History of Refusals by Executive Branch Officials to Provide Information Demanded by Congress ( 1982 )


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  •          History of Refusals by Executive Branch Officials to
    Provide Information Demanded by Congress
    [The follow ing two m em oranda, prepared by the Office of Legal Counsel at the request of the
    Attorney G eneral, describe instances since the founding of the Republic in w hich officials in the
    Executive Branch have refused to disclose inform ation o r produce docum ents requested by
    Congress. T he first m em orandum , dated D ecem ber 14, 1982, sets forth exam ples of situations in
    which a President has personally directed that inform ation be w ithheld, relying on the doctrine of
    executive privilege. T he second m em orandum , dated January 27, 1983, docum ents incidents
    w here the Attorney G eneral or som e other executive official refused to provide inform ation or
    d o cu m en ts to C o n g ress in situations involving law en fo rc em en t, security, o r p ersonnel
    investigations. . . .]
    PART I— Presidential Invocations of Executive Privilege
    Vis-a-Vis Congress
    December 14, 1982
    MEMORANDUM FOR THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    This memorandum briefly describes those incidents in which a President
    personally directed the withholding of information from Congress.1Included are
    incidents in which a President found it necessary to withhold specific documents
    or information, as well as general directives of a President concerning the
    withholding of information from Congress.
    No effort has been made to catalogue the numerous instances in which
    information was withheld from Congress by executive officers other than the
    President; nor does this survey discuss the countless examples of full disclosure
    by the Executive. The objective of the memorandum is neither to show how
    frequently the Executive Branch has refused congressional requests for informa­
    tion, nor to demonstrate how often an accommodation between the branches has
    been achieved. Rather, the memorandum seeks to show that presidentially
    1 Although an attempt has been made to be as thorough as possible, no claim is made that the following list is
    comprehensive. In this regard, we note Deputy Assistant Attorney General Mary Lawton’s statement in a
    memorandum to Rep. William S. Moorhead, dated Apr 25, 1973.
    In response to your request . . I regret that it is not physically possible to furnish you with a
    comprehensive list o f presidential refusals of information to Congress. To give you all of the
    instances of such refusals since the beginning of the Republic would require an amount of historical
    research which the Office of Legal Counsel lacks the resources for handling. In addition, there is a
    categorization problem of distinguishing the relatively few instances of exercise of Executive
    Privilege per se [i.e . a refusal to disclose by the President personally] from the many instances of
    agreed accommodations . . for nonappearance of witnesses, nondisclosure or partial disclosure.
    751
    mandated refusals to disclose information to Congress—though infrequent— are
    by no means unprecedented acts of this or any other Administration.
    1. Washington Administration
    St. C lair Incident
    On March 27, 1792, the House of Representatives established a congressional
    committee to investigate the failure of General St. Clair’s military expedition
    against the Indians. The House authorized the committee “ to call for such
    persons, papers, and records, as may be necessary to assist their inquiries.” 2
    The committee subsequently asked the President for those papers pertaining to
    the St. Clair campaign. Since this was the first occasion in which Congress had
    established a committee to investigate the performance of the Executive and had
    authorized it to request documents from the President, and wishing “ that so far as
    it should become a precedent, it should be rightly conducted,” 3 President
    Washington held a meeting with his Cabinet, attended by Jefferson, Hamilton,
    Randolph and Knox. Jefferson described the conclusions reached by the Nation’s
    first Cabinet:
    We had all considered, and were of one mind, first, that the House
    was an inquest, and therefore might institute inquiries. Second,
    that it might call for papers generally. Third, that the Executive
    ought to communicate such papers as the public good would
    perm it, and ought to refuse those, the disclosure c f which would
    injure the public: consequently were to exercise a discretion.
    Fourth, that neither the committees nor House had a right to call
    on the Head of a Department, who and whose papers were under
    the President alone; but that the committee should instruct their
    chairman to move the House to address the President.141
    Although the Cabinet “agreed in this case, that there was not a paper which
    might not be properly produced,” 5 the President apparently felt it advisable
    nevertheless to negotiate with Congress a non-confrontational resolution of the
    problem. Jefferson thereupon agreed to speak individually to members of the
    House committee in orderto “bring them by persuasion into the right channel.” 6
    Jefferson’s conciliation efforts were successful, for on April 4, 1792, the House
    resolved,
    that the President of the United States be requested to cause the
    proper officers to lay before this House such papers of a public
    2 3 Annals of Cong. 493 (1792)
    3 1 The Writings of Thomas Jefferson 303 (Lipscomb ed , 1905).
    4 
    Id. at 3
    03-04 (emphasis added)
    5 
    Id. at 3
    05.
    6 
    Id. See generally
    Younger, “Congressional Investigations and Executive Secrecy. A Study in the Separation c f
    P o w e r s 20 U Pitt L Rev. 755 , 757 (1959).
    752
    nature, in the Executive Department, as may be necessary to the
    investigation of the causes of the failure of the late expedition
    under Major General St. Clair.171
    Correspondence Involving United States Minister to France
    In 1794, the Senate requested by resolution correspondence between the
    United States Minister to France and the Republic of France, and between the
    Minister and the State Department.8 President Washington submitted certain of
    the correspondence requested, but withheld “ those particulars which, in my
    judgment, for public considerations, ought not to be communicated.” 9
    The Jay Treaty
    On March 24, 1796, the House of Representatives requested by resolution that
    the President disclose to the House his instructions to the United States Minister
    who negotiated the Jay Treaty with Great Britain, along with correspondence and
    documents relative to that Treaty. Implementation of the Treaty apparently
    required an appropriation which the House was called upon to vote.10 President
    Washington denied the House’s right to demand and receive any of the papers
    requested. Though the President had provided “ all the papers affecting the
    negotiation with Great Britain” to the Senate in the course of its deliberations on
    the Treaty, Washington determined that the House had no legitimate claim to
    those papers:
    The nature of foreign negotiations requires caution; and their
    success must often depend on secrecy; and even, when brought to
    a conclusion, a full disclosure of all the measures, demands, or
    eventual concessions which may have been proposed or con­
    templated would be extremely impolitic: for this might have
    pernicious influence on future negotiations; or produce immediate
    inconveniences, perhaps danger and mischief, in relation to other
    Powers. The necessity of such caution and secrecy was one cogent
    reason for vesting the power of making Treaties in the President
    with the advice and consent of the Senate; the principle on which
    the body was formed confining it to a small number of members.
    Toadmit, then, aright in the House of Representatives to demand,
    and to have, as a matter of course, all the papers respecting a
    negotiation with a foreign Power, would be to establish a dan­
    gerous precedent.
    7 3 Annals of Cong. 536 (1792) (emphasis added).
    8 Senate Journal, 3d Cong , 1st Sess. 42 (1794).
    9 1 J Richardson, Messages and F^pers of the Presidents 152 (1896)
    10 See W. Binkley, President and Congress 53 -4 (3d rev. 1947).
    753
    Subsequently, the House debated Washington’s refusal for a full month, but
    took no action." It is highly instructive, however, that during the debate Rep.
    James Madison, although disagreeing with President Washington’s message in
    some respects, acknowledged on the House floor,
    that the Executive had a right, under a due responsibility, also, to
    withhold information, when of a nature that did not permit a
    disclosure of it at the time. And if the refusal of the President had
    been founded simply upon a representation, that the state of the
    business within his department, and the contents of the papers
    asked for, required it, although he might have regretted the
    refusal, he should have been little disposed to criticize it.1121
    2. Adams Administration
    D iplom atic M aterial Concerning United States Representatives to France
    In 1798 the House of Representatives by resolution requested from the Presi­
    dent documents containing instructions to, and dispatches from, representatives
    of the United States to France.13 On April 3, 1798, President Adams transmitted
    some of that material to both Houses, but omitted “ some names and a few
    expessions descriptive of the persons” involved.14
    3. Jefferson Administration
    The Burr Conspiracy
    In January 1807, the House of Representatives by resolution requested that the
    President
    lay before this House any information in possession of the Ex­
    ecutive, except such as he may deem the public welfare to require
    not to be disclosed, touching any illegal combination of private
    individuals against the peace and safety of the Union, or any
    military expedition planned by such individuals against the ter­
    ritories of any Power in amity with the United States; together
    11 5 Annals o f Cong. 760 (1796); see 
    id. at 426-783.
