USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 1 of 44 STATEMENT OF JURISDICTION The district court had subject-matter jurisdiction to enforce a subpoena issued by the Special Counsel to Appellant to appear before the grand jury on June 29, 2018. After denying the motion to quash the subpoena on July 31, 2018, the court issued a contempt order on August 10, 2018, but stayed the order pending appeal. Appellant filed his notice of appeal on August 13, 2018. This Court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. 1291 to review the final order. STATEMENT OF THE ISSUES 1. Whether Congress, under the Appointments Clause of Article II, § 2, of the U.S. Constitution, “established by law” the appointment of a private attorney to serve as a special counsel as an “Officer of the United States.” 2. Whether Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller III (the “Special Counsel”) was unconstitutionally appointed because he is a “principal officer” under the Appointments Clause of Article II, and thus was required to be—but was not— appointed by the President with the Advice and Consent of the Senate. 3. Whether Congress “by Law vest[ed] the Appointment” of the Special Counsel as an “inferior Officer []” in “Head of the [Justice] Department[ ],” and thus, under the “Excepting Clause,” was unconstitutionally appointed because he 1 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 2 of 44 was required to be —but was not— appointed by Attorney General Jeff Sessions rather than by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein. STATUTES AND REGULATIONS The applicable constitutional provisions, statutes and regulations are provided in the body of the brief or Addendum. STATEMENT OF THE CASE The procedural history of this case is fully presented in the District Court’s Memorandum Opinion (Op.) at 19-23. The pertinent facts relevant for this appeal are summarized as follows: a. Subpoena history 1. The Special Counsel issued a renewed grand jury subpoena to Appellant Andrew Miller on June 5, 2018, to produce documents and appear as a witness before the grand jury on June 8, 2018. His local counsel had objected to the request for documents as being overly burdensome and discussed with the Special Counsel about limiting its scope. 2. At a hearing before the Court on June 18, 2018, on a motion to show cause and cross-motion to quash the subpoena, the parties reached an agreement on the scope of the documents requested. The court ordered that the documents be produced on June 25, 2018 and ordered the witness was to appear before the grand jury on June 29, 2018. 2 USCA Case #18-3052 3. Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 3 of 44 On June 25, 2018, the witness provided the documents to Special Counsel as ordered and agreed to. On June 28, 2018, the day before he was ordered to appear before the grand jury, his new counsel filed a motion to quash the subpoena on the basis that the Special Counsel was unconstitutionally appointed under the Appointments Clause of the Constitution. 4. After expedited briefing on the motion to quash, the Court held a hearing on July 18, 2018. On July 31, 2018, the Court issued an Order and a 92-page Memorandum Opinion denying the motion to quash. Appx. C. The witness was ordered to appear before the grand jury on August 10, 2018. 5. On August 9, 2018, the witness filed a motion requesting that he be held in contempt explaining that he was respectfully declining to appear the next day before the grand jury and requesting a stay of any such contempt order so that he could appeal it to this Court. 6. On August 10, 2018, a contempt hearing was held, at the conclusion of which the Court held the witness in contempt but stayed its order on the condition that a notice of appeal be filed by 9:00 AM August 14. Appx. B. On August 13, 2018, Appellant filed his notice of appeal. b. Attorney General’s recusal and appointment of the Special Counsel 7. On February 9, 2017, Attorney General Jeff Sessions was sworn into office having been confirmed by the Senate. 3 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 4 of 44 8. On March 2, 2017, Attorney General Sessions announced that he was recusing himself “from any existing or future investigations of any matters arising from the campaigns for the President of the United States.” Op. at 17. 9. On April 25, 2017, Rod Rosenstein, who was nominated by President Trump to be the Deputy Attorney General on February 1, 2017, was confirmed by the Senate and was soon thereafter appointed by the President and sworn into office. 10. On May 9, 2017, two weeks after his appointment, Rosenstein sent a three-page Memorandum to General Sessions recommending that FBI Director Comey be fired for the way he handled the investigation of Hillary Clinton’s emails during the 2016 election, particularly for his public statements on the matter contrary to FBI and DOJ policy. 11. On that same day, Sessions sent a one paragraph letter to the President attaching Mr. Rosenstein’s Memorandum and recommending Comey’s removal as FBI Director. 12. On that same day, President Trump sent a letter to Director Comey terminating him from office citing both Rosenstein’s and Sessions’ recommendations. 13. One week later, on May 16, 2017, Robert Mueller was interviewed by President Trump for the position of FBI Director but was not hired. 4 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 5 of 44 14. The next day, on May 17, 2017, Rosenstein appointed Mueller as Special Counsel1 SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT 1. The appointment of the Special Counsel violated the Appointments Clause of the Constitution because Congress did not enact any statute clearly authorizing his appointment. The two statutes relied upon by the court below, 28 U.S.C. 551(1) and 515(b), alone or in combination, do not provide such authority. Moreover, neither United States v. Nixon, 418 U.S. 683 (1974) nor In re Sealed Case, 829 F.2d 50 (D.C. Cir. 1987), provide support for the appointment since the statutory provisions were not discussed at any length. Clear language authorizing the appointment of inferior officers is required because it alters the default manner of appointing officers under Appointments Clause. 2. Because of his extraordinary powers as a prosecutor, coupled with the lack of supervision and control over this conduct, the Special Counsel, like U.S. Attorneys, was required to be appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. The district court’s conclusion that the Special Counsel Regulations could be revoked “immediately” and thereby subject the Special Counsel to be fired at will and thus place him in an inferior officer status is wrong for three reasons. 1 Op. at 18-19. The Special Counsel’s Order and Regulations, 28 C.F.R. Part 600 , are reproduced in the Addendum. 5 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 6 of 44 First, hypothesizing what the legal implications could be in futuro is an impermissible exercise to determine current legal duties. Second, any attempt to revoke the regulations is subject to judicial review. Third, in any event, such regulations cannot be revoked by the DAG since Attorney General is charged by law to issue or revoke such regulations and has not delegated that authority to the DAG. 3. Even if the Special Counsel’s appointment as an inferior officer was authorized by statute, the Excepting Clause requires that he be appointed by the Head of the Department, which is Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Instead, Mr. Mueller was unconstitutionally appointed by Deputy Attorney General (DAG) Rod Rosenstein who assumed the role of Acting Attorney General because of Sessions recusal from the investigation. The recusal of Sessions from the investigation did not trigger a “disability” under 28 U.S.C. 508(a) that empowered the DAG to assume the appointment powers of the Attorney General. Moreover, the Attorney General did not delegate any of his powers to the DAG under 28 U.S.C. 510, nor could he constitutionally delegate his appointment authority. APPLICABLE STANDARD OF REVIEW Appellate review of orders “based upon errors of law” is “plenary” or de novo review. Recording Indus. Ass’n of America v. Verizon Internet Servs., Inc., 6 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 7 of 44 351 F.3d 1229, 1233 (D.C.Cir. 2003). The issues presented in this appeal are “pure issues of law.” Op. at 23. ARGUMENT I. Congress Did Not “By Law” Vest in the Attorney General the Power to Appoint Private Citizens to Be Special Counsel Inferior Officers The Appointments Clause of Article II provides that: [The President shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, Judges of the Supreme Court, and all other Officers of the United States, whose appointments are not herein otherwise provided for, and which shall be established by Law: but the Congress may by Law vest the Appointment of such