Miller v. Casey

Decision Date16 March 1984
Citation235 U.S.App.D.C. 11,730 F.2d 773
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — District of Columbia Circuit

Marshall Lee Miller, pro se.

Freddi Lipstein, Atty., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., with whom J. Paul McGrath, Asst. Atty. Gen., Stanley S. Harris, U.S. Atty., and Leonard Schaitman, Atty., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., were on the brief, for appellee.

Before WILKEY, BORK and SCALIA, Circuit Judges.

Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WILKEY.

WILKEY, Circuit Judge:

This suit arose from two requests by appellant Marshall Lee Miller to the Central Intelligence Agency. Each request sought access to information concerning alleged efforts by the United States and other countries to infiltrate intelligence agents and potential guerrillas into Albania during the period 1945-53. One request was made pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA); the other pursuant to CIA regulations permitting access to classified information for historical research purposes.

The CIA denied both requests. The district court granted summary judgment for the agency. We affirm.

I. FACTS

Miller seeks to confirm a dramatic allegation of covert warfare and high-level betrayal. He claims that the United States and the United Kingdom engaged in a "widely known but unsuccessful attempt" to overthrow the Communist government of Albania following World War II. 1 As Miller believes, the two countries cooperated to infiltrate intelligence agents and potential guerrillas into the Balkan nation; the attempt ended in failure, with the partisans meeting capture or death as soon as they reached Albania. At least one cause for the program's failure emerged several years after its termination, the plaintiff says, when program director Kim Philby defected to the Soviet Union.

A. FOIA Request

The FOIA request submitted by Miller on 7 January 1981 asked for:

All information on attempts by the U.S., U.K., and other western countries to infiltrate intelligence agents and potential guerrillas into Albania during the period between the end of World War II and the death of Stalin in 1953, including but not limited to those operations apparently betrayed to the Russians by Kim Philby. 2

The CIA refused to release any documents to Miller. The CIA explained its position in a letter dated 13 February 1981:

I must advise you that the fact of the existence or nonexistence of any documents which would reveal a confidential or covert CIA connection with or interest in matters relating to those set forth in your request is classified pursuant to Executive Order 12065. Further, the fact of the existence or nonexistence of such documents would directly relate to information Central Intelligence has the responsibility to protect from unauthorized disclosure .... Accordingly, pursuant to exemptions (b)(1) and (b)(3) of the FOIA, your request is denied to the extent that it concerns any such documents. By this statement we are neither confirming nor denying that any such documents exist. 3

Miller then met with the agency's Deputy, and amended his request on 24 April 1981 in an effort to satisfy the CIA's concerns. The amended request excluded the names of still-serving intelligence personnel, and documents prepared solely by British intelligence. Miller also offered to negotiate appropriate conditions for access to the material, so as to avoid disclosing still-sensitive information. Miller also pointed out that he had previously served as a senior government official, that he held a top secret security clearance, and that he sought the material for a book he was writing on the Balkans. 4

On 6 May 1981, the CIA responded that its original determination remained unchanged, and treated the modified request as an appeal of the denial. 5 On 5 January 1982 the CIA denied the appeal. 6

B. Historical Research Request

On 17 June 1981, Miller sought historical research clearance to information concerning "attempts by the U.S. and other western countries to infiltrate intelligence agents and potential guerrillas into Albania during the period 1945 to 1953." Miller again recited his credentials as a scholar, his previous and then current security clearances, and factors indicating that access would be consistent with national security. 7

The CIA denied Miller's request. The agency noted that historical research requests were to be granted only "where the researcher's needs cannot be satisfied through requests for access to reasonably described records." 8 The agency then concluded that reviewing the application for historical research clearance would be "pointless" since his appeal of the denial of his FOIA request was still pending. 9

Miller renewed his request for historical research access on 16 February 1982. 10 The CIA denied the renewed request on 1 March 1982, explaining that Miller apparently no longer had the requisite security clearances, and that in any case access to classified information would be on a "need-to-know" basis not met by Miller's historical research needs. 11

II. ANALYSIS
A. FOIA Request

The CIA claims that either of two FOIA exemptions--Exemptions 1, covering classified material, and Exemption 3, covering material which other statutes expressly protect from disclosure--supports its refusal to reveal whether the documents sought by Miller exist. Since each exemption requires a slightly different inquiry, we analyze each in turn.

