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INTELLIGENCE ACTIVITIES AND THE
RIGHTS OF AMERICANS
_______
BOOK II
_______
FINAL REPORT
OF THE
SELECT COMMITTEE
TO STUDY GOVERNMENTAL OPERATIONS
WITH RESPECT TO
INTELLIGENCE ACTIVITIES
UNITED STATES SENATE
TOGETHER WITH
ADDITIONAL, SUPPLEMENTAL, AND SEPARATE
VIEWS
APRIL 26 (legislative day, April 14), 1976
B. THE OVERBREADTH OF DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE ACTIVITY
MAJOR FINDING
The Committee finds that domestic intelligence activity
has been overbroad in that (1) many Americans and domestic
groups have been subjected to investigation who were not
suspected of criminal activity and (2) the intelligence
agencies have regularly collected information about personal
and political activities irrelevant to any legitimate
governmental interest.
Subfindings
(a) Large numbers of law-abiding Americans and lawful
domestic groups have been subjected to extensive intelligence
investigation and surveillance.
(b) The absence of precise standards for intelligence,
investigations of Americans contributed to overbreadth.
Congress did not enact statutes precisely delineating
the authority of the intelligence agencies or defining
the purpose and scope of domestic intelligence activity.
The executive branch abandoned the standard set by Attorney
General Stone -- that the government's concern was not
with political opinions but with "such conduct as
is forbidden by the laws of the United States." Intelligence
agencies' superiors issued over-inclusive directives to
investigate "subversion" (a term that was never
defined in presidential directives) and "potential"
rather than actual or likely criminal conduct, as well
as to collect general intelligence on lawful political
and social dissent.
(c) The intelligence agencies themselves used imprecise
and overinclusive criteria in their conduct of intelligence
investigations. Intelligence investigations extended beyond
"subversive" or violent targets to additional
groups and individuals subject to minimal "subversive
influence" or having little or no "potential"
for violence.
(d) Intelligence agencies pursued a "vacuum cleaner"
approach to intelligence collection -- drawing in all
available information about groups and individuals, including
their lawful political activity and details of their personal
lives.
(e) Intelligence investigations in many cases continued
for excessively long periods of time, resulting in sustained
governmental monitoring of political activity in the absence
of any indication of criminal conduct or "subversion."
Elaboration of Findings
The central problem posed by domestic intelligence activity
has been its departure from the standards of the law.
This departure from law has meant not only the violation
of constitutional prohibitions and explicit statutes,
but also the adoption of criteria unrelated to the law
as the basis for extensive investigations of Americans.
In 1917-1924, the federal government, often assisted
by the private vigilante American Protective League, conducted
sweeping investigations of dissenters, war protesters,
labor organizers, and alleged "anarchists" and
"revolutionaries." These investigations led
to mass-arrests of thousands of persons in the 1920 "Palmer
raids." Reacting to these and other abuses of investigative
power, Attorney General Harlan Fiske Stone in 1924 confined
the Bureau of Investigation in the Justice Department
to the investigation of federal crimes. Attorney General
Stone articulated a clear and workable standard:
The Bureau of Investigation is not concerned with political
or other opinions of individuals. It is concerned only
with their conduct and then only such conduct as is forbidden
by the laws of the United States. 1
Nevertheless, his restriction lasted for little more
than a decade.
In the mid-1930s the FBI resumed domestic intelligence
functions, carrying out President Roosevelt's vague order
to investigate "subversive activities." The
President and the Attorney General authorized FBI and
military intelligence investigations of conduct explicitly
recognized as "not within the specific provisions
of prevailing statutes." As a result, ideas and associations,
rather than suspicion of criminal offenses, once again
became the focus of federal investigations.
The scope of domestic intelligence investigations consistently
widened in the decades after the 1930s, reaching its greatest
extent in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
Domestic intelligence investigations were permitted under
criteria which more nearly resembled political or social
labels than standards for governmental action. Rather
than Attorney General Stone's standard of investigating
"only such conduct as is forbidden by the laws of
the United States," domestic intelligence used such
labels as the following to target intelligence investigations:
--"rightist" or "extremist" groups
in the "anticommunist field
--persons with "anarchistic or revolutionary beliefs"
or who were "espousing the line of revolutionary
movements"
--"general racial matters"
--"hate organizations"
--"rabblerousers"
--"key activists"
--"black nationalists"
--"white supremacists"
--"agitators"
--"key black extremists"
These broad and imprecise labels reflect the ill-defined
mission of domestic intelligence, which resulted from
recurring demands for progressively wider investigations
of Americans. Without the firm guidance provided by law,
intelligence activities intruded into areas of American
life which are protected from governmental inquiry by
the constitutional guarantees of personal privacy and
free speech and assembly.
Subfinding (a)
Large numbers of law-abiding Americans and lawful domestic
groups have been subjected to extensive intelligence investigation
and surveillance.
Some domestic intelligence activity has focused on specific
illegal conduct or on instances where there was tangible
evidence that illegal conduct was likely to occur. But
domestic intelligence has gone far beyond such matters
in collecting massive amounts of data on Americans. For
example:
FBI Domestic Intelligence. -- The FBI has compiled at
its headquarters over 480,000 files on its "subversion"
investigations and over 33,000 files on its "extremism"
investigations. 2 During the twenty years from 1955 to
1975, the FBI conducted 740,000 investigations of "subversive
matters" and 190,000 investigations of "extremist
matters." 3
The targets for FBI intelligence collection have included:
--the Women's Liberation Movement
--the conservative Christian Front and Christian Mobilizers
of Father Coughlin;
--the conservative American Christian Action Council
of Rev. Carl McIntyre;
--a wide variety of university, church and political
groups opposed to the Vietnam war;
--those in the non-violent civil rights movement, such
as Martin Luther King's Southern Christian Leadership
Council, the National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People (NAACP), and the Council on Racial Equality
(CORE).
