters-- "... General Vandenberg stated that he was strongly opposed to the Central Intelligence Agency or its director participating in policy decisions on any matter. However, he felt that he should be present at meetings of the Council. To this General Norstad voiced serious exceptions, as he felt that the Council was already too big. He thought that the Director should not even be present as an observer, as this had proven to be cumbersome and unworkable at meetings of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Admiral Sherman suggested, however, that the Director should normally be present at meetings of the Council, in its discretion. General Vandenberg concurred in this, as did General Norstad, and it was accepted with the additional proviso that the joint Chiefs of Staff would also attend meetings at the discretion of the Council. " - Approved For Release 2003/05 @} jF4P84-00709R000300090001-0 ".. the Army-Navy conferees felt that the position of the Director as the Ingelligence Adviser was inherent in the position itself, and that it would not be proper-to provide by law that the head of an agency under the Council should sit on the Council. " Specific Statement of Functions of CIA "... General Vandenberg indicated the difficulties which he had had in having to go to the N. I. A. on so many problems. He felt that the difficulties of his position would be multiplied, as he would have to ask policy guidance and direction from the Council on National Defense, which consists of many more members than the N. I. A. He was assured that the intent of the act was that the CIA would operate independently and come under the Council only on such specific measures as the Council may, from time to tinge, desire to direct. It would not be necessary for the Agency to ask continual approval from the Council. "...It was the final sense of the meeting that the Director of Central Intelligence should report to the Council on National Defense. As General Vandenberg indicated it would be necessary to report somewhere; that neither the President nor he was anxious to have another agency "free wheeling" around the Government. However, it was thought that the agency should have sufficient power to perform its own functions without it being necessary to have specific approval from the Council on each action. " Presidential Recommenclation to Congress it read as follows: Title II - coordination for National Security as it pertained to CIA - Congress a draft entitled "National Security Act of 1947. " Under On February 26, 1947, President Truman submitted to the "SF.C. 202. (a) There is hereby established under the National Approved For Release 2003/05/27) l&!RL'P~4-00709R000300090001-0 Security Council a Central Intelligence Agency, with a Director of Central Intelligence, who shall be the head thereof, to be appointed by the President. The D6ector shall receive compensation at the rate of $14, 000 a year. (b) Any commissioned officer of the United States Army, the United States Navy, or the United States Air Force may be appointed to the office of Director; and his appointment to, acceptance of, and service in, such office shall in no way affect any status, office, rank, or grade he may occupy or hold in the United States Army, the United States Navy, or the United States Air Force, or any emolument, perquisite, right, privilege, or benefit incident to or arising out of any such status, office, rank, or grade. Any such commissioned officer on the active list shall, while serving in the office of Director, receive the military pay and allowances payable to a commissioned officer of his grade and length of service and shall be paid, from any funds available to defray the expenses of the Agency, annual compensation at a rate equal to the amount by which $14, 000 exceeds the amount of his annual military pay and allowances. (c) Effective when the Director first appointed under subsection (a) has taken office- (1) The functions of the National Intelligence Authority (11 Fed. Reg. 1337, 1339, February 5, 1946) are transferred to the National Security Council, and such Authority shall cease to exist. (2) The functions of the Director of Central Intelligence and the functions, personnel, property, and records of the Central Intelligence Group are transferred to the Director of Central Intelligence appointed under this Act and to the Central Intelligence Agency respectively, and such Group shall cease to exist. Any unexpended balances of appropriations, allocations, or other funds available are authorized to be made available in like manner for expenditure by the Agency. " In retrospect, it is recalled that the White House drafting committee's prime concern was the unification aspects of the legislation. Approved For Release 2 .,31051t2IZ CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 In this connection, there was a general feeling that any unnecessary enlargement of the CIA provision would lead to controversy and would affect the legislative processing of the National Security Act of 1947. In addition, it was believed that detailed administrative provisions for CIA could not be adequately presented as part of the National Security Act of 1947, simply because of the lack of time. As events transpired, however, Congress was to delve into the CIA provisions at some length. In fact, during the floor discussion of the bill in the I-louse chamber, Mr. Carter Manasco, (D. , Alabama), a member of the House Committee which marked up the bill, said: This section on central intelligence was given more study by our 43 Subcommittee and the Full Committee than any other section of the bill. " vL'Ui L Approved For Releas Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 CHAPTER III. CONGRESSIONAL CONSIDERATION OF THE NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 Background On 26 February 1947 the President transmitted a draft bill entitled "National Security Act of 1947" to the President of the Senate pro te.npore and the Speaker of the House of Representatives and recommended its enactment by the 80th Congress. Prior to this date consideration had been given in both Houses to the need for a Government-wide foreign intelligence service and the structure it should take. House: During the 79th Congress, the House Committee on Military Affairs had issued "A report on the System Currently Employed in the Collection, Evalua`ion, and Dissemination of Intelligence Affecting the War Potential of the United States. "49 The report recognized the need for strong intelligence as the "nation's final line of defense, " and made nine very specific reco.nmendations: Recom-nendation 1: That the National Intelligence Authority, established on January 22, 1946, by Presidential directive, be authorized by act of Congress. Recommendation 2: That the National Intelligence Authority shall consist of the Secretaries of State, War, and the Navy, or deputies for intelligence. Recommendation 3: That the Central Intelligence Group receive its appropriations direct from the Congress. Recommendation 4: That the Central Intelligence Group has complete control over its own personnel. Approved For Release 2003/05/27Q 1 - p.p 4-00709R000300090001-0 v! , Recommendation 5: That the Director of the Central Intelligence Group be a civilian appointed for a preliminary term of two years and a permanent term of 10 years, at a salary of at least $12, 000 a year. Recommendation 6: That the Director of the Central Intelligence Group be appointed by the President, by and with the consent of.the Senate. Recommendation 7: That the Director of Central Intelli- gence shall (1) accomplish the correlation and evaluation of intelligence relating to the national security, and the appropriate dissemination within the Government of the resulting strategic and national policy intelligence, and in so doing making full use of the staff and facilities of the intelligence agencies already existing in the various Government departments; (2) plan for the coordination of such of the activities of the intelligence agencies of the various Government departments as relate to the national security and recommend to the National Intelli- gence Authority the. establishment of such over-all policies and objectives as will assure the most effective accomplishment of the national intelligence mission; (3) perform, for the benefit of said intelligence agencies, such services of common concern related directly to coordination, correlation, evaluation, and dissemination as the National Intelligence Authority shall determine can be more efficiently accomplished centrally; (4) perform such other similar functions and duties related to intelli- gence affecting the national security as the Congress and the National Intelligence Authority may from time to time direct. It is specifically understood that the Director of Central Intelligence shall not undertake operations for the collection of intelligence. (Emphasis added) Recommendation 8: That Paragraphs 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10 of the Presidential directive of January 22, 1946, relating to the establishment of a National Intelligence Authority be enacted into law, with such revisions in wording as may seem necessary. Recommendation 9: That the Army be requested sympa- thetically to examine further the question of the establish- ment of an Intelligence Corps for the training, development, and assignment of especially qualified officers. 34 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Senate: In terns of legislative processing during the 79th Congress, the Senate got further than the House. The Senate Committee on Military Affairs reported out a bill proposing a National Security Council outside of the national defense establishment and a Central Intelligence Agency for the purpose of coordinating nilitary and civilian programs, policies, 50 and plans in the foreign intelligence field. This bill was introduced as S. 2044 by Senators Lister Hill (D., Ala.), Elbert D. Thomas (D. , Utah), and Warren R. Austin (R., Vt.) on 9 April 1946, pursuant to President Truman's unification message of 19 December 1945. The need for "national intelligence" was underscored by General George C. Marshall in hearings before the Senate Committee on Military "Intelligence relates to purpose as well as to military capacity to carry out that purpose. The point, I think, is we should know as much as we possibly can of the possible intent and the capability of any other country in the world. . . Prior to entering the war we had little more than what a military attache could learn at a dinner, more or less, over the coffee cups... Today I think we see clearly we must know what the other fellow is planning to do, in our own defense... The important point is that the necessity applies equally outside of the arrned forces. It includes the State Department and other functions of the Government, and it should therefore be correlated on that level. 51 While S. 2044 was favorably acted upon by the Senate Military Affairs Committee, the Senate Committee on Naval Affairs, which had concurrent jurisdiction, did not report it out. Approved For Release.2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Thus, the crucible for central intelligence was carried over to the first session of the 80th Congress in the Presidential draft of the National Security Act of 1947. Title I of the draft concerned the "National Defense Establishment. " Title II, entitled "Coordination for National Security, " provided for the National Security Council and the Central Intelligence Agency. 52 Legislative Processing Faced with a complicated and vital legislative task related to the nation's future security, Congress deliberated on the National Security Act of 1947 for nearly five months. Senate: Introduction of a bill incorporating the President's draft was temporarily delayed while the Senate determined which standing committee would have jurisdiction over the bill. The Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments (now the Committee on Government Operations) questioned the decision of the President pro tempore, Arthur Vandenburg (R., Mich.) in referring the measure to the Armed Services Committee, 53 The Senate upheld the President pro tempore's ruling on 3 'March 1947 and Senator Chan Gurney (R., S. D. ), Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, then introduced the measure as S. 758. The Senate Armed Services Committee held hearings for ten weeks, went into executive session on 20 May, and reported out an amended version of S. 758 on 5 June. 54 The bill was considered by the Senate on 7 and 9 July and was approved by voice vote. Approved For Release 2003/0~':r4 RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 House: The measure eventually reported to the House was introduced on 28 February 1947 as H. R. 4214 by Chairman Clare Hoffman (R. , Mich.) of the Committee on Expenditures in the Execu- tive Departments (now the Committee on Government Operations). This bill was the subject of hearings which commenced on 2 April 1947 and concluded on 1 July. A favorable report was issued on 16 July. On 19 July H. R. 4214 was considered by the House, amended and passed by a voice vote. Immediately following this action,, the House passed S. 758 after substituting the provisions of its own Conference: S. 758 emerged from Conference Committee on 24 July 1947. The Senate accepted the Conference Report the same day by a voice vote and the House followed suit on the 25th of July. Legislative Record on CIA The legislative record on CIA in the National Security Act of 1947 consists of testimony before committees, committee reports,' floor discussions, amendments proposed and the provisions which were ultimately adopted. Overall, this record identifies the issues raised, the alternatives considered, and the reasons or explanations for the choices or compromises ultimately approved. Of the many factors having a bearing on the type of legislative record made on CIA, two seem especially deserving of mention. First, security inhibited the full development of the public legislative record { 1 Approved For Release/7 : CIA-RDP84-007098000300090001-0 on CIA. In opposing an amendment on the floor in the House, Mr. Manasco (D. , Ala.) underscored this handicap by revealing that "Many witnesses appeared before our Committee. We were sworn to secrecy, and I hesitate to even discuss this section, because I am afraid that I may say something, because the Congressional Record is a public record, and divulge something here that we received in that committee that would give aid and comfort to any 55 potential enemy we have. " Second, CIA was only one aspect of a complicated and contro- versial legislative proposal dealing primarily with military unification. The controversy surrounding the "National Military Establishment" also engulfed other provisions of the Act, including CIA. This, however, is not meant to imply the absence of independent reserva- tions concerning the CIA. Considering all of these factors, a fairly extensive public record was made on the CIA section. Further, the reasons and rationale for CIA related legislative action is, for the most part, wrong in assuming that extensive deliberation could be avoided by The White House drafting team was correct in estimating that the CIA section had the potentiality for being controversial but it was readily identifiable in the public record. reducing the CIA section down to "minimal provisions." Congressional interest in providing for a CIA was clearly underestimated. Probably SECRE Approved For Relea~ 7 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 t L. the most striking aspect of the Congressional interest in CIA was the overwhelming support for institutionalizing the Agency In statute as a positive step towards providing for the nation's future security. With this introduction the legislative record on the CIA section in the National Security Act of 1947 is developed and organized according to the five dominant legislative themes which evolved: (1) Need for a Central Intelligence Agency; (2) Position of CIA within the Executive Branch; (3) Statutory specification of functions for CIA; (4) Civilian status of the Director of Central Intelligence; and (5) Relationship to internal security. Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 CHAPTER IV. NEED FOR CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE The need for institutionalizing central intelligence was established in certain committee findings during the 79th Congress and was to be stressed again during the 80th Congress. In anticipation of hearings on S. 758, Senator Thomas56 made a major address to the Senate on the "President's" bill and emphasized the need for a Central Intelligence Agency:57 "Neither the War Department nor the Navy Department had an intelligence service adequate to our needs when the war broke out. The intelligence agencies in each Department operated separately for the most part, except for the exchange of routine military and naval attache reports. There was no real integration of intelligence at the operating level, and no established liaison with the State Department. Though funds were inadequate, there was much duplication of effort by the services. "The war brought substantial appropriations and drastic reorganization. The Office of Strategic Services was finally set up under the jurisdiction of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and acted as the central coordinating agency in intelligence matters. Later, the Joint Intelligence Committee and its subcommittees made further provision for the coordination of intelligence activities. In spite of these and other changes, however, much unnecessary duplication existed in the intelli- gence services of the State, War, and Navy Departments. The significance of the collection, analysis, and evaluation of information concerning foreign countries is no less great now than. it was during the war. The effective conduct of both foreign policy and military policy is dependent on the possession of full, ? accurate, and skillfully analyzed information concerning foreign countries. With our present world-wide sphere of international responsibility and our position among the world powers, we need the most efficient intelligence system that can be devised. Organization, of course, is not the whole story. We do know, however, that there is no returning to the prewar system, where the War, Navy and State Departments went their respec- tive ways. We have now a central intelligence agency estab- lished by executive action. Provision for such an agency should Approved For Release 2063/05/27 : 'CIA-RDP84-00709R0003000900 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 be made in permanent legislation. It seems entirely logical that such an agency should be placed in the framework of any agency that might be set up to coordinate military and foreign policies. " The theme so strongly stated by Senator Thomas was reiterated and amplified before the Senate Armed Services Committee during the hearing on S. 758: (Excerpts follow) Vice Admiral Forrest Sherman (member of the White House drafting team and detailed by the Secretary of Navy to work with the Military Affairs Committee on the Common Defense Act of 1946): "1 consider the Central Intelligence Agency to be a vital necessity under present world conditions, Its necessity will increase with our greater international respon- sibilities as the power of sudden attack is amplified by further developments in long range weapons and weapons of mass destruction. x158 Lt. General Hoyt S. Vandenberg (Director of Central Intelli- gence):->9 I sincerely urge adoption of the intelligence provisions of this bill. Section 202 will enable us to do our share in main- taining the national security, It will form a firm basis on which we can construct the finest intelligence service in the world. In my opinion, a strong intelligence system is equally if not more essential in peace than in war. Upon us has fallen leadership in world affairs. The oceans have shrunk until today both Europe and Asia border the United States almost as do Canada and Mexico. The interests, intentions, and capabili- ties of the various nations on these land masses must be fully known to our national policy makers. We must have this intelligence if we are to be forewarned against possible acts of agression, and if we are to be armed aginst disaster in an era of atomic warfare. "I think it can be said without successful challenge that before Pearl Harbor we did not have-an intelligence service in this country comparable to that of Great Britain or France or Russia or Germany or Japan. We did not have one because the people of the United States would not accept it, It was felt that there was so:nething un-American about espionage and even about intelligence generally. There was a feeling that Approved For Release 2003/05 MU- DP84-00709R000300090001-0 all that was necessary to win a war-if there ever were to be another war-was an ability to shoot straight. One of the great prewar fallacies was the common misconception that, if the Japanese should challenge us in the Pacific, our armed services would be able to handle the problem in a matter of a few months at most. "All intelligence is not sinister, not is it an invidious type of work. But before the Second World War, our intelligence services had left largely untapped the great open sources of information upon which roughly 80 percent of intelligence should normally he based. I mean such things as books, magazines, technical and scientific sur- veys, photographs, commercial analyses, newspapers, and radio broadcasts, and general information from people with a knowledge of affairs abroad. What weakened our position further was that those of our intelligence services which did dabble in any of these sources failed to coordinate their results with each other. "The Joint Congressional Committee to Investigate We are incorporating many of these into our present thinking... made some very sound recommendations for its improvement.. regarding the shortcomings of our intelligence system and the Pearl Harbor Attack reached many pertinent conclusions "The committee showed that some very significant efficiently be performed centrally. field commanders. But, over and above these failures were others, perhaps more serious, which went to the very struc- ture of our intelligence organizations. I am talking now of the failure to exploit obvious sources; the failure to coordinate the collection and dissemination of intelligence; the failure to centralize intelligence functions of common concern to more than one department of the Government, which could more . some of the evaluated information was not passed on to the information had not been correctly evaluated. It found that "In the testimony which has preceded mine in support possibly ask the question asked by the Pearl Harbor Committee: ization, so that no future congressional committee can intelligence, there must be coordination and some central- Establishment and its policies on the other. Similarly with political policies one one hand and our National Defense coordination between the State Department and our foreign others- there has been shown an awareness of the need for of this bill- by the Secretaries of War and the Navy, General Eisenhower, Admiral Nimitz, and General Spaatz, among Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : jA-ROH51, -00709R000300090001-0 'Why, with some of the finest intelligence available in our history - why was it possible for a Pearl Harbor to occur?' "The committee recommended that intelligence work have centralization of authority and clear-cut allocation of responsibility. It found specific fault with the system of dissemination of