ERVIN, Circuit Judge:
Vernon Bellecourt, Bill Means and Bob Brown were called to testify before a federal grand jury which was investigating possible illegal activities of a number of people, including the officers of the Peoples’ Committee for Libyan Students. When the men refused to testify before the grand jury despite grants of use immunity, the district court found them in contempt. They appeal that finding. We affirm.
I.
The complicated procedural history of this case began on July 20, 1988, when subpoenae were served on Vernon Bellec-ourt and Bill Means to appear before a grand jury in Alexandria, Virginia on July 25. Bob Brown was later subpoenaed to appear the same day. The men subsequently were told to appear on July 27, 1988.
On the 27th, the three witnesses appeared but refused to testify without speaking to counsel.
The witnesses asked Judge Cacheris for two weeks to consult with their attorneys. The government told the court it would offer immunity to the witnesses, and each witness was given a copy of the immunity order and its supporting papers. The court ordered the witnesses to obtain local counsel and appear the next day, July 28, at 10:00 a.m.
The next day, at the appointed hour, the witnesses again withheld their testimony. Again before Judge Cacheris, counsel for Means and Bellecourt explained that their clients refused to testify because the immunity order was fatally flawed.
(Brown was still without representation.) The government informed the court that electronic surveillance conducted pursuant to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (“FISA”), 50 U.S.C. § 1806
et seq.,
had preserved some conversations of the witnesses. The court reissued the immunity order of each defendant, in their presence,
by amending the date on the original order. The court then ordered the witnesses to testify at 1:00 p.m. that afternoon.
At 1:00 p.m. the witnesses refused to talk to the grand jury without a more extensive review into the legality of the FISA wiretaps. (Judge Bryan had ruled on the 27th that the FISA wiretaps were legal, but these witnesses asked for a more in-depth investigation.) At 2:30 p.m. Judge Cacheris ruled that the witnesses could appear before Judge Bryan for a determination as to whether he (Judge Bryan) should hold another hearing on the legality of the wiretaps. The witnesses argued before Judge Bryan that: 1) because they were aggrieved persons (i.e., they had been overheard) they should have been notified by the government as to how it intended to use the wiretaps; and 2) the FISA statute requires the court to determine not only that the electronic surveillance was properly authorized, but that it was also properly conducted, particularly with regard to the minimization requirement.
Judge Bryan let Brown speak on his own behalf, and allowed the witnesses to view the government’s memorandum and affidavit filed the previous day in support of its petition that the court conduct an
in camera, ex parte
review of the legality of the FISA surveillance. When court reconvened, the witnesses argued that the court should have reviewed all the logs and transcripts to ensure that the surveillance was lawfully conducted. Judge Bryan ruled that the three witnesses were not targets of the surveillance, but were aggrieved parties. He went on to rule that the applications were properly approved and the minimization requirements were satisfied. Finally, he explained that the documents could not be disclosed in whole or in part without compromising national security. Judge Bryan rejected any need to examine the logs because the witnesses were not targets.
At 3:00 p.m. on the 28th, the grand jury issued a true bill against eight defendants without the benefit of Means’, Bellecourt’s or Brown’s testimony. Because the grand jury was continuing its investigation, Judge Cacheris held contempt hearings and found Bellecourt and Means in contempt and ordered them incarcerated. Brown, still without counsel, was told to appear on August 2, 1988, with counsel, for a contempt hearing. Bellecourt and Means were given a stay until August 2 to file an appeal to this court.
On Tuesday, August 2, Brown appeared before Judge Ellis with counsel as did Means and Bellecourt. The men argued that Judge Bryan’s review of the legality of the surveillance was insufficient. Counsel for Brown adopted the arguments made by his colleagues, waived his appearance in the previous hearings on behalf of Brown and any defects therein, and represented to the court that Brown would continue to withhold his testimony. Judge Ellis then found Brown in contempt as well. The court on August 4 extended the stay of the contempt proceedings to August 17 in order to permit all three men to appeal.