Army Surveillance of Civilians. -- The Army's nationwide
intelligence surveillance program created files on some
100,000 Americans and an equally large number of domestic
organizations, encompassing virtually every group seeking
peaceful change in the United States including:
--the John Birch Society;
--Young Americans for Freedom;
--the National Organization of Women;
--the NAACP;
--the Urban League;
--the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith; and Business
Executives to End the War in Vietnam. 4
CIA's CHAOS Program. -- The CIA's extensive CHAOS program
-- which compiled intelligence on domestic groups and
individuals protesting the Vietnam war and racial conditions
-- amassed some 10,000 intelligence files on American
citizens and groups and indexed 300,000 names of Americans
in CIA computer records. 5
IRS Selective Tax Investigations of Dissenters. -- Between
1969 and 1973, the Internal Revenue Service, through a
secret "Special Service Staff" (SSS), targeted
more than 10,000 individuals and groups for tax examinations
because of their political activity. 6 The FBI and the
Internal Security Division of the Justice Department gave
SSS lists of taxpayers deemed to be "activists"
or "ideological organizations;" the FBI, in
providing SSS with a list of over 2,000 groups and individuals
classified as "Right Wing," "New Left,"
and "Old Left," expressed its hope that SSS
tax examinations would "deal a blow to dissident
elements." 7 A smaller though more intensive selective
enforcement program, the "Ideological Organization
Project," was established in November 1961 in response
to White House criticism of "right-wing extremist"
groups. 8 On the basis of such political criteria, 18
organizations were selected for special audit although
there was no evidence of tax violation. 9 In 1964, the
IRS proosed to expand its program to make "10,000
examinations of tax exempt organizations of all types
including the extremist groups." 10 Although this
program never fully materialized, the "Ideological
Organizations Project" can be viewed as a precursor
to SSS.
CIA and FBI Mail Opening. -- The 12 mail opening programs
conducted by the CIA and FBI between 1940 and 1973 resulted
in the illegal opening of hundreds of thousands of first-class
letters. In the 1960s and early 1970s, the international
correspondence of large numbers of Americans who challenged
the condition of racial minorities or who opposed the
war in Vietnam was specifically targeted for mail opening
by both the CIA and FBI.
The overbreadth of the longest CIA mail opening program
-- the 20 year (1953-1973) program in New York City --
is shown by the fact that of the more than 28 million
letters screened by the CIA, the exteriors of 2.7 million
were photographed and 214,820 letters were opened. 11
This is further shown by the fact that American groups
and individuals placed on the Watch List for the project
included:
--The Federation of American Scientists;
--authors such as John Steinbeck and Edward Albee;
--numerous American peace groups such as the American
Friends Service Committee and Women's Strike for Peace;
and
--businesses, such as Praeger Publishers. 12
By one CIA estimate, random selection accounted for 75
percent of the 200,000 letters opened, including letters
to or from American political figures, such as Richard
Nixon, while a presidential candidate in 1968, and Senators
Frank Church and Edward Kennedy. 13
IV NSA's Watch List and SHAMROCK Programs. -- The National
Security Agency's SHAMROCK program, by which copies of
millions of telegrams sent to, from, or through the United
States were obtained between 1947 and 1973, involved the
use of a Watch List 1967-1973. The watch list included
groups and individuals selected by the FBI for its domestic
intelligence investigations and by the CIA for its Operation
CHAOS program. In addition, the SHAMROCK Program resulted
in NSA's obtaining not only telegrams to an from certain
foreign targets, but countless telegrams between Americans
in the United States and American or foreign parties abroad.
14
In short, virtually every element of our society has
been subjected to excessive government-ordered intelligence
inquiries. Opposition to government policy or the expression
of controversial views was frequently onsidered sufficient
for collecting data on Americans.
The committee finds that this extreme breadth of intelligence
activity is inconsistent with the principles of our Constitution
which protact the rights of speech, political activity,
and privacy against un"Justified governmental intrusion.
Subfinding (b)
The absence of precise standards for intelligence investigations
of Americans contributed to overbreadth. Congress did
not enact statutes precisely delineating the authority
of the intelligence agencies or defining the purpose and
scope of domestic intelligence activity. The Executive
branch abandoned the standard set by Attorney General
Stone -- that the government's concern was not with political
opinions but with "such conduct as is forbidden by
the laws of the United States." Intelligence agencies'
superiors issued overinclusive directives to investigate
"subversion" (a term that was never defined
in presidential directives) and "potential"
rather than actual or likely criminal conduct, as well
as to collect general intelligence on lawful political
-and social dissent.
Congress has never set out a specific statutory charter
for FBI domestic intelligence activity delineating the
standards for opening intelligence investigations or defining
the purpose and scope of domestic intelligence activity.
15
Nor have the charters for foreign intelligence agencies
-- the Central Intelligence Agency and the National Security
Agency -- articulated adequate standards to insure that
those agencies did not become involved in domestic intelligence
activity. While the 1947 National Security Act provided
that the CIA shall have no "police, subpoena, law
enforcement powers or internal security functions,"
16 the Act was silent concerning whether the CIA was authorized
to target Americans abroad or to gather intelligence in
the United States on Americans or foreign nationals in
connection with its foreign intelligence responsibilities.
By classified presidential directive, the CIA was authorized
to conduct counterintelligence operations abroad and to
maintain central counterintelligence files for the intelligence
community." Counterintelligence activity was defined
in the directive to include protection of the nation against
"subversion," a term which, as in the directives
authorizing FBI domestic intelligence activity, was not
defined.
In the absence of specific standards for CIA activity
and given the susceptibility of the term "subversion"
to broad interpretation, the CIA conducted Operation CHAOS
-- a large scale intelligence program involving the gathering
of data on thousands of Americans and domestic groups
to determine if they had "subversive connections"and
illegally opened the mail of hundreds of thousands of
Americans.
Moreover, the Act does not define the scope of the authority
granted to CIA's Director to protect intelligence "sources
and methods." 18 This authority has been broadly
interpreted to permit surveillance of present and former
CIA employees in the United States as well as domestic
groups thought to be a threat to CIA installations in
the United States.
