EPIC v. NARA
Seeking public release White House records concerning Kavanaugh's work on warrantless wiretapping, Patriot Act, and other surveillance programs
Top News
- EPIC Settles Lawsuit for Kavanaugh White House Records: EPIC has settled a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the National Archives for records pertaining to Justice Kavanaugh's work on surveillance in the Bush White House post-9/11. EPIC will receive attorneys fees as part of the settlement. The records released to EPIC through the lawsuit revealed that Kavanaugh discussed warrantless wiretapping with program architect John Yoo. The records released to EPIC also show that, after the New York Times exposed the program, Kavanaugh exchanged hundreds of emails with White House and DOJ staff about the program, gathered legal justifications for the program, and drafted speeches defending warrantless wiretapping. Congress ended the controversial program in 2015, following extensive hearings. On the DC Circuit Court of Appeals in 2015, Judge Kavanaugh issued a surprising opinion on surveillance authority. Senator Leahy pursued Kavanaugh's views on surveillance during the Supreme Court nomination hearing. (Apr. 20, 2020)
- EPIC Celebrates Sunshine Week with 2020 FOIA Gallery: In celebration of Sunshine Week, EPIC has unveiled the 2020 FOIA Gallery. Since 2001, EPIC has annually published highlights of EPIC's most significant open government cases. For example, last year EPIC filed the first lawsuit in the country for the public release of the Mueller Report. The federal court rebuked Attorney General Barr and agreed to review the complete Mueller Report to determine what additional material must be released. EPIC also prevailed in EPIC v. the Commission on AI. A federal court ruled that the Commission on Artificial Intelligence is subject to the FOIA. Following the court's decision, the AI Commission released documents about its activities to EPIC. In this year's FOIA gallery, EPIC also highlighted pre-trial risk assessment reports, documents about Justice Kavanaugh's role in the warrantless surveillance program, a DHS drone status report, the Census data transfer plan, and more than 29,000 complaints against Facebook pending at the FTC. (Mar. 16, 2020)
More top news
- EPIC FOIA - Kavanaugh Drafted White House Speeches on Warrantless Wiretapping + (Dec. 18, 2019)
Emails obtained by EPIC in a
FOIA lawsuit show that now Justice Kavanaugh, as a top White House advisor, drafted several speeches defending warrantless wiretapping after the
New York Times exposed the controversial program in 2005. EPIC has created an
index of the email subject lines to illustrate Kavanaugh's role in President Bush's
2006 State of the Union, former Attorney General Gonzales'
January 2006 speech at Georgetown Law, and speeches promoting
border surveillance. Kavanaugh was
particularly involved in
revising a
paragraph on the NSA program in the 2006 State of the Union. Documents previously obtained by EPIC revealed that Kavanaugh exchanged
hundreds of emails with White House and DOJ staff about the
NSA surveillance program and
gathered legal justifications for the program. Congress
ended the controversial program in 2015, following
extensive hearings. On the DC Circuit Court of Appeals in 2015, Judge Kavanaugh issued a surprising
opinion on surveillance authority. Senator Leahy
pursued Kavanaugh's views on surveillance during the Supreme Court nomination hearing.
- EPIC FOIA Lawsuit: Kavanaugh at White House Defended Warrantless Surveillance + (Oct. 31, 2019)
New emails released in EPIC's lawsuit show that Justice Kavanaugh, as a White House adviser, defended the controversial warrantless wiretapping program that
Congress ended in 2015. Following a
New York Times article which revealed government wiretapping without judicial authority, Kavanaugh
circulated legal justifications for the program. The emails obtained by EPIC also show that
Kavanaugh and then Justice Department lawyer
Neil Gorsuch placed a
USA Today op-ed defending the program. In the nomination hearing for the federal appeals court, Kavanaugh
downplayed his role in the wiretapping program, though judge Kavanaugh later
defended the NSA program based on a novel legal theory that
leading scholars disputed. Documents previously obtained by EPIC revealed that Kavanaugh exchanged
hundreds of emails with White House and DOJ staff about the
NSA surveillance program.
- National Archives Releases New Kavanaugh Records + (May. 20, 2019)
In response to EPIC's Freedom of Information Act
lawsuit, the National Archives has
released hundreds of new emails from Justice Kavanaugh's time in the White House. The emails concern the controversial surveillance programs
Total Information Awareness,
Computer Assisted Passenger Prescreening System II (CAPPS II), and
Secure Flight. The contents of many emails were withheld in full. EPIC's FOIA lawsuit, along with a related
lawsuit by Senator Richard Blumenthal, resulted in the public release of hundreds of thousands of pages about Justice Kavanaugh's work in the White House. The records include
communications between Kavanaugh and John Yoo, the author of the warrantless surveillance program.
