S-4712-119
Read twice and referred to the Select Committee on Intelligence.
Sponsored by Chuck Grassley (R-IA)
What it does
This bill would amend the National Security Act of 1947 to grant the Office of the Inspector General of the Intelligence Community (ICIG) the same law enforcement authority already held by several other federal Inspectors General. It does this by applying an existing provision of federal law — 5 U.S.C. § 406(f) — to the ICIG, and by adding the ICIG to the list of offices covered by that provision. That authority typically includes the ability to make arrests, execute warrants, and carry firearms in connection with investigations.
Who benefits
The ICIG and its investigative staff, who would gain formal law enforcement tools to pursue misconduct investigations. Whistleblowers and others who report wrongdoing within the intelligence community, who may benefit from a more empowered oversight body. Taxpayers broadly, if stronger enforcement deters waste, fraud, and abuse in intelligence programs. Congress, which may gain a more effective independent check on intelligence agencies.
Who is hurt
Intelligence community agencies (such as the CIA, NSA, and DIA) whose personnel and operations would be subject to a more empowered investigative body. Senior intelligence officials who could face more direct law enforcement scrutiny. Civil liberties advocates who may be concerned about expanding law enforcement authority within the national security apparatus. Potentially, individuals under investigation who face a more coercive oversight process than currently exists.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the ICIG is the only major federal Inspector General that lacks law enforcement authority, creating an uneven oversight landscape where intelligence community misconduct is harder to investigate and prosecute than in other federal agencies. They contend that parity with other IGs — such as those at the Department of Defense and Department of Justice, which already hold this authority — is a straightforward good-government fix that strengthens accountability in one of the most powerful and secretive parts of the federal government.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that granting law enforcement authority to the ICIG raises unique risks in the intelligence context, where coercive investigative tools could chill the sensitive information-sharing and source-protection practices that intelligence work depends on. They contend that the intelligence community's existing oversight mechanisms — including congressional intelligence committees and agency-level IGs — already provide accountability, and that adding arrest and warrant authority to the ICIG could blur the line between oversight and operational interference in ways that other IG offices do not face.