inferior Officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the Courts of Law, or in the Heads of Departments. U.S. Const. art. II, § 2 (emphasis added). The Appointments Clause provides that, as a default rule, all Officers of the United States must be nominated by the President, confirmed by the Senate, and then appointed by the President. Recognizing, however, that principal officers will usually need the help of inferior officers to do their jobs, the Appointments Clause also allows Congress to create by Law other officers and by Law to vest the appointment of inferior officers in the President alone, in the Courts of Law or in the Heads of Departments. Such vesting laws, like the Vesting Clauses of the Constitution, must clearly state that they are vesting the power to appoint inferior officers in the Head of a Department or that power remains with the President and the Senate. In this case, Congress has 7 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 8 of 44 not “by Law” clearly vested in the Acting Attorney General the power to appoint an inferior officer Special Counsel. As a result, Robert Mueller’s appointment is unlawful.2 Here, whether the Special Counsel is deemed a principal or inferior officer, his appointment by the Deputy Attorney General violates the strict requirements of the Appointments Clause because the Special Counsel was neither appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate, nor was he appointed pursuant to authority vested by the express terms of a congressional enactment. At a minimum, the Special Counsel is an “inferior Officer[]” and thus could only have been appointed by an official with power specifically conferred by Congress. The Deputy Attorney General did not have clear and specific statutory authorization to appoint the Special Counsel, however, and his appointment accordingly is unconstitutional.3 2 See Steven G. Calabresi, Congress Has Not Created an Inferior Office of Special Counsel Since 1999. Northwestern Pub. Law Research Paper No. 18-17, 2018 https://ssrn.com/abstract=31991430 3 The need for express and specific statutory language authorizing appointment follows from the fact that Congress’s exercise of its power under the Excepting Clause alters the “default manner of appointment for inferior officers”: Presidential appointment and Senates confirmation. Edmond v. United States, 520 U.S. 651, 660 (1997); see also United States v. Janssen, 73 M.J. 221, 224 (C.A.A.F. 2014) (“[W]e interpret Edmond to require statutory language specifically granting the head of a department the power to appoint inferior officers.”); Appointment of Assistant Appraisers at New York, 15 Op. Att’y Gen. 449, 450 (1878) (concluding that Congress did not authorize appointment “[w]here there is no express 8 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 9 of 44 A. No statute provides authority to appoint the Special Counsel. The district court found that two statutes provide for the appointment of a Special Counsel: 28 U.S.C. § 533(1) and 28 U.S.C. § 515(b). But neither one, alone or in combination, provide such authority. Section 533 authorizes the Attorney General to “appoint officials . . . to detect and prosecute crimes against the United States[.]” The appointment authorization in § 533 is strictly limited and has no bearing on Mueller’s appointment. It is not a general authorization to the Attorney General to appoint private attorneys, let alone one who brings indictments in his own name on behalf of the United States without any U.S. Attorney or high-ranking Department of Justice officer. As § 533’s title explains, it specifically and solely authorizes the appointment of “Investigative and other law enforcement officials” connected with the Federal Bureau of Investigation. 28 U.S.C. 533 (emphasis added). Judge Friedrich correctly analyzed Section 533(1): Section 533’s placement suggests interpreting the provision within the narrower context of its surrounding provisions governing the FBI and its investigations, not as a broad grant of authority for the Attorney General to appoint inferior officers generally and a Special Counsel in particular. enactment” providing for it). The exception thereby effects a waiver of the constitutionally prescribed advice-and-consent default rule. See Freytag v. Comm’r, 501 U.S.868, 882 ) (1991) (explaining that the “principle of separation of powers is embedded in the Appointments Clause”). 9 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 10 of 44 United States v. Concord Mgmt. & Consulting LLC, 317 F. Supp. 3d 0598, *27 (2018). Section 515(b) provides no authority to appoint the Special Counsel either. It states: Each Attorney specially retained under the authority of the Department of Justice shall be commissioned as special assistant to the Attorney General or special attorney, and shall take the oath required by law. Foreign counsel employed in special cases are not required to take the oath. The Attorney General shall fix the annual salary of a special assistant or special attorney. This, plainly, is not a grant of new power to retain or to hire new inferior officers, but simply provides on its face that attorneys, who at most are mere employees who have already been hired or retained, can also have a title and a salary. Section 515(b) is phrased in the past tense and refers to hires that have already been made. To be sure, there is in fact a provision in Title 28 authorizing the Attorney General to hire persons, who can then be denominated and commissioned as “special assistant[s]” or “special attorney[s]” under section 515(b). 28 U.S.C. § 543(a) (entitled “Special Attorneys”). The Special Counsel does not invoke this provision for obvious reasons—it authorizes the Attorney General only to “appoint attorneys to assist United States attorneys when the public interest so requires, including the appointment of qualified tribal prosecutors and other qualified attorneys to assist in prosecuting Federal offenses committed in Indian country.” This is an explicit authorization for hiring special assistants or special counsels. 10 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 11 of 44 But manifestly, Mueller was not appointed to assist U.S. Attorneys or to prosecute in Indian country. He was hired as a stand-alone officer who replaces rather than assists the functions of U.S. Attorneys. Section 543 thus provides the hiring authority that is cross-referenced but not created by section 515. The latter provision allows the Attorney General of the United States to move his pieces in the criminal law enforcement chess game all over the board, but it does not give him the power to create a new Queen. The remainder of Title 28 confirms this conclusion. For example, Section 519 says that the Attorney General has the power to “direct all. . . special attorneys appointed under section 543 of this title in the discharge of their respective duties.” But this cross-reference also creates no new inferior officers, just as section 515 creates no new inferior officers. Both clauses refer to attorneys already appointed by law who are assisting U.S. Attorneys, which is not what Robert Mueller is doing. Here again, the district court in Concord got it right. Noting the verb tenses employed in § 515(b), the court found that “whether § 515 refers to past or present conditions, it does not appear to convey the power to bring those conditions about.” Concord, 317 F. Supp. 3d at 621. The court also noted § 515(b)’s “sharp[]” contrast “with the numerous other statutes that do confer the power to appoint in a straightforward manner”—both proximate to § 515(b) and dispersed 11 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 12 of 44 throughout the U.S. Code. Id. (citing appointment statutes); see also 5 U.S.C. § 3105 (““Each agency shall appoint as many administrative law judges as are necessary”). B. No precedent holds that Congress has authorized by statute the appointment of the Special Counsel. The district court, both here and in Concord, found that two controlling precedents hold that the §§ 515 and 533 provide the requisite authority to appoint the Special Counsel: United States v. Nixon, 418 U.S. 683 (1974) and In re Sealed Case, 829 F.2d 50 (D.C. Cir. 1987). Neither decision can carry the weight. Nixon’s purportedly “controlling” analysis consists of a single sentence—a passing and unnecessary statement that Congress has “vested in [the Attorney General] the power to appoint subordinate officers to assist him in the discharge of his duties. 28 U.S.C. 509, 510, 515, 533.” 