1. Exemption 1

Exemption 1 to the FOIA protects from disclosure information which is:

(A) specifically authorized under criteria established by an Executive order to be kept secret in the interest of national defense or foreign policy and (B) [is] in fact properly classified pursuant to such Executive order. 12

Executive Order 12356 controls the classification of the information sought under Miller's FOIA request. That order requires an agency to "refuse to confirm or deny the existence or non-existence of requested information whenever the fact of its existence or non-existence is itself classifiable under this Order." 13 Information may be classified when its unauthorized disclosure "either by itself or in the context of other information, reasonably could be expected to cause damage to the national security." 14 A presumption of damage to the nation's security arises from unauthorized disclosure of intelligence sources or methods. 15

The CIA claimed that it would damage both the national security and U.S. foreign relations if it revealed whether the sought-after documents exist. An affidavit prepared by Louis J. Dube, the Information Review Officer for the Directorate of Operations of the CIA, set forth the CIA's reasons for feeling the national security would be threatened. These reasons fall into seven broad categories: 1) disclosure now might prevent foreign countries from participating in future covert missions, 2) disclosure might hamper future relations with Albania, 3) a pattern of denials or affirmances would permit hostile nations to piece together a "catalog" of U.S. covert missions, 4) denial or affirmance would enable the Soviet Union to ascertain the reliability of its double agent, Kim Philby, 5) acknowledgement could jeopardize sources and sympathizers still within Albania, 6) acknowledgement could hamper future recruitment of sources, and 7) acknowledgement would reveal the particular intelligence method--infiltration of agents--allegedly used in the mission. 16

The district court was not obliged to accept Dube's affidavit without question. The court was required to "determine the matter de novo," placing "the burden ... on the agency to sustain its action." 17 In that de novo review, however, the district court must "accord substantial weight to an agency's affidavit concerning the details of the classified status of the disputed record." 18 Summary judgment is warranted on the basis of agency affidavits when the affidavits describe "the justifications for nondisclosure with reasonably specific detail, demonstrate that the information withheld logically falls within the claimed exemption, and are not controverted by either contrary evidence in the record nor by evidence of agency bad faith." 19

Applying this standard, we affirm the District Court's finding that the CIA met its burden. The affidavit provided responds specifically and suitably to Miller's request.

Miller's request incorporates a basic assumption: that the covert Albanian mission actually occurred. He does not ask for information concerning rumors or published reports; 20 he seeks hard facts concerning a specific event.

Given the nature of Miller's request, responding that the agency did maintain files "on attempts by the U.S. ... and other western countries to infiltrate intelligence agents and potential guerrillas into Albania" 21 would show that such attempts had occurred. While, as Miller observes, the lack of such record might indicate only sloppy filekeeping by the CIA, the much stronger likelihood is that the absence of files would indicate that the U.S. participated in no such attempts. The CIA's central premise--that an answer as to whether the files existed would be tantamount to declaring whether the mission occurred--is thus sound.

Miller observes that the CIA's central premise would be less defensible if the agency had construed his request more broadly, so as to include unofficial reports of rumored activities, or CIA records of actions involving nations other than the United States. 22 The fact is, however, that Miller's request was not broadly drawn; it made a specific inquiry about specific actions. The agency was bound to read it as drafted, not as either agency officials or Miller might wish it was drafted.

Since a response to Miller's request would have amounted to an admission or denial that the secret mission occurred, the...

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