SNEPP: THE CASE FOR JUDICIAL RESTRAINT

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP80B01554R003300130074-5
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RIFPUB
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K
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3
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 22, 2005
Sequence Number: 
74
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Publication Date: 
May 1, 1980
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MAGAZINE
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Approved FoRelease 2005/03/16 : CIA-RDP80B015503300130074-5 Tape 14 Side A, 1/8 - 1/4 a jug 'No NOTE FOR: Gary I made some semi-commitments to Mr. John J.D. Owen of Amherst, a classmate and friend.2 that I'd see him if he came to Washington and called; and to President Ed Mortola of Pace University who is on some Presidential Commission for Education. Approved For Release 2005/03/16 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R003300130074-5 Approved For Release 2005/03/16 : CIA-RDP80B01554R003300130074-5 TICLE'P7~.REj3 FIRST PRI"1CPPIES OX PAGE CENTER for NATIONAL SECURITY ITY STUDIES M Y 1980 Snepp: The Case cr Judi dal alga n T' Guasl by Anthony Lewis The Warren Court was often chided by conservatives for failing to exercise self-restraint-for reaching out to decide issues instead of leaving them, at least in the first instance, to the political branches of government. Given the great power of the Supreme Court, it should be wary of overreaching. But the caution should apply whether a novel decision is being made in the interests of the individual or of the state.. In the case of Frank Snepp, the Court reached out for novel doctrine that greatly enlarges the state's power to suppress what it defines as official secrets. The Court acted without explicit congressional guidelines, in 'an area where Congress has done much legislating, and it acted in a summary manner that violated its own traditions. The result is to give this country the first elements of an Official Secrets Act: the statute that in Britain has been condemned by repeated studies as an unjustified obstacle to informed democratic control of government. Snepp was,a Central Intelligence Agency man in Vietnam. After leaving the agency in 1976 he wrote a book, Decent Interval, that criticized the performance of Secretary of State Kissinger, Ambassador Graham Martin, and CIA officials in the final days-criticized them in particular for leaving behind, when the Americans pulled out in 1975, many Vietnamese who had worked for the CIA and other U.S. agencies, Like all CIA employees, Snepp on joining the Agency had signed an agreement not to publish anything about it without its prior approval. In the earlier case of Victor Marchetti, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit had decided (and the Supreme Court declined to review the decision) that that promise was a legally-binding contract, enforceable by injunction. But Decent Interval appeared before officials knew about it: too late for an injunction against publication. The government instead sought to penalize Snepp financially, to discourage others from following his example. Damages are the usual remedy for breach of contract; but in suing, the Government sought something more: _ a "constructive trust" that would take all of Snepp's profits from the book and give them to the Government. It won that from the trial judge, but the Fourth Circuit said the proper remedy was punitive damages, fixed by a jury. Snepp asked the Supreme Court'to review the whole theory that his promise was an enforceable "contract." Point cf View The Government opposed review, saying that it was content with the Fourth Circuit decision. But if the Supreme Court heard the case, it said, it would argue for the constructive trust remedy. _ The Supreme Court took the case and decided it summarily, without hearing argument. A 6-3 majority, in an unsigned opinion, found that Snepp had violated both; his "contract" and a "trust inherent in his position." The Court imposed a constructive trust on Snepp, requiring him "to disgorge the benefits of his faithlessness." The manner of the decision was extraordinary. Because the government had only conditionally raised the question of the remedy, saying it was satisfied with what it had won' in the Court of Appeals, Snepp's lawyers had not briefed the legal issue of constructive trusts-much less had an opportunity to argue it orally. Justice Stevens, in the dissenting opinion, said he had been able to find no precedent for the Supreme Court thus reaching out to decide a question without giving counsel some chance to discuss it. The matter-the substance