Court Opinion

ID: 4119544
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-01-27 22:40:47.185204+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:19:59.120475
License: Public Domain

Administration of Coral Reef Resources in the Northwest
                        Hawaiian Islands
T he President m ay use his authonty under the A ntiquities Act to establish a national m onum ent in
    the territorial sea and a national m onum ent in the exclusive econom ic zone to protect m arine
   resources.

T he President m ay not establish a national w ildlife refuge in the territorial sea or the exclusive eco­
    nom ic zone using the im plied power to reserve public lands recognized in U nited States v. M idw est
    O il Co., 236 U.S. 4 5 9 (1 9 1 5 ).

T he authority to m anage national m onum ents can, under certain circum stances, be shared betw een
    the Departm ent o f the Interior and other agencies, but the Fish and W ildlife Service m ust m aintain
    sole m anagem ent authority over any national w ildlife refuge area w ithin a m onum ent. R egulations
    applicable to national m onum ents trum p inconsistent fishery m anagem ent plans, but the establish­
    m ent o f a national m onum ent would not preclude the establishm ent o f a national m arine sanctuary
   in the same area.

                                                                                                    September 15, 2000

                            M   em orandum          O p in io n   fo r t h e   S o l ic it o r
                                     Departm ent           of the     I n t e r io r ,

                                          T h e G en era l C o u n sel
                   N a t i o n a l O c e a n ic   and    A t m o s p h e r i c A d m i n is t r a t io n

                                                          and

                                          T h e G en era l C o u n sel
                                C o u n c il   on   E n v ir o n m e n t a l Q u a l it y

   On May 26, 2000, President Clinton issued an Executive Order directing the
development and protection of a scientifically based, comprehensive national
system of marine protected areas. Exec. Order No. 13158, 65 Fed. Reg. 34,909
(2000). At the same time, the President also issued a Memorandum to the Secre­
taries of the Interior and Commerce stating that, “ it is in the best interest of
our Nation, and of future generations, to provide strong and lasting protection
for the coral reef ecosystem of the Northwest Hawaiian Islands.” Memorandum
for The Secretary of the Interior and The Secretary of Commerce, Re: Protection
o f U.S. Coral Reefs in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands (May 26, 2000). In that
Memorandum, the President directed both Secretaries, “ working cooperatively
with the State of Hawaii and consulting with the Western Pacific Fisheries
Management Council, to develop recommendations within 90 days for a new,
coordinated management regime to increase protection of the ecosystem and pro­
vide for sustainable use.” Id. The President further directed that the Secretaries
consider whether the President should “ extend permanent protection to objects

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of historic or scientific interest or to protect the natural and cultural resources
of this important area.” Id.
  About one month after the President issued the Memorandum to the Secretaries
of the Interior and Commerce, our office received a joint memorandum from the
Department of the Interior, the Department o f Commerce, and the Council on
Environmental Quality, posing a series of legal questions relating to possible steps
that the President could take to protect the marine environment of the coral reef
resources of the Northwest Hawaiian Islands. Memorandum for Randolph Moss,
Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, from John Leshy, Solicitor,
Department of the Interior, James Dorskind, General Counsel, National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration ( “ NOAA” ), and Dinah Bear, General Counsel,
Council on Environmental Quality, Re: Request fo r Opinion Regarding Adminis­
tration o f Coral R eef Resources in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands (June 30,
2000) ( “ Joint M emo” ).1 We were asked whether the President could use his
authority under the Antiquities Act, 16 U.S.C. §§431—433 (1994), to establish
a national monument either in the territorial sea of the United States 3-12 miles
seaward of the baseline or in the exclusive economic zone (“ EEZ” ) 12-200 miles
seaward of the baseline in order to protect coral reef resources. We were also
asked whether the President could establish a national wildlife refuge in either
the territorial sea or the EEZ. Finally, we were asked a series of questions relating
to how such a national monument or wildlife refuge could be managed. These
questions involve the relationship o f a variety of statutes, including the Antiquities
Act, the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, 16
U.S.C.A. §§ 1801-1802, 1811, 1851-1857 (1985 & West Supp. 2000) (in relevant
part) (“ M SFCM A” ), the National Wildlife Refuge System Administration Act
of 1966, 16 U.S.C. §§ 668dd-668ee (1994 & Supp. IV 1998) ( “ NWRSAA” ),
and the National Marine Sanctuaries Act, 16 U.S.C. §§ 1431-1445b (1994 & Supp.
IV 1998) ( “ NM SA” ).
  In light of the time frame within which policymakers were working, we pro­
vided a short summary of our answers on August 18, 2000. See Memorandum
for John Leshy, Solicitor, Department of the Interior, James Dorskind, General
Counsel, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and Dinah Bear,
General Counsel, Council on Environmental Quality, from Randolph D. Moss,

