Prosecution for Contempt of Congress of an Executive Branch Official Who Has Asserted a Claim of Executive Privilege

CourtDepartment of Justice Office of Legal Counsel
DecidedMay 30, 1984
StatusPublished

This text of Prosecution for Contempt of Congress of an Executive Branch Official Who Has Asserted a Claim of Executive Privilege (Prosecution for Contempt of Congress of an Executive Branch Official Who Has Asserted a Claim of Executive Privilege) 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.

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Prosecution for Contempt of Congress of an Executive Branch Official Who Has Asserted a Claim of Executive Privilege, (olc 1984).

Opinion

Prosecution for Contempt of Congress of an Executive Branch Official Who Has Asserted a Claim of Executive Privilege

As a m atter o f statutory construction and separation of powers analysis, a United States Attorney is not required to refer a congressional contem pt citation to a grand jury or otherw ise to prosecute an Executive Branch official who carries out the President's instruction to invoke the President’s claim o f executive privilege before a committee of Congress.

M a y 30, 1984

M e m o r a n d u m O p in io n for th e Atto rn ey G eneral

I. Introduction

This memorandum memorializes our formal response to your request for our opinion whether, pursuant to the criminal contempt of Congress statute, 2 U.S.C. §§ 192,194, a United States Attorney must prosecute or refer to a grand jury a citation for contempt of Congress issued with respect to an Executive Branch official who has asserted a claim of executive privilege in response to written instructions from the President of the United States. Your inquiry originally arose in the context of a resolution adopted by the House of Repre­ sentatives on December 16, 1982, during the final days of the 97th Congress, which instructed the Speaker of the House of Representatives to certify the report of the Committee on Public Works and Transportation concerning the “contumacious conduct of [the] Administrator, United States Environmental Protection Agency, in failing and refusing to furnish certain documents in compliance with a subpena duces tecum of a duly constituted subcommittee of said committee . . . to the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia, to the end that the Administrator . . . may be proceeded against in the manner and form provided by law.” H.R. Res. 632, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. (1982).1 Section 192 of Title 2, United States Code, provides, in general, that willful failure to produce documents in response to a congressional subpoena shall be a misdemeanor. Section 194 provides that if such a failure is reported to either house of Congress it “shall” be certified to the “appropriate United States attorney whose duty it shall be to bring the matter before the grand jury for its action.”

1 A lthough the D ecem ber 1982 dispute is now a m atter o f history, it raises recurring issues.

101 Your inquiry presents a number of complex issues that will be considered in this memorandum. The first issue is whether the Executive retains some discretion with respect to referral of a contempt of Congress citation to a grand jury. This issue raises questions of statutory construction and the separation of powers with respect to the scope of the Executive’s exercise of prosecutorial discretion. The second issue is whether the criminal contempt of Congress statute applies to an Executive Branch official who, on the orders of the President, asserts the President’s claim of executive privilege. This issue also involves questions of statutory interpretation and the constitutional separation of powers. As we have previously discussed with you, and as we explain in detail in this memorandum, we have concluded that, as a matter of both statutory construc­ tion and the Constitution’s structural separation of powers, a United States Attorney is not required to refer a contempt citation in these circumstances to a grand jury or otherwise to prosecute an Executive Branch official who is carrying out the President’s instruction in a factual context such as that pre­ sented by the December 16, 1982, contempt citation. First, as a matter of statutory interpretation reinforced by compelling separation of powers consid­ erations, we believe that Congress may not direct the Executive to prosecute a particular individual without leaving any discretion to the Executive to deter­ mine whether a violation of the law has occurred. Second, as a matter of statutory interpretation and the constitutional separation of powers, we believe that the contempt of Congress statute was not intended to apply and could not constitutionally be applied to an Executive Branch official who asserts the President’s claim of executive privilege in this context. Our conclusions are predicated upon the proposition, endorsed by a unani­ mous Supreme Court less than a decade ago, that the President has the author­ ity, rooted inextricably in the separation of powers under the Constitution, to preserve the confidentiality o f certain Executive Branch documents. The President’s exercise of this privilege, particularly when based upon the written legal advice of the Attorney General, is presumptively valid. Because many of the documents over which the President may wish to assert a privilege are in the custody of a department head, a claim of privilege over those documents can be perfected only with the assistance of that official. If one House of Congress could make it a crime simply to assert the President’s presumptively valid claim, even if a court subsequently were to agree that the privilege claim were valid, the exercise of the privilege would be so burdened as to be nullified. Because Congress has other methods available to test the validity of a privilege claim and to obtain the documents that it seeks, even the threat of a criminal prosecution for asserting the claim is an unreasonable, unwarranted, and there­ fore intolerable burden on the exercise by the President of his functions under the Constitution. Before setting out a more detailed explanation of our analysis and conclu­ sions, we offer the caveat that our conclusions are limited to the unique circumstances that gave rise to these questions in late 1982 and early 1983. 102 Constitutional conflicts within the federal government must be resolved care­ fully, based upon the facts of each specific case. Although tensions and friction between coordinate branches of our government are not novel and were, in fact, anticipated by the Framers of the Constitution, they have seldom led to major confrontations with clear and dispositive resolutions.

The accommodations among the three branches of the govern­ ment are not automatic. They are undefined, and in the very nature of things could not have been defined, by the Constitu­ tion. To speak of lines of demarcation is to use an inapt figure. There are vast stretches of ambiguous territory.

Frankfurter and Landis, P ow er o f Congress Over Procedure in Criminal Contempts in “Inferior" Federal Courts, 37 Harv. L. Rev. 1010, 1016 (1924) (emphasis in original). ‘The great ordinances of the Constitution do not estab­ lish and divide fields of black and white.” Springer v. Philippine Islands, 277 U.S. 189, 209 (1928) (Holmes, J., dissenting). Therefore, although we are confident of our conclusions, prudence suggests that they should be limited to controversies similar to the one to which this memorandum expressly relates, and the general statements of legal principles should be applied in other contexts only after careful analysis.

II. Background

Because the difficult and sensitive constitutional issues that we consider in this opinion could conceivably be resolved differently depending upon the specific facts of a controversy, this analysis is presented in the context of the December 16, 1982, actions of the House of Representatives. The facts sur­ rounding this dispute will be set out in detail in the following pages.

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