intelligence to those who had vital need of it. It stated that '. . . the security of the Nation can be insured only through continuity of service and centralization of responsibility in those charged with handling intelligence. "It found that there is no substitute for imagination and resourcefulness on the part of intelligence personnel, and that part of the failure in this respect was '... the failure to accord to intelligence work the important and significant role which it deserves. ' "The committee declared that '... efficient intelli- gence services are just as essential in time of peace as in war. ' "All of these findings and recommendations have my hearty concurrence. In the Central Intelligence Group, and in its successor which this bill creates, must be found the answer to the prevention of another Pearl Harbor. "As the United States found itself suddenly projected into a global war, immense gaps in our knowledge became readily apparent. The word 'intelligence' quickly took a fashionable connotation. Each new wartime agency - as well as many of the older departments - soon blossomed out with intelligence staffs of their own, each producing a mass of largely uncoordinated information. The resultant competi- tion for funds and specialized personnel was a monumental example of waste. "The War and Navy Departments developed full political and economic intelligence staffs, as did the Research and Analysis Division of the OSS. The Board of Economic Warfare and its successor, the Foreign Economic Adminis- tration, also delved deeply into fields of economic intelli- gence. Not content with staffs in Washington, they established subsidiary staffs in London and then followed these up with other units on the Continent. "When, during the war, for example, officials requested a report on the steel industry in Japan or the economic conditions in the Netherlands East Indies, they had the reports of the Board of Economic Warfare, G-2, ONI, and the OSS from which to choose. Because these agencies had competed to secure the best personnel, it was necessary for each of them to back up Approved For Release 2003/05/REOtom'-E P84-00709R000300090001-0 its experts by asserting that its particular reports were the best available, and that the others might well be disregarded. "As General Marshall stated in testifying on the uni- fication bill before the Senate Military Affairs, Committee last year, ' ... Prior to entering the war, we had little more than what a military attache could learn at a dinner, more or less over the coffee cups. "From this start, we suddenly had intelligence springing up everywhere. But nowhere was its collection, production, or dissemination fully coordinated- not even in the armed forces. General Marshall pointed this out in his testimony when he mentioned ' ... the difficulty we had in even developing a Joint Intelligence Committee. That would seem to be a very simple thing to do, but it was not at all. ' "There are great masses of information available to us in peace as in war. With our wartime experience behind us, we know now where to look for.material, as well as for what to look. I "The transition from war to peace does not change the necessity for coordination of the collection, production, and dissemination of the increasingly vast quantities of foreign-intelligence information that are becoming available. This coordination the Central Intelligence Agency will supply... "President Roosevelt established the Office of Strategic Services for the purpose of gathering together men of exceptional background and ability who could operate in the field of national, rather than departmental, intelligence. In weighing the merits of the OSS, one should remember that it came late into the field. It was a stopgap. Overnight, it was given a function to perform that the British, for instance, had been developing since the days of Queen Elizabeth. When one considers these facts, the work of the OSS was quite remark- able and its known failures must be weighed against its successes. Moreover, it marked a crucial turning point in the development of United States intelligence. We are now attempting to profit by their experiences and mistakes. "Having attained its present international position of importance and power in an unstable world, the United States should not, in my opinion, find itself again confronted with the necessity of developing its plans and policies on the basis of intelligence collected, compiled, and interpreted by some for- eign government. It is common knowledge that we found our- selves in just that position at the beginning of World War II... Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 "For months we had to rely blindly and trustingly .on the superior intelligence system of the British. Our successes prove that this trust was generally well placed. However, in matters so vital to a Nation having the responsibilities of a. world power, the United States should never again have to go hat in hand, begging any foreign government for the eyes- the foreign intelligence - with which to see, We should be self-sufficient. The interests of others may not be our interests... "The need for our own coordinated intelligence pro- gram has.been recognized in most quarters. The Pearl Harbor disaster dramatized that need and stopgap measures were adopted. As the war drew to a close, the President directed the Joint Chiefs of Staff to study the problem and draft recom- mendations for the future. "By the assignment of primary fields of intelligence responsibilities, we are - in the fields of collection, production, and dissemination - preventing overlapping functions - that is, eliminating duplicate roles and missions, and eliminating duplicate services in carrying out these functions," House Committee Testimony before the House Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments provided additional insights into the need for structuring foreign intelligence functions on a Government-wide basis. General Carl Spaatz, Commanding General, Army Air Force: "The bill provides the basic elements of security of which we may mention five.... Fourth, correct intelligence. The bill provides for enlargement of our capacity to know the capabili- ties of our possible enemies, how they can attack us, arid with what. Each service will retain its own technical intelli- gence with its own trained attaches abroad. The CIA will coordinate information from all the services, as well as from other branches of the Government. " 0 Fleet Admiral Chester Nirnitz: "The bill will establish a Central Intelligence Agency with the responsibility for collection of information from all available sources, evaluation of that information and dissemination thereof. This Agency is intended to secure complete coverage of the wide field of intelligence and should minimize duplication. The bill recog- nizes that military intelligence is a coniposit of authenticated Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA- Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 46 and evaluated information covering not only the armed forces establishment of a possible enemy but also his industrial capacity, racial traits, religious beliefs, and other related aspects. "61 Secretary James V. Forrestal (Secretary of the Navy; 6Z listed the CIA second among the essentials of the bill, after the National Security Council): "The need for that (CIA) should be obvious to all of us. ,, 63 Rep. W. J. Dorn (D., S.C.): "With regard to the Central Intelligence Agency - I may be wrong, but I have always felt that if Admiral Kimmel had had proper intelligence from Washington the attack on Pearl Harbor would not have occurred, or at least we would have been able to meet it better. From your experience, do you think that this Central Intelligence Agency -alone would warrant passage of this bill?" Vice Admiral Arthur Radford: "Of course, I think it is most important. Actually it is in existence now. It is already functioning. " Committee Reports The Senate Committee report on S. 758 concluded: "To meet the future with confidence, we must make certain... that a Central Intelligence Agency collects and analyzes that mass of information without which the Government cannot either maintain peace or wage war successfully. ,,65 The House Committee report on H. R. 4214 was equally clear i.nd succinct in its conclusion: "The testimony received by your com- committee discloses an urgent need for a continuous program of close coordination between our domestic, foreign and military policies so that we may always be able to appraise our commitments as a Nation in the light of our resources and capabilities. This, your committee Approved For Release 20031071 elif4DP84-00709R000300090001-0 feels, can be accomplished by the Central Intelligence Agency... In order that the Council (National Security Council), in its delibera- tions and advice to the President, may have available adequate infor- mation, there is provided a permanent organization under the Council, 66 which will furnish that information." report were re-echoed in floor statements during the Senate's dis- Senate: ' The Senate Armed Service Committee findings and Floor Discussion cussion of S. 758: Senator Chan Gurney (R. , S. D.) (Chairman of the Armed Services Committee): "As an important adjunct to the National Security Council there is a provision for a Central Intelligence Agency, which fills a long recognized demand for accurate information upon which important deci Tons, relating to foreign military policy can be based. " Senator Raymond Baldwin (R. , Conn.): Under the Council there is established a central intelligence agency to provide coordinated, adequate intelligence for all Government agencies concerned with national security. When one reads the record of the past war in regard to that field it is found that there was much to be desired in the way intelligence was covered, and there was great conflict about it. I say nothing here in depre- cation of the men who were engaged in the intelligence service, because some remarkable and extremely courageous things were done. Nevertheless, we demonstrated' from our experience the need of a central intelligence agency.. . Senator Lister Hill (D. , Ala. ): "It would (S. 758) provide security measures at all times, rather than only when hostili- ties threaten. It creates... a central intelligence agency which is so essential for the Government to maintain peace and without which the Government cannot wage war success- fully. ,69 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 House. The need for centralizing national intelligence drew wide support from many members of the House during the floor discussion of H. R. 4214: Rep. James Wadsworth (R., N.Y.): "This (H. R. 4214 and the instru- mentalities it establishes) links the military policy with foreign policy, all measured by our resources and the potentialities of other people. "70 Rep. Fred Busbey (R., Ill.) (although troubled with certain features of the CIA section): "I am not opposed to a central intelli- gence agency. ... You remember Pearl Harbor. They had intelli- gence, but it was not correlated and evaluated correctly. "71 Rep. Walter Andrews (R., N. Y.): "On the next level above the National Military Establishment there is provided the National Security Council with the President as chairman, which will effectively coordinate our domestic and foreign policies in the light of sound information furnished by the Central Intelligence Agency. "72 Rep. Robert Sikes (D., Fla. ): "During the intervening years between wars we have never had a proper balance between our foreign and military policies... We have never been fully informed of the capabilities, potential or intent of likely enemies... This is another time when we can well say, 'Remember Pearl Harbor.' 1173 Rep. Dewey Short (R., Mo.): "Mr. Chairman, on every score and by every count we should vote adequate funds for... our Central Intelligence - which has been lamentably weak These (including Central Intelligence) are the things above all others which will guarantee our security. "74 Rep. W. J. Bryan Dorn (D., S. C.): "Mr. Chairman, one of the most important features of this bill is the Central Intelligence Agency. I would like for you to turn back with me this afternoon to the most terrible period preceding World War II. Why, you had most of the newspapers and people in this country thinking that Adolf Hitler was a comic character, that a war in Europe could not last through the winter I remember those editorials quite well - that Germany would not last through the winter of 1939. I remember officers of the Navy coming back from observation posts in the Pacific and saying that the Japanese could not Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 .last 3 weeks in a war with America. The Government in Washington was stunned and shocked beyond belief when it suddenly realized that Paris and France would fall. "An important Member of the other body, who is still serving in that body, said that a few bombs on Tokyo would knock them out of the war. What a woeful lack of intelligence as to the potential power of our enemies. People were saying that Mussolini would not attack; that he was only bluffing. Around the world there was a total lack of knowledge of those forces that were marshalling to destroy American democracy. I tell you gentlemen of the committee that your central intelligence agency is a very important part of this bill. "75 Rep. Chet Holifield (D., Calif.): "I want to read to you some of the conclusions of the Pearl Harbor Committee, as follows. Their conclusions were: 'That'the Hawaiian Command failed to discharge their responsibility in the light of the warnings received from Washington, and other information possessed by them and the principal command by mutual cooperations. (B) They failed to integrate and coordinate their facilities for defense, to alert properly the Army and Navy Estab- lishments in Hawaii, particularly in the line of warning and intelligence available to them during the period Novem- ber 27 to December 7, 1941. They failed to effect liaison on a basis adequately designed to acquaint each of them with the operations of the other, which was necessary to their joint security, and to exchange fully all significant intelli- gence, and they also failed to appreciate and evaluate the significance of the intelligence and other information available to them. "'.6 Rep. Robert A. Harness (R., Ind.): "Nov a word about the Central Intelligence Agency. When such an organization was first proposed I confess I had some fear and doubt about it. Along with other members of the Committee, I insisted that the scope and authority of this Agency be carefully defined and limited. Please bear in mind that this is a bold departure from American tradition. This country has never before officially resorted to the collection of secret and strategic information in time of peace as an announced and fixed policy. Nov, however, I am convinced that such an Agency as we are now considering is essential to our national security. "77 49 Approved For Release 2003/ft _t fff_IRDP84-007098000300090001-0 Rep. Wadsworth (R., N.Y.): ". . . In addition, under the Council there would be another element which is to advise the Council, subject to regulations made by the Council, in the field of Intelligence, in the foreign field; and there is established a central intelligence agency subject to the Council headed by a director. The function of that agency is to constitute itself as a gathering point for information com- ing from all over the world through all kinds of channels concerning the potential strength of other nations and their political intentions. There is nothing secret about that. Every nation in the world is doing the same thing. But it must be remembered that the Central Intelligence Agency is subject to the Council and does not act independently. It is the agency for the collecting and dissemination of informa- tion which will help the President and the Council to adopt wise and effective policies. So with the information of that sort concerning other nations and information coming in with respect,to our own resources, both of which are available to the Council and President, we will have for the first time in our history a piece of machinery that should work and it is high time that we have it. We have never had it before. During this last war all sorts of devices were resorted to, obviously in great haste, to accomplish a thing like this. You may remember the huge number of special committees, organizations and agencies set up by Executive Order in an attempt to catch up with the target. We have learned as a result of the war that we should have some permanent organi- zation, and that is the one proposed in this bill. rr Rep. Manasco (D. , Ala. ): "If we had had a strong central intelligence organization, in all probability we would never had had the attack on Pearl Harbor; there might not have been a World War II... I hope the committee will support the provision in the bill, because the future security of our country in a large measure depends upon the intelligence we get. Most of it can be gathered without clandestine intelli- gence, but some of it must be of necessity clandestine intelligence. The things we say here today, the language we change, might endanger the lives of some American citizens in the future. "79 Thus, there was a consensus of agreement, almost reaching to unanimous proportions, that the concept of central intelligence should Urn Approved For Release 2003 a~URDP84-00709R000300090001-0 be ratified and embodied into statute. However, beyond this point of almost total accord, differences of opinion would arise as more specific consideration relating to CIA was undertaken. SECRET Approved For Release 2003/05/27 'CIA-RDP84-0 51 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 CHAPTER V. POSITION WITHIN EXECUTIVE BRANCH The position that should be prescribed for the CIA within the Executive Branch was understandably of considerable interest. This was the very ?iarrow of the central intelligence concept and an antece- dent to its disposition was an appreciation of the "supra-depart nental" nature of the relationships which had been established within the "intelligence community" under the National Intelligence Authority. It is recalled that the 22 January 1946 Presidential Directive 80 placed the Director of Central Intelligence and the Central Intelligence Group under the control of the President's chief advisors in international and military affairs, the Secretaries of State, War, and Navy, and the personal representative of the President. The DCI was a non-voting member of the NIA. Following this pattern, the proposed National Security Act of 1947 simply established ".. , under the National Security Council a Central Intelligence Agency with a Director of Central Intelligence, of the National Intelligence Authority. . . to the National Security Council. 1181 f These functions were to plan, develop, and coordinate all Federal foreign intelligence activities "... to assure the most effective accomplish- ment of the intelligence fission related to the nationar security. 1182 The functions of the DCI and the CIG under the NIA were transferred also to the DCI and the CIA Act, Approved For Release 2003/05/27 P00709R000300090001-0 In pursuing the meaning of these relationships three major questions were considered. First, could central intelligence operate effectively by reporting to a* group (National Security Council) rather than to an individual? Second, would satisfactory relationships be maintained between CIA and the departments and their intelligence agencies? Third, what relationship should exist between the DCI and the NSC? NSC Relationship House. During Committee hearings in the House, Representa- tive Walter Judd (R. , Minn.) pursued the respective merits of the CIA reporting to the NSC or to an individual: Rep. Judd: "I have concern as to whether the intelligence agency provided in the bill is given anywhere near the impor- tance it deserves... it seems to be a joint and hydra-headed agency which will weaken our intelligence rather than strengthen it. Dr. Vannevar Rush (Director of the Office of Emergency Manaement, Scientific Research and Development).