- National Archives Provides to EPIC Index of Kavanaugh Records + (Mar. 14, 2019)
In response to EPIC's Freedom of Information Act
lawsuit, the National Archives has provided an
index of Justice Kavanaugh's records that contains an accounting of all records
released by the National Archives so far. The letter includes an index of all e-mail and text files, including those withheld in full or in part. There was unprecedented secrecy surrounding the nomination of Judge Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court. EPIC's FOIA lawsuit and a related
request by Senator Richard Blumenthal resulted in the public release of hundreds of thousands of pages about Judge Kavanaugh's work in the White House. The records include
communications between Kavanaugh and John Yoo, the architect of the warrantless surveillance program.
- EPIC Celebrates Sunshine Week With 2019 FOIA Gallery + (Mar. 11, 2019)
In celebration of
Sunshine Week, EPIC has unveiled the
2019 FOIA Gallery. Since
2001, EPIC has published annually highlights of EPIC’s most significant open government cases and Freedom of Information Act requests. In 2018, EPIC obtained
e-mails about mass surveillance programs developed by Justice Kavanaugh as a White House legal advisor,
records about the controversial DHS "media monitoring program,"
communications between the FTC and Facebook about the agency's failure to enforce the 2011 Consent Order, and
documents that revealed obscure travel blacklists in the "SecureFlight" program. In the latest FOIA gallery, EPIC also highlight a significant
ruling from the D.C. Circuit in
EPIC v. IRS where the court stated that the IRS "misunderstands its FOIA disclosure obligations." This is one of two cases EPIC filed to obtain the public release of President Trump's tax records. In
EPIC v. IRS, the district court noted that President Trump tweeted, "For the record, I have ZERO investments in Russia. Russia has never tried to use leverage over me. I HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH RUSSIA - NO DEALS, NO LOANS, NO NOTHING!"
- EPIC FOIA: National Archives Releases New Batch of Kavanaugh Records + (Feb. 22, 2019)
In response to EPIC's Freedom of Information Act
lawsuit, the National Archives has just
released thousands of records about Justice Kavanaugh work in the White House Counsel's office after 9-11. The records include
e-mails from 2002-2003,
briefings, meeting memos, and correspondence, and
office files about anti-terrorism legislation and access to presidential records.
Emails previously released to EPIC revealed that Kavanaugh and John Yoo, architect of the warrantless surveillance program overturned by the US Congress, exchanged messages about the development of domestic surveillance programs. During the Supreme Court nomination hearing, EPIC
warned the Senate that the nominee has shown little regard for the Constitutional privacy rights of Americans as a top White House legal advisor and then as a
federal appellate judge.
- EPIC FOIA: Kavanaugh and Yoo Corresponded at White House about Warrantless Surveillance + (Jan. 10, 2019)
Newly released emails from the Bush Whitehouse reveal that Brett Kavanaugh and John Yoo, architect of the warrantless surveillance program, exchanges several messages about warrantless surveillance programs in the fall of 2001. The release follows
EPIC's FOIA lawsuit for Justice Kavanaugh's records from when his nomination was before the United States Senate. The new records show that there were
multiple emails about the warrantless surveillance program that was
eventually overturned by the US Congress. The emails also
reference a signing statement—likely for the 2001 authorization of military force — and a
discussion thread "FISA [Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act] letter." The agency previously
identified several hundred e-mails about surveillance programs that Kavanaugh authored. But the text of many
emails was withheld in full, leaving open questions about Kavanaugh's role in the post-9/11 surveillance programs.
- National Archives Releases Kavanaugh Emails on Surveillance Programs Identified in EPIC Suit + (Jan. 7, 2019)
The National Archives has
released thousands of emails Justice Kavanaugh sent between January 2001 and July 2003 while working in the White House Counsel's office. The release includes hundreds of emails concerning controversial White House surveillance programs the Archives
previously identified in response to
EPIC's lawsuit. In October, the National Archives revealed that Kavanaugh sent 11 e-mails to John Yoo, the architect of warrantless wiretapping; 227 e-mails about "surveillance" programs and the "Patriot Act;" and 119 e-mails concerning "CAPPS II" (passenger profiling), "Fusion Centers" (government surveillance centers), and the Privacy Act.
Subsequent searches revealed thousands more emails sent to Kavanaugh about mass surveillance programs.
- National Archives Moves Forward EPIC's Request for Kavanaugh White House Records + (Dec. 14, 2018)
The National Archives has
announced its intent to release dozens of undisclosed emails concerning Justice Kavanaugh's role in controversial White House surveillance programs. The announcement comes in response to EPIC’s
Freedom of Information Act lawsuit, which previously led the agency to
discover hundreds of Kavanaugh email exchanges about warrantless wiretapping and passenger profiling. Prior to Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearing, EPIC
warned that Kavanaugh—both as a White House legal advisor and then as a federal appellate judge—showed little regard for the constitutional privacy rights of Americans. The Kavanaugh emails are set to be released to EPIC in March.