No statute at all deals with the National Security Agency.
That Agency -- one of the largest of the intelligence
agencies -- was created by Executive Order in 1952. Although
NSA's mission is to obtain foreign intelligence from "foreign"
communications, this has been interpreted to permit NSA
to intercept communications where one terminal -- the
sender or receiver -- was in the United States. Consequently
when an American has used telephone or telegraph facilities
between this country and overseas, his message has been
subject to interception by NSA. NSA obtained copies of
millions of private telegrams sent from, to or through
the United States in its SHAMROCK program and complied
with requests to target the international communications
of specific Americans through the use of a watch list.
In addition to the failure of Congress to enact precise
statutory standards, members of Congress have put pressure
on the intelligence agencies for the collection of domestic
intelligence without adequate regard to constitutional
interests. 19 Moreover, Congress has passed statutes,
such as the Smith Act, which, although not directly authorizing
domestic intelligence collection, had the effect of contributing
to the excessive collection of intelligence about Americans.
Three functional policies, established by the Executive
branch and acquiesced in by Congress, were the basis for
the overbreadth of intelligence investigations directed
at Americans. These policies centered on (1) so-called
"subversion investigations" of attempts by hostile
foreign governments and their agents in this country to
influence the course of American life; (2) the investigation
of persons and groups thought to have a "potential"
for violating the law or committing violence; and (3)
the collection of general intelligence on political and
social movements in the interest of predicting and controlling
civil disturbances.
Each of these policies grew out of a legitimate concern.
Nazi Germany, Japan and the Soviet Union mounted intelligence
efforts in this country before World War II; and Soviet
operations continued after the war. In the 1960s and early
1970s, racist groups used force to deprive Americans of
their civil rights, some American dissidents engaged in
violence as a form of political protest, and there were
large-scale protest demonstrations and major civil disorders
in cities stemming from minority frustrations.
The Committee recognizes that the government had a responsibility
to act in the face of the very real dangers presented
by these developments. But appropriate restraints, controls,
and prohibitions on intelligence collection were not devised;
distinctions between legitimate targets of investigations
and innocent citizens were forgotten; and the Government's
actions were never examined for their effects on the constitutional
rights of Americans, either when programs originated or
as they continued over the years.
The policies of investigating Americans thought to have
a "potential" for violence and the collection
of general intelligence on political and social movements
inevitably resulted in the surveillance of American citizens
and domestic groups engaged in lawful political activity.
"Subversive" was never defined in the presidential
directives from Presidents Roosevelt to Kennedy authorizing
FBI domestic intelligence activity. Consequently, "subversive"
investigations did not focus solely on the activities
of hostile foreign governments in this country. Rather,
they targeted Americans who dissented from administration
positions or whose political positions were thought to
resemble those of "subversive" groups. An example
of the ultimate result of accepting the concept of "subversive"
investigations is the Johnson White House, instruction
to the FBI to monitor public hearings on Vietnam policy
and compare the extent to which Senators' views "followed
the Communist Party line." 20
Similarly, investigations of those thought to have the
"potential" for violating laws or committing
violence and the collection of general intelligence to
prepare for civil disturbances resulted in the surveillance
of Americans where there was not reasonable suspicion
to believe crime or violence were likely to occur. Broad
categories of American society -- conservatives, liberals,
blacks, women, young people and churches -- were targeted
for intelligence collection.
Domestic intelligence expanded to cover widespread political
protest movements in the late 1960s and early 1970s. For
example, in September 1967, Attorney General Ramsey Clark
called for a "new area of investigation and intelligence
reporting" by the FBI regarding the possibility of
"an organized pattern of violence" by groups
in the "urban ghetto." He Instructed FBI Director
Hoover:
... we must make certain that every attempt is being
made to get all information bearing upon these problems;
to take every step possible to determine whether the rioting
is preplanned or organized.... As apart of the broad investigation
which must be conducted ... sources or informants in black
nationalist organizations, SNCC and other less publicized
groups should be developed and expanded to determine the
size and purpose of these groups and their relationship
to other groups. 21
Such instructions did not limit investigation to facts
pointing to particular criminal or violent activity but
called for intensive intelligence surveillance of a broad
category of black groups (and their connections with other
groups) to determine their "size and purpose."
Similarly, the Army's broad domestic surveillance program
reflected administration pressure on the Army for information
on groups and individuals involved in domestic dissent.
22 As a former Assistant Secretary of Defense testified,
the Army's sweeping collection plan "reflected the
all-encompassing and uninhibited demand for information
directed at the Department of the Army." 23
Presidents Johnson and Nixon subjected the CIA to intensive
pressure to find foreign influence on the domestic peace
movements, resulting in the establishment of Operation
CHAOS. 24 When the Nixon Administration called for an
intensification of CIA's effort, the CIA was instructed
to broaden its targeting criteria and strengthen its collection
efforts. CIA was told that "foreign Communist support"
should be "liberally construed." 25 The White
House stated further that "it appears our present
intelligence collection capabilities in this area may
be inadequate" and implied that any gaps in CIA"s
collection program resulting from "inadequate resources
or a low priority of attention" should be corrected.
26
In short, having abandoned Attorney General Stone's standard
that restricted Government investigations to "conduct
and then only such conduct as is forbidden by the laws
of the United States," the Government's far-reaching
domestic intelligence policies inevitably, produced investigations
and surveillance of large numbers of lawabiding Americans.
Subfinding (c)
The intelligence agencies themselves used imprecise and
over-inclusive criteria in their conduct of intelligence
investigations. Intelligence investigations extended beyond
"subversive" or violent targets to additional
groups and individuals subject to minimal "subversive
influence" or having little or no "potential"
for violence.
Having been given vague directions by their superiors
and subjected to substantial pressure to report on a broad
range of matters, the intelligence agencies themselves
often established overinclusive targeting criteria. The
criteria followed in the major domestic intelligence programs
conducted in the 1960s and 1970s illustrate the breadth
of intelligence targeting:
"General Racial Matters". -- The FBI gathered
intelligence about proposed "civil demonstrations"
and related activities of "officials, committees,
legislatures, organizations, etc." in the "racial
field."