    The House did pass two resolutions, one declaring that the
    House had authonty to consider the expediency of carrying a treaty into effect, the second that the House need not
    state the purpose for which it required information from the Executive. See 
    id. at 771,
    782-83.
    12 
    Id. at 773.
       13 House Journal, 5th C ong., 2d Sess. 249 (1798).
    14 1 
    Richardson, supra, at 265
    .
    754
    with the measures which the Executive has pursued and proposes
    to take for suppressing or defeating the same.1'51
    President Jefferson replied by detailing the activities of Aaron Burr, but declined
    to mention the names of other alleged participants. Jefferson declared:
    The mass of what I have received in the course of these transac­
    tions is voluminous, but little has been given under the sanction of
    an oath so as to constitute formal and legal evidence. It is chiefly
    in the form of letters, often containing such a mixture of rumors,
    conjectures, and suspicions as renders it difficult to sift out the
    real facts and unadvisable to hazard more than general outlines,
    strengthened by concurrent information or the particular cred­
    ibility of the relator. In this state of the evidence, delivered
    sometimes, too, under the restriction of private confidence, nei­
    ther safety nor justice will permit the exposing names, except that
    of the principal actor, whose guilt is placed beyond question.1'61
    4. Monroe Administration
    Stewart Incident
    In 1825, the House of Representatives requested by resolution that the Presi­
    dent provide the Congress with documents concerning charges against certain
    naval officers, so far as he deemed such disclosure compatible with the public
    interest.17 President Monroe refused to submit the documents, stating:
    In consequence of several charges which have been alleged
    against Commodore Stewart, touching his conduct while com­
    15 16 Annals of Cong. 336 (1806) (emphasis added). Professor Raoul Berger has argued that the exception clause
    in the House resolution refutes any argument that Jefferson's subsequent withholding of documents was based on an
    executive privilege R. BeTger, Executive Privilege: A Constitutional Myth 179-81 (1974) (descnbing Jefferson’s
    explanation for withholding information as “ gratuitous” ). See also Cox, Executive Privilege, 122 U f t L. Rev.
    1383, 1397-98 (1974) (arguing that those historical examples of executive withholding which are preceded by a
    congressional authorization to withhold do not qualify as examples o f executive pnvilege) One could just as well
    read the exception clause, however, as an early illustration of congressional recognition of the executive privilege.
    See § 1, C , supra, note 19 infra.
    Moreover, it is highly unlikely Jefferson actually relied upon the exception clause as the basis for withholding
    information from the House, given the conclusions he reached while serving in President Washington’s Cabinet, see
    § 1, 
    A, supra
    , and given the views he expressed in a letter to the United States District Attorney for Virginia, who
    was then in charge of the Burr prosecution*
    Reserving the necessary right o f the President of the U.S. to decide, independently c f all other
    authority, what papers, coming to him as President, the public interests perm it to be communicated,
    & to whom, I assure you of my readiness under that restriction, voluntanly to furnish . . whatever
    the purposes of justice may require.
    9 The W ntings of Thomas Jefferson 55 (P. Ford ed 1898) Professor Berger also fails to note other occasions on
    which President Jefferson let it be known that he regarded himself free to withhold certain “ confidential”
    information “ given for my information in the discharge of my executive functions, and which my duties & the
    public interest forbid me to make public.” Id . at 63-64 (certificate to the court in Burr prosecution).
    16 1 
    Richardson, supra, at 412
       17 House Journal, 18th Cong , 2d Sess. 102-03 (1825).
    755
    manding the squadron of the United States [at] sea, it has been
    deemed proper to suspend him from duty and to subject him to
    trial on those charges. It appearing also that some of those charges
    have been communicated to the Department by Mr. Prevost,
    political agent at this time of the United States at Peru . . . and that
    charges have likewise been made against him by citizens of the
    United States engaged in commerce in that quarter, it has been
    thought equally just and proper that he should attend here, as well
    to furnish the evidence in his possession applicable to the charges
    exhibited against Commodore Stewart as to answer such as have
    been exhibited against himself.
    In this stage the publication of those documents might tend to
    excite prejudices which might operate to the injury of both. It is
    important that the public servants in every station should perform
    their duty with fidelity, according to the injunctions of the law and
    the orders of the Executive in fulfillment thereof. It is peculiarly
    so that this should be done by the commanders of our squadrons,
    especially on distant seas, and by political agents who represent
    the United States with foreign powers. . . . It is due to their rights
    and to the character of the Government that they be not censured
    without just cause, which cannot be ascertained until, on a view of
    the charges, they are heard in their defense, and after a thorough
    and impartial investigation of their conduct. Under these circum­
    stances it is thought that a communication at this time of those
    documents would not comport with the public interest nor with
    what is due to the parties concerned."81
    5. Jackson Administration19
    C orrespondence Between United States and the Republic c f Buenos Aires
    On December 28, 1832, President Jackson refused to provide the House of
    Representatives with the copies o f correspondence between the United States and
    the Republic of Buenos Aires and instructions given to the United States charge
    d ’affairs there, that it had requested. President Jackson replied that since negotia­
    18 2 
    Richardson, supra, at 278
    .
    19 Former Columbia Law Professor and current Federal District Judge Abraham D. Sofaer has noted:
    Available historical sources reveal that, although much information was provided voluntarily, all
    Presidents from Washington to Jackson withheld large quantities of material, especially diplomatic
    correspondence, from their voluntary transmittals. Congress frequently requested the information
    thus withheld, and Presidents usually complied. Rar more often than not, requests for information on
    sensitive issues contained qualifications authonzing the President to withhold material the disclosure
    of which might prejudice the nation. Qualifications o f information requests dealing with such
    important issues as the Burr conspiracy exemplify a tradition of legislative deference and trust,
    surely worth considerable weight in the debate about the discretion inherently possessed by the
    President.
    Sofaer, Book Review, 88 Harv. L Rev 281, 289(1974) (reviewing R. Berger, Executive Privilege: A Constitutional
    Myth)
    756
    tions with the Republic had only been suspended and not broken off, it would
    “ not be consistent with the public interest to communicate the correspondence
    and instructions requested by the House so long as the negotiation shall be
    pending.” 20
    Negotiations with Great Britain Over the Northeastern Boundary
    In response to the Senate’s request for information regarding negotiations
    carried on with Great Britain over the Northeastern Boundary, and particularly
    with respect to the Maine settlement, President Jackson informed the Senate on
    March 2, 1833, that negotiations with Great Britain were in progress and that in
    the meantime it was “ not deemed compatible with the public interest” to
    communicate the conditional arrangements made with the State of Maine.21 The
    House of Representatives also requested information concerning the settlement
    of the Northeastern Boundary, and on January 6,1835, President Jackson advised
    the House that it would be “ incompatible with the public interest” to communi­
    cate such information.22 However, the President did furnish this information to
    the Senate at the next session, stating that “ as the negotiation was undertaken
    under the special advice of the Senate, I deem it improper to withhold the
    information which the body has requested, submitting to them to decide whether
    it will be expedient to publish the correspondence before the negotiation has been
    closed.” 23
    Bank o f the United States Document
    On December 12, 1833, President Jackson responded to a resolution of the
    Senate requesting him to provide “ ‘a copy of the paper which has been published,
    and which purports to have been read by him to the heads of the Executive
    Departments . . . relating to the removal of the deposits of the public money from
    the Bank of the United States and its offices.’” President Jackson declined to
    provide the document on the ground that the Legislature had no constitutional
    authority to “ require of me an account of any communication, either verbally or
    in writing, made to the heads of Departments acting as a Cabinet council . . .
