Truman Loyalty Oath, 1947
Code of Federal Regulations, Title 3 -- The President
1943-1948 Compilation or 3 CFR, 1943-1948 Comp
PRESCRIBING PROCEDURES FOR THE ADMINISTRATION OF
AN EMPLOYEES LOYALTY PROGRAM
IN THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH OF THE GOVERNMENT
Whereas each employee of the Government of the United States
is endowed with a measure of trusteeship over the democratic processes
which are the heart and sinew of the United States; and
Whereas it is of vital importance that persons employed
in the Federal service be of complete and unswerving loyalty to
the United States; and
Whereas, although the loyalty of by far the overwhelming
majority of all Government employees is beyond question, the presence
within the Government service of any disloyal or subversive person
constitutes a threat to our democratic processes; and
Whereas maximum protection must be afforded the United States
against infiltration of disloyal persons into the ranks of its
employees, and equal protection from unfounded accusations of
disloyalty must be afforded the loyal employees of the Government:
Now, Therefore, by virtue of the authority vested in me
by the Constitution and statutes of the United States, including
the Civil Service Act of 1883 (22 Stat. 403), as amended, and
section 9A of the act approved August 2, 1939 (18 U.S.C. 61i),
and as President and Chief Executive of the United States, it
is hereby, in the interest of the internal management of the Government,
ordered as follows:
PART I, -- INVESTIGATION OF APPLICANTS
- There shall be a loyalty investigation of every person
entering the civilian employment of any department or agency
of the executive branch of the Federal Government.
- Investigations of persons entering the competitive service
shall be conducted by the Civil Service Commission, except in
such cases as are covered by a special agreement between the
Commission and any given department or agency.
- Investigations of persons other than those entering the
competitive service shall be conducted by the employing department
or agency. Departments and agencies without investigative organizations
shall utilize the investigative facilities of the Civil Service
Commission.
- The investigations of persons entering the employ of the
executive branch may be conducted after any such person enters
upon actual employment therein, but in any such case the appointment
of such person shall be conditioned upon a favorable determination
with respect to his loyalty.
- Investigations of persons entering the competitive service
shall be conducted as expeditiously as possible; provided, however,
that if any such investigation is not completed within 18 months
from the date on which a person enters actual employment, the
condition that his employment is subject to investigation shall
expire, except in a case in which the Civil Service Commission
has made an initial adjudication of disloyalty and the case continues
to be active by reason of an appeal, and it shall then be the
responsibility of the employing department or agency to conclude
such investigation and make a final determination concerning
the loyalty of such person.
- An investigation shall be made of all applicants at all
available pertinent sources of information and shall include
reference to:
- Federal Bureau of Investigation files.
- Civil Service Commission files.
- Military and naval intelligence files.
- The files of any other appropriate government investigative
or intelligence agency.
- House Committee on un-American Activities files.
- Local law-enforcement files at the place of residence
and employment of the applicant, including municipal, county,
and State law-enforcement files.
- Schools and colleges attended by applicant.
- Former employers of applicant.
- References given by applicant.
- Any other appropriate source.
- Whenever derogatory information with respect to loyalty
of an applicant is revealed a full investigation shall be conducted.
A full field investigation shall also be conducted of those applicants,
or of applicants for particular positions, as may be designated
by the head of the employing department or agency, such designations
to be based on the determination by any such head of the best
interests of national security.
PART II -- INVESTIGATION OF EMPLOYEES
- The head of each department and agency in the executive
branch of the Government shall be personally responsible for
an effective program to assure that disloyal civilian officers
or employees are not retained in employment in his department
or agency.
- He shall be responsible for prescribing and supervising
the loyalty determination procedures of his department or agency,
in accordance with the provisions of this order, which shall
be considered as providing minimum requirements.
- The head of a department or agency which does not have
an investigative organization shall utilize the investigative
facilities of the Civil Service Commission.
- The head of each department and agency shall appoint one
or more loyalty boards, each composed of not less than three
representatives of the department or agency concerned, for the
purpose of hearing loyalty cases arising within such department
or agency and making recommendations with respect to the removal
of any officer or employee of such department or agency on grounds
relating to loyalty, and he shall prescribe regulations for the
conduct of the proceedings before such boards.