FBI Field Offices were directed to report the "general
programs" of all "civil rights organizations"
and "readily available personal background data"
on leaders and individuals "in the civil rights movement,"
as well as any "subversive association" that
might be recorded in Field Office files. 28 In addition,
the FBI reported "the objectives sought by the minority
Community." 29
These broad criteria were also reflected in the FBI's
targeting of "white militant groups" in the
reporting of racial matters. Those who were "known
to sponsor demonstrations against integration and against
the busing of Negro students to white schools" were
to be investigated. 30
"New Left" Intelligence. -- In conducting a
"comprehensive study of the whole New Left movement"
(rather than investigating particular violations of law),
the FBI defined its intelligence target as a "loosely-bound,
free-wheeling, college-oriented movement." 31 Organizations
to be investigated were those who fit criteria phrased
as the "more extreme and militant anti-Vietnam war
and antidraft organizations." 32
The use of such imprecise criteria resulted in investigations
of such matters as (1) two university instructors who
helped support a student newspaper whose editorial policy
was described by the FBI as "left-of-center, antiestablishment,
and opposed to the University Administration" ; 33
(2) a dissident stockholder's group planning to protest
a large corporation's war production at the annual stockholder's
meeting; 34 and (3) "Free Universities" attached
to college campuses, whether or not there were facts indicating
any actual or potential violation of law. 35
"Rabble Rouser'' Index. -- Beginning in August 1967,
the FBI conducted intensive intelligence investigations
of individuals identified as "rabble rousers.""
The program was begun after a member of the National Advisory
Commission on Civil Disorders asked the FBI at a meeting
of the Commission "to identify the number of militant
Negroes and Whites." 36 This vague reference was
subsequently used by the FBI as the basis for instructions
implementing a broad new program: persons were to be investigated
and placed on the "rabble rouser" index who
were "racial agitators who have demonstrated a potential
for fomenting racial discord." 37
Ultimately, a "rabble rouser" was defined as:
A person who tries to arouse people to violent action
by appealing to their emotions, prejudices, et cetera;
a demagogue. 38
Thus, rather than collecting information on those who
had or were likely to commit criminal or violent acts,
a major intelligence program was launched to identify
"demagogues."
Army Domestic Surveillance of "Dissidents."
-- Extremely broad criteria were used in the Army's nationwide
surveillance program conducted in the late 1960s. Such
general terms as "the civil rights movement"
and the "anti- Vietnam/anti-draft movements"
were used to indicate targets for investigation."
In collecting information on these "Movements"
and on the "cause of civil disturbances," Army
intelligence was to investigate "instigators,"
"group participants" and "subversive elements"
-- all undefined.
Under later revisions, the Army collection plan extended
even beyond "subversion" and "dissident
groups" to "prominent persons" who were
"friendly" with the "leaders of the disturbance"
or "sympathetic with their plans." 40
These imprecise criteria led to the creation of intelligence
files on nearly 100,000 Americans, including Dr. Martin
Luther King, Major General Edwin Walker, Julian Bond,
Joan Baez, Dr. Benjamin Spock, Rev. William Sloane Coffin,
Congressman Abner Mikva, Senator Adlai Stevenson III,
41 as well as clergymen, teachers, journalists, editors,
attorneys, industrialists, a laborer, a construction worker,
railroad engineers, a postal clerk, a taxi driver, a chiropractor,
a doctor, a chemist, an economist, a historian, a playwright,
an accountant, an entertainer, professors, a radio announcer,
athletes, business executives and authors -- all of whom
became subjects of Army files simply because of their
participation in political protests or their association
with those who were engaged in such political activity.
42
The IRS Computerized Intelligence Index. -- In 1973,
IRS established a central computer index -- the "Intelligence
Gathering and Retrieval System" -- for general intelligence
data, much of it unrelated to tax law enforcement. More
than 465,000 Americans were indexed in the IRS computer
system, including J. Edgar Hoover and the IRS Commissioner,
as well as thousands of others also not suspected of tax
violation. Names in newspaper articles and other published
sources were indexed wholesale into the IRS computer.
Under the system, intelligence gathering preceded any
specific allegation of a violation, and possible "future
value" was the sole criterion for inclusion of information
into the Intelligence Gathering and Retrieval System.
CIA's Operation CHAOS. -- In seeking to fulfill White
House requests for evidence of foreign influence on domestic
dissent, the CIA gave broad instructions to its overseas
stations. These directives called for reporting on the
"Radical Left" which included, according to
the CIA, "radical students, antiwar activists, draft
resisters and deserters, black nationalists, anarchists,
and assorted 'New Leftists'." 43 CIA built its huge
CHAOS data base on the assumption that to know whether
there was significant foreign involvement in a domestic
group "one has to know whether each and every one
of these persons has any connection to foreigners."
44 CIA instructed its stations that even "casual
contacts based merely on mutual interest" between
Americans opposed to the Vietnam war and "foreign
elements" were deemed to "casual contacts based
merely on mutual interest" between Americans opposed
to the Vietnam war and "foreign elements" were
deemed to constitute "subversive connections."
45 Similarly, CIA's request to NSA for materials on persons
targeted by the NSA Watch List called for all information
regardless of how innocuous it may seem." 46
The Committee's investigation has shown that the absence
of precise statutory standards and the use of overbroad
criteria for domestic intelligence activity resulted in
the extension of intelligence investigations beyond their
original "subversive" or violent targets. Intelligence
investigations extended to those thought to be subject
to "subversive influence." Moreover, those thought
to have a "potential" for violence were also
targeted and, in some cases, investigations extended even
to those engaged in wholly non-violent lawful political
expression.
FBI "COMINFIL" Investigations. -- Under the
FBI's COMINFIL ("communist infiltration") program,
large numbers of groups and individuals engaged in lawful
political activity have been subjected to informant coverage
and intelligence scrutiny. Although COMINFIL investigations
were supposed to focus on the Communist Party's alleged
efforts to penetrate domestic groups, in practice the
target often became the domestic groups themselves.
