Opinion for the Court filed by
This suit for damages and equitable relief against several former and current federal officials arises out of an 89-day illegal wiretap of reporter Hedrick Smith’s home telephone in 1969. The District Court granted summary judgment to the officials on qualified immunity grounds without resolving appellants’ pending discovery requests. This is the second of three cases we decide today in which resolution of the officials’ quаlified immunity, defense turns on the validity of their assertions that their actions were prompted and justified by national security concerns. See Halperin v. Kissinger (“Halperin II"),
I
The challenged wiretap, like the wiretaps at issue in the companion cases, see Halperin II,
The next day, Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) Director J. Edgar Hoover sought authorization from former Attorney General John Mitchell to wiretap Smith’s residential telephone. The authorization memorandum, describing the wiretap program as a “matter of most grave and serious consequence to our national security,” I Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) 105, indicated that then National Security Advisor Henry A. Kissinger requested the Smith wiretap, id; see id. at 109, 110. The memorandum noted that Smith had been in contact with other surveillance targets, but it made no mention of Smith’s Okinawa article and noted that FBI files “contain[ed] no pertinent information of an internal security nature concerning him.” Id. at 105.
The wiretap, approved and installed the same day, remained in place for 89 days, until the Smiths moved out of Washington, D.C., on August 31, 1969. FBI summary letters were forwarded to President Nixon (through presidential aide John Ehrlich-man) and Kissinger. The government concealed the existence of the wiretap until May 11, 1973. Three years later, Smith and his family sued several federal officials (including President Nixon, who was later dismissed by stipulation) for monetary and equitable relief,
The District Court dismissed the case on the merits and also held the action time-barred. Smith v. Nixon,
On remand, the District Court, relying on the Supreme Court’s intervening “objectification’-’ of the qualified immunity defense in Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
II
The primary evil that moved the Harlow Court to abandon the subjective elements of the qualified immunity defense was the prospect of “broad-ranging discovery and the deposing of numerous persons, including an official's professional colleagues.” Harlow,
In keeping with Harlow's command, we subject damage actions against government officials to a heightened pleading standard. Bare allegations of improper purpose, like the bare allegations of malice rejected in Harlow,
Ill
Applying the heightened pleading requirement to this case, we consider first defendants’ allegations relating to the reasonableness of a national security basis for the wiretap. We then consider, in turn, the concrete factual allegations in plaintiffs’ сomplaint and those concrete assertions that plaintiffs could make were they now to be permitted to supplement their complaint with facts that they have learned through document discovery.
A
A defendant’s “bland assurances”— contemporaneous or post hoc—“That a situation did, in fact, represent a national security problem requiring electronic surveillance,” Smith I,
These allegations, in combination, plainly suffice to establish the reasonableness of national security motivation. See Haig v. Agee,
B
Aside from naked assertion that a national security purpose would have been unreasonable, see Amended Complaint II35, the allegations in the complaint arguably bearing upon this issue fall into three categories.
The first category tends to prove no more than that defendants’ actual purpose was something other than the protection of national security—for example, allegations that the records of the Smith wiretap were not filed in the “regular national security files of the FBI,” id ¶ 29, and were distributed years later to unusual recipients such as Haldeman and Ehrlichman, id. 111128-30, coupled with the charge that the object of thе wiretap was “to monitor the sources of [Smith's] news stories which were personally embarrassing to high government officials,” id. II34. All of this goes to subjective intent—which, as we have discussed above, is irrelevant.
The second category describes the manner in which plaintiffs used their telephone, and thus the types of conversations that defendants could have expected to (and did) intercept. Thаt plaintiffs “frequently communicated their political and other views ... in telephone conversations,” id. II25,
The third category consists of the allegation that “[a]t no time during the period of the interceptions did the plaintiffs ... act as agents of or in collaboration with a foreign power, its agents or agencies.” Id. That fact (assuming its truth) is likewise inadequate to suggest the irrationality of national security motivation. It was not clearly established at the time of the challenged wiretap that Title Ill’s national security exemption turned on the target’s affiliation with a foreign intelligence operative. Halperin II,
C
The deficiency of the complaint under the heightened pleading standard would be evidеnt even if we were to deem the complaint amended, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(b), to include the factual material that they acquired as a result of the discovery that should not (in light of the inadequacy of the original complaint) have been allowed. But cf. Zweibon v. Mitchell (“Zweibon IV”),
The second new element disclosed, according to plaintiffs, by subsequently introduced evidence, is that FBI logs of the wiretap “reveal an interest in evеrything but national security leaks” and “only two [logged conversations] are between Smith and a government employee[,] neither of [which] deals with anything resembling a leak.” Brief for Appellants at 33-34 (footnote omitted). The manner in which the wiretap was executed, however, is evidence not of the rationality of a putative national security purpose, but of the wiretap’s actual purpose (and perhaps of its reasonableness under the fourth amendment, a claim that plaintiffs have abandoned).
Since, however, plaintiffs’ claim that the wiretap did not intercept any evidence implicating Smith in a leak bears on the rationality of continuing the wiretap in the name of national security, see Halperin II,
We sympathize with plaintiffs’ cri de coeur that dismissal of their case without permitting them discovery “deprives [them] of the right to prove their case or even to have contrary facts considered on defendants’ motion for summary judgment.” Brief for Appellants at 4. But that, alas, is exactly what immunity means: that the ability to obtain monetary damages for a wrong must sometimes yield to the need to protect public officials (and ultimately the public itself). That need is particularly
IV
Plaintiffs also appeal that part of the District Court’s judgment on equitable relief affording the FBI an opportunity to evaluate whether the wiretap summary logs have sufficient “historical” or “research” value, see 44 U.S.C. §§ 3303-3303a (1982), to “warrant their continued preservation;” id. § 3303a(a), and transmittal to the National Archives, see id. § 2103. Smith v. Nixon,
As we held before in response to the same line of reasoning, the provisions directing the disposal of government documents “must yield to statutory or constitutional rights elsewhere granted.” Hobson v. Wilson,
* * * * * *
We affirm the grant of summary judgment against plaintiffs’ damage action and remand plaintiffs’ equitable relief claim for action consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
. The defendants remaining in this action are Kissinger, Mitchell, Ehrlichman, former FBI Assistant Directors William C. Sullivan (now deceased) and Cartha De Loach, and Nixon’s chief administrative aide, H.R. Haldeman, all in their personal and official capacities. The current FBI Director and Attorney General are sued in their official capacities for purposes of the equitable relief claims.
. Plaintiffs maintain that we are bound by our earlier statement in this cаse that, because defendants demonstrated no link between the appearance of the Okinawa article and initiation of the wiretap, "there is nothing in the record before us that contradicts [plaintiffs’] allegation that the wiretap was initiated [for a purpose that] ... involved no danger to national security.” Smith I,
. Apparently in light of our cases stating that the contours of the fourth amendment’s reasonableness requirement in the national security context were too nebulous at the time of the challenged wiretap to have been clearly established, see Zweibon IV,
. Plaintiffs’ complaint alleges that defendants’ dissemination of the intercepted information to other public officials violated their first, fourth, and ninth amendment rights. See Amended Complaint ¶ 39. To the extent that resolution of the qualified immunity defense as to those claims is any different, plaintiffs have waived them by failure to pursue them on appeal. See Carducci v. Regan,
