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9-7.000
ELECTRONIC
SURVEILLANCE
9-7.010 Introduction
9-7.100 Authorization of Applications for
Wire, Oral, and Electronic Interception Orders -- Overview and History of
Legislation
9-7.110 Format for the
Authorization Request
9-7.111 Roving Interception
9-7.112 Emergency Interception
9-7.200 Video Surveillance -- Closed
Circuit Television -- Department of Justice Approval Required When There Is
A Reasonable Expectation of Privacy
9-7.250 Use and Unsealing of Title III
Affidavits
9-7.301 Consensual Monitoring --
General Use
9-7.302 Consensual Monitoring --
"Procedures for Lawful, Warrantless Interceptions of Verbal Communications"
9-7.400 Defendant Motion or Discovery
Request for Disclosure of Defendant Overhearings and Attorney
Overhearings
A. The affidavit of an "investigative or law enforcement officer" of the United States who is empowered by law to conduct investigations of, or to make arrests for, offenses enumerated in 18 U.S.C. § 2516(1) or (3) (which, for any application involving the interception of electronic communications, includes any Federal felony offense), with such affidavit setting forth the facts of the investigation that establish the basis for those probable cause (and other) statements required by Title III to be included in the application;
B. The application by any United States Attorney or his/her Assistant, or any other attorney authorized by law to prosecute or participate in the prosecution of offenses enumerated in 18 U.S.C. § 2516(1) or (3) that provides the basis for the court's jurisdiction to sign an order authorizing the requested interception of wire, oral, and/or electronic communications; and
C. A set of orders to be signed by the court authorizing the government to intercept, or approving the interception of, the wire, oral, and/or electronic communications that are the subject of the application, including appropriate redacted orders to be served on any relevant providers of "electronic communication service" (as defined in 18 U.S.C. § 2510(15)).
I. DEFINITIONS
II. NEED FOR WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION
A. Investigations Where Written Department of Justice Approval is Required. A request for authorization to monitor an oral communication without the consent of all parties to the communication must be approved in writing by the Director or Associate Directors of the Office of Enforcement Operations, Criminal Division, U.S. Department of Justice, when it is known that:
(1) the monitoring relates to an investigation of a member of Congress, a federal judge, a member of the Executive Branch at Executive Level IV or above, or a person who has served in such capacity within the previous two years;(2) the monitoring relates to an investigation of the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, or Attorney General of any State or Territory, or a judge or justice of the highest court of any State or Territory, and the offense investigated is one involving bribery, conflict of interest, or extortion relating to the performance of his or her official duties;
(3) any party to the communication is a member of the diplomatic corps of a foreign country;
(4) any party to the communication is or has been a member of the Witness Security Program and that fact is known to the agency involved or its officers;
(5) the consenting or nonconsenting person is in the custody of the Bureau of Prisons or the United States Marshals Service; or
(6) the Attorney General, Deputy Attorney General, Associate Attorney General, any Assistant Attorney General, or the United States Attorney in the district where an investigation is being conducted has requested the investigating agency to obtain prior written consent before conducting consensual monitoring in a specific investigation.
B. Monitoring Not Within Scope of Memorandum. Even if the interception falls within one of the six categories above, the procedures and rules in this Memorandum do not apply to:
(1) extraterritorial interceptions;III. AUTHORIZATION PROCEDURES AND RULES
NOTE: Consensual monitoring conducted outside of the United States is not controlled by this memorandum. However, any extraterritorial investigative activity, including but not limited to consensual monitoring, requires the prior approval of the Criminal Division. Before conducting any such activity outside of the United States, agents should consult with their counsel's office and must consult with the Criminal Division's Office of International Affairs.(2) foreign intelligence interceptions, including interceptions pursuant to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 (50 U.S.C. §1801, et seq.);(3) interceptions pursuant to the court-authorization procedures of Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, as amended (18 U.S.C. §2510, et seq.);
(4) routine Bureau of Prisons monitoring of oral communications that are not attended by a justifiable expectation of privacy;
(5) interceptions of radio communications; and
(6) interceptions of telephone communications.
A. Required Information. The following information must be set forth in any request to monitor an oral communication pursuant to part II.A.:
(1) Reasons for the Monitoring. The request must contain a reasonably detailed statement of the background and need for the monitoring.B. Oral Requests. Unless a request is of an emergency nature, it must be in written form and contain all of the information set forth above. Emergency requests in cases in which written Department of Justice approval is required may be made by telephone to the Director or an Associate Director of the Criminal Division's Office of Enforcement Operations, or to the Assistant Attorney General, the Acting Assistant Attorney General, or a Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Criminal Division, and should later be reduced to writing and submitted to the appropriate headquarters official as soon as practicable after authorization has been obtained. An appropriate headquarters filing system is to be maintained for consensual monitoring requests that have been received and approved in this manner. Oral requests must include all the information required for written requests as set forth above.(2) Offense. If the monitoring is for investigative purposes, the request must include a citation to the principal criminal statute involved.
