Senate Judiciary Committee
Authorizes Chairman Leahy
To Issue Subpoenas
Related To
Administration’s Domestic Surveillance Program
Bipartisan Vote For Authorization
To Compel
Justice
Dept., Admin. Officials To Provide Legal Analysis For Program
WASHINGTON (Thursday, June
21) -- The Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday authorized Chairman
Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), in consultation with Ranking Member Arlen Specter
(R-Pa.), to issue subpoenas for documents relating to the authorization
and legal justification for the Administration's warrantless wiretapping
program.
In a bipartisan vote of 13-3,
the Committee authorized Chairman Leahy to issue subpoenas to the
Department of Justice and to the Executive Office of the President
relating to information the Committee has requested several times since
the program was first revealed in December 2005. Ranking Member Specter
and Senators Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) and Charles Grassley (R-Iowa)
supported the authorization,
along with all Democratic members of the Committee.
“This Committee has sought
information about the authorization of and legal justification for this
program time and again – in letters, at hearings, and in written
questions,” Leahy said.
“Yet this Administration has rebuffed all requests. Last
month, Senator Specter and I wrote again to Attorney General Gonzales
requesting these documents. We have still received no documents and no
explanation.
This stonewalling is unacceptable and it must end. If the
Administration will not carry out its responsibility to provide
information to this Committee without a subpoena, we will issue one.”
Below is the text of
the subpoena authorization as well as Chairman Leahy’s statement from
the Committee’s Executive Business Meeting earlier today.
Also
available is a May 21st letter from Chairman Leahy and
Ranking Member Specter reiterating earlier requests for information
about the legal justification for the domestic surveillance program from
the Department of Justice.
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Text
of Subpoena Authorization –
Motion Of Senator Patrick
Leahy
Chairman, Committee On The Judiciary
June 21, 2007
Be it resolved that, pursuant
to its authority under Rules 25 and 26 of the Standing Rules of the
Senate, the Senate Committee on the Judiciary hereby authorizes its
Chairman, in consultation with the
Ranking Member, to issue subpoenas to: 1) the Honorable Alberto
Gonzales, Attorney General of the United States, and 2) the Custodian of
Records at the Executive Office of the President, to provide the
Committee with all documents related to the Committee's investigation
into the Administration's operation of a warrantless domestic
surveillance program outside of the provisions of the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act, and its legal analysis for this program.
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Statement Of Sen. Patrick Leahy,
Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee,
On Authorization For Subpoenas
In Connection With The Investigation Of The Legal Basis
For The Warrantless Electronic Surveillance Program
Executive Business Meeting
June 21, 2007


Today I will ask the Committee to provide
the authorization to issue subpoenas for documents relating to the
National Security Agency’s warrantless domestic electronic surveillance
program. This is an authorization I first circulated two weeks ago and
that was formally held over by Senator Kyl last week.
For more than five years this
Administration intercepted conversations of Americans in the United
States without obtaining court orders under the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act (FISA). This program became public in December 2005
and, soon after, the President confirmed its existence. Since then,
this Committee has sought information about the authorization of and
legal justification for this program time and again – in letters, at
hearings, and in written questions. Yet, this Administration has
rebuffed all requests. Last month, Senator Specter and I wrote again to
Attorney General Gonzales requesting these documents. We have still
received no documents and no explanation.
This stonewalling is unacceptable and it
must end. If the Administration will not carry out its responsibility
to provide information to this Committee without a subpoena, we will
issue one. If we do not, we are letting this Administration decide
whether and how the Congress will do its job. The Judiciary Committee
is charged with overseeing and legislating on constitutional protections
and the civil liberties of Americans, and the warrantless electronic
surveillance program directly impacts these responsibilities.
Instead of responses, our attempts to get
straight answers from the Administration have met with stubborn refusals
of our legitimate oversight requests. This is information we need, we
should have, and whose production is long overdue. We are asking not
for intimate operational details but for the legal justifications and
analysis underlying these programs that affect the rights of every
American.
When we held our first hearing with
Attorney General Gonzales about this program, on February 6, 2006, he
refused to answer simple questions or discuss anything more than “those
facts the President has publicly confirmed.” He defended the program as
“necessary” and “very narrowly tailored,” but he refused to back up
these self-serving conclusions. He asserted that the Authorization for
the Use of Military Force passed after September 11 authorized this
warrantless wiretapping of Americans, yet would not even tell me
when the Justice Department
had come up with this particular legal justification. This pattern of
evasion has continued with every hearing, every letter, and every
written response.
Last month, we heard deeply troubling
testimony from former Deputy Attorney General James Comey about a
dispute over the legality of the warrantless electronic surveillance
program. When the senior Department of Justice leadership refused to
certify the legality of the program, the White House – including the
then-Counsel to the President, Mr. Gonzales – attempted to strong-arm an
ailing Attorney General Ashcroft in his hospital bed. When that did not
work, they decided simply to ignore the law and authorize the program
anyway. Only the prospect of a mass resignation of virtually every
senior officer in the Department of Justice, including the FBI Director,
caused the President to relent.
Yet, when Attorney General Gonzales was
asked at that February 6, 2006, hearing before this Committee whether
senior Justice Department officials expressed reservations about the NSA
warrantless surveillance program, he responded, “I do not believe that
these DOJ officials . . . had concerns about this program.” The
Committee and the American people deserve better.
There is no legitimate argument for
withholding these materials from this Committee. There is abundant
precedent for providing Executive Branch legal analysis to the Congress,
particularly to this Committee. Indeed, volumes upon volumes of
Attorney General and Office of Legal Counsel legal opinions have even
been made public. Sometimes in previous Administrations a particularly
sensitive subject has resulted in an accommodation between branches on
the manner in which it was shared. But this Administration has no
policy of accommodation. Its policy is to deny and to stonewall.
Neither is the fact that the matters involve classified information a
reason to withhold these legal documents. Congress receives sensitive
classified information regularly.
Why has this Administration been so
steadfast in its refusal? Deputy Attorney General Comey’s account
suggests that some of these documents would reveal an Administration
perfectly willing to ignore the law. Is that what they are hiding?
When the Department of Justice’s own
Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) began an internal
investigation into the conduct of Department of Justice attorneys who
approved this program, Attorney General Gonzales and the White House
shut them down by denying them the necessary clearances. The head of
OPR noted when he was forced to stand down that in its 31-year history
OPR had never before been prevented from pursuing an investigation.
Senators Durbin, Kennedy, Feingold, and Whitehouse have diligently
sought documents on this series of events many times, but, again, have
received no response.
Finally, I will note that this
Administration is now asking Congress to make sweeping changes to FISA –
a crucial national security authority over which this Committee has
jurisdiction. The White House wants us to agree to far-reaching changes
to that authority, but the Administration stubbornly refuses to let us
know how it interprets the current law and the perceived flaws that led
it to operate a program outside of the process established by FISA for
more than five years. This legal analysis is information the Committee
must have in order to make informed legislative decisions. As the
Supreme Court said in McGrain v.
Daugherty, “[a] legislative body cannot legislate wisely or
effectively in the absence of information respecting the conditions
which the legislation is intended to affect or change.”
Whatever the reason for the stonewalling,
this Committee has stumbled in the dark for too long, attempting to do
its job without the information it needs. We need this information to
carry out our responsibilities under the Constitution. Unfortunately,
it has become clear that we will not get it without a subpoena. I urge
the adoption of the subpoena authorization.
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