   1W e also received numerous other helpful submissions from the Department of the Intenor, NOAA, the Depart­
ment of State, the Department o f Defense, and the Environmental and Natural Resources Division o f the Department
of Justice. See Letter for Randolph Moss, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, from John D Leshy,
Solicitor, Department o f the Intenor (July 17, 2000), Letter for Randolph Moss, Assistant Attorney General, Office
of Legal Counsel, from James Dorskind, General Counsel, NOAA (July 24, 2000) (“ NOAA Letter” ); Memorandum
for Randolph Moss, Assistant Attorney General, Office o f Legal Counsel, from Susan Biniaz, Assistant Legal Advisor
Oceans, International Environmental and Scientific Affairs, Department of State, Re State Department Views
Regarding ENRD M em o Addressing Authonty to Protect Coral Reefs in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands (Aug 14,
2000) ( “ State M em o” ); Letter for Randolph D . Moss, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, from
Michael F. Lohr, Rear Admiral, JAGC, U.S N avy, DoD Representative for Ocean Policy Affairs (Aug. 14, 2000),
M emorandum for Randolph Moss, Assistant Attorney General, O ffice o f Legal Counsel, from Lois J. Schiffer, Assist­
ant Attorney General, ENRD, Re: ENRD Views Regarding Authonty to Protect Coral Reefs in the Northwest
Hawaiian Islands (Aug 8, 2000).

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Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, Re: Administration o f Coral
Reef Resources in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands (Aug. 18, 2000). We explained
in that memorandum that a comprehensive written opinion explaining those
answers would follow in the coming weeks.
   Consistent with our earlier advice, we conclude that the President could use
his authority under the Antiquities Act to establish a national monument in the
territorial sea. Although the question is closer, we also believe the President could
establish a national monument in the EEZ to protect marine resources. We are
unconvinced, however, that the President could establish a national wildlife refuge
in either area based on implied authority rooted in practice. Finally, with respect
to the management issues, we believe that the Department of the Interior must
have management authority over any national monument, that the Fish and Wild­
life Service cannot share management responsibilities with another agency over
any national wildlife refuge area within a national monument, that fishery manage­
ment plans issued under the MSFCMA must be consistent with regulations
applicable to national monuments, and that the establishment of a national monu­
ment would not preclude the establishment of a national marine sanctuary in the
same area under the NMSA.

          I. Establishing a National Monument under the Antiquities Act

A. The Territorial Sea

  The territorial sea is the area immediately adjacent to the coast of a nation.
See, e.g., Restatement (Third) of The Foreign Relations Law of the United States
 § 511(a) (1987) ( “ Restatement Third” ). International law permits a nation to claim
as its territorial sea an area up to twelve miles from its coast. Id. A nation is
sovereign in its territorial sea. See Legal Issues Raised by Proposed Presidential
Proclamation To Extend the Territorial Sea , 12 Op. O.L.C. 238, 240 (1988)
( “ OLC Territorial Sea Opinion” ). Indeed, “ [s]ubject to [innocent passage rules],
the coastal state has the same sovereignty over its territorial sea, and over the
air space, sea-bed, and subsoil thereof, as it has in respect of its land territory.”
Restatement Third §512; see also Church v. Hubbart, 6 U.S. (2 Cranch) 187,
234 (1804) (“ The authority of a nation within its own territory is absolute and
exclusive. The seizure of a vessel within the range of its cannon by a foreign
force is an invasion of that territory, and is a hostile act which it is its duty to
repel. But its power to secure itself from injury may certainly be exercised beyond
the limits of its territory.” ); OLC Territorial Sea Opinion at 240 (“ Indeed, a
nation has the same sovereignty over the territorial sea as it has over its land
territory.” ).
   Although the United States for many years claimed a three-mile territorial sea,
in 1988 President Reagan extended the territorial sea to twelve miles. Proclamation

