Residence Requirement for Assistant United States
Attorneys Under 28 U.S.C. § 545(a)
Under 28 U.S.C. § 545(a), Assistant United States Attorneys must physically reside in or within 25
miles of the district that they serve.
November 20, 2012
MEMORANDUM OPINION FOR THE GENERAL COUNSEL
EXECUTIVE OFFICE FOR UNITED STATES ATTORNEYS
Federal law provides that “[e]ach assistant United States attorney shall reside in
the district for which he or she is appointed or within 25 miles” of that district. 28
U.S.C. § 545(a) (2006). In 1979, we interpreted the phrase “shall reside” to require
the “physical presence” of Assistant United States Attorneys, reasoning that the
ordinary meaning of the word “residence” as well as the legislative history
established Congress’s intent to regulate where AUSAs could physically live
while serving their districts. Assistant U.S. Attorney—Residence Requirement (28
U.S.C. § 545), 3 Op. O.L.C. 360 (1979) (“1979 Opinion”). You asked us to revisit
the 1979 Opinion’s reading of section 545(a) in light of advances in technology
that would make it possible for AUSAs to work remotely while living outside their
districts.1 Specifically, you asked whether maintaining a “virtual presence” in a
district through a telework arrangement could satisfy the section 545(a) residence
requirement. Although we appreciate that telework capabilities now allow some
AUSAs to perform their duties even while stationed more than 25 miles from their
districts, we believe that the 1979 Opinion correctly interpreted the statute and that
AUSAs must physically reside in or within 25 miles of the district that they serve.2
1
See Letter for Virginia A. Seitz, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, from Jay
Macklin, General Counsel, Executive Office for United States Attorneys (October 1, 2012) (“EOUSA
Letter”).
2
The 1979 Opinion interpreted an earlier version of the statute, which required all AUSAs, save
those serving in the District of Columbia and the Southern District of New York, to reside within their
appointing district. See 28 U.S.C. § 545(a) (1976). The current statute does not except AUSAs
appointed for D.C. and SDNY from the residence requirement, but rather allows all AUSAs, regardless
of district, to live “in . . . or within 25 miles” of the district they serve. 28 U.S.C. § 545(a) (2006).
Despite this change, the statute’s key phrase—which restricts where AUSAs “shall reside”—has
remained constant, and the 1979 Opinion’s analysis is therefore relevant to the amended statute.
1
Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 36
I.
Section 545(a) states in its entirety:
Each United States attorney shall reside in the district for which he is
appointed, except that these officers of the District of Columbia, the
Southern District of New York, and the Eastern District of New
York may reside within 20 miles thereof. Each assistant United
States attorney shall reside in the district for which he or she is ap-
pointed or within 25 miles thereof. The provisions of this subsection
shall not apply to any United States attorney or assistant United
States attorney appointed for the Northern Mariana Islands who at
the same time is serving in the same capacity in another district. Pur-
suant to an order from the Attorney General or his designee, a United
States attorney or an assistant United States attorney may be as-
signed dual or additional responsibilities that exempt such officer
from the residency requirement in this subsection for a specific peri-
od as established by the order and subject to renewal.
The text indicates, in a number of ways, that Congress intended section 545(a)
to impose a physical residence requirement. To start, the statute focuses on where
AUSAs (and U.S. Attorneys) must “reside”—a word that generally connotes
physically living in a particular place. See Webster’s Third New International
Dictionary 1931 (1993) (to reside is “to dwell permanently or continuously: have a
settled abode for a time: have one’s residence or domicile”); Random House
Dictionary of the English Language 1648 (1987) (to reside is “to dwell permanent-
ly or for a considerable time”); see also Black’s Law Dictionary 1423 (9th ed.
2009) (defining residence as “[t]he act or fact of living in a given place for some
time”; “[t]he place where one actually lives, as distinguished from a domicile”;
and “bodily presence as an inhabitant in a given place”).
Beyond the use of the word “reside,” the way the statute marks the bounds of
the residence requirement also indicates that Congress intended to regulate
physical presence. AUSAs must reside in “or within 25 miles” of the district they
serve, and U.S. Attorneys for D.C. and for New York’s southern and eastern
districts may live “within 20 miles” of their district. Id. By framing the residence
requirements in terms of permissible geographic ranges, Congress indicated that it
was using the phrase “shall reside” to specify where these federal attorneys must
physically dwell.
Other parts of section 545(a) reinforce this understanding of the residence
requirement. The statute does not apply to federal attorneys “appointed for the
Northern Mariana Islands who at the same time [are] serving in the same capacity
in another district.” Id. Nor does it reach anyone to whom the Attorney General
assigns “dual or additional responsibilities that exempt such officer from the
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Residence Requirement for AUSAs Under 28 U.S.C. § 545(a)
residency requirement . . . for a specific period.” Id.3 If U.S. Attorneys and AUSAs
could satisfy the requirements of section 545(a) by maintaining a virtual presence
in one district while residing in another, these exceptions for those that take on
dual roles in different districts would not be necessary. See Corley v. United
States, 556 U.S. 303, 314 (2009) (A statute “should be construed so that effect is
given to all its provisions, so that no part will be inoperative or superfluous, void
or insignificant.”) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Based on this
and the other textual indications discussed above, we conclude that section 545(a)
requires that AUSAs physically reside in or within 25 miles of the district they
serve.4
II.
The legislative history confirms that section 545(a) requires physical residence.
In 1896, when Congress first considered whether to authorize the appointment of
AUSAs (then “assistant district attorneys”), the draft language did not include a
residence requirement. Representative Johnson asked the bill sponsor whether
assistants would need to be “actual residents of the district” for which they are
appointed. 28 Cong. Rec. 2464 (1896). When the sponsor said no, Representative
Johnson offered an ultimately successful amendment “for the purpose of imposing
a restriction in that regard,” commenting that he did “not think that there ought to
be anybody sent out to fill such positions in the State or Territory unless he lives
there.” Id.; see also 29 Stat. 181 (1896) (providing that assistant district attorneys
“must be residents of the district for which they are appointed”).
