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SUPPLEMENTARY DETAILED STAFF REPORTS
ON INTELLIGENCE ACTIVITIES AND THE
RIGHTS OF AMERICANS
_______
BOOK III
_______
FINAL REPORT
OF THE
SELECT COMMITTEE
TO STUDY GOVERNMENTAL OPERATIONS
WITH RESPECT TO
INTELLIGENCE ACTIVITIES
UNITED STATES SENATE
APRIL 23 (under authority of the order
of April 14), 1976
WARRANTLESS SURREPTITIOUS ENTRIES: FBI "BLACK BAG"
BREAK-INS AND MICROPHONE INSTALLATIONS
I. INTRODUCTION
Since 1948 the FBI has conducted hundreds of warrantless
surreptitious entries to gather domestic and foreign intelligence,
despite the questionable legality of the technique and
its deep intrusion into the privacy of targeted individuals.
Before 1966, the FBI conducted over two hundred "black
bag jobs." 1 These warrantless surreptitious entries
were carried out for intelligence purposes other than
microphone installation, such as physical search and photographing
or seizing documents. Since 1960, more than five hundred
warrantless surreptitious microphone installations against
intelligence and internal security targets have been conducted
by the FBI, a technique which the Justice Department still
permits. Almost as many surreptitious entries were conducted
in the same period against targets of criminal investigations.
1a
Although several Attorneys General were aware of the
FBI practice of break-ins to install electronic listening
devices, there is no indication that the FBI informed
any Attorney General about its use of "black bag
jobs."
Surreptitious entries were performed by teams of FBI
agents with special training in subjects such as "lock
studies." Their missions were authorized in writing
by FBI Director Hoover or his deputy, Clyde Tolson. A
"Do Not File" procedure was utilized, under
which most records of surreptitious entries were destroyed
soon after an entry was accomplished.
The use of surreptitious entries against domestic targets
dropped drastically after J. Edgar Hoover banned "black
bag jobs" in 1966. In 1970, the relaxation of restraints
on domestic intelligence techniques such as surreptititous
entries was proposed in the Huston Plan. Hoover opposed
this proposal, although he expressed a willingness to
follow the Huston Plan, if directed to do so by the Attorney
General. 2
B. The Legal Context: United States v. Ehrlichman
The legality of warrantless surreptitious entries for
intelligence puroses is highly questionable. An FBI official
who administered "black bag" operations in the
1960s expressed the opinion that they were "clearly
illegal," 3 even though a 1954 memorandum from Attorney
General Herbert Brownell to J. Edgar Hoover had provided
the color of legal authority for surreptitious entries
to install microphones. 4
U.S. v. Ehrlichnwn is the only judicial decision on the
legality of a warrantless surreptititous entry and physical
search where the action was justified by the claim that
it was "in the national interest." 5 In that
case -- which did not involve intelligence agencies --
President Nixon's assistants, John Ehrlichman and Charles
Colson, were among five defendants accused of conspiring
to deprive a Los Angeles psychiatrist of his Fourth Amendment
rights "by entering his offices without a warrant
for the purpose of obtaining the doctor's medical records
relating to one of his patients, Daniel Ellsberg, then
under Federal indictment for revealing top secret documents."
6
Ruling on the defendant's discovery motions, Federal
District Judge Gerhard Gesell found the break-in and search
of the psychiatrist's office "clearly illegal under
the unambiguous mandate of the Fourth Amendment"
because no search warrant was obtained:
[T]he Government must comply with the strict constitutional
and statutory limitations on trespassory searches and
arrests even when known foreign agents are involved. .
. . To hold otherwise, except under the most exigent circumstances,
would be to abandon the Fourth Amendment to the whim of
the Executive in total disregard of the Amendment's history
and purpose. 7
Gesell also pointed to a passage in the landmark "Keith"
case to emphasize that surreptitious entries should be
viewed by the courts as more intrusive than other forms
of search such as wiretapping:
physical entry of the home is the chief evil against
which the wording of the Fourth Amendment is directed.
8
Despite the national security defense raised by the defendants,
Judge Gesell concluded that "as a matter of law .
. . the President . . . lacked the authority to authorize
the Fielding break-in." Gesell commented that break-ins
in the interest of "national security" cannot
be excepted from the requirement of a judicial warrant;
the Fourth Amendment cannot be obviated, he wrote,
. . . whenever the President determines that an American
citizen, personally innocent of wrongdoing, has in his
possession information that may touch upon foreign policy
concerns. Such a doctrine, even in the context of purely
information-gathering searches, would give the Executive
a blank check to disregard the very heart and core of
the Fourth Amendment and the vital privacy interests that
it protects. Warrantless criminal investigatory searches
-- which this break-in may also have been -- would, in
addition, undermine vital Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights."
10
Judicial decisions on electronic surveillance have encompassed
surreptitious entries for the purpose of installing electronic
listening deices. The leading case, Katz v. United States,"
abandoned previous judicial decisions in which the legality
of microphone surveillance depended upon whether or not
a "constitutionally protected area," such as
a home or office, had been physically invaded. 12 Instead,
the Court declared that "the Fourth Amendment protects
people, not places," wherever they have a "reasonable
expectation of privacy." 13 In Katz the Court recognized
a possible exception to the warrant requirement for "a
situation involving the national security" -- an
exception which might apply to all forms of electronic
surveillance, including surveillance accomplished by trespass
to install a microphone 14
The possible exception to the warrant requirement, articulated
by the Supreme Court and sustained by some lower courts
in electronic surveillance cases, 15 probably would not
apply to surreptitious entries conducted for the purpose
of physical search. As Attorney General Edward H. Levi
testified:
The nature of the search and seizure can be very important.