FBI COMINFIL investigations reached into domestic groups
in virtually every area of American political life. The
FBI conducted COMINFIL investigations in such areas as
"religion," "education," "veterans'
matters," "women's matters," "Negro
question," and "cultural activities." 47
The "entire spectrum of the social and labor movement"
was covered. 48
The overbreadth that results from the practice of investigating
groups for indications of communist influence, or infiltration
is illustrated by the following FBI COMINFIL intelligence
investigations:
NAACP. -- An intensive 25 year long surveillance of the
NAACP was conducted, ostensibly to determine whether there
was Communist infiltration of the NAACP. This surveillance,
however, produced detailed intelligence reports on NAACP
activities wholly unrelated to any alleged communist "attempts"
to infiltrate the NAACP, and despite the fact that no
evidence was ever found to contradict the FBI's initial
finding that the NAACP was opposed to communism. 48a
Northern Virginia Citizens Concerned About the ABM. --
In 1969, the FBI conducted an intelligence investigation
and used informants to report on a meeting held in a public
high school auditorium at which the merits of the Anti-Ballistic
Missile System were debated by, among others, Department
of Defense officials. The investigation was apparently
opened because a communist newspaper had commented on
the fact that the meeting was to be held. 49
National Conference on Amnesty for Vietnam Veterans.
-- In 1974, FBI informants reported on a national conference
sponsored by church and civil liberties groups to support
amnesty for Vietnam veterans. The investigation was based
on a two-step "infiltration" theory. Other informants
had reported that the Vietnam Veterans Against the War
(which was itself the subject of an intelligence investigation
because it was thought to be subject to communist or foreign
influence) might try to "control" the conference.
50 Although the conference was thus twice removed from
the original target, it was nevertheless subjected to
informant surveillance.
FBI intelligence investigations to find whether groups
are subject to communist or "subversive" influence
result in the collection of information on groups and
individuals engaged in wholly legitimate activity. Reports
on the NAACP were not limited to alleged communist infiltration.
Similarly, the investigation of the National Amnesty Conference
produced reports describing the topics discussed at the
conference and the organization of a steering committee
which would include families of men killed in Vietnam
and congressional staff aides. 51 The reports on the meeting
concerning the ABM system covered the past and present
residence of the person who applied to rent the high school
auditorium, and plans for a future meeting, including
the names of prominent political figures who planned to
attend. 52
The trigger for COMINFIL-type investigations -- that
subversive attempts" to infiltrate groups were a
substantial threat -- was greatly exaggerated. According
to the testimony of FBI officials, the mention in a communist
newspaper of the citizens' meeting to debate the ABM was
sufficient to produce intelligence coverage of that meeting.
53 A large public teach-in on Vietnam, including representatives
of Catholic, Episcopal, Methodist and Unitarian churches,
as well as a number of spokesmen for antiwar groups, was
investigated because a Communist Party official had "urged"
party members to attend and one speaker representing the
W. E. B. DuBois Club was identified as a communist. 54
The FBI surveillance of the teach-in resulted in a 41-page
intelligence report based on coverage by 13 informants
and sources. 55 And the FBI's investigation of all Free
Universities near colleges and universities was undertaken
because "several" allegedly had been formed
by the Communist Party "and other subversive groups."
56
Similarly, the FBI's broad COMINFIL investigations of
the civiI rights movement in the South were based on the
FBI's conclusion that the Communist Party had "attempted"
to take advantage of racial unrest and had "endeavored"
to pressure U.S. Government officials "through the
press, labor unions and student groups. 57 [Emphasis supplied.]
No mention was made of the general failure of these attempts."
The Committee finds that COMINFIL investigations have
been based on an exaggerated notion of the threat posed
by "subversives" and foreign influence on American
political expression. There has been unjustified belief
that Americans need informants and government surveillance
to protect them from "subversive" influence
in their unions, churches, schools, parties and political
efforts.
Investigations of Wholly Non-Violent Political Expression.
-- Domestic intelligence investigations have extended
from those who commit or are likely to commit violent
acts to those thought to have a "potential"
for violence, and then to those engaged in purely peaceful
political expression. This characteristic was graphically
described by the White House official who coordinated
the intelligence agencies' recommendations for "expanded"
(and illegal) coverage in 1970. He testified that intelligence
investigations risked moving
from the kid with a bomb to the kid with a picket sign,
and from the kid with the picket sign to the kid with
the bumper sticker of the opposing candidate. And you
just keep going down the line. 53
Without precise standards to restrict their scope, intelligence
investigations did move beyond those who committed or
were likely to commit criminal or violent acts. For example:
--Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., was targeted for the FBI's
COINTELPRO operations against "Black Nationalist
Hate Groups" on the theory, without factual justification,
that Dr. King might "abandon" his adherence
to nonviolence. 59
--The intensive FBI investigation of the Women's Liberation
Movement was similarly predicated on the theory that the
activities of women in that Movement might lead to demonstrations
and violence. 60
--The FBI investigations of Black Student Unions proceeded
from the concern of the FBI and its superiors over violence
in the cities. Yet, the FBI opened intelligence investigations
on "every Black Student Union and similar group regardless
of their past or present involvement in disorders."
61 [Emphasis added.]
--The nationwide Army Intelligence surveillance of civilians
was conducted in connection with civil disorders. However,
the Army collection plan focused not merely on those likely
to commit violence but was "so comprehensive . .
. that any category of information related even remotely
to people or organizations active in a community in which
the potential for violence was present would fall within
their scope." 62
The Committee finds that such intelligence surveillance
of groups and individuals has greatly exceeded the legitimate
interest of the government in law enforcement and the
prevention of violence. Where unsupported determinations
as to "potential" behavior are the basis for
surveillance of groups and individuals, no one is safe
from the inquisitive eye of the intelligence agency.