    [nor] might I be required to detail to the Senate the free and private conversations
    I have held with those officers on any subject relating to their duties and my
    own.” 24
    Correspondence with France
    On February 6, 1835, President Jackson furnished extracts from the dispatches
    between the United States and the government of France that the House of
    20 2 
    Richardson, supra, at 608-09
     21 
    Id. at 637.
     22 3 
    Richardson, supra, at 127
     23 
    Id. at 229-30.
     24 
    Id. at 3
    6.
    757
    Representatives had requested, declining to send the full documents on the
    ground that it was not at that time in the public interest to do so.25
    Removal c f the Surveyor General
    On February 10, 1835, President Jackson sent a message to the Senate
    declining to comply with its resolution which requested the production of copies
    of charges made to the President against Gideon Fitz, the Surveyor General,
    which resulted in Mr. Fitz’s removal from office. The resolution based the
    Senate’s need for the documents on: 1) the need to nominate Mr. Fitz’s successor,
    and 2) a pending Senate investigation into fraud in the sale of lands.
    The President refused to furnish the documents on the ground that they related
    to subjects which belonged exclusively to the functions of the Executive. In
    addition, the President said that disclosure of the documents would subject the
    motives of the President in removing Mr. Fitz to the review of the Senate when not
    sitting as judges in an impeachment proceeding, and that the Executive’s acquies­
    cence in the Fitz case might be used by Congress as a precedent for similar and
    repeated requests. The President said:
    This is another of those calls for information made upon me by
    the Senate which have, in my judgment, either related to the
    subjects exclusively belonging to the executive department or
    otherwise encroached on the constitutional powers of the Ex­
    ecutive. Without conceding the right of the Senate to make either
    of these requests, I have yet, for the various reasons heretofore
    assigned in my several replies, deemed it expedient to comply
    with several of them. It is now, however, my solemn conviction
    that I ought no longer, from any motive nor in any degree, to yield
    to these unconstitutional demands. Their continued repetition
    imposes on m e, as the representative and trustee of the American
    people, the painful but imperious duty of resisting to the utmost
    any further encroachment on the rights of the Executive.
    . . . . Such a result, if acquiesced in, would ultimately subject
    the independent constitutional action of the Executive in a matter
    of great national concernment to the domination and control of the
    Senate. . . .
    I therefore decline a compliance with so much of the resolution
    of the Senate as requests “ copies of the charges, if any,” in
    relation to Mr. Fitz, and in doing so must be distinctly understood
    as neither affirming nor denying that any such charges were
    made. . . .|261
    25 
    Id. at 129
     26 
    Id. at 132-34.
    758
    6. lyier Administration
    Correspondence Regarding Negotiations with Great Britain Over the
    Northeastern Boundary
    In response to the House of Representatives’ request for all correspondence not
    previously communicated regarding the United States’ negotiation with Great
    Britain over the Northeastern Boundary, President Tyler withheld the documents
    and sent a February 26, 1842, message to Congress saying that “ in my judgment
    no communication could be made by me at this time on the subject of its
    resolution without detriment or danger to the public interests.” 27
    Information Regarding Executive Appointments
    On March 23, 1842, President Tyler refused to comply with a House resolution
    requesting that the President and the heads of departments communicate the
    names of such Members of the 26th and 27th Congresses who had applied for
    office, what office, and whether such application had been made in person, in
    writing, or through friends. President Tyler refused to disclose such information
    on the ground that it was by nature confidential, the disclosure of which could
    serve no “ useful object connected with a sound and constitutional administration
    of the Government in any of its branches,” and further, that
    compliance with the resolution which has been transmitted to me
    would be a surrender of duties and powers which the Constitution
    has conferred exclusively on the Executive, and therefore such
    compliance can not be made by me nor by the heads of Depart­
    ments by my direction. The appointing power, so far as it is
    bestowed on the President by the Constitution, is conferred with­
    out reserve or qualification. The reason for the appointment and
    the responsibility of the appointment rest with him alone. I can
    not perceive anywhere in the Constitution of the United States any
    right conferred on the House of Representatives to hear the
    reasons which an applicant may urge for an appointment to office
    under the executive department, or any duty resting upon the
    House of Representatives by which it may become responsible for
    any such appointment.1281
    Treaty to Suppress Slave Trade
    In response to the House of Representatives’ request to furnish, “ ‘so far as
    may be compatible with the public interest,’” a copy of the quintuple treaty
    between the five powers of Europe for the suppression of the African slave trade
    27 4 
    Richardson, supra, at 101
    .
    28 i'd. at 105-06.
    759
    and certain correspondence with respect to it, President Tyler replied on June 20,
    1842, that he had not received an authentic copy of the treaty and that “ [i]n regard
    to the other papers requested, although it is my hope and expectation that it will
    be proper and convenient at an early day to lay them before C ongress,. . . yet in
    my opinion a communication o f them to the House of Representatives at this time
    would not be compatible with the public interest.” 29
    Information Regarding Steps Taken to Obtain Recognition c f American
    Claim s by Mexican Government
    The Senate had requested the President to provide information, “ so far as he
    might deem it compatible with the public interest,” concerning what measures, if
    any, had been taken to obtain recognition by the Mexican government of certain
    claims of American citizens. President Tyler replied on August 23, 1842, that
    “ [i]n the present state of the correspondence and of the relations between the two
    Governments on these important subjects it is not deemed consistent with the
    public interest to communicate the information requested. The business engages
    earnest attention, and will be made the subject of a full communication to
    Congress at the earliest practicable period.” 30
    N egotiations Regarding Northwestern Boundary
    In response to the Senate’s request for information concerning the United
    States’ negotiations with Great Britain for settlement of the Northwest Boundary,
    President Tyler replied on December 23, 1842, that measures had been taken to
    settle the dispute and that “under these circumstances I do not deem it consistent
    with the public interest to make any communication on the subject.” 31
    H itchcock Investigation
    On January 31, 1843, President Tyler invoked executive privilege against a
    request by the House of Representatives to the Secretary of War to produce
    investigative reports submitted to the Secretary by Lieutenant Colonel Hitchcock
    concerning his investigations into frauds perpetrated against the Cherokee Indi­
    ans. The Secretary of War consulted with the President and under the latter’s
    direction informed the House that negotiations were then pending with the
    Indians for settlement of their claims, and that in the opinion of the President and
    the Department, publication of the report at that time would be inconsistent with
    the public interest. The Secretary of War further stated that the reports sought by
    the House contained information which was obtained by Colonel Hitchcock
    through ex p a r t e questioning of persons whose statements were not made under
    oath, and which implicated persons who had no opportunity to contradict the
    29Id at 158
    30Id. at 178-79.
