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TRANSPORTATION
SECURITY ADMINISTRATION In
the Matter of
) Threat
Assessments Regarding) Citizens
of the United States
)
Docket No. TSA-2002-13732 Who
Hold Or Apply For FAA
) Certificates
) Page
Identification
Of The Commenter
1
“A Clear And Present Danger” Of
Sufficient Gravity To Justify Some
Abridgements Of Constitutional Rights
And Procedures?
9
Constitutionally Acceptable Under A
“Clear And Present Danger” Standard?
16 ---------------------------------------------------- WRITTEN COMMENTS OF DON SCHELLHARDT, ESQUIRE I
have a vested interest in the preservation of Constitutional rights and
procedures.
In addition, I have some specialized expertise and experience which
is relevant and material in the context of the present proceedings.
In this regard, I am an attorney, trained at
The majority of my career has been spent as a “political lawyer”
in and around Since
leaving metropolitan What I am is an engaged citizen -- who is experienced and accomplished in working with, and for, all 3 branches of American government: legislative, regulatory and judicial. I am not a conservative, but neither am I a radical. I
am not even a liberal.
I am a patriot --
and I consider myself a knowledgeable member of the American
mainstream.
I write these words for TSA, but I also write them for the possible
members of a future reviewing court.
I say this because the current rules, if “kept on the
books” in their current form, will almost certainly attract a court
challenge --
which will almost certainly succeed, at least in part.
The current rules simply stretch the
To reach this conclusion, there are really only 3 “bottom line”
questions: 1.
Would the current
rules, in their current form, be Constitutionally permissible under normal,
“Business As Usual” circumstances? 2.
If not, is the 3.
If so, are the specific
“abridgements of usually guaranteed Constitutional rights and
procedures”, as set forth in the specific
rules initiated by TSA, abridgements of a nature which are
Constitutionally permissible during an emergency period of “clear and
present danger”?
Are The Current Rules
Constitutional Under
You don’t have to go to law school to know this.
All you have to do is watch Law
and Order on TV.
Just imagine the following scene on Law
and Order:
Prosecutor Jack McCoy stands before a judge and says, “Your Honor,
we want you to throw this man in jail.
We can’t, or at least won’t, call up any witnesses to testify
against him. In
fact, we can’t, or at least won’t, produce any
kind of evidence against him.
But you can take our word for it, Judge:
This guy is a suspicious character, and he’s up to no good.
Again, I can’t tell you exactly how we know
that --
but I’m from the government and you can trust me.”
Needless to say, the average American sixth grader could tell you
There Is Something Wrong With This Picture.
Actually, even this imaginary
scene, incredible as it would sound to most everyday Americans, is not fully
analogous to the authority claimed by TSA in the current version of its
current pilot licensing rules.
A truly accurate metaphor for TSA’s claims would be a scene like
this:
A lawyer stands before a judge and says, “Your Honor, Jack McCoy
and his prosecutors just threw my client in jail without a trial
… without presenting
any evidence against him …
and without even telling him what the charges against him
are.”
Then Jack McCoy rises, folds his arms together, and with a smug
expression declares: “You
don’t like it, Your Honor? Tough.”
(1) Civil Law
versus Criminal Law. Of
course, I can already hear some TSA lawyers exclaiming:
“Objection, Your Honor! Denial
of a pilot’s license is a civil matter, not a criminal matter.
We’re not talking about throwing anyone in jail without evidence or
accountability. We’re
just talking about denying a pilot’s license.
A more suitable metaphor, however, would be that Mr. Schellhardt is
comparing MacIntosh apples to Delicious apples.
Both are apples, just as both civil matters and criminal matters are
subject to the “due process” requirements of the
In the present proceedings, it is true, we are not discussing TSA’s
authority to take away someone’s liberty or life
-- but we are
discussing TSA’s authority to take away someone’s livelihood.
This is, in essence, a property right, subject to the
Constitution’s mandate that neither life nor liberty nor property may be
taken by the government without “due process of law”.
In short, even proving a Defendant’s liability for a “slip and
fall” case --the Trial
Court 101 variety of civil law --
can be a tall order, once “due process” requirements are brought
into play.
Further, even a “slip and fall” verdict, whether reached by a
judge or a jury, is potentially appealable, with respect to both the
underlying liability and the damages assessed.
How, then, can it be seriously argued that potentially removing a
person’s livelihood, and perhaps seriously damaging his or her reputation
in the process, can be done without evidence, opportunity for
cross-examination or post-decision accountability?
In
TSA’s authority to deny or revoke pilot’s licenses should be
similarly restricted --
at least under normal, “Business As Usual” circumstances.