- 0 ". , . The Central Intelligence Agency provided for (in the bill) links the military establishment and the State Department, and hence cannot logically be placed under the Secretary of National Defense. It is a joint matter. It might be reporting directly to the President... " Rep. Judd: "I have never seen a hydra-headed organization which functions as well as one headed by a single man. If we were caught flat-footed without proper intelligence at the out- break of another war, it might be disastrous. "83 SECR T d For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/ 84-00709R000300090001-0 54 Rep_ Judd: "Regarding the CIA, do you think that it ought to be under the National Security Council, or directly under the Secretary of National Defense, on a par with the National Security Resources Board, the Joint Research and Develop- ment Board, the National Security Resources Board. The CIA is put under the National Security Council so that it has a dozen heads. It seems to me that this is so important that it ought to be on a par with those other agencies. " Vice Admiral Radford: "I feel that the CIA should be under the National Security Council. " Rep. Judd: "You don't think that its reports will make the rounds and never get any action?" Vice Admiral Radford: "I hardly think so. I think its handling of reports gln be controlled by, the Director. I am sure it would be. " Senate. In a statement before the Senate Committee, Mr. Allen W. Dulles, who made extraordinary contributions to the success of the OSS and who eventually was to become the first civilian to be appointed Director of Central Intelligence, questioned the desirability of the Director reporting to a large National Security Council:85 "... this (National Security) Council will have at least six members, and possibly more, subject to Presidential appointments. From its composition it will be largely military although the Secretary of State will be a member. If precedent is any guide, it seems unlikely, in view of the burden of work upon all the members of this Council, that it will prove to be an effective working body which will meet frequently, or which could give much supervisory attention to a central intelligence agency. It would seem preferable that the Chief of Central Intelligence should report, as at present, to a smaller body, of which the Secretary of State would be the chairman, and which would include the Secretary of National Defense, and a representative of the President, with the right reserved to the Secretaries of State and of National Defense to be represented on this small board by SECRET Approved For Release 2003/ 5/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 ECRET deputies, who should have at least the rank of Assistant Secretary. And this board must really meet and assume the responsibility for advising and counseling the Direc- tor of Intelligence, and assure the proper liaison between the Agency and these two Departments and the Executive. " However, under no circumstances did Mr. Dulles want CIA to be organized under an individual policy maker; 86 "The State Department, irrespective of the form in which the Central Intelligence Agency is cast, will collect and process its own information as a basis for the day-by- day conduct of its work. The armed services intelligence agencies will do likewise. But for the proper judging of the situation in any foreign country it is important that informa- tion should be processed by an agency whose duty it is to weigh facts, and to draw conclusions from those facts, without having either the facts or the conclusions warped by the inevitable and even proper prejudices of the men whose duty it is to determine policy and who, having once determined a policy, are too likely to be blind to any facts which might tend to prove the policy to be faulty. The Central Intelligence Agency should have nothing to do with policy. It should try to get at the hard facts on which others must determine policy. The warnings which might well have pointed to the attack on Pearl Harbor were largely discounted by those who had already concluded that the Japanese must inevitably strike elsewhere. The warnings which reportedly came to Hitler of our invasion of North Africa were laughed aside. Hitler thought he knew we didn't have the ships to do it. It is impossible to provide any system which will be proof against the human frailty of intellectual stubbornness. Every individual suffers from that. All we can do is to see that we have created the best possible mechanism to get the unvarnished facts before the policy makers, and to get it there in time. " Chairman Gurney of the Senate Armed Services Committee became particularly interested in whether the CIA should report to the National Security Council or to an individual, particularly the Secretary of National Defense. In line with this interest he arranged S[CP Approved For Release 2003/0 2 iDP84-00709R000300090001-0 for Mr. Charles S. Cheston, a former Assistant Director of the Office of Strategic Services, to meet with Admiral Roscoe Hillen- koetter, who succeeded General Vandenberg as DCI on I May 1947. Mr. Cheston's viewpoint was subsequently made a matter of record in the Senate hearings:87 "... It has been amply demonstrated that problems of peace and war in modern times require total intelligence. Each of the principal departments and agencies of Govern- ment requires information for the determination of basic questions of policy, the collection and analysis of which are entirely outside the scope of its own operations. It does not solve the problem to create a kind of clearing house for information gathered in the ordinary operations of the several departments. What is needed is an effective, integrated, single agency with clearly defined duties and authority to analyze and correlate information from all sources and, wherever necessary, to supplement existing methods of collection of information, Such an agency must serve all principal departments of the Government and also bring together the full and comprehensive information upon which national policy must be based. It should not supplant existing intelligence units within the several departments, Every effort should be made to improve and strengthen these units wherever possible. The problem is national and not departmental. And it will not be solved by having the policies and operations of such an agency determined by a committee of Cabinet members, whose primary duty is to discharge the full-time responsibilities of their own offices. " Following a meeting with Mr. Cheston in Philadelphia on Memorial Day, Admiral Hillenkoetter wrote a letter to Senator Gurney, from which the following is excerpted: "The third point (advocated by Mr. Cheston) is that the Director should report to an individual rather than a committee. As I previously stated before the Senate Appropriations Committee, I feel that this is a matter to be determined by the Congress rather than by rue. On purely theoretical SECRET Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 56 Approved For Release 2003/05/271jA 84-00709R000300090001-0 I %L- grounds, it would, of course, be best to report to one indi- vidual rather than a group. However, I can work with a Council equally well, and see no great difference in either solution that Congress may determine. There may be some question as to the wisdom of having the Director of Central Intelligence report to the Secretary of National Defense. This, in effect, might be considered as placing the Agency within the military establishment, which would not, in all probability, be satisfactory to the State Department. They have a great interest in the operations of the Agency, and their contributions in the intelligence field are particularly important in time of peace, when the Foreign Service can operate throughout the world. "As General Donovan stated in his memorandum to you of 7 May.1947, intelligence 'must serve the diplomatic as well as the military and naval arms. ' This can be best done outside the military establishment. As General Donovan stated further, '. Since the nature of it: work requires it to have status, it should be independent of any Department of the Government (since it is obliged to serve all and must be free of the natural'bias on operating Departments).' " When this matter came to the Senate floor, Senator Robertson of the Senate Armed Services Committee proposed an amendment elevating the Secretary of National Security (Secretary of Defense) to a position "... where he will be over the National Security Council, the Central Intelligence Agency, and the National Security Resources Board, and over the entire military establishment as well. "88 The emphasis behind this amendment, however, was to make the Secretary of Defense the coordinator of national security and immediately under the President. It was only collaterally related to central intelligence. Senator Gurney, in opposing the amendment, said, "We do not believe that the (Secretary of Defense) should in any way control, by means of a superior position, the conclusions which emanate from the Security Council... "89 The amendment was defeated. Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Relationship with Intelligence Community While the CIA was established under the National Security Coun- cil as proposed by Administration, Congressional consideration helped to illuminate the supra-departmental nature of the Agency's function as much as it did to ratify earlier Executive Branch action. The second concern relating to the establishment of the CIA under the National Security Council was whether this arrangement would support satisfactory relationships between the CIA and the depart- ments and their. intelligence agencies.. This concern was brought out in the following colloquy during the Senate Committee hearings:' Senator Tydings (D., Md.): "... when you get down to the Central Intelligence Agency, which certainly is one of the most important of all the functions set forth in the bill, I notice that it reports directly to the President and does not seem to have any line running to the. War Department, or the Navy Department, or to the Secretary for Air. And I was wondering if that rather excluded position, you might say, was a wholesome thing. It seems to me that Central Intelli- gence Agency ought to have more direct contact with the Army and the Navy and the Air Force; and as I see it on the chart here, it is pretty well set aside and goes only to the President. What is the reason for that?" Admiral Sherman: "Well, sir, this diagram shows the pri- mary control of the Central Intelligence Agency through the National Security Council which, of course, is responsible to the President. But, of course, the Central Intelligence Agency, by its detailed directive, takes information in from the military services and also supplies them with information. "In other words, it is a staff at ency and controlled through the National Security Council, which is supported by the military services, and in turn, supports them. Senator Tydings: "It seems to me that of course they would diffuse such information as a matter of orderly procedure Approved For Release 2003/05/?x - DP84-00709R000300090001-0 59 to the Army, Navy, and Air Force, as they collected the information and as they deemed it pertinent. But I would feel a little more secure about it if there were a line running from that agency to the War Department, the Navy Department, and the Air Force, rather than have it go up through the President and back again. Because the Presi- dent is a rather busy man, and while he has control over it, one of its functions, it seems to me, ought to be to have a closer tie-in with the three services than the chart indicates." relationships. " Naval Intelligence, and there are a good many other cross- Agency, who collaborates very closely with Military and Secretary of National Defense, the Central Intelligence diagram. Actually, the Security Council, placed directly under it, has members of the three departments, the Admiral Sherman: "Well, sir, that is the trouble with the Senator Tydings: "I realize that, but even so, I think intelli- gence is about as important a part of running a war as there is, as I know you will agree. And it is rather set off there by itself, and is only under the President; which is all right for general direction purposes, but I do not feel satisfied in having it over there without some lines running to the War Department, the Navy Department, and the Air Force, even though that might follow and they might do it anyhow!' Cn. three departments, and to those others." so on, extending from the Central Intelligence Agency to the chart, we might show a line of collaboration and service and Admiral Sherman: "Well, in a further development of this Senator Tydings: "To the Joint Chiefs of Staff anyway. " the present time. " a matter of fact. We have a Central Intelligence (man) in the Policy Council of the Research and Development Board at Admiral Sherman: "They serve the Joint Chiefs of Staff, as Senator Tydings: "If you ever do another chart, will you do me the favor of connecting that up with those three departments and with the Joint Chiefs of Staff? Because it looks like it is set up in that way to advise the President, more than to advise the services and the Joint Chiefs of Staff; which, of course, is not the intention of it at all, in my opinion. " SECRET Approved For Release 2001( 5If FF -RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Admiral Sherman: "We tried, in this particular chart, to show only the primary line of control, with the exception of the dotted line from the President to the Joint Chiefs of Staff, which is there for constitutional reasons. " Senator Tydings: "Well, I hope that my comments will cause us to find some way that we can make sure that someone will offer an amendment from the War Department or the Navy Department that the Intelligence Agency is to have direct tie-in with the Joint Chiefs and the Army, Navy, and Air Force. Otherwise, we may have another Pearl Harbor controversy, with the question arising, 'Who got the information?" And the reply, 'It was not transmitted.' That is one thing that should not happen again. And as this is set up, it would lend the layman the opinion that it was more or less detached, rather than an integral part of the three services." Senator Tydings: "Admiral, that is an awfully short bit of explanation, under the caption "Central Intelligence Agency, " the way it is set up here, separately, to be appointed by the President, and superseding the services now run by the Army and the Navy, I respectfully submit to you and to General Norstad that it might be wise to put an amendment in there, in order to make certain that the thing is understood; that this Central Intelligence Agency shall service the three departments and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and have some tie-in with the three departments, rather than to leave it hanging up there on a limb all off by itself. I do not think that would change anything mate- rially, but it would clarify it, and make it plain that we are setting up something for the purposes for which we conceive it tc be set up. " Admiral Sherman: "Well, sir, I would like to make a comment on the language as to the Central Intelligence Agency. At one time in the drafting we considered completely covering the Central Intelligence Agency in the manner that it should be covered by law. " Senator Tydingj "Admiral, my point is simply this: that under the wording as to the Central Intelligence Agency which Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 SECRET begins on page 20 and ends at the top of page 22, it deals more or less with consolidation and not with the duties that devolve upon that office. It seems to me there is a void in the bill that ought to be eliminated. Admiral Sherman: "Well, we considered the matter of trying to cover the Central Intelligence Agency adequately, and we found that that matter, in itself, was going to be a matter of legislation of considerable scope and importance. Senator Tyding "A separate bill?" Admiral Sherman: "A separate bill. And after consultation with General Vandenberg, we felt it was better in this legis- lation only to show the relationship of the Central Intelligence Agency to the National Security Council, and then leave to separate legislation the task of,a full and thorough develop- ment of the Central Intelligence Agency. " Senator Tydings: "Well, now, for the record, is it safe for this Committee to assume that during this session it is likely that a bill will come along dealing with the Central Intelli- gence Agency in the particulars we have under discussion?" Admiral Sherman: "It is my understanding that that will take place. " The Chairman: "How about that, General Vandenberg? " General Vandenberg: "The enabling act is prepared, but we do not want to submit that until we have reason for it. " Later, General Vandenberg reviewed for the Senate committee i) the relationships which had been developed between the Director of Central Intelligence and the intelligence community under the 22 January 1946 Presidential directive:91 "In order to perform his prescribed functions, the Director of Central Intelligence must keep in close and inti- mate contact with the departmental intelligence agencies of SECT?LT Approved For Release 2003/05SE.1I RrP84-00709R000300090001-0 L 62. the Government. To provide formal machinery for this pur- pose, the President's Directive established an Intelligence Advisory Board. to advise the Director. The permanent mem- bers of this Board are the Directors of Intelligence of the State, War and Navy Departments and the Air Force. Pro- vision is made, moreover, to invite the heads of other intelligence agencies to sit as members of the Advisory Board on all matters which would affect their agencies. In this manner, the Board serves to furnish the Director with the benefits of the knowledge, advice, experience, viewpoints and over-all requirements of the departments and their intelligence agencies. " The responsibility to support the departments and their intelli- gence agencies was a function of the DCI under the President's Directive of 22 January 1946 and was carried over into the CIA section of the President's proposal by providing that "the functions of the Director of Central Intelligence and the functions... of the Central Intelligence Group are transferred to the Director of Central Intelli- gence appointed under this act and to the Central Intelligence Agency respectively. However, in keeping with the House Committee's view92 duties in the interest of clarity and simplicity... " the CIA section was amended to specify these supporting functions. This provided the basis for the following colloquy on the I-louse floor:93 Rep. Kersten (R. , Wis.): "It seems to me from what the gentleman has said that the Central Intelligence Agency is one of the very important parts of this entire set-up. I wish to ask the gentleman if there is a definite coordination provided for between that Agency and, say the Department of State? For I feel that certaiii information of the Agency would affect the activities of the entire system. " S C~RFT . that it is better legislative practice to spell out such (CIA's) Approved For Release 2003/05/27 CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Re. Wadsworth (l:. , N. Y. ): "The gentleman is correct. May I point out that under the provisions of the bill the Central Intelligence Agency in effect must cooperate with all the agencies of the Government, including the State De- partment. It is the gathering point of information that may come in from any department of the Government with re- spect to the foreign field, including the State Department, of course; including the War Department, through G-2; including the Navy Department, through ONI. That informa- tion is gathered into the central agency to be evaluated by Central Intelligence and then disseminated to those agencies of Government that may be interested in some portion of it. " hCI Relationship with NSC The third and final consideration relating to structural rela= tio-_ships concerned the position of the Director with respect to the National Security Council. A s background it is recalled that prior to submission of the proposal act to the Congress, General Vanden- berg stroungly opposed participation by either CIA or its Director in policy decisions but felt that there should be a provision providing for the Director's presence at the meeting of the Council. The 22 January 1946 Directive provided that the Director sit on the National Intelligence Authority as a non-voting member. However, the draft- iris tearry felt that the position of the Director as the intelligence -.,!visor to the Council was inherent in the position itself, and that it ;could be improper to provide by late that the head of the Agency, under $ill. Council, should sit on the Council. 94 While being present at the inoe?ting of the Council did not necessarily constitute sitting "on" the >iiny net =* .a? co -mm icatic to hiaa from the Comptrv1Ier . C-eaaral on tai urea subject. The Comptrallex General notes Lhit Ica the eza trnent of Ccatral lutslligance Agency legislation the General Acca ng -4 ice 'mss generally broadened the $ of and ~t m,az of ac itie3 of " moat " Govvz rnent agaxt.:.ies 17ut that with the Contral I APIlig e Agency a3 c read to ram only a voucher audit of vouc iered fuels and no audit of cca$dentb f=.snds. Vie, thexclore. reco^3 ne..:ds "... a chats e in the scar.~ of our a;idit : or:c at CLI ... by brcadeni ng the General Ace ntd 3 C tire's audit, while recognizing that "July broaden ioy of cur audit activiti-3 shed =,ot iacluaa an oval :on of the .ntel- iigenee activities of the Agency." Mr. .3lday.. speaking for his Sub cazn=ittee in hi3 letter of .3uae I3th. reoorri endn that the Agency consider vlith L%r3 Car, troller General "a broadsx type of a;ztiit than i3 pre ently acco~ its ie'd." _ T3 haatox7 and farts in this mate: are as follows: Section ` 101,b) of the Central l..te13ig~9 .~gsucy ~;ct of 1949F ?rovi.des is G .e amna made available to heL -A-3-- icy -=?y be c_c , r de i Wit!hOut r era, d to r'~e oas i s of la .;r and r -?,lation3 relati.na to the exoaniutura of Covern..rex t rd3; a=d for cb,;3ct;3 of a ; ~a3i ant;_ ?, rsor is zy, or corer ;lcl nata: o. ouch anii:~res to be accounted for sol,ly oa Via c3rti.iicatn 03 the irt`.ctoi and eye-y :;%Ich c_.:tiz Cate 34a l dcamnad a :,%&ilcirnt Voucher for i tr a.-nount thoreia ccrtiiie6.,: I!j r Approved For Release 2003/0527 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 tali 1 ' t . Y . Approved For 2o'031b/27 :r.C:.,IA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 in View of tha clop a into elation of all of this A e~ucy' a acti vzti * a. I b isyy it coui3 nave ba n Corr ;tly ar u that all of the fxwda of the vea'C7 saxovlci be e--LP;-used a.dar the auth.oxity rf :lzls 3ecbicma so that nc a c:i L.jem wo'.ia be sz~bj ~ to outside audit. l.owever. it hau been cur practice. as yogi I MOW, to put as muds of our ex"OendituroS on the her ed side as is pr esih3e and still protect r aitive activities. t, vouc 1ch e=ea iiruraa have be en subje. to a voucher audit by repreeenta- Uves tho , r i :>ceouatin_I i ce. All othax e.` esditures have bsea subject to the strict t kind of in orra ccaArol and auditing'by 4-tar own ,:Audit StaH and Comptroller. The proportion as betweezi voucher--td and CC den has varied from year to year but the a very-113 ban been a qb 46 peT cent vos tiered. to .55 p* r cant- l would be pleased oo continuo with the" procedt v; however, ii thex e is a bradc^ning of the C,-n.,--al Acc ng CLice; s review into a comprehensive audit of the v deer d side. we will encowttex Serious problerw% as such an examination would neeen arily exteZad into the field of iatelliience so% ces and= etbhada unless its scope were limited at or direction. The Coal l,'utellige a Agent is a partic la---ly sensitive arm of the ex.-.cutive branch of the Goverrmens in the general #Ials1 oL foreign relati.or-'s, and I wCuld net wish its use.-: ass to be l=paired in aay way by fa t a body rep-;ble to the le ia:ive branch or from the 1 illative bxaacli a meas?,re of control or a=. ervi.aion detri eutal to Its effztriv sa. AceOx0,13&3y. r felt I should bmit heae faits to you. AA t e lama tima. I could wuggest t', t I c;iaC-4ss th matte. with the COw:Pt-oilex C...neral, 4l:Ir. Campbellas weU as Mr. Fiisiay, ?i you a prove. to detsrnina whethax a form of aidit of so-called vou#hered to the General Acc 3iag ace and to dir. Uay ;:mda oatiasas *oxy and his hubcommitte can be a iced Upon +.~it1--out impairing the powers a:ut o rities 4 h rr a:d to enuitures for c dentaal p oeea o ad -which we have found esseu:iai to our o?pe:ati.oxis. if you aurae, I s= 1 proceed to have such conversations a4 i s? : r ~ s`t the no ulis to you without r;:acbing any Lo^zmitmerit ntil 0~ l 'r3'~r obtained your e .recur; ~n~e, ..0L--Ic a r el y. Al lan ".fit. Du~.llci Approved For Release 2003/05/27 !CIA-RDP_8.4-00709R000300090001 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 25 July 1959 The Honorable Paul J. Kilday Chairman, Subcommittee on CIA Committee on Armed Services U. S. House of Representatives Washington 25, D. C. Dear Mr. Kilday: I refer to your letter of 18 June 1959 and to our discussion on 30 June 1959 with regard to your desire that I initiate a conference with the Comptroller General to consider the possibility of a broader type of audit in the Central Intelligence Agency by the General Accounting Office. This is an interim report to advise you that I have contacted Mr. Campbell who, designated Mr. A. T. Samuelson to discuss this matter with us initially. Colonel L. K. White, my Deputy Director for Support, has had a meeting with Mr. Samuelson, and Mr. Campbell and Mr. Samuelson have accepted my invitation to a briefing next week in order to gain a better understanding of our activities and of the problems inherent in the conduct of a comprehensive audit. After this briefing and any other subsequent discussions which the Comptroller General and I may feel necessary, I shall report further to you on this matter. Sincerely, Allen W. Dulles Director Approved For Release 2003/05/27 CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 COPY Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 3 August 1959 The Honorable Paul J. Kilday Chairman, Subcommittee on CIA Committee on Armed Services U. S. House of Representatives Washington 25, D. C. Dear Mr. Kilday: . With further reference to my letter of 25 July 1959 in connection with the relationship between the Central Intelligence Agency and the General Accounting Office I should like to report that Mr. Campbell, the Comptroller General, accompanied by Mr. Keller, his General Counsel, and Mr. Samuelson, Director of the Civil Accounting and Auditing Division, GAO, attended a briefing of approximately three hours duration in my offices on 30 July 1959. This briefing included presentations by our most senior officials who are responsible to me for the conduct of our operations and financial activities. Insofar as was possible within the time available, we gave Mr. Campbell a full explanation of the activities of the entire Agency. He indicated that the briefing was extremely helpful and that he would be in touch with us again soon. I shall keep you advised as to our progress. Sincerely, Allen W. Dulles Director ILLEGIB Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF THE UN D STATES WASHINGTON 25 May 16, 190.1 Ho oruble Paul J. i ilday, Chairman S~,ec?al Subcommittee.. Central intelligence Agency Committee on Armed Services House of Representatives'. The General Ac osnting Office has made a review of selected activities of the Central Intelligence Ate-..,:icy (CIA) for the purpose of determining w het'fer. the scope of the audit of the General Accounting Office cbuld.i be expanded s ffiziently to maize reasonably comprehensIve.evaluations of CIA activities that would be helpful to the Congress. This review was made pursuant to V- interest indicated by the Special. Sub- commi_tee at an executive hearing in May 1959. Follo,Ang several meetings between representatives of the General A: comtin4; Office and CIA, the Director of Central Intelligence and the Comptroller General in. Cctober 1959 had an exchange of correspondence concerning the audit and concerning restrictions on undertaking reviews in the area of sen lava security operations. Various steps were taken by CIA to place the General. Accounting Office in a position to adman a comprehensive audit of the overt activities of CL's. It is our vi---,v, however,' that t. nder existing security restrictions on our audit of CM actin. flies, we do not have sufficient access to ma:;-- comprehensive reviews on a continuing basis that would be productive of evaluations helpful to the Congress. . l e limited our review to selected ave~-t activities as access to the covert (confidential) acttvi s of C ~ was denied us. We have had no access whatsoever to the Plans Coy.. onent, and we coot electively review and evaluate the activities- of the Support Component beca:lfe the con:; d:ntial and ovez-i activities of t is compo- r_ t arc integrated to such an extent that we cannot maize reasonably corapre-,--ansive au: is. We have been given sufficient ac.:4ss to ma: e reasonably comp ensive review-3 of : t:1s overt of the latclii nca Co :wo.