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November 1, 2000

President Bill Clinton
1600 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20500

Re: Intelligence Authorization Act (H.R. 4392) and Criminal Penalties for Disclosure of Classified Information

Dear President Clinton:

We are writing to urge you to veto the Intelligence Authorization Act for FY 2001, H.R. 4392 because the bill includes two provisions, taken from the Senate-passed version of the bill (S. 2507), that threaten civil liberties. The first would make virtually all willful, unauthorized disclosure of classified information a felony punishable by a substantial fine and up to three years in prison. The second would legalize "authorized intelligence activity" that is illegal under the terms of any legislation adopted in the future to implement a treaty, unless the implementing legislation indicates otherwise. In essence, it puts intelligence activity above the law. These sweeping provisions have been the subject of no public hearings and were inserted into the Senate version of this legislation with virtually no public debate. They would sanction lawless activity and have a profound negative effect on the ability of the press to expose governmental misdeeds. Accordingly, we urge you to veto the Intelligence Authorization Act, or at a minimum, support legislative efforts to delay the effective date of these two provisions until January 1, 2002.

Disclosure of Classified Information

Section 304 of the Intelligence Authorization Act would reverse 50 years of precedent -- through the entire Cold War -- of rejecting efforts by the Central Intelligence Agency to make it a crime for any person who has or had a security clearance to disclose classified information without authorization. This provision would close down debate about matters of crucial interest to the public that relate to national defense or to foreign policy. The crucial role of the press in exposing governmental misdeeds and the need for reform would be compromised. The implications for the First Amendment, and for the ability of news organizations to fulfill its promise, are profound.

Virtually every week a major newspaper runs a story based in part on classified information. In recent months, these stories have, for example, informed the public of the continuation of an Iraqi missile program, about unease in China regarding the proposed deployment of a missile defense system in the U.S., and about the need to stem sales by Russia of deadly military technology to countries on the State Department's list of state sponsors of terrorism. Other stories have informed the public and members of Congress about the need for additional equipment on helicopters to protect the servicemen who fly them, and about links between drug traffickers and the Mexican military. Under this provision, every such story could trigger a criminal investigation. Indeed, the publication of the Pentagon Papers -- so crucial to the public debate about the Vietnam War -- involved a disclosure of classified information. In all likelihood, in the name of prosecutorial discretion, the Department of Justice in the next administration would not prosecute all such leaks, just those that are the most embarrassing to a prior administration of the other major political party.

Moreover, such prosecutions would put enormous pressure, including the threat of legal process such as a subpoena, on news organizations to reveal the source of the disclosure. As the American Society of Newspaper Editors and media outlets put it in their September 20 letter, "[T]his provision would result in news entities being forced to act as the government's own enforcement agents. … The role of news entities such as newspapers and the electronic media, however, is to shed light on the activities of the government, not to be the government's enforcement agents."

Newspapers across the country have editorialized against the provision:

Leading members of Congress have taken a similar dim view of the provision, as has the spokesman for the Department of Defense. Members of the Senate Judiciary Committee wrote that "…[S]ection 304 defines "classified information" to include information that the 'person knows or has reason to believe has been properly classified by appropriate authorities. This expansive definition of 'classified information,' disclosure of which would be subject to criminal penalties, would effectively create a prior restraint by imposing a requirement … [that] [w]ould-be whistleblowers … check with their superiors about the [classified] status of the information." (October 27, 2000 letter from Sens. Grassley, Schumer and Leahy to Sens. Stevens and Byrd). The Chairman and Ranking Minority Member of the House Judiciary Committee wrote that the provision has "profound First Amendment implications" and may "dangerously chill whistleblowers who otherwise properly and legitimately disclose government mismanagement and wrongdoing." (October 25, 2000 letter from Reps. Hyde and Conyers to Reps. Rogers and Serrano). DOD spokesman Ken Bacon reportedly told the New York Times that the provision is disastrous for any official who deals with the press in national security matters, whether at the State Department, the National Security Council or the Pentagon. He pointed out that to respond to a routine press question about the movement of Iraqi troops, for example, he might have to rely on classified information. (The New York Times, October 31, 2000, p. A1).

