Census Confidentiality and the PATRIOT Act
The Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to
Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001 does not require the Secretary of Com-
merce to disclose census information to federal law enforcement or national security
officers where such disclosure would otherwise be prohibited by the Census Act.
January 4, 2010
MEMORANDUM OPINION FOR THE GENERAL COUNSEL
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
You have asked whether the Uniting and Strengthening America by
Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terror-
ism Act of 2001, Pub. L. No. 107-56, 115 Stat. 272 (“PATRIOT Act”), as
amended, may require the Secretary of Commerce to disclose census
information to federal law enforcement or national security officers
where such disclosure would otherwise be prohibited by the Census Act,
13 U.S.C. §§ 8, 9, 214 (2006). We have identified no provisions of the
PATRIOT Act that would compel the Secretary to disclose such protected
information. 1
I.
To help promote the public cooperation on which an accurate census
largely depends, federal census statutes have long provided assurances
of confidentiality to respondents. See generally Baldrige v. Shapiro, 455
U.S. 345, 354, 356–59 (1982). This Office has described the current
Census Act confidentiality provisions as “the most recent codification of
a statutory confidentiality requirement that dates back more than a century
and that bars the disclosure of covered census information by census
1 We solicited views from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) and the Crimi-
nal, National Security, and Civil Rights Divisions of the Department of Justice. The
Criminal Division, upon review, offered no views. The FBI and the Civil Rights Division
concurred with the Department of Commerce in the view that no provisions of the
PATRIOT Act override the Census Act’s protections for covered census information
possessed by the Commerce Department. The National Security Division disagreed,
contending that section 215 of the PATRIOT Act, as amended, may allow for a court
order to compel the Secretary to disclose furnished census information. We address this
provision and the National Security Division’s views in greater detail below.
1
34 Op. O.L.C. 1 (2010)
officials.” Relationship Between Illegal Immigration Reform and Immi-
grant Responsibility Act of 1996 and Statutory Requirement for Confiden-
tiality of Census Information, __ Op. O.L.C. Supp. __, at *1 (May 18,
1999) (“IIRIRA Opinion”). The Census Act provides:
Neither the Secretary [of Commerce], nor any other officer or em-
ployee of the Department of Commerce or bureau or agency thereof,
or local government census liaison, may, except as provided in sec-
tion 8 or 16 or chapter 10 of this title or section 210 of the Depart-
ments of Commerce, Justice, and State, the Judiciary, and Related
Agencies Appropriations Act, 1998 or section 2(f ) of the Census of
Agriculture Act of 1997—
(1) use the information furnished under the provisions of this ti-
tle [the Census Act] for any purpose other than the statistical pur-
poses for which it is supplied; or
(2) make any publication whereby the data furnished by any
particular establishment or individual under this title can be iden-
tified; or
(3) permit anyone other than the sworn officers and employees
of the Department or bureau or agency thereof to examine the in-
dividual reports.
13 U.S.C. § 9(a).
The cross-referenced statutes in section 9(a) presently provide excep-
tions only for disclosure of transcripts or reports containing information
furnished by a respondent when requested by that respondent (or his or
her heir, successor, or authorized agent), see 13 U.S.C. § 8(a); certain
“tabulations and other statistical materials” that the Secretary may pro-
duce for private parties or government agencies, provided that the dis-
closed materials do not reveal “the information reported by, or on behalf
of, any particular respondent,” id. § 8(b); certain address information that
may be disclosed to local government census liaisons under section 16 of
the Census Act, id. § 16; certain business data and information on busi-
ness enterprises that may be shared with the Bureau of Economic Analysis
and the Bureau of Labor Statistics under sections 401 and 402 of the
Census Act, id. §§ 401, 402; certain disclosures to the Census Monitoring
Board permitted by section 210 of the Departments of Commerce, Justice,
and State, the Judiciary, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 1998,
2
Census Confidentiality and the PATRIOT Act
Pub. L. No. 105-119, 111 Stat. 2471, 2487 (1997); and certain disclosures
to the Department of Agriculture permitted by the Census of Agriculture
Act of 1997, Pub. L. No. 105-113, §§ 2(f), 4(a)(1), 111 Stat. 2274–76,
for the purpose of facilitating the agriculture census. In addition, section
9(b) of the Census Act exempts certain information relating to the census
of governments from section 9(a)’s confidentiality protections, see 13
U.S.C. § 9(b), and certain other provisions outside the Census Act ex-
pressly address the confidentiality of covered census information under
section 9. See, e.g., 42 U.S.C. § 11608 (2006) (establishing procedures
with respect to information protected by section 9 for purposes of imple-
menting an international convention); 42 U.S.C. § 6274 (2006) (specifi-
cally permitting disclosure of certain information “without regard to”
section 9); 44 U.S.C. § 2108(b) (2006) (regulating release of certain
historic census records in the custody of the Archivist of the United
States).
Reinforcing the confidentiality protections of section 9, section 8(c) of
the Census Act provides that “[i]n no case shall information furnished
under this section”—which, as noted, authorizes the Secretary to furnish
statistical tabulations of census data that “do not disclose the information
reported by, or on behalf of, any particular respondent,” as well as census
transcripts and reports when requested by the respondent (or the respond-
ent’s heir, successor, or authorized agent) —“be used to the detriment of
any respondent or other person to whom such information relates, except
in the prosecution of alleged violations of this title.” 13 U.S.C. § 8(c); see
also 15 C.F.R. § 80.5 (2009) (noting this statutory prohibition). Under
section 214 of the Census Act, violations of section 9 by any census
employee, staff member, or local liaison are subject to criminal punish-
ment. See 13 U.S.C. § 214.