Subfindings (d)
Intelligence agencies pursued a "vacuum cleaner"
approach to intelligence collection -- drawing in all
available information about groups and individuals, including
their lawful political activity and details of their personal
lives.
Intelligence agencies collect an excessive amount of
information by pursuing a "vacuum cleaner" approach
that draws in all available information, including lawful
political activity, personal matters, and trivia. Even
where the theory of the investigation is that the subject
is likely to be engaged in criminal or violent activity,
the overbroad approach to intelligence collection intrudes
into personal matters unrelated to such criminal or violent
activity.
FBI officials conceded to the Committee that in conducting
broad intelligence investigations to determine the "real
purpose" of an organization, they sometimes gathered
"too much information." 63
The FBI's intelligence investigation of the "New
Left," for example, was directed towards a "comprehensive
study of the whole movement" and produced intensive
monitoring of such subjects as "support of movement
by religious groups or individuals," "demonstrations
aimed at social reform," "indications of support
by mass media," "all activity in the labor field,"
and "efforts to influence public opinion, the electorate
and Government bodies." 64
Similar overbreadth characterized the FBI's collection
of intelligence on "white militant groups."
In 1968 FBI field offices were instructed not to gather
information solely on actual or potential violations of
law or violence, but to use informants to determine the
"aims and purposes of the organization, its leaders,
approximate membership" and other "background
data" relating to the group's "militancy."
In 1971 the criteria for investigating individuals were
widened. Special Agents in Charge of FBI field offices
were instructed to investigate not only persons with "a
potential for violence," but also anyone else "who
in judgment of SAC should be subject of investigation
due to extremist activities." 66
Even in searching for indications of potential violence
in black urban areas or in collecting information about
violence prone Ku Klux Klan chapters, there was marked
overbreadth. In black urban areas, for example, FBI agents
were instructed to have their informants obtain the names
of "Afro-American type bookstores" and their
"owners, operators and clientele." 67 The activities
of civil rights and black groups as well as details of
the personal lives of Klan members, were reported on by
an FBI intelligence informant in the Ku Klux Klan. 67a
Under this approach, the average citizen who merely attends
a meeting, signs a petition, is placed on a mailing list,
or visits a book store, is subject to being recorded in
intelligence files.
A striking example of informant reporting on all they
touch was provided by an FBI informant in an antiwar group
with only 55 regular members and some 250 persons who
gave occasional support. The informant estimated she reported
nearly 1,000 names to the FBI in an 18-month period --
60-70 percent of whom were members of other groups (such
as the United Church of Christ and the American Civil
Liberties Union) which were engaging in peaceful, lawful
political activity together with the antiwar group or
who were on the group's mailing list. 68 Similarly in
the intelligence investigation of the Women's Liberation
Movement, informants reported the identities of individual
women attending meetings (as well as reporting such matters
as the fact that women at meetings had stated "how
they felt oppressed, sexually or otherwise."). 69
Such collection of "intelligence" unrelated
to specific criminal or violent activity constitutes a
serious misuse of governmental power. In reaching into
the private lives of individuals and monitoring their
lawful political activity -- matters irrelevant to any
proper governmental interest -- domestic intelligence
collection has been unreasonably broad.
Subfinding (e)
Intelligence investigations in many cases continued for
excessively long periods of time, resulting in sustained
governmental monitoring of political activity in the absence
of any indication of criminal conduct or "subversion."
One of the most disturbing aspects of domestic intelligence
investigations found by the Committee was their excessive
length. Intelligence investigations often continued, despite
the absence of facts indicating an individual or group
is violating or is likely to violate the law, resulting
in long-term government monitoring of lawful political
activity. The following are examples:
(i) The FBI Intelligence Investigation of the NAACP (1941-1966).
-- The investigation of the NAACP began in 1941 and continued
for at least 25 years. Initiated according to one FBI
report as an investigation of protests by 15 black mess
attendants about racial discrimination in the Navy, 70
the investigation expanded to encompass NAACP chapters
in cities across the nation. Although the ostensible purpose
of this investigation was to determine if there was "Communist
infiltration" of the NAACP, the investigation constituted
a long-term monitoring of the NAACP's wholly lawful political
activity by FBI informants. Thus:
--The FBI New York Field Office submitted a 137-page
report to FBI headquarters describing the national office
of the NAACP, its national convention, its growth and
membership, its officers and directors, and its stand
against Communism. 71
--An FBI informant in Seattle obtained a list of NAACP
branch officers and reported on a meeting where signatures
were gathered on a "petition directed to President
Eisenhower" and plans for two members to go to Washington,
D.C., for a "Prayer Pilgrimage." 72
--In 1966, the New York Field Office reported the names
of all NAACP national officers and board members, and
summarized their political associations as far back as
the 1940s. 73
--As late as 1966, the FBI was obtaining NAACP chapter
membership figures by "pretext telephone call ...
utilizing the pretext of being interested in joining that
branch of the NAACP." 74
--Based on the reports of FBI informants, the FBI submitted
a detailed report of a 1956 NAACP-sponsored Leadership
Conference on Civil Rights and described plans for a Conference
delegation to visit Senators Paul Douglas, Herbert Lehman,
Wayne Morse, Hubert Humphrey, and John Bricker. 75 Later
reports covered what transpired at several of these meetings
with Senators. 76 Most significantly, all these reports
were sent to the White House. 77
(ii) The FBI Intelligence Investigation of the Socialist
Workers Party (1940 to date). -- The FBI has investigated
the Socialist Workers Party (SWP) from 1940 to the present
day on the basis of that Party's revolutionary rhetoric
and alleged international links. Nevertheless, FBI officials
testified that the SWP has not been responsible for any
violent acts nor has it urged actions constituting an
indictable incitement to violence. 77a
FBI informants have been reporting the political positions
taken by the SWP with respect to such issues as the "Vietnam
War," "racial matters," "U.S. involvement
in Angola," "food prices," and any SWP
efforts to support a non-SWP candidate for political office.