- EPIC FOIA: National Archives Finds More Kavanaugh E-mails on Surveillance Programs + (Oct. 24, 2018)
The National Archives has
found hundreds of e-mails about Justice Kavanaugh's role in controversial White House surveillance programs, including warrantless wiretapping and passenger profiling. Following EPIC's
Freedom of Information Act lawsuit, the agency found hundreds of Kavanaugh email messages about the wiretapping program from 2003. Kavanaugh also exchanged 95 e-mail messages about the
controversial renewal in 2004, which the Attorney General and FBI Director opposed. There are also 573 Kavanaugh email messages about "Lichtblau" and "Risen" prior to the
New York Times expose on the warrantless wiretapping program. The National Archives also found more than 8,000 e-mails that Kavanaugh sent or received about passenger profiling programs. Prior to the nomination hearing, EPIC warned that Kavanaugh, both as a White House legal advisor and then as a federal appellate judge, showed little regard for the constitutional privacy rights of Americans.
- In EPIC Suit, National Archives Identifies Thousands of Kavanaugh E-mails on Surveillance Programs + (Oct. 11, 2018)
In EPIC's
Freedom of Information Act suit, the National Archives has now
identified thousands of additional records concerning Justice Kavanaugh's role in controversial White House surveillance programs, including warrantless wiretapping and the Patriot Act. These programs were later suspended, curtailed, or modified by Congress. The agency completed its second
search of e-mails on Wednesday, in response to EPIC's case, and found that Kavanaugh received 183 messages from John Yoo, the architect of the warrantless wiretapping program. The Archives also found 1,988 e-mails concerning Kavanaugh and "surveillance" programs and the "Patriot Act" and 754 e-mails concerning Kavanaugh "CAPPS II" (passenger profiling), "Fusion Centers" (government surveillance centers), and the Privacy Act. The National Archives will eventually release these records to the public as a result of EPIC's lawsuit. Prior to nomination hearing, EPIC had
warned that Kavanaugh, both as a White House legal advisor and then as a federal appellate judge, showed little regard for the constitutional privacy rights of Americans.
- EPIC Calls on Senate Leaders to Postpone Vote on Kavanaugh Pending Release of White House Emails on Surveillance Programs + (Oct. 3, 2018)
Following the release of new information to EPIC in a FOIA lawsuit against the National Archives, EPIC has
asked Senator McConnell and Senator Schumer to postpone a vote on the nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh. The documents obtained in
EPIC v. NARA reveal that Judge Kavanaugh played a significant role in controversial White House surveillance programs that implicate the constitutional privacy rights of Americans. The Archives has now confirmed that there are hundreds of emails concerning Kavanaugh's role in such programs as
warrantless wiretapping, the Patriot Act, "CAPPS II" (passenger profiling), and
"Fusion centers" (government surveillance centers). Kavanaugh exchanged almost a dozen emails to John Yoo, whose legal memos on surveillance were later
rescinded by the Office of Legal Counsel. EPIC wrote, "the Senate curtailed several of these programs that Brett Kavanaugh helped develop."
- National Archives Confirms Existence of Numerous Kavanaugh Records on Surveillance Programs + (Oct. 3, 2018)
In response to EPIC's
Freedom of Information Act suit, the National Archives has now confirmed that there are hundreds of records concerning Brett Kavanaugh's role in controversial White House surveillance programs, including warrantless wiretapping and the Patriot Act. The programs were later suspended, curtailed, or modified by Congress. The communication to EPIC revealed that Kavanaugh sent 11 e-mails to John Yoo, the architect of warrantless wiretapping; 227 e-mails about "surveillance" programs and the "Patriot Act;" and 119 e-mails concerning "CAPPS II" (passenger profiling), "Fusion Centers" (government surveillance centers), and the Privacy Act. The National Archives has processed roughly 300,000 pages of Judge Kavanaugh's records between 2001 and 2003. These records will be released this month pending White House approval. EPIC has
warned that Kavanaugh, both as a top-level White House aide and then as a federal appellate judge, has shown little regard for the Constitutional privacy rights of Americans.