- An officer or employee who is charged with being disloyal
shall have a right to an administrative hearing before a loyalty
board in the employing department or agency. He may appear before
such board personally, accompanied by counsel or representative
of his own choosing, and present evidence on his own behalf,
through witnesses or by affidavit.
- The officer or employee shall be served with a written
notice of such hearing in sufficient time, and shall be informed
therein of the nature of the charges against him in sufficient
detail, so that he will be enabled to prepare his defense. The
charges shall be stated as specifically and completely as, in
the discretion of the employing department or agency, security
considerations permit, and the officer or employee shall be informed
in the notice (1) of his right to reply to such charges in writing
within a specified reasonable period of time, (2) of his right
to an administrative hearing on such charges before a loyalty
board, and (3) of his right to appear before such board personally,
to be accompanied by counsel or representative of his own choosing,
and to present evidence on his behalf, through witness or by
affidavit.
- A recommendation of removal by a loyalty board shall be
subject to appeal by the officer or employee affected, prior
to his removal, to the head of the employing department or agency
or to such person or persons as may be designated by such head,
under such regulations as may be prescribed by him, and the decision
of the department or agency concerned shall be subject to appeal
to the Civil Service Commission's Loyalty Review Board, hereinafter
provided for, for an advisory recommendation.
- The rights of hearing, notice thereof, and appeal therefrom
shall be accorded to every officer or employee prior to his removal
on grounds of disloyalty, irrespective of tenure, or of manner,
method, or nature of appointment, but the head of the employing
department or agency may suspend any officer or employee at any
time pending a determination with respect to loyalty.
- The loyalty boards of the various departments and agencies
shall furnish to the Loyalty Review Board, hereinafter provided
for, such reports as may be requested concerning the operation
of the loyalty program in any such department or agency.
PART III -- RESPONSIBILITIES OF CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION
- There shall be established in the Civil Service Commission
a Loyalty Review Board of not less than three impartial persons,
the members of which shall be officers or employees of the Commission.
- The Board shall have authority to review cases involving
persons recommended for dismissal on grounds relating to loyalty
by the loyalty board of any department or agency and to make
advisory recommendations thereon to the head of the employing
department or agency. Such cases may be referred to the Board
either by the employing department or agency, or by the officer
or employee concerned.
- The Board shall make rules and regulations, not inconsistent
with the provisions of this order, deemed necessary to implement
statutes and Executive orders relating to employee loyalty.
- The Loyalty Review Board shall also:
(1) Advise all departments and agencies on all problems
relating to employee loyalty.
(2) Disseminate information pertinent to employee loyalty
programs.
(3) Coordinate the employee loyalty policies and procedures
of the several departments and agencies.
(4) Make reports and submit recommendations to the Civil
Service Commission for transmission to the President from time
to time as may be necessary to the maintenance of the employee
loyalty program.
2. There shall also be established and maintained in the
Civil Service Commission a central master index covering all persons
on whom loyalty investigations have been made by any department
or agency since September 1, 1939. Such master index shall contain
the name of each person investigated, adequate identifying information
concerning each such person, and a reference to each department
and agency which has conducted a loyalty investigation concerning
the person involved.
- All executive departments and agencies are directed to
furnish to the Civil Service Commission all information appropriate
for the establishment and maintenance of the central master index.
- The reports and other investigative material and information
developed by the investigating department or agency shall be
retained by such department or agency in each case.
- The loyalty Review Board shall currently be furnished
by the Department of Justice the name of each foreign or domestic
organization, association, movement, group or combination of
persons which the Attorney General, after appropriate investigation
and determination, designates as totalitarian, fascist, communist
or subversive, or as having adopted a policy of advocating or
approving the commission of acts of force or violence to deny
others their rights under the Constitution of the United States,
or as seeking to alter the form of government of the United States
by unconstitutional means.
- The Loyalty Review Board shall disseminate such information
to all departments and agencies.
