Taking Liberties
By

Declan McCullagh /

CNET/ December 4, 2009, 7:04 PM

White House Crashing? There's A Law Against That

5803574It's no a crime to crash a party at your neighbor's home, at least if he lets you in the door. But what about crashing a state dinner at the White House?

After Tareq Salahi and his wife Michaele slipped into the reception before President Obama's dinner, possibly without an invitation, criminal charges have become a popular topic of speculation. Jonathan Turley, law professor at George Washington University, thinks the Secret Service will push for charges to be filed, and Republican Sen. Jon Kyl told Fox News that "they should be in some way brought to justice here, again, as an example to others not to do it." CBS News' Bob Schieffer agrees.

One relevant statute is 18 USC 1001, a catch-all law that makes it a crime to lie to federal officials. It's a crime to cover up a material fact or make "any materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or representation."

Note the trap that this poses to the unwary. Let's say the Secret Service is interviewing you about a crime that took place near your home while you were at home, and you're entirely innocent. To buttress your story, you might tell a fib about being elsewhere that evening -- and, presto, you're now a criminal because you lied to the Feds.

If, upon entering the White House, the Salahis informed the Secret Service uniformed agents that they were on the guest list, and they knew they were telling a lie, that would seem to fall under 18 USC 1001. On the other hand, if the Salahis merely showed their IDs and sauntered through the metal detector, that would place them on more solid legal ground. (This is what lawyers call a fact-specific analysis.)

Or prosecutors could claim, as attorney Lawrence Robbins suggested to the National Law Journal, that the couple had a "duty to speak" up and inform a White House guard that they were not on the guest list.

Another possible pitfall is the interviews that the Secret Service reportedly conducted with the Salahis through last weekend. Federal criminal law is intricate and complex, and missteps by interviewees are common. That's why one white collar defense attorney, Solomon Wisenberg of Barnes & Thornburg, has written that "barring special circumstances, I never let a client with the slightest degree of criminal exposure submit to an interview by government agents."

18 USC 1001 is what ensnared Martha Stewart, even though she was interviewed by the FBI with her attorney sitting next to her. Stewart was convicted of making false statements, not of insider trading, and her conviction was upheld on appeal.

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs has said that Salahi's party-crashing was being looked into "criminally"; for their part, the couple have denied they did anything wrong.

There's also 18 USC 1036, which makes it a crime to, by fraud or false pretense, enter any property "belonging in whole or in part to, or leased by, the United States." It seems to be intended to criminalize unauthorized access to airports and seaports (think terrorist attacks), but there's no obvious reason it wouldn't apply to the White House.

A third section of the federal criminal code, 18 USC 1752, might be more of a stretch. It creates a crime for anyone who knowingly and willfully enters "a restricted area of a building or grounds where the president or other person protected by the Secret Service is or will be temporarily visiting."

The District of Columbia criminal code does contain a special section devoted to crimes and trespass on the U.S. Capitol Building. One section (DC ST 1981 ? 9-112) says, for instance, it's a crime to: "Enter or to remain upon the floor of either House of the Congress, to enter or to remain in any cloakroom or lobby adjacent to such floor, or to enter or to remain in the Rayburn Room of the House or the Marble Room of the Senate, unless such person is authorized, pursuant to rules adopted by that House or pursuant to authorization given by that House..."

I wasn't able to find a similar section dealing with the White House, although as an aside there is one section of the city code dealing with "filth or excrement of any kind" (DC ST 1981 ? 22-3112.1) that in 1988 a court ruled applied to someone throwing blood on the White House pillars.

The general-purpose trespass statute (DC ST 1981 ? 22-3102) in the District of Columbia covers anyone who, without "lawful authority," enters "any public or private dwelling, building, or other property, or part of such dwelling, building, or other property, against the will of the lawful occupant or of the person lawfully in charge thereof."

