[Congressional Record: April 5, 2011 (Senate)]
[Page S2127-S2128]
NOTICE OF INTENT TO OBJECT
Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, I would like to briefly address the
intelligence authorization bill for fiscal year 2011, which has now
been reported by the Intelligence Committee. I filed additional views
to the committee report accompanying the bill, and my remarks today
will include a brief summary of those views.
I have now been a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee for
over a decade--Senator Feinstein, Senator Rockefeller and I all began
serving on the committee at the beginning of 2001, which I believe
makes us the committee's longest-serving current members. In my time on
the committee, I have become quite familiar with the intelligence
authorization process.
It has now been almost 7 years since an intelligence authorization
bill was signed into law during the fiscal year it was intended to
cover, and although the 2011 fiscal year is now over halfway over,
Congress still has an opportunity to provide useful guidance and
direction regarding intelligence spending for this fiscal year. The
fiscal year 2011 intelligence authorization bill is the product of
substantial labor by both Chairman Feinstein and Vice Chairman
Chambliss, as well as their respective staff, and I commend them both
for their efforts and for the bipartisan manner in which they have
worked to put it together.
Unfortunately, I have very serious concerns about one provision of
this bill, and that is why I voted against it during the committee
markup last month.
Section 403 of this bill would authorize the Director of National
Intelligence, DNI, to establish an administrative process under which
the DNI and the heads of the various intelligence agencies would have
the authority to take away the pension benefits of an intelligence
agency employee, or a former employee, if they ``determine'' that the
employee has knowingly violated his or her nondisclosure agreement and
disclosed classified information.
I share my colleagues' frustration regarding unauthorized
disclosures, or ``leaks,'' of classified information. Leaks are a
problem that has plagued intelligence agencies throughout modern
history--they can undermine intelligence operations, jeopardize
intelligence sources and methods, and have a terrible impact on the
lives of covert agents who are publicly exposed. Every Member of
Congress, myself included, wants to find new ways to identify and
appropriately punish individuals who illegally disclose classified
information. I personally spent 4 years working on legislation to
increase the criminal penalty for people who are convicted of
deliberately exposing covert agents. And I am proud to say that with
help from a number of my Republican and Democratic colleagues, this
legislation was finally signed into law last year. So I don't take a
backseat to anybody when it comes to getting tough on leaks.
I agree that increasing penalties for particular offenses can
sometimes have a deterrent effect on those who might otherwise be
tempted to leak, so I support the creation of new consequences for
individuals who have been convicted of illegally divulging classified
information. But when it comes to leakers, the biggest challenge is not
determining how to punish them as much as it is identifying who they
are.
Given these challenges, my concern is that giving intelligence agency
heads the authority to take away the pensions of individuals who
haven't been formally convicted of any wrongdoing could pose serious
problems for the due process rights of intelligence professionals, and
particularly the rights of whistleblowers who report waste, fraud and
abuse to Congress or inspectors general.
Section 403--as approved by the Select Committee on Intelligence--
gives intelligence agency heads the power to take pension benefits away
from any employee that an agency head ``determines'' has knowingly
violated their nondisclosure agreement. But as I pointed out to my
colleagues during the committee markup of this bill, neither the DNI
nor any of the intelligence agency heads have asked Congress for this
authority. Moreover, as of today none of the intelligence agencies have
officially told Congress how they would interpret this language.
It is entirely unclear to me what standard agency heads would use to
``determine'' that a particular employee was guilty of disclosing
information. It seems clear that section 403 gives agency heads the
power to make this determination themselves, without going to a court
of law, but the language of the provision provides virtually no
guidance about what standard should be used, or even whether this
standard could vary from one agency to the next. And no agency
[[Page S2128]]
heads have yet told Congress what standard they believe they would be
inclined or required to use. This means that if an agency head
``determines'' that a particular individual is responsible for a
particular anonymous publication, he or she could conceivably take
action to revoke that individual's pension benefits even if the agency
does not have enough proof to convict the employee in court.