Enacted into law after the September 11, 2001 attacks, the PATRIOT
Act made extensive changes to existing statutes governing investigations
related to terrorism, intelligence, and national security. Although some
PATRIOT Act provisions were subject to a statutory sunset, Congress
reauthorized provisions of the original PATRIOT Act, with amend-
ments, in the USA PATRIOT Improvement and Reauthorization Act of
2005, Pub. L. No. 109-177, 120 Stat. 192 (“Reauthorization Act”). The
PATRIOT Act, as amended, authorized a number of new or modified
3
34 Op. O.L.C. 1 (2010)
forms of surveillance, information-gathering, and information-sharing for
federal law enforcement and national security officers. 2
2 You identified for our review PATRIOT Act provisions establishing the following
surveillance and information-gathering powers for certain federal officers: authority to
obtain so-called “roving” wiretaps under foreign intelligence surveillance provisions, 50
U.S.C. § 1805(c)(2)(B) (2006) (containing language originating in PATRIOT Act § 206);
authority to conduct surveillance of certain agents of foreign powers for longer periods
than previously authorized, 50 U.S.C.A. § 1805(d) (West Supp. 2009) (containing lan-
guage originating in PATRIOT Act § 207); authority for certain warrant-based seizures of
voicemail messages, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2510(14), 2703(a)–(b) (including provisions originat-
ing in PATRIOT Act § 209); authority to seek court orders for production of “tangible
things” relevant to certain terrorism and intelligence investigations, 50 U.S.C.A. § 1861
(West 2003 & Supp. 2009) (including provisions originating in PATRIOT Act § 215);
revised standards for obtaining certain electronic surveillance warrants, 50 U.S.C.A.
§§ 1804(a)(6)(B), 1823(a)(6)(B) (West 2003 & Supp. 2009) (containing language origi-
nating in PATRIOT Act § 218); and authority to seek court orders compelling production
of certain educational records possessed by educational agencies and institutions for use
in certain terrorism-related investigations and prosecutions, 20 U.S.C. § 1232g(j) (2006)
(originating in PATRIOT Act § 507). You also identified one provision regarding infor-
mation-sharing within the federal government, section 508, which authorized the Attorney
General or a designee above a specified rank to apply for an ex parte court order to obtain
certain confidential educational reports, records, and information possessed by the
Department of Education for use in certain terrorism-related investigations and prosecu-
tions. 20 U.S.C. § 9573(e) (2006) (containing language originating in PATRIOT Act
§ 508).
We have independently identified and reviewed several other information-sharing pro-
visions of the PATRIOT Act (as amended), including provisions permitting disclosure
within the federal government of certain intelligence-related grand jury matters, Fed. R.
Crim. P. 6(e)(3)(D) (containing language originating in PATRIOT Act § 203(a)); provi-
sions permitting sharing within the federal government of certain intelligence-related
information contained in certain electronic intercepts, 18 U.S.C. § 2517(6) (2006) (origi-
nating in PATRIOT Act § 203(b)); provisions permitting sharing within the federal
government of certain intelligence-related information “obtained as part of a criminal
investigation,” 50 U.S.C.A. § 403-5d (West 2003 & Supp. 2009) (containing language
originating in PATRIOT Act § 203(d)); provisions authorizing the Secretary of the
Treasury to share certain financial records and reports with other agencies, 12 U.S.C.
§§ 3412(a), 3420(a)(2) (2006), 31 U.S.C. § 5319 (2006) (containing provisions originat-
ing in PATRIOT Act § 358); provisions requiring an entity in the Treasury Department to
analyze, disseminate, and provide access to certain information relating to financial
crimes, 31 U.S.C. § 310 (2006) (containing provisions originating in PATRIOT Act
§ 361); provisions requiring the Attorney General and FBI Director to provide the State
Department and Immigration and Naturalization Service with access, for visa-related
purposes, to criminal history record information in certain files, 8 U.S.C. § 1105(b)
(2006) (originating in PATRIOT Act § 403(a)); provisions encouraging dissemination of
4
Census Confidentiality and the PATRIOT Act
The PATRIOT Act includes certain express exceptions to otherwise
applicable confidentiality provisions. Section 508 of the PATRIOT Act
provided for authorized applications by certain high-ranking Justice
Department officials for an ex parte court order requiring production of
certain educational records—possessed by the Department of Education
and otherwise subject to statutory confidentiality requirements —for use
in certain terrorism-related investigations and prosecutions. PATRIOT
Act § 508 (repealed by Pub. L. No. 107-279, §§ 401(a)(6), 403(1), 116
Stat. 1940, 1983, 1985 (2002)); 20 U.S.C. § 9573(e) (2006) (recodify-
ing similar authorization). This provision authorized court orders “requir-
ing” the Secretary of Education to permit the Attorney General or his
designee to “collect” and “retain, disseminate, and use” these records for
official purposes related to covered investigations and prosecutions,
“[n]otwithstanding” statutory disclosure prohibitions that would other-
wise apply to those specific records. PATRIOT Act § 508; 20 U.S.C.
