The United States charged three defendants with conspiring to
destroy, and one of them with destroying, Government property. In
response to the defendants' pretrial motion for disclosure of
electronic surveillance information, the Government filed an
affidavit of the Attorney General stating that he had approved the
wiretaps for the purpose of
"gather[ing] intelligence information deemed necessary to
protect the nation from attempts of domestic organizations to
attack and subvert the existing structure of the Government."
On the basis of the affidavit and surveillance logs (filed in a
sealed exhibit), the Government claimed that the surveillances,
though warrantless, were lawful as a reasonable exercise of
presidential power to protect the national security. The District
Court, holding the surveillances violative of the Fourth Amendment,
issued an order for disclosure of the overheard conversations,
which the Court of Appeals upheld. Title III of the Omnibus Crime
Control and Safe Streets Act, which authorizes court-approved
electronic surveillance for specified crimes, contains a provision
in 18 U.S.C. § 2511(3) that nothing in that law limits the
President's constitutional power to protect against the overthrow
of the Government or against "any other clear and present danger to
the structure or existence of the Government." The Government
relies on § 2511(3) in support of its contention that "in excepting
national security surveillances from the Act's warrant requirement,
Congress recognized the President's authority to conduct such
surveillances without prior judicial approval."
Held:
1. Section 2511(3) is merely a disclaimer of congressional
intent to define presidential powers in matters affecting national
security, and is not a grant of authority to conduct warrantless
national security surveillances. Pp.
407 U. S.
301-308.
Page 407 U. S. 298
2. The Fourth Amendment (which shields private speech from
unreasonable surveillance) requires prior judicial approval for the
type of domestic security surveillance involved in this case. Pp.
407 U. S.
314-321;
407 U. S.
323-324.
(a) The Government's duty to safeguard domestic security must be
weighed against the potential danger that unreasonable
surveillances pose to individual privacy and free expression. Pp.
407 U. S.
314-315.
(b) The freedoms of the Fourth Amendment cannot properly be
guaranteed if domestic security suveillances are conducted solely
within the discretion of the Executive Branch, without the detached
judgment of a neutral magistrate. Pp.
407 U. S.
316-318.
(c) Resort to appropriate warrant procedure would not frustrate
the legitimate purposes of domestic security searches. Pp.
407 U. S.
318-321.
444 F.2d 651, affirmed.
POWELL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
DOUGLAS, BRENNAN, MARSHALL, STEWART, and BLACKMUN, JJ., joined.
DOUGLAS, J., filed a concurring opinion,
post, p.
407 U. S. 324.
BURGER, C.J., concurred in the result. WHITE, J., filed an opinion
concurring in the judgment,
post, p.
407 U. S. 335.
REHNQUIST, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of the
case.
Page 407 U. S. 299
MR. JUSTICE POWELL delivered the opinion of the Court.
The issue before us is an important one for the people of our
country and their Government. It involves the delicate question of
the President's power, acting through the Attorney General, to
authorize electronic surveillance in internal security matters
without prior judicial approval. Successive Presidents for more
than one-quarter of a century have authorized such surveillance in
varying degrees, [
Footnote 1]
without guidance from the Congress or a definitive decision of this
Court. This case brings the issue here for the first time. Its
resolution is a matter of national concern, requiring sensitivity
both to the Government's right to protect itself from unlawful
subversion and attack and to the citizen's right to be secure in
his privacy against unreasonable Government intrusion.
This case arises from a criminal proceeding in the United States
District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, in which the
United States charged three defendants with conspiracy to destroy
Government property in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. One of the
defendants, Plamondon, was charged with the dynamite bombing of an
office of the Central Intelligence Agency in Ann Arbor,
Michigan.
During pretrial proceedings, the defendants moved to compel the
United States to disclose certain electronic
Page 407 U. S. 300
surveillance information and to conduct a hearing to determine
whether this information "tainted" the evidence on which the
indictment was based or which the Government intended to offer at
trial. In response, the Government filed an affidavit of the
Attorney General, acknowledging that its agents had overheard
conversations in which Plamondon had participated. The affidavit
also stated that the Attorney General approved the wiretaps
"to gather intelligence information deemed necessary to protect
the nation from attempts of domestic organizations to attack and
subvert the existing structure of the Government. [
Footnote 2]"
The logs of the surveillance
Page 407 U. S. 301
were filed in a sealed exhibit for
in camera inspection
by the District Court.
On the basis of the Attorney General's affidavit and the sealed
exhibit, the Government asserted that the surveillance was lawful,
though conducted without prior judicial approval, as a reasonable
exercise of the President's power (exercised through the Attorney
General) to protect the national security. The District Court held
that the surveillance violated the Fourth Amendment, and ordered
the Government to make full disclosure to Plamondon of his
overheard conversations.
321 F.
Supp. 1074 (ED Mich.1971).
The Government then filed in the Court of Appeals for the Sixth
Circuit a petition for a writ of mandamus to set aside the District
Court order, which was stayed pending final disposition of the
case. After concluding that it had jurisdiction, [
Footnote 3] that court held that the
surveillance was unlawful, and that the District Court had properly
required disclosure of the overheard conversations, 444 F.2d 651
(1971). We granted certiorari, 403 U.S. 930.
I
Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act, 18
U.S.C. §§ 2510-2520, authorizes the use of electronic surveillance
for classes of crimes carefully
Page 407 U. S. 302
specified in 18 U.S.C. § 2516. Such surveillance is subject to
prior court order. Section 2518 sets forth the detailed and
particularized application necessary to obtain such an order, as
well as carefully circumscribed conditions for its use. The Act
represents a comprehensive attempt by Congress to promote more
effective control of crime while protecting the privacy of
individual thought and expression. Much of Title III was drawn to
meet the constitutional requirements for electronic surveillance
enunciated by this Court in
Berger v. New York,
388 U. S. 41
(1967), and
Katz v. United States, 389 U.
S. 347 (1967).
Together with the elaborate surveillance requirements in Title
III, there is the following proviso, 18 U.S.C. § 2511(3):
"Nothing contained in this chapter or in section 605 of the
Communications Act of 1934 (48 Stat. 1143; 47 U.S.C. 605) shall
limit the constitutional power of the President to take such
measures as he deems necessary to protect the Nation against actual
or potential attack or other hostile acts of a foreign power, to
obtain foreign intelligence information deemed essential to the
security of the United States, or to protect national security
information against foreign intelligence activities.
Nor shall
anything contained in this chapter be deemed to limit the
constitutional power of the President to take such measures as he
deems necessary to protect the United States against the overthrow
of the Government by force or other unlawful means, or against any
other clear and present danger to the structure or existence of the
Government. The contents of any wire or oral communication
intercepted by authority of the President in the exercise of the
foregoing powers may be received in evidence in any trial
hearing,
Page 407 U. S. 303
or other proceeding only where such interception was reasonable,
and shall not be otherwise used or disclosed except as is necessary
to implement that power."
(Emphasis supplied.)
The Government relies on § 2511(3). It argues that,
"in excepting national security surveillances from the Act's
warrant requirement, Congress recognized the President's authority
to conduct such surveillances without prior judicial approval."
Brief for United States 7, 28. The section thus is viewed as a
recognition or affirmance of a constitutional authority in the
President to conduct warrantless domestic security surveillance
such as that involved in this case.
We think the language of § 2511(3), as well as the legislative
history of the statute, refutes this interpretation. The relevant
language is that:
"Nothing contained in this chapter . . . shall limit the
constitutional power of the President to take such measures as he
deems necessary to protect . . ."
against the dangers specified. At most, this is an implicit
recognition that the President does have certain powers in the
specified areas. Few would doubt this, as the section refers --
among other things -- to protection "against actual or potential
attack or other hostile acts of a foreign power." But so far as the
use of the President's electronic surveillance power is concerned,
the language is essentially neutral.
Section 2511(3) certainly confers no power, as the language is
wholly inappropriate for such a purpose. It merely provides that
the Act shall not be interpreted to limit or disturb such power as
the President may have under the Constitution. In short, Congress
simply left presidential powers where it found them. This view is
reinforced by the general context of Title III. Section 2511(1)
broadly prohibits the use of electronic
Page 407 U. S. 304
surveillance "[e]xcept as otherwise specifically provided in
this chapter." Subsection (2) thereof contains four specific
exceptions. In each of the specified exceptions, the statutory
language is as follows: "It shall not be unlawful . . . to
intercept" the particular type of communication described.
[
Footnote 4]
The language of subsection (3), here involved, is to be
contrasted with the language of the exceptions set forth in the
preceding subsection. Rather than stating that warrantless
presidential uses of electronic surveillance "shall not be
unlawful," and thus employing the standard language of exception,
subsection (3) merely disclaims any intention to "limit the
constitutional power of the President."
The express grant of authority to conduct surveillances is found
in § 2516, which authorizes the Attorney General to make
application to a federal judge when surveillance may provide
evidence of certain offenses. These offenses are described with
meticulous care and specificity.
Where the Act authorizes surveillance, the procedure to be
followed is specified in § 2518. Subsection (1) thereof requires
application to a judge of competent jurisdiction for a prior order
of approval, and states in detail the information required in such
application. [
Footnote 5]
Page 407 U. S. 305
Subsection (3) prescribes the necessary elements of probable
cause which the judge must find before issuing an order authorizing
an interception. Subsection (4) sets forth the required contents of
such an order.
Page 407 U. S. 306
Subsection (5) sets strict time limits on an order. Provision is
made in subsection (7) for "an emergency situation" found to exist
by the Attorney General (or by the principal prosecuting attorney
of a State) "with respect to conspiratorial activities threatening
the national security interest." In such a situation, emergency
surveillance may be conducted "if an application for an order
approving the interception is made . . . within forty-eight hours."
If such an order is not obtained, or the application therefor is
denied, the interception is deemed to be a violation of the
Act.