Section 403 states that agency heads must act ``in a manner
consistent with the due process and appeal rights otherwise available
to an individual who is subject to the same or similar disciplinary
action under other law.'' But federal agencies do not normally take
away the pension benefits of former employees unless they are convicted
of a crime or begin openly working for a foreign government. I do not
believe that this ``otherwise available'' language is intended to
require the government to get a criminal conviction, but beyond that I
am not at all sure what impact this language is supposed to have and I
am not sure that the various intelligence agency heads will know what
it means either. This only increases my concern that this provision
could be used to undermine or violate the due process rights of
intelligence agency employees, with a corresponding impact on their
family members and dependents.
I am also especially troubled that section 403 is silent regarding
disclosures to Congress and inspectors general. Everyone hopes that
intelligence agency managers and supervisors will act honorably and
protect whistleblowers who come forward and go through proper channels
to report waste, fraud and abuse in national security agencies, but
this is unfortunately not always the reality. There are existing laws
in place that are intended to protect whistleblowers who provide
information to Congress and inspectors general--and I believe that
these laws should be strengthened--but section 403 does not specify
whether it would supersede these existing statutes or not. I know that
none of my colleagues would deliberately do anything to undermine
protections for legitimate whistleblowers, but I think it was a mistake
for the Intelligence Committee to report this bill without hearing the
intelligence agencies' views on whether or not they believe that
section 403 would impact existing whistleblower protections.
It is unfortunately entirely plausible to me that a given
intelligence agency could conclude that a written submission to the
congressional intelligence committees or an agency inspector general is
an ``unauthorized publication,'' and that the whistleblower who
submitted it is thereby subject to punishment under section 403,
especially since there is no explicit language in the bill that
contradicts this conclusion. Withholding pension benefits from a
legitimate whistleblower would be highly inappropriate, but overzealous
and even unscrupulous individuals have served in senior government
positions in the past, and will undoubtedly do so again in the future.
This is why it is essential to have strong protections for
whistleblowers enshrined in law, and this is particularly true for
intelligence whistleblowers, since, given the covert nature of
intelligence operations and activities, there are limited opportunities
for public oversight. But reporting fraud and abuse by one's own
colleagues takes courage, and no whistleblowers will come forward if
they do not believe that they will be protected from retaliation.
Finally, I am somewhat perplexed by the fact that section 403 creates
a special avenue of punishment that only applies to accused leakers who
have worked directly for an intelligence agency at some point in their
careers. There are literally thousands of employees at the Departments
of Defense, State and Justice, as well as the White House, who have
access to sensitive information. Some of the most serious leaks of the
past few decades have undoubtedly been made by individuals working for
these organizations. I do not see an obvious justification for singling
out intelligence community employees, particularly in the absence of
evidence that these employees are responsible for a disproportionate
number of leaks. And I am concerned that it will be harder to attract
qualified individuals to work for intelligence agencies if Congress
creates the perception that intelligence officers have fewer due
process rights than other government employees.
Withholding pension benefits from individuals who are convicted of
disclosing classified information will often be an appropriate
punishment. This punishment is already established in existing laws,
and I would be inclined to support efforts to clarify or strengthen
these laws. But I am not inclined to give agency heads broad authority
to take away the pensions of individuals who have not been convicted of
wrongdoing, particularly when the agency heads themselves have not even
told Congress how they would interpret and implement this authority.
This is why I voted against this authorization bill. All of my
colleagues and I agree that illegal leaks are a serious problem, but
this does not mean that anything at all that is done in the name of
stopping leaks is necessarily wise policy.
I look forward to working with my colleagues to amend this bill, and
I am hopeful that they will be willing to modify or remove section 403
to address the concerns I have raised. In the meantime, I should be
clear that it is my intention to object to any request to pass the
current version of the bill by unanimous consent.
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