§ 9573(e). In addition, among numerous other changes, the PATRIOT Act
amended applicable laws to permit wider sharing of certain evidence
collected by grand juries, see Fed. R. Crim. P. 6(e)(3)(D), and broader
disclosure within the government, “[n]otwithstanding any other provision
of law,” of certain intelligence-related information obtained as part of a
criminal investigation. 50 U.S.C.A. § 403-5d (West 2003 & Supp. 2009);
see also supra note 2. None of the PATRIOT Act’s provisions expressly
references the Census Act or its confidentiality protections.
You have asked whether any of the information-gathering or infor-
mation-sharing provisions of the PATRIOT Act, as amended, may over-
ride the confidentiality requirements of the Census Act so as to require the
Commerce Secretary to disclose otherwise covered census information
to federal law enforcement or national security officials. Our understand-
ing from you is that you are not asking us to address what effect, if any,
the Census Act confidentiality provisions have on census-related infor-
information collected under certain statutory provisions “so it may be used efficiently and
effectively for national intelligence purposes,” 50 U.S.C. § 403-1(f)(6) (2006) (containing
language originating in PATRIOT Act § 901); and provisions generally requiring “expedi-
tious[]” disclosure to intelligence officials, pursuant to established guidelines, of foreign
intelligence acquired by federal law enforcement officers “in the course of a criminal
investigation,” 50 U.S.C. § 403-5b (2006) (containing language originating in PATRIOT
Act § 905).
5
34 Op. O.L.C. 1 (2010)
mation or communications that could possibly be obtained through sur-
veillance, interception, or other means apart from a direct request to the
Commerce Department. Nor are you asking us to address the effect, if
any, of PATRIOT Act provisions on the confidentiality under the Census
Act of census information possessed not by the Commerce Department,
but by third parties, such as those furnishing census information. We have
reviewed the PATRIOT Act provisions that you have identified, and we
have also conducted an independent review of the statute. With one ex-
ception, we conclude that none of the provisions appears on its face to
require the Secretary of Commerce to disclose census information other-
wise subject to the confidentiality protection mandated by the Census Act.
We therefore do not discuss the entirety of the PATRIOT Act in detail
and instead turn to the one provision that, in our judgment, warrants
further analysis.
In section 215 of the PATRIOT Act, Congress amended provisions
of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (“FISA”), 50 U.S.C.A.
§§ 1801–1885c (West 2003 & Supp. 2009), that previously authorized
court orders to obtain records from specified types of businesses, see 50
U.S.C. § 1862 (2000), to permit orders for production of “any tangible
things” for use in certain terrorism and intelligence investigations, see
50 U.S.C.A. § 1861(a)(1) (West 2003 & Supp. 2009). As amended by the
Reauthorization Act and two other statutes, see Reauthorization Act
§ 106; USA PATRIOT Act Additional Reauthorizing Amendments Act of
2006, Pub. L. No. 109-178, §§ 3–4, 120 Stat. 278, 278–81; Intelligence
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2002, Pub. L. No. 107-108, § 314(a)(6),
115 Stat. 1394, 1402, section 215 now provides:
Subject to paragraph (3) [which requires especially high-level ap-
proval within the FBI for certain categories of records], the Director
of the Federal Bureau of Investigation or a designee of the Director
(whose rank shall be no lower than Assistant Special Agent in
Charge) may make an application for an order requiring the produc-
tion of any tangible things (including books, records, papers, docu-
ments, and other items) for an investigation to obtain foreign intelli-
gence information not concerning a United States person or to
protect against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence ac-
tivities, provided that such investigation of a United States person is
6
Census Confidentiality and the PATRIOT Act
not conducted solely upon the basis of activities protected by the
first amendment to the Constitution.
50 U.S.C.A. § 1861(a)(1). 3
II.
Section 215, by its plain terms, provides the FBI with broad authority
to obtain “tangible things (including books, records, papers, documents,
and other items)” for use in certain terrorism and intelligence investiga-
tions. 4 And, as a general matter, the PATRIOT Act and its legislative
history suggest an intention on the part of Congress to provide the federal
government with substantial new powers to combat terrorism and protect
national security. See, e.g., H.R. Rep. No. 109-174, at 7 (2005) (confer-
ence report on Reauthorization Act describing PATRIOT Act as intended
“[t]o better equip Federal law enforcement and the intelligence communi-
ty with the resources necessary to confront . . . modern threats”); H.R.
Rep. No. 107-236, pt. 1, at 41 (2001) (committee report on predecessor
bill to the PATRIOT Act describing legislation as “provid[ing] enhanced
investigative tools and improv[ing] information sharing for the law en-
forcement and intelligence communities to combat terrorism and terrorist-
related crimes”).
There is, however, a long history of congressional enactments provid-
ing broad confidentiality protection to census information. The Supreme
3 The Reauthorization Act provided that the FISA provisions amended by section 215
would revert to their pre-PATRIOT Act form on December 31, 2009, but would remain
in effect “[w]ith respect to any particular foreign intelligence investigation that began
before the date on which [these] provisions . . . cease to have effect, or with respect to any
particular offense or potential offense that began or occurred before the date on which
such provisions cease to have effect.” See Reauthorization Act § 102(b). Congress
recently postponed the December 31, 2009 sunset in the Reauthorization Act until Feb-
ruary 28, 2010. See Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2010, Pub. L. No. 111-
118, § 1004(a), 123 Stat. 3409, 3470. Legislation pending in Congress would further
reauthorize section 215 with certain amendments. See, e.g., S. 1692, 111th Cong. (as
reported by the S. Comm. on the Judiciary, Oct. 13, 2009).