- Senate Committee Moves to Vote on Kavanaugh with White House Records on Mass Surveillance Still Secret + (Sep. 28, 2018)
Chairman Charles Grassley (R-IA) has scheduled a
vote today on the nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, though records of Kavanaugh's White House role in the Patriot Act, warrantless wiretapping, and other programs of mass surveillance remain secret. EPIC filed a Freedom of Information Act
lawsuit against the National Archive for release of these records and then moved for a
preliminary injunction so that the records could be made available prior to Senate consideration of the nominee. In an earlier
statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee, EPIC warned that Kavanaugh, both as a top-level White House aide and then as a federal appellate judge, has shown little regard for the Constitutional privacy rights of Americans. In
Klayman v. Obama, he
backed the warrantless collection of the telephone records of all Americans under the "special needs" doctrine, a view endorsed by no other judge in the federal judiciary. In a
second letter, EPIC urged postponement of the Senate vote, pending release of these documents. Yesterday, the American Bar Association
called for postponement of the vote, pending an investigation of charges concerning sexual assault.
- EPIC Seeks Injunction to Compel Release of Kavanaugh Records + (Sep. 21, 2018)
EPIC has filed a motion seeking a preliminary injunction
against the National Archives to compel the release of Brett Kavanaugh’s White House records about warrantless surveillance and the Patriot Act. EPIC argues that these records are essential to understand Kavanaugh’s views on privacy, and must be released prior to the Senate votes on the Supreme Court nominee. EPIC explained that the agency has already missed deadlines established by the Freedom of Information Act. EPIC filed suit against NARA on September 17 after NARA failed to process
EPIC’s two urgent Freedom of Information Act requests. EPIC earlier sent
two letters to the Senate Judiciary Committee highlighting concerns about Kavanaugh’s role in the creation of the Patriot Act, his defense of warrantless wiretapping in the White House, and his troubling opinion as a judge in Klayman v. Obama, which justified the warrantless collection of phone records of all Americans.
- EPIC Sues for Release of Kavanaugh White House Records on Warrantless Surveillance, Patriot Act + (Sep. 18, 2018)
EPIC has filed a lawsuit to compel the National Archives and Records Administration to release Brett Kavanaugh's White House records about warrantless surveillance and the Patriot Act. EPIC's lawsuit follows the agency's failure to respond to EPIC's
two urgent Freedom of Information Act requests. In the complaint, EPIC explains that timely release of these records is now essential to assess Kavanaugh's role in the White House surveillance programs. In Senate testimony, Kavanaugh
claimed that he knew nothing about these programs, but
documents indicate that he drafted President Bush's speech on the Patriot Act, communicated with John Yoo, the architect of the warrantless surveillance program, and defended suspicionless surveillance of the American public. Last week, EPIC sent a
letter to the Senate Judiciary Committee urging postponement of the the committee vote on Kavanaugh until the documents EPIC requested are released. EPIC highlighted concerns about Kavanaugh’s White House years in an earlier
letter to the Committee.
- EPIC Asks Senate Committee for Delay on Kavanaugh Vote, Seeks Records Release + (Sep. 12, 2018)
In a
letter to the Senate Judiciary Committee, EPIC has urged the Senate Judiciary Committee to postpone the vote in the Executive Business Meeting on the nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh, pending the release of documents concerning the development, defense, and promotion of surveillance programs during the period 2001-2006. EPIC said “[t[he documents are necessary for a full consideration of the qualifications of the nominee to serve on the United States Supreme Court.” In an earlier
letter to the Committee, EPIC asked the Senate to determine Judge Kavanuagh's role, while in the Bush White House, in the unlawful warrantless wiretapping program and the secret expansion of the Patriot Act. Traditionally, the records of Supreme Court nominees who served in the White House are routinely made available prior to committee hearings. Last month, EPIC submitted
two urgent Freedom of Information Act requests for the records. EPIC regularly shares its views with the Senate concerning nominees to the Supreme Court, including
Justice Gorsuch,
Justice Kagan,
Justice Sotomayor,
Justice Alito, and
Chief Justice Roberts.
- Senator Leahy Pursues Questions about Privacy with Judge Kavanaugh + (Sep. 6, 2018)
During day three of the Senate Judiciary Committee’s nominations hearings, Senator Patrick Leahy
asked Judge Kavanaugh about privacy and government surveillance. (6:20) Senator Leahy stated “In your concurrence in
Klayman v. Obama you went out of your way to say that not only is the dragnet collection of American’s telephone records by the NSA okay because it’s 'not a search,’ you also said that 'even if it is a search, it is justified in order to prevent terrorism.’” Senator Leahy pointed out that the
Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board found that the legal authorities in the Klayman case had not prevented a single terrorist act. Leahy asked, "Why did you go out of your way to write an opinion stating that the program met a critical national security need when it had already been found by our national security people it made no concrete difference in fighting terrorism?” Judge Kavanaugh said that the recent Supreme Court decision in Carpenter was a “game-changer” and that had it been law at the time, he could not have written the concurrence in Klayman. Senator Leahy also questioned Judge Kavanaugh on
U.S. v. Jones, asking “do you believe that there becomes a point where the collection of data about a person becomes so pervasive that a warrant would be required even if the collection of one bit of the same data would not?” Judge Kavanaugh did not answer this question directly. Senator Flake commended Senator Leahy’s questions, noting that future of privacy was a critical issue for the Committee to consider.