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No. 5928, 3 C.F.R. 547 (1989) (“ The territorial sea of the United States hence­
forth extends to 12 nautical miles from the baselines of the United States deter­
mined in accordance with international law.” ). The proclamation noted that exten­
sion of the territorial sea “ will advance the national security and other significant
interests o f the United States” and, consistent with international law, provided
that “ the ships of all countries enjoy the right of innocent passage” through the
territorial sea. Id. The proclamation also provided, however, that it did not
“ extend[] or otherwise alter[] existing Federal or State law or any jurisdiction,
rights, legal interests, or obligations derived therefrom.” Id.
   But for the U.S. Government’s conveyance to the various states of “ all right,
title, and interest of the United States, if any it has, in and to all said [submerged]
lands, improvements, and natural resources” up to three miles from the baseline
in the Submerged Lands Act of 1953, 43 U.S.C. §§ 1301-1315 (1994) (“ SLA” ),
the Antiquities Act would authorize the President to establish a national monument
in the territorial sea up to three miles seaward of the baseline. The Antiquities
Act authorizes the President “ to declare by public proclamation historic land­
marks, historic and prehistoric structures, and other objects of historic or scientific
interest that are situated upon the lands owned or controlled by the Government
of the United States to be national monuments.” 2 The relevant issue is whether
the United States “ controls” the submerged lands and waters within the first three
miles of the territorial sea for purposes of the Antiquities Act. Neither the Act,
nor its brief attendant Congressional reports,3 nor any case law that we were able
to find sheds light on the meaning of the word “ control” as used by the Act.
The dictionary definition of “ control,” however, is “ to exercise restraining or
directing influence over.” 4 Case law in a range of contexts interpreting the word
is to the same effect.5 Because the United States Government maintains sov­
ereignty over the territorial sea to almost the same extent that it maintains sov­
ereignty over its land territory, it therefore “ control[s]” the area within the tradi­
tional territorial sea of three miles for purposes of the Antiquities Act.6 Rein­
    2 Although the Antiquities Act refers to “ lands,” the Supreme Court has recognized that it authonzes the reserva­
tion o f “ waters located on or over federal lands.” United States v. California, 436 U S 32, 36 n 9 (1978). See
also Cappaert v. U nited States, 426 U S 128, 138-42 (1976). The Court has also made clear that the Antiquities
Act can be used to protect objects o f scientific interest, as well as historic interest See id at 142 (rejecting argument
that Antiquities Act may only be used to protect archeologic sites); Cameron v. United States, 252 U.S. 450, 455
(1920) (upholding President’s authonty to establish a monument to protect the Grand Canyon)
    3 See S Rep No. 59-3797 (1906) (one page); H .R Rep. No. 59-2224 (1906) (eight pages).
    4 W ebster’s Third New International Dictionary 496 (1993); see also Black’s Law Dictionary 330 (7th ed 1999)
(“ to exercise power or influence over” )
    5 See, e.g., Martin v State, 372 N .E2d 1194, 1197 n 5 (Ind Ct. App 1978) ( “ ‘Control’ means the ability to
exercise a restraining or directing influence over something.” ). Speaks v. State, 239 A 2d 600, 604 (Md App 1968)
(“ ‘Control*, as used in [a drug possession statute], is given its ordinary meaning, namely, ‘to exercise restraining
or directing influence over’        ” ); Kim v C onvent o f the Sacred Heart, 1998 WL 563960, at *3 (D Conn. 1998)
( “ The term ‘control’ simply means ‘the power o r authonty to manage, supenntend, direct or oversee.’ ” ). See also
 17 C F R. § 2 3 0 405 (2000) (securities regulation) ( “ The term control       . means the possession, direct or indirect,
of the pow er to direct or cause the direcuon of the management and policies of a person          .” ).
    6 The fact that under international law and the terms o f the 1988 proclamation nations other than the United
States retain the nght o f “ innocent passage” through the three mile territorial sea would not alter this analysis

