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Agency of Fear

Opiates and Political Power in America

By Edward Jay Epstein



Chapter 26 - Executive Order





Just before he left for his Christmas vacation in 1971, Attorney General
Mitchell turned over to Leo Pellerzi, his assistant attorney general for
administration, a White House plan for a new narcotics enforcement office. He
instructed Pellerzi that the White House wanted this office to be
administratively incorporated in the Department of Justice, but actually it
would operate out of the executive office of the president. When Pellerzi, a
careerist in the Department of Justice, read the details of the plan, he
became decidedly alarmed. It called for a series of special strike forces to
be formed around the country, each staffed with selected agents from the
Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, the Bureau of Customs, the Alcohol.
Tobacco and Firearms unit, and the Internal Revenue Service, as well as
several state police officers. Each strike force would be empowered to use
court-authorized wiretaps and no-knock warrants in making arrests of
narcotics pushers around the country. Special grand juries would then be
convened to indict the arrestees. Both the strike forces and grand juries
would be under the direct control of Myles Ambrose, who would operate both
from the Justice Department and from the president's executive office and
report directly to the president.* What alarmed Pellerzi most about this new
organization was that it Would temporarily detached from the agency, employ a
group of CIA agents, for domestic-intelligence purposes, which in his opinion
was clearly illegal. (This was never carried out.) Pellerzi also doubted the
propriety of a provision in the plan which gave the new office the authority
to assign grants from the Law Enforcement Administration Agency to local
police departments that cooperated with the new federal strike forces.
Pellerzi read the proposal over several times and then decided to take it to
Henry Petersen, who was then the assistant attorney general for the criminal
division of the Department of Justice, in which the new office would
ostensibly be located.

* In fact, the White House staff. which was loosely called the Executive
Office of the President and had grown from less than 100 persons when Nixon
was vice-president to more than 1,200 by the time he had become president,
was housed in a number of buildings, including the old Executive Office
Building, the new Executive Office Building, and a row of brownstones,
restored by Kennedy, on Jackson Street.

Petersen, who had worked his way up from a messenger boy to an assistant
attorney general, was equally dismayed by this new White House plan. He told
Pellerzi that he suspected it was no more than "political crap" designed to
help the Nixon administration in the 1972 election, and he suggested that
Pellerzi use his special talents in administrative procedures to slow down
the implementation of this new office. He also said that he would attempt to
select a deputy director for this new office, if it were finally approved,
who would resist political pressures. As for the possible illegalities,
Petersen assured Pellerzi that he would take them up with Richard
Kleindienst, then the deputy attorney general, since Mitchell had left on his
Christmas vacation.

Upon hearing the suggestion that this new office would employ CIA liaisons,
Kleindienst called Richard Helms and told him what the White House was now
proposing. Helms categorically rejected the proposal as a violation of the
Central Intelligence Agency's charter, as Kleindienst had assumed he would
do, and Kleindlenst then suggested that they work together to kill this
particularly disturbing part of the proposal. Eventually they succeeded in
eliminating CIA agents from the plan. Meanwhile, Pellerzi and Petersen
managed to restrict the funds that could be used for special grand juries and
to limit the White House takeover of the drug program was imminent. He
immediately called Attofney General Mitchell, who was vacationing in Florida,
and asked what this televised "presidential meeting" meant to his agency.
Mitchell replied that he had not been told about any White House actions, but
Ingersoll was not reassured. (The same evening, at the Playboy Plaza Hotel in
Miami, Liddy, who drafted the original presidential option paper for this new
office, and Hunt, a consultant on the plan, met with Jack Bauman, a former
CIA agent and specialist in surreptitious entries, to discuss other
operations that they claimed would function under the aegis of the White
House.)

In the next month the White House strategists easily overrode the combined
opposition of Assistant Attorneys General Pellerzi and Petersen, Ingersoll,
and Rossides. In early January, Krogh told Ingersoll in no uncertain terms
that since the BNDD had refused to intensify its efforts to arrest street
pushers, the White House was creating another agency to do the job. Moreover,
Ingersoll would be ordered to cooperate by turning over the agents,
specialists in survel illance, and other unspecified resources required by
the new White House agency headed by Ingersoll's rival, Ambrose. Although
Mitchell initially told Ingersoll that he would work out a compromise plan
with the White House whereby the BNDD would increase the number of street
arrests it was making-at least, until the election was over-and, in return,
the White House would abandon its plan to create this new investigative
agency, he told Ingersoll in mid-January that the White House plans were too
far advanced to be changed. At about the same time, Secretary of the Treasury
John Connally reported to Rossides that the White House decision on the new
agency was irreversible. Ingersoll even offered to increase the mass arrests
the White House demanded. He later explained to me, "I was flexible as far as
tactics were concerned, and if returning to more street arrests was the only
way to save the bureau's programs, I was willing to do it." His last-minute
offer was, however, rejected by Krogh as "too little, too late."

On January 28, 1972, less than a month after the director of the BNDD and his
counterpart at the Treasury Department learned of the planned agency, ODALE
was officially created by an executive order of the president (which, unlike
an "executive reorganization order," need not be submitted to Congress for
approval). President Nixon simply declared:

Each department and agency of the Federal Government shall, upon request and
to the extent permitted by law, assist the Director of the Office for Drug
Abuse Law Enforcement in the performance of functions assigned to him or
pursuant to this order, and the Director may, in carrying out those
functions, utilize the services of any other federal and state agency, as may
be available and appropriate.