An entry into a house to search its interior may be viewed
as more serious than the overhearing of a certain type
of conversation. The risk of abuse may loom larger in
one case than the other. 16
II. OPERATIONAL PROCEDURE, AUTHORIZATION, AND TARGETING
A. Internal Procedure and Authorization
The only internal FBI memorandum located by the Select
Committee which discussed the policy for surreptitious
entries stated:
We do not obtain authorization for "black bag"
jobs from outside the Bureau. Such a technique involves
trespassing and is clearly illegal; therefore, it would
be impossible to obtain any legal sanction for it. Despite
this, "black bag" jobs have been used because
they represent an invaluable technique in combating subversive
activities of a clandestine nature aimed directly at undermining
and destroying our nation. 17
The FBI described the procedure for authorization of
surreptitious entries as follows:
When a Special Agent in Charge (SAC) of a field office
considered surreptitious entry necessary to the conduct
of an investigation, he would make his request to the
appropriate Assistant Director at FBIHQ, justifying the
need for an entry, and assuring it could be accomplished
safely with full security. In accordance with instructions
of Director J. Edgar Hoover, a memorandum outlining the
facts of the request was prepared for approval of Mr.
Hoover, or Mr. Tolson, the Associate Director. Subsequently,
the memorandum was filed in the Assistant Director's office
under a "Do Not File" procedure, and thereafter
destroyed. In the field office, the SAC maintained a record
of approval as a control device in his office safe. At
the next yearly field office inspection, a review of these
records would be made by the Inspector to insure that
the SAC was not acting without prior FBIHQ approval in
conducting surreptitious entries. Upon completion of this
review, these records were destroyed. 18
One FBI agent who performed numerous "black bag
jobs" stated that he obtained approval from some
officer at FBI headquarters, although not always the Director,
before performing a study of the feasibility of an entry.
19 He said that a feasibility study was intended to determine:
whether the entry could be accomplished in a secure manner,
who owned the building and whether a key could be obtained.
Floor plans of the building were often procured. If a
building owner appeared to be a "patriotic citizen,"
FBI agents would approach him for assistance in entering
a unit of his building - - ---- "show our credentials
and wave the flag." 20 If the FBI agents decided
that they would be unable to obtain the building owner's
consent to enter the target's promises, the agents would
examine the building and the area to determine the feasibility
of a break-in. 21
The FBI agent stated that if an entry was considered
feasible he would write a memorandum to "Director,
FBI" and, in response, would invariably receive an
authorizing memorandum from headquarters initialled "JEH"
[J. Edgar Hoover]. 22 Another FBI agent who frequently
participated in break-ins, stated that the directives
for such operations were sometimes initialled by Hoover
and usually initialled by the Assistant Director in charge
of the Domestic Intelligence Division. 23
One agent, who served on a special squad responsible
for installing electronic surveillance devices, stated
that in the majority of cases he was able to obtain a
key to the target's premises, either from a landlord,
hotel manager, or neighbor. In other cases, he simply
entered through unlocked doors. He stated that only in
a small proportion of the cases to which he was assigned
was it necessary to pick a lock. 23a Once a bug was planted,
it was generally necessary for Bureau agents to monitor
the conversations from a location close to the targeted
premises.
Selected FBI agents received training courses in the
skills necessary to perform surreptitious entries. An
FBI technician provided formal instruction in "lock
studies" as in-service training for experienced agents;
"specialized lock training" was also provided
to each agent who received training in electronic surveillance
at "sound school." 24 These courses were conducted
at the direction of the Assistant Director in charge of
the Bureau Laboratory. The Unit Chief who taugh the courses
stated that he had participated in numerous "black
bag jobs" in which his only role was to open locks
and safes; all other activities were performed by other
agents accompanying him. He said that he would ordinarily
receive an incentive award for a successful entry. 25
One agent involved in surreptitious entries stated that
he never knowingly conducted an entry for, or with the
assistance of, a local police force; nor was he aware
of any information being provided by the FBI to local
police about an entry. 26
The agent said that he performed two microphone installations
against CIA employees at the request of the CIA. He also
stated that he was never accompanied on an entry operation
by a CIA officer. 27
B. Targets: Counterintelligence and Domestic Subversives
The FBI has identified two broad categories of targets
for surreptitious entries from 1942 to April 1968: (1)
groups and individuals connected with foreign intelligence
and espionage operations; and (2) "domestic subversive
and white hate groups." 28
A Domestic Intelligence Division memorandum summarized
the fruits obtained from surreptitious entries against
domestic groups:
We have on numerous occasions been able to obtain material
held highly secret and closely guarded by subversive groups
and organizations which consisted of membership lists
and mailing lists of these organizations. 29
The memorandum also cited a warrantless surreptitious
entry against the Ku Klux Klan as an example of the utility
of the technique:
Through a "black bag" job, we obtained the
records in the possession of three high-ranking officials
of a Klan organization.... These records gave us the complete
membership and financial information concerning the Klan's
operation which we have been using most effectively to
disrupt the organization and, in fact, to bring about
its near disintegration. 30
A former FBI agent has stated that the locations of break-in
operations included the residences of targets of investigation
as well as organizational headquarters. 31
The FBI was "unable to retrieve an accurate accounting"
of the number of warrantless surreptitious entries from
their files: "there is no central index, file, or
document ... no precise record of entries" due to
the "Do Not File procedure." 32 Relying upon
a general review of files and upon the recollections of
FBI agents at headquarters, the Bureau estimated that,
in the "black bag job" category (warrantless
surreptitious entries for purposes other than microphone
installation):
There were at least 239 surreptitious entries conducted
against at least fifteen domestic subversive targets from
1942 to April 1968.... In addition, at least three domestic
subversive targets were the subject of numerous entries
from October 1952 to June 1966. 33
"An entry against one white hate group" was
also reported .34 One example of a "domestic subversive
target" against whom numerous entries were conducted
is the Socialist Workers Party, which may have been targeted
for as many as ninety-two break-ins during the period
from 1960 to 1966. 35
To have a more complete picture of the extent of "black
bag" operations, two other FBI estimates, also based
on incomplete records, must be considered along with this
partial accounting of the number of "black bag job"
entries against domestic subversive groups. First, the
Bureau estimated that between 1960 and 1975, 509 surreptitious
microphone installations took place against 420 separate
"targets of counterintelligence, internal security,
and intelligence collection investigations." 36 It
is impossible to determine from the FBI estimates exactly
how many of these installations involved a surreptitious
entry because other techniques were also utilized, such
as installing a microphone prior to the occupancy of the
target or encapsulating it in an article which was sent
into the premises. It is also impossible to determine
the number of these targets who were American citizens.