In view of these and other interrelated provisions delineating
permissible interceptions of particular criminal activity upon
carefully specified conditions, it would have been incongruous for
Congress to have legislated with respect to the important and
complex area of national security in a single brief and nebulous
paragraph. This would not comport with the sensitivity of the
problem involved, or with the extraordinary care Congress exercised
in drafting other sections of the Act. We therefore think the
conclusion inescapable that Congress only intended to make clear
that the Act simply did not legislate with respect to national
security surveillances. [
Footnote
6]
The legislative history of § 2511(3) supports this
interpretation. Most relevant is the colloquy between Senators
Hart, Holland, and McClellan on the Senate floor:
"Mr. HOLLAND. . . . The section [2511(3)] from which the Senator
[Hart] has read does not affirmatively
Page 407 U. S. 307
give any power. . . .
We are not affirmatively conferring
any power upon the President. We are simply saying that
nothing herein shall limit such power as the President has under
the Constitution. . . . We certainly do not grant him a thing."
"There is nothing affirmative in this statement."
"Mr. McCLELLAN. Mr. President,
we make it understood that we
are not trying to take anything away from him."
"Mr. HOLLAND. The Senator is correct."
"Mr. HART. Mr. President, there is no intention here to expand
by this language a constitutional power. Cleary we could not do
so."
"Mr. McCLELLAN. Even though intended, we could not do so."
"Mr. HART. . . . However, we are agreed that this language
should not be regarded as intending to grant any authority,
including authority to put a bug on, that the President does not
have now."
"In addition, Mr. President,
as I think our exchange makes
clear, nothing in section 2511(3) even attempts to define the
limits of the President's national security power under present
law, which I have always found extremely vague. . . . Section
2511(3) merely says that, if the President has such a power, then
its exercise is in no way affected by title III. [
Footnote 7]"
(Emphasis supplied.)
Page 407 U. S. 308
One could hardly expect a clearer expression of congressional
neutrality. The debate above explicitly indicates that nothing in §
2511(3) was intended to expand or to contract or to define whatever
presidential surveillance powers existed in matters affecting the
national security. If we could accept the Government's
characterization of § 2511(3) as a congressionally prescribed
exception to the general requirement of a warrant, it would be
necessary to consider the question of whether the surveillance in
this case came within the exception, and, if so, whether the
statutory exception was itself constitutionally valid. But viewing
§ 2511(3) as a congressional disclaimer and expression of
neutrality, we hold that the statute is not the measure of the
executive authority asserted in this case. Rather, we must look to
the constitutional powers of the President.
II
It is important at the outset to emphasize the limited nature of
the question before the Court. This case raises no constitutional
challenge to electronic surveillance as specifically authorized by
Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of
1968. Nor is there any question or doubt as to the necessity of
obtaining a warrant in the surveillance of crimes unrelated to the
national security interest.
Katz v. United States,
389 U. S. 347
(1967);
Berger v. New York, 388 U. S.
41 (1967). Further, the instant case requires no
judgment on the scope of the President's surveillance power with
respect to the activities of foreign powers, within or without this
country. The Attorney General's affidavit in this case states that
the surveillances were
Page 407 U. S. 309
"deemed necessary to protect the nation from attempts of
domestic organizations to attack and subvert the existing
structure of Government" (emphasis supplied). There is no evidence
of any involvement, directly or indirectly, of a foreign power.
[
Footnote 8]
Our present inquiry, though important, is therefore a narrow
one. It addresses a question left open by
Katz, supra, at
389 U. S. 358
n. 23:
"Whether safeguards other than prior authorization by a
magistrate would satisfy the Fourth Amendment in a situation
involving the national security. . . ."
The determination of this question requires the essential Fourth
Amendment inquiry into the "reasonableness" of the search and
seizure in question, and the way in which that "reasonableness"
derives content and meaning
Page 407 U. S. 310
through reference to the warrant clause.
Coolidge v. New
Hampshire, 403 U. S. 443,
403 U. S.
473-484 (1971).
We begin the inquiry by noting that the President of the United
States has the fundamental duty, under Art. II, § 1, of the
Constitution, to "preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of
the United States." Implicit in that duty is the power to protect
our Government against those who would subvert or overthrow it by
unlawful means. In the discharge of this duty, the President --
through the Attorney General -- may find it necessary to employ
electronic surveillance to obtain intelligence information on the
plans of those who plot unlawful acts against the Government.
[
Footnote 9] The use of such
surveillance in internal security cases has been sanctioned more or
less continuously by various Presidents and Attorneys General since
July, 1946. [
Footnote
10]
Page 407 U. S. 311
Herbert Brownell, Attorney General under President Eisenhower,
urged the use of electronic surveillance both in internal and
international security matters on the grounds that those acting
against the Government
"turn to the telephone to carry on their intrigue. The success
of their plans frequently rests upon piecing together shreds of
information received from many sources and many nests. The
participants in the conspiracy are often dispersed and stationed in
various strategic positions in government and industry throughout
the country. [
Footnote
11]"
Though the Government and respondents debate their seriousness
and magnitude, threats and acts of sabotage against the Government
exist in sufficient number to justify investigative powers with
respect to them. [
Footnote
12] The covertness and complexity of potential unlawful
conduct
Page 407 U. S. 312
against the Government and the necessary dependency of many
conspirators upon the telephone make electronic surveillance an
effective investigatory instrument in certain circumstances. The
marked acceleration in technological developments and
sophistication in their use have resulted in new techniques for the
planning, commission, and concealment of criminal activities. It
would be contrary to the public interest for Government to deny to
itself the prudent and lawful employment of those very techniques
which are employed against the Government and its law-abiding
citizens.
It has been said that "[t]he most basic function of any
government is to provide for the security of the individual and of
his property."
Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.
S. 436,
384 U. S. 539
(1966) (WHITE, J., dissenting). And unless Government safeguards
its own capacity to function and to preserve the security of its
people, society itself could become so disordered that all rights
and liberties would be endangered. As Chief Justice Hughes reminded
us in
Cox v. New Hampshire, 312 U.
S. 569,
312 U. S. 574
(1941):
"Civil liberties, as guaranteed by the Constitution, imply the
existence of an organized society maintaining public order without
which liberty itself would be lost in the excesses of unrestrained
abuses."
But a recognition of these elementary truths does not make the
employment by Government of electronic surveillance a welcome
development -- even when employed with restraint and under judicial
supervision. There is, understandably, a deep-seated uneasiness and
apprehension that this capability will be used to intrude upon
cherished privacy of law-abiding citizens. [
Footnote 13] We
Page 407 U. S. 313
look to the Bill of Rights to safeguard this privacy. Though
physical entry of the home is the chief evil against which the
wording of the Fourth Amendment is directed, its broader spirit now
shields private speech from unreasonable surveillance.
Katz v.
United States, supra; Berger v. New York, supra; Silverman v.
United States, 365 U. S. 505
(1961). Our decision in
Katz refused to lock the Fourth
Amendment into instances of actual physical trespass. Rather, the
Amendment governs
"not only the seizure of tangible items, but extends as well to
the recording of oral statements . . . without any 'technical
trespass under . . . local property law.'"
Katz, supra, at
389 U. S. 353.
That decision implicitly recognized that the broad and unsuspected
governmental incursions into conversational privacy which
electronic surveillance entails [
Footnote 14] necessitate the application of Fourth
Amendment safeguards.
National security cases, moreover, often reflect a convergence
of First and Fourth Amendment values not present in cases of
"ordinary" crime. Though the investigative duty of the executive
may be stronger in such cases, so also is there greater jeopardy to
constitutionally protected speech.
"Historically, the struggle for freedom of speech and press in
England was bound up with the issue of the scope of the search and
seizure
Page 407 U. S. 314
power,"
Marcus v. Search Warrant, 367 U.
S. 717,
367 U. S. 724
(1961). History abundantly documents the tendency of Government --
however benevolent and benign its motive -- to view with suspicion
those who most fervently dispute its policies. Fourth Amendment
protections become the more necessary when the targets of official
surveillance may be those suspected of unorthodoxy in their
political beliefs. The danger to political dissent is acute where
the Government attempts to act under so vague a concept as the
power to protect "domestic security." Given the difficulty of
defining the domestic security interest, the danger of abuse in
acting to protect that interest becomes apparent. Senator Hart
addressed this dilemma in the floor debate on § 2511(3):
"As I read it -- and this is my fear -- we are saying that the
President, on his motion, could declare -- name your favorite
poison -- draft dodgers, Black Muslims, the Ku Klux Klan, or civil
rights activists to be a clear and present danger to the structure
or existence of the Government. [
Footnote 15]"
The price of lawful public dissent must not be a dread of
subjection to an unchecked surveillance power. Nor must the fear of
unauthorized official eavesdropping deter vigorous citizen dissent
and discussion of Government action in private conversation. For
private dissent, no less than open public discourse, is essential
to our free society.
III
As the Fourth Amendment is not absolute in its terms, our task
is to examine and balance the basic values at stake in this case:
the duty of Government
Page 407 U. S. 315
to protect the domestic security, and the potential danger posed
by unreasonable surveillance to individual privacy and free
expression. If the legitimate need of Government to safeguard
domestic security requires the use of electronic surveillance, the
question is whether the needs of citizens for privacy and free
expression may not be better protected by requiring a warrant
before such surveillance is undertaken. We must also ask whether a
warrant requirement would unduly frustrate the efforts of
Government to protect itself from acts of subversion and overthrow
directed against it.
Though the Fourth Amendment speaks broadly of "unreasonable
searches and seizures," the definition of "reasonableness" turns,
at least in part, on the more specific commands of the warrant
clause. Some have argued that "[t]he relevant test is not whether
it is reasonable to procure a search warrant, but whether the
search was reasonable,"
United States v. Rabinowitz,
339 U. S. 56,
339 U. S. 66
(1950). [
Footnote 16] This
view, however, overlooks the second clause of the Amendment. The
warrant clause of the Fourth Amendment is not dead language.