The president then appointed Ambrose director of ODALE and, simultaneously
special consultant to the president on narcotics control.

The next day, taking his furniture and his two secretaries from the Bureau of
Customs (Rossides later billed the White House for the removed furniture),
Ambrose moved into his new offices-one located in the town-house annex of the
White House, on Jackson Street, the other in the Department of Justice.
Ambrose, a shrewd and outspoken former politician in New York, fully realized
that his new office would be bitterly opposed by the agencies from which it
was commandeering agents and money. To some degree, he was "doing their job
for them," as he later put it. He thus fully anticipated the opposition from
his rivals and was told by Krogh that both Ingersoll and Rossides had fought
to abort the creation of his office.

Since there was virtually no precedent for an agency like the Office of Drug
Abuse Law Enforcement, Ambrose had to proceed step by step, in assembling his
strike forces. The first step was to appoint regional directors who would
superintend and select the federal agents and local police on each strike
force in each of the thirty-three target cities he selected. Andrew J.
Maloney, an assistant U.S. attomey in New York, was put in charge of the East
Coast from Maine to New Jersey. Joseph H. Reiter, whom Ambrose knew from his
work in the tax division of the Justice Department, was given responsibility
for the Mid-Atlantic states. Joseph Martinez, a Miami lawyer with a strong
background in narcotics prosecutions, was assigned the Southern states. Fifty
other lawyers, many of whom Ambrose knew personally, were deployed in
instantly created field offices of the new organization. Four hundred
investigators were requisitioned from the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous
Drugs and the Bureau of Customs, and Ambrose requested more than a hundred
liaisons from the Internal Revenue Service, as well as specialists from other
agencies of the government. This was all accomplished during the first thirty
days of existence of this new office, in what Ambrose himself referred to as
a "monumental feat of organization."

However, since the Office of Drug Abuse Law Enforcement was set up without
approval of Congress, it had little direct access to Congress-appropriated
funds. Though Ambrose succeeded in listing most of the special prosecutors he
hired on the payroll of the Department of Justice as "temporary consultants,"
and managed to requisition funds from various agencies to pay for his
clerical and investigative staff, finding money for the operating expenses of
his strike forces presented serious difficulties. Finally, Krogh and other
White House advisors decided that these strike forces could be temporarily
financed through grants from LEAA, although it will be recalled that this
fund was specifically established by Congress to finance local rather than
federal police activities. As expected, some LEAA officials protested the
granting of money to a federal office as a violation of the spirit of the
law: "Congress never intended for LEAA grants to be used to bypass the
appropriations process," one administrator warned. So, with White House
assistance, the new office established a series of local organizations, with
such names as "Research Associates," through which grants could be made by
LEAA. The money was then channeled back to selected strike forces, with these
organizations acting, in effect, as money conduits.

Problems were also encountered appropriating specialists for the new office.
Ingersoll resisted supplying the wiretapping technicians requested by the
BNDD on the grounds that the strike forces were supposedly set up to pursue
street pushers, "which did not require a wiretapping capacity." After Krogh
was asked to intervene on the president's behalf, Ingersoll finally was
forced to part with a few wiretapping technicians. From Rossides, the new
office demanded not only customs agents, who had the unique authority to
conduct searches without warrants under certain circumstances, but also IRS
agents working on the target-selection program. Rossides provided the strike
forces with thirty-five customs inspectors and twenty-five secretaries, but
drew the line on reassigning IRS agents. Despite White House pressure,
Rossides argued that the strike forces did not need tax examiners to go after
street pushers and cautioned that such a transfer of authority could
undermine the autonomy of the Internal Revenue Service. Again, the new agency
used its connections with the White House. This time, John Connally
interceded and persuaded Rossides to allow thirty-five IRS agents to serve as
liaisons on the strike forces. Ingersoll and Rossides were understandably
confused about the objectives of this office, if only because the new strike
forces, had little resemblance to more conventional law-enforcement forces.
These highly unorthodox units, which were being controlled from the White
House through the president's special consultant Myles Ambrose, included not
only trained narcotics and customs officers but also Immigration and
Naturalization Service officers; Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms control
agents; probation officers; state troopers; and local police officers. From
the beginning these strike forces were not simply directed to enforce the
narcotics laws but to make arrests by any lawful means possible, even if it
meant bypassing the normal channels. For example, the guidelines for the Los
Angeles strike force stated:

What [the Office of Drug Abuse Law Enforcement] is all about is the concept
that hitting the heroin traffic in one manner only, particularly a manner
which relies eventually on prosecutors or judges to keep heroin dealers out
of traffic, must be unsuccessful.... In Los Angeles [we] will rely on many
approaches, aimed at not only prosecuting heroin dealers, but at harassing
and disrupting them by using the many statutes and procedures available to
us.

The guidelines then went on to suggest such tactics as using probation
officers to revoke the parole of uncooperating suspects, using grand juries
to harass suspects, and employing Immigration and Naturalization Service
officers to deport targets. It was assumed that very few suspects or
uncooperative witnesses could resist the powers of harassment held by this
eclectic group of police officers. With the authority of court-authorized
no-knock warrants and wiretaps they could strike at will in any of the target
cities and against virtually anyone selected as a target. By March, 1972, the
strike forces had become operational.







------------------------------------------------------------------------

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