of what was decided-was even more remarkable. For the Court did not stop at holding that CIA employees who sign formal secrecy undertakings are legally bound by them. It.did not stop at affirming that those persons may be enjoined from writing or speaking about the agency's secret work, as Victor Marchetti was, or may be financially punished for publishing without prior clearance. The Court raised the possibility that those draconian devices may be applied to anyone in government who has access to significant classified material. "Quite apart from the plain language of the [secrecy] agreement," the Supreme Court said, "the nature of Snepp's duties and his conceded access to confidential sources and materials could establish a trust relationship." Elsewhere the opinion implied that Snepp's position not only could but did create "a fiduciary obligation" not to say anything without his superiors' approval. Thousands of people in the Defense and State Departments and elsewhere have access to material as secret as that known to Frank Snepp, who was not a high CIA official. Potentially, therefore, any one of those persons can be enjoined from speaking about abuses in his agency or deprived of his royalties for publishing without approval a book critical of agency policy. In effect the Court has given the government the outlines of a broad new secrecy law, which future judicial decisions can fill in, Approved For Release 2005/03/16: CIA-RDP80BO1554ROO33PAI-3110 A-5-. The Experience ce Breast Cancer The articles on breast can- cer are a tribute to enlightened journalism ("Reducing the Trauma of Breast Cancer" by Maya Pines and "The Best Years of My Life" by Betty Rollin, April 6). I recently underwent a dou- ble mastectomy, and I find the sentiments expressed by the authors very honest and thor- ough. Thank you for helping me and, I imagine, countless others. It Is a difficult ordeal to go through, and we need support systems from many- most of all the physicians In- volved. PEM DONEGAN WORMER Farmington, Conn. Maya Pines's otherwise good article contained a few factual errors. A modified radical mastectomy is not the same as a total mastectomy, nor was the modified radical compared with other surgery in the National Surgical Adju- vant breast study. Actually, the modified radical mastec- tomy was recommended as the surgical procedure of choice by the National Cancer Institute consensus committee even though there has never been a randomized trial to compare it directly with other types of surgery. Random trials are not al- ways necessary to demon- strate the effectiveness of cer- tain treatments. Evidence ac- cumulating from many cen- ters all over the world shows that the procedure of local ex- cision and radiation therapy yields results just as good as mastectomy despite the non- random nature of most of these studies. Women should be made aware that this option of treatment exists, and have E_ E the opportunity to discusss it with a qualified radiation therapist prior to surgery. LEONARD R. PROSNITZ, M.D. Professor of Therapeutic Radiology School of Medicine Yale University New Haven The two-step procedure will enrich surgeons, anesthesiolo- gists and hospitals, but at what benefit to patients? I find It hard to believe that Dr. Kel- ley really distrusts her pa- thologists, or that the exten- sive testing called for is cost- effective, either. The fact is that an abundant body of lit- erature exists demonstrating that pathologists are quite ac- curate, and that, for example, scanning is overutilized in the majority of early cases. JOSEPH E. BARRIE, M.D. Concord, Mass. I wish to add one point about the psychological benefit to the patient of the two-step pro- cess. I had a biopsy and "Itim- pectomy" in the ambulatory- surgery program at Norwalk Hospital. When I awoke, my surgeon told me the biopsy showed a malignancy. He said I should get dressed and go home and come to his office on Monday. At that point, I thought my only options were just how radical a mastectomy I would undergo. To my aston- ishment and relief, the sur- geon recommended radiation - painless and, we now be- lieve, successful in my case. The- days between the sur- geon's personal diagnosis and the biopsy were infinitely more difficult for me than the days between the biopsy and the appointment to discuss the options. The earlier period found my husband and me drawn together in enormous tension. We went through all of our fears before the biopsy. But once we actually heard the dreaded news, we found we could cope. Divorcing some of the emotional strain from the necessary physical ones is truly a blessing for the patient and her family. PHYLLIS S. McGRATH Weston, Conn. Happy fifth anniversary, Betty