- EPIC Urges Senate Committee to Explore Kavanaugh's Views on Privacy, Klayman Opinion + (Sep. 3, 2018)
In a
letter and
memo to the Senate Judiciary Committee, EPIC has urged Senators to question Supreme Court nominee
Brett Kavanaugh on critical privacy, open government, and government surveillance issues. EPIC expressed concerns about the Kavanaugh’s views on privacy and Constitutional rights, stating “In Klayman v. Obama, Judge Kavanaugh went out of his way to set out theories to defend the suspicionless surveillance of the American public that surprised even conservative legal scholars.” EPIC said that Kavanaugh's views are out of step with recent Supreme Court opinions that carry forward Fourth Amendment protections to the digital age for
GPS tracking,
cell phone searches, and
cell site location data. EPIC also asked the Senate to determine Judge Kavanuagh’s role, while in the Bush White House, in the unlawful warrantless wiretapping program and the secret expansion of the Patriot Act. EPIC regularly shares its views with the Senate concerning nominees to the Supreme Court, including
Justice Gorsuch,
Justice Kagan,
Justice Sotomayor,
Justice Alito, and
Chief Justice Roberts. The Senate hearings begin on Tuesday, September 4.
- EPIC and Open Government Groups Urge Senate to Delay Hearing on Kavanaugh + (Aug. 27, 2018)
EPIC along with a nonpartisan coalition of open government groups sent a
letter to the Chair and Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee urging the Senate to delay hearings on Supreme Court nominee
Brett M. Kavanaugh until all relevant records are released. In the letter, the groups stated, "Secrecy and selective availability of information continue to plague public confidence in the Senate's ability to conduct a fair and impartial review of Judge Kavanaugh's background and qualification." The groups urged the senators to work across party lines to ensure maximum transparency and protect the public's right to know. Judge Kavanaugh's confirmation hearing is currently
scheduled for September 4, yet most of the records from his White House years have been withheld. Traditionally, the records of Supreme Court nominees who served in the White House are routinely made available prior to committee hearings. Earlier this month, EPIC submitted
two urgent Freedom of Information Act requests for the records. At issue are concerns about Judge Kavanaugh's role in the warrantless wiretapping program and the secret expansion of the Patriot Act.
- EPIC and Open Government Groups Urge Senate to Delay Hearing on Kavanaugh + (Aug. 27, 2018)
EPIC along with a nonpartisan coalition of open government groups sent a
letter to the Chair and Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee urging the Senate to delay hearings on Supreme Court nominee
Brett M. Kavanaugh until all relevant records are released. In the letter, the groups stated, "Secrecy and selective availability of information continue to plague public confidence in the Senate's ability to conduct a fair and impartial review of Judge Kavanaugh's background and qualification." The groups urged the senators to work across party lines to ensure maximum transparency and protect the public's right to know. Judge Kavanaugh's confirmation hearing is currently
scheduled for September 4, yet most of the records from his White House years have been withheld. Traditionally, the records of Supreme Court nominees who served in the White House are routinely made available prior to committee hearings. Earlier this month, EPIC submitted
two urgent Freedom of Information Act requests for the records. At issue are concerns about Judge Kavanaugh's role in the warrantless wiretapping program and the secret expansion of the Patriot Act.
- Congressional Research Service: Kavanaugh has a "more restrictive view" of the Fourth Amendment + (Aug. 27, 2018)
The
Congressional Research Service, has published a
report regarding Supreme Court nominee Judge Kavanaugh's jurisprudence. The nonpartisan CRS provides policy and legal analysis to committees and Members of both the House and Senate, regardless of party affiliation. The CRS report discusses Judge Kavanaugh's potential impact on the Supreme Court if confirmed. According to the report, Judge Kavanaugh has a "more restrictive view" on the constitutional right to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures than other judges on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. Notably in
Klayman v. Obama, Judge Kavanaugh stated that the National Security Agency's suspicionless surveillance of the American public was "entirely consistent with the Fourth Amendment." The report also includes an Appendix with tables that summarizes his rate of concurring and dissenting opinions relative to other judges on the D.C. Circuit and how his opinions have fared when reviewed by the Supreme Court.
