OPINION AND ORDER
The Honorable John E. Moss, Chairman, Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, of the House of Representatives’ Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, has moved the Court for an order authorizing disclosure of documents presented to a federal grand jury in Jacksonville, Florida. The documents were presented as part of the government’s effort to show probable cause that a criminal offense had been committed, in order to obtain an indictment. An indictment was returned against Ven-Fuel, Inc. on January 14, 1977. (United States v. Ven-Fuel, Inc., 77-15-Cr-J-Y) Chairman Moss specifically requests disclosure of documents other than those relating to the criminal case which might be used as evidence at the trial of that case.
This motion presents two questions: (1) whether the law concerning grand juries, particularly Fed.R.Crim.P. 6(e), forbids disclosure of the documents sought; and (2) whether the House Subcommittee and Chairman Moss have an independent right to obtain the documents sought. For two compelling reasons, discussed as follows, the Court holds that disclosure of the documents is not prohibited by Rule 6(e), and that Chairman Moss and the House Subcommittee are entitled under federal law to the documents.
I. Grand Jury Secrecy — Disclosure of Documents Presented
Fed.R.Crim.P. 6(e) provides for the secrecy of “matters occurring before the grand jury”, unless a court authorizes disclosure for the purposes of a judicial proceeding, or at the request and showing by a defendant that he needs the information to justify dismissal of an indictment. Rule 6(e) codifies the traditional policies underlying grand jury secrecy; but it also remains subject to the exceptions that those policies recognize.
See In re Report & Recommendation of Grand Jury,
Rule 6(e), however, was not intended to insulate from disclosure all information once it is presented to a grand jury.
United States v. Saks & Co.,
Furthermore, it is doubtful whether mere documentary information was ever included within the scope of Rule 6(e) secrecy for grand juries.
State of Ill.
v.
Sarbaugh,
“. . . when testimony or data is sought for its own sake — for its intrinsic value in the furtherance of a lawful im vestigation — rather than to learn what to place before the grand jury, it is not a valid defense to disclosure that the same information was revealed to a grand jury or that the same documents had been, or were presently being, examined by a grand jury.” Id. at 54.
A United States Senate Banking Committee requested to see documents which had been shown to a federal grand jury, and which were in the custody of the United States Attorney, in
In re Senate Banking Committee Hearings,
The preceding cases establish the authority that (1) simply because documentary information is presented to a grand jury does not preclude it from all further examination but that (2) a good, independent basis for obtaining that information needs to be shown. When, along with several indictments, the federal grand jury in the District of Columbia returned a sealed report with a two page letter to Judge Sirica, recommending that the report be transmitted to the House of Representatives’ Committee on the Judiciary, the indicted defendants objected.
In re Report & Recommendation of Grand Jury,
*1304 . . incredible that grand jury matters should lawfully be available to disbarment committees and police disciplinary investigations and yet be unavailable to the House of Representatives . Certainly Rule 6(e) cannot be said to mandate such a result.” Id. at 1230.
Judge Sirica concluded that “delivery to the committee is imminently proper, and is indeed, obligatory.”
In the present case, the documentary information presented to the grand jury is sought by Chairman Moss and the subcommittee for the purpose of examining the documents themselves, and not for any interest in the events that transpired during the grand jury proceedings. Furthermore, Chairman Moss has indicated that he is willing to accept copies of the documents, so that there would be no possibility that documentary information might be unavailable for use in the criminal trial in this Court. That accommodation by Chairman Moss protects the secrecy of the grand jury and the rights of the defendant.
Cf. Capitol Indem. Corp. v. First Minn. Constr. Co.,
Although Chairman Moss and the Subcommittee have requested only those documents which do not relate to the indictment and pending criminal case, the Court believes that in order to fortify the inviolable secrecy of the grand jury’s deliberation that resulted in the indictment, there should be no segregation and identification of the documentary information into two separate groups. Consequently, the Court will order that, without any distinguishing classification, all of the documentary information presented to the grand jury be made available for examination by the staff and representatives of Chairman Moss. What Judge Sirica said about the sealed report returned by the grand jury with the recommendation that it be sent to the House Judiciary Committee, can be adapted and paraphrased about the documentary information sought by Chairman Moss and the Subcommittee. The documentary information
“. . . draws no accusatory conclusions. It deprives no one of an official forum in which to respond. It is not a substitute for indictments where indictments might properly issue. It contains no recommendations, advice or statements that infringe on the prerogatives of other branches of government. . It renders no moral or social judgments. [It] is a simple and straight forward compilation of information gathered by the Grand Jury, and no more.” In re Report & Recommendation of Grand Jury,370 F.Supp. at 1226 .