Second, the FBI estimated that between 1960 and 1975,
there were 491 surreptitious entries to install electronic
surveillance devices against 396 targets of criminal investigations.
37
C. Operations Directed Against the Socialist Workers
Party
Recently disclosed FBI memoranda pertaining to surreptitious
entries directed at the Socialist Workers Party (SWP)
in 1960-1966 provide additional details on FBI procedures.
38 Most of the documents were to be filed in the "Personal
Folder" of the Special Agent in Charge of the New
York field office. 39
The "purpose of assignment" for surreptitious
entries against an SWP affiliate, the Young Socialist
Alliance (YSA), was described as follows:
To locate records and information relating to the national
organization of the YSA, [and] the identity of national
members located throughout the country. Also it is anticipated
that records of the local organization will be made available.
40
To carry out this assignment, the FBI prepared memoranda
which contained detailed plans for post-midnight burglarizing
of YSA headquarters. The FBI's entry plans included descriptions
of "security aspects" such as building floor
plans, locks, lighting, surrounding streets, entrances,
and the occupants' living habits. 41
The FBI's Los Angeles field office obtained "photographs
of material maintained in the office of James P. Cannon,
National Chairman of the SWP," including letters
to and from Cannon. 42 The field office reports about
this material carried the warning:
EXTREME CAUTION SHOULD BE EXERCISED IN UTILIZING INFORMATION
FURNISHED BY [DELETED] IN ORDER THAT THE IDENTITY OF THIS
HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL SOURCE IS NOT COMPROMISED. 43
Several of the reports were "classified" because
disclosure could "compromise effectiveness of the
source." 44 Moreover, upon receipt of this information,
FBI headquarters advised the Los Angeles field office:
Due to the sensitive nature of [deleted], which may become
a further source of valuable information concerning the
Socialist Worker's Party, any data obtained from that
source should be paraphrased when submitted to the Bureau
or other offices in memorandum form suitable for dissemination.
45
The Bureau apparently required such paraphrasing because
it contemplated the dissemination outside the FBI of data
obtained from surreptitious entries.
The material photographed by the FBI included membership
lists, photographs of members, contribution lists, and
correspondence concerning members' public participation
in United States presidential campaigns, academic debates,
and civil rights and antiwar organizing. For example,
the following items were among those photographed by Bureau
agents at the national offices of the Socialist Worker's
Party:
-- "Items of correspondence between SWP National
Headquarters and various branches detailing plans to obtain
petition signatures to get on the ballot in 1960 elections."
-- "Letter sent by [SWP leader] to President Eisenhower
(1/21/60) against loyalty program." 46
-- "SWP members active in trade unions -- identity
of union and members disclosed." 47
-- "Letter dated 6/1/60 setting forth the topic
of speech to be given by . . . SWP Vice-Presidential candidate
at opening of tour at Detroit, and listing complete schedule
of cities to be visited thereafter in nationwide tour."
48
-- "Correspondence identifying contributors to SWP
election campaign fund."
-- "Letter proposing picket activity at Democratic
Convention." 49
-- "List naming all students at each session of
Trotsky School from beginning in 1947 to the present."
50
-- "Letter setting forth that [deleted] was cancelling
balance of her national tour because her husband . . .
had suffered a stroke." 51
-- "Correspondence re arrangements for [deleted]
to debate at Yale University."
-- "Letter announcing death of [deleted] . . . and
plans for NY memorial meeting . . . ." 52
-- "Letter of Young Socialist Alliance (YSA) of
5/23/61 organizing Northern support for Southern students
in integration struggle." 53
-- "Note from SWP member . . . requesting new key
to headquarters so he could continue delivering newspapers
there when he finished work at night." 54
-- "Letter ... detailing health status of Nat'l
Chairman." 55
-- "Several current items of correspondence to and
from SWP members active in integration activities in Georgia."
56
-- "Letters from National office to all branches
re March on Washington." 57
-- "Voluminous correspondence from many areas re
SWP getting on the ballot in 1964 Presidential elections."
58
-- "Complete tour schedule for SWP Presidential
candidates Sept.-Oct. 1964." 59
-- "Plans of [deleted] to write a book." 60
-- "Reports on SWP participation in March on Washington
(against the Vietnam War)." 61
-- "Correspondence re new veterans anti-war organization."
-- "Current photographs of SWP members."
-- "Correspondence re new anti-war front in Cleveland."
62
-- "Confidential address book of National-international
Trotskyites." 63
In addition to these items, the FBI obtained information
about other activities of SWP members, leaders and affiliates,
including publishing plans, financial status, international
travels and contacts, legal defense strategy, 64 and the
political conflicts within the party. For example, information
about "proposed legal maneuvers" by a committee
to aid indicted Young Socialist Alliance members in Bloomington,
Indiana, was obtained by the FBI.
The number of documents photographed during a single
operation reached as high as 220 65 and regularly was
above 100.
Ill. FBI POLICY AND THE QUESTION OF AUTHORIZATION OUTSIDE
THE BUREAU
A. FBI Policy: The Hoover Termination of "Black
Bag Jobs''
After apparently approving hundreds of warrantless surreptitious
entries, J. Edgar Hoover changed the FBI policy in 1966.