- Kavanaugh White House Counsel: PATRIOT Act, "measured, careful, responsible, and constitutional approach" + (Aug. 11, 2018)
On Thursday, the Senate Judiciary Committee
released the first production of records for Supreme Court nominee
Brett M. Kavanaugh from his time as associate counsel for George W. Bush. Roughly
5,700 pages of documents were made available to the public. The documents show that Kavanaugh assisted in the effort to pass the
Patriot Act and drafted a
statement that President Bush incorporated in the
bill signing. Kavanaugh wrote that the PATRIOT Act will “update laws authorizing government surveillance,” which he claimed, and President Bush then restated, were from an era of “rotary phones.” In fact, the PATRIOT Act weakened numerous U.S. privacy laws, including the
subscriber privacy provisions in the Cable Act and the
email safeguards in the Electronic Communications Privacy Act. Both laws were enacted after the era of rotary phones. Congress
amended the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act after it was revealed that the White House had authorized warrantless wiretapping of Americans beginning in 2002. In an email exchange, Kavanaugh wrote that the PATRIOT Act was a "measured, careful, responsible, and constitutional approach . . . .” EPIC recently submitted
two urgent Freedom of Information Act requests for Judge Kavanaugh’s records during his time serving as Staff Secretary for President Bush.
Background
In Freedom of Information Act lawsuit EPIC v. NARA, EPIC is seeking the public release of records concerning Brett M. Kavanaugh's work in the White House related to the development, expansion, promotion, and defense of surveillance programs. EPIC argues that there is strong evidence that these documents exist, and that they are essential to understanding Kavanaugh's views on privacy and how he would rule on the issue as a justice on the U.S. Supreme Court.
During Kavanaugh's time as a top advistor in the White House-from January 2001 through May 2006-many of the post-September 11th surveillance systems, directed toward the American public, were initiated and implemented, including the warrantless wiretapping program, Total Information Awareness, airport body scanners, passenger profiling, the secret expansion of the Patriot Act and a national identification system for Americans. In his 2006 confirmation hearings for the D.C. Circuit, Kavanaugh asserted that he knew nothing of the warrantless wiretapping programs. Recently released documents, however. indicate that he drafted President Bush's speech on the Patriot Act, communicated with John Yoo, the architect of the warrantless wiretapping program, about the legal justification for the program, and defended suspicionless wiretapping of the American public. The only way to understand the true extend of Kavanaugh's involvement is for NARA to release the rest of his White House records related to these issues.
EPIC's lawsuit has revealed additional emails in Kavanaugh's conversation with John Yoo about the legal justification for surveillance. EPIC's lawsuit also disclosed over a thousand emails related to surveillance from Kavanaugh's time as Staff Secretary, including emails that show that Kavanaugh offered several justifications for the warrantless wiretapping program after the New York Times exposed its existence in 2005. The emails also show that Kavanaugh was extensively involved in defending the Patriot Act.
The Creation of the Warrantless Wiretapping Program
President Bush issued the first authorization for the warrantless wiretapping program on October 4, 2001. The program was grounded in legal memos written by John Yoo, a Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the DOJ's Office of the Legal Counsel. One of these memos, titled "Constitutional Standards on Random Electronic Surveillance for Counter-Terrorism Purposes," was dated September 17, 2001. That same day, Kavanaugh sent Yoo a message, asking: "Any results yet on the 4A implications of random/constant surveillance of phone and e-mail conversations of non-citizens who are in the United States when the purpose of the surveillance is to prevent terrorist/criminal violence?" EPIC's lawsuit revealed that Kavanaugh and Yoo's email conversation continued, but the contents of these emails have not been made public.
Kavanaugh was also a top advisor during the time when the DOJ began questioning the legal authority for warrantless wiretapping, including the famous clash between DOJ and White House officials at Attorney General John Ashcroft's hospital bedside on March 10, 2004. At this time, Kavanaugh also worked directly for Alberto Gonzales, a central figure in the program. Yet no related emails have been released to the public.
The Defense of the Warrantless Wiretapping Program
The warrantless wiretapping program operated in secret until December 16, 2005, when the New York Times published an article revealing the existence of the program. The reporters had known about the program since early 2004, but White House officials convinced the paper to delay publication, keeping the American public in the dark for over a year.
When the story went public, the White House went on the defense. According to Eric Lichtblau's Pulitzer Prize-winning book, Bush's Law: The Remaking of American Justice, Kavanaugh was a key member of the White House team that defended the program. Lichtblau described an email Kavanaugh sent to others on the team: "'It is not good,' Kavanaugh wrote, 'if Americans or Members of Congress think we did something that is a good thing but stretched the law in doing . . . we need to fight back hard on the legal part in the court of public opinion and the court of Congress.'" This email thread was heavily redacted in records released by the OLC, including this quote, making the substance of this conversation unavailable to the public. Emails released by the DOJ also show that Kavanaugh and Gorsuch were involved in placing an op-ed in USA Today defending warrantless surveillance. Emails released to EPIC show the existence of additional emails in the thread, although the contents of the emails are almost entirely redacted.
