

Legal Sidebari
The Special Counsel’s Report: Can Congress
Get It?
Updated April 9, 2019
UPDATE 4/9/2019: After this Sidebar was originally published, the Attorney General reported to Congress
on March 24, 2019 that the Special Counsel had submitted a report concerning “allegations that
members of the presidential campaign of Donald J. Trump, and others associated with it, conspired with
the Russian government in its efforts to interfere in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, or sought to
obstruct related federal investigations.” In a subsequent letter, the Attorney General indicated that a
redacted version of the report could be made available “by mid-April, if not sooner.” The letter identified
four categories of information that would be redacted from the report: (1) grand jury material; (2)
“material the intelligence community identifies as potentially compromising sensitive sources and
methods; (3) material that could affect other ongoing matters, including those that the Special Counsel
has referred to other Department offices; and (4) information that would unduly infringe on the personal
privacy and reputational interests of peripheral third parties.”
In addition, on April 5, 2019, a panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit ruled in
McKeever v. Barr that federal courts lack “inherent authority” to authorize the disclosure of grand jury
matters in circumstances not covered by an explicit exception set out in Rule 6(e) of the Federal Rules of
Criminal Procedure. Though the facts of McKeever are unrelated to the Special Counsel’s report, it
appears that the appellate court’s decision in McKeever has, for the time being, closed off one potential
avenue for Congress to obtain grand jury material in federal court in the District of Columbia (though the
decision could always be reheard en banc or overturned by the Supreme Court).
The original post from March 8, 2019 is below.
Recent media reports suggest that Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller III is close to concluding his
investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 election. As discussed in this separate Sidebar,
Department of Justice (DOJ) regulations require the Special Counsel to deliver a confidential report
(Special Counsel report) to Attorney General William Barr at the conclusion of the investigation, and the
Attorney General must then notify Congress with “an explanation” for the investigation’s termination.
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CRS Legal Sidebar
Prepared for Members and
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But there appears to be no requirement in statute or regulation obligating the Attorney General to share
the full Special Counsel report with Congress, and Mr. Barr has indicated that legal considerations might
require him to withhold some or all of it. In response, some Members of Congress have suggested that a
subpoena may be issued to compel disclosure of the full report.
Should the Attorney General withhold portions of the Special Counsel report and, potentially, resist a
congressional subpoena seeking disclosure, the decision would likely stem, at least in part, from two legal
limitations that restrict the release of information about federal criminal investigations: (1) Federal Rule
of Criminal Procedure 6(e) (Rule 6(e)), which, among other things, prohibits an attorney for the
government from disclosing “a matter occurring before the grand jury”; and (2) “executive privilege,”
which potentially insulates certain information from disclosure to protect executive branch confidentiality
interests. The legal considerations that could impact the Attorney General’s decision to withhold specific
information from Congress may vary depending on the particular nature and context of the requested
information and any subpoena. However, these two doctrines would appear most likely to inform not only
the Attorney General’s decision, but also any potential judicial consideration of the question if an impasse
between Congress and the executive branch over the Special Counsel report were eventually to make its
way to court. The federal judiciary has generally sought to avoid adjudicating disputes between the
executive and legislative branches when possible, instead encouraging the branches to settle their
differences through a process of negotiation and accommodation. However, the House has previously
been successful in using the courts to enforce a congressional subpoena issued to the Attorney General,
though the context-specific nature of judicial rulings in this field means that a similar result might not be
guaranteed in every case where Congress seeks executive branch records. Nevertheless, while both limits
on information sharing are subject to multiple variables and little judicial guidance, in both cases,
exceptions exist that may provide Congress with an avenue to obtain at least some protected material.
Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 6(e)
Rule 6(e) shrouds grand jury proceedings in secrecy by setting out a list of persons, including grand jurors
and “attorney[s] for the government,” who “must not disclose a matter occurring before the grand jury”
unless the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure “provide otherwise.” The prohibition is indefinite (i.e., the
veil of secrecy is not lifted merely because a grand jury has completed its investigation and either issued
an indictment or declined to do so). However, Rule 6(e) also contains a series of exceptions to the general
rule of grand jury secrecy that permit disclosure of grand jury matters under certain circumstances. Many
of the exceptions require a court order before any disclosure of a grand jury matter may occur.
Because the Attorney General is an “attorney for the government” within the meaning of the Federal
Rules of Criminal Procedure, he is bound by Rule 6(e)’s obligation not to disclose grand jury “matter[s].”
That term, however, is not defined in Rule 6(e) and has been the subject of sometimes unclear and
contradictory judicial constructions. Generally, courts have viewed “matter[s] occurring before the grand
jury” as encompassing any information that “would tend to reveal some secret aspect of the grand jury’s
investigation,” such as “the identities of witnesses or jurors, the substance of testimony, the strategy or
direction of the investigation, the deliberations or questions of jurors, and the like.” Under this broad
umbrella, particular categories of information clearly constitute grand jury “matter[s],” while other
categories may hinge on the specific factual context in which a request is made and the use to which a
grand jury is put in the investigation at issue. For example, actual transcripts of proceedings and witness
testimony, as well as written “summaries” or “discussions” of the proceedings, are grand jury matters. So
too are the details of a grand jury’s composition and focus. But general statements about prosecutors’
deliberations, independent of the grand jury, may not constitute grand jury matters, nor may notes or other
memorializations of witness interviews conducted before a grand jury subpoena is issued.
The amount of grand jury content in the Special Counsel’s report to the Attorney General will likely
depend on the form the report takes and the specific factual circumstances under which particular
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information was gathered. Assuming some or all of the report contains grand jury material, however, the
question remains whether sharing that material with Congress would constitute a prohibited disclosure
under Rule 6(e). On this question, courts have reached conflicting conclusions. Relying on an expansive
conception of Congress’ investigative authority, two courts have held that Congress has a
“constitutionally independent legal right” to obtain documents in furtherance of “legitimate legislative
activity” even if the documents disclose matters occurring before a grand jury. Yet other courts have
criticized these decisions, sharply disagreeing with the conclusion that the rule of grand jury secrecy does
not apply when Congress is the contemplated recipient of information.
Regardless of the conflict in the case law, DOJ has taken the position that it may release grand jury
material to Congress only if disclosure is permitted under Rule 6(e). Thus, to the extent the Special
Counsel’s report to the Attorney General contains grand jury material, it seems likely that the Attorney
General would act as if constrained by Rule 6(e) even in the face of a congressional subpoena.
Still, the disclosure prohibition in Rule 6(e) is subject to several codified and judicially crafted exceptions
that sometimes permit disclosure of grand jury information (usually only with prior judicial
authorization). In the context of the Special Counsel investigation into possible Russian interference in
the 2016 election, one potentially relevant exception to Rule 6(e) permits an attorney for the government
to disclose any grand jury matter involving threats of attack or intelligence gathering by foreign powers to
“any appropriate federal . . . government official.” Although an “appropriate” government official could
arguably include a Member of Congress, disclosure under this exception would be limited: only grand
jury information concerning the specified subject matter would be available, at the discretion of the
attorney for the government. It is thus unclear whether this exception would motivate the Attorney
General to provide Congress with information in the Special Counsel report that would otherwise be
withheld.
Two other exceptions to the rule of grand jury secrecy would permit Congress independently to petition a
court for access to grand jury material in the Special Counsel report: (1) the exception allowing a court to
authorize disclosure of grand jury matters “preliminarily to or in connection with a judicial proceeding,”
and (2) the exception, recognized by a few courts, allowing a court to authorize disclosure of grand jury
matters in special or exceptional circumstances. Some courts have applied one or both of these exceptions
in the context of congressional requests for grand jury materials (a case currently before the D.C. Circuit
could limit the applicability of the exception for special or exceptional circumstances). As such, even if
Rule 6(e) restricts what the Attorney General may share from the Special Counsel report, Congress might,
depending on the circumstances, have additional tools at its disposal to seek protected material in court.