In response to a Domestic Intelligence Division memorandum
of July 19, 1966, outlining the procedures used for approval
and reporting on "black bag jobs," Hoover appended
the following handwritten note: "No more such techniques
must be used." 67 Six months later, Hoover formalized
this directive in a memorandum:
I note that requests are still being made by Bureau officials
for the use of "black bag" techniques. I have
previously indicated that I do not intend to approve any
such requests in the future, and, consequently, no such
recommendations should be submitted for approval of such
matters. This practice, which includes also surreptitious
entrances upon premises of any kind, will not meet with
my approval in the future. 68
The FBI's accounting of surreptitious entries indicated
that Hoover's prohibition applied only to "black
bag jobs." Break ins to install microphones were
not banned. 69 Moreover, Hoover's order did not finally
terminate "black bag jobs" against foreign targets.
70 Despite Hoover's directive, there is evidence that
at least one "black bag job" directed against
a "domestic subversive target" took place between
1966 and 1968. 71
B. Presidential and Attorney General Authorization
1. The Huston Plan: Proposal to Lift the Ban
In 1970, a plan for the inter-agency coordination of
domestic intelligence activity was presented to President
Nixon. The "Huston Plan" proposed, among other
things, that restrictions against "black bag"
entries "should be modified to permit selective use
of this technique against foreign intelligence targets
and other urgent and high priority internal security targets."
72 Presidential assistant Tom Charles Huston, the proponent
of this plan, which received the support of many high
officials in the intelligence community, was of the opinion
that "black bag jobs" were illegal but should
be utilized nonetheless:
Use of this technique is clearly illegal: it amounts
to burglary. It is also highly risky and could result
in great embarrassment if exposed. However, it is also
the most fruitful tool and can produce the type of intelligence
which cannot be obtained in any other fashion.
The FBI, in Mr. Hoover's younger days, used to conduct
such operations with great success and with no exposure.
The information secured was invaluable. ...
Surreptitious entry of facilities occupied by subversive
elements can turn up information about identities, methods
of operation, and other invaluable investigative information
which is not otherwise obtainable. This technique would
be particularly helpful if used against the Weathermen
and Black Panthers. 73
In a memorandum to Attorney General John Mitchell, J.
Edgar Hoover expressed his "clear-cut opposition
to the lifting of the various restraints" proposed
in the Huston Plan, but he also indicated a willingness
to participate in the plan if it were adopted:
[T]he FBI is prepared to implement the instructions of
the White House at your direction. Of course, we would
continue to seek your specific authorization, where appropriate,
to utilize the various sensitive investigative techniques
involved in individual cases. 74
Although President Nixon granted approval for the Huston
Plan, he revoked this approval within five days, in part
because of Hoover's opposition. 75
2. Justice Department Policy
(a) Historical Development. -- There is no indication
that any Attorney General was informed of FBI surreptitious
entries for domestic intelligence purposes other than
microphone installation. 71
During World War II Alexander Holtzoff, a Special Assistant
to the Attorney General, submitted a memorandum to Director
Hoover on the "admissibility of evidence obtained
by trash covers or microphone surveillance," in response
to a series of hypothetical questions posed by an FBI
official. Holtzoff declared flatly:
The secret taking or abstraction of papers or other property
from the premises without force is equivalent to an illegal
search and seizure, if the taking or abstraction is effected
by a representative of the United States. Consequently,
such papers or other articles are inadmissible as against
a person whose rights have been violated, i.e., the person
in control of the premises from which the papers or other
property has been taken, Gouled v. United States, 255
U.S. 298.
However, Holtzoff interpreted prevailing court decisions
as permitting a "microphone installation ... where
an actual trespass is committed." He stated that:
evidence so obtained should be admissible, although no
precise case decided by the courts involving such a situation
has been found. The basic principle governing the situation
is ... that microphone surveillance is not equivalent
to an illegal search and seizure, Goldman v. United States,
316 U.S. 129. 77
In fact, the Goldman decision did not support Holtzoff's
conclusion, since the microphone surveillance in the case
did not involve trespass; and the Court did not address
the question of microphone surveillance accomplished by
surreptitious entry.
In 1952, Attorney General J. Howard McGrath advised Director
Hoover that he could not "authorize the installation
of a microphone involving a trespass under existing law."
McGrath added, "Such surveillances as involve trespass
are in the area of the Fourth Amendment, and evidence
so obtained and from leads so obtained, is inadmissible."
78
A 1954 directive from Attorney General Brownell provided
at least the color of legal authority for microphone surveillance
involving trespass, but did not deal with surreptitious
entries for other purposes. 79
The Justice Department policy toward warrantless surreptitious
entry for the purpose of microphone installation apparently
remained unchanged until 1965, when Attorney General Katzenbach
required the FBI to seek his prior approval for microphone
surveillances involving trespass, and he restricted the
purpose, of such operations to the collection of intelligence
affecting the national security. 80
(b) FBI Briefings of Attorney General Robert Kennedy.
-- In 1961, the FBI reiterated to the Justice Department
that the Bureau's practice was to install microphones,
sometimes by trespass, without informing the Justice Department.
In May 1961, Byron White, Deputy Attorney General under
Robert Kennedy, was told by Director Hoover that:
in the internal security field we are utilizing microphone
surveillances on a restricted basis even though trespass
is necessary to assist in uncovering the activity of [foreign]
intelligence agents and Communist Party leaders. . . .
In the interest of national safety, microphone surveillances
are also utilized on a restricted basis, even though trespass
is necessary, in uncovering major criminal activities.