    31 Id at 210-11
    760
    allegations or provide any explanation. The Secretary of War expressed the
    opinion that to publicize such statements at that time would be unjust to the
    persons mentioned , and would defeat the object of the inquiry. He also stated that
    the Department had not yet been given a sufficient opportunity to pursue the
    investigation, to call the affected parties for explanations, or to make any other
    determinations regarding the matter. The President stated:
    The injunction of the Constitution that the President ‘shall take
    care that the laws be faithfully executed,’ necessarily confers an
    authority, commensurate with the obligation imposed to inquire
    into the manner in which all public agents perform the duties
    assigned to them by law. To be effective these inquiries must often
    be confidential. They may result in the collection of truth or of
    falsehood, or they may be incomplete and may require further
    prosecution. To maintain that the President can exercise no discre­
    tion as to the time in which the matters thus collected shall be
    promulgated . . . would deprive him at once of the means of
    performing one of the most salutary duties of his office. . . . To
    require from the Executive the transfer of this discretion to a
    coordinate branch of the Government is equivalent to the denial of
    its possession by him and would render him dependent upon that
    branch in the performance of a duty purely executive.1321
    In response to the House’s claim that it had a right to demand from the
    Executive and heads of departments any information in the possession of the
    Executive which pertained to subjects under the House’s deliberations, President
    Tyler stated that the House could not exercise a right to call upon the Executive for
    information, even though it related to a subject of the deliberations of the House,
    if, by so doing, it would interfere with the discretion of the Executive.33
    Instructions to N avy Officers
    In response to the House of Representatives’ request for copies of instructions
    given to British and American commanding officers who were charged, pursuant
    to a treaty with Great Britain, with suppressing the slave trade off the coast of
    Africa, President Tyler sent a May 18, 1844, message to the House declining to
    provide the information on the ground that to do so would be incompatible with
    the public interest.34
    Foreign Correspondence Regarding the Ownership and Occupation of
    Oregon Territory
    In June 1844, President Tyler sent a message to the Senate explaining his
    refusal to comply with its request for documents relating to the ownership and
    32 
    Id. at 222.
     33 Id at 222-23.
    34 
    Id. at 3
    20.
    761
    occupation of the Oregon Territory. “ [I]n the present state of the subject-matter, ”
    the President wrote, “ it is deemed inexpedient to communicate the information
    requested. . . .” 35
    7. Polk Administration
    Foreign Relations Expenditures c f Prior Administration
    In 1846, President Polk refused to provide the House of Representatives with
    confidential memoranda regarding certain expenses incurred for the conduct of
    foreign relations during the Tyler Administration. In refusing to comply with a
    House resolution requesting documentation of these expenses, President Polk
    stated that where a past President had placed a seal of confidentiality upon an
    expenditure, and the matter was terminated before he entered office,
    [a]n important question arises, whether a subsequent Presi­
    dent, either voluntarily o r at the request of one branch of Con­
    gress, can without a violation of the spirit of the law revise the acts
    of his predecessor and expose to public view that which he had
    determined should not be “ made public.” If not a matter of strict
    duty, it would certainly be a safe general rule that this should not
    be done. Indeed, it may well happen, and probably would hap­
    pen, that the President for the time being would not be in posses­
    sion of the information upon which his predecessor acted, and
    could not, therefore, have the means of judging whether he had
    exercised his discretion wisely or not.1361
    Polk concluded that the President making an expenditure, deemed by him
    confidential, may, if he chooses, keep all the information and evidence upon
    which he acts in his own possession. If, for the information of his successors, he
    leaves some evidence upon which he acts in the confidential files of one of the
    executive departm ents, such evidence does not thereby become publicly
    available.
    M ilitary and D iplom atic Instructions with Respect to Mexico
    On January 12, 1848, President Polk sent a message to the House transmitting
    reports of the Secretaries of State, War, and the Navy in response to a con­
    gressional resolution seeking copies of all instructions given to American mili­
    tary and diplomatic officers relating to the return of President General Lopez de
    Santa Anna to Mexico. President Polk stated that he was transmitting the
    documents,
    » 
    Id. at 3
    27.
    »/Id. at 602.
    
     39 
    Id. at 679.
     40 5 
    Richardson, supra, at 139-40
    .
    764
    Documents Involving American Claims Against the Mexican Government
    In response to a Senate request for papers and proofs on file with the Executive
    Branch regarding the claim of Samuel A. Belden & Co. against the Mexican
    government, on May 29, 1852, President Fillmore forwarded all documents save
    those of a diplomatic nature, and stated that because the claim was still being
    negotiated it was therefore “ not deemed expedient . . . to make public the
    documents which have been reserved.”41
    Sandwich Islands
    On August 14, 1852, President Fillmore refused to provide information to the
    Senate regarding a proposition made by the King of the Sandwich Islands to
    transfer the islands to the United States, as not comporting with the public
    interest.42
    9. Buchanan Administration
    Law Enforcement Files
    On January 11,1859, President Buchanan responded to a request by the Senate
    for information relating to the landing of a slave ship on the coast of Georgia. The
    President transmitted a report from the Attorney General which stated that an
    offense had been committed and that measures were being taken to enforce the
    law. However, he concurred with the opinion of the Attorney General that “ it
    would be incompatible with the public interest at this time to communicate the
    correspondence with the officers of the Government at Savannah or the instruc­
    tions which they have received.”43
    10. Lincoln Administration
    Fort McHenry Arrests
    On July 27, 1861, President Lincoln refused to provide to the House of
    Representatives documents revealing the grounds, reasons, and evidence upon
    which Baltimore police commissioners were arrested at Fort McHenry for the
    reason that disclosure at that time would be incompatible with the public
    interest.44
    Arrest c f Brigadier General Stone
    On May 1, 1862, President Lincoln refused to comply with a request by the
    Senate for more particular information regarding the evidence leading to the
    4 ,/Id. at 534.
    
     44 6 
    Richardson, supra, at 33
    .
    765
    arrest of Brigadier General Stone on the ground that the determination to arrest
    and imprison him was made upon the evidence and in the interest of public safety,
    and that disclosure of more particular information was incompatible with the
    public interest.45
    N egotiations with N ew Granada
    The House of Representatives had requested the Secretary of State to commu­
    nicate to it, “ if not in his judgment incompatible with the public interest,”
    information concerning American relations with New Granada, and what nego­
    tiations, if any, had been had with General Herran of that country. President
    Lincoln, on January 14, 1863, replied to the resolution giving a resume of
    developments in New Granada. However, with respect to official communica­
    tions with General Herran, he stated that “ [n]o definitive measure or proceeding
    has resulted from these communications, and a communication of them at present
    would not, in my judgment, be compatible with the public interest.”46
    11. Johnson Administration
    M ilitary Correspondence
    On January 26, 1866, President Johnson refused to disclose to the Senate
    certain communications from military officers regarding violations of neutrality
    on the Rio Grande on the ground that such disclosure would not be consistent
    with the public interest.47
    Confinement c f Jefferson Davis
    On February 9 ,1 8 6 6 , President Johnson refused, on advice from the Secretary
    of War and the Attorney General, to comply with a request by the House of
    Representatives for a report by the Judge Advocate General concerning the
    confinement of Jefferson Davis, and others, on the ground that disclosure would
    not be in the public interest.48
    N ew Orleans Investigations
    On May 2, 1866, President Johnson refused to provide the House of Repre­
    sentatives with a copy of a report that it had requested concerning General
    Smith’s and James T. Brady’s New Orleans investigations, citing the public
    interest in nondisclosure.49
    45 
    Id. at 74.
     *M .     at   147. 149.
    47 
    Id. at 3
    76-77.
    48 
    Id. at 3
    78.
    49 
    Id. at 3
    85.