Before this court the witnesses urge again that Judge Bryan’s review of the lawfulness of the surveillance was inadequate and that they should have been notified of the surveillance and its possible use in grand jury questioning. We reject both claims and affirm the decisions below.
II.
When the Attorney General files, as in this case, a sworn affidavit stating that disclosure or an adversarial hearing would compromise the national security of the United States, a review of FISA wiretaps must be conducted
in camera
and
ex parte.
50 U.S.C. § 1806(f). The witness
es in the instant case argue simply that Judge Bryan should have more closely scrutinized the materials before him. The learned district court spent three hours reviewing the government’s
ex parte
submissions of: (1) approximately 50 applications; (2) the identity of the officer making each application; (3) the identity of the target(s), (4) information establishing probable cause to believe that the target(s) are “foreign powers” or “agents of foreign powers” and that the premises where the foreign powers operate are being used to engage in activities defined under the Act; (5) the approval of the Attorney General; (6) the minimization procedures followed;
and (7) the appropriate agency certifications.
Because the parties and the court have discovered no appellate decisions setting forth any criteria governing the extent of review of a FISA wiretap, we turn to domestic wiretap cases for guidance. The United States Supreme Court, in
Gelbard v. United States,
408 U.S. 41, 92 S.Ct. 2357, 33 L.Ed.2d 179 (1972), ruled that in contempt proceedings instituted for failure to testify before a grand jury, the witness may avail himself of the defense that the question asked was based on an illegal wiretap. The court did not address the issue of a recalcitrant witness who confronts questions based on lawful electronic surveillance.
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ERVIN, Circuit Judge:
Vernon Bellecourt, Bill Means and Bob Brown were called to testify before a federal grand jury which was investigating possible illegal activities of a number of people, including the officers of the Peoples’ Committee for Libyan Students. When the men refused to testify before the grand jury despite grants of use immunity, the district court found them in contempt. They appeal that finding. We affirm.
I.
The complicated procedural history of this case began on July 20, 1988, when subpoenae were served on Vernon Bellec-ourt and Bill Means to appear before a grand jury in Alexandria, Virginia on July 25. Bob Brown was later subpoenaed to appear the same day. The men subsequently were told to appear on July 27, 1988.
On the 27th, the three witnesses appeared but refused to testify without speaking to counsel.
The witnesses asked Judge Cacheris for two weeks to consult with their attorneys. The government told the court it would offer immunity to the witnesses, and each witness was given a copy of the immunity order and its supporting papers. The court ordered the witnesses to obtain local counsel and appear the next day, July 28, at 10:00 a.m.
The next day, at the appointed hour, the witnesses again withheld their testimony. Again before Judge Cacheris, counsel for Means and Bellecourt explained that their clients refused to testify because the immunity order was fatally flawed.
(Brown was still without representation.) The government informed the court that electronic surveillance conducted pursuant to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (“FISA”), 50 U.S.C. § 1806
et seq.,
had preserved some conversations of the witnesses. The court reissued the immunity order of each defendant, in their presence,
by amending the date on the original order. The court then ordered the witnesses to testify at 1:00 p.m. that afternoon.
At 1:00 p.m. the witnesses refused to talk to the grand jury without a more extensive review into the legality of the FISA wiretaps. (Judge Bryan had ruled on the 27th that the FISA wiretaps were legal, but these witnesses asked for a more in-depth investigation.) At 2:30 p.m. Judge Cacheris ruled that the witnesses could appear before Judge Bryan for a determination as to whether he (Judge Bryan) should hold another hearing on the legality of the wiretaps. The witnesses argued before Judge Bryan that: 1) because they were aggrieved persons (i.e., they had been overheard) they should have been notified by the government as to how it intended to use the wiretaps; and 2) the FISA statute requires the court to determine not only that the electronic surveillance was properly authorized, but that it was also properly conducted, particularly with regard to the minimization requirement.