(2) Rights
versus Privileges. It
could be argued that a pilot’s license is a privilege,
not a right, since there is no recognized Constitutional right to fly a
plane (although there is a Constitutional right to “freedom of
mobility”), and the government has for decades been authorized to pick and
choose between applicants for pilot’s licenses.
It could be claimed that Jack McCoy’s legal authority to throw
someone in jail, or a judge’s legal authority to take $5,000.00 from
Stop-and-Shop in order to give it to a grandmother with a broken hip, is
action that is not normally within the government’s discretion.
Because parties are normally entitled
to be free of imprisonment, and/or to keep their own money, it could be
asserted that these things cannot be seized by government without evidence,
the opportunity for cross-examination and post-decision accountability.
By contrast, it could be argued, these Constitutional restrictions on
government action are not mandatory in the case of pilot’s license, since
no one is really entitled to
acquire such a privilege. Court decisions have, in fact, affirmed that licenses of various kinds --even driver’s licenses -- are indeed privileges, rather than rights, and can therefore be denied or revoked by a government agency.
When applied to the present proceedings, however, this is a
distinction without a difference.
While applicants for a pilot’s license are not entitled, as a
matter of right, to the license itself, they are
entitled, as a matter of right, to apply for that license under procedures
which are uniform, reasonable and predictable. Their applications can be denied by a government agency, but they must be denied under rules which are applied, uniformly and predictably, to all of the applicants. The decision to deny a pilot’s license cannot be discriminatory, unrelated to the actual requirements for flying a plane and/or otherwise “arbitrary and capricious”.
Thus, for example, a driver’s license can be revoked or denied if
the license holder or applicant has been convicted of drunken driving.
There is, in short, no absolute
right to obtain, or retain, a driver’s license.
There is, however, an absolute right to apply for such a license, and/or
to keep it for the specified period once it has been obtained, under
uniform, reasonable and predictable procedures.
Thus, for example, a court would be very unlikely to uphold a
government agency that denied driver’s licenses to everyone with an
Hispanic surname, or to everyone with blue eyes, or
to “suspicious” individuals picked from the pool for license denials on the basis
of reasons that are neither disclosed nor subject to review by an impartial
authority. Is The
MAYBE, BUT PROBABLY NOT.
As
TSA is doubtless aware, the
(1) “Clear and
Present Dangers” of the Past.
Most of these departures from the Constitution, although not all,
were explicitly and/or implicitly permitted during one of two periods in
American history: the American
Civil War, aka the War Between the States (as I learned while living in
During the former crisis, President Abraham Lincoln took certain
targeted actions that might be politely termed “extra-Constitutional”.
These included imprisoning the Mayor of When challenged on these matters by a reporter, President Lincoln replied: “Am I to save the Constitution, and lose the country?”
During World War II, President
Further, in a much more visible and sweeping action, this time
directed against American citizens, President
Roosevelt presided over the indiscriminate internment of virtually all
Japanese-Americans in “concentration camps”
-- on the grounds
that all Americans of Japanese descent were automatically “suspect” in
their loyalties. At
the same time, German-Americans, including the father and paternal
grandparents of the undersigned, were left alone
-- perhaps because
it was not politically or logistically feasible to throw almost 1 out of
every 5 Americans into a detention center.
Leroy F. Schellhardt, the German-American father of the undersigned,
went on to serve with distinction in the wartime Marine Corps.
In the case of Korematsu v.
United States, a lawsuit against the detention centers by a
Japanese-American citizen, the A. Most
American lawyers and judges of 2003 look back on the
Korematsu decision with embarrassment, if not outright shame.
It is almost universally recognized, within today’s
American legal community, that the
“blank check” given to the government, by the Korematsu
decision, was far too large.
It is also recognized, with the benefit of hindsight, that the
“blank check” was in practice abused by other American citizens to
permit the widespread theft of property from Japanese-Americans, one way or
another, while they were far from home.
In
short: It is very unlikely
that the same decision would be made by today’s B.
The Korematsu decision
proved to be the high water mark point in
judicial indulgence of the “clear and present danger” rationale for
approving or overlooking extra-Constitutional actions by government.
Less than a decade after the Korematsu
decision, the United States Supreme Court refused to view the Korean War
as sufficient justification for the seizure of certain American steel mills.
President Harry Truman, citing the need to maintain steel production
during a time of war, had reacted to a steel strike by sending in troops to
keep the mills running.
The
It is clear, then, that all dangers to the
(2) Applying
the Precedents. If
the American Civil War and World War II were deemed by the courts to be
“clear and present dangers”, while the Korean War was not, in which
category do the events of September 11 and the war in
As was stated earlier, the evidence is conflicting.