4 For purposes of this opinion, we assume without deciding that, even though section
215 is not expressly cast as an intragovernmental information-sharing provision, section
215 orders may require “production” of “tangible things” not only from parties outside the
federal government, but also from agencies within it.
7
34 Op. O.L.C. 1 (2010)
Court has construed sections 8 and 9 of the Census Act to “embody ex-
plicit congressional intent to preclude all disclosure of raw census data
reported by or on behalf of individuals,” Baldrige, 455 U.S. at 361, and
lower courts have likewise deemed it “‘abundantly clear that Congress
intended both a rigid immunity from publication or discovery and a liberal
construction of that immunity that would assure confidentiality,’” Carey
v. Klutznick, 653 F.2d 732, 739 (2d Cir. 1981) (quoting McNichols v.
Klutznick, 644 F.2d 844, 845 (10th Cir. 1981)); see also United States v.
Bethlehem Steel Corp., 21 F.R.D. 568, 569–70, 572 (S.D.N.Y. 1958)
(holding that “the purpose to protect the privacy of the information fur-
nished to the Government is so clear and the public policy underlying
the purpose so compelling that absent a clear Congressional grant, there
is no basis upon which to direct the Department of Commerce to make
available to the Department of Justice or to any person the reports here
sought”). Moreover, Congress, far from disavowing this judicial con-
struction, has amended the Census Act several times—including through
the addition of further express exceptions to section 9—without limiting
or repealing the courts’ expansive interpretation of the Act’s prohibition
(absent a clear exception) on disclosure of covered census information
possessed by the Commerce Department. 5
5 See, e.g., Departments of Commerce, Justice, and State, the Judiciary, and Related
Agencies Appropriations Act, 1998, Pub. L. No. 105-119, 111 Stat. 2471, 2487 (1997);
Census of Agriculture Act of 1997, Pub. L. No. 105-113, §§ 2(f), 4(a)(1), 111 Stat. 2274–
76; Census Address List Improvement Act of 1994, Pub. L. No. 103-430, § 2(b), 108 Stat.
4393, 4394; Foreign Direct Investment and International Financial Data Improvements
Act of 1990, Pub. L. No. 101-533, § 5(b)(2), 104 Stat. 2344, 2348; Pub. L. No. 87-813, 76
Stat. 922 (1962). Indeed, the legislative history of census-related enactments includes
repeated acknowledgments of a strong statutory policy of census confidentiality. See, e.g.,
S. Rep. No. 105-141, at 4 (1997) (describing express exception added to section 9 as
“grant[ing] the Secretary of Commerce the authority to provide information [covered by
that section] to the Secretary of Agriculture”); H.R. Rep. No. 105-296, at 4 (1997) (same);
S. Rep. No. 93-1183, at 70 (1974) (committee report on federal privacy legislation
describing census statutes as “prohibit[ing] publication of data gathered by the [Census]
Bureau in identifiable form and strictly govern[ing] confidentiality”); H.R. Rep. No. 93-
1416, at 12 (1974) (committee report on federal privacy legislation describing the “[l]aws
relating to the Bureau of the Census” as “very strict, limiting access to such records only
to Census employees”); S. Rep. No. 87-2218, at 1 (1962) (noting that “[o]riginal reports
filed with the Bureau of the Census are confidential” under census statutes); H.R. Rep.
No. 60-960, at 23 (1908) (describing predecessor to section 9 as intended to provide “a
more effective guaranty than heretofore of the confidential character of the returns as
8
Census Confidentiality and the PATRIOT Act
The question, therefore, is whether the broad but general language in
section 215 should be construed to override the well-established confiden-
tiality protections set forth in the Census Act, even though section 215
contains no express and specific statement indicating an intention to do
so. Of course, strictly speaking, the plain text of section 215 could be read
to conflict with the confidentiality provision of the Census Act, as the
phrase “any tangible things” could be construed to encompass census
records. Nonetheless, we think section 215 is better read not to have this
significant consequence, and prior executive branch precedent addressing
when and whether a subsequent statute should be construed to cut back on
the confidentiality of census records supports that conclusion.
Indeed, for more than sixty years, the Executive Branch has consistent-
ly employed a strong presumption that statutes affecting access to infor-
mation in general should not be construed to overcome the specific pro-
tections afforded to covered census information by the Census Act. In a
1944 Attorney General opinion, for example, we concluded that a statute
generally requiring transfer of records to the National Archives did not
remove statutory confidentiality protections applicable to census records.
Confidential Treatment of Census Records, 40 Op. Att’y Gen. 326, 328.
The statute at issue there provided that “‘[a]ll archives or records belong-
ing to the Government of the United States (legislative, executive, judi-
cial, and other) shall be under the charge and superintendence of the
Archivist to th[e] extent” of, among other things, permitting the Archivist
“to make regulations for the arrangement, custody, use, and withdrawal of
material deposited in the National Archives Building.’” Id. at 327 (quot-
ing Act of June 19, 1934, ch. 668, § 3, 48 Stat. 1122, 1122). The statute
further provided that “‘[a]ll Acts or parts of Acts relating to the charge
and superintendency, custody, preservation, and disposition of official
papers and documents of executive departments and other governmental
needed in many cases and desirable in all to enlist that public confidence without which
census inquiries must fail”); see also Proclamation No. 1898 (Nov. 22, 1929) (Pres.