    766
    12. Grant Administration
    Performance c f Executive Functions
    In April 1876, President Grant was requested by the House of Representatives
    to provide information which would show whether any executive acts or duties
    had been performed away from Washington, the lawfully established seat of
    government . (This was an attempt to embarrass the President for having spent the
    hot summer at Long Beach.) On May 4, 1876, the President refused on the
    ground that the Constitution did not give the House of Representatives authority
    to inquire of the President where he performed his executive functions, and that,
    moreover, the House’s lawful demands on the Executive were limited to informa­
    tion necessary for the proper discharge of its powers of legislation or
    impeachment.50
    13. Cleveland Administration
    Dismissal of D istrict Attorney
    In response to a resolution by the Senate requesting the Attorney General to
    provide certain documents concerning the administration of the United States
    Attorney’s Office (then District Attorney) for the Middle District of Alabama,
    and the President’s dismissal of the incumbent district attorney, President
    Cleveland sent a message on March 1, 1886, to the Senate stating that he was
    withholding the requested documents because they contained information ad­
    dressed to him and to the Attorney General by private citizens concerning the
    former district attorney, and that the documents related to an act (the suspension
    and removal of an Executive Branch official) which was exclusively a discretion­
    ary executive function.51
    “Rebecca ” Schooner Incident
    On February 26, 1887, President Cleveland refused to provide the Senate with
    information that it requested regarding the seizure and sale of the American
    schooner Rebecca at Tampico, and the resignation of the Minister of the United
    States to Mexico, on the ground that publication of the requested correspondence
    would be inconsistent with the public interest.52
    14. Harrison Administration
    International Conference on the Use c f Silver
    In response to the Senate’s request for information regarding the steps taken
    toward holding an international conference on the use of silver, President Har­
    50 7 
    Richardson, supra, at 361-66
     51 8 
    Richardson, supra, at 375
    .
    52 
    Id. at 538
    767
    rison stated on April 26, 1892, that “ in my opinion it would not be compatible
    with the public interest to lay before the Senate at this time the information
    requested, but that at the earliest moment after definite information can properly
    be given all the facts and any correspondence that may take place will be
    submitted to Congress.” 53
    15. Cleveland Administration
    Cuba M atters
    In response to a request by the House of Representatives for copies of all
    correspondence relating to affairs in Cuba since February 1895, President
    Cleveland transmitted on February 11, 1896, a communication from the Secre­
    tary of State and such portions of the correspondence requested as he deemed it
    not inconsistent with the public interest to communicate.54
    Correspondence with Spain
    On May 23, 1896, President Cleveland transmitted to the Senate a requested
    copy of the protocol with Spain, but withheld copies of certain correspondence
    with Spain on the ground that it would be incompatible with the public good to
    furnish such correspondence.55
    16. McKinley Administration
    War D epartm ent Investigations
    In response to a request made by the Senate to the Secretary of War for a report
    on the War Department’s investigation into receipts and expenditures of Cuban
    funds, President McKinley informed the Senate on January 3, 1901, that it was
    not deemed compatible with the public interest to transmit the document at that
    tim e.56
    17. Theodore Roosevelt Administration
    United States Steel Proceedings
    On January 4, 1909, the Senate passed a resolution directing the Attorney
    General to inform the Senate whether certain legal proceedings had been in­
    stituted against the United States Steel Corporation, and if not, the reasons for its
    non-action. A request was also made for the opinions of the Attorney General
    regarding this matter, if any had been written. President Roosevelt replied to the
    Senate on January 6, 1909, stating that he had been orally advised by the Attorney
    33 9 
    Richardson, supra, at 238-39
    .
    54 
    Id. at 666.
     53 
    Id. at 669.
     56 9 
    Richardson, supra, at 6458
    (Bur of N at’i Literature ed. 1911).
    768
    General that there were insufficient grounds for instituting legal action against
    U.S. Steel, and that he had
    instructed the Attorney General not to respond to that portion of
    the resolution which calls for a statement of his reasons for
    nonaction. I have done so because I do not conceive it to be within
    the authority of the Senate to give directions of this character to
    the head of an executive department, or to demand from him
    reasons for his action. Heads of the executive departments are
    subject to the Constitution, and to the laws passed by the Con­
    gress in pursuance of the Constitution, and to the directions of the
    President of the United States, but to no other direction
    whatever.1571
    When the Senate was unable to get the documents from the Attorney General,
    it subpoenaed the Commissioner of Corporations to produce all papers and
    documents regarding U.S. Steel in his possession. The Commissioner reporteid
    the request to the President, who sought an opinion from Attorney General
    Bonaparte regarding the Commission’s statutory obligation to withhold such
    information except upon instruction by the President. The Attorney General
    advised the Commissioner that the discretion to make public the requested
    documents was vested in the President and that, accordingly, he should turn over
    all documents within the scope of the subpoena to the President.58 The Commis­
    sioner did so, and President Roosevelt then informed the Judiciary Committee
    that he had the papers and that the only way the Senate could get them was
    through his impeachment. President Roosevelt also explained that some of the
    facts were given to the government under a pledge of secrecy and that the
    government had an obligation to keep its word.59
    18. Coolidge Administration
    Bureau c f Internal Revenue Oversight
    On April 11, 1924, President Coolidge responded to a request by the Senate
    for a list of all companies in which the Secretary of the Treasury “ was interested”
    (for the purpose of investigating their tax returns) as a part of a general oversight
    investigation of the Bureau of Internal Revenue. President Coolidge refused to
    provide the information on the ground that it was confidential information the
    disclosure of which would be detrimental to public service, calling the Senate’s
    investigation an “ unwarranted intrusion,” bom of a desire other than to secure
    information for legitimate legislative purposes.60
    ” 43    Cong Rec. 528 (1909).
    58 27   Op Att’y Gen. 150 (1909).
    59 E    Corwin, The President— Office and Powers 429 (1957).
    60 65   Cong. Rec 6087 (1924)
    769
    19. Hoover Administration
    London Treaty Letters
    On July 11, 1930, President Hoover responded to a request addressed to the
    Secretary of State from the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for certain
    confidential telegrams and letters leading up to the London Naval Conference and
    the London Treaty. The Committee members had been permitted to see the
    documents with the understanding that the information contained therein would
    be kept confidential. The Committee asserted its right to have full and free access
    to all records touching on the negotiation of the Treaty, basing its right on the
    constitutional prerogative of the Senate in the treaty-making process. In his
    message to the Senate, President Hoover pointed out that there were a great many
    informal statements and reports which were given to the government in con­
    fidence. The Executive was under a duty, in order to maintain amicable relations
    with other nations, not to publicize every negotiating position and statement
    which preceded final agreement on the Treaty. He stated that the Executive must
    not be guilty of a breach of trust, nor violate the invariable practice of nations. “ In
    view of this, I believe that to further comply with the above resolution would be
    incompatible with the public interest.” 61
    20. Franklin D. Roosevelt Administration
    FBI Records
    On April 30, 1941, at the direction of President Roosevelt, Attorney General
    Jackson wrote the Chairman of the House Committee on Naval Affairs, stating
    his refusal to provide the Committee with certain FBI records. Attorney General
    Jackson declared that “ all investigative reports are confidential documents of the
    executive department of the Government, to aid in the duty laid upon the
    President by the Constitution to ‘take care that the laws be faithfully executed,’
    and that congressional or public access to them would not be in the public
    interest.” 62
    R adio Intelligence Material
    Pursuant to a January 19, 1943, resolution, a House Select Committee to
    Investigate the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) subpoenaed the
    Director of the Bureau of the Budget on July 9, 1943, to appear before the Select
    Committee and produce Bureau files and correspondence dealing with requests
    by the War and Navy Departments to the President for an executive order
    transferring the functions of the FCC ’s Radio Intelligence Division to the military
    establishments. The Director refused, citing Attorney General Jackson’s letter of