Finally, Rule 6(e) does not automatically bar independent disclosure of all information that happens to
have “reached the grand jury chambers.” And because Rule 6(e) generally does not apply to disclosures
by grand jury witnesses, Congress may be able to obtain much of the information in the Special Counsel
report through the more time-consuming process of subpoenaing underlying documents and witness
testimony.
For more information on grand jury secrecy and the exceptions that could apply to Congress, see this
report.
Executive Privilege
The Attorney General may also cite executive privilege as grounds for withholding aspects of the Special
Counsel report from Congress. Executive privilege is an implied—rather than textually explicit—
constitutional doctrine that has been given definition more by the historical practice of the political
branches than by judicial pronouncements. Under a memorandum issued during President Reagan’s
administration that appears to remain in effect, the final determination of whether the privilege is asserted
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is left to the President’s judgment. Thus, an assertion of executive privilege over the Special Counsel
report would likely come from the President personally or with his explicit authorization.
The Supreme Court’s only robust discussions of the privilege occurred in two cases in the 1970s
involving President Nixon’s communications and records. In United States v. Nixon, a case concerning a
grand jury subpoena for Oval Office recordings of conversations between the President and his advisors,
the Court recognized the constitutional dimensions of executive privilege for the first time, holding that
the need to protect the confidentiality of presidential communications relating to the “discharge of a
President's powers” is “constitutionally based” and “inextricably rooted in the separation of powers.” But
the Court also established that the protection for presidential communications is a qualified one, holding
that “absent a need to protect military, diplomatic, or sensitive national security secrets,” President
Nixon’s “generalized interest” in the confidentiality of his communications was overcome by the
judiciary’s “demonstrated, specific need” for evidence in a pending trial. The High Court reaffirmed the
scope and qualified nature of executive privilege three years later in Nixon v Administrator of General
Services, at least as the privilege relates to presidential communications and records. That case involved a
claim of executive privilege by then-former President Nixon in response to new legislation that sought to
preserve presidential records by subjecting them to screening and cataloguing by executive branch
archivists. The Court held that Nixon’s claim of “Presidential privilege clearly must yield to the important
congressional purposes of preserving the materials….”
Because executive privilege is not governed by bright-line rules and there have been few judicial
decisions examining the scope of the privilege, the executive and legislative branches have sometimes
taken divergent views of the privilege’s scope. While Congress has generally interpreted executive
privilege narrowly, limiting its application to the types of confidential presidential communications
referenced by the Supreme Court, the executive branch has historically viewed the privilege more
broadly, providing protections to several categories of documents and communications that may implicate
executive branch confidentiality interests. Under the executive branch’s interpretation, the privilege
covers not only communications involving the President or his close advisors, but also deliberative
communications within executive branch agencies; military, diplomatic, and national security
information; and information from law enforcement files such as evidence gathered in an investigation
and communications related to investigative and prosecutorial decision making. Some of these different
components could conceivably be implicated by the contents of the Special Counsel report. For example,
parts of the report would likely include information from both open and closed law enforcement files.
Given the subject matter of the Special Counsel’s investigation, it seems possible the report may include
information relevant to national security concerns or involving presidential communications.
Executive Privilege and Congressional Subpoenas
The Supreme Court has not addressed executive privilege in any substantial way since the Nixon cases,
and has never addressed the application of executive privilege in the context of a congressional
investigation. The most significant judicial analysis of executive privilege in the context of a
congressional investigation is the D.C. Circuit’s decision in Senate Select Committee on Presidential
Campaign Activities v. Nixon. Senate Select Committee involved an attempt by a congressional committee
to obtain Nixon’s oval office recordings as part of the Committee’s investigation into the 1972
Presidential election. Although ultimately siding with the President, the D.C. Circuit made clear that a
President’s assertion of the privilege could be overcome by a “strong showing of need by another
institution of government….” The court elaborated that Congress, in the exercise of its investigative
powers, may overcome the President’s presumptive privilege when it can show that “the subpoenaed
evidence is demonstrably critical to the responsible fulfillment of the Committee’s function.”