EPIC's lawsuit also revealed new emails that show that Kavanaugh was a key defender of the warrantless wiretapping program after the program became public. The emails show that Kavanaugh offered several legal justifications for the warrantless wiretapping program after the program was revealed to the public. Kavanaugh collected analysis from Orin Kerr and Cass Sunstein and precedent from the Clinton administrations in support of the program. Kavanaugh also highlighted a portion of Justice White's concurrence in Katz v. United States that would not require courts to scrutinize a President's justification for warrantless surveillance if it is based on national security.
Kavanaugh downplayed his role in the defense of warrantless wiretapping in written responses to questions from Sen. Durbin after his 2006 confirmation hearings. Kavanaugh wrote that, after the New York Times story broke, "the President [spoke] publicly about the program on numerous occasions and I have performed my ordinary role as Staff Secretary with respect to staffing the President's public speeches." Kavanaugh's uncritical view of warrantless surveillance has permeated into his work on the bench. While on the D.C. Circuit, Kavanaugh wrote separately in Klayman v. United States to endorse the NSA’s bulk telephone record collection program based on an unspecified “national security need.”
The Defense and Expansion of the Patriot Act
Emails contained in records released to the Senate Judiciary Committee provide a glimpse into Kavanaugh's activities supporting the Patriot Act. Kavanaugh played a central role in the adoption and defense of the Patriot Act, which he described as a "measured, careful, responsible, and constitutional approach." Kavanaugh drafted talking points supporting the Patriot Act that were later incorporated into President Bush's signing statement. He wrote that "the new law will update laws authorizing government surveillance. These laws were enacted decades ago by Congress in an era of rotary telephones. These laws must be updated to account for e-mail, internet usage, cellular phones, and other forms of modern communication." President Bush adopted the "rotary phones" characterization in his signing statement. Kavanaugh's description of the Patriot Act revealed a deep misunderstanding of modern privacy law. In fact, the Patriot Act diminished privacy protections in the Cable Act and the Electronic Communications Privacy Act ("ECPA"), neither of which were from "the era of the rotary phone," as they protected the privacy of interactive video records and e-mail, respectively.
Kavanaugh was still in the White House when the Patriot Act reauthorizing amendments, which further expanded surveillance authority, passed in March 2006, and when the "telephony metadata program" was transitioned to the bulk surveillance orders issued under Section 215 of the Patriot Act. These programs were harshly criticized by Members of Congress. Subsequently, the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board ("PCLOB") reported that it had "not identified a single instance involving a threat to the United States in which the program made a concrete difference in the outcome of a counterterrorism investigation." Sen. Leahy further emphasized that "the administration has not demonstrated that the Section 215 phone records collection program is uniquely valuable enough to justify the massive intrusion on Americans' privacy." Congress subsequently passed the USA FREEDOM Act in 2015, ending the bulk collection program and amending Section 215.
EPIC's lawsuit has revealed that Kavanaugh exchanged many emails about the Patriot Act as Staff Secretary. The emails show that Kavanaugh was involved in drafting and approving fact sheets and speeches justifying the surveillance authorities. The contents of the emails, however, are largely redacted.
Opinion in Klayman v. Obama
On the D.C. Circuit, Judge Kavanaugh defended warrantless surveillance in a surprising opinion in Klayman v. Obama, where he wrote that the "bulk collection of telephony data" is not a search and is "entirely consistent with the Fourth Amendment." He stated further that, even if it were a search, the search would be reasonable because the collection of personal data serves a "special need." No court had ever recognized the "special needs" doctrine without a showing that the conduct in fact advances a government interet.
When Sen. Leahy asked Judge Kavanaugh about this opinion during the 2018 confirmation hearings, Judge Kavanaugh admitted that Carpenter v. United States was a "game changer" as far as whether there was a search, but he failed to justify or revise his assertion of the special needs doctrine, even faced with clear evidence that the program did not prevent any terrorist attacks.
Testimony Before the Senate Judiciary Committee in 2018
As of September 5, 2018,
only 7% of the records from Kavanaugh's time at the White House had been released to the Senate Judiciary Committee, and
only 4% were available to the public.
After the September 17, 2001 email to John Yoo became public, several Senators questioned Kavanaugh about his involvement in warrantless wiretapping. Kavanaugh claimed that it was "all hands on deck" after September 11, but that he could not remember the full extent of his conversation with Yoo, or whether he had seen Yoo's memo dated the same day. He also claimed that his 2006 testimony was truthful as to his knowledge of the Terrorist Surveillance Program, but did not further elaborate.