    61 S. D oc No. 216, 71st C ong , Special Sess 2 (1930).
    62 40 Op. A tt’y G en 45, 46 (1941)
    770
    April 30, 1941, and a presidential instruction that the Bureau’s files were to be
    kept confidential, because disclosure would not com port with the public
    interest.63
    In addition, the Acting Secretary of War was requested to appear before the
    Select Committee to produce documents bearing on the War and Navy Depart­
    ments’ requests to the President and to bring several Army officers to testify. The
    Acting Secretary refused to provide the documents on the President’s direction,
    on the ground that doing so would be incompatible with the public interest, and,
    pursuant to his own judgment, refused to permit the Army officers to appear.64
    FBI Records
    In 1944, the same Select Committee subpoenaed the Director of the Federal
    Bureau of Investigation to testify concerning fingerprint records and activities at
    Pearl Harbor, and also to identify a certain document which he was alleged to
    have received in the course of his duties. The Director refused to give testimony
    or to exhibit a copy of the President’s directive requiring him, in the interest of
    national security, to refrain from testifying or disclosing the contents of the
    Bureau’s files.65 Attorney General Biddle wrote a letter to the Select Committee,
    dated January 22, 1944, informing the Committee that communications between
    the President and the heads of departments were privileged and not subject to
    inquiry by congressional committees.66
    21. TVuman Administration
    Condon Incident
    In March 1948, the House Committee on Un-American Activities issued a
    subpoena to the Secretary of Commerce directing him to appear before the
    Committee and to bring with him a letter from the Director of the FBI concerning
    the loyalty of Dr. Condon, Director of the National Bureau of Standards, together
    with all records, files, and transcripts of the loyalty board relating to Dr. Condon.
    On March 13, 1948, President Truman issued a directive providing for the
    confidentiality of all loyalty files and requiring that all requests for such files from
    sources outside the Executive Branch be referred to the Office of the President,
    for such response as the President may determine. 13 Fed. Reg. 1359 (1948). At a
    press conference held on April 22, 1948, President Truman indicated that he
    would not comply with the request to turn the papers over to the Committee.67
    Steelman Incident
    On March 6, 1948, during an investigation into a strike among employees of
    Government Services, Inc., a subcommittee of the Hcuse Committee on Educa­
    63 Study and Investigation c f the Federal Communications Commission Hearings on H Res. 21 Before the House
    Select Comm, to Investigate the Federal Communications Commission, 78th C ong., 1st Sess 37 (1943).
    64 Id at 67-68
    65 
    Id. at 2304-05.
      66 Id at 2337-39
    67 The Public lepers of the Presidents, Harry S Truman, 1948, at 228
    771
    tion and Labor issued a subpoena to presidential assistant John R. Steelman.68
    Mr. Steelman returned the subpoena to the chairman of the subcommittee on the
    ground that “ the President directed me, in view of my duties as his assistant, not
    to appear before your subcommittee.” 69 The minority report to H.R. Rep. No.
    1595 commented on Mr. Steelman’s failure to comply with the subpoena as
    follows:
    the purpose of the subpoena on Mr. Steelman was to obtain from
    him the contents of any oral or written communications which had
    been made to him by the President with reference to the strike
    prevailing in the restaurants maintained by Government Services,
    Inc. I cannot believe that any congressional committee is entitled
    to make that kind of investigation into the private conferences of
    the President with one of his principal aides. I cannot conceive
    that the views of a Senator or Congressman on a pending bill may
    be extracted by a court or by a congressional committee by
    subpoenaing the Senator’s of [sic] Congressman’s administrative
    assistant or any other assistant, secretary, or confidential em­
    ployee. Likewise, I regard it as a direct invasion of the Executive’s
    prerogative to invade the work and time of his assistant in this
    manner. Dr. Steelman I think acted with the utmost propriety in
    referring the matter to the President. The Chief Executive very
    naturally and properly directed Dr. Steelman not to appear before
    the subcommittee.1701
    State D epartm ent Employee Loyalty Investigation
    On March 28, 1950, a subcommittee of the Senate Foreign Relations Commit­
    tee investigating allegations of disloyalty among State Department employees
    served subpoenas on the Secretary of State, the Attorney General, and the
    Chairman of the Civil Service Commission, demanding the production of all files
    bearing on the loyalty of certain State Department employees. After reference of
    the subpoena to the President pursuant to the directive of March 13, 1948, the
    President on April 3, 1950, directed the officials not to comply with the sub­
    poena.71 Thereafter it appeared that the subpoenaed documents had been made
    available to the preceding Congress prior to the issuance of the March 13, 1948,
    directive. President Truman thereupon agreed to make the files available to the
    subcommittee on the theory that this would not constitute a precedent for
    subsequent exceptions from the March 13, 1948, directive.72
    68 Investigation c f G SI Strike: Hearings o n H. Res 111 Before a Special Subcomm. c f the House Comm, on
    Education and Labor, 80th Cong , 2d Sess. 347-53 (1948).
    69 H R Rep. No. 1595, 80th Cong., 2d Sess. 3 (1948); see id Pt. 2, at 8.
    70 
    Id. Pt. 1,
    at 12
    71 The Public F^pers of the Presidents, H arry S Truman, 1950, at 240.
    72 S. Rep. No. 2108, 81st Cong., 2d Sess. 9 (1950)
    772
    General Bradley Incident
    During the investigation into the circumstances surrounding the dismissal of
    General Douglas MacArthur held by the Senate Committees on Armed Services
    and Foreign Relations in 1951, General Bradley refused to testify about a
    conversation with President Truman in which he had acted as the President’s
    confidential adviser. The Chairman of the Committee, Senator Russell, recog­
    nized Bradley’s claim of privilege. When that ruling was challenged, the Com ­
    mittee upheld it by a vote of 18 to 8 .73 At a press conference held on May 17,
    1951, President Truman indicated that he had previously taken the position that
    his conversation with General Bradley was privileged and that he was “ happy”
    with the Committee’s action.74
    Refusal to Comply with an Excessively Burdensome Demand fo r Information
    During an investigation into the administration of the Department of Justice by
    a special subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee, the chairman of the
    subcommittee requested a number of departments and agencies to furnish the
    following information:
    A list of all cases referred to the Department of Justice or U.S.
    Attorneys for either criminal or civil action by any governmental
    department or agency within the last six years, in which:
    a. Action was declined by the Department of Justice, including
    in each such case the reason or reasons assigned by said Depart­
    ment for such refusal to act.
    b. Said cases were returned by the Department of Justice to the
    governmental Department or agency concerned for further infor­
    mation or investigation. In such cases, a statement of all subse­
    quent action taken by the Department of Justice should be
    included.
    c. Said cases have been referred to the Department of Justice
    and have been pending in the Department for a period of more
    than one year and are not included in b. above.1751
    President Truman instructed the heads of all agencies and departments not to
    comply with that request for the following reasons set forth in his letter, dated
    March 7, 1952, to the chairman of the subcommittee:
    [T]his request of yours is so broad and sweeping in scope that it
    would seriously interfere with the conduct of the Government’s
    business if the departments and agencies should undertake to
    73 Military Situation in the Far East' Hearings Before the Senate Comm, on Armed Services and the Senate
    Comm, on Foreign Relations, 82d Cong., 1st Sess. 763, 832-72 (1951).
    74 The Public Ffcpers of the Presidents. Harry S Truman, 1951, at 289.
    73 The Public lep ers of the Presidents, Harry S Truman, 1952-53, at 199.
    773
    comply with it. I am advised that it would require the examination
    of hundreds of thousands of files, that it would take hundreds of
    employees away from their regular duties for an extensive period
    of time, and that it would cost the Government millions of dollars.
    All this would be done, not for the purpose of investigating
    specific complaints, not for the purpose of evaluating credible
    evidence of wrongdoing, but on the basis of a dragnet approach to
    examining the administration of the laws.
