Bassiouni, Mahmoud C v. CIA

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 8, 2004
Docket04-2258
StatusPublished

This text of Bassiouni, Mahmoud C v. CIA (Bassiouni, Mahmoud C v. CIA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Bassiouni, Mahmoud C v. CIA, (7th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 04-2258 MAHMOUD CHERIF BASSIOUNI, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.

CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY, Defendant-Appellee.

____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 02 C 4049—Charles R. Norgle, Sr., Judge. ____________ ARGUED OCTOBER 26, 2004—DECIDED DECEMBER 8, 2004 ____________

Before POSNER, EASTERBROOK, and SYKES, Circuit Judges. EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge. Professor M. Cherif Bassiouni, a member of DePaul Law School’s faculty since 1964, is the head of DePaul’s International Human Rights Law Institute and a frequent participant in human-rights activities sponsored by the United States, the European Union, and the United Nations. In 1983 Bassiouni asked the Central Intelligence Agency for copies of all documents that mention him. The agency replied that it had some but would not reveal any details. In 1999 Bassiouni tried again, invoking both the Freedom of Information Act and the Privacy Act. Again the agency replied that it has documents 2 No. 04-2258

bearing his name. Some of these, the CIA stated, had come from the State Department, to which it dispatched copies. The State Department’s catalog and partial disclosure of those copies satisfies Bassiouni. But he is dissatisfied with the CIA’s refusal to hand over or even describe documents it generated internally or received from sources other than the State Department. The district court concluded that the CIA is entitled to keep mum. 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5290 (N.D. Ill. Mar. 30, 2004). Both the FOIA and the Privacy Act contain exceptions for classified information. 5 U.S.C. §552(b)(1) (FOIA); 5 U.S.C. §552a(k) (Privacy Act). (Exemption 3, see §552(b)(3), like- wise covers properly classified documents in light of the National Security Act, 50 U.S.C. §403, see CIA v. Sims, 471 U.S. 159 (1985), but we need not discuss it given exemption 1.) The Privacy Act also allows the CIA to exempt by regulation records in its possession. See 5 U.S.C. §552a(j)(1). The agency has used this authority, see 32 C.F.R. §1901.62, which leads Bassiouni to direct his fire against the CIA’s invocation of exemptions to the FOIA. The agency does not contend that the contents of all documents mentioning Bassiouni are classified; it could hardly do so, given not only its refusal to identify which documents it holds but also the certainty that its files contain many U.N. reports, newspaper clippings, and other non-classified materials. Instead the agency maintains that providing a list of the documents that mention Bassiouni, and claiming document- by-document exemptions for those whose contents are classified, would reveal details about intelligence-gathering methods. These methods are classified independently of the information in materials the CIA collects. See Executive Order 12958 §1.5(c), (d), 60 Fed. Reg. 19825, 19827 (April 20, 1995). (Since this suit began, E.O. 12958 has been superseded by Executive Order 13292, 68 Fed. Reg. 15315 (Mar. 28, 2003), but the substantive criteria pertinent to Bassiouni’s situation are unchanged. See 68 Fed. Reg. 15317.) No. 04-2258 3

It is easy to appreciate the basis of this concern. A list of documents could show clusters of dates that reveal when the agency acquired the information. Knowing which docu- ments entered the files, and when, could permit an astute inference how the information came to the CIA’s attention— and, in the intelligence business, “how” often means “from whom.” A Vaughn index (named after Vaughn v. Rosen, 484 F.2d 820 (D.C. Cir. 1973)) thus could blow an agent’s cover. Painstaking analysis of the patterns reflected in the agen- cy’s holdings might reveal that the person named in the request is himself a source of information. That would not be worrisome if people could request information only about themselves; Bassiouni knows whether he has ever been on the CIA’s payroll (or has provided unpaid assistance). But any member of the public may invoke the FOIA, and the agency must disregard the requester’s identity. See Department of Justice v. Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, 489 U.S 749, 771 (1989); NLRB v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 421 U.S 132, 149 (1975). Thus any informa- tion available to Bassiouni is available to North Korea’s secret police and Iran’s counterintelligence service too. These and other hostile entities would be greatly interested in learning who is assisting the CIA. Even allies could be un- pleasantly surprised by information that discloses espion- age operations. And when the dates, numbers, and general subjects of documents (the information required in a Vaughn index) would not help anyone learn who supplied the infor- mation, it could help them learn how the CIA is deploying its resources and what subjects it is investigating; that knowledge could be useful to both nations and terrorists. Because lists of documents could assist foreign intelli- gence services—whose powers of inference and deduction rise with their own stock of information, which helps them to identify patterns that professors, newspaper reporters, and judges may miss—the CIA refuses to reveal its hold- ings. It does this even when disclosure could be innocuous. 4 No. 04-2258

There are two risks in disclosing when the request is harm- less (as Bassiouni’s may well be) and keeping silent when the CIA sees a danger. The first risk is that whoever makes the decision on behalf of the CIA may miss some clue that foreign intelligence services would catch, and thus inadver- tently reveal secrets. The second risk is that people would draw an inference from disparate treatment: if, for example, the CIA opens its files most of the time and asserts the state-secrets privilege only when the information concerns a subject under investigation or one of its agents, then the very fact of asserting the exemption reveals that the request has identified a classified subject or source. When a pattern of responses itself reveals classified information, the only way to keep secrets is to maintain silence uni- formly. And this is what the CIA has done. Today the agency’s silence is called a “Glomar response,” taking its name from the Hughes Glomar Explorer, a ship built (we now know) to recover a sunken Soviet submarine, but dis- guised as a private vessel for mining manganese nodules from the ocean floor. See Phillippi v. CIA, 546 F.2d 1009 (D.C. Cir. 1976). Every appellate court to address the issue has held that the FOIA permits the CIA to make a “Glomar response” when it fears that inferences from Vaughn indexes or selective disclosure could reveal classified sources or methods of obtaining foreign intelligence. See, e.g., Frugone v. CIA, 169 F.3d 772 (D.C. Cir. 1999); Minier v. CIA, 88 F.3d 796 (9th Cir. 1996). Bassiouni does not take issue with these decisions.

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