EPIC's Interest
Part of EPIC's mission is to educate the public about emerging privacy issues. It is hard to imagine a more important privacy issue than the potential confirmation of a Supreme Court justice who helped develop and defend warrantless surveillance. EPIC also provides guidance to members of the Senate Judiciary Committee on nominee's views on privacy. Kavanaugh's White House records relating to warrantless wiretapping and the Patriot Act are essential to understand Kavanaugh's views on the right to privacy and how he might rule as a Supreme Court justice on the issue. EPIC submitted two urgent FOIA requests for these records. EPIC has also sent two letters to the Senate Judiciary Committee highlighting concerns about Kavanaugh's role in the creation of the Patriot Act, his defense of warrantless wiretapping in the White House, and his troubling opinion as a judge in Klayman v. Obama, which justified the warrantless collection of phone records of all Americans.
FOIA Documents
- EPIC's Kavanaugh Emails FOIA Request (August 1, 2018)
- EPIC's Kavanaugh Staff Files FOIA Request (August 1, 2018)
- Phase One and Two Search Results (October 3, 2018)
In response to EPIC's suit and motion for a preliminary injunction, the National Archives agreed to search and process records responsive to EPIC's FOIA requests in three phases. The first phase involved a search of records that the Archives has already processed for release pursuant to a "special access" request by Senate Judiciary Chairman Grassley. These records include files from Judge Kavanaugh's time in the White House Counsel's Office. Specifically, the physical files that he maintained and the e-mails that he sent during that period. The agency conducted the following searches of Kavanaugh's e-mails (results included below):
Phase 1 and Phase 2 Searches (E-mail records from White House Counsel’s Office period from January 2001 to July 2003)
Type of search |
Search terms |
Number of results |
E-mails sent from Brett M. Kavanaugh |
to/cc/bcc John C. Yoo between September 1, 2001 and February 1, 2002 |
11 |
|
to/cc/bcc Michael Hayden between September 1, 2001 and February 1, 2002 |
0 |
|
that include the terms “Michael Hayden” or “National Security Agency” between September 1, 2001 and February 1, 2002 |
3 |
|
that include the terms “Patriot Act” or “PATRIOT Act” or “surveillance” |
227 |
|
that include the terms “CAPPS II” or “Privacy Act” or “Fusion Center” |
119 |
E-mails sent to/cc/bcc Brett M. Kavanaugh |
from John C. Yoo between September 1, 2001 and February 1, 2002 |
183 |
|
from Michael Hayden between September 1, 2001 and February 1, 2002 |
0 |
|
that include the terms “Michael Hayden” or “National Security Agency” between September 1, 2001 and February 1, 2002 |
19 |
|
that include the terms “Patriot Act” or “PATRIOT Act” or “surveillance” |
1988 |
|
that include the terms “CAPPS II” or “Privacy Act” or “Fusion Center” |
754 |
- Phase 3 Searches (E-mail records from Staff Secretary period from July 2003 to May 2006)
Type of search |
Search terms |
Number of results |
E-mails sent to/from/cc/bcc Brett M. Kavanaugh |
to/cc/bcc Patrick Philbin between May 1, 2003 and June 1, 2004 |
258 |
|
to/cc/bcc Jack Goldsmith between October 6, 2003 and June 1, 2004 |
110 |
|
to/cc/bcc Steven Bradbury between December 1, 2005 and February 1, 2006 |
632 |
|
that include the terms “Comey” and “Ashcroft” between March 1, 2004 and March 11, 2004 |
95 |
|
that include the terms “Lichtblau” or “Risen” between October 1, 2004 and December 1, 2005 |
573 |
|
that include the terms “surveillance” or “National Security Agency” |
7998 |
|
that include the terms “CAPPS II” or “Secure Flight” or “Passenger Name Record” or “Total Information Awareness” |
806 |
- Emails responsive to Phase 1 Search:
- Emails responsive to Phase 2 Search:
Legal Documents
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia (No. 18-2150)
Resources
News
- As Democrats Raise Alarm Over Barrett Materials, Litigation for Kavanaugh's Papers Drags On, Law.com, October 12, 2020
- EPIC v. National Archives, Daily Dot, October 30, 2018
- Lawsuit unearths hundreds of Kavanaugh emails on government surveillance, Daily Dot, October 15, 2018
- Democrats not giving up Kavanaugh battle, POLITICO, October 11, 2018
- [Kavanaugh and the Supreme Court], The Intercept, October 9, 2018
- What's On The Line for Tech in SCOTUS Vote, POLITICO, October 5, 2018
- Lawsuits point to large trove of unreleased Kavanaugh White House documents, Yahoo News, October 5, 2018
- This Will Continue, Talking Points Memo, October 5, 2018
- As Bush aide, Kavanaugh sent 227 emails about “surveillance,†raising questions about his role, Fast Company, October 5, 2018
- Kavanaugh’s Surveillance Discussions Under The Microscope, POLITICO Morning Tech, October 4, 2018
More news
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