81
A memorandum by Courtney Evans, Assistant Director of
the FBI for the Special Investigative Division, indicates
that he discussed microphones in "organized crime
cases" with Attorney General Kennedy in July 1961:
It was pointed out to the Attorney General that we had
taken action with regard to the use of microphones in
(organized crime) cases and . . . we were nevertheless
utilizing them in all instances where this was technically
feasible and where valuable information might be expected.
The strong objections to the utilization of telephone
taps as contrasted to microphone surveillances was stressed.
The Attorney General stated he recognized the reasons
why telephone taps should be restricted to national-defense-type
cases and he was pleased we had been using microphone
surveillances, where these objections do not apply, wherever
possible in organized crime matters. 82
Evans testified that the purpose of this meeting was
to secure the Attorney General's approval for the leasing
of a telephone line from a private company for a wiretap
operation. 83
Evans stated that he was "purposely vague"
in this conversation and did not describe to the Attorney
General the kinds of technical surveillance the Bureau
was using or their methods for installing surveillance
devices. 84 He explained that his "purposely vague"
briefing was consistent with Director Hoover's policy.
Mr. EVANS. Mainly because of a feeling the Director had
expressed, that one shouldn't discuss confidential techniques
used by the Bureau any more than was absolutely necessary.
Question. It was your understanding that the admonition
applied to the Attorney General as well as all other persons
outside the Bureau?
Mr. EVANS. It was my understanding that if exceptions
were to be made, the Director was going to make them himself.
85
Evans, who was responsible for the FBI's liaison with
Attorney General Kennedy, testified that it was "entirely
possible" that the Attorney General did not understand
that surreptitious entries might be used in connection
with the "microphone surveillance" and leased
telephone line taps which he subsequently authorized.
Evans himself understood that the operation for which
the Attorney General's signature was obtained "could
have in some instances" included microphone installation
by means of surreptitious entry, although Evans indicated
that there were several methods by which the Bureau could
make a "legal entry to a location and effect a microphone
installation. 86
(c) Present Policy. -- The Justice Department under Attorney
General Edward H. Levi has addressed, for the first time,
the legal issues arising from "black bag jobs."
This occurred in a statement submitted by Acting Assistant
Attorney General John C. Keeney in the appeal of the conviction
of John Ehrlichman for the break-in by the White House
"plumbers" at the office of Daniel Ellsberg's
psychiatrist. Assessing the "plumbers" break-in,
the Justice Department declared:
The physical entry here was plainly unlawful . . . because
the search was not controlled as we have suggested it
must be, there was no proper authorization, there was
no delegation to a proper officer, and there was no sufficient
predicate for the choice of the particular premises invaded.
87
At the same time, however, the Justice Department defended
the President's constitutional authority to conduct warrantless
surreptitious entries in limited circumstances and with
proper executive authorization:
It is the position of the Department that such activities
must be very carefully controlled. There must be solid
reason to believe that foreign espionage or intelligence
is involved. In addition, the intrusion into any zone
of expected privacy must be kept to the minimum and there
must be personal authorization by the President or the
Attorney General. The Department believes that activities
so controlled are lawful under the Fourth Amendment.
In regard to warrantless searches related to foreign
espionage or intelligence, the Department does not believe
there is a constitutional difference between searches
conducted by wiretapping and those involving physical
entries into private premises. One form of search is no
less serious than another. It is and has long been the
Department's view that warrantless searches involving
physical entries into private premises are justified.
88
The Justice Department and the FBI have not terminated
the use of warrantless surreptitious entry for electronic
surveillance purposes in cases of "foreign espionage
or intelligence". Warrantless surreptitious entry
for other forms of search is not presently being conducted
but, as indicated in the Justice Department statement,
has not been ruled out as a matter of policy in foreign
intelligence cases.
The FBI has stated that "microphone surveillances
have been continued and in some instances physical entry
of the premises has been necessary" against foreign
counterintelligence targets. In addition, "a small
number" of surreptitious entries which apparently
did not involve microphone installation "were conducted
in connection with foreign counterintelligence investigations
having grave impact on the security of the nation."
Entries for the purpose of installing electronic surveillance
devices have also provided an opportunity to conduct other
forms of search. The Bureau has stated:
Based on available records and discussions with FBI personnel,
it has been determined that in connection with microphone
surveillances in the United States, there have been occasions
when observations and recordings were made of pertinent
information contained within the premises. 89
According to the FBI, this "opportunity" has
been "exploited" exclusively against foreign
agents. 90
Warrantless surreptitious entries against American citizens
who have "no significant connection with a foreign
power, its agents or agencies" are undoubtedly unconstitutional.
92 The constitutional issues arising from warrantless
surreptitious entries against foreign agents within the
United States have not been definitely resolved by the
courts. The Committee recommends, as a matter of policy
that all governmental search and seizure "should
be conducted only upon authority of a judicial warrant"
issued in narrowly defined circumstances and with procedural
safeguards "to minimize the acquisition and retention
of non-foreign intelligence information about Americans."
93
APPENDIX 1
SURREPTITIOUS ENTRIES FOR THE INSTALLATION OF MICROPHONES
IN CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS
1. Entries
since 1960 2. Separate
targets each year
since 1960
1960 11 11
1961 69 49
1962 106 84
1963 84 66
1964 83 67
1965 41 35
1966 0 0
1967 0 0
1968 0 0
Subtotal 394 312
According to the FBI, the following entries were conducted
pursuant to judicial warrants issued under title III of
the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Actof 1968:
1. Entries 2. Separate
targets each year
1969 3 3
1970 8 8
1971 7 6
1972 19 18
1973 27 20
1974 22 21
1975 11 8
Total 491 396
1 FBI memorandum from the FBI to Senate Select Committee,
Oct. 17, 1975, re request pertaining to surreptitious
entries for installation of electronic surveillance.