418 U.S. at 694. This is no more than dictum because, contrary to the district courts’ view, it was not necessary to the Court’s justiciability analysis. Indeed, the district court acknowledged that “no party in Nixon had disputed that Congress had authorized the Attorney General to appoint the Watergate Special Prosecutor.” Op. at 68. And the justiciability analysis did not turn on whether the Attorney General had statutory authority to appoint the Special Prosecutor—it turned on whether a dispute between the President and another Executive Branch official—there, the Special Prosecutor— could be adjudicated by an Article III court. The pivotal fact was that the Special 12 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 13 of 44 Prosecutor was a member of the Executive Branch, something none of the parties disputed.4 Far from a “necessary” step in the Nixon Court’s reasoning, then, the discussion of the Special Prosecutor’s appointment was merely unnecessary background. Not only was the one-sentence statutory analysis not necessary to the Supreme Court’s justiciability holding in Nixon—the Court there did not examine or even quote the texts of 28 U.S.C. 509, 510, 515, and 533, or compare them to other statutes on the books in 1973—in Title 28 and elsewhere—by which Congress vested in other entities the power to appoint inferior officers. Nor did the Court acknowledge the fact that § 515(b) refers to employees already “retained” rather than granting a new power to appoint inferior officers, or that § 533 is embedded in the statutes governing the FBI. Sealed Case is not controlling either. As in Nixon, the Court in Sealed Case stated—without analysis—that various statutes, including § 515, “accommodat[ed] the delegation” of power to Independent Counsel Lawrence Walsh. In re Sealed Case, 829 F.2d at 55. But Lt. Colonel Oliver North, the appellant in the case, did not contest the Attorney General’s general statutory authority to appoint someone already within DOJ at the time of his appointment. Rather, he argued that the 4 The Government’s briefing confirms as much. See Brief for the United States, United States v. Nixon, 418 U.S. 683 (1974) Nos. 73-1766, 73-1834, at 17, 27-30. 13 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 14 of 44 Independent Counsel statute foreclosed use of that authority because it was the exclusive means at that time of appointing someone in that capacity. See Brief of Appellant at 13-21, In re Sealed Case, 829 F.2d 50 (D.C. Cir. 1987) (No. 87-5247, at 13-21 (discussing 28 U.S. § 597(a)). A review of the appellate briefing in Sealed Case fully confirms that the Court’s reference to statutory appointment authority there is not binding in this case involving appointment of a private attorney as Special Counsel. In short, there is no statutory authority to appoint the Special Counsel or to authorize the promulgation of regulations to provide for such appointment. II. The Special Counsel’s Appointment Is Unconstitutional Because He Is A Principal Officer Not Appointed By The President With The Advice And Consent Of The Senate The Appointments Clause, as construed by controlling precedent, requires that all “officers of the United States” be appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate. That is the default rule and only Congress can overcome it with a statute that clearly confers appointment authority on the President, the courts, or the “Heads of Departments.” Because no such statute exists, and because the Special Counsel, with his broad prosecutorial powers, is at least on par with U.S. Attorneys who have been appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate, his appointment was unconstitutional ab initio. A. The Special Counsel Possesses Extraordinary Power 14 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 15 of 44 “Federal prosecutors are granted broad authority under our laws to choose their targets and pursue their investigations. As former Attorney General Robert H. Jackson stated, ‘[t]he prosecutor has more control over life, liberty, and reputation than any other person in America. His discretion is tremendous.’” Op. at 2 (quoting Robert H. Jackson, The Federal Prosecutor, Address at Conference of United States Attorneys (Apr. 1, 1940)) (emphasis added). Given this power and discretion, “from the very beginning, [U.S. Attorneys] were appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate, and were removable by the President.” In re Sealed Case, 838 F.2d at 511 n.55 (D.C. Cir. 1988) (citing 1 Stat. 92 (1789)), rev’d sub nom. Morrison v. Olson, 487 U.S. 654 (1988). The President “went to the Senate for advice and consent, presumably reading” the Appointments Clause “to support and perhaps require this approach” when it came to U.S. Attorneys. Susan Low Bloch, The Early Role Of The Attorney General In Our Constitution Scheme: In The Beginning There Was Pragmatism, 198 Duke L. J. 561, 567 n.24. Congress has followed suit. Although the Judiciary Act of 1789 “did not specify how the Attorney General or the district attorneys would be appointed[,]” Congress later enacted a provision aligned with the President’s customary approach—requiring Presidential appointment and Senate confirmation for each U.S. Attorney. See 28 U.S.C. § 541(a). Congress did so expressly “to conform … 15 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 16 of 44 with the Constitution[,]” Historical Notes to § 541(a), presumed as it was to know the requirements of the Appointments Clause. Cannon v. Univ. of Chicago, 441 U.S. 677, 697-98 (1979). This “historical practice”—followed by both political branches—is due “significant weight” in interpreting the Appointments Clause. NLRB v. Noel Canning, 134 S. Ct. 2550, 2559 (2014). This longstanding practice is consistent with how Congress and the Executive Branch treat the appointment of important and powerful public officials. Deputy and Assistant Cabinet Secretaries, and permanent U.S. Attorneys, are principal officers, even though they can be fired by the Cabinet Secretary they report to as well as by the President. No one reasonably could conclude, for example, that the Deputy Secretaries of State and Defense or the Deputy Attorney General or Solicitor General of the Justice Department could be appointed as inferior officers. Yet if the district court’s reasoning were adopted, nothing would prevent the Attorney General from appointing a “shadow” cadre of Special U.S. Attorneys, a Special Solicitor General, and similar subcabinet officials as inferior officers. Stated another way, the lower court’s analysis would support a federal government where there is only one principal officer who is the Head of the Department, and 16 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 17 of 44 all other subcabinet officials could be appointed by them unless Congress later enacted laws to vest their appointment in the President alone or courts of law.5 The work that a Special Counsel like Robert Mueller does is at least as important and impactful as the work done by any number of permanent U.S. Attorneys, and likely more so. In fact, Mueller is more powerful than is a permanent U.S. Attorney because he has nationwide jurisdiction and can indict foreign citizens and corporations as he did when he indicted more than a dozen Russian citizens, officials, and business entities, which affect the conduct of our foreign policy. In short, Mueller can be accurately characterized as a U.S. Attorney-at-Large. Appellant submits this Special Counsel’s extraordinary authority, coupled with his insulation from being removed from office at will, satisfies the test laid out in Morrison, Edmond, and Intercollegiate that he is a principal rather than an inferior officer. B. The Special Counsel Satisfies the Morrison v. Olson Test While Morrison v. Olson has been widely regarded as being supplanted by subsequent Appointments Clause cases, Appellant submits that if that Court were to have considered the officer status of this Special Counsel, it would have come 5 See Steve Calabresi, A federal judge’s alarming reason for upholding the Mueller crusade, The Hill (Sept. 10, 2018), http://thehill.com/opinion/judiciary/405793-a-federal-judges-alarming-reason-forupholding-the-mueller-crusade. 17 USCA Case #18-3052 out the other way. Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 18 of 44 Under Morrison, an inferior officer is marked by four characteristics: (1) removability by a higher executive official; (2) performance of only “certain, limited duties”; (3) limited in jurisdiction; and (4) limited tenure. The Special Counsel plainly is not limited in his duties. The difference between Alexia Morrison’s duties and powers and those of the Special Counsel could not be more stark. As Professor Akhil Amar testified: [Morrison] was focused on only one person, who was out of government at the time: Ted Olson. In contrast, Robert Mueller is apparently investigating the President of the United States for possible obstruction of justice in firing the Director of the FBI, as well as at several other people involved in a major national scandal, which involves alleged Russian tampering with a presidential election. The Mueller investigation is thus vastly wider and more consequential for the republic than was Alexia Morrison’s. Even under the Morrison test, it would be preposterous to say that Robert Mueller is just like Alexia Morrison, conducting an investigation of small and limited scope. Testimony Before the S. Comm. on the Judiciary, 115th Cong. 6-7 (2017) (statement of Akhil Reed Amar, Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science, Yale Law School) (emphasis in original).6 The Special Counsel’s jurisdiction also is far from limited. The prosecutorial power wielded by this Special Counsel is clearly extraordinary. And 6 In response to allegations that Mueller is indeed formulating policy by bringing novel criminal charges in some cases, the district court responded that “[t]he ability to raise a novel legal theory, however, is not the same as policymaking power, which . . . the Special Counsel lacks. See Appointment Order ¶¶ (b), (c).” Op. at 51. Add. at xx. Not so. Litigation is a powerful tool for making policy. Government agencies, particularly the NLRB, use enforcement actions instead of rulemaking in order to establish policy. See NLRB v. Bell Aerospace Co., 416 U.S. 267, 269 (1974) (reversing an attempt to force the Board to use rulemaking). 18 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 19 of 44 the degree of authority he wields strongly supports his principal-officer status under the Appointments Clause. See, e.g., Intercollegiate Broad. Sys., Inc. v. Copyright Royalty Bd., 684 F.3d 1332, 1337 (D.C. Cir. 2012) (examining degree of authority of Copyright Royalty Judges in assessing whether they are principal or inferior officers). The district court found that the “extraordinary authority” standard offered by Appellant, as opposed to the easily met “significant authority” standard in Edmond that marks the distinction between officers and employees, is too subjective and difficult to administer. Op. at 63-64. But the very nature of the Appointments Clause analysis calls for weighing factors by the Court in light of the particular features of the officer at issue; and while admittedly it may be “somewhat subjective in close cases” (Op. 64), this is not a close case. In any event, as will be demonstrated, the Edmond test has been satisfied. C. The Special Counsel is Not an Inferior Officer Under Edmond A decade after Morrison, the Supreme Court revisited the principal-inferior officer distinction in Edmond v. United States, 520 U.S. 651 (1997). There, the Supreme Court “emphasized three factors” in making the distinction—whether an officer is (1) “subject to the substantial supervision and oversight of” another Executive officer who is, or is “subordinate” to, a principal officer; (2) “removable . . . without cause;” and (3) subject to “another executive branch entity’s . . . power 19 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 20 of 44 to reverse the [officer’s] decisions,” such that the officer has “‘no power to render a final decision on behalf of the United States unless permitted to do so by other Executive Officers.’” Intercollegiate Broad. Sys., 684 F.3d at 1338 (citing Edmond, 520 U.S. at 664–65). Appellant submits that the Special Counsel fails to satisfy all three factors. 1. The Special Counsel is not “subject to substantial supervision and oversight.” With regard to the first Edmond factor, the regulations clearly give the Special Counsel wide discretion to conduct his investigation, with the Acting AG being given little if any authority to supervise him. In practice, the Acting AG appears to take a deferential hands-off approach to the work of the Special Counsel, prompting judicial criticism for the way the Special Counsel has strayed from the bounds of his original jurisdiction.7 To be sure, the Special Counsel is to follow the Department of Justice policies, including those found in the U.S. Attorney’s Manual, as do all U.S. attorneys who are appointed by the president and 7 Sharon LaFraniere, Judge Questions Whether Mueller Has Overstepped His Authority on Manafort, N.Y. TIMES (May 4, 2018), https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/04/us/mueller-authority-paul-manafort-casejudge.html (“I don’t see what relation this [Manafort] indictment has with anything the special counsel is authorized to investigate.”) 20 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 21 of 44 confirmed by the Senate. But as for the Special Counsel being subjected to “substantial supervision and oversight,” Appellant submits that Judge Friedrich’s analysis is right on target: At most, the Acting Attorney General is able to countermand actions that— after giving “great weight to the views of the Special Counsel—are so inappropriate or unwarranted under established Departmental practices.” 28 C.F.R. § 600.7(b). As noted, it is unclear from the provision what “established Departmental practices” shape the Special Counsel’s actions. And troublingly, the importance of the decision and the Acting Attorney General’s desired course of action are not considerations specified in the text. The provision prevents the Acting Attorney General from countermanding a decision with which he disagrees, no matter how vehemently, so long as the decision does not rise to the level of “so inappropriate or unwarranted under established Departmental practices.” Id. 317 F. Supp. 3d 598, at *9. Judge Friedrich concludes that “[a]t the very least, some Special Counsel decisions remain insulated from review or countermand.” In short, there clearly is no “substantial supervision and oversight” of the Special Counsel’s work under Edmond. Id. (emphasis added). 2. The Special Counsel has the power to render a final decision on behalf of the United States without permission from anyone else at the Department of Justice. The court below asserts that Section 600.7(b), “while no model of clarity,” could be read to theoretically allow the AG to countermand a decision by the Special Counsel. Op. at 37. From this, the court leaps to the conclusion that the Special Counsel “‘ha[s] no power to render a final decision on behalf of the United States unless permitted to do so by other Executive officers.’” Op. at 43 (citing 21 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 22 of 44 Edmond, 520 U.S. at 665) (emphasis added). But the regulations nowhere require the Special Counsel to seek approval or get permission from the AG before making final decisions about who to investigate, indict, and prosecute. At most, the Special Counsel may notify the AG of proposed indictments, plea bargains, and the like. But he does not need the approval of the AG to make those decisions. The court then back-pedals from its statement that the Special Counsel cannot make final decisions “unless permitted to do so.” Instead, the court states that, “[t]o require a superior officer personally to approve all significant decisions made by one of the ‘numerous,’ . . . inferior officers he directs and supervises, moreover, would be infeasible given the realities of modern governance.” Id. at 46 (citing United States v. Germaine, 99 U.S. 508, 510 (1878)). Given the reality that there is only one Special Counsel, and a very powerful one at that, it is certainly not asking too much that the AG approve the Special Counsel’s significant decisions that have the effect of depriving persons of their liberty interests, rather than being merely advised about them. 3. The Special Counsel is Not Removable Without Cause. The Special Counsel regulations insulate the Special Counsel from being removed from his position for “misconduct, dereliction of duty, incapacity, conflict of interest, or for other good cause, including violation of Departmental policies.” 28 C.F.R. § 600.7(d). This, too, supports his principal officer status. 22 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 23 of 44 Here again, Judge Friedrich’s analysis is correct: There is reason to think, however, that the Special Counsel regulations afford the Special Counsel more substantial protection against removal, and thus risk rendering him a principal officer. In Intercollegiate, for example, a similar removal standard “for misconduct or neglect of duty” “support[ed] a finding that [the officers at issue] are principal officers.” 684 F.3d at 1339– 40; see also Edmond, 520 U.S. at 664–665 (concluding that the officers at issue were inferior officers in part because they were removable “without cause”). And in general, for-cause removal standards are often understood to provide some degree of independence and protection beyond mere failure to accept supervision. See, e.g., PCAOB, 561 U.S. at 502–03; PHH Corp., 881 F.3d at 77–78 (majority opinion); id at 191 n.16 (Kavanaugh, J., dissenting). The Special Counsel regulations themselves suggest the same. As discussed above, the regulations—at most—only require the Special Counsel to follow the Acting Attorney General’s countermand orders for actions deemed “so inappropriate or unwarranted under established Departmental practices.” 