Rather, it has been
"a valued part of our constitutional law for decades, and it has
determined the result in scores and scores of cases in courts all
over this country. It is not an inconvenience to be somehow
'weighed' against the claims of police efficiency. It is, or
should
Page 407 U. S. 316
be, an important working part of our machinery of government,
operating as a matter of course to check the 'well-intentioned but
mistakenly overzealous executive officers' who are a part of any
system of law enforcement."
Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S. 481.
See also United States v. Rabinowitz, supra, at
339 U. S. 68
(Frankfurter, J., dissenting);
Davis v. United States,
328 U. S. 582,
328 U. S. 604
(1946) (Frankfurter, J., dissenting).
Over two centuries ago, Lord Mansfield held that common law
principles prohibited warrants that ordered the arrest of unnamed
individuals who the officer might conclude were guilty of seditious
libel. "It is not fit," said Mansfield,
"that the receiving or judging of the information should be left
to the discretion of the officer. The magistrate ought to judge;
and should give certain directions to the officer."
Leach v. Three of the King's Messengers, 19 How.St.Tr.
1001, 1027 (1765).
Lord Mansfield's formulation touches the very heart of the
Fourth Amendment directive: that, where practical, a governmental
search and seizure should represent both the efforts of the officer
to gather evidence of wrongful acts and the judgment of the
magistrate that the collected evidence is sufficient to justify
invasion of a citizen's private premises or conversation. Inherent
in the concept of a warrant is its issuance by a "neutral and
detached magistrate."
Coolidge v. New Hampshire, supra, at
403 U. S. 453;
Katz v. United States, supra, at
389 U. S. 356.
The further requirement of "probable cause" instructs the
magistrate that baseless searches shall not proceed.
These Fourth Amendment freedoms cannot properly be guaranteed if
domestic security surveillances may be conducted solely within the
discretion of the Executive
Page 407 U. S. 317
Branch. The Fourth Amendment does not contemplate the executive
officers of Government as neutral and disinterested magistrates.
Their duty and responsibility are to enforce the laws, to
investigate, and to prosecute.
Katz v. United States,
supra, at
389 U. S.
359-360 (DOUGLAS, J., concurring). But those charged
with this investigative and prosecutorial duty should not be the
sole judges of when to utilize constitutionally sensitive means in
pursuing their tasks. The historical judgment, which the Fourth
Amendment accepts, is that unreviewed executive discretion may
yield too readily to pressures to obtain incriminating evidence and
overlook potential invasions of privacy and protected speech.
[
Footnote 17]
It may well be that, in the instant case, the Government's
surveillance of Plamondon's conversations was a reasonable one
which readily would have gained prior judicial approval. But this
Court
"has never sustained a search upon the sole ground that officers
reasonably expected to find evidence of a particular crime and
voluntarily confined their activities to the least intrusive means
consistent with that end."
Katz, supra, at
389 U. S.
356-357. The Fourth Amendment contemplates a prior
judicial judgment, [
Footnote
18] not the risk that executive discretion may be reasonably
exercised. This judicial role accords with our basic constitutional
doctrine that individual freedoms will best be preserved through a
separation of powers and division of functions among the different
branches and levels of Government. Harlan, Thoughts at a
Dedication: Keeping the Judicial Function in Balance, 49 A.B.A.J.
943-944 (1963). The independent check upon executive discretion is
not
Page 407 U. S. 318
satisfied, as the Government argues, by "extremely limited"
post-surveillance judicial review. [
Footnote 19] Indeed, post-surveillance review would never
reach the surveillances which failed to result in prosecutions.
Prior review by a neutral and detached magistrate is the
time-tested means of effectuating Fourth Amendment rights.
Beck
v. Ohio, 379 U. S. 89,
379 U. S. 96
(1964).
It is true that there have been some exceptions to the warrant
requirement.
Chimel v. California, 395 U.
S. 752 (1969);
Terry v. Ohio, 392 U. S.
1 (1968);
McDonald v. United States,
335 U. S. 451
(1948);
Carroll v. United States, 267 U.
S. 132 (1925). But those exceptions are few in number,
and carefully delineated,
Katz, supra, at
389 U. S. 357;
in general, they serve the legitimate needs of law enforcement
officers to protect their own wellbeing and preserve evidence from
destruction. Even while carving out those exceptions, the Court has
reaffirmed the principle that the "police must, whenever
practicable, obtain advance judicial approval of searches and
seizures through the warrant procedure,"
Terry v. Ohio,
supra, at
392 U. S. 20;
Chimel v. California, supra, at
395 U. S.
762.
The Government argues that the special circumstances applicable
to domestic security surveillances necessitate a further exception
to the warrant requirement. It is urged that the requirement of
prior judicial review would obstruct the President in the discharge
of his constitutional duty to protect domestic security. We are
told further that these surveillances are directed primarily to the
collecting and maintaining of intelligence with
Page 407 U. S. 319
respect to subversive forces, and are not an attempt to gather
evidence for specific criminal prosecutions. It is said that this
type of surveillance should not be subject to traditional warrant
requirements which were established to govern investigation of
criminal activity, not ongoing intelligence gathering. Brief for
United States 15-16, 23-24; Reply Brief for United States 2-3.
The Government further insists that courts
"as a practical matter would have neither the knowledge nor the
techniques necessary to determine whether there was probable cause
to believe that surveillance was necessary to protect national
security."
These security problems, the Government contends, involve "a
large number of complex and subtle factors" beyond the competence
of courts to evaluate. Reply Brief for United States 4.
As a final reason for exemption from a warrant requirement, the
Government believes that disclosure to a magistrate of all or even
a significant portion of the information involved in domestic
security surveillances
"would create serious potential dangers to the national security
and to the lives of informants and agents. . . . Secrecy is the
essential ingredient in intelligence gathering; requiring prior
judicial authorization would create a greater 'danger of leaks . .
. because, in addition to the judge, you have the clerk, the
stenographer and some other officer like a law assistant or bailiff
who may be apprised of the nature' of the surveillance."
Brief for United States 24-25.
These contentions in behalf of a complete exemption from the
warrant requirement, when urged on behalf of the President and the
national security in its domestic implications, merit the most
careful consideration. We certainly do not reject them lightly,
especially at a time of worldwide ferment and when civil disorders
in this country are more prevalent than in the less turbulent
Page 407 U. S. 320
periods of our history. There is, no doubt, pragmatic force to
the Government's position.
But we do not think a case has been made for the requested
departure from Fourth Amendment standards. The circumstances
described do not justify complete exemption of domestic security
surveillance from prior judicial scrutiny. Official surveillance,
whether its purpose be criminal investigation or ongoing
intelligence gathering, risks infringement of constitutionally
protected privacy of speech. Security surveillances are especially
sensitive because of the inherent vagueness of the domestic
security concept, the necessarily broad and continuing nature of
intelligence gathering, and the temptation to utilize such
surveillances to oversee political dissent. We recognize, as we
have before, the constitutional basis of the President's domestic
security role, but we think it must be exercised in a manner
compatible with the Fourth Amendment. In this case, we hold that
this requires an appropriate prior warrant procedure.
We cannot accept the Government's argument that internal
security matters are too subtle and complex for judicial
evaluation. Courts regularly deal with the most difficult issues of
our society. There is no reason to believe that federal judges will
be insensitive to or uncomprehending of the issues involved in
domestic security cases. Certainly courts can recognize that
domestic security surveillance involves different considerations
from the surveillance of "ordinary crime." If the threat is too
subtle or complex for our senior law enforcement officers to convey
its significance to a court, one may question whether there is
probable cause for surveillance.
Nor do we believe prior judicial approval will fracture the
secrecy essential to official intelligence gathering. The
investigation of criminal activity has long
Page 407 U. S. 321
involved imparting sensitive information to judicial officers
who have respected the confidentialities involved. Judges may be
counted upon to be especially conscious of security requirements in
national security cases. Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and
Safe Streets Act already has imposed this responsibility on the
judiciary in connection with such crimes as espionage, sabotage,
and treason, §§ 2516(1)(a) and (c), each of which may involve
domestic as well as foreign security threats. Moreover, a warrant
application involves no public or adversary proceedings: it is an
ex parte request before a magistrate or judge. Whatever
security dangers clerical and secretarial personnel may pose can be
minimized by proper administrative measures, possibly to the point
of allowing the Government itself to provide the necessary clerical
assistance.
Thus, we conclude that the Government's concerns do not justify
departure in this case from the customary Fourth Amendment
requirement of judicial approval prior to initiation of a search or
surveillance. Although some added burden will be imposed upon the
Attorney General, this inconvenience is justified in a free society
to protect constitutional values. Nor do we think the Government's
domestic surveillance powers will be impaired to any significant
degree. A prior warrant establishes presumptive validity of the
surveillance and will minimize the burden of justification in
post-surveillance judicial review. By no means of least importance
will be the reassurance of the public generally that indiscriminate
wiretapping and bugging of law-abiding citizens cannot occur.
IV
We emphasize, before concluding this opinion, the scope of our
decision. As stated at the outset, this case involves only the
domestic aspects of national security. We have not addressed, and
express no opinion
Page 407 U. S. 322
as to, the issues which may be involved with respect to
activities of foreign powers or their agents. [
Footnote 20] Nor does our decision rest on the
language of § 2511(3) or any other section of Title III of the
Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968. That Act does
not attempt to define or delineate the powers of the President to
meet domestic threats to the national security.
Moreover, we do not hold that the same type of standards and
procedures prescribed by Title III are necessarily applicable to
this case. We recognize that domestic security surveillance may
involve different policy and practical considerations from the
surveillance of "ordinary crime." The gathering of security
intelligence is often long range and involves the interrelation of
various sources and types of information. The exact targets of such
surveillance may be more difficult to identify than in surveillance
operations against many types of crime specified in Title III.
Often, too, the emphasis of domestic intelligence gathering is on
the prevention of unlawful activity or the enhancement of the
Government's preparedness for some possible future crisis or
emergency. Thus, the focus of domestic surveillance may be less
precise than that directed against more conventional types of
crime.