Hoover) (“No person can be harmed in any way by furnishing the information required
[by the census]. The Census has nothing to do . . . with the enforcement of any national,
state, or local law or ordinance.”); see generally Baldrige, 455 U.S. at 356–58 (reviewing
history of census statutes and concluding that the history “reveals a congressional intent
to protect the confidentiality of census information by prohibiting disclosure of raw
census data reported by or on behalf of individuals”).
9
34 Op. O.L.C. 1 (2010)
agencies inconsistent with the provisions of this Act are hereby re-
pealed.’” Id. (quoting Act of June 19, 1934, ch. 668, § 11, 48 Stat. 1122,
1124). The Acting Attorney General concluded that census records could
be transferred to the custody of the Archivist under these provisions.
However, even in the face of language expressly repealing “[a]ll” incon-
sistent federal statutes, the Acting Attorney General determined that the
Archivist lacked the discretion—otherwise provided as part of the author-
izing statute creating the Office of the Archivist—to allow for the dissem-
ination and use of the transferred census records. Census records trans-
ferred to the custody of the Archivist remained subject to confidentiality
statutes specific to census information, as “[i]t would require very clear
language in a general statute relating to the custody of records to justify
attributing to the Congress an intention to depart from” the policy of
census confidentiality. Id. at 328. 6
6 In 1950, Congress amended the statutes governing the National Archives of the Unit-
ed States to provide, among other things, that
[w]henever any records the use of which is subject to statutory limitations and re-
strictions are . . . transferred [to the National Archives], permissive and restrictive
statutory provisions with respect to the examination and use of such records applica-
ble to the head of the agency from which the records were transferred or to employees
of that agency shall thereafter likewise be applicable to the Adminstrator [of General
Services, who oversaw the National Archives under the statute], the Archivist, and to
the employees of the General Services Administration.
Federal Records Act of 1950, Pub. L. No. 81-754, sec. 6(d), § 507(b), 64 Stat. 578, 583,
587; see also Pub. L. No. 90-620, 82 Stat. 1238, 1288 (1968) (codifying similar provision
at 44 U.S.C. § 2104). The amended statute provided, however, that such statutory re-
strictions would remain in effect for fifty years unless the Administrator extended the
restrictions for a further period. See Federal Records Act § 507(b); see also Pub. L. No.
90-620, 82 Stat. at 1288 (codifying similar provision at 44 U.S.C. § 2104). In 1973, this
Office advised that the “plain language” and “history” of these provisions expressly
governing agency records “constitute[d]” the “very clear language” required to supersede
census confidentiality under the 1944 Attorney General opinion, and thus that the Archi-
vist had authority under the statute to disclose census records after fifty years notwith-
standing a 1952 agreement between the Census Bureau and the Archivist that barred
disclosure of census records for seventy-two years. See Memorandum for William G.
Casselman II, General Counsel, General Services Administration, from Robert G. Dixon,
Jr., Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, at 7, 8 (June 14, 1973).
In further amendments to these statutes in 1978, Congress generally shortened to thirty
years the period during which statutorily protected documents must remain confidential,
but also provided specifically that “any release” of “census and survey records of the
10
Census Confidentiality and the PATRIOT Act
The expectation that Congress would not cut back on the confidentiality
of census records without doing so in a very clear manner has governed
executive branch interpretation in subsequent decades. For example, the
Acting Attorney General concluded in 1962 that section 9’s confidentiali-
ty protections applied to certain surveys then authorized by the Census
Act but exempt from Census Act provisions penalizing false responses
and failures to respond (and thus considered “voluntary”). Confidentiality
of “Voluntary” Reports Under the Census Laws, 42 Op. Att’y Gen. 151,
151–52. Although pre-1954 census statutes had expressly provided that
such surveys were subject to statutory confidentiality provisions and the
1954 census statute (which included section 9(a) in substantially similar
form to the Census Act today) included no such express cross-reference,
the Acting Attorney General observed that “a change in the law so far-
reaching as to deprive voluntary reports of their confidential nature cer-
tainly would have been pointed out and explained in” the legislative
history. Id. at 155. Indeed, the Acting Attorney General found “no
uncertainty” in the language of section 9. Id. Noting that section 9 includ-
ed other express exceptions but otherwise applied to all information
furnished “under this title,” the Acting Attorney General concluded that
“[i]f Congress had sought to exempt the replies to voluntary surveys from
the operation of 13 U.S.C. 9(a), it certainly would have done so express-
ly.” Id.
Finally, in a more recent opinion, this Office determined that a statute
plainly intended to enhance the ability of government officials to share
immigration status information with immigration authorities did not
Bureau of the Census containing data identifying individuals enumerated in population
censuses” would be governed by the 1952 agreement and any amendments to that agree-
ment “now or hereafter entered into between the Director of the Bureau of the Census and
the Archivist of the United States.” Pub. L. No. 95-416, 92 Stat. 915 (1978) (amending 44
U.S.C. § 2104); see also 44 U.S.C. § 2108 (2006) (codifying similar provisions). Con-
sistent with Congress’s longstanding policy of census confidentiality, the House Commit-
tee on Government Operations explained the need for a specific protection for census
records by noting that “[t]he committee believes that the right of American citizens to
assert a right of privacy over information provided in census questionnaires far outweighs
the general public’s right to have access to that information during the lifetime of the
individual citizen.” H.R. Rep. No. 95-1522, at 3 (1978); see also S. Rep. No. 95-710, at 2
(1978) (explaining that this provision “addresses the issue of premature release of census
records information”).