Rollin! How wonderful it is that this person is really alive and really happy to be alive; how sad, that it took such a close call before she was able to see and under- stand what was going on in her life and to make some rather drastic changes for herself. A paradox indeed that Betty Rollin had to have a part of the whole taken away before she became whole. I sincerely hope other people can learn from her painful experience. Many thanks to Miss Rollin for sharing so openly her own per- sonal experience. Obviously, she gained much more from her mastectomy than she lost. We all can learn a lesson in liv- ing from her. I hope she sees and feels many more anniver- saries. BARBARA-ANN KLIE Rochester Accountability of The C.I.A. Tad Szulc argues that leaks concerning C.I.A. covert operations from Capitol Hill sources are no problem and as- serts that Director of Central Intelligence Stansfield Turner "has admitted that he knows of no examples of such leaks from Capitol Hill sources" ("Putting Back the Bite in the C.I.A.," April 6). If Admiral Turner's admis- sion was correct as of the time it was made, he now needs to look no farther than Mr. Szulc's own article to find a leak on a sensitive C.I.A. mat- ter from Capitol Hill sources. The article describes a meet- ing in S-907, "the most secure room in all of Congress," to re- view C.I.A. plans for covert, paramilitary operations In Af- ghanistan. In view of the de- tailed description of the dis- cussion and decisions made at a secret meeting attended only `..f megtbe, of the Senate, C.I.A. representatives and the staff directors of the Select Committee, how can it be maintained that there are no leaks from Senate sources on matters of As the wife of a C.I.A. opera- tive, I find the prospect of a less accountable C.I.A. threat- ening indeed. I'm also puzzled by the claim of some that had the C.I.A. not been stripped of Its powers, we would not be in the mess we're in today, espe- cially the mess of Iran. How quickly we seem to for- get that the C.I.A. master- minded the overthrow of Mos- sadegh in 1953, putting, the Shah in power. The excesses and the unaccountability of the agency in Iran, and in many other now anti-American countries, have made the mess. It is not a question of what might have been good for Iran, or what is right or wrong. It Is a question of interference. A backlash Is inevitable. The greater the power of the C.I.A., the more Irans we can expect. Indeed, El Salvador and Nicaragua sta Welcoming Vii etnam Refugees The drama of collective vio- lence described in "Vietnam Fallout in a Texas Town" (by Ross Milloy, April 6) is typical of eruptions between segre- gated communities without bonds of language, memory or religion to bind them. But Seadrift is not the whole story. As a sponsor and director of the Indochinese Refugee Spon- sorship Development Project of the Dutchess Interfaith Council, I have seen Vietnam- ese refugees being welcomed in Dutchess and Ulster Coun- ties. My own committee fur- nished a complete four-room apartment without any cash outlay except for window shades. Nor does responsibil- ity end with material dona- tions. Sponsors show refugees how to shop and cope, get them jobs and apartments, drive them to medical appointments and language lessons, and often tutor them themselves. Many feel ( ' do) that we have benefitd09ore than they by these relationships. HELEN FEIN Director, Indochinese Refugee Sponsorship Development Project Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Preserving and Sharing Art I want to thank Mary Vespa for her article "Rare Finds in a Museum" (April 20). Al- though the article dealt only with the plight of photographic collections, its tale of involun- tary neglect and deterioration can be generalized to three-di- mensional objects, paintings and prints in most American museums of anthropology. Various ideas have been ad- vanced for rekindling interest in their preservation. At the Peabody Museum, we are ex- perimenting with the coun- try's first large-scale collec- tion-sharing program. During the next three years, the Pea- body will make available to nine art, history, science and general museums some 1,200 artifacts, photos, paintings, prints and documents for pub- lic exhibition. FRAN SILVERMAN Director, Collection-Sharing Program Peabody Musem Harvard University Cambridge, Mass. ^ The Times welcomes letters from readers. Letters for publication should include the writer's name, address and daytime telephone number. Letters should be ad- dressed to The Editor, Magazine, The New York Times, 229 West 43d Street, New York, N. Y. 10036. Be- cause of the large volume of mass received, we regret that we are un- able to acknowledge or to return