28 C.F.R. § 600.7(b); see supra Section III.A.1.a. With regard to actions that do not rise to that level, the regulations do not clearly require the Special Counsel to follow orders, so it is difficult to see how “good cause” would arise from the Special Counsel’s refusal to follow orders. Under such circumstances, the Special Counsel could rightly resist removal on the ground that he was proceeding in full compliance with the regulations, while the Acting Attorney General would not have a similarly steady leg to stand. After all, the Acting Attorney General would be seeking to remove the Special Counsel for not following orders that the Special Counsel was under no duty to follow. … Therefore, the Special Counsel’s for-cause removal protection, if substantial, “supports a finding” that the Special Counsel is a principal officer. Id. at 1339. (emphasis added) 317 F. Supp. 3d 598 at **21-22. Appellant submits that considering the totality of the regulations both on paper and in practice, the for-cause removal protections are substantial in this case. 4. The “For Cause” Standard in the Special Counsel Regulations Cannot 23 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 24 of 44 Be Rescinded “Immediately” to Remove the Special Counsel Both Judge Howell and Judge Friedrich concluded that, regardless of the “good cause” protection from removal, the regulations themselves can be rescinded “immediately’ by the Acting Attorney General. Accordingly, the Special Counsel is removable at will after all, thereby making him an inferior officer. Op. at 30; United States v. Concord Mgmt. & Consulting LLC, 317 F.Supp.3d 598 (D.D.C. 2018) at *23. This is wrong. a. Hypothetical Revocation of the Regulations Is Irrelevant. In the first place, hypothesizing how these regulations might be easily revoked does not mean that the analysis of the present operation of the regulations, which insulate the Special Counsel from control, can be dispensed with when determining his officer status. That is no different than saying a statute that provides for only for-cause removal of an officer does not support principal-officer status because Congress has the power to, and could, just repeal that statute in the future. Constitutional law does not turn on hypotheticals and contingencies. See, e.g., Comptroller of Treasury of Md. v. Wynne, 135 S. Ct. 1787, 1806 (2015) (“Of course, we do not decide the constitutionality of a hypothetical tax scheme that Maryland might adopt because such a scheme is not before us.”); Exxon Corp. v. Eagerton, 462 U.S. 176, 189 (1983) (refusing to “strain to reach a constitutional question by speculating that the Alabama courts might in the future interpret” the 24 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 25 of 44 law in a particular fashion). The Appointments Clause is no different—it looks to existing, objective sources of law that govern an officer’s removal, not some hypothetical future circumstance where those objective sources of law may not exist. b. Special Counsel Regulations Cannot Be Immediately Revoked Second, the lower court’s facile conclusion that the Special Counsel regulations can be immediately revoked, making the Special Counsel subject to firing at will, is illusory. When Executive Branch agencies and departments promulgate regulations or guidance documents, or the President issues executive orders, these documents reflect considered legal and policy judgments and ought to be taken seriously. This is the case irrespective of whether or not they create privately enforceable rights or where, as here, they are binding on the agency. Moreover, contrary to Judge Howell’s position,8 the fact that Executive Branch regulations can be changed does not render them illusory; to hold otherwise would make shambles of decades of administrative law, under which Executive Branch agencies and departments promulgate regulatory policies that ebb and flow as these agencies exercise their statutorily-bestowed or constitutionally-based discretion. 8 Indeed, Judge Howell acknowledges, citing the Nixon case, “that regulations have ‘force of law’ so long as ‘extant,’” but nevertheless suggests that because the Attorney General can allegedly rescind the Special Counsel regulations “immediately,” these regulations therefore have no legal force. Op. at 30. 25 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 26 of 44 Thus, the fact that the Attorney General cannot bind himself or his successors when it comes to changing or even repealing outright Special Counsel regulations does not rob them of legal force. There are, of course, some circumstances where a written document lacks some or all legal impacts. This may be the case when a contract is held to be null and void, or a given statute is held to be unconstitutional. Alternatively, one can easily envision a statute that, while having some force, does not run afoul of a particular constitutional limitation against which it is tested. It should be emphasized that Judge Howell’s view that the Special Counsel regulations can be changed immediately (or even very quickly) by the Attorney General, and that this can be done with the utmost ease, is contradicted by wellestablished case law. In this regard, numerous courts have found that once a given legal or policy position has been enshrined, the Executive Branch entity involved cannot revoke it without going through the appropriate process, which includes providing “a reasoned explanation for the change.” Encino Motorcars, LLC v. Navarro, 136 S. Ct. 2117, 2125 (2016). The most recent example of the significance of written articulations of Executive Branch policies, even when such articulations were promulgated initially without resort to any notice and comment process, involves a case currently pending in the footprint of this Circuit. The case, NAACP v. Trump, 26 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 27 of 44 involves litigation challenging the Trump Administration’s effort to rescind the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (“DACA”) program.9 It is worth emphasizing here that DACA was originally established by a memorandum issued in 2012 by Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano. DACA also was justified as an exercise of prosecutorial discretion by the Executive Branch and specifically indicated that it did not create any privately enforceable rights. Significantly, in seeking to rescind DACA, the Department of Justice argued that this policy was unlawful, an assertion buttressed by several judicial decisions, albeit the ones outside of this Circuit. Yet, despite all of these considerations, Judge Bates denied the government’s motions to dismiss the plaintiffs’ challenge to DACA’s attempted rescission. His key justification was that DOJ’s “scant legal reasoning was insufficient to satisfy the Department’s obligation from its prior stated view that DACA was lawful”. NAACP v. Trump, 298 F.Supp.3d 209, 238 (D.D.C. 2018). Judge Bate’s decision specifically drew on the Supreme Court’s Encino Motorcars case, which struck down a Department of Labor regulation that sought to narrow the department’s construction of a particular statutory exemption on the grounds that the department’s explanation for its regulatory change was inadequate. 9 See NAACP v. Trump, 298 F.Supp.3d 209 (D.D.C. 2018). 27 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 28 of 44 To emphasize, in both Encino and the DACA case, the judiciary did not conclude that the disputed Executive Branch actions were unlawful as a matter of substance. Indeed, there is no doubt that, for example, DACA can be rescinded, but only after providing a fulsome judicially-blessed explanation of why the rescission is sought. And, the Encino Court specifically noted that, merit-wise, the narrowing of the exemption being sought by the Department of Labor was a permissible interpretation of its statutory authority. The fact that Executive Branch agencies and departments cannot revoke at will even the most informally promulgated written articulations of policy and law and can only do so upon fulsomely articulating the reasons for the change being sought underscores that such written articulations are not hortatory. Indeed, they are legally binding on the entities that have issued them, until and unless properly revoked. The same holds true for DOJ’s Special Counsel regulations.10 D. The Twenty-Fifth Amendment Is Not An Issue As noted, supra, the district court was critical of Appellant’s “extraordinary power” case-by-case approach that officers, not unlike that used by the Supreme Court, in determining whether an officer invariably requires Senate confirmation, being a principal officer, or falls within the Excepting Clause under which an 10 See generally Josh Blackman, Can the Special Counsel Regulations Be Unilaterally Revoked?, LAWFARE (July 5, 2018). http://www.lawfareblog.com/can-special-counsel-regulations-be-unilaterallyrevoked. 