The Select Committee sought to make the required showing by arguing it had a “critical” need for the
tapes to carry out two separate and distinct functions. First, pursuant to its oversight function, the
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Committee argued that access to the tapes was necessary to “oversee the operations of the executive
branch, to investigate instances of possible corruption and malfeasance in office, and to expose the results
of its investigations to public view.” Second, pursuant to its legislative function, the Committee argued
that “resolution, on the basis of the subpoenaed tapes, of the conflicts in the testimony before it ‘would
aid in a determination whether legislative involvement in political campaigns is necessary’ and ‘could
help engender the public support needed for basic reforms in our electoral system.’”
The circuit court concluded that the Committee had failed to make the requisite showing of need. That
determination, however, appears to have been based on a pair of unique facts: first, copies of the tapes had
been provided to the House Judiciary Committee under that Committee’s impeachment investigation; and
second, the President had publicly released partial transcripts of the tapes. As for the oversight function,
the appellate court held that because the Judiciary Committee had obtained the tapes, any further
investigative need by the Select Committee was “merely cumulative.” With regard to the Select
Committee’s legislative functions, the court held that the particular content of the conversations was not
essential to future legislation, as any “specific legislative decisions” the Committee faced could
“responsibly be made” based upon the released transcripts.
Application of Executive Privilege Principles to the Special Counsel Report
The strength of any assertion of executive privilege in the face of a congressional subpoena may depend
on (1) the appropriate scope of the privilege—especially for open and closed law enforcement files— and
(2) the significance of the legislative interest set forth by the congressional committee.
With regard to the first issue, the Special Counsel report could contain information relating to various
species of executive privilege, but perhaps the most apparent claim would be one asserted to protect
confidential information associated with investigative and prosecutorial decision making in both closed
and open aspects of the Special Counsel investigation. Yet, federal courts have not addressed whether
there is a constitutionally based law enforcement component to executive privilege that applies during a
congressional investigation and whether (if it does exist) such a privilege can justify non-compliance with
a congressional subpoena. The only such dispute to reach the courts was United States v. House of
Representatives, arising from a criminal contempt of Congress citation against an executive official who
claimed executive privilege as the basis for refusing to comply with a House committee subpoena for law
enforcement material. That case was dismissed without significant discussion of the executive privilege
claim or Congress’ authority to obtain the subpoenaed information after the court determined that judicial
intervention in such inter-branch disputes “should be delayed until all possibilities for settlement have
been exhausted.”
Even so, a series of DOJ legal opinions has developed the executive branch’s position that executive
privilege provides protections to confidential law enforcement information. Generally these claims have
related to open law enforcement files. For example, the Office of Legal Counsel has stated that “the
policy of the Executive Branch throughout our Nation’s history has generally been to decline to provide
committees of Congress with access to, or copies of, open law enforcement files except in extraordinary
circumstances.” The executive branch has identified various constitutional justifications for this policy of
nondisclosure that generally relate either to the impairment of the Executive’s ability to “take care that the
Laws be faithfully executed” that would result from congressional interference in executive branch law
enforcement decisions or prejudicial effect on potential targets of executive branch enforcement actions.
At times, however, the executive branch has extended its interpretation of the ostensible law enforcement
component of executive privilege to include protections for closed law enforcement files. The DOJ has
acknowledged that once an investigation ends, many justifications for nondisclosure “lose some of their
force,” but maintains that nondisclosure may still be necessary to protect the executive branch’s “long-
term institutional interest in maintaining the integrity of the prosecutorial decision-making process.”
