MEMORANDUM OPINION
This matter comes before the Court on Defendant Harold J. Nicholson’s (“Defendant’s”) Motion to Suppress All Evidence Derived from Searches or Seizures Conducted Pursuant to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (“Motion”). In this Motion, Defendant attacks the constitutionality of FISA in general and as applied in this case.
1
I.
The Defendant is charged with Espionage, Attempted Espionage, and Conspiracy to Commit Espionage, all in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 794. In the course of the investigation that led to Defendant’s arrest and indictment, Defendant’s home, office, car, safe deposit box, and personal effects were subject to electronic surveillance and physical searches conducted under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, 50 U.S.C. §§ 1801 et seq. (“FISA”). Defendant now asks this Court to suppress evidence derived from these searches. Additionally, although the schedule for argument of this issue and related discovery issues was set by unanimous agreement of the parties and the Court, Defendant now argues that this schedule “is an arbitrary and disabling restraint on the ability of Mr. Nicholson to present a full and fair defense.” Def.Mot. at 28. 2
II.
In the twenty years since it was enacted, FISA has been upheld as constitutional by every court to address the issue. 3 Against this backdrop, Defendant asserts numerous grounds for suppression in this ease, claiming that (1) electronic surveillance under FISA violates the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement; (2) physical searches under FISA likewise violate the Fourth Amendment; and that FISA procedures violate (3) the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fifth Amendment; (4) the Right to Counsel provided by the Sixth Amendment; (5) Article III of the United States Constitution; (6) the Political Question Doctrine; and (7) the doctrine of the Separation of Powers.
A. FISA Satisfies the Requirements of the Fourth Amendment.
Numerous challenges to FISA have arisen under the Fourth Amendment, which protects the “right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures....” U.S. Const, amend. IV. Most notable among these cases is
United States v. Pelton,
the provisions of FISA [are] “reasonable both in relation to the legitimate need of the Government for intelligence information and the protected rights of our citizens,” ... and therefore compatible with the Fourth Amendment.
Id.
(quoting
United States v. United States District Court,
On February 9, 1995, President Clinton signed Executive Order 12949, which expanded FISA to include physical searches. Since this change, no court has addressed the constitutionality of any FISA provision. Accordingly, although bound by Pelton and other precedent regarding electronic surveillance and the general procedural framework of FISA, this Court addresses the narrow issue of physical searches under FISA as a matter of first impression. 6
Defendant relies heavily on Judge Leventhal’s concurrence in
United States v. Ehrlichman,
Defendant’s argument that physical searches are per se more intrusive that electronic surveillance is unavailing in light of Katz. While physical search of a residence will expose one’s personal effects to the government, it will seldom allow the government to invade the bodily privacy of the subject, and that of innocent visitors, in the way that extended video and aural surveillance can and often does. 10 Accordingly, the physical searches in question here are constitutionally indistinguishable from the FISA-authorized electronic surveillance unanimously upheld by federal courts.
Defendant argues that the
ex parte in camera
review authorized by FISA violates rights protected by the Fifth and Sixth Amendments. Notably, Defendant has offered no case law to support this assertion, and this Court knows of no instance in which a court has required an adversary hearing or disclosure in determining the legality of a FISA surveillance. To the contrary, every court examining FISA-obtained evidence has conducted its review
in camera
and
ex parte. See In re Grand Jury Proceedings, Grand Jury No. 87-4,
Defendant also asserts that the terms “agent of a foreign power” and “foreign intelligence information,” as used in FISA, are impermissibly vague in violation of the Due Process Clause of Fifth Amendment. However, Defendant cites no case law that supports this conclusion. In
United States v. Duggan,
C. Surveillance in this Case did not Violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
Defendant next argues that FISA is based on invidious distinctions between agents of foreign, as opposed to domestic, powers. As an initial matter, and as set forth above, this Court holds that FISA does not violate any fundamental constitutionally-protected rights of surveillance subjects. Accordingly, this Court subjects FISA to rationality review and again adopts the reasoning of the Second Circuit in Duggan, holding that disparate treatment of foreign and domestic groups
is rationally related to the “Act’s purposes of attempting to protect the United States against various types of acts of foreign powers and to acquire information necessary to the national defense or the conduct of foreign affairs.”
D. Surveillance in this Case did not Violate Article III or the Doctrine of the Separation of Powers.
Next, Defendant submits that by asking Article III judges to adjudicate search requests, FISA violates Article III and the Separation of Powers doctrine. Every court that has addressed the issue has held that an Article III judge is properly “acting in his judicial capacity” when sitting on the FISA Court.
United States v. Johnson,
E. Surveillance in this Case did not Violate the Political Question Doctrine.
Finally, Defendant claims that FISA procedures violate the Political Question Doctrine. Again, this Court follows the unanimous holdings of other federal courts and rules that this claim is without merit.
See Duggan,
Accordingly, Defendant’s Motion to Suppress is DENIED. An appropriate Order shall issue.
Notes
. Defendant has acknowledged that other courts have previously addressed all but one of Defendant's present claims and unanimously upheld FISA as constitutional. Defendant indicates that
. Because the Government and defense counsel mutually agreed to the present schedule, the Court will not disturb the chosen dates now.
.
See United States v. Cavanagh,
.The Second Circuit similarly applied this reasonableness analysis in United. States v. Duggan:
A fortiori we reject defendants’ argument that a FISA order may not be issued consistent with the requirements of the Fourth Amendment unless there is a showing of probable cause to believe the target has committed a crime.
. In
United States v. Truong Dinh Hung,
. Defendant's argument on this point seems to conflate two issues: the higher Fourth Amendment standard generally applied to searches of a person's home and the allegedly more intrusive nature of physical, as opposed to electronic searches. Since courts reviewing FISA-autho-rized electronic surveillance of a suspect’s home unanimously have found such surveillance constitutional, this Court focuses on Defendant’s claim that physical searches must be reviewed under a more stringent constitutional standard than that applied to electronic surveillance.
. Aside from this dictum, Defendant cites no jurisprudential authority supporting the proposition that physical searches require a heightened standard of review. The Court is aware of no case that so holds.
.
Katz
explicitly overruled
Olmstead v. United States,
. This type of entry clearly is contemplated by the procedures upheld in
Pelton. See
50 U.S.C. §§ 1804(a)(8) and 1805(b)(1)(D);
see, e.g., Kevork,
.
See United States v. Koyomejian,
.
See, e.g., United States v. Isa,
.
See, e.g., United States v. Hovsepian,
. In a footnote to his Motion, Defendant argues that FISA has an impermissible chilling effect on speech protected by the First Amendment. Def. Mot. at 24 n. 21. However, FISA explicitly provides that "no United States person may be considered a foreign power or agent of a foreign power solely upon the basis of activities protected by the first amendment to the Constitution of the United States....” 50 U.S.C. § 1805;
see ACLU v. Barr,