^r_: nt, but such re ie:-rs, in uCt our ceinicn, will not be Productive of significant evaluations because we cannot f asibly evaluate the extent to which needed overt information is available for / Collection or dote niedtFeoneed for the Intelligence Information sel selected 01-0 o ..I..c~ed for collation and use in the production of intelligence reports. About 9o Percent or the annual ex'-endiz res of tl'~e Intelligence Component relates to payroll. and other con dual payments for personal set ices rendered in selecting on the basis of personal judgment order broad guidelines established by the intelligence community the specil.c information to be collected, collated, and used in t e production of 4n`,ellig c reports. Based on our review, we believe that (1) CIA is financing certain Library - of Congress activities which substantially n"anscend CIA's interest and responsi- bility for providing a centralized reference service as a service of common con- cern to the intelligence community and (2) administrative controls over CLA,'3 covert field organization, the U. S. joint Publications Research Service, should be stren hened. In addition, v;e have r=-testioned the arrangements under which CIA is financing certain activities at the Department of State. I\ o projects at the Library of Congress, the Monthly hidex of Russian Accessions and the East European Accession lade., are being fin=ed through the operating budgets of the Czfice of Central Refer--=-e. The budget of this office includes $635, 000 to f' ce tese projects in fiscal year 1961. 'Ti e projects pr uce cations are primarily distributed to public and private research organizations and iiararies in the United States and many foreign nations, including some in the U. S. S. R. and its satellites. Th.-se projects, in our opinion, substantially transcend CIA's interest and responsibility for providing a central reference facility as a service of corm-non concern to ILe intelligence conic nIu.a it`y. We have been advised by CIA that based on a review of the needs of the Intelli- U ca community, it has been determined that the present published form of these indexes is not essential for intelligence ;ni-.=poses., but, there are portions of the research work that goys into the preparation of the indexes that CIA would viant to continue, and the matter is under active consideration to determine vi t portion of the related costs should continue to be financed by CLA. Certain admi=-iistxative procedures pertinent to CIA's control over the activities of its covet field orrranizat'on, the U. S. Joint Pt. )Hcations Research Service, sacul_d be strengthened. We have been advised by CiA that changes are to be made which vii1i strengthen these controls. r o projects at the C 2rt_ne t OS State, :e Natlo al Intelli ce Survey and io ap-iiC Intel i ace, ar ' ,ring fin edd bCie r , rr n u - are IJ' ~ Li1C~ u by C..~; t:~ G, 1311 irk C, eL~t'~nJ fULJ~ "c$' '. of the Cf ce Of Central Reference and the U1ce of 1-s- COPY Approved For Release 2003/95/27: CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0. C O P Y Approved For Release 2003/05/27 CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 of the two offices include $2, 417, 000 to finance these projects in 1961. In April 1951, we were advised by CIA that the par=ent of State and CIA have been considering the possible transfer of these D :partme.n..t of State ac+~ivlties to Ciro CIA presently has under co. side a.tion other matters raised by us cn these financing arrangements, and we will furnish you with a supplementary le Uer when decision has been reached t areon. In as much as we cannot, is cur opinion, effectively a: compli;h any worthwhile audit objectives on a continuing basis, we p3.an to discontinue our and of Cam. activit: s. We are prepared to discuss these matters ~:}pith you shr^u.ld you so desire. A copy of this letter is being sent today to the Director of Central In t-alligence. Sincerely yours, /S/ Co Lpttoller General of the United States Approved 0pY ER 61-4.049 CO-N'iPTROLL It GENERAL ON THE UNITED STATES DD/S-61-1640 WASHINGTON 25 .133200 May 16, 1961 honorable Allen Du les, Director Cenral Jnte?ligence Agcy Dear Mr. Dulles: The General Accounting Office has completed a review of selected overt activities of the Central Intellib nce Agency. Based on this review, we believe that under existing security restrictions on the General Accounting Office audit of CIA activities, we do not have sufficient access to make comprehensive reviews on a continuing basis that would be productive of evaluations helpful to the Congress. Our review of selected overt activities in the Intelligency Component dis- closed certain matters that were brought to the attention of CIA officials, and we v;; re advised by them that corrective action on these matters is to be taken, or is presently under consideration by CM- I wish to acimowledge the cooperation of CM. officials in taking various - steps to place the General Accounting Office in a position to make a compre- hesive audit of the overt activities of CLL.. Transmitted herewith is a copy of a letter sent today to the Chairman, Special Sjjhcommittee, Central Intelligence Ab ncy, Committee on Armed Services, House of Representatives., presenting the results of our review. Sincerely yoi. s, /6/ Comptroller General of the United States Aat Sent Approved For Release 2003/O5Y27 :'CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 ILLEGIB Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R00O300090001-0 2--13320 ilmaacable Carl 'fiaac*s, Chaim a . Cc itt>s ca Ar-....bd rxvicas iiru" & ;~ra3 ti'i 'say lattar dated Nay 16, 1951, to Z able Yau1 1. X11da7, L"Saira, Waaial SV34caitta4, Caotrsl I.'stslii~~ C ali am 1& 34rricaa, Hcu-w of ntati sa, us repmtzd upon cvm roview of adll,etmd acti,ittci of C- ral 1mtm1t13*a" N. 9' ('U)- for t2ka o - tax is?n ebist a2 L~ areas th* wit of the trail Acccsinti:...3 Cs2fi a c*ntld Sa ~z, ad - cu2fIci=t!y- to mAka rtNasrs-all ccmVr-.,~i' arraltratizs of CIA actiytti3m. Za thin lattsac tra ;3?atad that tsar `,.:~ =iutiz 8scri*,7 z'"t~ ictico ia4 ca t 1-3ior7, era of t r.~~ ' i~ w *_ 13 T blt. k is a? a rtcc aiaGr3 tat 9a it cf yl i Id s~, to 3 ii.^.::--3 t:t ~ i~tas :31's.3t &r 3 o -tea 121 '-tee: ? t~ c-~- r-~ if t (l) ;.- '~ i r a.,er*_i?{ d `r~ two Dir3tt=, ' .~i~ra cartifi:od b7 fife Diractor sa ins of a ccifidan cial, 2:crraordinzz-7, or T3eac7 n.aturs, juch ex?anditaras vary not sub}sct'to aYax+ nation by tho Accauntin3 Offics without the ccncur::nca of the Dirictor. "c.3 activities in support of the ccnfidantial c93ration2 a-ubr-scid practically all of the s.3bA1ni3trati'a operations. i ~+':htlc.a, 'rs :r_.. willin,3 to atta-xgt to eye an audit at CIA w1th.n thi principles atat::d b7 the Director in his latter of C_tcbar 15, 1959, but in our r-ply dat-rd October- 21, 1959, we statod twat in ta,a $vent it app arod after a trial period cur rcvl rs w rat linitsd to such an trtant thLt We could not effectively and constructively accczplish aiy iorth-whila objnctivz3 a-a wTuld ccnsidar w-bather or not the audit should be conti:~uad. urtr.3 the ensuing 30 months rat undertook to - a a rn-'iexz of atlectcci overt sctiviti6s era azcas3 to the cover :'.ctiviti- s 3:wts not rssd?a available to us. Ia thin cormectian, accs.s to th actiritias of _lie Support Cc cnent in which ws could bat e.xpact3d to bQ moat elfectiva in our reviews was significantly 1inited bde.au3s covtrt and overt actiTitiea of this ccqc"nt arm inte3rated. Ida s-*ra not able to review sufficiently financial ya.~a~a +s t, pro rty ,n:+ a apt' con.ractina, procur3-aant, and ai:nilar activities for an), affective appraisal of the adiiniatraticn of these activ?tiex. Cur cos acafor a raviVw of the internal audit prc3-ra-s nzd raworta era very limited azul we ha4 no acceaa vataver to the %,-=x of tca Ina?-actor C3 aral; tharefora, we ware not able to apprsiss the imtor?nal review zzach3ni,As Within t e a 13tscy. 1 have h ri*_h:ar caslate accost to the ^_tivitisx of the tatmiiiy*ance+ CC=?C-n4-,t, but t r..attr.s of -blue ucti;rit:Aa a:%j the is?..'~? of cc lute" e.ccz to intaxnal ravi nr prc3r sat and rxporta has significantly Hefted cur -jffaactivs.^.esn i;, this area. In undertakia: to azs rcvie i at tb4 Central Intss11i3snc$ W-s recognized that the :~at'trs Of the acti-litiaa of this A.3,enc7 pYa- saatari problcy,s can sufficient hrxa4th of ce-f-3rays aid rs'rist of detail for tbt purpose of reachia~ ;jcund ccrclusicns. Ue ha-.-s s ia"- r7 cyfcrt to brctdan cur :sviaw of tctg actlritia3 of tha soc7' within tla iinsta_iaa3 xhich :n-rs plac ct u1, a:x3 > rib to aa3ura you that cur cc clu%ion that could not -ffactivily acct lima any r - bad Wort-,bile al-lit oojactivas at CIrk an a ccutl-rwi.- hernia aj only after cca31d.srin all tl-.A factors az 31v thy. Tab obta12 the .:ua of oC%_:'3 r.saa of a G-o -Jr'J.1 lccc nt!^^ C--1, ?! S;~1t o CU .:tl it1=~~, it 1~1~. _~-l??~.4r513 :Lr k11i .'Jit :1's ~J - A''.' ,1 17 4 01Sta _1C 33 i) -1 it CIS to bO 'J^,33i~i'J to p -f rat r3A3cna517 ccri,psins r0vi.-n+;1 O'E tiaa i y4 :Ter; ?ate1tt cc:3p13t.: zc.13.3 to that ni+aiaiatritiie ~.~.".tia3 cuch f.3 fia.3ocia!, p_cc_1:-? s_nt, p_c^-?rty, and ya:otrro+ti Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 :d1-! .aviv~,r actlviti~s 24t u:a -irfut-~~ast i a:-P,>c t of botL s4ri.31U-va a d ern; iii ~za2i~nz of CL's. s : , x r- iata y 1 t2raa: is car izt CIA c~~ the ~~~Taavlx of yr v? xi cm th?a dlacrQtiAxca of Vu.: ~k zh~ry is imrlt44. ~44 az?s ?r_ ar9ct to diacaaj .:aaya so.tt=2 cart is ~i4h lirrrely ycura, Ccagtrollar C--m=-al of $h Ua i t aci 5 t Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R00030009000fi.=6--- - Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 COPY OF DRAFT; COPY OF FINAL LETTER NOT RECEIVED Honorable Joseph Campbell The Comptroller General of the United States Washington 25, D. C. DRAFT OGC:LRH:jeb 11 July 1962 Dear Mr. Campbell: I have read your letter concerning the restrictions on performance of an audit of the Central Intelligence Agency and your opinion that as a result of these restrictions you could not effectively accomplish any worthwhile audit objectives at the Central Intelligence Agency. As you know, the restrictions you met with in the Central Intelligence Agency are necessary, I believe, for the proper protection of its intelligence activities and should be maintained. Also, Mr. McCone has informed us that among the reorganizational steps he has carried out is a major strengthening of the comptroller and internal audit functions in the Agency. Consequently, I believe you have met the objectives of my letter of May 10, 1961, which recommended that you continue your work at that time, and since you feel confirmed in your opinion that it is not a worthwhile effort, I arr, agreeable that y oui withdraw from further audit activities in the Centri:l Intelligence a-envy. Sincerely, Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : GA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES JUL 2 3 1962 Your letter dated July 13, 1962, on further audit activities by the General Accounting Cfiice at Central Intelligence Agency is acknowledged. Your acceptance of our conclusion that we ithdraw from :w further audit activities at this Agency is appreciated and we will proceed to com- plete the work that is in process at a relatively early date. Sincerely, Joseph Campb?11 Comptroller General of the United States Honorable Carl Vinson Chairman, Cocir.zittee on Arnied Services house of Representatives Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 NOTE FOR THE FILE SUBJECT: Jury Duty in Prince George's County 1. In a recent meeting with Judge Roscoe Parker, Jury Judge of the Circuit Court of Prince George's County, Maryland, I was advised that he has no objection to a covert employee of the Agency serving on a jury in Prince George's County. 2. I explained the problems we had in other local juris- dictions in this regard, but Judge Parker, ,who is quite knowledge- able of the Agency's statutory responsibilities, said he could not recall any problems with jury service by CIA covert employees in his fifteen years on the bench. 3. To assist us, however, the following procedure was agreed upon. When a covert employee is summoned for jury service in Prince George's County, he is to contact Judge Parker on the morning of the first day of jury duty and identify himself as an Agency employee at which time Judge Parker will brief him on how to respond to certain questions which might be asked during voir dire examination. 25X1A JGB:ks Distribution: Original - JURY DUTY Y- JGB Signer 1 - Chrono Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R0003000 STATSPEC L Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Next 4 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-OP OGC 74-0545 25 March 1974 SUBJECT : Claim by D 25X1A REFERENCE : Memo to JSW fr JED dtd 4 Feb 74, re: Creditable Service for Retirement Purposes- 25X1 1. In accordance with the referent memorandum, on 15 February 1974 I discussed the subject claim with Mr. Thomas A. Tinsley (101-24581), the Director, Bureau of Retirement, Insurance and Occupational Health, CSC. (Mr. Tinsley was appointed Director upon the retirement of Mr. Andrew Ruddock and has been appropriately cleared.) I explained to Mr. Tinsley 25X1A that Mr. Ruddock had discussed the matter within 1970 and had instructed Mr. ~etail his case in writing and return it personally 25X1A to Mr. Ruddock or process it through the Agency. (In following these in- structions , Mr. 0 not only detailed his retirement claim but also added two additional claims.) 251X1A 25X1A 2. I reviewed the Agency's position regarding proprietary employees with Mr. Tinsley, discussing in detail those same aspects that were discussed with members of CSC's Board of Appeals in the dated 29 January 1969). I also stated that our review of Mr. I credit- able service claim revealed that Mr. added nothing new to the matter he presented to us in 1970. As we did not find such service creditable then, there seems to be no basis to change that decision now. Mr. Tinsley briefly reviewed the claim and then stated that he saw no basis in the letter to find the service creditable. Accordingly, I suggested that, as Mr. is currently within the Civil ervice Retirement System, it would be appropriate for CSC to inform 25X1A I I directly of their determination. I sent a copy of the claim (OGC 74- 0313, dated 15 February 1974) to Mr. Tinsley who will correspond with Mr. 25X1 A I directly. 25X1A 3 . On 22 February 197f I called this Office inquiring as to the status of his claim. I explained that, although he had lodged a single claim, in reality, it was three separate claims and each part must be processed SECRE 25(1A 25X1A 25X1A 25X1A 25X1A 25X1A Approved For Release 2 w5 CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 independent of the others. I mentioned that CSC was currently considering' the first part of his claim, that they would correspond with him directly and that we had not made as much progress on the other two parts. I assured Mr. that as soon as I had something concrete to report on these two parts that I would be in touch with him. 4. On 25 February 1974 I met with Mr. Clyde Carter, Air Amer' review 0' claim with him. Mr. Carter informed me that Mr had visited the Air America offices prior to the submission of his claim. Mr. left the impression with Mr. Carter that he intended to methodically pursue his claim, exploring all administrative remedies in order to obtain satisfaction; however, if these remedies fail he will likely pursue the matter in court. Further, 0 told Mr. Carter that he has yet to retain counsel. I explained the results of my meeting at CSC to Mr. Carter and discussed the precedent for a disability claim such as that Mr. ~s lodging. It was Mr. Carter's recollection that no employee of Air America has been covered by the Federal Employees' Compensation Act, but some have been covered by the Defense Base Act. I explained to Mr. Carter that it was my view that the third part of Mr. claim--the payment for loss of his pilot's license--would be a matter properly resolved between Mr. ll and Air America. Accordingly, I will suggest to Mr hat he make that claim directly with Air America. 5. On 25 February 1974 I met with Messrs. Herbert A. Doyle and his deputy, Albert Klien of the Employment Standards Administration (ESA), Department of Labor. Both of these individuals hold appropriate Agency clearances. Within ESA INIr. Doyle holds two positions, Director, Office of Federal Employees' Compensation and Acting Director, Office of Workmen's Compensation Programs. As a result, Mr. Doyle has the responsibility for the administration of the provisions of both the Federal Employees' Compen- sation Act (FECA) and the Defense Base Act (DBA). I explained Mr. claim, stating that the disability part seemed appropriately within the jurisdiction of ESA. It was Mr. Doyle's recollection that Air America employees had been processed under the FECA in the past, but his files on this subject were not immediately available. Mr. Doyle explained that in processing an FECA claim, his office made the following determinations: a. Whether the claim was timely made--there is an absolute five- year statutory limitation (5 U . S . C . 8122) from the date the claimant knew or would be reasonably expected to know that his disability was a result of the employment. SEC RE Approved For Release 2003/05/27 CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 b. Whether the individual qualifies as an employee under the Act as defined by 5 U . S . C . 8101. c. Whether the disability occurred during the performance of the employee's duty. d. Whether there is a causal relationship between the disability and the employment. The first determination must be affirmative before ESA will even consider the next. If, for example, the claim was not timely made, ESA will not consider the question of Federal employment. We discussed at some length the timeliness aspect of the claim. It appears that there is not enough information in the claim to make a determination in that 5 U.S.C. 8122(b) states: In a case of latent disability, the time for filing claim does not begin to run until the employee has a compensable disability and is aware, or by the exercise of reasonable diligence should have been aware, of the causal relation- ship of the compensable disability to his employment. In such a case, the time for giving notice of injury begins to run when the employee is aware, or by the exercise of reasonable diligence should have been aware, that his condition is causally related to his employment, whether or not there is a compensable disability. 25X1A 25X1A The type of disability--polio--that ,II suffered has been classified as a latent disability by ESA. In order to obtain additional data regarding the date of the employee's knowledge of causal relationship, ESA has the employee and the employing agency complete their forms CA-1 and 2 and CA-4. 6. On 28 February 1974, Mr. Doyle called to explain that it was his opinion that 0' claim would not be covered under the FECA. He wanted to research whether the DBA had application. 7. On 18 March 1974 I again discussed the applicability of the DBA with Mr. Doyle. He explained that Section 913a of Title 33, which is incorporated igito the DBA, was amended in 1972 (P.L. 92-576) to state in part that: The time for filing a claim shall not begin to run until the employee or beneficiary is aware, or by the exercise of reasonable diligence should be aware, of the relation- ship between the injury or death and the employment. }~ r k uh~t ~) LL,11L I Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 25X1A claim does not specifically state when he had knowledge of the relationship between his disability and his employment. We also discussed Section 930(f) of Title 33 which states in part that where the employer has been given notice or has knowledge of an injury or death and fails to file a report in accordance with Section 930 (a), Section 913 does not begin to 25X1A run until such report is filed. It is my understanding that no report has been filed by IF employer; however, Mr. Doyle explained that there is no evidence here that the employer was given notice or had knowl- edge of the relationship between Mr. II disability and his employment. Therefore, in Mr. Doyle's opinion Section 930(f) would not toll the running of the Section 913 statutory period. 8. Mr. Doyle and I agreed that while there are a number of methods to process this claim, the most direct would be that in which I would submit Mr.~ claim to Mr. Doyle for his consideration of all applicable law 25X1 A that he has the responsibility for administrating. Thus, I sent a copy /1rVA A _ _ _ 25X1A in accordance with our discussions as outlined above, will have to inquire of Mr.as to when Mr. rst became aware of the relationship between his disability and his employment in order to determine whether Mr. can qualify under the DBA. 25X1A 25X1A 9. Accordingly, I ::otified n 25 March 1974 that his disability claim is being processed by the Department of Labor and that he should expect them to contact him directly. As to the third part of his claim--the loss of license--I informed Mr. I that he should lodge such a claim 25X1A directly with his former employer. I will confirm this in a letter to Mr. 25X1 25X 25X` I outlined this same information to Mr. Carter. Further I assed , p this information to the Deputy Director of Security. 