Judge Bryan let Brown speak on his own behalf, and allowed the witnesses to view the government’s memorandum and affidavit filed the previous day in support of its petition that the court conduct an
in camera, ex parte
review of the legality of the FISA surveillance. When court reconvened, the witnesses argued that the court should have reviewed all the logs and transcripts to ensure that the surveillance was lawfully conducted. Judge Bryan ruled that the three witnesses were not targets of the surveillance, but were aggrieved parties. He went on to rule that the applications were properly approved and the minimization requirements were satisfied. Finally, he explained that the documents could not be disclosed in whole or in part without compromising national security. Judge Bryan rejected any need to examine the logs because the witnesses were not targets.
At 3:00 p.m. on the 28th, the grand jury issued a true bill against eight defendants without the benefit of Means’, Bellecourt’s or Brown’s testimony. Because the grand jury was continuing its investigation, Judge Cacheris held contempt hearings and found Bellecourt and Means in contempt and ordered them incarcerated. Brown, still without counsel, was told to appear on August 2, 1988, with counsel, for a contempt hearing. Bellecourt and Means were given a stay until August 2 to file an appeal to this court.
On Tuesday, August 2, Brown appeared before Judge Ellis with counsel as did Means and Bellecourt. The men argued that Judge Bryan’s review of the legality of the surveillance was insufficient. Counsel for Brown adopted the arguments made by his colleagues, waived his appearance in the previous hearings on behalf of Brown and any defects therein, and represented to the court that Brown would continue to withhold his testimony. Judge Ellis then found Brown in contempt as well. The court on August 4 extended the stay of the contempt proceedings to August 17 in order to permit all three men to appeal.
Before this court the witnesses urge again that Judge Bryan’s review of the lawfulness of the surveillance was inadequate and that they should have been notified of the surveillance and its possible use in grand jury questioning. We reject both claims and affirm the decisions below.
II.
When the Attorney General files, as in this case, a sworn affidavit stating that disclosure or an adversarial hearing would compromise the national security of the United States, a review of FISA wiretaps must be conducted
in camera
and
ex parte.
50 U.S.C. § 1806(f). The witness
es in the instant case argue simply that Judge Bryan should have more closely scrutinized the materials before him. The learned district court spent three hours reviewing the government’s
ex parte
submissions of: (1) approximately 50 applications; (2) the identity of the officer making each application; (3) the identity of the target(s), (4) information establishing probable cause to believe that the target(s) are “foreign powers” or “agents of foreign powers” and that the premises where the foreign powers operate are being used to engage in activities defined under the Act; (5) the approval of the Attorney General; (6) the minimization procedures followed;
and (7) the appropriate agency certifications.
Because the parties and the court have discovered no appellate decisions setting forth any criteria governing the extent of review of a FISA wiretap, we turn to domestic wiretap cases for guidance. The United States Supreme Court, in
Gelbard v. United States,
408 U.S. 41, 92 S.Ct. 2357, 33 L.Ed.2d 179 (1972), ruled that in contempt proceedings instituted for failure to testify before a grand jury, the witness may avail himself of the defense that the question asked was based on an illegal wiretap. The court did not address the issue of a recalcitrant witness who confronts questions based on lawful electronic surveillance.
The circuit courts throughout the country have accorded grand jury witnesses power to challenge questions based on illegal wiretaps under 18 U.S.C. § 2515,
but the extent of that power varies from circuit
to circuit. Some of the courts allow an immunized recalcitrant witness to invoke § 2515 as a defense only to the extent that his establishing a violation would not significantly hinder the work of the grand jury. The witness is not entitled to view wiretap documents or to a hearing on the issue of the lawfulness of the surveillance.
See, e.g. In Re Persico,
491 F.2d 1156, 1162 (2d Cir.),
cert. denied,
419 U.S. 924, 95 S.Ct. 199, 42 L.Ed.2d 158 (1974) (concluded that a witness could invoke § 2515 in only three narrow circumstances: (1) in the absence of a necessary court order (authorizing the wiretap), (2) if the government concedes the wiretap was unlawful, or (3) if there is a prior judicial adjudication that the wiretap was unlawful); and
Droback v. United States,
509 F.2d 625, 626 (9th Cir.1974), ce
rt. denied,
421 U.S. 964, 95 S.Ct. 1952, 44 L.Ed.2d 450 (1975) (same) (declining to permit the witness to bring grand jury proceedings to a halt in order to conduct suppression hearings).