Footnotes:
1 Memorandum from FBI to Senate select Committee, 1/13/76.
Throughout this report, the FBI's term "black bag
job" will be used, as in FBI memoranda, to refer
to warrantless surreptitious entries for purposes other
than microphone installation, e.g., physical search and
photographing or seizing documents. The term "surreptitious
entries" will be used to refer to all warrantless
entries by the FBI, including both "black bag jobs"
and entries for the purpose of microphone installation.
Surreptitious entries of either type often involved breaking
and entering the targeted premises. See the Committee's
report on FBI Electronic Surveillance for a general treatment
of microphone installations.
1a Memorandum from FBI to Senate Select Committee, 10/17/75,
p. 3.
2 Memorandum from J. Edgar Hoover to Attorney General
Mitchell, 7/27/70.
3 Memorandum from William C. Sullivan to C. D. DeLoach,
7/19/66. This memorandum was written by Section Chief
F. J. Baumgardner and approved on Sullivan's behalf by
his principal deputy, J. A. Sizoo.
4 Memorandum from Brownell to Hoover, 5/20/54.
5 U.S. v. Ehrlichman, 376 F. Supp. 29, 31 (1974).
6 U.S. v. Ehrlichman, 376 F. Supp. 29,31 (1974).
7 Ibid, p. 33, Gesell wrote: "Defendants contend
that, over the last few years, the courts have begun to
carve out an exception to this traditional rule for purely
intelligence-gathering searches deemed necessary for the
conduct of foreign affairs. However, the cases cited are
carefully limited to the issue of wiretapping, a relatively
nonintrusive search, United States v. Butenko, 494 F.2d
593 (3rd Cir. 1974) ; United States v. Brown, 484 F.2d
418 (5th Cir. 1973) ; Zweibon v. Mitchell, 363 F. Supp.
936 (D.D.C. 1973), and the Supreme Court has reserved
judgment in this unsettled area. United States v. United
States District Court, 407 U.S. 297, 322 n. 20, 92 S.
Ct. 2125, 32 L. Ed. 2d 752 (1972)." Ibid, p. 33.
8 U.S. v. Ehrlichman, supra at 33, n. 3 citing U.S. v.
U.S. District Court, supra at 313. This decision, known
as the Keith case, after its author, Judge Damon Keith,
is discussed in detail in the report on FBI Electronic
Surveillance.
9 U.S. v. Ehrlichman, supra, at 34.
10 Ibid, pp. 33-34. The Ehrlichman decision has been
appealed and the Justice Department has filed a memorandum
in the Court of Appeals contesting Judge Gesell's ruling
on the President's power. The Justice Department's position
is set forth later in this report at pp. 369-370.
11 Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347 (1967).
12 For example, Goldman v. United States, 316 U.S. 129
(1942).
13 Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. at 351, 360.
14 389 U.S., at 358 n. 23.
15 Although the Supreme Court has never held that there
is such an exception, at least two lower courts have so
held in the foreign intelligence and counterintelligence
field. United States v. Butenko, 494 F.2d 593 (3rd Cir.
1974), United States v. Brown, 484 F.2d 418 (5th Cir.
1973) ; but cf., Zweibon v. Mitchell, 516 F.2d 594 (D.C.
Cir. 1975, en banc).
16 Levi testimony, 11/6/75, Hearings, Vol. 5, p. 97.
17 Memorandum. from W. C. Sullivan to C. D. DeLoach,
7/19/66, Subject: "Black Bag" Jobs.
18 Memorandum from the FBI to the Senate Select Committee,
September 23, 1975.
19 Staff summary of interview with former FBI Agent 1,
9/5/75, p. 3.
20 Ibid, p. 4.
21 Ibid, p. 4.
22 Staff Summary, FBI Special Agent 1 Interview, 9/5/75,
p. 4; FBI Special Agent 1 Interview, 6/27/75, p. 4.
23 Staff Summary, FBI Special Agent 2 Interview, 9/10/75,
p. 2.
23a FBI Special Agent 1 Interview, 9/5/75.
The Committee did not conduct a detailed examination
of all operational techniques and procedures involved
in surreptitious entry operations.
24 Unaddressed memorandum from J. Edgar Hoover, Director,
6/22/64.
25 FBI Special Agent 2 Interview, 9/10/75. pp. 1-4.
26 FBI Special Agent 1 Interview, 9/5/75, p. 5.
27 FBI Special Agent 1 Interview, 9/5/75, pp. 5, 8.
28 Memorandum from the FBI to the Select Committee, 9/23/75,
p. 1. The FBI compiled a list of the "domestic subversive"
targets, based "upon recollections of Special Agents
who have knowledge of such activities, and review of those
files identified by recollection as being targets of surreptitious
entries." The Bureau admits that this list is "incomplete."
The Select Committee has reviewed this list and has determined
that the specific targets listed fell within what was
understood at the time of the surreptitious entries to
be the "domestic subversive" category, as defined
in FBI Manual Section 87 as permissible targets for full
investigations (committee Staff Memorandum, September
25, 1975.) [See the discussion of the overbreadth of FBI
full investigations in the Report on 'the Development
of FBI Domestic Intelligence Investigations; 1916-1976.]
29 Memorandum from W. C. Sullivan to C. D. DeLoach, 7/19/66,
p. 2.
30 Memorandum from W. C. Sullivan to C. D. DeLoach, p.
2.
31 Staff Summary, Interview of Former FBI Special Agent
3, 5/21/75, p. 4.
32 Memorandum from the FBI to Senate Select Committee,
9/23/75.
33 Memorandum from the FBI to Senate Select Committee,
1/13/76.
34 Memorandum from the FBI to Senate Select Committee,
1/13/76.
35 Sixth Supplementary Response to Requests for Production
of Documents of Defendant Director of the Federal Bureau
of Investigations, Socialist Workers Party, et al, v.