Similarly, while it is more difficult to decide whether the relative
power of the
On The Other Hand, the existence of Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMDs)
permits even relatively under-armed
nations and/or groups to inflict great damage upon
the
The problem with this approach, however, is that hostile parties have
had the ability to inflict great damage upon the
Surely none of us wish to see such a result.
Of course, the power of
An alternative standard for measurement is the degree to which the
American people themselves are being asked by their government, or
required by their government, to mobilize and sacrifice.
In this respect, the current situation still resembles the Korean
War-- which was not deemed “a clear and present danger”
-- much more than
it resembles the American Civil War or World War II. During the American Civil War, and even more so during World WarII, taxes rose and a draft was instituted. During World War II, mandatory rationing of civilian resources -- notably, gasoline, rubber and food -- was instituted as well. In addition, recycling of scrap metal and other commodities was initiated on a major scale. The
Korean War, by contrast, did not involve tax increases, rationing, recycling
or any other systematic sacrifices on “the home front”.
The Korean War did involve a draft, however, which had been continued
from the days of World War II.
The current situation does
not involve even that.
Nor does the current situation involve any kind of rationing
… any efforts by
government to increase recycling …
or any other visible government efforts, of any kind, to conserve
and/or divert civilian resources.
The absence of such efforts is particularly surprising in light of
the fact that the two most frequently cited enemies, Al Qaeda and Oil
is a predominantly imported substance which could be reduced or replaced on
a huge scale, over time, by government mandates
for more natural gas and electricity in vehicles
-- and for greater
use of solar energy, fuel cells and gasified “clean coal” in powerplants
and factories.
Finally, far from asking for tax increases, to pay for military
ventures and homeland security, President George W. Bush is continuing to
ask for additional tax cuts.
It may be that
A call for Americans to meet “a clear and present danger” by
sacrificing some of their Constitutional rights and procedures, and
literally nothing else, does not sound like a government’s true
response to a true emergency. It sounds like a cover story to mask a grab for power. Are
The Specific Rules Under Discussion
Constitutionally Acceptable Under A “Clear And Present Danger” Standard?
N
O.
Even if a court were to find that “a clear and present danger” to
the Republic exists at the present time, any abridgements of Constitutional
rights and procedures must be reasonably
related to effective action against the danger.
Conversely, while President Truman was ordered to undo his seizure of
the steel mills due to the absence of a sufficiently “clear and present
danger”to the
Given the potential killing power of an aircraft today, particularly
if it is coupled with a Weapon of Mass Destruction, it is reasonable to
“err on the side of caution” when a “suspicious” individual applies
for a pilot’s license or something “suspicious” is learned about the
holder of an existing pilot’s license.
It is also reasonable to protect informants and/or other
“sensitive” information sources, through a policy of non-disclosure,
when and if information from these sources is
only used to justify a temporary
denial or revocation, pending the possible development of disclosable
evidence that is open to review by a court and/or to cross-examination
by an adversely affected party.
Specifically:
The current version of the current rules should be revoked and
replaced by new rules. These
new rules should authorize denial or suspension of a pilot’s license, on
the basis of “suspicion”, for
a maximum period of sixty (60)
days. After 60
days, the new rules should require TSA to choose between two options:
(a) restoring the denied
or suspended pilot’s license; or (b)
providing the evidence for a continued denial or suspension, subject to
review in a Hearing, and/or by a court, with opportunities for
cross-examination by the adversely affected party.
The “war on terrorism” has not uncovered any new realities in its
frequent reliance on informants, “guilt by association” and other
indicators of “suspicion” that are not admissible in court and/or cannot
be disclosed without endangering information sources.
Law enforcement agencies routinely
rely on informants, “guilt by association” and similar indicators of
“suspicion” --
but they do not
rely upon them in court.
Rather, they use them to select targets for investigation,
and/or methods of investigation, in
the often justified hope of developing evidence that can
be used in court --
without compromising information sources or violating the Constitution.
When in doubt about a current or potential pilot,
Err on the side of caution.
But don’t remain in doubt for more than 60 days.
For the reasons set forth herein, the undersigned urges TSA to:
(a) revoke the current version of its current rules regarding
“threat assessments” of current and potential licensed pilots; and
(b) replace the current rules with new rules which permit a license
denial or suspension, on the basis of “suspicion”,
for a maximum
period of 60 days, after which the pilot’s license must be restored or the evidence for continued denial or suspension provided, subject
to review in a Hearing, and if necessary by a court, with opportunities for
cross-examination by the adversely affected party. Respectfully
submitted, Don
Schellhardt, Esquire (203)
757-1790
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