Given these potential distinctions between Title III criminal
surveillances and those involving the domestic security, Congress
may wish to consider protective standards for the latter which
differ from those already prescribed for specified crimes in Title
III. Different standards may be compatible with the Fourth
Amendment
Page 407 U. S. 323
if they are reasonable both in relation to the legitimate need
of Government for intelligence information and the protected rights
of our citizens. For the warrant application may vary according to
the governmental interest to be enforced and the nature of citizen
rights deserving protection. As the Court said in
Camara v.
Municipal Court, 387 U. S. 523,
387 U. S.
534-535 (1967):
"In cases in which the Fourth Amendment requires that a warrant
to search be obtained, 'probable cause' is the standard by which a
particular decision to search is tested against the constitutional
mandate of reasonableness. . . . In determining whether a
particular inspection is reasonable -- and thus in determining
whether there is probable cause to issue a warrant for that
inspection -- the need for the inspection must be weighed in terms
of these reasonable goals of code enforcement."
It may be that Congress, for example, would judge that the
application and affidavit showing probable cause need not follow
the exact requirements of § 2518, but should allege other
circumstances more appropriate to domestic security cases; that the
request for prior court authorization could, in sensitive cases, be
made to any member of a specially designated court (
e.g.,
the District Court for the District of Columbia or the Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit); and that the time
and reporting requirements need not be so strict as those in §
2518.
The above paragraph does not, of course, attempt to guide the
congressional judgment, but, rather, to delineate the present scope
of our own opinion. We do not attempt to detail the precise
standards for domestic security warrants any more than our decision
in
Katz sought to set the refined requirements for the
specified criminal surveillances which now constitute Title III. We
do
Page 407 U. S. 324
hold, however, that, prior judicial approval is required for the
type of domestic security surveillance involved in this case, and
that such approval may be made in accordance with such reasonable
standards as the Congress may prescribe.
V
As the surveillance of Plamondon's conversations was unlawful,
because conducted without prior judicial approval, the courts below
correctly held that
Alderman v. United States,
394 U. S. 165
(1969), is controlling, and that it requires disclosure to the
accused of his own impermissibly intercepted conversations. As
stated in
Alderman,
"the trial court can and should, where appropriate, place a
defendant and his counsel under enforceable orders against
unwarranted disclosure of the materials which they may be entitled
to inspect."
394 U.S. at
394 U. S. 185.
[
Footnote 21]
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is hereby
Affirmed.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE concurs in the result.
MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
See n 10,
infra.
[
Footnote 2]
The Attorney General's affidavit reads as follows:
"JOHN N. MITCHELL being duly sworn deposes and says: "
"1. I am the Attorney General of the United States."
"2. This affidavit is submitted in connection with the
Government's opposition to the disclosure to the defendant
Plamondon of information concerning the overhearing of his
conversations which occurred during the course of electronic
surveillances which the Government contends were legal."
"3. The defendant Plamondon has participated in conversations
which were overheard by Government agents who were monitoring
wiretaps which were being employed to gather intelligence
information deemed necessary to protect the nation from attempts of
domestic organizations to attack and subvert the existing structure
of the Government. The records of the Department of Justice reflect
the installation of these wiretaps had been expressly approved by
the Attorney General."
"4. Submitted with this affidavit is a sealed exhibit containing
the records of the intercepted conversations, a description of the
premises that were the subjects of surveillances, and copies of the
memoranda reflecting the Attorney General's express approval of the
installation of the surveillances."
"5. I certify that it would prejudice the national interest to
disclose the particular facts concerning these surveillances other
than to the court
in camera. Accordingly, the sealed
exhibit referred to herein is being submitted solely for the
court's
in camera inspection, and a copy of the sealed
exhibit is not being furnished to the defendants. I would request
the court, at the conclusion of its hearing on this matter, to
place the sealed exhibit in a sealed envelope and return it to the
Department of Justice, where it will be retained under seal so that
it may be submitted to any appellate court that may review this
matter."
[
Footnote 3]
Jurisdiction was challenged before the Court of Appeals on the
ground that the District Court's order was interlocutory, and not
appealable under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. On this issue, the court
correctly held that it did have jurisdiction, relying upon the All
Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651, and cases cited in its opinion, 444
F.2d at 655-656. No attack was made in this Court as to the
appropriateness of the writ of mandamus procedure.
[
Footnote 4]
These exceptions relate to certain activities of communication
common carriers and the Federal Communications Commission, and to
specified situations where a party to the communication has
consented to the interception.
[
Footnote 5]
Title 18 U.S. C. § 2518, subsection (1), reads as follows:
"§ 2518. Procedure for interception of wire or oral
communications"
"(1) Each application for an order authorizing or approving the
interception of a wire or oral communication shall be made in
writing upon oath or affirmation to a judge of competent
jurisdiction and shall state the applicant's authority to make such
application. Each application shall include the following
information: "
"(a) the identity of the investigative or law enforcement
officer making the application, and the officer authorizing the
application;"
"(b) a full and complete statement of the facts and
circumstances relied upon by the applicant, to justify his belief
that an order should be issued, including (i) details as to the
particular offense that has been, is being, or is about to be
committed, (ii) a particular description of the nature and location
of the facilities from which or the place where the communication
is to be intercepted, (iii) a particular description of the type of
communications sought to be intercepted, (iv) the identity of the
person, if known, committing the offense and whose communications
are to be intercepted;"
"(c) a full and complete statement as to whether or not other
investigative procedures have been tried and failed, or why they
reasonably appear to be unlikely to succeed if tried or to be too
dangerous;"
"(d) a statement of the period of time for which the
interception is required to be maintained. If the nature of the
investigation is such that the authorization for interception
should not automatically terminate when the described type of
communication has been first obtained, a particular description of
facts establishing probable cause to believe that additional
communications of the same type will occur thereafter;"
"(e) a full and complete statement of the facts concerning all
previous applications known to the individual authorizing and
making the application, made to any judge for authorization to
intercept, or for approval of interceptions of, wire or oral
communications involving any of the same persons, facilities or
places specified in the application, and the action taken by the
judge on each such application; and"
"(f) where the application is for the extension of an order, a
statement setting forth the results thus far obtained from the
interception, or a reasonable explanation of the failure to obtain
such results."
[
Footnote 6]
The final sentence of § 2511(3) states that the contents of an
interception
"by authority of the President in the exercise of the foregoing
powers may be received in evidence . . . only where such
interception was reasonable. . . ."
This sentence seems intended to assure that, when the President
conducts lawful surveillance -- pursuant to whatever power he may
possess -- the evidence is admissible.
[
Footnote 7]
114 Cong.Rec. 14751. Senator McClellan was the sponsor of the
bill. The above exchange constitutes the only time that § 2511(3)
was expressly debated on the Senate or House floor. The Report of
the Senate Judiciary Committee is not so explicit as the exchange
on the floor, but it appears to recognize that, under § 2511(3),
the national security power of the President -- whatever it may be
-- "is not to be deemed disturbed." S.Rep. No. 1097, 90th Cong., 2d
Sess., 94 (1968).
See also The "National Security
Wiretap": Presidential Prerogative or Judicial Responsibility,
where the author concludes that, in § 2511(3),
"Congress took what amounted to a position of neutral
noninterference on the question of the Constitutionality of
warrantless national security wiretaps authorized by the
President."
45 S. Cal.L.Rev. 888, 889 (1972).
[
Footnote 8]
Section 2511(3) refers to "the constitutional power of the
President" in two types of situations: (i) where necessary to
protect against attack, other hostile acts or intelligence
activities of a "foreign power"; or (ii) where necessary to protect
against the overthrow of the Government or other clear and present
danger to the structure or existence of the Government. Although
both of the specified situations are sometimes referred to as
"national security" threats, the term "national security" is used
only in the first sentence of § 2511(3) with respect to the
activities of foreign powers. This case involves only the second
sentence of § 2511(3), with the threat emanating -- according to
the Attorney General's affidavit -- from "domestic organizations."
Although we attempt no precise definition, we use the term
"domestic organization" in this opinion to mean a group or
organization (whether formally or informally constituted) composed
of citizens of the United States and which has no significant
connection with a foreign power, its agents or agencies. No doubt
there are cases where it will be difficult to distinguish between
"domestic" and "foreign" unlawful activities directed against the
Government of the United States where there is collaboration in
varying degrees between domestic groups or organizations and agents
or agencies of foreign powers. But this is not such a case.
[
Footnote 9]
Enactment of Title III reflects congressional recognition of the
importance of such surveillance in combatting various types of
crime. Frank S. Hogan, District Attorney for New York County for
over 25 years, described telephonic interception, pursuant to court
order, as "the single most valuable weapon in law enforcement's
fight against organized crime." 117 Cong.Rec. 14051. The "Crime
Commission" appointed by President Johnson noted that
"[t]he great majority of law enforcement officials believe that
the evidence necessary to bring criminal sanctions to bear
consistently on the higher echelons of organized crime will not be
obtained without the aid of electronic surveillance techniques.
They maintain these techniques are indispensable to develop
adequate strategic intelligence concerning organized crime, to set
up specific investigations, to develop witnesses, to corroborate
their testimony, and to serve as substitutes for them -- each a
necessary step in the evidence-gathering process in organized crime
investigations and prosecutions."
Report by the President's Commission on Law Enforcement and
Administration of Justice, The Challenge of Crime in a Free Society
201 (1967).
[
Footnote 10]
In that month, Attorney General Tom Clark advised President
Truman of the necessity of using wiretaps "in cases vitally
affecting the domestic security." In May, 1940, President Roosevelt
had authorized Attorney General Jackson to utilize wiretapping in
matters "involving the defense of the nation," but it is
questionable whether this language was meant to apply to solely
domestic subversion. The nature and extent of wiretapping
apparently varied under different administrations and Attorneys
General, but, except for the sharp curtailment under Attorney
General Ramsey Clark in the latter years of the Johnson
administration, electronic surveillance has been used both against
organized crime and in domestic security cases at least since the
1946 memorandum from Clark to Truman. Brief for United States
16-18; Brief for Respondents 51-56; 117 Cong.Rec. 14056.