(3) Danger. If the monitoring is intended to provide protection to the consenting party, the request must explain the nature of the danger to the consenting party.
(4) Location of Devices. The request must state where the monitoring device will be hidden: on the person, in personal effects, or in a fixed location.
(5) Location of Monitoring. The request must specify the location and primary judicial district where the monitoring will take place. A monitoring authorization is not restricted to the original district. However, if the location of monitoring changes, notice should be promptly given to the approving official. The record maintained on the request should reflect the location change.
(6) Time. The request must state the length of time needed for the monitoring. Initially, an authorization may be granted for up to 90 days from the day the monitoring is scheduled to begin. If there is the need for continued monitoring, extensions for additional periods of up to 90 days may be granted. In special cases (e.g., "fencing" operations run by law enforcement agents or long-term investigations that are closely supervised by the Department's Criminal Division), authorization for up to 180 days may be granted with similar extensions.
(7) Names. The request must give the names of persons, if known, whose communications the department or agency expects to monitor and the relation of such persons to the matter under investigation or to the need for the monitoring.
(8) Trial Attorney Approval. The request must state that the facts of the surveillance have been discussed with the United States Attorney, an Assistant United States Attorney, or the previously designated Department of Justice attorney responsible for a particular investigation, and that such attorney concurs that the use of consensual monitoring is appropriate under this memorandum (including the date of such concurrence). The attorney must also concur that the use of consensual monitoring under the facts of the investigation does not raise the issue of entrapment. Such statements may be made orally.
(9) Renewals. A request for renewal authority to monitor oral communications must contain all the information required for an initial request. The renewal request must also refer to all previous authorizations and explain why an additional authorization is needed, as well as provide an updated statement as to the concurrence of the responsible trial attorney.
C. Authorization. Authority to engage in consensual monitoring in situations set forth in part II.A. of this Memorandum may be given by the Attorney General, the Deputy Attorney General, the Associate Attorney General, the Assistant Attorney General or Acting Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Criminal Division, a Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the Criminal Division, or the Director or an Associate Director of the Criminal Division's Office of Enforcement Operations. Requests for authorization will normally be submitted by the headquarters of the department or agency requesting the consensual monitoring to the Office of Enforcement Operations for review.
D. Emergency Monitoring. If an emergency situation requires consensual monitoring at a time when one of the individuals identified in part III.B. above cannot be reached, the authorization may be given by the head of the responsible department or agency, or his or her designee. Such department or agency must then notify the Office of Enforcement Operations as soon as practicable after the emergency monitoring is authorized, but not later than three working days after the emergency authorization.
IV. SPECIAL LIMITATIONS
When a communicating party consents to the monitoring of his or her oral communications, the monitoring device may be concealed on his or her person, in personal effects, or in a fixed location. Each department and agency engaging in such consensual monitoring must ensure that the consenting party will be present at all times when the device is operating.
In addition, each department and agency must ensure: (1) that no agent or person cooperating with the department or agency trespasses while installing a device in a fixed location, unless that agent or person is acting pursuant to a court order that authorizes the entry and/or trespass, and (2) that as long as the device is installed in the fixed location, the premises remain under the control of the government or of the consenting party. See United States v. Yonn, 702 F.2d 1347 (11th Cir.), cert denied, 464 U.S. 917 (1983) (rejecting the First Circuit's holding in United Statesv. Padilla 520 F.2d 526 (1st Cir. 1975), and approving use of fixed monitoring devices that are activated only when the consenting party is present). But see United States v. Shabazz, 883 F.Supp. 422 (D.Minn. 1995).
V. NEED FOR ORAL AUTHORIZATION OF CONSENSUAL MONITORING WHERE NO WRITTEN APPROVAL IS REQUIRED
Prior to receiving approval for consensual monitoring from the head of the department or agency or his or her designee, a representative of the department or agency must contact the United States Attorney, an Assistant United States Attorney, or the Department of Justice attorney responsible for a particular investigation. Authorization may be obtained orally from this attorney. The attorney, in giving authorization, must concur as to both the legality and the propriety of the consensual monitoring in question.
VI. REPORTS
VII. GENERAL LIMITATIONS
April 1998 | USAM Chapter 9-7 |
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