28 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 29 of 44 inferior officer might not require Senate confirmation. The court complained that, as a policy matter, “[t]he need for objective, determinable and administrable rules is particularly pressing given the role principal officers can be called upon to play at times of national emergency.” Op. at 64 (emphasis added). The court then launched into a lengthy, but misguided, in terrorem argument that adopting a functional approach in determining whether the Special Counsel is a principal rather than inferior officer would implicate and complicate the TwentyFifth Amendment process regarding the circumstances when the Vice President may become the Acting President, because under that amendment, “the principal officers of the executive departments” will make that decision. Op. at 64-66 citing U.S. CONST. amend. XXV, § 4 (emphasis in opinion). The Court continued that determining who is a “principal officer” under the Appointments Clause, “could exacerbate and the extend the crisis over presidential leadership” and “cast a pall of illegitimacy on the President’s tenure….” Op. at 65. When confronted with the Twenty-Fifth Amendment administrability problems this would create, the witness’s counsel changed his tune, asserting that such officers actually would not be principal officers at all, but “superior” officers, a third type of constitutional officer distinct from principal and inferior officers. [Oral arg. at 27:11–28:22]. Counsel most assuredly did not “change his tune;” rather, counsel suggested that the Court was reading off a different sheet of music. In particular, counsel attempted to allay any concerns the Court may have about the applicability of the 29 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 30 of 44 Twenty-Fifth Amendment by pointing out that the term “principal officer,” regularly used in modern Appointments Clause cases to denote those officers who are confirmed by the Senate, in fact does not appear anywhere in the Appointments Clause, but only in the Opinion Clause in addition to the Twenty-Fifth Amendment.11 Counsel merely proffered using the terms “noninferior” or 11 The term “principal Officer” appears in the Opinions Clause, which says that the President “may require the Opinion, in writing, of the principal Officer in each of the executive Departments, upon any Subject relating to the Duties of their respective Offices.” U.S. Const. art. II, § 2, cl. 1. The phrasing of the Opinions Clause indicates that there is one and only one “principal” officer in each executive department, meaning that the “principal” officers are really the “Heads of Departments” or Cabinet Secretaries, who are capable of appointing inferior officers if authorized by statute. That does not mean that all non-principal officers are inferior. The opposite of an inferior officer is a superior officer, and many superior officers are technically not “principal officers” but nevertheless are appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. This was very clear at the Constitutional Convention. When the inferior officers provision of the Appointments Clause was introduced by Gouverneur Morris on September 15, 1787, James Madison claimed: “It does not go far enough if it be necessary at all – Superior Officers below Heads of Departments ought in some cases to have the appointment of lesser offices.” http://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/debates_915.asp. Madison clearly had the understanding that the class of “Superior Officers” was broader than the class of department heads (or “principal Officers”). The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787, at 627 (Max Farrand ed. 1911). Contrary to Judge Howell’s observation that “there is little indication that anyone at the Convention but [Gouverneur] Morris agreed with Madison,” Op. at 59), this distinction was recognized by others at the Convention as well. Rufus King, in discussing the Senate’s role in appointments, “did not suppose it was meant that all the minute officers were to be appointed by the Senate, or any other original source, but by the higher officers of the departments to which they belong.” 2 Records of the Federal Convention 539 (Max Farrand ed., 1911). The Framers distinguished less important from more important officers, and the scheme of appointment was based upon that distinction. 11 30 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 31 of 44 “superior” officer to clarify the difference. Indeed, the Supreme Court has squarely rejected use of the Twenty-Fifth Amendment in construing the Appointments Clause. See Freytag v. CIR, 501 U.S. 868, 887 n.4 (1991) (pointing out that the Twenty-Fifth Amendment’s “language, of course, does not control our interpretation of a prior constitutional provision, such as the Appointments Clause” and rejecting reliance on meaning of “executive departments” in the Twenty-Fifth Amendment in determining meaning of “Head of Department” under Appointments Clause).12 In short, the court’s concerns about the applicability of the Twenty-Fifth Amendment were clearly unfounded. 11 See also Free Enterprise Fund v. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, 537 F.3d 667 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (Kavanaugh, J., dissenting), rev’d in part, 561 U.S. 477 (2010); Senate Report No. 66, 89th Cong., 1st Sess., Feb. 10, 1965, at 2 (“It is the judgment of the committee that the language ‘principal officers of the executive departments’ more adequately conveys the intended meaning of Sections 4 and 5, that only those members of the President’s official Cabinet were to participate in any decision of disability referred to under these sections.”). The uniform modern practice has been to refer to noninferior officers as “principal officers.” " ‘[F]or purposes of appointment,’ the Clause divides all officers into two classes — "inferior officers" and noninferior officers, which we have long denominated "principal" officers. Germaine, supra, at 509, 511.” NLRB v. SW Inc. 137 S.Ct. 929 (Thomas, J., concurring) at 945 12 See also Senate Report No. 66, 89th Cong., 1st Sess., Feb. 10, 1965, at 2 (“It is the judgment of the committee that the language ‘principal officers of the executive departments’ more adequately conveys the intended meaning of Sections 4 and 5, that only those members of the President’s official Cabinet were to participate in any decision of disability referred to under these sections.”). 31 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 32 of 44 III. The Special Counsel, As an Inferior Officer, Was Not Appointed by the “Head of the Department.” Even if the Special Counsel is an inferior officer “established by Law” under the Appointments Clause, that Excepting Clause requires that Congress “by law vest [his] appointment” in the “Head[] of Department[].” The Head of the Department here for all relevant time periods was and continues to be Attorney General Jeff Sessions. The Special Counsel was instead appointed on May 17, 2017 by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who purported to be the Acting Attorney General, presumably because Attorney General Sessions had decided to recuse himself from any investigations related to the presidential campaign. A mere recusal from a single matter, however, does not make the Deputy Attorney General the “Head[] of the Department[]” for purposes of the Appointments Clause. While General Sessions may have recused himself from a certain investigation, he cannot divest himself of or delegate his constitutional duty to appoint the investigator. As will be demonstrated, neither 28 U.S.C. § 508(a) regarding the “absence” or “disability” of the Attorney General nor 28 U.S.C. § 510 authorizing the delegation of the Attorney General’s functions, provided the Deputy Attorney General with the constitutional authority to appoint the Special Counsel. In any event, the Special Counsel did not invoke § 510 in the court below, nor was any 32 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 33 of 44 function of the Attorney General in fact delegated to the Deputy Attorney General pursuant to procedures specified in Justice Department regulations. See 28 C.F.R. §§ 0.180-183. A. Attorney General Sessions’ Recusal From the Russia Investigation Did Not Make the Deputy Attorney General the “Head of the Department” for Purposes of the Appointments Clause by Operation of 28 U.S.C. § 508. The controlling statute for vacancies in the Department of Justice is 28 U.S.C. § 508 (emphasis added): (a) In case of a vacancy in the office of Attorney General, or of his absence or disability, the Deputy Attorney General may exercise all the duties of that office, and for the purpose of section 3345 of title 5 the Deputy Attorney General is the first assistant to the Attorney General. The first part of subsection (a) merely refers to the Deputy Attorney General (DAG)’s authority to exercise “all the duties of that office” upon certain statutory contingencies occurring. It does not confer by operation of law an “Acting” officer title or status upon the DAG. The Attorney General remains the Head of the Department for purposes of the Appointments Clause. Moreover, the “Acting” designation is specifically defined and triggered by operation of law only pursuant to 5 U.S.C. § 3345, the Federal Vacancies Reform Act (FVRA), which is referenced in the second part of Section 508, and which in pertinent part provides: “Acting Officer” is “first assistant to that office if the holder dies, resigns, or is otherwise unable to perform the functions and duties of the office ** * *.” 