Attorney General, et al, 73 Civ. 3160 (S.D.N.Y.), 3/24/76.
36 Memorandum from the FBI to Senate Select Committee,
10/17/75, p. 3. The FBI reporting of these statistics
does not make clear how many of these installations, if
any, were included in the estimate of the number of surreptitious
entries cited above.
37 Memorandum from the FBI to Senate Select Committee,
10/17/75, pp. 4-5. See Appendix for the complete yearly
breakdown of these statistics.
38 These materials have been described by the FBI as
a response to the Socialist Workers Party request for
"documents relating to any intelligence gathering
burglaries perpetrated by or with knowledge of the F.B.I.
against the S.W.P., the Y.S.A. (Young Socialist Alliance)
or anyone suspected to be a leader or member thereof."
(Sixth Supplementary Response to Requests for Production
of Documents of Defendant Director of the Federal Bureau
of Investigation, Socialist Worker's Party, et al. v.
Attorney General, et al., 73 Civ. 3160 (S.D.N.Y.), 3/24/76.)
39 This method of filing of documents relating to the
operational details of surreptitious entries should be
distinguished from the "Do Not File" procedure
which led to the destruction of documents recording the
authorization of surreptitious entries.
40 Memoranda from New York Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
6/23/60 and 9/26/62.
41 Several memoranda describe the "security aspects"
of the FBI agents' plans for securing entry into the headquarters
of the Young Socialist Alliance. One reads as follows:
"The headquarters entrance is a store front on the
street level. There is only one entrance to the headquarters.
The door is locked with a Master padlock only. . . .
"The entrance to the building is located approximately
75 feet on the north side of [the] Street from Second
Avenue. The headquarters is a street front located adjacent
to the entrance to the apartment building. . . . East
of the headquarters store front are located 4 similar
store fronts within the same building. These are described
as follows from the headquarters going east: New York
Telephone Company; empty store front; law office; empty
store front.
"There are 4 floors of apartment dwellings above
these store fronts in the building.
"There is a street light located on the north side
of [the] Street, approximately five store fronts east
of the headquarters. Inasmuch as the nearest other street
light is located on the southeast corner of [the street]
and Second [street], the immediate area of the headquarters
is reasonably dark in evening hours.
"Previous spot checks on numerous occasions have
shown that there is a very limited amount of pedestrian
and automobile traffic after 12 Midnight. These spot checks
have also shown that the lights of the apartments in the
building are darkened.
"Entrance will be made between the hours of 12 Midnight
and 4 AM, June 30, 1960." (Memorandum from FBI Headquarters
to New York Field Office, 6/23/60.)
When the YSA headquarters moved in 1962, the "security
aspects" of the FBI's entry plans were re-evaluated:
"This building is a three-story edifice approximately
25 feet wide by 75 feet in depth. The second and third
floors are loft premises. The first floor is occupied
by [a paint company]. The entrance to the second and third
floors of the building is a door located beside the paint
store. This door leads directly to stair flights to the
second and third floors and is secured with a cylinder
lock. This entrance does not connect with the paint store
on the street level. . . .
"The third floor loft of this building is occupied
by an artist . . . who maintains a studio. This individual
pursues his profession, together with holding occasional
art classes, in this loft. This activity transpires during
the daytime. [The artist] does not reside on these premises
and is not known to frequent the premises in the evening
hours.
"The YSA Headquarters are located on the second
floor left space. The YSA moved into these headquarters
on 9/21/62. Numerous spot checks of the area have shown
very limited pedestrian and automobile traffic after midnight.
The buildings adjacent to this location . . . on both
sides of the street, are commercial establishments and
lofts, and contain no residence.
"It has been ascertained that the paint store at
this building closes at 6:00 p.m. and that all of the
commercial establishments in this area close business
between 5:00 and 6:00 p.m. . . .
"Entrance will be made between the hours of twelve
midnight and 4:00 a.m., on 9/28/62." Memorandum from
FBI Headquarters to New York Field Office, 9/26/62.
42 Memorandum from Los Angeles Field Office to New York
Field Office, 6/16/60; memorandum from Los Angeles Field
Office to FBI Headquarters, 6/17/60.
43 For example, memorandum from Los Angeles Field Office
to New York Field Office, 6/16/60. (Deletion by FBI.)
44 For example, memorandum from Los Angeles Field Office
to FBI Headquarters, 6/17/60.
45 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to Los Angeles Field
Office, 7/1/60. (Deletion by FBI.)
46 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 1/29/60.
47 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 3/25/60.
48 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 6/3/60.
49 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 7/11/60.
50 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 9/26/60.
51 memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 10/24/60.
52 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 12/16/60.
53 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 6/6/61.
54 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 9/15/61.
55 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 11/3/61.
56 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 8/24/62.
57 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 8/16/63.
58 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 2/10/64.
59 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 7/10/61.
60 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 10/30/64.
61 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 4/30/65.
62 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 12/17/65.
63 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters, to New York Field
Office, 4/22/66.
64 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 7/10/64; memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New
York Field Office, 5/14/65; memorandum from FBI Headquarters
to New York Field Office, 7/16/65. 65 Memorandum from
FBI Headquarters to New York Field Office, 4/30/65.
66 omitted in original.
67 Memorandum from W. C. Sullivan to C. DeLoach, 7/19/66,
p. 3.
68 Memorandum from Hoover to Tolson and DeLoach, 1/6/67.
Hoover's motivation for issuing this order in 1966 is
unclear. His order came during the same period in which
the Bureau's mail opening programs were halted. (See the
report on "CIA and FBI Mail Opening", Sec. Ill
-- Termination of the FBI Mail Opening Programs, for a
discussion of the possible motivation for Hoover's termination
of both mail opening activities and surreptitious entries.)
