Proposed Changes in Operation of the Witness Protection Program

CourtDepartment of Justice Office of Legal Counsel
DecidedDecember 29, 1982
StatusPublished

This text of Proposed Changes in Operation of the Witness Protection Program (Proposed Changes in Operation of the Witness Protection Program) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Proposed Changes in Operation of the Witness Protection Program, (olc 1982).

Opinion

Proposed Changes in Operation of the Witness Protection Program

The Attorney G eneral has broad discretion in adm inistering the W itness Protection Program estab­ lished under T itle V o f the O rganized Crim e Control Act o f 1970, and his decisions in this connection are not subject to judicial review under the statute.

Two proposed changes in the adm inistration o f the Program , dealing with the settlem ent o f existing debts by p ersons entering the Program and with the custody of children brought into the Program , are generally w ithin the A ttorney G eneral’s authority. However, certain m odifications should be m ade to protect fully the due process n g h ts of persons entitled to litigate or enforce custody and visitation rights against a participant in the Ptogram . W hether the proposed changes provide constitutionally adequate protection for either creditors unable to satisfy their claim s because of the governm ent’s refusal to disclose the identity o f persons in the Program , or for persons w ithin the Program w hose identity is disclosed to creditors, may depend on the facts of each case.

The proposed ch an g es would not subject the governm ent to liability under the Federal Tort C laim s A ct, because they com e within an exception to the waiver o f sovereign im m unity in that A ct. Nor would they subject the governm ent to liability for contract dam ages under the H icker A ct.

December 29, 1982

MEMORANDUM OPINION FOR THE ASSOCIATE ATTORNEY GENERAL

This memorandum responds to your request for our opinion concerning proposed changes in the operation of the Witness Protection Program (the Program). For the reasons outlined in detail in this memorandum, we conclude that all of the proposed changes are legally permissible, although we recommend certain additional modifications in the handling of child custody litigation to alleviate certain constitutional concerns present in the Program even after adop­ tion of the proposed changes.

I. Description of Program and Proposed Changes

Under the Program, which was established under Title V of the Organized Crime Control Act of 1970, Pub. L. No. 91—452, §§ 501-504, 84 Stat. 922, 933—34 reprinted in notes prec. 18 U.S.C. § 3481 (1976) (Crime Control Act), the Attorney General is authorized to protect witnesses and families of witnesses whose lives might be placed in danger as a result of their testimony against organized crime figures. The Attorney General has delegated the authority to provide this protection to the United States Marshals Service (the Marshals

821 Service). See 28 C.F.R. § 0 .1 11(c) (1982). In discharging these duties, the Marshals Service ordinarily assigns marshals to guard participants or relocates them with new identities in a new area of the country. The Service generally assures the continued security of participants who have been relocated by refusing to disclose their new identity to members of the public.1 However, this policy of concealing the new identities of relocated participants has led to two general problems. The first arises when witnesses have accumulated large debts before entering the Program. When a witness enters the Program, he signs a form agreement, called a Memorandum of Understanding, in which he agrees to “ settle” all of his debts with creditors.2 Frequently, however, witnesses do not fulfill this pledge, and creditors attempting to sue on claims against a witness in the Program are unable to enforce any judgment against the witness because they cannot learn his new location and identity. Currently, the Marshals Service will assist a creditor only by forwarding his mail and legal process to the witness. If the witness refuses to appear at any judicial proceeding or to satisfy any judgment, the creditor lacks any avenue for securing relief. The second problem arises when a participant is sued by an ex-spouse or other person outside the Program seeking to obtain custody of a child who was brought into the Program.3 In some cases, the witness or his spouse has legal custody of the child when they enter the Program, but the ex-spouse sues to modify the prior order granting one of them custody. In other cases, children have been brought into the Program in violation of a court order granting the ex-spouse custody. The Memorandum of Understanding signed by the witness specifically states that the Marshals Service will not permit the witness to bring children into the Program in violation of a court order,4 but witnesses and/or their spouses have defied this prohibition without the knowledge of the Marshals Service or government attorneys.5 The Marshals Service facilitates child custody litigation by transmit­ ting mail and legal process to the witness and spouse, by assuring the security of any legal proceedings, and by paying the counsel fees of impecunious witnesses and spouses. It does not currently disclose the new identity of a witness or his spouse, however, even though the witness may refuse to participate in any judicial proceeding or to conform to any judgment. Any solution to these recurrent problems must reconcile the needs of the government, witnesses, and the spouses of witnesses to conceal the participants’ new identities with the right of creditors and ex-spouses to satisfy their legitimate

1 The M arshals Service will disclose a participant's new identity to a law enforcement official seeking to arrest the participant for a felony committed before his entrance into the Program. 2 M emorandum of Understanding at 5 (supplied with opinion request) 3 We generally will use the term “ ex-spouse" throughout this memorandum We assume, however, that custody suits may also be brought by persons who are not ex-spouses but who nevertheless have legal custody or visitation rights. In addiuon, for the sake o f convenience, we will refer to the ex-spouse as female and the witness as male, although the opposite could just as well be true. 4 See Memorandum of Understanding at 5. 5 See, e.g , Salmeron v Gover, No. 81-047 (D .D .C 1981) (M arshals Service and ex-spouse of witness agreed in a consent decree approved by the court to return child brought into Program by witness in violation of a state custody order)

822 legal claims. Accordingly, it has been proposed that the Marshals Service adopt the following policy. First, in cases where creditors bring suit against a witness, or where ex-spouses bring suit against a witness or his spouse, the Marshals Service would arrange for a secure courtroom, service of process on the defend­ ant, and reimbursement of counsel fees of an indigent defendant. Second, in the situation where an ex-spouse obtains “ legal custody” of a child, the Marshals Service would accept service of the relevant court order, arrange for the order to be sealed and validated for the ex-spouse in the jurisdiction where the child resides, and permit the local sheriff to execute the order. The Marshals Service would not disclose to the ex-spouse the new identity or the location of the child. It would also not inform the sheriff that he was seizing a child who was living with a witness and/or his spouse. If the security of the witness or his spouse were threatened by the return of an older child who knew their new identities, they apparently would be relocated.

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