That's been used frequently in White House incidents. Courts have ruled that a Secret Service officer has "lawful authority" to eject people from the grounds, and they've upheld the trespass conviction of a protester who entered as part of a tour and then knelt on the ground after being asked to stand up.

All of the cases I've read deal with run-of-the-mill fence jumpers (for which there is, of course, a blog), or visitors on a White House tour who broke away and did something like kneel to pray or unfurl a protest banner on the lawn. There seems to be no precedent for prosecuting someone as a trespasser based on crashing a party at the executive mansion; nor did Jeff Gannon ever face any legal hassles for attending White House press conferences as a journalist even though he wasn't exactly one at the time.

If the Salahis had crashed a highbrow private party in the Virginia hunt country, would senators be going on national television to call for the couple to be locked up? But because this incident has embarrassed the Secret Service, it may become charged as a federal crime (chalk it up as another example of how broad federal law has become).

Another way to look at the escapade is this: Because the Salahis entered, left, and did no harm, they usefully exposed a security weakness that now can be fixed. Besides, if the Secret Service wants to investigate someone, they might want to look into why their own agents on the presidential protective detail were using unencrypted pagers to discuss threats against the president and the location of Air Force One on September 11, 2001.

Declan McCullagh is a senior correspondent for CBSNews.com. He can be reached at declan@cbsnews.com and can be followed on Twitter as declanm. You can bookmark Declan's Taking Liberties site here, or subscribe to the RSS feed. Declan previously was chief political correspondent for CNET, a reporter for Time, and Washington bureau chief for Wired.
© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc.. All Rights Reserved.
17 Comments Add a Comment
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keen_observer says:
Martha Stewart is of no relevance to this speculation about "White House Crashing." She did nothing to be "ensnared" by 18 USC 1001; instead, targeted for political gain, this law provided a bogus legal basis for bogus charges that were enabled, aided, abetted, and facilitated by egregious legal malpractice in her case. And "her conviction upheld on appeal" means squat. No evidence existed of any "misleading statements" by her; not one single word spoken by her or any federal agent was recorded in a verbatim transcript or in sworn testimony. The Martha Stewart case stands as a condemnation of every aspect of the legal system, including the rubber-stamp "upheld on appeal." This appeals decision was made by a biased and unqualifed 2nd Circuit three-man panel of judges, which was headed by a bogus judge who only a few months earlier was the chief Federal prosecutor for Vermont and never previously a judge. Their rubber-stamp decision, grounded in biased speculations, upheld the verdict of a stealth juror, who crowed about a "verdict for the little guy," and a jury of kool-aid drinkers who absolved the prosecution of their burden of proof in a class-based verdict. 18 USC 1001 was abused and misused as a political weapon on Martha Stewart, and being "upheld on appeal," a compelling case exists for the repeal of 18 USC 1001.
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Mokkie57 says:
My guess is all the hoop-la has hurt someones Pride. So lets go hang the party crashers. They hurt the pride of ________) You fill in the blank.
America is the only place I know where we will hang a golfer but let a senator get by with his loss of morals.
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wsuperman444 says:
this is a security breach at the highest levels and this "joke" could have plunged us in to war! and civil unrest had this been a terrorist that some how had gotten in to that dinner as much as the social seceratary is good friends with the Obama's she should be fired the Secret service Director should be fired and every guard or person that was suppose to be "mining the gate should be fired! how can the the Secret Service even after knowing of this state that the President was not in any danger? for Gods sake they were hugging and shaking hands with Obama, the vice President and the President of India! among others true they did not bring any weapons in.. but.. the hundreds of steak knifes on every table and other potenial weapons lying about as utensils the scene if it had been a terrorist would be unimaginable! ask your self this question what is worse than harming Obama? ( God forbid) killing or hurting the President from India.. now you have a out right war with hundreds of Millions of Indians looking for revenge! talk about a terrorist payday! every one involved in this should be jailed for several years as potenial Terrorist.. just to show that we are serious about Childish jokes that could have plunged us in to war no less!
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wsuperman444 says:
this is a security breach at the highest levels and this "joke" could have plunged us in to war! and civil unrest had this been a terrorist that some how had gotten in to that dinner as much as the social seceratary is good friends with the Obama's she should be fired the Secret service Director should be fired and every guard or person that was suppose to be "mining the gate should be fired! how can the the Secret Service even after knowing of this state that the President was not in any danger? for Gods sake they were hugging and shaking hands with Obama, the vice President and the President of India! among others true they did not bring any weapons in.. but.. the hundreds of steak knifes on every table and other potenial weapons lying about as utensils the scene if it had been a terrorist would be unimaginable! ask your self this question what is worse than harming Obama? ( God forbid) killing or hurting the President from India.. now you have a out right war with hundreds of Millions of Indians looking for revenge! talk about a terrorist payday! every one involved in this should be jailed for several years as potenial Terrorist.. just to show that we are serious about Childish jokes that could have plunged us in to war no less!
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watkinsjr2000 says:
Don't you get it people? Bob Schieffer is right on this.What the Salahis did is not unlike if they somehow had managed to get into a top secret military installation without authorization. The guards who let them pass should be disciplined (and probably fired), but that doesn't change the fact that what these people did was illegal. Not only that, but with all of the high ranking government officials at that state dinner a breach like this amounts to a serious national security risk.Had they been spies carrying chemical or biological weapons (and intent on using them to harm the president or others) the results of this could have been catastrophic.