25X1A Assistant General Counsel cc: DD/Personnel DD/Security DDM&S SECRET Approved For Release 2003/05t27 CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 OGC 74-0472 MEMORANDUM FOR: Mr. Warner SUBJECT: Restrictions on Use of Telephone Recording Devices 1. A Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulation (47 C. F. R. 64. 501) prohibits a telephone company from using any recording device to monitor telephone conversa- tions unless the parties to the conversation are given proper notice that the conversation is being recorded. Such notice is required to be given by the use of an automatic tone warning device--the so-called "beep tone"--which is repeated at regular intervals during the course of the conversation. It is also mandatory that no recording device shall be used unless it can be physically connected tc and disconnected from the telephone line or switched on and off. 2. To comply with the above regulation, telephone com- panies have inserted a similar limitation in their tariff schedules, which are filed with the Federal Communications Commission in accordance with 47 U. S.C.A. 203. 3. It seems clear that the burden of meeting the "beep tone" requirement is on the telephone companies rather than on the users, which creates a rather difficult enforcement problem for this reason. If the "beep tone" requirement is violated, a telephone company can be fined up to $500 for each day of the violation. 47 U. S. S.C. A. 502. However, the telephone company's grnly recourse against the subscriber who violates the "beep tone" requirement is to remove the telephone. In practice, the likeli- hood that a telephone company will take such action against subscribers is very slight. As it was pointed out in OCC 74-0428 dated 8 March 1974, telephone compaiii es are too concerned with First Amendment and monopoly problems since the subscriber has Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 no alternative to their service. Thus, a subscriber who records a conversation without the "beep tone" runs very little risk. It remains, nonetheless, a violation of the tariff schedules filed by telephone companies with the FCC to record a telephone conversation without the use of the "beep tone. " 4. Another means of recording telephone conversations is the so-called induction method where a tape recorder is attached to an induction coil placed against a previously installed telephone. This method also violates the FCC regulation unless a "beep tone" is used. 5. In any event, it has been held that no interception occurs when one party to a telephone conversation simply records it for his own use. Parkhurst v. Kling, 249 F. Supp. 315 (D. C. Pa., 1965). Thus, there is no violation of 47 U. S. C. A. 605 which prohibits the interception and publication of telephone and radio communications without the consent of the parties to the conversation. Likewise, there is no violation of the pro- scription against the wiretapping contained in the Omnibus Crime Act of 1968 (18 U. S.C.A. 2511, et seq. ), since no "interception" takes place when one party to a conversation records it for his own use. Smith v. Cincinnati Post and Times Star, 353 F. Supp. 1126 (S. D. Ohio, 1972), aff'd, 475 F. 2d 740 (1973). 6. With regard to the use of a microphone or an amplifier to monitor conversations, it also has been held that no interception occurs when a person places a microphone or a radio transmitter in such a position as to record a telephone conversation, since such listening in in no manner interferes with the transmission of the conversation over the telephone wires. Irvine v. California, 347 U. S. 128 (1954), Silverman v. United States, 365 U. S. 505 (1961), United States v. Borgese, 235 F. Supp. 286 (1964). More- over, it is certain that a telephone company cannot be held responsible for recordings by these devices since the telephone system is not used. When one looks to the essential purpose of the FCC regulation, however, which is to protect the privacy of telephone communications, attempts to make distinctions between mechanical devices attached to telephones and mechanical devices not attached to telephones is meaningless, if the end result is the same. Approved For Release 2003/05/27.: CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 25X1 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 8. I discussed the above procedure with Mr. Hilbert Schlossberg of the General Counsel's Office at FCC, who advised me that police departments, fire departments, and the like, also record conversations involving threats, safety and related topics. These organizations usually have an agreement with the local telephone company permitting recordation of the conversations without the "beep tone" or any other notice. If the Agency wants to be absolutely safe in this area, we can attempt to reach a similar agreement with C&P. Whether we decide to do so, however, is a matter of policy. 25X1A Assistant General Counsel Distribution: Original - COMMUNICATIONS (OGC 74-0428 filed in Equipment & 1 - JGB Signer Supplies) A - Chrono 1 - DDM &S 1 - D/Security Approved For Release 2003/05/27: CIA-R&%4-(7( t0k660300090001-0 10 April 1974 25X1A 25X1A MEMORANDUM FOR: Chief, Administrative Staff/OJCS SUBJECT : Outside Activity of Mr. 25X1A 25X1A' 1. I ia GS-12'computer programmer in OJCS, has requested approval to engage in certain outside activities. Specifically, he wishes to teach courses in computer science at the Bureau of Labor Statistics on 20 April and 10 May 1974. The work for the Bureau will be done under a contract between the Bureau and a firm called Mr. II is the president of this company. The agreement between the Bureau and provides for the presentation of the courses in return for a fixed dollar amount. The courses will be taught by Mr. outside of his normal duty hours with the Agency. 25X1A 25X' 25X1A 2. The undersigned is of the opinion that Mr. II activities, described above, are not in violation of the Dual Compensation Act of 1964. The prohibition against receiving dual compensation is set forth at 5 U. S. C. A. 5533(a) as follows: ... an individual is not entitled to receive basic pay from more than one position for more than an aggregate of 40 hours of work in one calendar week (Sunday through Saturday). A "position" is defined as being a civilian office or position (including a temporary, part-time, or intermittent position) in the executive branch of the United States Government. 5 U. S. C. A. 5531(2). Congress has, however, excepted certain types of pay from the broad limitations set forth in sections 5533(a) and 5531(2). One of these exceptions is "pay cdnsisting of fees paid on other than a time basis." 5 U. S. C. A. 5533(d)(2) Approved For Release 20031105/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27: CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 25X1A 3. So long, Mr.Dis compensated on a basis other than time, such as on a "per job" or "per course" basis, he will not violate the Dual Compensation Act. 25X1A 4. The undersigned is also of the opinion that based upon the above facts, Mr.~ is not in violation of the law applicable to conflicts of interest found in Title 18 of the United States Code and in Executive Order 11222. Therefore, there is no legal objection to his forming a company which offers computer programming and instruction to the general public and to his serving as president of the company. He should not, of course, either use any special knowledge gained through his Agency employment for his own benefit or use his position and duties with the Agency to solicit business. He should not in his outside employment engage in any work which might result in a conflict, or an apparent conflict, between his private interests and his official government duties and responsi- bilities. If Mr has any specific questions concerning a particular contract, etc. , his questions should be referred to this Office. 25X1A 5. The conclusions reached in this case should not be used as precedent in any other because cases concerning dual compensation and conflicts of interest are decided on the facts peculiar to each. 25X1A OGC:AEG:cap Original - Addressee 1 - EMPLOYEE RELATIONS AND ACTIVITIES 1 - AEG Signer -I-'-'--C hr ono Approved For Release 2QII3/D512Z::CL&- DP84-00709R000300090001-0 OGC 74-0676 11 April 1974 25X1A 25X1A 25X1' MEMORANDUM FOR: Director, Central Reference Service SUBJECT: Agency Use of Copyrighted Pictorial Material REFERENCE: Your memorandum, same subj, dtd 7 Nov 73 1. Referenced memorandum requests both a legal opinion and practical guidance from this Office on the Agency's use of copyrighted pictorial materials. In addition, Mr. J has orally requested certain additional and specific guidance on the use of still photographs. This memorandum is in response to both requests. 2. Per your request at paragraph 4 of referent memo- randum, I have met with and been briefed by representatives of your office concerning their procedures and activities which might be violations of copyright. First, in the area of still photographs, I was advised that you procure these either by extracting them from unclassified ing the ri hts to them E-- I Lnose p o ograp s which are extracted from unclassified publications are usually filed with an appropriate control marking-- "Official Use Only, " "Government Use Only, " or "Note Copyright Restrictions on Use. " The use to which you put such photographs is usually in publications designed for consumption within the Agency or the intelligence community. For the most part these are classified publications or carry at the very least, one of the control markings. On occasion, though, you have been asked to permit the use of such photographs in unclassified publications (an example being provided with referent memorandum). In the Approved For Release 2003/05/E7 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 20P3/b5/21 :-Cfib-R9P84-00709R000300090001-0 Jam.. .._ 25X1A example- -an unclassified, unmarked biographic report on 25X1 A I L-there is a photograph of him taken from 10 November 1969. While the report cites the ource of the photograph, you advise no rights were 2W 1L ned for its use. 4. In the area of procurement, retention and use of tele- vision video materials, I was advised as follows: Normally, your people tape three news programs and the Today. Show each day. In addition, they may from time to time at the request of an interested office, video tape programs of special interest on certain domestic issues such as riots, Watergate, etc. This activity is almost always done on request, an example being a recent CBS program entitled "Mysterious Alert. " With respect to retention of these video tape materials, I was advised that they are not transferred to television film and are retained by CRS only so long as there is an operational need. The guidelines set out in your memorandum to the ADD/I of 14 December 1973 (Attachment A) would, on balance, seem to be very good and for purposes of this opinion, the guidelines are incorporated by reference herein. 5. A third area of concern to your officers is the in- creasing number of requests you receive to reproduce video Approved For Release 2003/05/29 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2403/05127 : ClA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 tape cassettes and reel-to-reel video tape programs which have been purchased from commercial distributors. The cassettes seem to be primarily training materials or courses provided via the television medium and the requests generally come from OTR. If you were to honor the request, the net effect would be that the Agency would purchase only one copy and then make as many duplicates as are needed. In this regard. the men and to Chief, Development and Technical Services Group, OTR, dated 30 November 1973 (Attachment C), seem particularly appropriate. Therein, in pertinent part he states: I cannot authorize reproduction of the commercially produced video training course described in reference for reasons of copyright. Your memo does not indi- cate Hewlitt Packard approval to reproduce the tapes in-house, so I must assume that we would be doing it against their reproduction restrictions and existing copyright laws. (Attachment B) and, I do not believe that the Agency should reproduce video cassette programs purchased from commercial distributors. We should pay the vendor for each and every cassette purchased and not enter intcmultiple copy reproduction to satisfy internal requirements. (Attachment C) 6. in general, every unauthorized use of copyrihted material, 1 including use with source acknowledgment, - 1/ 17 U. S. C. A. 1: "Any person entitled thereto, upon complying with the provisions of this title, shall have the exclusive right: (a) to print, publish, copy, and vend the copyrighted work; . 11 2/ Henry Holt and Co., Inc., to Use of Felderman v. Liggett and ..Myers Tobacco Co., 23 F. Supp. 302, 304 (1938). "The fact that the defendant acknowledged the source from which this matter was taken does not excuse the infringement. While the acknowledgment indicates that it did not intend unfair competition it does not relieve the defendant from legal liability for the infringement. " And, Toksvig v. Bruce Publishing Company et al. , 181 F. 2d 664, 666 (1950): "Nor does the fact that defen- dants acknowledged the source from which the passages were taken excuse infringement. " Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27; CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 is an infringement for which the law provides remedies. 3/ These range from civil actions for injunctive relief and/or money damages 4/to criminal sanctions. 5/ Photographs and television programs copyrighted within the United States or a foreign country which is a signatory to the Universal Copyright Convention are entitled to the protection afforded by U. S. law.6/ 7. On the Government use of copyright material, "It is general Government policy that copyrighted matter will not knowingly be incorporated in publications prepared by or for the Government except with the written consent of the copyright owner.,, ?/ The procedural remedy available to a copyright owner claiming an infringement of statutory copyright by or on behalf of the United States is, however, controlled by statute. The action must be brought within three years of the alleged infringement, it 3/ Alfred Bell & Co. v. Catalda Fine Arts, 191 F. 2d 99. "A copyright confers the exclusive right to copy the copyrighted work and right not to have others copy it. " 4/ 17 U. S. C. A. 101: "If any person shall infringe the copy- right in any work protected under the copyright laws of the United States such person shall be liable: (a) to an injunction restraining such infringement; (b) to pay the copyright proprietor such damages as thei copyright proprietor may have suffered due tothe infringement as well as the profits which the infringer shall have made from such infringe- ment, .... " 5/ 17 U. S. C. A. 104: "Any person who willfully and for profit shall infringe any copyright secured by this title, or who shall knowingly and willfully aid or abet such infringement, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, .... " 6/ Am. Jur. 2d, Copyright and Literary Property, s 76. "The Universal Copyright Convention was ratified by the United States Senate in 1954 and came into force for the United States on September 16, 1955, .... Basically this convention provides that each member nation shall grant within its own borders the same treatment to foreign authors as it accrds to its own citizens. " 7/ 41 CFR 5-54. 202 Approved For Release 2003/05127; CIA-RDP+84-00709R000300090001-0 must be brought in the United States Court of Claims and, prior to the commencement of such action, the head of the agency concerned has the statutory authority to settle the claim with the copyright owner and pay the compromised damages out of available appropriations. 8/ 8. In discussions with representatives of your office, the case of The Williams & Wilkins Company v. The' United States was raised. 9/ This case, a copyright suit under 28 U. S. C. A. 1498(b) is on point, particularly insofar as its lengthy discussion of the doctrine of "fair use" is concerned. However, it is our opinion that the case is so narrow in its application and its fact distinguishable, on at least one important point, that it does not significantly ameliorate the-activities of your office vis-a-vis the law. The case arose because the National Library of Medicine (NLM), under the National Institute of Health (NIH) and the Library of NIH engaged in photocopying articles from medical and pharmaceutical journals which were published by plaintiff, The Williams & Wilkins Company of Baltimore. Defendant libraries were fairly select in their 8/ 28 U. S. C. A. 1498(b): "Hereafter, whenever the copyright in any work protected under the copyright laws of the United States shall be infringed by the United States, by a corporation owned or controlled by the United States, or by a contractor, subcontractor, or any person, firm, or corporation acting for the Government and with the authorization or consent of the Government, the exclusive remedy of the owner of such copyright shall be by action against the United States in the Court of Claims for the recovery of his reasonable and entire compensation as damages for such infringement, including the minimum statutory damages as set forth in section 101(b) of title 17, United States Code: And provided further, That before such action against the United States has been in- stituted the appropriate corporation owned or controlled by the United States or the head of the appropriate department or agency of the Govern- ment, as the case may be, is authorized to enter into an agreement with the copyright owner in full settlement and compromise for the damages accruing to him by reason of such infringement and to settle the claim administratively out of available appropriations. Except as otherwise provided by law, no recovery shall be had for any infringement of a copyright covered by this subsection committed more than three years prior to the filing of the complaint or counterclaim for infringement in the action, .... " 9/ U. S. Court of Claims, No. 73-68; Decided 27 November 1973. wed For Release 200/05/27 ! CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2603/05127-:'CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 response to requests for copiespf articles and they had established guidelines on copying. Nevertheless, the libraries did copy articles and make them available--NIH to its personnel only, NLM to a wider audience including non-Government re- questers. The court took judicial notice of the fact that both institutions are nonprofit in character and exist only to further the public health. In looking to the doctrine of "fair use, " the court found that both libraries were rather restrictive in answering requests for photocopies of materials, particularly whole journals, lengthy articles or multiple copies of same, and that there was no evidence that plaintiff's business had been harmed in any monetary way. The court also examined the intent of Congress in establishing the NLM. Both the legislation es- tablishing the NLM and the "Congressional declaration of purpose" makes it clear that Congress expected the library to make available photocopies of its holdings in the furtherance of its mission--"to assist in the advancement of medical and related sciences, and to aid the dissemination and exchange of scientific and other information important to the progress of medicine and to the public health. " 10 / 11/ 10/ 42 U. S. C. A. 275 11/ 42 U.S.C.A. 276 (a) The Surgeon General, through the Library and subject to the provisions of subsection (c) of this section, shall--(1) acquire and pre- serve books, periodicals, prints, films, recordings, and other library materials pertinent to medicine; (2) organize the materials specified in clause (1) of this subsection by appropriate catalogi ig, indexing, and bib- liographical listing; (3) publish and make available the catalogs, indexing and bibliographies referred to in clause (2) of this subsection; (4) make available, through loans, photographic or other copying procedures or otherwise, such materials in the Library as he deems appropriate; (5) provide reference and research assistance; and (6) engage in such other activities in furtherance of the purposes of this part as he deems appropriate and the Library's sources permit. (c) The Secretary is authorized, after obtaining the advice and recommendations of the Board (established under section 277 of this title), to prescribe rules under which the Library will provide copies of its publications or materials, or will make available its facilities for research or its bibliographic, reference, or other services, to public and private agencies and organizations, institutions, and individuals. Such rules may provide for making available such publications, materials, facilities, or services (1) without charge as a public service, or (2) upon a loan, ex- change or charge basis, or (3) in appropriate circumstances, under con- tract arrangements made with a public or other nonprofit agency, organiza- tion or institution. (Emphasis added. ) -Approved For Release 2003105/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/Q5IZ GIA bP84-00709R000300090001-0 It is at this point that the case becomes distinguishable from the one presented by you. The Agency does not have an express statutory authority Yo photocopy. The court held that the practices of the libraries had, up to that time, been "fair!' and that there had been no infringement of plaintiff's copyright. However, it felt compelled to explain its opinion by reemphasizing "four interrelated aspects" of the holding. First, the use was found to be "fair" on the basis of all the factors and elements of the case, none of which was controlling. Second, the holding of "fair use" was- restricted to the type and context of use by NIH and NLM as shown by the record; no other case, set of facts or similar situations were passed upon. Third, the record failed to show a significant detriment to plaintiff but did demonstrate injury to medical and scientific research if the photocopying were found to be an infringement. Fourth, the court expressed its strong belief that the judicial doctrine of "fair use" is amorphous and open- ended and that there is a real requirement for Congress to act to further delineate the doctrine in the photocopying area. 9. In my discussions with representatives of your office, we also discussed the effect of classifying pictorial materials as a safeguard to possible claims of copyright infringement. It is important to emphasize the fact that classifying pictorial materials does not relieve an infringement, protects nothing and may, in actuality, be a detriment. Were the Agency to classify photographs which had been extracted from unclassified periodicals, it might be shown the classification-%v'-as simply for the purpose of concealing a probable infringement and that con- cealment could be construed as "fraudulent. " This would have the effect of tolling the three year statute of limitations, that is, extending the period for bringing an action until three years after plaintiff discovered the infringement. 12/ In addition, in view of the requirements of Executive Order 11652, effective 1 June 1972, it would appear that classifying such material is improper. 12/ Holmberg v. Armbrecht, 327 U. S. 392, 90 L. ed. 743 (1946); Baxter v. Curtis Industries, Inc., 201 F. Supp. 101 (1962); and Prather v. Neva Paperbacks, Inc. , 446 F. 2d 338 (1971). Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 :CIA-RDP84=00709R000300090001-0 10. It is the opinion of this Office that the activities of your office, as describedAierein, except in those instances where you have purchased the right to use copyrighted pictorial materials, are probably violations of statutory copyright. Whether your unauthorized use of such materials can be considered "fair use" we just do not know. As in The Williams & Wilkins Company case, the final decision on any particular use depends on all of the facts. Accordingly, the first question asked in paragraph 3(a) of referent memorandum is answered in the negative. The second question asked in that same paragraph is answered as follows: We know of no "better way to use the photos that would preclude any possible claim that CIA was violating copyright laws. " Notwith- standing, on the facts and the laws, we believe that within the context of your procurements and uses and restrictive procedures you impose, the risks to the Agency are minimal and that you may continue your activities with probable impunity. Should a question of impropriety arise, the Agency would attempt to negotiate a settlement with the complaining party per the pro- visions of 28 U. S.C.A. 1498 (b). This Office would, however, admonish you to continue adherence to your strict policies, as described in the three memoranda mentioned herein, particularly in turning away reque-ts to reproduce expensive, commercially produced video tape cassettes because, as I advised previously representatives of your office, suits for copyright infringement almost always involve large sums of money. 11. With respect to the two questions asked in paragraph 3 (b) of referent memorandum, we would advise as follows: Recordings of U. S. television materials should not be classified while available for analyst review, and as noted in paragraph 9, super, to classify them would appear to be improper. Rather, it should be sufficient to control these as "Official Use Only." 25X1A GMB:sm Distribution: Original - Addressee Assistant Ger/oral Counsel I - OGC Subject: COPYRIGHT 1 - GMB Sinner 1 - Chrono AADbroved For Release 2003/05/27 CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 25X1 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 FOIAB5 which all allowances flow. 3. All allowances inuring to a Government employee are FOIAB5 established by laws enacted by Congress. These and the regula- tions promulgated thereunder are the basic authorities from 4. In providing for the travel and transfers of its employees within the continental United States, the only authority available is O.MB Circular A-56, now superseded by the Federal Travel Regulations (FTR!s) issued by the General Accounting Office (1 May 1973). Both within OMB Circular Attachment 3, Section 4. 1, is the requirement that for real estate expenses to be reimbursable, a "permanent change of station . . , must be . . . authorized or approved and the old and new official stations located within the 50 States, the District of Columbia, the territories and possessions of the United States, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or the Canal Zone, .': In the FTR's at Chapter 2, Part 6 -- "Allowance for Expenses Incurred In Connection With Residence Trans- actions" -- the same condition precedent is present. In addition, at Section 4. Id of A-56 and Part 6 of the FTR's is the occupancy requirement: "The dwelling for which reimburse- ment of selling expenses is claimed . . . " must have been ". . the employee's residence at the time he was first definitely informed by competent authority of his transfer to the new official station. " A-56, Section 4. 1, and modified by the Agency as 5. On the question the Agency has authority to waive these conditions pr~ced~r_, so that Ir. I t`?ight be reimbursed, it is the opinion of the undersig l d that only if here is a deternni nation t;,.-'s PCS mo;'e was occasioned 1 by the o, _ .^ peculiar and ll??a5.'al n `U.'''' E _ ,~ A` ency'_~ b, s:_aess GrJ :'C; C!C?;-.2 ilt ar. .~rLTeS S- _os and tov os` J ~ .J r 1 o ~i..._ t1he Uaitea Sta'._e. o _ ..'~ estate t0 _0t1? oi5 tine `-1 FOIAB5 Approved For Release 2003/Q5/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 FOIAB5 25X1A Assistant ral Counsel Attachments References (a) and (b) GMB: sm Distribution: Original - Addressee (hand carried 4/23/74) 1 - OGC Subject: ALLOWANCES 1 - GMB Signer 1- Chrono Approved For Release'2003ftS /27.: CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 OGC 74-0697 24 April 1974 MEMORANDUM FOR: Chief, Support Element Services Staff, DDO SUBJECT: Sick Leave - 1. You have requested the opinion of this office as to whether a retroactive adjustment of approximately 200 hours can be made with respect to subject's sick leave benefits. 2. Subject's contract of employment dated 6 December 1957, was amended on 5 June 1962 to provide for special travel from his overseas post to the United States and return for a thirty calendar day vacation with pay. The travel was to commence on or about 21 September 1962. The contract was also amended to provide subject with sick leave benefits as follows: (b) Effective the date of your return to your permanent post of assignment following your vacation in the United States, subparagraph (b) of paragraph sit (6) entitled "Benefits" is deleted and in lieu thereof is substituted the following: _ "(b) You will be entitled to sick, annual and home leave (including travel expenses incident thereto) equal to and subject to the same rules and regulations applicable to Government appointed employees. Annual leave may only be taken at times and places approved in advance by appropriate Government representatives. " } J. For various a dm;,,.istra~ive T E ~oo s. subject did not take. his vacation as scheduled and cl_d not return to the United States until approximately 22 June 196-1 . and ac 1 --'-at time he began earning government leave b+?r_ef its. Approved For Release 2003/05/27': CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 4. It is clear that if subject had taken his vacation as' scheduled on 21 September 1962, he would have started earning leave benefits on approximately 31 October 1962 in accordance with the terms of the amendment to his contract. It would seem to be a strange circuristance to deny an individual benefits he otherwise is entitled to merely because he delayed his vacation, especially when the reasons for the delay were beyond his cont- ol. The clear intent of the amendment to the contract was to provide leave benefits, effective on or about 31 October 1962. In these circumstances, it is our opinion that a retroactive adjustment of his sick leave benefits is in order. ;5X1 A JGB: sm Distribution: Original - Addressee 1 - LEAVE 1 - JGB Signer X- Chrono Approved For Release 2003/05/27 CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 OGC 74-0710 24 April 1974 MEMORANDUM FOR: DD/M&S Comparison of Overtime Requirements Under CIA Regulations, Title 5 and The Fair Labor Standards Act REFERENCES: a) Civil Service Commission Memo to D/Pers, dtd, 19 Apr 74, subj, Proposed Interim Instructions to Implement the Fair Labor Standards Act b) Memo fr C/PMCD to D/Pers, dtd, 19 Apr 74, subj, Fair Labor Standards. Act Amendments of 1974 1.. This is in response to your request of 22 April for a breakout of the requirement to pay for overtime work under current CIA regulations, Title 5 of the U. S. Code, and the Fair Labor Standards Act, as amended. 2. As you know, on 8 April the President signed P. L. 93-259, the Fair Labor Standards Act Amendment of 1974. The amendment of Section 3(e) of the Act, the "coverage" section, to include for the first time "any individual employed by the Government of the United States -- in any executive agency (as defined in Section 105 . . . )" of Title 5 of the U. S. Code, causes the Act to be applicable to most Government agencies including CIA. In addition, the Civil Service Commission has the statutory responsibility of administerin the Act within most Government: agencies, including CIA. Per Reference A: The FLSA, as amended 'by P. L. 93-259, does not repeat, 3meud, or otherwise mod-!f,; any existing federal nay Rather, the FLSA establishes a n.inimu,n standard to hick cove*_-ed cznployces arc entltlcd. To tc.e c:cten that the FLSA ..: aid provide a reacer pay Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 benefit to an employee (e. g. , a higher overtime rate) than the benefit payable under other existing pay rules, the employee is entitled to the FLSA benefit. If other existing pay rules provide a higher benefit, of course, the employee continues to receive that benefit. No Federal employee's pay or pay related benefits (overtime, Sunday pay, etc. ,) will be reduced to conform to the FLSA minimum standards. 3. The following are general statements on the require- ments for overtime compensation, or compensatory time off in lieu thereof under CIA regulations, Title 5 of the U. S. Code, and the FLSA. Certain exceptions, not applicable to the great majority of Agency and other federal employees, have been omitted. 25X1A i. CIA: "Compensable overtime is that work performed by an employee in excess of the normal basic workweek which has been authorized by a designated senior official as compensable. " "The basic 40-hour workweek consists of five con- secutive duty days, normally Monday through Friday. " 25X1A "The basic nonovertime workday does not exceed eight hours. " 25X1A ii. Title 5: "Hours of work officially ordered or approved in excess of 40 hours in an administrative workweek, or . . . in excess of 8 hours in a day, performed by an employee are overtime work . . . " 5 U. S.C.A. 5542(a). iii. FLSA: Generally, ". . . no employer shall employ any of his employees . . . for a workweek longer than forty hours, unless such employee receives compensation for his employment in excess of the hours specified at a rate not less than one and one-half times the regular rate at which he is employed. Sec 7(c). Under the FLSA overtime is compensable if the employer suffers or permits it to be worked. "In other words, for nonexempt employees overtime need not be 'officially ordered or approved' as is presently required. Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Under the concept, any work performed by a nonexempt employee for the benefit of the agency, whether requested or not, is working time if the employer knows of or has reason to believe it is being performed. Thus a nonexempt employee who commences work prior to the scheduled shift, or continues to work during meal periods or at the end of the shift, even though the work was not requested, is entitled to compensation for overtime work. (In this regard see paragraph 7c, Ref. A. ) B. Rate of Overtime Compensation. 25X1A i. CIA: "The overtime pay rate is one and one-half times the hourly rate of basic salary but will not exceed one and one-half times the minimum scheduled rate for GS-10. " Thus, no overtime hourly rate may be greater an one -half times the first step of a GS-10. ii. Title 5: Essentially the same provisions as followed by CIA. 5 U. S. C. A. 5542(a)l, iii. FLSA: ". . . a rate not less than one and one-half times the regular rate at which he . . . (the employee) . . . is employed." Sec. 7(a). Note that "regular rate" includes the scheduled or basic rate, night differential, and Sunday premium pay. (See paragraph 9c, Ref. A. ) C. Compensatory Time. i. CIA: a) Employees, GS-11 and below, may, at their request, receive compensatory time off in lieu of payment for directed overtime; b) Employees, GS-12 through GS-14, may also 25X1A receive compensatory time off if they request it, but only to the extent the hours are otherwise compensable as overtime; cTmpensable as overtime. c) Also, employees, GS-15 or above, may receive compensatory time only to the extent the hours are ii. Title 5: "The head of an agency may -- 25X1A (1) on request of an employee, grant . . . compensatory time off . . . instead of payment for an equal amount of time spent in irregular or occasional overtime work; and Approved For Release 2003q05127: _CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 (2) provide that an employee whose rate of basic pay is in excess of the maximum rate of basic pay for a GS-10 shall be granted compensatory time off . . . instead of being paid for that work. " 5 U. S.C.A. 5543. In other words, for those employees who make more than the maximum basic GS-10, the head of an agency may direct that they only receive compensatory time. iii. FLSA: No comparable provision. "The FLSA.requires that a non-exempt employee be compensated for hours in excess of 40 hours a week at a rate not less than one and one-half times his regular rate. This means that compensatory time off for overtime work is not appropriate for a non-exempt employee. A non-exempt employee must be paid for overtime work. " Subparagraph 9d, Ref. A. D. Exemptions From Overtime. i. CIA: a) Employees GS-11 and below, may receive over- time for all hours of directed overtime except, that in any pay period, an employee's aggregate compensation (basic salary, overtime, holiday pay, annual premium pay, night differential, or compensatory time off in lieu of overtime) may not exceed the maximum scheduled rate for a GS-15; b) GS-12 thru GS-14 employees may NOT be compensated for the hours of directed overtime between 40 and 48 either by overtime pay or compen- satory time, UNLESS the directed hours are: "on a position which requires substantial amounts of overtime work on a con- tinuing basis and the productivity is predominately measurable in units of production or hours of duty performed; on any day during a work period of seven or more consecutive days;" or, "on a job the duties of which are substantially unrelated to the primary assignment. " The same aggregate compensation limitation applies with respect to exceeding the maximum scheduled rate for a GS-15; c) GS-15 employees may not receive overtime or compensatory time in lieu thereof, except in the cage of a "production" oriented position or unless the second job concept mentioned above applies. In addition, the aggregate compensation limitation applies. 25X1A ii. Title 5: "An employee may be paid premium pay . . . (overtime, annual premium pay, Sunday and holiday pay) ". . . only to the extent that payment does not cause his aggregate rate of Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0. Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 pay for any pay period to exceed the maximum rate for a GS-15. " 5 U. S. C. A. 5547. iii. FLSA: There are a host of exemptions from both the minimum wage and overtime requirements of the Act, but those most applicable to the Agency are the so-called executive, administrative, and professional exemptions. Sec. 13, At Ref. A, Attachment 1, pages 4 and 5, the Commission provides guidance for determining the exempt or nonexempt status of employees within the three categories. Department of Labor regulations which define and delimit the three terms are provided for your comparison as Attachment 1 hereto. 4. The identification of employees as "exempt or non- exempt" and the determination of payment for overtime under the provisions of both the Agency's regulation and the FLSA are the chief problems with which we are now concerned. However, existing CIA occupational categories of employees follow an occupational coding system similar to that of the Civil Service Commission. It is proposed that the Office of Personnel identify all employees as "exempt" or "nonexempt" by following the CSC guidelines, within the next few days. Thereafter, we will be better able to determine the extent of the problem and how Agency regulations can be changed to solve it. In addition, it is recommended that the Office of Finance be charged with developing a procedure to accomplish the dual computation of overtime as required by the Act. By the terms of the Act, the Commission is relieved of its administration with respect to individuals employed in the Library of Congress, United States Postal Service, Postal Rate Commission, and Tennessee Valley Authority. FOIAB5 FOIAB5 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 FOIAB5 25X1A Chief Position Management & Compensation Division 25X1A OJCS D/Pers C/CMPD - 25X1A General Counsel, NSA GMB: sm Distribution: Original - Addressee 1 - OGC Subject: PAY 1 - GMB Signer 1- Chrono Note: Attachments on file in OGC Library. Approved For Release 2db3/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 FOIAB5 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 OGC 74-0767 6 May 1974 MEMORANDUM FOR: Deputy Director of Personnel SUBJECT : EOD Travel of REFERENCES A. Your memo dtd 5 March 74, same subject B. OGC 74-0887 dtd 14 Jan 74, same subject 25X1A Ben: 25X1A 25X1A 1. I apologize for the all-too-long a time it has taken me to get back to you on the I I case. When viewed against our overall case- load, Mr. 0 problem is certainly one of our smaller ones. The "smaller" cases, however, are often the most difficult to resolve, and his case certainly falls into this catego y. 2. The Federal Travel Regulations provide that travel and trans- portation expenses and applicable allowances are payable in the case of a shortage-category appointee from his place of actual residence at the time of appointment to permanent duty at official stations within the United States. FTR 2-1.3(c). A new appointee is an individual who is first appointed to Government service. FTR 2-1.5e(1) . The effective date of appointrent is the date on which the appointee reports for duty at his first official station. FTR 2-1.4j. The expenses for travel, transportation, and allowances shall not be allowed unless and until the new appointee to a shortage-category position agrees in writing to remain in Government service for 12 months following the effective date of his appointment. FTR 2-1 .5a (1) (a) and FTR 2-1.5f (2) (a) . Authorized expenses may be paid to the individual concerned even though he has not been appointed at the time travel to his first official station is performed. FTR 2-1.5f(2) (b). Mr. Greg Haller of the General Services Administration is responsible for interpreting the Federal Travel Regulations. He bias explained to me that FTR 2-1. 5f(2) (b) permits travel to the first official station before appointment, but the travel must be incident to the appointment and undertaken at the direction of the prospective employing agency. Approved For Release 20Q3/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 25X1A 25X1A 3. The facts in this case are clear. Mr travel from California to Michigan was not incident to his appointment except in the most vague and indefinite way. We have an Office of Personnel letter to him advising him not to begin travel until he has received written author- ization to do so, and the have his own statement that he was not depending upon final job offers until the end of the summer, either from the Agency or other organizations. Thus, I would have a legal objection to interpreting his early June move from California to Michigan as being incident to his appointment and undertaken at the direction of the Agency. The additional factors you mention--when the Office of Personnel could have telephoned and his wife's maternity condition--are not, I am sorry to say, pertinent to the question of his travel entitle t. 25M 4. You ask if we may look at Mr. II place of residence at the time of selection in a more liberal way and find that he was "selected" some time before 7 June 1973, subject only to clearances which- came through on 22 May 1973. The question of "selection for appointment" (paragraph 6, OGC 74-0081) is a problem of my own making. I did not accurately quote the Federal Travel Regulation which states that: ...travel and transportation expenses and applicable allowances.. are payable in the case of... (c) new appointees, as provic'ed in 2-1.5 /shortage-category appointees/, from their places of actual residence at the time of appointment to permanent duty at official stations .... FTR 2-1.3(c). In relation to the subject of travel expenses for shortage-category appointees, the only time the FTR uses the word "selection" is in connection with limits on travel expenses, i. e . , /t/he limit on travel and transportation expenses in the individual case is the cost of direct travel or transportation as allowable between the indi- vidual's place of residence at the time of selection or assignment and the official station to which appointed or assigned; .... FTR 2-1.5f(5) . Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0' Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 I again contacted Mr. Haller to pursue a definition for the word "selection" as used above. He obtained an informal opinion from the General Accounting Office that "place of residence at the time of selection" means "place of actual residence at the time of appointment". It may be of interest to you to know that both GSA and GAO do not give the Federal Travel Regulations a liberal interpretation. I believe we should take a similar view. In summary, I must state a legal objection to construing the regulations and the facts in Icase in such a way as to enable the claim to be approved. 25X1A 25X1A Office of Gena,, al Counsel cc: D/Fin C/OP/SPD/PPB DDM&S w/their background OGC: AEG: cap Original - Addressee 1 - OGC Subj: ALLOWANCES 1 - AEG Signer Chrono Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 STATSPEC L Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Next 5 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For 3/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 OGC 74-0832 P 10 May 1974 MEMORANDUM FOR: Chief, EA Personnel SUBJECT : Family Visitation Travel REFERENCE : Telepouch I C/EA Div., fm COS Vietnam, dtd 8 May 74 25X1A 25X1A concerning the question raised in Referent. Therein, the Chief of Station, Vietnam requests clarification on the monetary limitations for family visitation travel (FVT). FOIAB5 In part, P.L. 90-221 authorizes payment of: The travel expenses of officers and employees of the Service for up to two round trips each year for purposes of family visitation. . .except that, with respect to any such officer or employee FOIAB5 25X1 Approved For Release-2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-007098000300090001-0 4 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 whose dependents are located abroad, the Secretary may authorize such additional trips as he deems appropriate not to exceed the equivalent cost of two round trips of less than first class to the District of Columbia, .. . Provided, That the facilities of the Military Airlift Command shall be utilized whenever possible for travel authorized ... /herein/ . 25X1A (a) Travel expenses may be paid for up to two round trips a year by the employee for the purpose of visiting his family in the United States. 4. The legislative history of P.L. 90-221 reflects that there was a conscientious effort not to provide a specific monetary amount in the amendment. The Congress realized that the circumstances in Vietnam that gave rise to the amendment may occur in other countries where travel to the United States may be more expensive. Changes in plane fares also made a dollar figure unrealistic. Therefore, they set a maxi- mum allowance as the cost of two round trips in each year at a cost of less than first class travel, i . e . , economy or tourist fare, between the post where the employee is assigned and Washington, D.C. Families living abroad may be visited more frequently so long as the maximum is not exceeded. The amendment, however, does not guarantee an employee all these trips each year for visitation. The availability of FVT for an employee is at all times subject to the needs of the Agency. Further, no cash payments accrue to the employee for any trips authorized but not made. In order to keep the cost to a minimum the Congress includec a requirement that travel under the authority of the amendment be by Military Airlift Command aircraft wherever possible. 