[
Footnote 11]
Brownell, The Public Security and Wire Tapping, 39 Cornell
L.Q.195, 202 (1954).
See also Rogers, The Case For Wire
Tapping, 63 Yale L.J. 792 (1954).
[
Footnote 12]
The Government asserts that there were 1,562 bombing incidents
in the United States from January 1, 1971, to July 1, 1971, most of
which involved Government-related facilities. Respondents dispute
these statistics as incorporating many frivolous incidents, as well
as bombings against nongovernmental facilities. The precise level
of this activity, however, is not relevant to the disposition of
this case. Brief for United States 18; Brief for Respondents 26-29;
Reply Brief for United States 13.
[
Footnote 13]
Professor Alan Westin has written on the likely course of future
conflict between the value of privacy and the "new technology" of
law enforcement. Much of the book details techniques of physical
and electronic surveillance and such possible threats to personal
privacy as psychological and personality testing and electronic
information storage and retrieval. Not all of the contemporary
threats to privacy emanate directly from the pressures of crime
control. Privacy and Freedom (1967).
[
Footnote 14]
Though the total number of intercepts authorized by state and
federal judges pursuant to Tit. III of the 1968 Omnibus Crime
Control and Safe Streets Act was 597 in 1970, each surveillance may
involve interception of hundreds of different conversations. The
average intercept in 1970 involved 44 people and 655 conversations,
of which 295 or 45% were incriminating. 117 Cong.Rec. 14052.
[
Footnote 15]
114 Cong.Rec. 14750. The subsequent assurances, quoted in part I
of the opinion, that § 2511(3) implied no statutory grant,
contraction, or definition of presidential power eased the
Senator's misgivings.
[
Footnote 16]
This view has not been accepted. In
Chimel v.
California, 395 U. S. 752
(1969), the Court considered the Government's contention that the
search be judged on a general "reasonableness" standard, without
reference to the warrant clause. The Court concluded that argument
was
"founded on little more than a subjective view regarding the
acceptability of certain sorts of police conduct, and not on
considerations relevant to Fourth Amendment interests. Under such
an unconfined analysis, Fourth Amendment protection in this area
would approach the evaporation point."
Id. at
395 U. S.
764-765.
[
Footnote 17]
N. Lasson, The History and Development of the Fourth Amendment
to the United States Constitution 79-105 (1937).
[
Footnote 18]
We use the word "judicial" to connote the traditional Fourth
Amendment requirement of a neutral and detached magistrate.
[
Footnote 19]
The Government argues that domestic security wiretaps should be
upheld by courts in post-surveillance review
"[u]nless it appears that the Attorney General's determination
that the proposed surveillance relates to a national security
matter is arbitrary and capricious,
i.e., that it
constitutes a clear abuse of the broad discretion that the Attorney
General has to obtain all information that will be helpful to the
President in protecting the Government . . ."
against the various unlawful acts in § 2511(3). Brief for United
States 22.
[
Footnote 20]
See n 8,
supra. For the view that warrantless surveillance, though
impermissible in domestic security cases, may be constitutional
where foreign powers are involved,
see United States v.
Smith, 321 F.
Supp. 424, 425-426 (CD Cal.1971); and American Bar Association
Project on Standards for Criminal Justice, Electronic Surveillance
120, 121 (Approved Draft 1971, and Feb.19-71 Supp. 11).
See
also United States v. Clay, 430 F.2d 165 (CA5 1970).
[
Footnote 21]
We think it unnecessary at this time and on the facts of this
case to consider the arguments advanced by the Government for a
reexamination of the basis and cope of the Court' decision in
Alderman.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, concurring.
While I join in the opinion of the Court, I add these words in
support of it.
This is an important phase in the campaign of the police and
intelligence agencies to obtain exemptions from the Warrant Clause
of the Fourth Amendment. For, due to the clandestine nature of
electronic eavesdropping, the need is acute for placing on the
Government
Page 407 U. S. 325
the heavy burden to show that "exigencies of the situation [make
its] course imperative." [
Footnote
2/1] Other abuses, such as the search incident to arrest, have
been partly deterred by the threat of damage actions against
offending officers, [
Footnote 2/2]
the risk of adverse publicity, or the possibility of reform through
the political process. These latter safeguards, however, are
ineffective against lawless wiretapping and "bugging" of which
their victims are totally unaware. Moreover, even the risk of
exclusion of tainted evidence would here appear to be of negligible
deterrent value, inasmuch as the United States frankly concedes
that the primary purpose of these searches is to fortify its
intelligence collage, rather than to accumulate evidence to support
indictments and convictions. If the Warrant Clause were held
inapplicable here, then the federal intelligence machine would
literally enjoy unchecked discretion.
Here, federal agents wish to rummage for months on end through
every conversation, no matter how intimate or personal, carried
over selected telephone lines, simply to seize those few utterances
which may add to their sense of the pulse of a domestic
underground.
We are told that one national security wiretap lasted for 14
months and monitored over 900 conversations. Senator Edward Kennedy
found recently that "warrantless devices accounted for an average
of 78 to 209 days of listening per device, as compared with a
13-day per device average for those devices installed under court
order." [
Footnote 2/3] He concluded
that the Government's
Page 407 U. S. 326
revelations posed
"the frightening possibility that the conversations of untold
thousands of citizens of this country are being monitored on secret
devices which no judge has authorized and which may remain in
operation for months and perhaps years at a time. [
Footnote 2/4]"
Even the most innocent and random caller who uses or telephones
into a tapped line can become a flagged number in the Government's
data bank.
See Laird v. Tatum, 1971 Term, No. 71-288.
Such gross invasions of privacy epitomize the very evil to which
the Warrant Clause was directed. This Court has been the
unfortunate witness to the hazards of police intrusions which did
not receive prior sanction by independent magistrates. For example,
in
Weeks v. United States, 232 U.
S. 383;
Mapp v. Ohio, 367 U.
S. 643; and
Chimel v. California, 395 U.
S. 752, entire homes were ransacked pursuant to
warrantless searches. Indeed, in
Kremen v. United States,
353 U. S. 346, the
entire contents of a cabin, totaling more than 800 items (such as
"1 Dish Rag") [
Footnote 2/5] were
seized incident to an arrest of its occupant and were taken to San
Francisco for study by FBI agents. In a similar case,
Von Cleef v.
New
Page 407 U. S. 327
Jersey, 395 U. S. 814,
police, without a warrant, searched an arrestee's house for three
hours, eventually seizing
"several thousand articles, including books, magazines,
catalogues, mailing lists, private correspondence (both open and
unopened), photographs, drawings, and film."
Id. at
395 U. S. 815.
In
Silverthorne Lumber Co. v. United States, 251 U.
S. 385, federal agents "without a shadow of authority"
raided the offices of one of the petitioners (the proprietors of
which had earlier been jailed) and "made a clean sweep of all the
books, papers and documents found there." Justice Holmes, for the
Court, termed this tactic an "outrage."
Id. at
251 U. S. 390,
251 U. S. 391.
In
Stanford v. Texas, 379 U. S. 476,
state police seized more than 2,000 items of literature, including
the writings of Mr. Justice Black, pursuant to a general search
warrant issued to inspect an alleged subversive's home.
That "domestic security" is said to be involved here does not
draw this case outside the mainstream of Fourth Amendment law.
Rather, the recurring desire of reigning officials to employ
dragnet techniques to intimidate their critics lies at the core of
that prohibition. For it was such excesses as the use of general
warrants and the writs of assistance that led to the ratification
of the Fourth Amendment. In
Entick v. Carrington, 19
How.St.Tr. 1029, 95 Eng.Rep. 807, decided in 1765, one finds a
striking parallel to the executive warrants utilized here. The
Secretary of State had issued general executive warrants to his
messengers authorizing them to roam about and to seize libelous
material and libellants of the sovereign. Entick, a critic of the
Crown, was the victim of one such general search during which his
seditious publications were impounded. He brought a successful
damage action for trespass against the messengers. The verdict was
sustained on appeal. Lord Camden wrote that, if such sweeping
tactics were validated, then
"the secret cabinets and bureaus of every
Page 407 U. S. 328
subject in this kingdom will be thrown open to the search and
inspection of a messenger, whenever the secretary of state shall
think fit to charge, or even to suspect, a person to be the author,
printer, or publisher of a seditious libel."
Id. at 1063. In a related and similar proceeding,
Huckle v. Money, 2 Wils. K.B. 206, 207, 95 Eng.Rep. 768,
769 (1763), the same judge who presided over Entick's appeal held
for another victim of the same despotic practice, saying "[t]o
enter a man's house by virtue of a nameless warrant, in order to
procure evidence, is worse than the Spanish Inquisition. . . ."
See also Wilkes v. Wood, 19 How.St.Tr. 1153, 98 Eng.Rep.
489 (1763). As early as
Boyd v. United States,
116 U. S. 616,
116 U. S. 626,
and as recently as
Stanford v. Texas, supra, at
379 U. S.
485-486;
Berger v. New York, 388 U. S.
41,
388 U. S. 49-50;
and
Coolidge v. New Hampshire, supra, at
403 U. S. 455
n. 9, the tyrannical invasions described and assailed in
Entick, Huckle, and
Wilkes, practices which also
were endured by the colonists, [
Footnote 2/6] have been recognized
Page 407 U. S. 329
as the primary abuses which ensured the Warrant Clause a
prominent place in our Bill of Rights.
See J. Landynski,
Search and Seizure and the Supreme Court 288 (1966). N. Lasson, The
History and Development of the Fourth Amendment to the United
States Constitution 478 (1937); Note, Warrantless Searches In Light
of
Chimel: A Return To The Original Understanding, 11
Ariz.L.Rev. 457, 460 476 (1969).
As illustrated by a flood of cases before us this Term,
e.g., Laird v. Tatum, No. 71-288;
Gelbard v. United
States, No. 71-110;
United States v. Egan, No.