11
34 Op. O.L.C. 1 (2010)
override the Census Act’s protections for covered census information
possessed by the Commerce Department. IIRIRA Opinion. The statute at
issue prohibited any federal, state, or local government entity or official
from restricting any government entity or official from “sending to, or
receiving from, the Immigration and Naturalization Service information
regarding the citizenship or immigration status, lawful or unlawful, of any
individual.” Id. at *4 (quoting 8 U.S.C.A. § 1373(a) (West 1999)). Al-
though the opinion rested primarily on a reading of the statute that con-
strued the restrictions on “government entities” as not encompassing
Congress’s enactment of census confidentiality provisions, see id. at *6,
this Office, in support of this conclusion, reiterated that “[i]n light of the
federal government’s longstanding commitment to confidentiality in this
area, there is every reason to expect that Congress would have spoken
with particular clarity if it had intended to cut back on the scope of 13
U.S.C. § 9(a) in enacting” a new statute. Id. at *11. We thus concluded
that “the absence of a reference in either statute to the other suggests that
the text of 13 U.S.C. § 9(a) should be construed to mean just what it says,
and that [the immigration statute] should be understood to have left in
place the confidentiality requirement that 13 U.S.C. § 9(a) establishes.”
Id. at 8–9 (footnote omitted).
In light of this consistent precedent, we would construe section 215 to
override the preexisting Census Act protections for covered census infor-
mation possessed by the Commerce Department only if the evidence of
congressional intention compelled such a conclusion. Here, however, the
evidence does not compel such a conclusion.
Section 215 makes no reference to the census or the Census Act. And
although Congress has amended section 9 of the Census Act on several
occasions to establish exceptions, it has not added an express exception
for section 215 orders in the wake of that provision’s enactment. Nor is
there language in section 215 like that contained in the statute addressed
in the 1944 Attorney General opinion concerning the Archivist’s role as
custodian of governmental records. There, the statute expressly stated that
the authority of the Archivist to take custody of records extended to all
records “belonging to the Government of the United States (legislative,
executive, judicial, and other)” and for purposes of carrying out that
authority, “all” inconsistent federal statutes were repealed. Confidential
Treatment of Census Records, 40 Op. Att’y Gen. at 327. By contrast,
12
Census Confidentiality and the PATRIOT Act
section 215 not only does not expressly encompass “all” governmental
records (it simply permits orders requiring production of “tangible things”
in general), it also includes no express repeal of any federal statute pro-
hibiting disclosure of such information. Similarly, section 215 contains no
language like that identified in this Office’s 1999 opinion on the relation-
ship between the immigration disclosure provision and the Census Act’s
confidentiality provisions, in which we noted the absence of express
language such as “notwithstanding any provision of law . . . [this provi-
sion provides for the disclosure of information] without restriction” that
could indicate an intention to override the longstanding statutory protec-
tions for census information possessed by the Department of Commerce.
IIRIRA Opinion at *5.
The PATRIOT Act does include a severability clause requiring that
PATRIOT Act provisions be given “maximum effect” if deemed invalid
or unenforceable in part or as applied, but this provision does not indicate
congressional “intent that [section 215] be construed broadly to give it
maximum effect,” as the National Security Division has suggested to us in
its views. The full text of this provision states:
Any provision of this Act held to be invalid or unenforceable by its
terms, or as applied to any person or circumstance, shall be con-
strued so as to give it the maximum effect permitted by law, unless
such holding shall be one of utter invalidity or unenforceability, in
which event such provision shall be deemed severable from this Act
and shall not affect the remainder thereof or the application of such
provision to other persons not similarly situated or to other, dissimi-
lar circumstances.
PATRIOT Act § 2 (reprinted at 18 U.S.C. § 1 note (2006)). By its plain
terms, this provision applies only when PATRIOT Act provisions are
“held to be invalid or unenforceable” in whole or in part (emphasis add-
ed); it does not otherwise establish any special rule of construction for the
PATRIOT Act or manifest an intention to repeal, absent judicial invalida-
tion, any provision of prior law. See also, e.g., 147 Cong. Rec. 20,685
(2001) (section-by-section analysis of PATRIOT Act conference report
included in the record by Sen. Leahy describing this provision as
“provid[ing] that any portion of this Act found to be invalid or unenforce-
able by its terms, or as applied to any person or circumstance, shall be
13
34 Op. O.L.C. 1 (2010)
construed to give it the maximum effect permitted by law and that any
portion found invalid or unenforceable in its entirety shall be severable
from the rest of the Act”).
Given the established interpretive approach to repeal of the Census
Act’s confidentiality provisions, the absence of any express repeal lan-
guage in section 215 is significant, especially because other sections of
the PATRIOT Act expressly revise statutory restrictions on certain other
categories of confidential information.
Section 508 provides a striking comparison. Much like section 215,
this provision authorized applications by certain high-ranking Justice
Department officials for an ex parte court order requiring production of
certain information (specifically, certain educational records possessed
by the Department of Education) for use in certain terrorism-related
investigations. PATRIOT Act § 508 (repealed by Pub. L. No. 107-279,
§§ 401(a)(6), 403(1), 116 Stat. 1940, 1983, 1985 (2002)); 20 U.S.C.