5. The Agency implemented the adoption of the FVT provision of P.L. 90-221 into wherein at paragraphs 2 (a) and (b) it is stated in part: (b) When the dependents are located outside the United States., .more than two family visitation trips may be permitted a year, but reimbursement for such travel may not exceed the cost of two round trips by less than first class air to the District of Columbia. Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001--0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 6. It is the opinion of this Office that these regulations are consistent with the statutory authority on which they are based. Further, while not mandatory, they are consistent with the Foreign Affairs Manual. The Uniform State/AID/USIA regulations for visitation travel are outlined therein at 3 PAM 699. 7. Accordingly, it is the opinion of this Office that for the Vietnam Station Travel Directive to be consistent with the statutory and regulatory authorities they must reflect the following: a. If the employee's family is located in the United States, he may be granted as many as two trips a year to visit them. b . If the employee's family is located outside the United States, he may be granted as many trips as the cost for which does not exceed the cost of two round trips by less than first class air to the District of Columbia. 25X1A Assistant General Counsel OGC: JED: cap Original - Addressee 1 - OGC Subj: TRAVEL 1 - JED Signer 1 - Chrono SEC R ET Approved For Release '2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 1. The production of intelligence bearing on the national security for use at the highest levels of policy determination of the United States Government is a responsibility of the gravest note. The organization bearing this responsibility should be staffed with persons of the highest available intellect, integrity, professionalism, dedication, perspicacity, and dynamism. The Central Intelligence Agency's retirement policy is an essential element of its program for ensuring that its staff possesses these attributes to the highest degree feasible. 2. The personnel staffing program of the Agency is based on the concept of selective recruitment for career employment and managed career development. Selection standards are designed to accept only persons with the highest qualifications and potential for development. The Agency's development program provides a career-long blend of formal training and managed progression through appropriate assignments of increasing breadth and respon- sibility. 3. The goal of the Agency's development program is to place the best available employee in every position. Prom otion'f3olicy reinforces career development by advancing those who excel and have the capacity for further growth. The Agency's rigorous system for evaluating the performance of its employees is designed to assure high levels of effectiveness. Those who are unsatisfac- tory are separated; those who are marginal or unlikely to find full career satisfaction are counseled to resign. 4. Intelligence activities are characterized by continuous ch ,nges--in requirements, methods, techniques, processes, and emphases. As these changes occur, the Agency reassigns its career staff employees and provides supplementary training as required. To the extent that these measures do not meet the needs, requisite skills, experience, and special abilities are acquired by the employment of new personnel. 1 7?? .. _ ? 4 1 .I i Approved For Release 2003/05/27 CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27: CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 -2- 5. Because there are practical limits to the size of the Agency, the requirement for new employees and the operation of the career development program cannot be accomplished without attrition. Part of this attrition is provided by involuntary separations and resignations through the Agency's system for evaluating employee performance. Other vacancies are provided by voluntary retire- ment and resignation and by death and disability. But together these do not create a sufficient number of vacancies. 6. The Agency's retirement policy is an integral part of its program to maintain the high level of performance required by its mission and responsibilities. It also provides the additional attrition necessary for career development and the acquisition of new em- ployees. This policy, adopted in 1959, generally limits the career span of its employees to age 60. 7. Agency employees, with some exceptions, have all attained their career peaks several years before reaching age 60. They have had a full CIA career and have made their maximum individual con- tribution to their Govermnent. Exceptions specifically contemplated are individuals who possess rare scholarship and talents that would be difficult to replace in the normal course of career development and whose retirement would not be in the best interests of the Gov- ernment. In some cases retirement at 60 may result in loss of valuable experience and know-how and only generate a recruitment and training requirement. 8. It is recognized that enforcement of the policy to retire employees at age 60 occasionally subordinates the personal desires of the individual to the best interests of the Government. This is usually the case when it is necessary for any reason to separate an employee. The normal voluntary retirement age for most Federal employees is 65, and the compulsory age under the Civil Service system is 70. Similar retirement ages for CIA would result in the grAdual accumulation of an excessive number of employees of de- clining performance, whether due to declining health, motivation, or drive or to inability to adapt to change. The effectiveness with which the Agency fulfills its extraordinary responsibilities depends entirely upon the highest possible level of effectiveness in staffing the Agency. Consequently, extraordinary action toward attaining 7.7 1-7! 1 A roved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27-3EIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 and maintaining this goal--such as effecting a retirement policy more stringent than that for the Federal service in general--is warranted. 9. Retirement at age 60 may appear less appropriate for those Agency employees who are in positions that are not unique to intelli- gence activities. In theory, it might be possible to identify all such positions and exempt the incumbents thereof from the retirement policy. 10. There are two reasons for not doing so. Attempts to for- mulate criteria of differentiation would generate new problems of morale and administration. The creation of exempt categories of employees would foster odious comparisons. It would thwart the implementation of the general retirement policy indefinitely as groups and individuals pleaded their individual cases. 11. The more fundamental reason for not exempting certain categories of Agency employees is that the work of the Agency must be performed with utmost responsiveness. This requires a general state of mind on the part of all employees that timeliness is critical, accuracy is imperative, and absorption with the task at hand takes priority over personal distractions. Advancing years inevitably bring about a lessening of work vigor and enthusiasm. The larger the pro- portion of older employees, the greater the debilitating effects on the tenor of the Agency. 12. In summary, the age 60 retirement policy is a key element of the Agency's efforts to attain excellence in its staffing.. Without the policy the entire personnel program of the Agency would be im- paired. The most vigorous and productive individuals, finding themselves stymied, will leave the service or will never be per- suaded to enter in the first place. By shortening the career span of all employees, service in intelligence will continue to be highly attractive to outstanding young men and women. In the end, our national intelligence objectives will be best served. ^r- A~'proved For ReleaseR 27 :CIA-R[{P84-007098000300090001-0 30 April 1968 MEMORANDUM FOR: Director of Central Intelligence SUBJECT : Retirement Policy 1. This memorandum submits recommendations for your approval in paragraph 4. 2. During the past several weeks I have reviewed Vie Agency's retirement policy with the Deputy Directors, the General Counsel, the Inspector General, the Director of Personnel, and the Chairman of the CIA Retirement Board. 3. Our discussion and conclusions are summarized as follows: b. The principal issue of our discussion, and from which all others flow, is whether the Agency should have a policy requiring retirement earlier than provided by law under the Civil Service Retirement Act or the CIA Retirement and Dis- ability System for GS-18s and above. After considerable discussion, it was the consensus that there should be an early retirement policy with a stipulated age at which most employees t i,;',?1 1 t 1.'C1 t (f;i tS: 93~f: Approved For Relkarsg M'9/05/27.: CIA-RDP84-00709R000S000bOt f-f1l Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 should leave. At the same time, it was recognized that, because the Directorates have different problems, Agency policy should be flexible enough to permit liberal exceptions when justified. This appears to be particularly true in the Intelligence Directorate because of the various types of professional employees needed and because these profes- sionals often are individuals who have prepared themselves through academic study for long-range professional careers where an arbitrary retirement age would not be a condition of employment. Rationale in support of such a policy is attached at Tab A. c. Having reached agreement that the Agency should have an early retirement policy with provision for exceptions to meet particular needs or circumstances, we then discussed the types of exceptions that could be identified and action recommended in advance. General agreement was reached on the following: (1) There should be no general exception for employees who argue that at the time they entered on duty they were led to believe (or now believe) that they had the right to :*,ork until age 65 or 70, depending on the retirement sys tem in which they participate. (2) There is a small group (12) of Agency employees who will not have 12 years of creditable service by their scheduled retirement date. We feel that these employees, as a group, should be permitted to remain on duty until they accumulate 12 years of service when they earn the right to continue important statutory hospitalization and life insurance coverage. (3) As originally conceived in 1959, our early retire- ment policy expected employees to retire at age 60 with 30 years of service or at age 62 with at least 5 years of service. When the Civil Service Retirement Act was amended in 1966 to include a provision for optional re- tirement at age 60 with 20 years of service, Agency policy was in turn revised. There were some employees who prior to the revision of Agency policy had been informed r Approved For Release 2003105/27 : CIA-RDP84-007098000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA -RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 that their scheduled retirement would be at age 62 and presumably planned accordingly. With the change, their scheduled retirement age was lowered to 60. We feel that these employees should be permitted to remain on duty until age 62 if they so request. This does not include those employees who at age 60 have at least 30 years of service since this was a requirement under the earlier Agency policy. (4) An overall exception should be made for the group of printers (57) who were induced to transfer from the Government Printing Office to the Agency with the assurance that they would not lose any benefits. (5) There should be no overall exception for lower graded clerical employees. Each such case should be considered on its own merits. (6) There should be no overall exception for employees with technical skills in grades GS-7 and below even though it might be difficult to recruit replacements and their loss would create training problems. Each such case should be considered on its own merits. (7) No overall exception should be made for employees merely because they are writing Agency history. a. Agency policy continue to provide that employees gener- ally will be required to retire at age 60 or as soon thereafter as they are eligible for optional retirement under the law, regard- less of whether they are covered by the Civil Service or the CIA retirement system. b. Exceptions to the general policy be considered by the Director on an individual case basis when requested by the Head of Career Service or a Deputy Director. Approved For Release 2003/05/27: CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 c. Overall exceptions as indicated in paragraphs 3. c. (2), (3), and (4) above be approved. 25X1A L. K. White Executive Director-Comptroller Attachment Rationale CONCUR: 25X1A Deputy Director 25X1A for Support Deputy irec or 25X1A for Intelligence General Counse 25X1A Deputy Director L 25X1A for Plans *,W ience and Technology Deputy Director Inspector General The recommendations contained in paragraph 4 are approved. 25X1A Richard Helms (Date Director of Central Intelligence irpP'_~T . AR Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 ~4pproved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 SUBJECT: Retirement Policy Distribution: 0 & 1 - D/Personnel 1 - ExDir-Comp 1 - ER 2 - DD/S 1 - DD/P 1 - DD/I 1 - DD/S&T 1 - General Counsel I - Inspector General 1 - C/BSD/OP ~rpipr Approved For Relegse01 7 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 . OGC 74-0 13 Approved For Release 2003/05/271:,CalA-84-00709R000300090001-0 SUBJECT . Early Retirement Policy--Review of OGC Opinions and P . L . 93-259 FOIAB5 1. The record as reconstructed from OGC files is not altogether clear as to when and why the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) established a retirement age for its employees which is below the mandatory age followed by other Government agencies. It appears that in 1959 a decision was made at the highest level of the Agency that all employees were expected to retire as soon as they became eligible to do so without suffering a reduction in their annuity. * This meant that employees would retire at age 60 with 30 or more years of service or at age 62 with less than 30 but more than five years of service. I amendments to the Civil Service Retirement (CSR) system permitted participating employees to retire at age 60 without a reduction in their annuity if they had at least 20 years of service. Thereupon, Agency policy was modified and all Agency employees were expected to retire at age 60 if they had at least 20 years of service. 2. Office of Personnel memoranda available in OGC indicate that the early retirement policy was adopted in 1959 because of the long-range concern and the conviction that the Operations Directorate (and certain support offices) could not be effectively staffed with a substantial number of employees over age 60. In addition, the Operations Directorate (and certain support offices) had a pronounced age hump as a result of the employment therein of large numbers of World War II veterans and employees of CIA predecessor organizations. The early retirement age was made Agency. wide for the sake of uniformity of policy, and there are no records in the Office of General Counsel (OGC) of discussions between 1959 and 1965 as to the need for or the ultimate impact of a single policy applicable to all elements of the Agency and all levels and fields of employment. The development and implementation of the Agency's retire- ment policy is set out in detail in the DDS Historical Series, OP-4, dated June 1971. A memorandum for the DCI from the Director of Personnel dated 17 September 1959 first recommended the early retirement policy. MNNI VV=U IVI RCICQ.JC LVVJ/VJ/LI . V1M-RLJF V4-VV/ V.7 RVVVJVVV.7VVV I-V Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 3. It should be noted that up until 1965, the Office of General Counsel had not issued an opinion concerning the early retirement policy.** FOIAB5 4. In 1967, the Director of Personnel requested that the Director establish a senior task force to review the Agency's early retirement policy. He noted that resistance to and resentment of the age 60 retirement was increasing and that it seemed unfair to employees to whom the policy was not a known and accepted condition of employment at the time of original employment. (It appears that a statement of the Agency's early retire- ment policy was first set forth in a Headquarters Regulation in 1961). The Director of Personnel also argued that the passage of the CIAR legislation satisfied the original objectives of the policy, that the number of extensions in service were growing rapidly, and that the Agency would not (he was told) enforce the early retirement policy, but employees did not know this. FOIAB5 ** The General Counsel was a member of the Career Council which had approved the proposal initially in 1959. He was thereafter Chairman of the Retirement Board. Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 FOIAB5 FOIAB5 FOIAB5 6. Perhaps here a digression from the chronology should be made in order to mention a few facts about the CSR system. Public Law 854 of July 31, 1956 (70 Stat. 736) provided that mandatory separation under the CSR system was at age 70. (70 Stat. 748. ) I Today, section 8335 of Title 5 of the U.S. Code still pro- vides that mandatory separation under the CSR system is not until age 70. Sections 8331 and 2105 of Title 5 indicate that Agency employees, if not covered by another retirement system for Government employees, do come under the applicable provisions of Title 5 pertaining to the CSR system. 7. In early 1968, an internal OGC memorandum was prepared which discussed rationales for early retirement. The paper suggested that an employee did not necessarily have to be a member of the Operations Directorate to occupy a position of considerable stress and demand or occasionally face physical discomforts, danger, or endure other hard- ships. The paper also stated that it was difficult, however, to make a strong argument that professionals in the Intelligence and Science and Technology Directorates (the analysts) who are approaching age 60 have (because of their age) lost their ambition, were not performing satisfactorily, or were not up-to-date in their disciplines. A more persuasive factor mentioned in the paper is the statement that persons nearing 60 control the output of younger men, whose attitudes and thinking might be more current and who are probably in less of an "intellectual rut". Observations have been made by sociologists, etc. , that there often develops within large, structured organizations a bureaucratic malaise which is more pronounced among older persons, particularly those who occupy middle-level positions and who are aware that they are at the apogee of their careers. 8.. The General Counsel in early 1968 revised a paper prepared by the Deputy Director for Support (DDS) which upheld the Agency's early retirement policy. A few months later he responded to a proposal from the DDS, who suggested that the Agency might develop an incentive compensation program to encourage early retire- ment, stating that such a program was fraught with legal problems but that it might work under certain conditions. 'The details of such a program would have to be worked out well in advance of its implementation. The Voluntary Investment Plan (VIP) is an indirect result of Agency efforts to make retirement financially more attractive. Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 9. The early 1968 papers described above culminated in a 30 April 1968 memorandum from the Executive Director to the Director concerning the Agency's early retirement policy. The Director approved the continuance of the policy that employees generally would be required to retire at age 60 or as soon thereafter as they were eligible for optional retirement, regardless of whether they were covered by the CSR or CIAR system. A few overall exceptions were made affecting about 100 persons, most of whom were printers induced to transfer from the Government Printing Office to the Agency. No other general exceptions to the rule would be considered, but individual cases would be examined in the future by the Director. 10. No other documents on the subject of retirement age appear in OGC files until 1972. In November of that year, the General Counsel sent a memorandum to Mr. Colby concerning the President's memorandum ordering an end to any discrimination in federal employment based on age. The General Counsel contended that the Agency did not contradict the President's wishes because our retirement policy was not the type of discrimination he was banning. The General Counsel drew a distinction between general employment practices and the Agency's career philosophy and suggested that the Agency's policy was no different in principle from the CSR's age 70 statutory limitation and the CIAR's age 60 statutory limitation. 11. What seems to be reflected in the papers referred to above and what seems to have evolved is that the Agency's early retirement policy is not now based so much on the old rationale of "hardships", "dangers", "burning-out", etc. , but on the new rationale that it is an effective and efficient management tool. As a management tool, it helps management meet the declining personnel ceilings that have been im- posed upon the Agency in recent years. 12. On 8 April 1974 the President approved P . L. 93-259 (88 Stat. 55), known as the Fair Labor Standards Amendment of 1974. Almost all the sections of the Act amend or repeal sections of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA) (29 U.S.C. 201-219). There is Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 tucked in at the end of the Act, in section 28 of the 29 sections com- prising the Act, several amendments to the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (ADEA) (29 U . S . C . 621-634). The key amendment is one which states that the policy of Congress is that there shall be no discrimination on account of age in federal government employment. 13. The amendment provides that: (a) All personnel actions affecting employees or applicants for employment (except with regard to aliens employed outside the limits of the United States) ...in executive agencies as defined in section 102 of Title 5, ...shall be made free from any discrimination based on age. The Civil Service Commission is authorized to enforce this provision and to issue whatever regulations are needed to carry out its responsi- bilities. The Commission is to review and evaluate all agency programs designed to carry out this policy and to provide for the acceptance and processing of complaints of discrimination in federal employment on. account of age. An aggrieved party may bring a civil action in a federal district court to obtain whatever legal or equitable relief will effectuate the purpose of the amendment. The amendment also provides certain time periods within which the aggrieved must give notice of an alleged unlawful practice and notice of an intent to file a civil action. 14. The amendment further stipulates that: (t)he head of each. . .agency. . .shall comply with (the) ... regulations. . . of the Civil Service Commission.... The Commission is given the authority to establish reasonable exemptions from the law, but only when it can establish a maximum age requirement on the basis of a determination that age is a bona fide occupational qualification necessary to the performance of the duties of the position. 