The disclosure of some classified information is a serious matter and it is already proscribed in current law. For example, it is a crime to disclose national defense information with reason to believe that such disclosure could cause injury to the United States (18 U.S.C. 793), to disclose classified cryptographic information (18 U.S.C. 798), or to disclose the identity of a covert agent (15 U.S.C. 421). Congress and various administrations have consistently recognized that First Amendment concerns require that criminal sanctions accompany only disclosures of the most sensitive classified information that can do the most harm. Moreover, a person with a security clearance can lose their clearance, their job, and any prospect for employment in their chosen field if they disclose classified information.

However, this provision would make it a crime to disclose any classified information, regardless of whether the person who disclosed the information had any intent to harm the United States or help a foreign adversary. It uses a sledgehammer to address a problem that could be solved with a scalpel. Such a sweeping prohibition, with substantial criminal penalties, should not even be considered given the well-documented tendency to over-classify documents and to classify documents release of which would do nothing more than cause the government to consider adopting a necessary reform. Rather, the Administration would do well instead to strengthen its efforts to tighten up the classification system, and to seek full funding of its declassification initiative. This provision will do more to hide problems and misdeeds than to protect the national security.

Treaty "Obligations"

The second provision that compels us to urge you to veto the Intelligence Authorization Act for FY 2001 (H.R. 4392) appears as Section 308 of the conference report on the bill. This provision would put the intelligence agencies above the law. Under this provision, "authorized intelligence activity" that violates any law enacted in the future to implement a treaty or other international agreement would be legal, unless the implementing legislation indicated otherwise.

Legislation implementing international treaties prohibits some of the most atrocious conduct imaginable. Treaties into which the United States has or will soon enter proscribe such heinous conduct as genocide, bribery, racial discrimination, hostage taking and hijacking. For example, the legislation implementing the Convention Against Torture and Other Forms of Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Punishment establishes that it is the policy of the United States not to expel, extradite or effect the involuntary return of any person to a country in which there are substantial grounds for believing that the person would be in danger of being tortured. This policy applies regardless of whether the person who might be tortured is in the United States. Section 2242 of Pub. Law 105-277, 112 Stat. 2681-822 (1998). Had section 308 been law when Congress considered the legislation implementing the Convention Against Torture, it would be legal under the statute for a CIA agent acting pursuant to an "authorized intelligence activity" to return a person to a place where they would be tortured. This would be the case unless a member of Congress successfully slipped into the implementing legislation a provision indicating that it applied to intelligence activity as well.

This provision is opposed by a broad array of human rights groups, including the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, the World Organization Against Torture, and the Federation of American Scientists.

The very limited Senate debate on this provision indicates that whether a particular intelligence activity that violates a law implementing a treaty is "authorized" is unclear. For example, it appears that the authorization need not be written and need not be issued specifically with respect to the conduct in question. Rather, as Senator Shelby put it, "Individual actions might be authorized through general written policies, rather than case-specific authorizations." See colloquy between Senators Biden and Shelby, 146 Cong. Rec. pages S9686-7, October 3, 2000. This is an invitation for abuse of authority to evade a law by which every other government official must abide.

There can be no excuse for giving intelligence agencies a license to ignore the law, including laws that implement treaty obligations. To create such a blanket exception for "authorized intelligence activities" is to invite other countries that undertake treaty obligations to except these and other activities from the requirements of the treaty. This provision would ensure that there is no public debate as to whether there should be an "intelligence exception" to a future treaty obligation proscribing objectionable conduct.

For these reasons, we urge you to veto this legislation, or, at a minimum, to support legislative efforts to delay the implementation of this legislation until January 1, 2002 so that these provisions can be carefully reviewed by Congress next year.

Sincerely,

Laura W. Murphy
Director

Gregory T. Nojeim
Legislative Counsel




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