    1 do not believe such a procedure to be compatible with those
    provisions of the Constitution which vest the executive power in
    the President and impose upon him the duty to see that the laws
    are faithfully executed.1761
    Confidentiality c f Administration c f Loyalty Security Program
    In the spring of 1952 members of a Senate Appropriations subcommittee
    sought detailed information on the administration of the Loyalty Security Pro­
    gram. In response to a request for guidance by the Department of State, President
    Truman on April 3, 1952, issued detailed instructions which provided for the
    confidentiality of the Loyalty Security Program. These instructions provided,
    inter alia:
    There is no objection to making available the names of all
    members of an agency loyalty board, but it is entirely improper to
    divulge how individual board members voted in particular cases
    or to divulge the members who sat on particular cases. If this type
    of information were divulged freely, the danger of intimidation
    would be great, and the objectivity, fairness and impartiality of
    board members would be seriously prejudiced.1771
    22. Eisenhower Administration
    Executive Branch Deliberative Discussions
    During the Army-McCarthy Hearings, the counselor of the Army was ques­
    tioned about discussions which had taken place during a conference of high-level
    government officials.
    On May 17, 1954, President Eisenhower directed the Secretary of Defense to
    instruct the employees of his Department not to testify on those issues. The
    President’s letter stated:
    Because it is essential to efficient and effective administration
    that employees of the Executive Branch be in a position to be
    completely candid in advising with each other on official matters,
    n id .
    77 
    Id. at 235-36.
    774
    and because it is not in the public interest that any of their
    conversations or communications, or any documents or reproduc­
    tions, concerning such advice be disclosed, you will instruct
    employees of your Department that in all of their appearances
    before the Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on Govern­
    ment Operations regarding the inquiry now before it they are not
    to testify to any such conversations or communications, or to
    produce any such documents or reproductions. This principle
    must be maintained regardless of who would be benefited by such
    disclosures.1781
    This letter was interpreted as requiring every officer and employee of the
    government to claim privilege on his own in any situation covered by that letter.
    Hence there were a considerable number of invocations of executive privilege
    during the Eisenhower Administration which were not referred to, or specifically
    authorized by, the President.
    Conversation with Presidential Assistant Sherman Adams
    During hearings in July 1955 on the Dixon-Yates Contract before the Subcom­
    mittee on Antitrust and Monopoly of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Securities
    and Exchange Commission Chairman Armstrong was questioned on various
    issues. During most of his testimony, questions of privilege were disposed of
    without reference to the White House. When questioned about a telephone
    conversation with Presidential Assistant Sherman Adams, he sought the advice
    of the Special Counsel to the President who, upon advice of the Attorney
    General, directed that Mr. Armstrong could testify as to existence of the con­
    versation, but not as to matters discussed during the conversation.79
    Killian and G aither Panel Reports
    In connection with an investigation into satellite and missile programs in
    January 1958, then-Senator Lyndon Johnson asked for the release of the so-called
    Killian and Gaither Panel reports. President Eisenhower denied the request in
    part on the ground that the reports had been prepared with the understanding that
    the advice contained in them would be kept confidential. The President added
    that “ these reports are documents of the National Security Council. Never have
    the documents of this Council been furnished to the Congress.” 80
    Confidentiality o f ICA Country Reports
    Between 1957 and 1959 the International Cooperation Administration (ICA),
    the predecessor to the Agency for International Development (AID), repeatedly
    78 The Public lepers of the Presidents, Dwight D Eisenhower, 1954, at 483-84
    79 Power Policy. Dixon-Yates Contract' Hearings on S Res 61 Before the Subcomm. on Antitrust and Monopoly
    c f the Senate Comm on the Judiciary. 84th Cong., 1st Sess. 751 (1955).
    80The Public Ffcpers of the Presidents, Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1958, at 117-18.
    775
    denied to Congress and to the Comptroller General access to its country evalua­
    tion reports on the ground that they contained confidential opinions and tentative
    recommendations on matters involving foreign policy. These refusals were made
    without express presidential authorization.
    When this issue came up at President Eisenhower’s news conference of July 1,
    1959, the President approved these withholdings largely on the ground that the
    release of the reports would jeopardize the ability of the United States to obtain
    confidential information.81
    The Mutual Security legislation of 1959—1961 provided in effect that the ICA
    could withhold information from Congress or the Comptroller General only upon
    a presidential certification that he had forbidden the document be furnished and
    stated the reason for so doing. President Eisenhower made the following
    certifications:
    November 12, 1959, relating to an evaluation report on Vietnam;82
    December 22, 1959, relating to evaluation reports on Iran and Thailand;83
    December 2, 1960, relating to evaluation reports on several South American
    countries. These reports apparently were made available to the Comptroller
    General during the following Administration.84
    23. Kennedy Administration
    Confidentiality c f Names cf Specific Government Employees
    During an investigation into military cold war education and speech review
    policies conducted by the Senate Committee on Armed Services, Senator Thur­
    mond requested the names of individual government employees of the Depart­
    ment of Defense and the Department of State who made or recommended
    changes in specific speeches.
    On February 8, 1962, President Kennedy directed the Secretary of Defense
    and all personnel under the jurisdiction of his Department not to give any
    testimony or produce any documents which would disclose such information.
    The letter stated:
    [I]t would not be possible for you to maintain an orderly Depart­
    ment and receive the candid advice and loyal respect of your
    subordinates if they, instead of you and your senior associates, are
    to be individually answerable to the Congress, as well as to you,
    for their internal acts and advice.
    S(C       Jfc                  H*          *
    I do not intend to permit subordinate officials of our career
    81 Id .. 1959, at 488, 489.
    82 
    Id. at 776.
     83 
    Id. at 874
     84 Id , 1960-61, at 881
    776
    services to bear the brunt of congressional inquiry into policies
    which are the responsibilities of their superiors.1851
    Chairman Stennis upheld the claim of privilege. The ruling was upheld by the
    Subcommittee.86 On February 9, 1962, President Kennedy sent a similar letter to
    the Secretary of State.87
    Confidentiality c f National Security Council Papers
    Later, during the same investigation into military cold war education and
    speech review policies, Senator Thurmond demanded certain National Security
    Council papers. In a letter to Chairman Stennis dated June 23, 1962, President
    Kennedy refused to release those papers on the ground that “ the unbroken
    precedent of the National Security Council is that its working papers and policy
    documents cannot be furnished to the Congress.” 88
    24. Johnson Administration
    Exemption c f Presidential Assistants from Appearance Before Congressional
    Committees
    In 1968, during hearings on the nomination of Justice Fortas to be Chief
    Justice of the United States, Treasury Under Secretary Barr, Associate Special
    Counsel to the President DeVier Pierson, and Secretary of Defense Clark
    Clifford were invited to appear before the Senate Committee on the Judiciary to
    testify on the question whether Justice Fortas had participated in high-level White
    House meetings dealing with the development of legislation authorizing the
    Secret Service to protect presidential candidates.
    By letters dated September 16, 1968, Mr. Barr and Mr. DeVier Pierson both
    declined the invitation. Mr. Barr’s letter contained the following pertinent
    language:
    In the development of this legislation, I participated in meetings
    with representatives of the White House and discussed the matter
    directly with the President.
    Based on long-standing precedents, it would be improper for
    me under these circumstances to give testimony before a Con­
    gressional committee concerning such meetings and discussions.
    Therefore, I must, with great respect, decline your invitation to
    appear and testify.
    Mr. DeVier Pierson stated:
    85 Military Cold War Education and Speech Review Policies • Hearings Before the Special Preparedness
    Subcomm c f the Senate Comm on Armed Services, 87th Cong , 2d Sess. 508-509 (1962).
    86 
    Id. at 513-14.
      87 Id at 725.
    88 
    Id. at 2951-57.
    3160-61.
    Ill
    As Associate Special Counsel to the President since March of
    1967, I have been one of the “ immediate staff assistants”
    provided to the President by law. (3 U .S.C . 105, 106.) It has been
    firmly established, as a matter of principle and precedents, that
    members of the President’s immediate staff shall not appear
    before a Congressional committee to testify with respect to the
    performance of their duties on behalf of the President. This
    limitation, which has been recognized by the Congress as well as
    the Executive, is fundamental to our system of government. I
    must, therefore, respectfully decline the invitation to testify in
    these hearings.