78
Moreover, to enable the FBI to develop "background
information" on SWP leaders, informants have been
reporting certain personal aspects of their lives, such
as marital status. 79 The informants also have been reporting
on SWP cooperation with other groups who are not the subject
of separate intelligence investigations. 80
(iii) The Effort to Prove Negatives. -- Intelligence
investigations and programs have also continued for excessively
long periods in efforts to prove negatives. CIA's Operation
CHAOS began in 1967. From that year until the program's
termination in 1974, 81 the CIA repeatedly reached formal
conclusions that there was negligible foreign influence
on domestic protest activity. In 1967, the CIA concluded
that Communist front groups did not control student organizations
and that there were no significant links with foreign
radicals; 82 in 1968, the CIA concluded that U.S. student
protest was essentially homegrown and not stimulated by
an international conspiracy; 83 and in 1971 the CIA found
"there is no evidence that foreign governments, organizations,
or intelligence services now control U.S. New Left Movements
... the U.S. New Left is basically self-sufficient and
moves under its own impetus." 84
The result of these repeated findings was not the termination
of CHAOS's surveillance of Americans, but its redoubling.
Presidents Johnson and Nixon pressured the CIA to intensify
its intelligence effort, to find evidence of foreign direction
of the U.S. peace movement. As Director Helms testified:
When a President keeps asking if there is any information,
"how are you getting along with your examination,"
"have you picked up any more information on this
subject," it isn't a direct order to do something,
but it seems to me it behooves the Director of Central
Intelligence to find some way to im prove his performance,
or improve his Agency's performance. 85
In an effort to prove its negative finding to a skeptical
White House -- and to test its validity each succeeding
year -- CIA expanded its program, increasing its coverage
of Americans overseas and building an ever larger "data
base" on domestic political activity. Intelligence
was exchanged with the FBI, NSA, and other agencies and
eventually CIA agents who had infiltrated domestic organizations
for other purposes supplied general information on the
groups' activities. 86 Thus, the intelligence mission
became one of continued surveillance to prove a negative,
with no thought to terminating the program in the face
of the negative findings.
As in the CHAOS operation, FBI intelligence investigations
have often continued even in the absence of any evidence
of "subversive" activities merely because the
subjects of the investigation have not demonstrated their
innocence to the FBI's satisfaction. The long term investigations
of the NAACP and the Socialist Workers Party described
above are typical examples.
A striking illustration of FBI practice is provided by
the intelligence investigation of an advisor of Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr. The advisor was investigated on the theory
that he might be a communist "sympathizer."
The Bureau's New York office concluded he was not. 87
Using a theory of "guilty until proven innocent,"
FBI headquarters directed that the investigation continue:
The Bureau does not agree with the expressed belief of
the New York office that [ ] 88 is not sympathetic to
the Party cause. While there may not be any evidence that
[ ] is a Communist neither is there any substantial evidence
that he is anti-Communist. 89
Where citizens must demonstrate not simply that they
have no connection with an intelligence target, but must
exhibit "substantial evidence" that they are
in opposition to the target, intelligence investigations
are indeed open ended.
Footnotes:
1 New York Times, 5/10/24. Attorney General Stone implemented
this policy by issuing a directive to Acting Director
J. Edgar Hoover of the Bureau of Investigation: "The
activities of the Bureau are to be limited strictly to
investigations of violations of law, under my direction
or under the direction of an Assistant Attorney General
regularly conducting the work of the Department of Justice."
(Memorandum from Attorney General Stone to J. Edgar Hoover,
5/13/24, cited in Alpheus Thomas Mason, Harlan Fiske Stone:
Pillar of the Law [New York: Viking Press, 1956), p. 151.]
2 Memorandum from FBI to Select Committee, 10/6/75.
3 Memorandum from FBI to Select Committee, Re: Investigative
Matters, received 11/12/75. These statistics include as
separate "matters" investigative leads pursued
by different FBI offices in the same case.
4 Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights,
"Federal Data Banks, Computers, and Bill of Rights,"
1971, p. 264.
5 See CHAOS Report: See. II D, "Operation of the
CHAOS Program and Related CIA Projects."
6 See IRS Report: Part II, See. II, "Special Service
Staff."
7 Memorandum from D. J. Brennan to W. C. Sullivan, 8/15/69.
8 Memorandum from William Loeb to Dean Barron, 11/30/61.
9 Memorandum from Mitchell Rogovin to Dean Barron, 12/20/61.
10 Memorandum from Commissioner, IRS to Myer Feldman,
7/11/63.
11 See Mail Report: Part I, "Domestic CIA and FBI
Mail Opening Programs."
12 See Mail Report: Part II, See. II B (1), "Selection
Criteria."
13 See Mail Report: Part II, See. II B (1), "Selection
Criteria."
14 See "National Security Agency Surveillance Affecting
Americans", NSA Report: Sec. II A, "Summary
of NSA Watch List Activity".
15 The FBI's statutory authority provides that the Attorney
General may appoint officials: "(1) to detect and
prosecute crimes against the United States; (2) to assist
in the protection of the President; and (3) to conduct
such investigations regarding official matters under the
control of the Department of Justice and the Department
of State as may be directed by the Attorney General."
(28 U.S.C. 533.)
Attorney General Edward H. Levi told the Select Committee
"that the statutory basis for the operations of the
Bureau cannot be said to be fully satisfactory."
(Edward H. Levi testimony, 12/11/75, Hearings, Vol. 6,
p. 313.)
16 50 U.S.C. 403 (d) (3).
17 National Security Intelligence Directive No. 5.
18 50 U. S.C. 403 (d) (3).
19 See Finding on Deficiencies in Control and Accountability,
pp. 277-279.
20 FBI summary memorandum, 1/31/75.
21 Memorandum from Ramsey Clark to J. Edgar Hoover, 9/14/67.
22 See Military Surveillance Report: See. II C.
23 Robert F. Froehkle testimony, Senate Judiciary Subcommittee
on Constitutional Rights, 1971, cited hereinafter as 1971
Hearings.