71-263;
United States v. Caldwell, No. 757;
United
States v. Gravel, No. 71-1026;
Kleindienst v. Mandel,
No. 71-16, we are currently in the throes of another national
seizure of paranoia, resembling the hysteria which surrounded the
Alien and Sedition Acts, the Palmer Raids, and the McCarthy era.
Those who register dissent or who petition their governments for
redress are subjected to scrutiny by grand juries, [
Footnote 2/7] by the FBI, [
Footnote 2/8] or even by the military. [
Footnote 2/9] Their associates are
interrogated.
Page 407 U. S. 330
Their home are bugged and their telephones are wiretapped. They
are befriended by secret government informers. [
Footnote 2/10] Their patriotism and loyalty are
questioned. [
Footnote 2/11]
Page 407 U. S. 331
Senator Sam Ervin, who has chaired hearings on military
surveillance of civilian dissidents, warns that "it is not an
exaggeration to talk in terms of hundreds of thousands of . . .
dossiers." [
Footnote 2/12]
Senator Kennedy, as mentioned
supra, found "the
frightening possibility that the conversations of untold thousands
are being monitored on secret devices." More than our privacy is
implicated. Also at stake is the reach of the Government's power to
intimidate its critics.
When the Executive attempts to excuse these tactics as essential
to its defense against internal subversion, we are obliged to
remind it, without apology, of this Court's long commitment to the
preservation of the Bill of Rights from the corrosive environment
of precisely such expedients. [
Footnote 2/13]
Page 407 U. S. 332
As Justice Brandeis said, concurring in
Whitney v.
California, 274 U. S. 357,
274 U. S.
377:
"Those who won our independence by revolution were not cowards.
They did not fear political change. They did not exalt order at the
cost of liberty."
Chief Justice Warren put it this way in
United States v.
Robel, 389 U. S. 258,
389 U. S.
264:
"[T]his concept of 'national defense' cannot be deemed an end in
itself, justifying any . . . power designed to promote such a goal.
Implicit in the term 'national defense' is the notion of defending
those values and ideas which set this Nation apart. . . . It would
indeed be ironic if, in the name of national defense, we would
sanction the subversion of . . . those liberties . . . which [make]
the defense of the Nation worthwhile."
The Warrant Clause has stood as a barrier against intrusions by
officialdom into the privacies of life. But if that barrier were
lowered now to permit suspected subversives' most intimate
conversations to be pillaged then why could not their abodes or
mail be secretly searched by the same authority? To defeat so
terrifying a claim of inherent power, we need only stand by the
enduring values served by the Fourth Amendment. As we stated last
Term in
Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.
S. 443,
403 U. S.
455:
"In times of unrest, whether caused by crime or racial conflict
or fear of internal subversion, this basic law
Page 407 U. S. 333
and the values that it represents may appear unrealistic or
'extravagant' to some. But the values were those of the authors of
our fundamental constitutional concepts. In times not altogether
unlike our own, they won . . . a right of personal security against
arbitrary intrusions. . . . If times have changed, reducing
everyman's scope to do as he pleases in an urban and industrial
world, the changes have made the values served by the Fourth
Amendment more, not less, important."
We have as much or more to fear from the erosion of our sense of
privacy and independence by the omnipresent electronic ear of the
Government as we do from the likelihood that fomenters of domestic
upheaval will modify our form of governing. [
Footnote 2/14]
Page 407 U. S. 334
|
407
U.S. 297app|
APPENDIX TO OPINION OF DOUGLAS, J., CONCURRING
FEDERAL WIRETAPPING AND BUGGING 1969-1970
Court Ordered Executive Ordered
Devices Devices
Days in Use
Days in Minimum Maximum
Year Number Use Number (Rounded) (Rounded)
1969 30 462 94 8,100 20,800
1970 180 2,363 113 8,100 22,600
Ratio of Days Used Average Days in Use
Executive Ordered: Per Device
Court Ordered Court Executive Ordered
Ordered Devices
Year Minimum Maximum Devices Minimum Maximum
1969 17.5* 45.0* 15.4 86.2 221.3
1970 3.4 9.6 13.1 71.7 200.0
* Ratios for 1969 are less meaningful than those for 1970, since
court-ordered surveillance program was in its initial stage in
1969.
Source:
(1) Letter from Assistant Attorney General Robert Mardian to
Senator Edward M. Kennedy, March 1, 1971. Source figures withheld
at request of Justice Department.
(2) Reports of Administrative Office of U.S. Courts for 1969 and
1970.
Page 407 U. S. 335
[
Footnote 2/1]
Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.
S. 443,
403 U. S. 455;
McDonald v. United States, 335 U.
S. 451,
335 U. S. 456;
Chimel v. California, 395 U. S. 752;
United States v. Jeffers, 342 U. S.
48,
342 U. S.
51.
[
Footnote 2/2]
See Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of
Narcotics, 403 U. S. 388.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Letter from Senator Edward Kennedy to Members of the
Subcommittee on Administrative Procedure and Practice of the Senate
Judiciary Committee, Dec. 17, 1971, p. 2. Senator Kennedy included
in his letter a chart comparing court-ordered and
department-ordered wiretapping and bugging by federal agencies.
This chart is reproduced in the
407
U.S. 297app|>Appendix to this opinion. For a statistical
breakdown by duration, location, and implementing agency of the
1,042 wiretap orders issued in 1971 by state and federal judges,
see Administrative Office of the United States Courts,
Report on Applications for Orders Authorizing or Approving the
Interception of Wire or Oral Communications for 1971; The
Washington Post, May 14, 1972, p. A30, col. 1 (final ed.).
[
Footnote 2/4]
Kennedy,
supra, 407
U.S. 297fn2/3|>n. 3, at 2.
See also H. Schwartz, A
Report on the Costs and Benefits of Electronic Surveillance
(American Civil Liberties Union 1971); Schwartz, The Legitimation
of Electronic Eavesdropping: The Politics of "Law and Order," 67
Mich.L.Rev. 455 (1969).
[
Footnote 2/5]
For a complete itemization of the objects seized,
see
the Appendix to
Kremen v. United States, 353 U.
S. 346, 349 [omitted].
[
Footnote 2/6]
"On this side of the Atlantic, the argument concerning the
validity of general search warrants centered around the writs of
assistance which were used by customs officers for the detection of
smuggled goods."
N. Lasson, The History and Development of the Fourth Amendment
to the United States Constitution 51 (1937). In February, 1761, all
writs expired six months after the death of George II, and Boston
merchants petitioned the Superior Court in opposition to the
granting of any new writs. The merchants were represented by James
Otis, Jr., who later became a leader in the movement for
independence.
"Otis completely electrified the large audience in the court
room with his denunciation of England's whole policy toward the
Colonies and with his argument against general warrants. John
Adams, then a young man less than twenty-six years of age and not
yet admitted to the bar, was a spectator, and many years later
described the scene in these oft-quoted words: 'I do say in the
most solemn manner that Mr. Otis's oration against the Writs of
Assistance breathed into this nation the breath of life.' He"
"was a flame of fire! Every man of a crowded audience appeared
to me to go away, as I did, ready to take arms against Writs of
Assistance. Then and there was the first scene of opposition to the
arbitrary claims of Great Britain. Then and there, the child
Independence was born. In 15 years, namely in 1776, he grew to
manhood, and declared himself free."
Id. at 559.
[
Footnote 2/7]
See Donner & Cerruti, The Grand Jury Network: How
the Nixon Administration Has Secretly Perverted A Traditional
Safeguard Of Individual Rights, 214 The Nation 5 (1972).
See
also United States v. Caldwell, O.T. 1971, No. 70-57;
United States v. Gravel, O.T. 1971, No. 71-1026;
Gelbard v. United States and United States v. Egan, O.T.
1971, Nos. 71-110 and 71-263.
And see N.Y. Times, July 15,
1971, p. 6, col. 1 (grand jury investigation of N.Y. Times staff
which published the Pentagon Papers).
[
Footnote 2/8]
E.g., N.Y. Times, April 12, 1970, p. 1, col. 2 ("U.S.
To Tighten Surveillance of Radicals"); N.Y. Times, Dec. 14, 1969,
p. 1, col. 1 ("F.B.I.'s Informants and Bugs Collect Data On Black
Panthers"); the Washington Post, May 12, 1972, p. D21, col. 5
("When the FBI Calls, Everybody Talks"); the Washington Post, May
16, 1972, p. B15, col. 5 ("Black Activists Are FBI Targets"); the
Washington Post, May 17, 1972, p. B13, col. 5 ("Bedroom Peeking
Sharpens FBI Files"). And, concerning an FBI investigation of
Daniel Schorr, a television correspondent critical of the
Government,
see N.Y. Times, Nov. 11, 1971, p. 95, col. 4;
and N.Y. Times, Nov. 12, 1971, p. 13, col. 1. For the wiretapping
and bugging of Dr. Martin Luther King by the FBI,
see V.
Navasky, Kennedy Justice 135-155 (1971). For the wiretapping of
Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and John L. Lewis by the FBI
see
Theoharis & Meyer, The "National Security" Justification For
Electronic Eavesdropping: An Elusive Exception, 14 Wayne L.Rev.
749, 760-761 (1968).
[
Footnote 2/9]
See Laird v. Tatum, O.T. 1971, No. 71-288;
see
also Federal Data Banks, Computers and the Bill of Rights,
Hearings before the Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights of the
Senate Committee on the Judiciary, 92d Cong., 1st Sess. (1971);
N.Y. Times, Feb. 29, 1972, p. 1, col. 3.