    The Secretary of Defense also asked to be excused ifrom a personal appearance
    before the Committee, stating that “ because of the complexities of the current
    world situation, my time is fully occupied in meeting my obligations and
    responsibilities as Secretary of Defense.”89
    25. Nixon Administration
    FBI Investigative Files
    On November 21, 1970, the Attorney General, with the specific approval of
    the President, refused to release certain investigative files of the Federal Bureau
    of Investigation to Rep. L. H. Fountain, Chairman of the Intergovernmental
    Relations Subcommittee of the House Government Operations Committee. The
    reports discussed certain scientists nominated by the President to serve on
    advisory boards of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.90
    M ilitary A ssistance Plan
    On August 30, 1971, President Nixon declined to make available to the Senate
    Foreign Relations Committee the Five-Year Plan for the Military Assistance
    Program.91 In a memorandum to the Secretaries of State and Defense, the
    President stated:
    The Senate Foreign Relations Committee has requested “ direct
    access to the Executive Branch’s basic planning data on Military
    Assistance” for future years and the several internal staff papers
    containing such data. The basic planning data and the various
    89 Nom inations c f A be Fortas and Homer Thornberry: Hearings Before the Senate Comm, on the Judiciary, 90th
    C ong.. 2d Sess. 1347, 1348, 1363 (1968).
    90 Memorandum for Honorable William S. Moortiead, Chairman, Subcommittee on Foreign Operations and
    G overnment Information of the House Committee on Government Operations, from Deputy Assistant Attorney
    Genera] Mary Lawton (Apr. 25, 1973) (Lawton Memorandum); U.S. Government Information Policies and
    fYactices— The Pentagon Papers, Part 2, H ouse Comm, on Government Operations, 92d C ong., IstSess 362-63
    (1971).
    91 Executive Privilege. The Withholding c f Information B y the Executive: Hearing Before the Subcomm. on
    Separation c f Powers c f the Senate Comm, on the Judiciary, 92d Cong., 1st Sess. 45-46 (1971).
    778
    internal staff papers requested by the Senate Foreign Relations
    Committee do not, insofar as they deal with future years, reflect
    any approved program of this Administration. . . .
    I am concerned, as have been my predecessors, that unless
    privacy of preliminary exchange of views between personnel of
    the Executive Branch can be maintained, the full frank and
    healthy expression of opinion which is essential for the successful
    administration of Government would be muted.
    I have determined, therefore, that it would not be in the public
    interest to provide to the Congress the basic planning data on
    military assistance as requested by the Chairman. . . ,1921
    AID Information Concerning Foreign Assistance to Cambodia
    On March 15, 1972, the President directed the Secretary of State to withhold
    from the Foreign Operations and Government Information Subcommittee of the
    House Government Operations Committee the Agency for International De­
    velopment (AID) country field submissions for Cambodian foreign assistance for
    fiscal year 1973.”
    USIA Memoranda
    On the same date the President instructed the Director of the United States
    Information Agency (USIA) to decline to provide to the Senate Foreign Relations
    Committee all USIA country program memoranda.94
    Watergate
    President Nixon, asserting executive privilege during 1973 and 1974, refused
    to provide to the Senate Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities
    (Watergate Committee) and to the House Judiciary Committee various tape
    recordings of conversations involving the President, and other materials relating
    to the involvement of 25 named individuals in criminal activities connected with
    the 1972 presidential election.95
    26. Carter Administration
    Department of Energy Gas Conservation Fee Documents
    In April 1980 the Subcommittee on Environment, Energy and Natural Re­
    sources of the House Committee on Government Operations subpoenaed docu­
    n Id at 46.
    93 118 Cong. Rec 8694 (1972); Lawton 
    Memorandum, supra
    .
    94 
    Id. 93 See
    J. Hamilton, The Power to Probe 23-26, 65 (1976); Cox, Executive Privilege, 122 U. Pa. L Rev 1383,
    1420 (1974) Although the tape recordings were eventually turned over to the House Judiciary Committee, the
    President's refusal to make those same tapes available to the Senate Watergate Committee was unanimously affirmed
    by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit Senate Select Committee v. Nixon, 
    498 F.2d 725
    (1974) (en banc) President Nixon’s refusal to disclose Watergate-related tapes and documents in response to a
    subpoena in a criminal case is beyond the scope of this memorandum See generally United States v Nixon, 
    418 U.S. 683
    (1974)
    779
    ments reflecting intra-Executive Branch deliberations concerning the President’s
    decision to impose a conservation fee on imports of crude oil and gasoline.96 For
    several weeks representatives of the Executive Branch negotiated with the
    Subcommittee about releasing the documents. On April 25, 1980, Secretary of
    Energy Duncan informed the Subcommittee that “ the President has instructed
    me to pursue all reasonable grounds of accommodation. If there are no further
    reasonable avenues of negotiation, the President has instructed me to assert a
    privilege with respect to these documents.” 97 Ultimately, some but not all of the
    documents were given to the Subcommittee, which tacitly withdrew its request
    for documents that reflected deliberations directly involving the Executive Office
    of the President.98
    27. Reagan Administration
    Secretary Watt’s Implementation c f the M ineral Lands Leasing Act
    On October 2, 1981, the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee of the
    House Committee on Energy and Commerce served a subpoena on Secretary of
    the Interior James Watt for all documents relative to his determination of Canadi­
    an reciprocity under the Mineral Lands Leasing Act, 30 U.S.C. § 181. Among
    the material covered by the subpoena were a number of Cabinet-level predeci­
    sional deliberative documents, while other documents contained classified,
    diplomatic information. On October 13, 1981, President Reagan directed Secre­
    tary Watt not to release 31 particular documents whose disclosure would be
    inconsistent with the confidential relationship among Cabinet officers and the
    President, and which would violate the constitutional doctrine of separation of
    powers. While protecting the confidentiality of these documents, Secretary Watt
    made repeated efforts to accommodate the Subcommittee’s needs through certain
    limited document disclosures, testimony, and correspondence.
    On February 8 ,1982, a contempt resolution against Secretary Watt was passed
    by the Subcommittee; on February 25 the full Committee supported this con­
    clusion by a vote of 23 to 19. By this time, however, Secretary Watt had reached a
    decision finding Canada to be a “ reciprocal” national under the Mineral Lands
    Leasing Act. Immediately thereafter he informed all members of the Subcommit­
    tee that since the deliberative process had concluded, he was “ hopeful” that
    additional documents might be released.
    On March 16, 1982, Fred F. Fielding, Counsel to the President, together with
    members of the Subcommittee, reached an agreement pursuant to which all of the
    disputed documents were made available for one day at Congress under the
    96 Proclamation No 4744, 16 Weekly Comp. Pres. Doc. 592 (1980).
    97 M emorandum for the Attorney General, from Assistant Attorney General John Harmon, 6 (Jan. 13, 1981).
    98 
    Id. at 8.
    780
    custody of a representative from the Office of Counsel to the President. Minimal
    notetaking, but no photocopying, was permitted; the documents were available
    for examination by Members Only.99
    T h e o d o r e B . O lso n
    Assistant Attorney General
    Office c f Legal Counsel
    99 See generally H.R. Rep. No. 8 9 8 ,97th Cong., 2d Sess. 73-84(1982); Contempt c f Congress. Hearings Before
    the Subcomm. on Oversight and Investigations c f the House Comm on Energy and Commerce. 97th C ong., 2d
    Sess. (1982)
    781
    

Document Info

Filed Date: 12/14/1982

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/29/2017