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Study: Ex-Rep. Made Use of 'Black' Budgets

Secret legislation long has been a tool for pet projects.

In the early 1990s, Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., used classified legislation to try to move one-third of the CIA from Washington's Virginia suburbs to his home state.


Rep. Randy
Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham, R-Calif., speaks during a news conference held in "Smugglers Gulch" along the U.S.- Mexico border in San Diego, seen in this Tuesday, March 29, 2005, file photo. A new study says Cunningham took advantage of secrecy and badgered congressional aides to help slip items into classified bills that would benefit him and his associates. Cunningham's case puts a stark spotlight on the oversight of classified _ or "black" _ budgets. (AP Photo/Denis Poroy) (Denis Poroy - AP)

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In one episode stretching from 1999 until at least 2001, tensions between the then-chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., and the Defense Intelligence Agency peaked when Shelby used his panel's legislation to direct significant chunks of the agency's budget to projects in a science-intensive spying discipline called Measurement and Signatures Intelligence. The projects he pressed for benefited aerospace-focused Hunstville, Ala.

At the time, the DIA wanted to spend that money on traditional human spying. Because the money was in the classified portion of the intelligence bill, the public never knew of the debate.

Shelby's office did not respond to requests for comment.

A former chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, now-retired Sen. Bob Graham, D-Fla., said he does not like earmarking. "Essentially it takes what should be a rational process of allocating public dollars and makes it into politics based, not merit based," he said.

Jim Currie, a Democratic aide on the Senate committee from 1985 to 1991, said classified bills are the perfect place to slip in provisions not scrutinized. Rarely do members of Congress examine the legislation, which is stored in safes in each committee's windowless, vault-like offices.

Congressional aides play an important role in reviewing the bills for items that are suspicious. But Stern, the auditor for the House Intelligence Committee, found that Cunningham harassed staff members to get his way, undermining that oversight. Once, when an aide found out that a Cunningham spending priority had been changed, he wrote in an e-mail: "I am under my desk, ducking and covering."

One committee member, Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., said Cunningham also had an exaggerated personality. "If he were talking about a tuna fish sandwich, it could drive him to anger or tears," Issa said. "Some of his actions were discounted as, 'It's just Duke.'"

Issa said the best safeguard for secret legislation is awareness on the part of the committee. "The support of the staff pushing back and making more public individual requests for conversations is helping," he said.

Several committee Democrats expressed pessimism that Congress will do its job, however.

"Our committee _ our 20-odd people and a comparable number of staff _ cannot offer sufficient oversight over many billions of dollars of activity," said Rep. Rush Holt, D-N.J.

"We don't try," he said.


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© 2006 The Associated Press