[
Footnote 2/10]
"Informers have been used for national security reasons
throughout the twentieth century. They were deployed to combat what
was perceived to be an internal threat from radicals during the
early 1920's. When fears began to focus on Communism, groups
thought to have some connection with the Communist Party were
heavily infiltrated. Infiltration of the Party itself was so
intense that one former FBI agent estimated a ratio of one
informant for every 5.7 members in 1962. More recently, attention
has shifted to militant anti-war and civil rights groups. In part
because of support for such groups among university students
throughout the country, informers seem to have become ubiquitous on
campus. Some insight into the scope of the current use of informers
was provided by the Media Papers, FBI documents stolen in early
1971 from a Bureau office in Media, Pennsylvania. The papers
disclose FBI attempts to infiltrate a conference of war resisters
at Haverford College in August, 1969, and a convention of the
National Association of Black Students in June, 1970. They also
reveal FBI endeavors"
"to recruit informers, ranging from bill collectors to apartment
janitors, in an effort to develop constant surveillance in black
communities and New Left organizations"
"[N.Y. Times, April 8, 1971, p. 22, col. 1]. In Philadelphia's
black community, for instance, a whole range of buildings
'including offices of the Congress of Racial Equality, the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference [and] the Black Coalition'
[
ibid.] was singled out for surveillance by building
employees and other similar informers working for the FBI."
Note, Developments In The Law -- The National Security Interest
and Civil Liberties, 85 Harv.L.Rev. 1130, 1272-1273 (1972). For
accounts of the impersonation of journalists by police, FBI agents
and soldiers in order to gain the confidences of dissidents,
see Press Freedoms Under Pressure, Report of the Twentieth
Century Fund Task Force on the Government and the Press 29-34,
86-97 (1972). For the revelation of Army infiltration of political
organizations and spying on Senators, Governors and Congressmen,
see Federal Data Banks, Computers and the Bill of Rights,
Hearings before the Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights of the
Senate Committee on the Judiciary, 92d Cong., 1st Sess. (1971)
(discussed in my dissent from the denial of certiorari in
Williamson v. United States, 405 U.
S. 1026). Among the Media Papers was the suggestion by
the FBI that investigation of dissidents be stepped up in order to
"
enhance the paranoia endemic in these circles and [to] further
serve to get the point across there is an FBI agent behind every
mailbox.'" N.Y. Times, March 25, 1971, p. 33, col. 1.
[
Footnote 2/11]
E.g., N.Y. Times, Feb. 8, 1972, p. 1, col. 8 (Senate
peace advocates said, by presidential adviser, to be aiding and
abetting the enemy).
[
Footnote 2/12]
Amicus curiae brief submitted by Senator Sam Ervin in
Laird v. Tatum, No. 71-288, O.T. 1971, p. 8.
[
Footnote 2/13]
E.g., New York Times Co. v. United States, 403 U.
S. 713;
Powell v. McCormack, 395 U.
S. 486;
United States v. Robel, 389 U.
S. 258,
389 U. S. 264;
Aptheker v. Secretary of State, 378 U.
S. 500;
Baggett v. Bullitt, 377 U.
S. 360;
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v.
Sawyer, 343 U. S. 579;
Duncan v. Kahanamoku, 327 U. S. 304;
White v. Steer, 327 U. S. 304;
De Jonge v. Oregon, 299 U. S. 353,
299 U. S. 365;
Ex parte
Milligan, 4 Wall. 2;
Mitchell
v. Harmony, 13 How. 115. Note, The "National
Security Wiretap": Presidential Prerogative or Judicial
Responsibility, 45 S.Cal.L.Rev. 888, 907-912 (1972).
[
Footnote 2/14]
I continue in my belief that it would be extremely difficult to
write a search warrant specifically naming the particular
conversations to be seized, and therefore any such attempt would
amount to a general warrant, the very abuse condemned by the Fourth
Amendment. As I said, dissenting in
Osborn v. United
States, 385 U. S. 323,
385 U. S.
353:
"Such devices lay down a dragnet which indiscriminately sweeps
in all conversations within its scope, without regard to the nature
of the conversations, or the participants. A warrant authorizing
such devices is no different from the general warrants the Fourth
Amendment was intended to prohibit."
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, concurring in the judgment.
This case arises out of a two-count indictment charging
conspiracy to injure and injury to Government property. Count I
charged Robert Plamondon and two codefendants with conspiring with
a fourth person to injure Government property with dynamite. Count
II charged Plamondon alone with dynamiting and injuring Government
property in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The defendants moved to compel the
United States to disclose, among other things, any logs and records
of electronic surveillance directed at them, at unindicted
coconspirators, or at any premises of the defendants or
coconspirators. They also moved for a hearing to determine whether
any electronic surveillance disclosed had tainted the evidence on
which the grand jury indictment was based and which the Government
intended to use at trial. They asked for dismissal of the
indictment if such taint were determined to exist. Opposing the
motion, the United States submitted an affidavit of the Attorney
General of the United States disclosing that
"[t]he defendant Plamondon has participated in conversations
which were overheard by Government agents who were monitoring
wiretaps which were being employed to gather intelligence
information deemed necessary to protect the nation from attempts of
domestic organizations to attack and subvert the existing structure
of the Government,"
the wiretaps having been expressly approved by the Attorney
General. The records of the intercepted conversations and copies of
the memorandum reflecting the Attorney General's approval were
submitted under seal, and solely for the Court's
in camera
inspection. [
Footnote 3/1]
Page 407 U. S. 336
As characterized by the District Court, the position of the
United States was that the electronic monitoring of Plamondon's
conversations without judicial warrant was a lawful exercise of the
power of the President to safeguard the national security. The
District Court granted the motion of defendants, holding that the
President had no constitutional power to employ electronic
surveillance without warrant to gather information about domestic
organizations. Absent probable cause and judicial authorization,
the challenged wiretap infringed Plamondon's Fourth Amendment
rights. The court ordered the Government to disclose to defendants
the records of the monitored conversations and directed that a
hearing be held to determine the existence of taint either in the
indictment or in the evidence to be introduced at trial.
The Government's petition for mandamus to require the District
Court to vacate its order was denied by the Court of Appeals. 444
F.2d 651 (CA6 1971). That court held that the Fourth Amendment
barred warrantless electronic surveillance of domestic
organizations even if at the direction of the President. It agreed
with the District Court that, because the wiretaps involved were
therefore constitutionally infirm, the United States must turn over
to defendants the records of overheard conversations for the
purpose of determining whether the Government's evidence was
tainted.
I would affirm the Court of Appeals, but on the statutory ground
urged by defendant respondents (Brief 115) without reaching or
intimating any views with respect
Page 407 U. S. 337
to the constitutional issue decided by both the District Court
and the Court of Appeals.
Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of
1968, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2510-2520, forbids, under pain of criminal
penalties and civil actions for damages, any wiretapping or
eavesdropping not undertaken in accordance with specified
procedures for obtaining judicial warrants authorizing the
surveillance. Section 2511(1) establishes a general prohibition
against electronic eavesdropping "[e]xcept as otherwise
specifically provided" in the statute. Later sections provide
detailed procedures for judicial authorization of official
interceptions of oral communications; when these procedures are
followed, the interception is not subject to the prohibitions of §
2511(1). Section 2511(2), however, specifies other situations in
which the general prohibitions of § 2511(1) do not apply. In
addition, § 2511(3) provides that:
"Nothing contained in this chapter or in section 605 of the
Communications Act of 1934 (48 Stat. 1143; 47 U.S.C. 605) shall
limit the constitutional power of the President to take such
measures as he deems necessary to protect the Nation against actual
or potential attack or other hostile acts of a foreign power, to
obtain foreign intelligence information deemed essential to the
security of the United States, or to protect national security
information against foreign intelligence activities. Nor shall
anything contained in this chapter be deemed to limit the
constitutional power of the President to take such measures as he
deems necessary to protect the United States against the overthrow
of the Government by force or other unlawful means, or against any
other clear and present danger to the structure or existence of the
Government. The contents
Page 407 U. S. 338
of any wire or oral communication intercepted by authority of
the President in the exercise of the foregoing powers may be
received in evidence in any trial hearing, or other proceeding only
where such interception was reasonable, and shall not be otherwise
used or disclosed except as is necessary to implement that
power."
It is this subsection that lies at the heart of this case.
The interception here was without judicial warrant, it was not
covered by the provisions of § 2511(2), and it is too clear for
argument that it is illegal under § 2511(1) unless it is saved by §
2511(3). The majority asserts that § 2511(3) is a "disclaimer," but
not an "exception." But however it is labeled, it is apparent from
the face of the section and its legislative history that, if this
interception is one of those described in § 2511(3), it is not
reached by the statutory ban on unwarranted electronic
eavesdropping. [
Footnote 3/2]
The defendants in the District Court moved for the production of
the logs of any electronic surveillance to which they might have
been subjected. The Government
Page 407 U. S. 339
responded that conversations of Plamondon had been intercepted,
but took the position that turnover of surveillance records was not
necessary because the interception complied with the law. Clearly,
for the Government to prevail, it was necessary to demonstrate,
first, that the interception involved was not subject to the
statutory requirement of judicial approval for wiretapping because
the surveillance was within the scope of § 2511(3), and, secondly,
if the Act did not forbid the warrantless wiretap, that the
surveillance was consistent with the Fourth Amendment.
The United States has made no claim in this case that the
statute may not constitutionally be applied to the surveillance at
issue here. [
Footnote 3/3] Nor has
it denied that, to
Page 407 U. S. 340
comply with the Act, the surveillance must either be supported
by a warrant or fall within the bounds of the exceptions provided
by § 2511(3). Nevertheless, as I read the opinions of the District
Court and the Court of Appeals, neither court stopped to inquire
whether the challenged interception was illegal under the statute,
but proceeded directly to the constitutional issue without
adverting to the time-honored rule that courts should abjure
constitutional issues except where necessary to decision of the
case before them.
Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Authority,
297 U. S. 288,
297 U. S.
346-348 (1936) (concurring opinion). Because I conclude
that, on the record before us, the surveillance undertaken by the
Government in this case was illegal under the statute itself, I
find it unnecessary, and therefore improper, to consider or decide
the constitutional questions which the courts below improvidently
reached.
The threshold statutory question is simply put: was the
electronic surveillance undertaken by the Government in this case a
measure deemed necessary by the President to implement either the
first or second branch of the exception carved out by § 2511(3) to
the general requirement of a warrant?