§ 9573(e) (recodifying similar authorization). But in contrast to section
215, which simply authorizes orders for “production” of tangible things
in general, section 508 expressly established a mechanism for infor-
mation-sharing between federal agencies, and expressly repealed applica-
ble confidentiality statutes, using precisely the sort of language—
“notwithstanding [other specified provisions],” PATRIOT Act § 508;
20 U.S.C. § 9573(e)—that we suggested in our IIRIRA opinion would
indicate congressional intent to repeal confidentiality protections of the
Census Act, IIRIRA Opinion at *5; see PATRIOT Act § 508; 20 U.S.C.
§ 9573(e). Moreover, at least one other PATRIOT Act provision like-
wise applies “[n]otwithstanding” other specified provisions of law. See
PATRIOT Act § 507 (codified at 20 U.S.C. § 1232g(j) (2006)) (authoriz-
ing court orders to obtain certain records from educational institutions
or agencies “[n]otwithstanding subsections (a) through (i) of this section
or any provision of State law”). And, as noted, the PATRIOT Act explic-
itly modified certain other confidentiality protections, such as grand
jury secrecy, to permit wider sharing of certain categories of sensitive
information within the federal government. See, e.g., PATRIOT Act
§ 203(a)(1) (similar provision now codified at Fed. R. Crim. P. 6(e))
(permitting disclosure of certain intelligence-related grand jury matters);
id. § 203(d) (including language codified at 50 U.S.C.A. § 403-5d (West
2003 & Supp. 2009)) (permitting sharing of certain information obtained
14
Census Confidentiality and the PATRIOT Act
as part of a criminal investigation). Section 508 and such other provi-
sions explicitly modifying restrictions on information-sharing or disclo-
sure show at the very least that Congress was aware of specific federal
confidentiality provisions and could have drafted explicit authority to
overcome Census Act prohibitions on information-sharing had it wished
to do so. 7
Our conclusion is further reinforced by prior Office precedent constru-
ing generally applicable information-sharing statutes. In these instances,
we applied a similarly strong presumption of confidentiality in concluding
that such measures did not override more specific confidentiality protec-
tions, even though as a matter of plain text the terms of the purportedly
overriding statute could have been construed to be inconsistent with the
confidentiality provisions at issue, just as is arguably the case here.
In GAO Access to Trade Secret Information, 12 Op. O.L.C. 181, 182
(1988) (“GAO Access”), for example, we considered whether the Food
and Drug Administration (“FDA”) could provide trade secret information
to the Comptroller General. The potentially overriding statute required
“[e]ach agency” to “give the Comptroller General information the Comp-
troller requires about the duties, powers, activities, organization, and
financial transactions of the agency,” id. (quoting 31 U.S.C. § 716(a)
(1982)). A separate statute, however, barred the FDA from “revealing,
other than to the Secretary [of Health and Human Services] or officers or
employees of [the Department of Health and Human Services], or to the
courts when relevant in any judicial proceeding under [other provisions of
the same statute], any information acquired under [specified sections of
that statute] concerning any method or process which as a trade secret is
entitled to protection.” Id. at 181 (quoting 21 U.S.C. § 331(j) (1982)). At
the outset, we observed that the FDA trade secrets statute was “clear on
its face” and “expressly provides that trade secret information may not
be disclosed outside [the Department of Health and Human Services] with
one exception: such information may be disclosed to a court in a judicial
proceeding under the [statute].” Id. We then observed that a prior Attor-
ney General opinion concluded, based in part on longstanding Executive
7 We do not consider here whether and to what extent section 215 orders may also
reach educational records (whether or not subject to production under section 508) or any
other confidential information not protected by the Census Act.
15
34 Op. O.L.C. 1 (2010)
Branch interpretation, that the FDA trade secrets statute did not allow
for an implied exception for disclosure of covered information to Con-
gress. Id. at 181–82 (discussing Federal Food, Drug & Cosmetic Act —
Prohibition on Disclosure of Trade Secret Information to a Congression-
al Committee, 43 Op. Att’y Gen. 116 (1978)). Accordingly, we conclud-
ed that the statute generally requiring disclosure of information to the
Comptroller General did not supersede the statute specifically protecting
the confidentiality of trade secrets. Id. at 182. “Since [the trade secrets
statute] is a specific statute directly addressing one executive branch
agency’s handling of trade secret information, while [the Comptroller
General statute] is a general statute addressed to all kinds of information
in possession of the executive branch, [the trade secrets statute] controls
in the absence of congressional intent to the contrary.” Id. at 182–83.
Similarly, in Disclosure of Confidential Business Records Obtained
Under the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act, 4B Op. O.L.C.
735 (1980) (“Business Records”), we considered whether provisions in
the Federal Reports Act, 44 U.S.C. § 3508 (1976), dealing with “the
general matter of the intragovernmental exchange of information,” 4B
Op. O.L.C. at 736, were applicable to confidential information and trade
secrets protected by the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act
(“Safety Act”), 15 U.S.C. 1401 (1976). The Safety Act subjected the
mandatory reporting of certain safety-related information to confidentiali-
ty guarantees by providing that officers and employees of the safety
agency could not “publish[], divulge[], disclose[], or make[] known” such
information “in any manner or to any extent not authorized by law.” 4B
Op. O.L.C. at 735–36 & nn.1–2. In concluding that the general provi-
sions of the Federal Reports Act did not override the specific protec-
tions of the Safety Act, id. at 738, we analogized the Safety Act reports
to census records, observing that confidentiality served the purposes of
the statute because Safety Act respondents, like census respondents, may
“fear, possibly even more [than disclosure to the public or competitors],
the disclosure of [reported] information to regulatory or law-enforcing
agencies,” id. at 737. Thus, we observed, it “may be anticipated that firms
will be less willing to submit correct and complete information under the
Safety Act if they must expect that this information will be shared with
[federal regulatory] agencies.” Id. at 737–38.