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forcing this conclusion is the Supreme Court’s treatment of the Antiquities Act
in United States v. California, 436 U.S. 32 (1978). In that case, the Court resolved
a dispute between the United States and California concerning who had dominion
over submerged lands and water within a national monument established in 1949
within a one-mile belt off of the California coast. Although the Court ultimately
held that Congress, through the SLA, had conveyed the United States’s interest
in the submerged lands to California, it noted along the way that: “ There can
be no serious question . . . that the President in 1949 had power under the Antiq­
uities Act to reserve the submerged lands and waters within the one-mile belts
as a national monument, since they were then ‘controlled by the Government of
the United States.’ ” Id. at 36.
   The question, then, is whether this analysis applies in the 3-12 mile range as
a result of President Reagan’s 1988 proclamation extending the territorial sea to
twelve miles. Critical to answering this question is determining the significance
of the disclaimer in the proclamation providing that it does not “ exten[d] or other­
wise alte[r] existing Federal or State law or any jurisdiction, rights, legal interests,
or obligations derived therefrom.” There are two possible ways to interpret this
disclaimer. One interpretation would be that the disclaimer prevents the proclama­
tion from affecting the scope of any statute in any way in the absence of Congres­
sional legislation adopting the proclamation as part of domestic law.7 A second

The Antiquities Act only requires that the Government exert ‘‘contro[l]” over the area. Nothing in the language
o f the statute requires that the Government maintain absolute control over the area without exceptions The best
reading of the statute, on the contrary, is that it requires only some significant quantum of control, which is easily
satisfied within the territorial sea See United States v California, 436 U S at 36 The regulations and other laws
that apply within the monument, however, if they are to comport with customary international law, would have
to be subject to the international law right of innocent passage, although international law also allows coastal states
to regulate innocent passage for particular purposes, including to prevent pollution, Restatement Third §513(2)(b),
and to conserve the living resources o f the sea, id. §513 cmt c(iv) Nothing in the Antiquities Act prohibits the
President from establishing a monument subject to preexisting easements and reservations, and indeed previous monu­
ments have been subject to such reservations. See, e.g , Proclamation No 7295, 65 Fed Reg 24,095, 24,098 (2000)
(establishing Giant Sequoia National Monument and providing that ‘‘[njothing in this proclamation shall be deemed
to revoke any existing withdrawal, reservation, or appropriation” and that ‘‘[njothing in this proclamation shall
be deemed to affect existing special use authorizations” ), Proclamation No 3443, 3 C F R 152, 153 (1961) (estab­
lishing Buck Island Reef National Monument and providing that no instrumentality of the United States ‘‘shall
adopt or attempt to enforce any rule . . restricting or reducing the existing fishing . . bathing or recreational
privileges by inhabitants o f the Virgin Islands” ).
   7A variety of Congressional statements express this view See, e g , H R Rep No 105-236, at 21 (1997)
(expressing view that ‘‘while the President has the authonty to expand our tem tory and sovereignty, only Congress
has the authonty to exercise legislative jurisdiction” and noting that unamended laws had been enforced only to
the three mile limit); 137 Cong. Rec. 33,702, 33,702 (1991) (statement of Congressman W alter B. Jones) ( ‘‘The
Presidential proclamation explicitly provides that the extension o f the tem tonal sea to 12 miles does not alter existing
State or Federal law. In other words, the United States has a 12-mile tem tonal sea in the eyes of the rest o f the
world, but until Congress amends Federal laws to conform to the extended tem tonal sea, existing authorities only
apply within the former 3-mile tem tonal sea This disclaimer means that Congress has the responsibility of com­
pleting what the President could only begin. If the United States is to have a meaningful 12-mile tem tonal sea,
it must have the statutory authonty to enforce its laws in the extended mantime zone. Only Congress can amend
U S laws to accomplish this ” ). Representatives o f the executive branch have also occasionally expressed this view
See Territorial Sea Extension, Hearing Before the Subcomm. on Oceanography and Great Lakes o f Ihe House Comm
on Merchant Marine and Fisheries, 101st Cong. 142 (1989) (statement of Rear Admiral Joseph E Vorbach, Chief
Counsel, U.S.C.G.) ( ‘‘[T]he Coast G uard’s statutory authorities have not been changed by the Proclamation. Accord­
ingly,-the definitions and application o f junsdictional terms relied on by the Coast Guard to c an y out its missions,
                                                                                                               Continued