But see In Re Grand Jury Proceedings (McElhinney),
677 F.2d 738 (9th Cir.1982) (discussed
infra).
Other circuits have gone somewhat further and allowed an
in camera
review of wiretap documentation to determine if it is facially valid.
See e.g. In Re Grand Jury Proceedings (Worobyzt),
522 F.2d 196 (5th Cir.1975),
cert. denied,
425 U.S. 911, 96 S.Ct. 1507, 47 L.Ed.2d 761 (1976) and
In the Matter of Special February 1977 Grand Jury (Pavone),
570 F.2d 674 (7th Cir.),
cert. denied,
437 U.S. 904, 98 S.Ct. 3089, 57 L.Ed.2d 1133 (1978). But these circuits have not deemed it necessary to conduct full adversarial hearings.
Finally, some circuits have gone even further and allowed limited access to materials such as wiretap applications and supporting affidavits. This disclosure was permitted only upon a determination that the legitimate interests of the government in maintaining secrecy are not at risk.
See In Re Lochiatto,
497 F.2d 803 (1st Cir.1974) (concluding that limited disclosure addressed competing objectives: (1) minimizing delay in grand jury proceedings, (2) protecting and securing the government’s interest in secrecy and (3) protecting a defendant’s right to assert the defenses Congress established). The
Lochiatto
court also ruled that if the government objects to disclosure on secrecy grounds, the court must decide if sensitive material can first be redacted and then given to the witness. 497 F.2d at 808. If the material cannot be disclosed, the court must review the electronic surveillance applications
in camera.
The Ninth Circuit in
In Re Grand Jury Proceedings (McElhinney),
677 F.2d 738 (9th Cir.1982), chose to follow the reasoning of
Lochiatto
rather than its earlier cases following
Pérsico.
The court made clear that if the government objected to disclosure on secrecy grounds, all materials would be reviewed
in camera
and the witness would not be permitted to introduce evidence to challenge the “minimization of the surveillance.” 677 F.2d at 741.
We believe that in this case the concerns weighing against disclosure are at least as important as in the domestic wiretap cases. Here, the Attorney General has submitted a sworn statement that disclosure would harm the national security interests of the United States, and Judge Bryan has so ruled. We are convinced that Judge Bryan’s extensive review of the FISA documentation submitted to him
ex parte
by the government protected all the procedural rights that would be afforded appellants even in the circuits most sympathetic to broad
Gelbard
challenges and in domestic surveillance cases. The witnesses apparently are asking this court to require district court judges to undertake onerous review of the minimization procedures used in conducting a facially valid electronic surveillance before they can be questioned before the grand jury. No court has given immunized grand jury witnesses (who are neither targets of the surveillance or the grand jury investigation) the same bundle of suppression-like rights afforded a criminal defendant. We decline the invitation to be the first.
III.
Finally, the witnesses argue that § 1806(c)
of FISA requires the government to give notice to grand jury witnesses of the possible use of electronically overheard conversations before any questions are asked of them. We are not convinced that the witnesses in this case suffered from any lack of notice, or were due any notice in the first instance.
Even if the witnesses are statutorily entitled to advance notification before grand jury interrogation, they were in fact informed by the Assistant United States Attorney that they had been overheard on court authorized electronic surveillance. Notice of the overhears was imparted before any questions were asked and certainly before the court conducted a contempt hearing.
Moreover, we believe the witnesses were not entitled to notice under FISA. Neither the statutory language nor the legislative history requires notification prior to
grand jury
questioning. Congress certainly knew how to include grand jury investigations as proceedings before which notice must be given to overheard persons because it said so in the domestic wiretap context.
Because the district court’s review of the legality of the electronic surveillance was adequate, and because no notification provisions were violated, the decisions below are
AFFIRMED.