16
Census Confidentiality and the PATRIOT Act
Much like the trade secrets statute addressed in our GAO Access opin-
ion, section 9 of the Census Act “expressly” protects covered census
information from disclosure and has long been understood to bar the
dissemination by the Commerce Department of such information outside
the Commerce Department except when authorized by a clear statutory
exception. 12 Op. O.L.C. at 181. Moreover, much as the trade secrets
statute at issue in our GAO Access opinion specifically addressed “one
executive branch agency’s handling of” a specific category of infor-
mation, while the Comptroller General statute broadly covered “all kinds
of information in possession of the executive branch” that would be useful
for particular investigations, id. at 182–83, so, too, here the Census Act’s
protections are specific to a very narrow subset of records—covered
census information—relative to the broad category of “tangible things”
covered by section 215. Likewise, the compliance concerns our Business
Records opinion relied upon in concluding that disclosure “would be
contrary to the statutory intent and contrary to the purposes [the statute]
was designed to achieve” seem equally applicable—as the Business Rec-
ords opinion itself recognized—to census information protected by the
Census Act. 4B Op. O.L.C. at 738.
In concluding that section 215 does not override the relevant census
provisions, we do not mean to suggest that section 215 may not be read to
repeal any federal statute that protects the confidentiality of information.
Our analysis is limited strictly to the case of census information in the
possession of the Commerce Department, in light of the strong presump-
tion against repeal of those confidentiality protections that has long been
applied to that category of information. Indeed, we note that we have
identified nothing in the legislative history of section 215 indicating any
intent on the part of Congress to touch upon protected census information,
even though other types of sensitive information encompassed by the
terms of section 215 were specifically addressed and identified as poten-
tially covered by the provision.
For example, in the Reauthorization Act Congress amended section 215
to require especially high-level approval within the FBI for applications
relating to certain categories of records—specifically, “library circulation
records, library patron lists, book sales records, book customer lists,
firearms sales records, tax return records, educational records, or medical
records containing information that would identify a person.” 50 U.S.C.A.
17
34 Op. O.L.C. 1 (2010)
§ 1861(a)(3). The Reauthorization Act conference report describes these
protections as applying to “certain sensitive categories of records.” H.R.
Rep. No. 109-333, at 91 (2005) (Conf. Rep.). Notably, however, the
report does not mention census records, even though the long history of
statutory confidentiality protections for census records possessed by the
Commerce Department suggests that Congress would also have consid-
ered such records “sensitive” had it had them in mind as being subject to
disclosure under section 215.
Similarly, in debates regarding the original PATRIOT Act, there is no
mention of census records, even though various other types of records are
mentioned. In particular, Senator Feingold unsuccessfully offered a floor
amendment that would have limited section 215’s scope to records held
by a “business” and expressly prevented disclosure under section 215 of
records “protected by any Federal or State law governing access to the
records for intelligence or law enforcement purposes.” 147 Cong. Rec.
19530–31 (2001). Although supporters of Senator Feingold’s amendment
raised concerns that section 215 could require the disclosure of other
forms of sensitive personal information, they did not mention census
information in their floor statements, much less suggest that without the
proposed amendment section 215 would repeal Census Act confidentiality
protections. See, e.g., id. (statement of Sen. Feingold) (expressing concern
that without the amendment “all business records can be compelled to be
produced [under section 215], including those containing sensitive per-
sonal information such as medical records from hospitals or doctors, or
educational records, or records of what books someone has taken out of
the library”) (emphasis added); id. at 19,532 (statement of Sen. Cantwell)
(“this legislation could circumvent or supersede Federal and State privacy
laws that protect student records, library records, and health records not
previously admissible under FISA”). And in a floor statement opposing
this amendment, Senator Hatch likewise made no reference to the Census
Act (or indeed any other specific federal confidentiality statute). He
simply observed that the amendment would “allow[] a host of state-law
provisions to stand in the way of national security needs” and “condition
the issuance of the court order [under section 215] on a myriad of federal
and state-law provisions,” thus “making investigations to protect against
international terrorism more difficult than investigations of certain domes-
tic criminal violations.” Id. at 19,532. The silence as to the statutory
18
Census Confidentiality and the PATRIOT Act
protections for the confidentiality of census information is significant, as
we think it fair to say here what the Acting Attorney General said with
respect to the confidentiality of voluntary census records in his 1962
opinion—that “a change in the law so far-reaching as to deprive voluntary
reports of their confidential nature certainly would have been pointed out
and explained in” the legislative history. Confidentiality of “Voluntary”
Reports, 42 Op. Att’y Gen. at 155.
* * * * *
We therefore conclude that section 215 should not be construed to re-
peal otherwise applicable Census Act protections for covered census
information such that they could require their disclosure by the Depart-
ment of Commerce. Because no other PATRIOT Act provision that you
have identified, nor any such provision that we have separately reviewed,
would appear to have that effect, we agree that the PATRIOT Act, as
amended, does not alter the confidentiality protections in sections 8, 9,
and 214 of the Census Act in a manner that could require the Secretary of
Commerce to disclose such information.
JEANNIE S. RHEE
Deputy Assistant Attorney General
Office of Legal Counsel
19