3
Since 2008, Congress has prohibited the use of funds “for the salary, benefits, or expenses of any
United States Attorney assigned dual or additional responsibilities by the Attorney General . . . that
exempt that United States Attorney from the residency requirements of 28 U.S.C. 545,” effectively
rendering the dual-responsibilities exception inapplicable to U.S. Attorneys. Consolidated Appropria-
tions Act, 2008, Pub. L. No. 110-161 (2007); see also Pub. L. No. 112-55 (2011) (same). By
preventing U.S. Attorneys from taking on dual responsibilities that would take them away from their
home districts, this appropriations rider presumes that section 545(a) regulates physical presence and
further reinforces our reading of the statute.
4
We would not read the residence requirement to apply to special attorneys appointed under
section 543 of chapter 28 of the U.S. Code, which authorizes “[t]he Attorney General [to] appoint
attorneys to assist United States attorneys when the public interest so requires.” Even though special
attorneys “assist” U.S. Attorneys, they are not the “assistant United States attorney[s]” to whom section
545(a) refers. Rather, section 545(a)’s use of the term “assistant United States attorneys” appears to be
a reference only to attorneys appointed under section 542, which provides that “[t]he Attorney General
may appoint one or more assistant United States attorneys.” We draw support for that reading from
floor statements made by the sponsor of the original AUSA residence requirement. When asked
whether the residence requirement would apply to “a special assistant,” the amendment’s sponsor
responded that the restriction was “only for regular deputies, not the special deputies,” and that the
Attorney General “has a right to employ special deputies at any time.” 28 Cong. Rec. 2465 (1896)
(statement of Representative Johnson).
3
Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 36
Floor statements from the debates on subsequent amendments to the statute
similarly indicate that Congress has long understood the statute to regulate
physical presence. As your letter notes, EOUSA Letter at 2, the 1979 Opinion
relied in part on two statements made during the 1941 debate on amending the
statute, the first of which explains that the then-current version of the statute
required attorneys to “move into the District and live in the District,” and the
second of which states that it was in “the best interest of the people whom
[AUSAs] service to require [AUSAs] to live among such people during their
tenure of office.” See 1979 Opinion, 3 Op. O.L.C. at 361; 87 Cong. Rec. 3269
(1941) (statements of Representatives McLaughlin and South). And when
Congress considered another amendment in 1979, the sponsor described section
545(a) as “a codification of the policy that law enforcement officials should reside
in the same community in which they enforce the law.” 125 Cong. Rec. 4164
(1979) (statement of Representative DeConcini). We have found nothing in the
legislative history to suggest that Congress has ever understood the residence
requirement as anything other than a limit on where U.S. Attorneys and AUSAs
may physically live, and we do not think the technological advances that make
telework an option for some AUSAs undermines the current relevance of Con-
gress’s stated purpose.
III.
We recognize that permitting remote work arrangements like the one you de-
scribe in your letter (through which an appellate attorney sought to telework for
two years while his spouse completed an overseas assignment) could assist the
Department’s retention efforts and alleviate potential difficulties arising from the
hiring freeze. And we are mindful that current technology could “ensure the
availability” of at least some attorneys—and thereby achieve one of the important
“purpose[s] of the residency requirement”—in ways that were not contemplated
when Congress passed the first residence requirement in 1896, or even when we
wrote the 1979 Opinion cited above. See 1979 Opinion, 3 Op. O.L.C. at 361. We
nevertheless believe that the text and legislative history require us to adhere to the
1979 Opinion’s analysis—an analysis that is consistent with other past readings of
both section 545(a) and a similar residence requirement for circuit judges. See
Memorandum for Philip H. Modlin, Director, Executive Office for United States
Attorneys from Mary C. Lawton, Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Office of
Legal Counsel (July 11, 1974) (“Lawton Memo”) (considering section 545(a) and
suggesting that “it is accepted almost without question that a public employee can
be required to live in the district in which he works”); Memorandum for Dennis
Mullins, Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Policy, from
Theodore B. Olson, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel (Sept.
26, 1984) (advising that a judicial nominee “establish his physical presence in
California” to comply with the requirement under 28 U.S.C. § 44(c) that a circuit
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Residence Requirement for AUSAs Under 28 U.S.C. § 545(a)
judge “be a resident of the circuit for which appointed”); E-mail for Kurt Didler
from Dan Koffsky, Re: US Atty Residency Req’t (Aug. 2, 2002) (adhering to the
1979 Opinion’s interpretation of “reside” to conclude that “presence in the district
seems to meet the statutory purpose”).
This is not to say that a U.S. Attorney could never approve an AUSA’s request
to telework away from the district in which he or she serves (and outside the 25
mile radius that the statute permits) for a reasonable period of time, subject to any
requirements of the Department’s Telework Policy. See DOJ Policy Statement
1200.01 (approved on Jul. 20, 2012) (available at http://www.justice.gov/jmd/hr/
doj1200-01.pdf, last visited Nov. 19, 2012). The residence requirement, we have
said, “contemplates a home in which [AUSAs] are present most of the time,” not
all of the time. See Lawton Memo. So while we do not think that an AUSA
telecommuting overseas for a period of two years could fairly be considered
“present most of the time” in his home district, other, short-term telework
arrangements would be permissible under the statute, as long as the AUSA usually
has a physical presence in or within 25 miles of the appointing district.
VIRGINIA A. SEITZ
Assistant Attorney General
Office of Legal Counsel
5