15. The legislative history of P.L. 93-259 states that the amendments to the ADEA are a logical extension of Congress' decision to extend FLSA coverage to federal, state, and local government employees, which is done in other sections of P . L. 93-259. The ADEA prohibits dis- crimination in employment on the basis of age in matters of hiring, job retention, compensation, and other terms, conditions or privileges of employment. Protection Linder the ADEA is limited, however, to individuals who are between 40 and 65 years of age. 5 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 16. The Senate bill amending the FLSA (S. 2747) was passed in lieu of the House bill (II.R. 12435) but the Conference Committee substituted for the language of the Senate bill much of the text of the House bill. The U.S. Code Congressional and Administrative News sets out in the legislative history of P . L . 93-259 only the House Report and the House Conference Report. 17. The Senate Conference Report is set out in the Congressional Record (Senate) of 28 March 1974. Senator Williams of New Jersey informed his colleagues on the floor of the Senate that despite a strenuous effort by the Senate conferees, they were forced to yield to the House on certain major issues. A section by section analysis of the Senate Conference Report is included in the Record. Under section 28, Nondiscrimination on Account of Age in Government Employment, the Senate Conference Report states: Questions have been raised about the appli- cability of the Age Discrimination provisions to the discretion which now may rest in the heads of certain executive agencies to terminate an employee in the interests of the national security of the United States. It was not the intent of the conferees to affect the exercise of such discretion, other than by barring actions which, in fact, would be illegal, such as a termination of employ- ment or a refusal to hire based on age. 18. Until the Civil Service Commission issues implementing `regulations or begins to consider categories of employees exempted from the new law, we cannot be certain that if faced with a court test of our early retirement policy that we will prevail. The Agency can, of course, seek a blanket or limited exemption from the application of the law. A limited exemption presumably would cover only certain categories of professional employees participating in the CSR system. ,fT jI Approved For Release (003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 19. It is noteworthy that the ADEA in prohibiting dis- crimination for age in the private sector specifies in 2. 9 U . S . C . 623(f) three areas beyond the scope of the Act. Exemptions are granted for employers: (1) to take any action otherwise prohibited where age is a bona fide occupational qualification reasonably necessary to the normal operation of the particular business, or when the differentiations are based on reasonable factors other'than age; (2) to observe the terms of a bona fide seniority system or other employee benefit plan such as a retirement plan; and, (3) to discharge or otherwise discipline an individual for good cause. In comparing the language of section 623 (f) with the language of the 1974 amendment, it seems that Congress has been more generous" to the private sector. Perhaps the Commission's regulations will "even the score", but we cannot be too optimistic. 25X1A Office of Gei eral Counsel Attachment: DCI approved Retirement Policy (ER 68-2186, dtd 30 Apr 68) DCI & DDCI cc: DDO DD/M&S DDI DD/S&T IG Comptroller D/Pers 7 Executive Secretary AEG: cap Distribution: triginal - RETIREMENT 1 - AEG Signer 1 - Chrono r a Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-007098000300090001-0 AppraE64 '(R eI6 bF2008QBMr-F-GA I $X-00709R000300090001 fp WASHINGTON, D.C. 20505 5 June 1974 The Honorable Carla A. Hills Assistant Attorney General Civil Division Department of Justice Washington, D. C. 20530 I have your letter of May 29th regarding new procedures within the Civil Division designed to bring cases of special significance to your attention. As you are aware, we have been working very closely io s ecificallyT i\vir erwin Goldbloom and s n p Mr. David J. Anderson, on the I . Obviously, 2`""^ this case has special significance and has been treated as such from its inception, and our relationships with Mr. Goldbloom and Mr. Anderson have been extremely close, more nearly representing a law firm partnership than representatives of two different agencies. Also, when we have worked with your Division on other cases, such as a recent contract fraud case when we worked with Mr. Irving Jaffe, the Division has always been cooperative and recognized the unusual aspects of the cases. As it turns out, almost all of the cases we send to the Department of Justice are unusual because of the unique mission of this Agency. Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 I can think of no way that we can improve our working relationships with your Division. Certainly, if there are any matters which I feel need your personal attention, I shall not hesitate to be in direct contact with you. 25X1A OGC:JSW:jeb cc: DCI OGC chrono Sincerely, U John S. Warner General Counsel subject Liaison-Governmental Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 DepartlnEnt Ol3ustice Uashin,r~yton, D.c. 20530 ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL CIVIL DIVISION May 29, 1974 Mr. John S. Warner General Counsel Central Intelligence Agency Washington, D. C. 20505 The Civil Division has initiated a practice whereby cases which are of special significance to a client agency or which are likely to create a noteworthy precedent are called to my attention. I try to follow the progress of these special cases personally and through my Deputies, and where necessary, to implement special procedures in their handling. As you may know, the Civil Division is responsible for supervising more than 27,00') cases exclu- sive of Custom court cases. Therefore it is necessary that we exercise care to designate only those cases which have special significance for special handling. Although the chiefs of our various sections to whom the incoming cases are assigned are highly competent in recognizing cases of special significance, it sometimes occurs that the papers forwarded do not set forth the true significance of the matter, particularly from the viewpoint of the client agency. Accordingly, where the case has special significance to your agency, I would very much appreciate your asking your staff, when forwarding the case, to include a statement setting forth the fact of and the reason for its special si;7nificance. That will assist us to render the most efficient legal service possible. Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Of course, when you are personally concerned about the progress of any given case, please do not hesitate to contact me directly, and I will make every effort to address the problems that give rise to your concerns. Thank you very much for your assistance. Sincerely , Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 SUBJECT: Jury Duty for Covert Employees--U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia 1. On 6 June I met with Chief Judge George L. Hart, Jr., in his chambers to discuss the problems that confront some Agency employees when they are called for jury duty. I stated that some of our employees have no visible employment relation- ship with the Agency, but they are in fact employees and are required to protect the covert employment relationship. I explained that previous Chief Judges (naming Sirica and Curran) had decided that such employees should not serve on their juries since they could not divulge their true employment. At this point, Chief Judge Hart interrupted me and informed me he would like to have Circuit Judge J. Skelly Wright attend our meeting since he and Judge Wright were studying the question of jury service in the District of Columbia. 2. Judge Wright joined us and I repeated the comments made to Judge Hart and then stated that although the Agency had an agreement with the former Chief Judges, I was there to seek their advice and guidance as to whether they wanted covert employees to serve. Judge Wright stated that it was his feeling that any individual who is required to keep his employer or the nature of his employment secret should not serve on a jury, but this was a matter within Judge Hart's discretion. Judge Hart stated that he felt such employees should be excused, but he wanted to make sure that the Circuit Court agreed with him. Judge Hart agreed that, rather than merely excusing an individual, he would have the Clerk of the Court pull the individual's registration card without explaining why it was being done. 3. 1 asked Judge Hart if I could explain our agreement to his secretary, Mrs. Dunnigap (who has been with the Judge for about 16 years), so that I would not have to bother him every time a covert employee was summoned. He agreed to this, commenting that he would still have to sign the summons. I asked him if he wanted a letter formalizinn Iu' 111 he said it was not necessary. Both he and Judge Wright were very our agreement, and cooperative and seemed to understand the problems involved. N'''1811I~ Approved For Relea~;e,2003/05/27: CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 4. On my way out I spoke with Mrs. Dunnigan and explained the problem to her. I told her that either I or another individual would deliver a covert employee's summons to her. In a case where there was not time to deliver the summons, I would call her and give her the individual's name and summons number. (This is the same arrangement I had worked out with Mrs. Holley, former Chief Judge Sirica's secretary. } Mrs. Dunnigan was very cooperative and agreed not to associate either my name or the Agency with a covert employee's name or summons. 25X1A Office of Gene7 1 Counsel OG : AEG: cap riginal - OGC Subj: JURY DUTY 1 - AEG Signer 1- Chrono Approved For Release 2003/05/27 CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 ? 4~ Approved For Ff 1easei `2'0 '3105/2t:' tA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 OGC 74-0977 10 June 1974 25X1A 25X1A FOIAB5 FOIAB5 MEMORANDUM FOR: Chief Support, EA Division SUBJECT: Travel Entitlements of Mr. Children 25X1A REFERENCE: OGC 73-2281, dtd ll December 1973, Subj, 25X1 A 25X1A I Response to Mr. on Is Divorce EA Support, 1. You have requested the opinion of this Office on the entitle- ment of Mr.1 _F to have his children travel to and from his post of assignment for the summer at Government expense. It is is understood that and his wife are in the process of being 25X1 divorced and that a separation agreement entered into between them states that custody shall be shared jointly by the parties and that is to have primary custody between 1 September and I June each year while Mr.I to have primary custody from 1 June to 1 September. It is further understood that when the divorce is final the separation agreement will be incorporated within the divorce decree. 25X1A 2. When an Agency employee is transferred overseas his entitlement to travel for himself and his family at Government expense is established by statute and by regulations issued thereunder. i I I With respect to who are 25X1A "members of the family," Agency regulations at0 state as follows: "When an employee is assigned to a post abroad, his dependents for purposes of travel (except educational travel) are (a) spouse; (b) children, (including step, adopted, and foster children) who are unmarried and under 21 years of age or, regardless of age, are incapable of self-support, . . . . " The Title 5 authority Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 r~~;T- 25X1A Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 cited su ra provides that regulations shall be prescribed by the . tCJlUent. That authority was delegated to the i~;rector of tho Bureau of the Budget by Executive Order 11230, 28 June 1965, then redelegated to the Administrator, General Services Administration by Executive Order 11609, 22 July 1971. The Administrator's regulations, "The Federal Travel Regulations, " are found in 6 F. A.M. 190. Therein at 2.14d, "immediate family" is defined as ". . . (a)ny of the following named members of the employee's household at the time he reports for duty at his new permanent duty, station or performs authorized or approved overseas tour renewal travel or separation travel: spouse, children (including step-children or adopted children) unmarried and under 21 years of age or physically or mentally incapable of supporting themselves regardless of age, , (Emphasis added.) This definition of dependents for travel purposes is more restrictive than the Agency's because of the requirement that the children be members of the employee's household at the time he reports for duty at his new permanent duty station. In applying this more restrictive definition of dependents, the Comptroller General has ruled that an employee who, being divorced with his ex-wife having legal custody of their children, and who, after being overseas for more than a year gained legal custody and control of the children, was not entitled to the children's transportation at Government expense to join him at his post overseas. They were not within the definition of "immediate family" as they were not members of his household at the time he was assigned overseas. B-166113, 26 Feb 69.3, 26 Feb 69. 3. This Office and the Comptroller General have ruled on questions similar tol in the past and, for the most part, it has been held that where custody is in the mother the employee father has no entitlement to transportation of his children at Government expense. In a 1969 opinion, this Office held: "Notwithstanding the broad definition of dependents, and consistent with government travel law generally, we believe the purpose and meaning of the and regulation are that the cost of travel of an employee's children to visitFOlAB5 him and return to their place of residence with their mother when he is assigned abroad may not be paid in those instances in which the children are in the legal custody of their mother and reside with her." OGC 69-2073, 3 Nov 69. 25X1A 4. Comptroller General opinions on fact situations analogous to Mr.~ase are as follows: It is believed that in conjunction with an examination of the questions of n J", t.; Approved For Release 2003165121 ' C1A-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 custody, dependency and immediate family. the Government must also look at the purpose of the Travel. in this regard the Comptroller General has ruled that a Navy enlisted man was not entitled to travel expenses for dependent wife who had taken two weeks' leave from her job in Pennsylvania to travel to and from San Diego, California, as she was not establishing her place of residence there. In fact, the Navy enlisted man was about to be released from active duty. In looking at the pur ose of the travel, the Comptroller stated: "Your wife apparently preferred to live in McKees Rocks while you were on sea duty, and since she arranged for only a short period of leave from her employment at that place, it appears clear that the purpose of her trip to Long Beach was to visit you and probably to accompany you home, rather than for the purpose of establishing a residence at . that place." "The law does not contemplate the furnishing of trans- portation at Government expenses under such circumstances, . . . ." 33 Comp. Gen. 307 (1954). In another case dealing directly with the question of custody and travel, the Comptroller ruled that an employee of the Foreign Agricultural Service, Department of Agriculture, stationed in Buenos Aires, was not entitled to transportation at Government expense for his two children to visit him. The divorce decree in that case had obligated him to pay their mother $150.00 per month for their maintenance and support as well as their schooling, medical bills and travel from their mother's home to his and return each year and, it "granted him custody of his children two months out of each year." The Comptroller viewed the two-month period of custody given to the father each year as a permissive right to visit the employee father with their actual residence being with the mother. He concluded the children could "not be considered as dependents for the purpose of charging the Government with the expenses of their travel." B-129962 (1957). 25X1A 25X1A 25X1A 25X1A 5. In a subsequent case, the employee, like was stationed in The divorce had provided that the two children were in the joint custody of the employee and his former wife and he wanted to take them to~ to live with him following its home leave, it being understood that they would be members of his household in II one residing with him for a period of approximately one year, the other, residing long enough to finish his last two years of high school. The Comptroller General stated: "If the two natural children of Mn do, in fact, return to with the employee to reside with him for the length of time indicated in the information transmitted here - approximately a year in the case of his daughter and longer in the case of his son - it is not -3- Approved For Rele s'e 2I3/ 2~, i:Il,A- P84-00709R000300090001-0 25X1A Approved For Release 2003/05/27 CIA-F DF84-00709R000300090001-0 unreasonable to regard such children as becoming members of the household of the employee at the time of their return with tu~,_ hii u and his. second cziifn +.. r .. - os B-129962 cited supra, discussed the question to Therein "the legal re, custody and control of the two minor children" was in the mother but the father was to "have the actual physical custody and control of the two minor children for the entire summer vacation each year." The General Counsel found that the children's legal residence was with the mother and that residence was not altered by the father's temporary custody of them during the summer vacation each year. Accordingly, the children could not be considered "dependents for the purpose of charging the Government with their expenses of travel." properly may be certified for payment." 44 Comp. Gen. 443 (1965). Yet another case which was passed upon by the General Counsel, GAO, on 25 February 1974, and issued as an "Ind It utclr one-way transportation from the United States to 6. This Office believes it important to examine both the question of 'cusp and the ose of travel for which reimburse- ment is sought. We start from the basic premise that a Government employee has no right to reimbursement for travel except where the c erne ?.+ ... _____ ~ _ , , _ FOIAB5 itle 5 of the U.S. Code, there are authorities which provide for reimbursement of the travel cost to an employee going abroad and for his dependents or "immediate family . " The Comptroller General and this Office have ruled that where legal custody is not with the employee, there is no entitle- ment to travel or allowances. Also, we have ruled on custody in one parent and no expression of custody. Now we are f d ace with a situation of "joint custody" where the periods of custody between the father and mother during the year are specifically established with the mother having them for three-fourths of the year. 25X1A In lo ki o ng at the intended travel of Mr. children to it seems clear that they do not intend t t k o a e up residence there an become members of his household for any appreciable period of time. p'Pv t~v - a r- - -- states: "My tentative plan is to have them come out here approximately 15 July and remain through the first of September." The purpose of the trip is simply for visitation. On the questions of custody and dependency, it would seem that the facts of Mr.~ ucase nlike those found in the cited Comptroller General opinions. It is not true that the regulations upon which those opinions are based are co'm ?ri'JT1 i-A L Approved For Release 2003/05/27: CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 Approved For Release 2003/05/27: CTA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0 somewhat more restrictive than the Agency's regulations. Not%vith- standing, it is the opinion of this Office that neither the law nor Agency regulations issued thereunder contemplate summer visitation travel at Government expense as sought by Mr were 25X1 A Mr. I children to truly establish residence i and become members of his household for a substantial period of time as was the case 25X in 44 Comp. Gen. 443, we are of the opinion that they might be found to be members of Mr.O household and accordingly, entitled to travel at Government expense. 25X1 A 7. If I can be of any further assistance, please advise. 25X1 A 25X1A /EA Support DD/M&S ;~ti1 y ri~'J Approved For Release 206r3/05/27: CIA-RDP84-00709R000300090001-0. Assistant Ge er Counsel Approved For Release 2003/05/27 : CIA-RDP84-00709R090001-0 Appeals of Escrow Leave Forfeiture 1. Escrow leave -cs recognized formally by Agency regulations as 25X1e^xly as 11 December 195 sup~leyent sneci f led in parag -aph 3a "When an e +loyee is integrated into another Federal department, establislment, Agency or organization, annual and sick leave to his credit on the date of integration will remain to his credit in this 'gcncy pending his return to the Agency from the organization into which he was irate : atcd." 2. The Agency maintained an escrow leave account for each indi- vidual. One reason for this device was cover related - to -arevent a new employee of the Department of State from appearing on its bcoks .ri.th a considerable existing balance of leave. 3. In any event, the escrow leave account for each individual tended to remain sequestered and inviolate. one individual had diffi- culty in using this account for leave purposes. In practice, he had to take leave ;,rit:nout pay from his cover organization in order to use his escrow leave. Since this practice could raise ainistrative questions within the cover organization, integrated employees, for the most part, did not touch their escrow accounts and tended to build u-o the cover organization leave account to the limit of the legal maximum.. Dena nds of assignments, availability of home leave, and. the generous annual leave accumulation combined to mean that most integrated emnla ees really were not in a position to use all of the various types of leave that were accumulating. 4. During this period, the Agency did not have access to Derartment of State leave records. The individual benefited from two leave records managed by two separate org-anization_s not in communication on this matter. In couseauence, many individuals approached the legal leave iii it in both Agency and cover orb nization leave accounts. ''his meant that they were substantially above the legal leave ceiling intended by Cow ess. 5. Cormumications on leave accounts improved between the Agency and the Department of State. It became a--parent v twin the Agency that the escrow system inadvertently was permit t tirsr the accur.-u aticm of annual 25X1eaTe in excess of the legal limit. l3 !love=her 1965, addressed. the problem thus: "If, at the beginning of the leave year, the combination of the annual leave balance from the cover facility and the balance of the annual leave in the employee's Organization escrow leave account results in a total annual leave balance in excess of the naxinun which the employee may legally carry over from leave yea.- to leave year, the excess Est be forfeited as of the beginning of the leave year." 25X1 6. thay: n- v ppCog Vrd3e ease 2003/ 927cvC t D zb079M#MOBgDgk001-0 '2. ...',:rider no circumstanans are es^_roy it-c:.-V8 ?}+-~c ou ti i_tJndeC as means of a lu-wing eTT.ployecs E L %cS' 12L a ____ __ m,L.Lte. ^a-r, are u*-ovid?e_1? by 1,2-w. (Undo=ii. 1 Lg in ori