PART IV -- SECURITY MEASURES IN INVESTIGATIONS
- At the request of the head of any department or agency
of the executive branch an investigative agency shall make available
to such head, personally, all investigative material and information
collected by the investigative agency concerning any employee
or prospective employee of the requesting department or agency,
or shall make such material and information available to any
officer or officers designated by such head and approved by the
investigative agency.
- Notwithstanding the foregoing requirement, however, the
investigative agency may refuse to disclose the names of confidential
informants, provided it furnishes sufficient information about
such informants on the basis of which the requesting department
or agency can make an adequate evaluation of the information
furnished by them, and provided it advises the requesting department
or agency in writing that it is essential to the protection of
the informants or to the investigation of other cases that the
identity of the informants not be revealed. Investigative agencies
shall not use this discretion to decline to reveal sources of
information where such action is not essential.
- Each department and agency of the executive branch should
develop and maintain, for the collection and analysis of information
relating to the loyalty of its employees and prospective employees,
a staff specially trained in security techniques, and an effective
security control system for protecting such information generally
and for protecting confidential sources of such information particularly.
PART V -- STANDARDS
- The standard for the refusal of employment or the removal
from employment in an executive department or agency on grounds
relating to loyalty shall be that, on all the evidence, reasonable
grounds exist for belief that the person involved is disloyal
to the Government of the United States.
- Activities and associations of an applicant or employee
which may be considered in connection with the determination
of disloyalty may include one or more of the following:
- Sabotage, espionage, or attempts or preparations therefor,
or knowingly associating with spies or saboteurs;
- Treason or sedition or advocacy thereof;
- Advocacy of revolution or force or violence to alter the
constitutional form of government of the United States;
- Intentional, unauthorized disclosure to any person, under
circumstances which may indicate disloyalty to the United States,
of documents or information of a confidential or non-public character
obtained by the person making the disclosure as a result of his
employment by the Government of the United States;
- Performing or attempting to perform his duties, or otherwise
acting, so as to serve the interests of another government in
preference to the interests of the United States.
- Membership in, affiliation with or sympathetic association
with any foreign or domestic organization, association, movement,
group or combination of persons, designated by the Attorney General
as totalitarian, fascist, communist, or subversive, or as having
adopted a policy of advocating or approving the commission of
acts of force or violence to deny other persons their rights
under the Constitution of the United States, or as seeking to
alter the form of government of the United States by unconstitutional
means.
PART VI -- MISCELLANEOUS
- Each department and agency of the executive branch, to
the extent that it has not already done so, shall submit, to
the Federal Bureau of Investigation of the Department of Justice,
either directly or through the Civil Service Commission, the
names (and such other necessary identifying material as the Federal
Bureau of Investigation may require) of all of its incumbent
employees.
- The Federal Bureau of Investigation shall check such names
against its records of persons concerning whom there is substantial
evidence of being within the purview of paragraph 2 of Part V
hereof, and shall notify each department and agency of such information.
- Upon receipt of the above-mentioned information from the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, each department and agency shall
make, or cause to be made by the Civil Service Commission, such
investigation of those employees as the head of the department
or agency shall deem advisable.
- The Security Advisory Board of the State-War-Navy Coordinating
Committee shall draft rules applicable to the handling and transmission
of confidential documents and other documents and information
which should not be publicly disclosed, and upon approval by
the President such rules shall constitute the minimum standards
for the handling and transmission of such documents and information,
and shall be applicable to all departments and agencies of the
executive branch.
- The provisions of this order shall not be applicable to
persons summarily removed under the provisions of section 3 of
the act of December 17, 1942, 56 Stat. 1053, of the act of July
5, 1946, 60 Stat. 453, or of any other statute conferring the
power of summary removal.
- The Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy, and
the Secretary of the Treasury with respect to the Coast Guard,
are hereby directed to continue to enforce and maintain the highest
standards of loyalty within the armed services, pursuant to the
applicable statutes, the Articles of War, and the Articles for
the Government of the Navy.
- This order shall be effective immediately, but compliance
with such of its provisions as require the expenditure of funds
shall be deferred pending the appropriation of such funds.
- Executive Order No. 9300 of February 5, 1943, is hereby
revoked.
Harry S. \cf2 Truman\cf0
The White House,
March 21, 1947.