The answer, it seems to me, must turn on the affidavit of the
Attorney General offered by the United States in opposition to
defendants' motion to disclose surveillance records. It is apparent
that there is nothing whatsoever in this affidavit suggesting that
the surveillance was
Page 407 U. S. 341
undertaken within the first branch of the § 2511(3) exception,
that is, to protect against foreign attack, to gather foreign
intelligence or to protect national security information. The sole
assertion was that the monitoring at issue was employed to gather
intelligence information
"deemed necessary to protect the nation from attempts of
domestic organizations to attack and subvert the existing structure
of the Government."
App. 20.
Neither can I conclude from this characterization that the
wiretap employed here fell within the exception recognized by the
second sentence of § 2511(3), for it utterly fails to assume
responsibility for the judgment that Congress demanded: that the
surveillance was necessary to prevent overthrow by force or other
unlawful means, or that there was any other clear and present
danger to the structure or existence of the Government. The
affidavit speaks only of attempts to attack or subvert; it makes no
reference to force or unlawfulness; it articulates no conclusion
that the attempts involved any clear and present danger to the
existence or structure of the Government.
The shortcomings of the affidavit when measured against §
2511(3) are patent. Indeed, the United States, in oral argument,
conceded no less. The specific inquiry put to Government counsel
was: "Do you think the affidavit, standing alone, satisfies the
Safe Streets Act?" The Assistant Attorney General answered "No,
sir. We do not rely upon the affidavit itself. . . ." Tr. of Oral
Arg. 15. [
Footnote 3/4]
Government counsel, however, seek to save their case by
reference to the
in camera exhibit submitted to the
Page 407 U. S. 342
District Court to supplement the Attorney General's affidavit.
[
Footnote 3/5] It is said that the
exhibit includes the request for wiretap approval submitted to the
Attorney General, that the request asserted the need to avert a
clear and present danger to the structure and existence of the
Government, and that the Attorney General endorsed his approval on
the request. [
Footnote 3/6] But I
am unconvinced that the mere endorsement of the Attorney General on
the request for approval submitted to him must be taken as the
Attorney General's own opinion that the wiretap was necessary to
avert a clear and present danger to the existence or structure of
the Government
Page 407 U. S. 343
when, in an affidavit later filed in court specifically
characterizing the purposes of the interception and at least
impliedly the grounds for his prior approval, the Attorney General
said only that the tap was undertaken to secure intelligence
thought necessary to protect against attempts to attack and subvert
the structure of Government. If the Attorney General's approval of
the interception is to be given a judicially cognizable meaning
different from the meaning he seems to have ascribed to it in his
affidavit filed in court, there obviously must be further
proceedings in the District Court.
Moreover, I am reluctant to proceed in the first instance to
examine the
in camera material and either sustain or
reject the surveillance as a necessary measure to avert the dangers
referred to in § 2511(3). What Congress excepted from the warrant
requirement was a surveillance which the President would assume
responsibility for deeming an essential measure to protect against
clear and present danger. No judge can satisfy this congressional
requirement.
Without the necessary threshold determination, the interception
is, in my opinion, contrary to the terms of the statute and subject
therefore to the prohibition contained in § 2515 against the use of
the fruits of the warrantless electronic surveillance as evidence
at any trial. [
Footnote 3/7]
There remain two additional interrelated reasons for not
reaching the constitutional issue. First, even if it were
determined that the Attorney General purported to
Page 407 U. S. 344
authorize an electronic surveillance for purposes exempt from
the general provisions of the Act, there would remain the issue
whether his discretion was properly authorized. The United States
concedes that the act of the Attorney General authorizing a
warrantless wiretap is subject to judicial review to some extent,
Brief for United States 21-23, and it seems improvident to proceed
to constitutional questions until it is determined that the Act
itself does not bar the interception here in question.
Second, and again on the assumption that the surveillance here
involved fell within the exception provided by § 2511(3), no
constitutional issue need be reached in this case if the fruit of
the wiretap were inadmissible on statutory grounds in the criminal
proceedings pending against respondent Plamondon. Section 2511(3)
itself states that
"[t]he contents of any wire or oral communication intercepted by
authority of the President in the exercise of the foregoing powers
may be received in evidence in any trial, hearing, or other
proceeding
only where such interception was reasonable,
and shall not be otherwise used or disclosed except as is necessary
to implement that power."
(Emphasis added.) There has been no determination by the
District Court that it would be reasonable to use the fruits of the
wiretap against Plamondon, or that it would be necessary to do so
to implement the purposes for which the tap was authorized.
My own conclusion, again, is that, as long as nonconstitutional,
statutory grounds for excluding the evidence or its fruits have not
been disposed of, it is improvident to reach the constitutional
issue.
I would thus affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals unless
the Court is prepared to reconsider the necessity for an adversary,
rather than an
in camera, hearing with respect to taint.
If
in camera proceedings are sufficient and no taint is
discerned by the judge, this case is over, whatever the legality of
the tap.
[
Footnote 3/1]
The Attorney General's affidavit concluded:
"I certify that it would prejudice the national interest to
disclose the particular facts concerning these surveillances other
than to the court
in camera. Accordingly, the sealed
exhibit referred to herein is being submitted solely for the
court's
in camera inspection and a copy of the sealed
exhibit is not being furnished to the defendants. I would request
the court, at the conclusion of its hearing on this matter, to
place the sealed exhibit in a sealed envelope and return it to the
Department of Justice, where it will be retained under seal so that
it may be submitted to any appellate court that may review this
matter."
App. 20-21.
[
Footnote 3/2]
I cannot agree with the majority's analysis of the import of §
2511(3). Surely, Congress meant at least that, if a court
determined that in the specified circumstances the President could
constitutionally intercept communications without a warrant, the
general ban of § 2511(1) would not apply. But the limitation on the
applicability of § 2511(1) was not open-ended; it was confined to
those situations that § 2511(3) specifically described. Thus, even
assuming the constitutionality of a warrantless surveillance
authorized by the President to uncover private or official graft
forbidden by federal statute, the interception would be illegal
under § 2511(1) because it is not the type of presidential action
saved by the Act by the provision of § 2511(3). As stated in the
text and n. 3,
infra, the United States does not claim
that Congress is powerless to require warrants for surveillances
that the President otherwise would not be barred by the Fourth
Amendment from undertaking without a warrant.
[
Footnote 3/3]
See Tr. of Oral Arg. 13-14:
"Q. . . . I take it from your answer that Congress could forbid
the President from doing what you suggest he has the power to do in
this case?"
"Mr. Mardian [Assistant Attorney General]: That issue is not
before this Court --"
"Q. Well, I would -- my next question will suggest that it is.
Would you say, though, that Congress could forbid the
President?"
"Mr. Mardian: I think, under the rule announced by this court in
Colony Catering, that, within certain limits, the Congress
could severely restrict the power of the President in this
area."
"Q. Well, let's assume Congress says, then, that the Attorney
General, or the President may authorize the Attorney General, in
specific situations, to carry out electronic surveillance if the
Attorney General certifies that there is a clear and present danger
to the security of the United States?"
"Mr. Mardian: I think that Congress has already provided that,
and --"
"Q. Well, would you say that Congress would have the power to
limit surveillances to situations where those conditions were
satisfied?"
"Mr. Mardian: Yes, I would -- I would concur in that, Your
Honor."
A colloquy appearing in the debates on the bill, appearing at
114 Cong.Rec. 14750-14751, indicates that some Senators considered
§ 2511(3) as merely stating an intention not to interfere with the
constitutional powers that the President might otherwise have to
engage in warrantless electronic surveillance. But the Department
of Justice, it was said, participated in the drafting of § 2511(3),
and there is no indication in the legislative history that there
was any claim or thought that the supposed powers of the President
reached beyond those described in the section. In any case, it
seems clear that the congressional policy of noninterference was
limited to the terms of § 2511(3).
[
Footnote 3/4]
See also Tr. of Oral Arg. 17:
"Q. . . . If all the
in camera document contained was
what this affidavit contained, it would not comply with the Safe
Streets Act?"
"Mr. Mardian: I would concur in that, Your Honor."
[
Footnote 3/5]
The Government appears to have shifted ground in this respect.
In its initial brief to this Court, the Government quoted the
Attorney General's affidavit and then said, without qualification,
"These were the grounds upon which the Attorney General authorized
the surveillance in the present case." Brief for United States 21.
Moreover, counsel for the Government stated at oral argument
"that the
in camera submission was not intended as a
justification for the authorization, but simply [as] a proof of the
fact that the authorization had been granted by the Attorney
General of the United States, over his own signature."
Tr. of Oral Arg. 7.
Later at oral argument, however, the Government said:
"[T]he affidavit was never intended as the basis for justifying
the surveillance in question. . . . The justification, and again I
suggest that it is only a partial justification, is contained in
the
in camera exhibit which was submitted to Judge Keith.
. . . We do not rely upon the affidavit itself, but the
in
camera exhibit."
Tr. of Oral Arg. 115. And in its reply brief, the Government
says flatly:
"Those [
in camera] documents, and not the affidavit,
are the proper basis for determining the ground upon which the
Attorney General acted."
Reply Brief for United States 9.
[
Footnote 3/6]
Procedures in practice at the time of the request here in issue
apparently resulted in the Attorney General's merely countersigning
a request which asserted a need for a wiretap. We are told that,
under present procedures, the Attorney General makes an express
written finding of clear and present danger to the structure and
existence of the Government before he authorizes a tap. Tr. of Oral
Arg. 17-18.
[
Footnote 3/7]
"Whenever any wire or oral communication has been intercepted,
no part of the contents of such communication and no evidence
derived therefrom may be received in evidence in any trial,
hearing, or other proceeding in or before any court, grand jury,
department, officer, agency, regulatory body, legislative
committee, or other authority of the United States, a State, or a
political subdivision thereof if the disclosure of that information
would be in violation of this chapter."
18 U.S.C. § 2515.