24 See pp. 99-101.
25 Memorandum from Tom Charles Huston to Deputy Director
of CIA, 6/20/69 p. 1.
26 Memorandum from Tom Charles Huston to Deputy Director
of CIA, 6/20/69, p. 1.
27 1964 FBI Manual Section 122, p. 1.
28 FBI Manual, Section 122, revised 12/13/66, p. 8-9.
29 FBI Manual, Section 122, revised 12/13/66; p. 8-9.
30 SAC Letter, 68-25,4/30/68.
31 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to all SAC's, 10/28/68.
32 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to all SAC's 10/28/68.
33 Memorandum from Mobile Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
12/9/70.
34 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to Minneapolis Field
Office, 4/23/70.
35 Memorandum from Detroit Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
4/15/66.
36 Memorandum from Cartha DeLoach to Clyde Tolson, 8/1/67.
37 Memorandum from Charles Brennan to William Sullivan,
8/3/67; SAC Letter 67-56, 9/12/67.
38 SAC Letter No. 67-70, 11/28/67.
39 1971 Hearings, pp. 1120-1121.
40 1971 Hearings, pp, 1123-1138.
41 Stein testimony, 1971 Hearings, p. 266.
42 "Military surveillance of Civilian Politics,"
Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on constitutional Rights
Report, 1973, p. 57, cited hereafter as 1973 Report.
43 Book cable from Thomas Karamessines to various European
Stations, June 1968.
44 Richard Ober testimony, Rockefeller Commission, 3/28/75,
pp. 88-89.
45 Cable from CIA Headquarters to field stations, November
1967, pp. 1-2.
46 Memorandum from Richard Ober to NSA, 9/14/71.
47 1960 FBI Manual, Section 87, pp. 5-11.
48 Annual Report of the Attorney General for Fiscal Year
1955, p. 195.
48a See History of Domestic Intelligence, Report, Part
II at note 139.
49 James Adams testimony, 11/19/75, Hearings, Vol. 6,
pp. 137-138. FBI documents indicate that another factor
in the opening of the investigation was the role of the
wife of a Communist in assisting in publicity work for
the meeting (Memorandum from Washington Field Office to
FBI Headquarters. 5/28/69, memorandum from Alexandria
Field Office to FBI Headquarters, 6/3/69) See Findings
6(a), p. 10, for the broad dissemination of reports that
resulted from this inquiry.
50 Raymond W. Wannall testimony, 12/2/75, Hearings, Vol.
6, p. 139.
51 Memorandum from Louisville Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
11/21/74.
52 Memoranda from Alexandria Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
6/5/69.
53 Adams, 11/19/75, Hearings, Vol. 6, p. 138.
54 Memorandum from Philadelphia Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
3/2/66.
55 Memorandum from Philadelphia Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
3/2/66.
56 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to Detroit Field
Office, 2/17/66.
57 Memorandum from J. Edgar Hoover, Chairman, Interdepartmental
intelligence Conference, to McGeorge Bundy, Special Assistant
to the President for National Security, 7/25/61, enclosing
IIC Report, Status of U.S. internal Security Programs.
See Findings on Political Abuse, p. 225 for discussion
on the larger impact of such FBI terminology.
58 Tom Charles Huston testimony, 9/23/75, Hearings, Vol.
2, p. 45.
59 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to all SAC's, 3/4/68.
60 Memorandum from New York Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
5/28/69. (Hearings, Vol. 6, Exhibit 54.)
61 Memorandum from Executives Conference to Tolson, 10/29/70.
62 Froehlke, 1971 Hearings, p. 384.
63 Adams, 12/2/75, Hearings, Vol. 69 p. 135.
64 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to all SACs, 10/28/68.
65 SAC Letter 68-25, 4/30/68.
66 1971 Manual, Section 122.
67 Memorandum from Philadelphia Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
8/12/68.
67a Rowe, 12/2/75, Hearings, Vol. 6, p. 116.
68 Mary Jo Cook testimony, 12/2/75, Hearings, Vol. 6,
pp. 112, 120.
69 Memorandum from Kansas City Field Office, 10/20/70;
memorandum New York Field Office, 5/28/69; memorandum
from Baltimore Field Office, 5/11/70 to FBI Headquarters.
CIA agents in the United States also reported on Women's
Liberation activities in the course of their preparation
for overseas duty in Operation CHAOS. (Agent 1, Contact
Report, Vol. 11, Agent 1 file.)
70 Memorandum from Washington Field Office to FBI headquarters,
3/11/41.
71 Memorandum from New York Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
2/12/57.
72 Memorandum from Seattle Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
6/1/57.
73 Memorandum from New York Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
4/15/65.
74 Memorandum from Los Angeles Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
4/15/66.
75 Memorandum from Hoover to Anderson, 3/5/56.
76 Memorandum from Hoover to Anderson, 3/6/56.
77 See Findings on "Political Abuse."
77a Robert Shackelford testimony, 2/2/76; pp. 89-90.
78 Shackelford, 2/2/76, p. 89.
79 Shackelford, 2/2/76; p. 90.
80 Shackleford, 2/2/76, p. 92.
81 See Findings, "Deficiencies in Control and Accountability",
p. 265.
82 CIA memorandum, "Student Dissent and Its Techniques
in the U.S.", 1/5/68.
83 CIA Report, "Restless Youth," Conclusions,
p. 1, 9/4/68.
84 CIA Report, "Definition and Assessment of Existing
Internal Security Threat-Foreign," 1/5/71, pp. 1-3.
85 Richard Helms testimony, Rockefeller Commission, 4/28/75,
pp. 2434-2435. Helms further testified: "President
Johnson was after this all the time ... this was something
that came up almost daily and weekly." Helms, Rockefeller
Commission, 1/13/75, pp. 163-164.
86 See CHAOS Report: Section II D, "Operations of
the CHAOS Program and Related CIA Projects," and
II E, "1969 Expansion of CHAOS."
87 Memorandum from New York Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
4/14/64.
88 Name deleted by Committee to protect privacy.
89 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 4/24/64.
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