5 33 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 34 of 44 U.S.C. § 3345(a)(1) (emphasis added). This provision clearly envisions a complete rather than partial inability to perform the functions and duties of the office. In the instant case, Sessions did not die, resign, or become absent, and neither was he “otherwise unable to perform the functions and duties of the office” under Section 3345 nor was he “disable[ed]” under Section 508. Both terms are essentially synonymous and must be read in pari materia. Sessions was not physically incapacitated or hospitalized in intensive care like Attorney General Ashcroft during the famous hospital bed visit in March 2004 that may have prevented him from carrying out all of his duties. Even if Sessions were partially “disabled” or legally incapacitated from carrying out his functions with respect to a single investigation, as the court below claims, Op. 88 and n.49, he was still the Head of the Department and able to perform all of his other statutory and constitutional duties, including the appointment of a Special Counsel as the investigator, while still remaining recused from the investigation. B. A Single-Issue Recusal Does Not Give Rise to a “Vacancy.” To demonstrate that the single-issue recusal by the Attorney General authorized the DAG to appoint the Special Counsel, the lower court relies on N.L.R.B. v. Southwest General, Inc., 137 S. Ct. 929 (2017) for the proposition that 34 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 35 of 44 “the Supreme Court has recognized that [the Federal Vacancies Reform Act] authorized the President ‘to appoint acting officials.’” Op. at 85. But this reasoning improperly expands the precise holding in S.W. Gen. The decision solely concerned a vacancy in an office, not one Officer’s voluntary recusal on a single issue. S.W. Gen., 137 S. Ct. at 934 (“The general rule is that the first assistant to a vacant office shall become the acting officer.”) (emphasis added). Moreover, as the lower court noted, that case referenced a predecessor statute enacted by the Second Congress that provided the President with powers to appoint a person “in case of death, absence from the seat of government, or sickness” of the Secretary of State, Treasury, and War departments “until such absence or inability by sickness shall cease.” Op. at 84-85. Again, “absence or inability by sickness” is equivalent to a de facto “vacancy” in the office. See S.W. Gen. at 934 (Congress has only authorized the President to bypass Senate advice and consent where an office has gone vacant.) 28 U.S.C. § 508 itself is entitled “Vacancies.” This indicates that the statutory scheme envisions cases in which the office would be missing its Head, rather than having the Head remain serving in his role but voluntarily recused on a single issue. The case law and other authority on vacancies which the court below cites do not apply to a single-issue recusal. In short, at single-issue recusal does 35 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 36 of 44 not give rise to a vacancy in that Office such that, as the court concluded, “there effectively is no Attorney General.” Op. at 86. C. A Single-Issue Recusal Is Not an “Absence” or “Disability” A voluntary recusal on a single issue does not give rise to an “absence or disability” under 28 U.S.C. § 508, such that the Deputy Attorney General would become the Acting Attorney General and thereby assume all duties of the Attorney General’s Office. The examples on which the opinion below relies show that the statute and other authorities envision only an entire, wholesale absence or disability, not a recusal to act on a single issue. Ultimately, Attorney General Sessions was still the Head of the Department when Rosenstein appointed a Special Counsel to investigate the President. General Sessions did not resign his office. There was no vacancy, and he was not unavailable or disabled. The opinion below asserts that “it is well settled . . . that statutory language authorizing one to exercise the duties of an office suffices to make that person an acting officer.” Op. at 84. However, the authorities cited by the court for that proposition envisioned an Officer being entirely absent or unable to perform. For example, the 1792 Act used the plural “duties,” and only applied until a “successor can be appointed.” This demonstrates that the statute contemplated a complete 36 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 37 of 44 absence from office quite unlike the circumstances in this case. See, e.g., Op. at 8485 (citing Act of May 8, 1792, ch. 37. § 8, 1 Stat. 279, 281). The same is true of the Vacancies Act of 1868, which states that “in case of the death, resignation, absence, or sickness of the head of any executive department, the first or sole assistant thereof shall . . . perform the duties of such head until a successor be appointed, or such absence or sickness shall cease.” Op. at 85 (citing Act of Feb. 20, 1863, ch. 45, 12 Stat. 656, 656 (emphasis added)). There can be no “successor” to Attorney General Sessions because he did not resign his Office, and Rosenstein did not inherit all the “duties” because he did not become the Acting Attorney General while Sessions remained Attorney General. In any event, it is clear from the current statutory text of 28 U.S.C. § 508 that the Congress envisioned a complete absence, not a constructive “absence” or “disability” on a single issue: “In case of a vacancy in the office of Attorney General, or of his absence or disability, the Deputy Attorney General may exercise all the duties of that office. . . .” 28 U.S.C. § 508 (emphasis added). Why else would Congress have given the Acting Attorney General “all the duties of that office,” if he were only stepping in to fill a gap left by a recusal on a single issue? The district court in Moog v United States, No. MISC. CIV-90-215E, 1991 WL 46518 (W.D.N.Y. Apr. 1, 1991), was faced with this very question. In Moog, the issue was the lawfulness of then-Deputy Attorney General William P. Barr’s 37 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 38 of 44 assuming the title and powers of “Acting Attorney General” with respect to certain enforcement matters due to a conflict of interest by then-Attorney General Richard Thornburg in that matter. The law in question required that the Attorney General personally sign Civil Investigative Demands (CIDs) for False Claims Act investigations. Instead of the AG’s signature, the DAG signed the CIDs as “Acting Attorney General.” The district court quickly dispatched the government’s argument that the Attorney General was “disabled” under Section 508: The next link in the government’s argument—that the Attorney General's recusal renders him disabled under 28 U.S.C.§ 508(a)—is equally problematic. It is readily apparent that the section contemplates a complete inability of the Attorney General to perform his duties, such that the Deputy Attorney General must step in and exercise “all the duties of that office.” Were the statute construed as the respondent urges, every conflict of interest on the part of an Attorney General would require his deputy to assume all the duties of office, clearly a nonsensical result. Id. at *2 (emphasis added). The government’s subsequent motion for reconsideration of the decision was quickly denied. 