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Despite the executive policy of nondisclosure, there is historical precedent for congressional committees
obtaining both closed and open law enforcement files. Generally this access has been under a negotiated
settlement or information-access agreement in which the committee has agreed to certain confidentiality
protections. For example, a 1982 Senate select committee investigation into undercover law enforcement
practices DOJ used during its ABSCAM operation obtained documents and testimony relating to the
closed investigation, including internal prosecutorial memoranda. Similarly, a House committee obtained
a variety of documents relating to open law enforcement files during a 1998 inquiry into DOJ’s ongoing
investigation into allegations of campaign finance violations during the 1996 election.
Even if aspects of the Special Counsel report are viewed as covered by executive privilege—perhaps
because the report includes material relating to presidential communications, national security matters, or
law enforcement files—the Nixon and Senate Select Committee cases counsel that the privilege may not
establish an absolute bar to Congress obtaining the protected information. Instead, analysis of whether
Congress could compel disclosure would involve balancing the President’s interest in confidentiality with
Congress’ need for the information. Thus the content of the report and the reason a congressional
committee is seeking the report would be essential to judicial consideration of the privilege question.
With respect to the President’s interest, it would appear from Nixon that the President’s interest is perhaps
at its apex when asserting the privilege “to protect military, diplomatic, or sensitive national security
secrets.” The President’s interest would presumably be reduced if based solely upon an interest in
protecting law enforcement materials, especially those connected with closed aspects of the investigation.
With respect to the congressional committee’s interest, the standard for overcoming the President’s
assertion of executive privilege may vary based on the species of executive privilege asserted. But in
Senate Select Committee the D.C. Circuit made clear that the focus was on both the “nature and
appropriateness” of the function for which the committee required the information, and whether the
material was “necessary,” or “demonstrably critical” to the “fulfillment” of that function. Thus, a
committee seeking the Special Counsel’s report would be in a stronger position if it can articulate a
significant legislative or oversight purpose for seeking the report. Those purposes would likely vary
depending on the committee that has issued the subpoena.
Takeaways for Congress
It appears that a congressional committee seeking to obtain the Special Counsel’s full report to the
Attorney General, should the Attorney General withhold some or all of it, may face obstacles related to
executive privilege and the rule of grand jury secrecy contained in Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure
6(e).
First, assuming the Special Counsel report discusses “matter[s] occurring before the grand jury,” the
Attorney General generally may not disclose that information unless a Rule 6(e) exception applies. And
although case law on the subject is sparse and conflicting, it seems likely that the Attorney General would
take the position (in conformity with DOJ) that Rule 6(e)’s prohibition extends even to disclosure to
Congress. As such, should a congressional committee wish to obtain grand jury materials in the Special
Counsel report, it may have to seek court authorization for disclosure pursuant to an exception to Rule
6(e). In the past, Congress has had some success obtaining grand jury materials by means of court orders
pursuant to Rule 6(e) exceptions, but authority is limited.
Whereas Rule 6(e) protects only applicable grand jury materials, executive privilege could apply to a
broader range of information within the Special Counsel report. However, the scope of the privilege is
unsettled, especially with respect to law enforcement information. Moreover, even if information is
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protected, executive privilege is generally qualified, and can be surmounted if Congress can show an
overriding need for the information.
Additionally, Congress may seek information stemming from the Special Counsel investigation through
sources other than the Special Counsel report. For example, Congress could seek the Special Counsel’s
testimony directly (though he would likely be constrained by the same Rule 6(e) and executive privilege
considerations discussed in this Sidebar), or Congress could opt to seek documents or testimony from
grand jury witnesses themselves.
Author Information
Michael A. Foster
Todd Garvey
Legislative Attorney
Legislative Attorney
Disclaimer
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan shared staff
to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and under the direction of
Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other than public understanding of
information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in connection with CRS’s institutional role.
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