One other thing, all of you conservative pinheads out there need to knock off the totally moronic talk about the White House trying to hide something because the president chooses to deal with his appointed WH Social Secretary's job performance in-house. It's the responsibility of the Secret Service to make sure something like this doesn't happen-period! They're the ones who screwed up.And what could President Obama possibly be hiding? He was the one, after all, put most at risk by this security breach.Had he wanted the Salahis to attend this state dinner, all he'd have had to do was invite them. Those who intimate otherwise come off looking as dumb as that mayor in Tenn. who claimed President Obama gave his speech on the troop deployments last week because he's a closet Muslim & wanted to keep the cartoon "A Charlie Brown Christmas" (which had been scheduled to run at that time) off the airwaves.Give me a break!

It certainly appears that idiots aren't likely to be placed on the endangered species list any time soon.
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rondivoo says:
I know one thing, had it been ordinary folks (with no wealth or prestige), they would be in jail NOW. Probably would have thrown them in jail immediately... these people knew what they were doing and should be criminally charged.
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dc1lady says:
This has nothing to do with a secret service error which could have been "audited for" via legitimate "secret" testing of protocol. This has to do with the fact that the Salahis could have been anyone entering the premises with criminal intent... they could have done grave harm, not only to the President, but to a number on the first chain of command. They committed a felony, and they should pay with consequences. That no one was hurt, and that something was learned from their actions, is a "bonus" from which we (as taxpayers) can consider as an "offset" to the expense of investigating them. Furthermore, after this, how can we ever assure the safety of another Head of State from a foreign country?
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knowdalaw says:
The law that states you should not lie to the Secret Service should apply back to the White House staff as well.

The White House Social Secretary, Ms. Rogers, told staff that they would not be concerned with standing beside the Secret Service to confirm guest. She said something to the effect, Oh, we won?t need that? She said the White House is the peoples house and they wanted the restrictions lifted for the guest they would invite. So if you charge the Salahi?s please turn around and charge WH staff as well.
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democracy1 replies:
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Please cite your source for that information, because I think you are full of it.
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sdemaggie says:
This is ridiculous. Prosecuting someone for the secret services' mistake is not justice. What a waste of money.
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wtcmedicdidntforget says:
I hope they do charge them. I diplomatic event is not the place to be crashing. HOWEVER what is Obama trying to hide by granting executive priv. over the social secretary testifying? Funny why the administration doesn?t want something out in the open.
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