Finally, in addition to the Court’s conclusion that the mere documentary information presented to the grand jury does not constitute matters occurring before the grand jury, the Court finds, as discussed next, that Chairman Moss and the Subcommittee have made an independent showing of their legal right to obtain the documentary information desired.
II. Legislative Prerogative and Power to Investigate
Article I, Section 6, Clause 1 of the Constitution provides
“The Senators and Representatives shall receive a Compensation for their Services, to be ascertained by Law, and paid out of the Treasury of the United States. They shall in all Cases, except Treason, Felony and Breach of the Peace, be privileged from Arrest during their Attendance at the Session of their respective Houses, and in going to and returning from the same; and for any Speech Or debate in either House, they shall not be questioned in any other Place.”
The Speech or Debate Clause provides both an absolute immunity from being questioned about legislative activities, and the
*1305
inherent, implied power to conduct legislative activity.
Eastland v. United States Servicemen’s Fund,
The threshold test which must be met in order for the Speech or Debate Clause to apply is whether a member of Congress or his staff acting on his behalf are involved in conduct within a legitimate legislative sphere of activity.
Eastland v. United States Servicemen’s Fund,
The Congress has no general authority to conduct generalized, unspecified investigations into private matters about which legislation could never be proper.
Eastland v. United States Servicemen’s Fund,
The legislative and executive branches are the political branches of government inasmuch as the members of those branches are answerable to the citizens who elect them and whom they represent. The effect of the Speech or Debate Clause is to preclude the executive branch or the courts from calling into question or requiring an accounting by the members of Congress for their legislative activities. So long as members of Congress are acting within their legitimate sphere, they can be held to answer or called to account only by their ultimate tribunal of reckoning, the electorate that they represent. Hence, in a case like this, it is improper for a court to defer to the opinions of the executive branch when the exercise of legitimate congressional authority is involved.
See Unit
*1306
ed States v. AT&T,
The exclusive power, responsibility, and purpose of Congress is legislation.
McGrain v. Daugherty,
In
Eastland v. United States Servicemen’s Fund,
“. . . vividly the harm that judicial interference may cause. A legislative inquiry has been frustrated for nearly five years, during which the Members and their aides have been obliged to devote time to consultation with their counsel concerning the litigation, and have been distracted from the purpose of their inquiry. The Clause was written to prevent the need to be confronted by such ‘questioning’ and to forbid invocation of judicial power to challenge the wisdom of Congress’ use of its investigative authority.” Id. at 511,95 S.Ct. at 1825 ,44 L.Ed.2d at 341 .
United States v. AT&T,
“. . . an order quashing the Committee’s subpoena, which is generally an impermissible frustration of the congressional power to investigate an area, conceded by all to be the situation here, in which ‘legislation could be had’ ”. Id. at 388.
Although the district court recognized that the case involved a clash of the powers of the legislative and the executive branches, the court used a reasoning that consisted of analyzing the interests of the two branches, and balancing those interests against each other. In so doing, however, the district court actually deferred almost completely to the position and interests of the executive branch in reaching a decision. The court of appeals intimated that deference to executive determinations, “when the result of the deference would be to impede Congress in exercising its legislative powers,” was constitutionally faulty. Id. at 392 and n. 12. However, in order to avoid a seemingly inevitable conflict among the branches of government, the court of appeals remanded the case without a decision, but with a suggested settlement approach for the legislative and executive branch representatives to follow. To date that settlement approach has not produced a resolution of the conflict.
The present case is also an involvement of the three branches of government, though without any direct conflict. There is a sense in which the powers and operations of the coequal, but interdependent, branches of the federal government are constitutionally established over theoretical fault lines. Disputes and confrontations between those branches always present the kinds of stress and tension that threaten to separate and divide those lines into chasms, ultimately collapsing our constitutionally created form of government. Hence, to avert and minimize such tensions is always the proper and prudent course of action.
There is no question that Chairman Moss and the Subcommittee have demonstrated their constitutionally independent legal right to the documents that they seek for their legitimate legislative activity. Consequently, the Court holds that they are entitled to disclosure of the documents they seek. Further, the Court will order that Chairman Moss, the members of the Subcommittee or their staff and representatives, be permitted to examine all of the documents, without segregation and identification of those upon which the criminal indictment was based, in order to determine what specific documents they wish produced for their use.
The Court finds that it has jurisdiction in this matter under the recent amendment to 28 U.S.C. § 1331, in that the United States Attorney is clearly an officer of the United States acting in his official capacity. Additionally, Chairman Moss has standing to move for disclosure of documents desired and needed for the exercise of the House of Representatives’ constitutional investigatory power.
United States v. AT&T,
There is no question that failure to obey a subpoena duces tecum issued by the House of Representatives in furtherance of its legitimate activity would constitute a contempt of that House of Congress.
McPhaul v. United States,