One agent who participated in "black bag" operations
indicated that he was unaware of any previous FBI opposition
to them. (FBI Special Agent 1 Interview, 9/5/75, p. 8)
69 Memorandum from Director, FBI, to Attorney General,
6/26/75, p. 1. Even today Justice Department policy permits
warrantless surreptitious entries, both to install microphones
and for other purposes in the area of "foreign espionage
or intelligence." See pp. 369-371.
70 See pp. 369-371.
71 Memorandum from the FBI to Senate Select Committee,
9/23/75.
72 Memorandum from Tom Charles Huston to H. R. Haldeman,
7/70, p. 2.
73 Memorandum from Huston to H.R. Haldeman, 7/70, p.
3.
74 memorandum from Hoover to Mitchell, 7/27/70. p. 3.
75 See report on The Huston Plan: Sec. VI, Rescission
of the Huston Plan: A Time for Reconsideration.
76 For a full treatment of memoranda between FBI Director
Hoover and successive Attorneys General on microphone
installation policy and an analysis of legal developments
in the field of electronic surveillance, see Report on
FBI Electronic Surveillance.
77 Memorandum from Holtzoff to Hoover, 7/4/44. Holtzoff
also advised the FBI that it could legally use cooperating
sources or informants to obtain access to private materials:
"Where a person (A), having possession of the membership
records of an organization, is told by a person (B) who
is a member of the same organization but who is working
in conjunction with the Bureau, that a particular place
is a safe one in which to leave the membership records
of the organization. After the records have been so left
agents of this Bureau who have the legal permission of
(B) enter the premises where the material was left, obtain
the records and remove them to another place where they
are completely photographed. The records are then returned
to their original place where they are subsequently obtained
by the depositor (A). It can be assured that both the
Agent and the person (B) can testify on behalf of the
Government.
The foregoing evidence is probably admissible. No entry
to the subject's premises was involved, nor was the property
abstracted from him. He left it voluntarily in the possession
of (B) whose possession was lawful and who thereafter
was in a position to grant permission to Bureau Agents
to photograph it."
78 Memorandum from McGrath to Hoover, 2/26/52.
79 Memorandum from Brownell to Hoover, 5/20/54. See full
discussion in Report on FBI Electronic Surveillance.
80 Memorandum from Katzenbach to Hoover, 9/27/65. See
full discussion in Report on FBI Electronic Surveillance.
81 Memorandum from Director, FBI, to Attorney General
Byron White, 5/4/61.
82 Memorandum from C. A. Evans to A. Belmont, 7/7/71.
83 Courtney Evans, testimony, 12/1/75, p. 24.
84 Evans, 12/1/75, p. 25.
85 Evans, 12/1/75, pp. 25,29.
86 Evans, 12/1/75, p. 31; Memorandum from Evans to Belmont,
8/17/61.
87 Department of Justice Letter, Acting Assistant Attorney
General John C. Keeney to Hugh E. Kline, Clerk of U.S.
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, 5/9/75.
88 Letter from Keeney to Hugh Kline, clerk of U.S. Court
of Appeals for the District of Columbia, 5/9/75.
89 Memorandum from the FBI to Senate Select Committee,
7/16/75.
90 Memorandum from the FBI to Senate Select Committee,
6/26/75.
In contrast to the surreptitious entries conducted against
"domestic subversive" targets until 1966, one
such foreign intelligence operation studied by the Committee
demonstrated an FBI pattern of conscientiously obtaining
authorization from executive branch officials outside
the Bureau: the CIA initially requested the aid of the
FBI in performing the operation; the FBI secured State
Department approval and then submitted the plan to the
Attorney General for his authorization. (Committee staff
summary of FBI memoranda.)
92 407 U.S. 297, 309, n. 8 (1972). The Keith case did
not specifically address the question of the legality
of "black bag jobs." However, by holding that
the President's constitutional powers do not enable him
to authorize warrantless electronic surveillance of domestic
organizations, the logic of the decision compels the conclusion
that warrantless surreptitious entries are unconstitutional.
93 Senate Select Committee Report on "Intelligence
Activities and the Rights of Americans," Recommendations
51-54, pp. 327-328.
The Committee made the following recommendation to restrict
the use of the technique of warrantless surreptitious
entry (referred to as "unauthorized entry" --
entry unauthorized by the target):
"Unauthorized entry should be conducted only upon
judicial warrant issued on probable cause to believe that
the place to be searched contains evidence of a crime,
except unauthorized entry, including surreptitious entry,
against foreigners who are officers, employees, or conscious
agents of a foreign power should be permitted upon judicial
warrant under the standards which apply to electronic
surveillance described in Recommendation 52." (Recommendation
54, P. 328.)
This recommendation on "unauthorized entry"
incorporates by reference the standards set forth in Recommendation
52 on electronic surveillance:
"All non-consensual electronic surveillance should
be conducted pursuant to judicial warrants issued under
authority of Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and
Safe Streets Act of 1968.
"The Act should be amended to provide, with respect
to electronic surveillance of foreigners in the United
States, that a warrant may issue if
"(a) There is probable cause that the target is
an officer, employee or conscions agent of a foreign power.
"(b) The Attorney General has certified that the
surveillance is likely to reveal information necessary
to the protection of the nation against actual or potential
attack or other hostile acts of force 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 hostile foreign intelligence
activity.
"(c) With respect to any such electronic surveillance,
the judge should adopt procedures to minimize the acquisition
and retention of non-foreign intelligence information
about Americans.
"(d) Such electronic surveillance should be exempt
from the disclosure requirements of Title III of the 1968
Act as to foreigners generally and as to Americans if
they are involved in hostile foreign intelligence activity
(except where disclosure is called for in connection with
the defense in the case of criminal prosecution)."
(Recommendation 54, pp. 327-28.)
It should be noted that there are well established exceptions
to the warrant requirement for searches in exigent circumstances.
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