1991 WL 255371 (Nov. 21, 1991). Notably, the Justice Department did not appeal that decision to the Second Circuit. The court below gave no weight to this decision but concluded that while the DAG may take on all the powers of the Attorney General after his recusal on one issue, this does not mean he will. Op. at 89. Assuming that the discretionary 38 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 39 of 44 exercise of power is cabined only to overseeing the Russia investigation, the DAG may not also assume the Attorney General’s appointment power. The district court’s reliance on United States v. Libby, 429 F. Supp. 2d 27 (D.D.C. 2006) to the contrary is unavailing, and even the court concedes that it provides “little additional clarity” on the meaning of 508(a). Op. at 88. There, U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald was appointed as a Special Counsel by thenDeputy Attorney General James Comey as “Acting Attorney General” due to the Attorney General’s recusal to investigate the unauthorized disclosure of classified information. Id. But whether Comey was lawfully the Acting AG under 508(a) and whether that issue was litigated, Judge Howell correctly observed that the Libby “[c]ourt appears to have assumed rather than concluded that [508(a)] does” authorize the Deputy to be an Acting AG in a single-recusal situation.13 The court discusses the applicability of the Federal Vacancies Reform Act (FVRA) 5 U.S.C.A. § 3345, a provision expressly referenced in 508. As 13 Moreover, the central issues before the court in Libby – whether the delegation of authority to U.S. Attorney Fitzgerald violated 28 U.S.C. §§ 516 and 519, and whether he was a superior officer – did not necessarily require a resolution of whether Comey was an Acting Attorney General. As a sitting U.S. Attorney, confirmed by the Senate, Fitzgerald was simply tasked to investigate the leaks of classified information in much the same way as then-U.S. Attorneys Rod Rosenstein and Ron Machen were tasked by Attorney General Holder to investigate the leaks of classified information in 2012. Attaching the moniker “Special Counsel” to the specialized task Fitzgerald was assigned to do was legally superfluous in determining his status. 39 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 40 of 44 previously noted, that statute is triggered when an officer: “dies, resigns, or is otherwise unable to perform….” Here, the canon of ejusdem generis governs, since the statute uses a list that ends with a catch-all term following two specific terms. Both death and resignation unequivocally make an officer entirely unavailable and the office vacant. It would undermine the statutory scheme to expand “otherwise unable to perform” to the extreme outer bounds of its meaning (as the opinion below does), to a partial “vacancy,” thus failing to read the term in the context of its neighbors, as the canons require. Finally, the court’s reliance by analogy on the practice of trial judges who recuse themselves from adjudicating a particular case is misplaced. Op. at 89. Simply put, the recusal of a trial judge due to a conflict or bias, which allows another equally appointed and confirmed trial judge to hear a case, cannot be compared at all to a Deputy Attorney General usurping the constitutional duty of the Attorney General as Head of the Department to appoint a private attorney as a Special Counsel with prosecutorial powers. A more apt comparison between judicial recusals and the issue in this case would be if all the Justices of the Supreme Court were recused from carrying out their constitutional duty to decide a 40 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 41 of 44 case before them. In that situation, the Rule of Necessity would apply requiring the Court to rule on the case notwithstanding the conflict.14 So too here, Attorney General Sessions, even if “disabled” from overseeing the ongoing Russia investigation, cannot avoid his constitutional duty to appoint an inferior officer as the investigator. Unlike the judges faced with invoking the Rule of Necessity, Sessions would not have to exercise any decision making authority in the investigation. D. 28 U.S.C. § 510 Does Not Allow the Attorney General to Delegate to the DAG Authority to Appoint the Special Counsel, and In Any Event, No Such Delegation Was Made. The court below asserts that, in the alternative, “even if the DAG were not Acting Attorney General for this matter, he still would have had the authority to appoint the Special Counsel’ under 28 U.S.C. § 510. The court is wrong. Not only did the Special Counsel not rely on Section 510 in the court below; that provision also does not operate automatically. If invoked, any delegation of powers by the Attorney General under that section requires compliance with Justice Department regulations applicable to such delegations to include a written numbered order, 28 14 See, e.g., In re Leefe, 2 Barb. Ch. 39 (N.Y. Ch. 1846) (holding that although a state law forbade the chancellor from deciding cases in which his relative was a party, the state constitution required that the chancellor alone hear appeals from inferior equity tribunals, and thus must decide the case). 41 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 42 of 44 C.F.R. § 0.180, and a review of the proposed delegation by the Office of Legal Counsel. Id. § 0.182 28 U.S.C. § 510 provides: The Attorney General may from time to time make such provisions as he considers appropriate authorizing the performance by any other officer, employee, or agency of the Department of Justice of any function of the Attorney General. The court’s expansive reading of this statute would render the structural constitutional protections of executive power and the separation of powers a mere nullity, since the Attorney General could delegate away any and all powers, including those vested in him under the Appointments Clause, even to a newly minted GS-11 attorney/employee in the Justice Department. That cannot be correct as a general proposition, and most assuredly not with respect to the delegation of the Attorney General’s appointment power.15 Indeed, as a leading commentator on the subject noted, the Office of Legal Counsel has said as much: The executive branch has institutional incentives to advocate for the President and department heads having as broad authority as is constitutional—including the power to choose to delegate that authority. Nonetheless, in 2005, the OLC indicated that it was a difficult and unresolved constitutional question whether Congress could ever authorize the delegation of final appointment authority to an officer not listed as an appointment authority in Article II. See Assignment of Certain Functions, 29 The Supreme Court has cautioned that the word “any” in a statute does not literally mean “any” but depends on the context. See Small v. United States, 125 S. Ct. 1752, 1754-55 (2005). 15 42 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 43 of 44 Op. O.L.C. at 135. Although the OLC left open the question whether such delegation could occur for inferior officer appointments, the OLC definitively stated that Congress could never authorize the President to delegate the nomination of principal officers subject to the advice and consent of the Senate. Jennifer Mascott, Who Are “Officers of the United States”?, 70 STAN. L. REV. 443, 555 n. 677 (2018). As the OLC opinion further explained: The Excepting Clause was proposed by Gouverneur Morris on the last working day of the Convention. James Madison objected that “[i]t does not go far enough if it be necessary at all— Superior officers below Heads of Departments ought in some cases to have the appointment of the lesser offices.” See James Madison, Notes of Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787, at 647 (1893, reprint 1987). Morris responded that there “is no necessity,” since “Blank commissions can be sent.” Id. Although these statements might support a broader view, at a minimum they support the view that a head of a department may use subordinates to carry out appointments so long as the appointment is submitted to the head of the department for approval and made in the name of the head of the department, upon whom ultimate political accountability must rest.” 29 Op. O.L.C. at 135-36 (emphasis added). In short, the Framers rejected the proposal to expand the appointment authority to officers below the Head of the Department, but allowed for subordinates to screen candidates and present them to the head of the department for approval. The reason for this decision is that the Framers view the broadening unduly the number of officials in the executive branch who can appoint inferior officers will diminish accountability. Finally, the fact of the matter is that Attorney General Sessions did not even attempt to make any “provision[]” to delegate any of this powers, let alone his 43 USCA Case #18-3052 Document #1750086 Filed: 09/12/2018 Page 44 of 44 appointment power under 28 U.S.C. § 510 to the Deputy Attorney General. If he were to do so, under Justice Department regulations, the Attorney General would be required to issue a numbered Order to that affect, 28 C.F.R. § 0.180, and have it first reviewed and approved by the Office of Legal Counsel. 28 C.F.R. § 0.182. In sum, the purported appointment of the Special Counsel violated the Appointments Clause because the Special Counsel was required to be appointed by Attorney General Jeff Sessions and not Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein. CONCLUSION For the foregoing reasons, Appellant respectfully requests that the judgment below be reversed. Respectfully submitted, /s/ Paul D. Kamenar PAUL D. KAMENAR 1629 K STREET, N.W. SUITE 300 WASHINGTON, DC 20006 (301) 257-9435 paul.kamenar@gmail.com Counsel for Andrew Miller DATE: SEPTEMBER 11, 2018 44