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interpretation would be that, as a result of the disclaimer, the proclamation, acting
alone, does not extend the reach of a statute unless Congress intended that the
statute be linked to the extent of the territorial sea as that area may be defined
at any given time. This latter interpretation is strongly supported by our 1988
opinion, which, although it was issued in anticipation of the proclamation, and
therefore did not analyze the precise language of the proclamation, nonetheless
assumed that, “ [b]y its terms, the proclamation will make clear that it is not
intended to affect domestic law.” OLC Territorial Sea Opinion at 253. Our
opinion observed that because “ Congress may . . . have enacted statutes that are
intended to be linked to the extent of the United States’ territorial sea under inter­
national law ,” the proclamation might change the reach of some statutes. Id. “ The
issue . . . in determining the effect of the proclamation on domestic law,” we
observed, ‘ ‘is whether Congress intended for the jurisdiction of any existing statute
to include an expanded territorial sea.” Id. We further explained that the “ most
important consideration in determining whether Congress intended a statute to be
affected by a change in the breadth of the territorial sea is the language of the
statute.” Id. We continued:

          If a statute includes a provision that simply overlaps or coincides
          with the existing territorial sea — such as the provision ‘‘three miles
          seaward from the coast of the United States” — the operation of
          the statute will probably not, in the absence of special cir­
          cumstances, be affected by a change in the territorial sea. Indeed,
          the statute does not appear to invoke the concept of the territorial
          sea at all, except for denoting an area that coincides with the terri­
          torial sea. A similar case is presented by a statute that uses the
          term “ territorial sea” but then defines it as “ three miles seaward
          from the coast of the United States.” Although the statute refers
          to the territorial sea, the definition reveals that Congress understood
          the area involved as the three-mile territorial sea in existence when
          the statute was enacted.

          O f course the more difficult cases will arise where Congress has
          used more ambiguous language. The best example is a statute which
          refers to the term ‘‘territorial sea’ ’ without further defining it. Con­
          gress could have intended the term to refer to the three miles that
          history and existing practice had defined or Congress could have
          intended the statute’s jurisdiction to always track the extent of the
          United States’ assertion of territorial sea under international law.

which have traditionally been applied to the previous territorial sea limit of 3 nautical miles, have not changed
To fully enforce these statutes between 3 and 12 nautical miles, Congressional action is necessary to extend such
federal laws beyond 3 nautical m iles.” )

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       A determination of congressional intent in these circumstances will
       therefore require further inquiry into the purpose and structure of
       a particular statute, and may include reference to the legislative his­
       tory, the interpretation of the statute by the executive branch and
       the courts, and the meaning of similar statutes governing the same
       subject matter.

Id. at 253-54. Thus, our 1988 opinion took the position that the proclamation
would, with respect to some statutes, have domestic legal consequences and set
forth an analytic approach for determining which statutes would be affected by
the proclamation.
   Although that opinion is not directly controlling here because it did not analyze
the specific language of the proclamation, a recent decision of the Second Circuit
Court of Appeals has analyzed that specific language and has explicitly adopted
the analysis of our opinion in its interpretation of the disclaimer. In re A ir Crash
off Long Island, 209 F.3d 200 (2d Cir. 2000). In that case, the court considered
whether the Death on the High Seas Act ( “ DOHSA” ), which provides for a right
of action to redress a death “ caused by wrongful act . . . occurring on the high
seas beyond a marine league from the shore of any State,” 46 U.S.C. § 761 (1994),
but which does not allow plaintiffs to recover nonpecuniary damages, applied to
a crash that occurred approximately eight miles off the coast of the United States.
Both parties agreed that, had the crash occurred before the 1988 proclamation
had been issued, the crash would have occurred beyond United States territorial
waters so that DOHSA would apply to bar plaintiffs from recovering nonpecuniary
damages. 209 F.3d at 212. “ The issue, therefore, [was] whether after issuance
of the Proclamation, DOHSA applied to the waters between three and 12 miles
from the shore.” Id. Defendants pointed to the disclaimer to argue that the
proclamation did not affect the scope of DOHSA, but the Second Circuit, quoting
our 1988 opinion, disagreed. Id. at 213. Instead, it held, “ the impact of the
Proclamation must be assessed on a statute-by-statute basis.” Id. Analyzing the
background and legislative history of DOHSA, the court concluded that Congress
had intended “ to exclude all state and federal territorial waters from its scope.”
Id. It continued:

       Nothing in DOHSA’s history or purpose provides a persuasive rea­
       son to fix immutably the scope of the statute to the boundary
       between United States territorial waters and nonterritorial waters
       as it existed in [the year of the statute’s enactment]. Thus, plaintiffs
       are correct in concluding that the effect of the Proclamation is to
       move the starting point of the application of DOHSA from three
       to 12 miles from the coast. Plaintiffs interpretation of the
       Proclamation does not change DOHSA, but designates certain addi­

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           tional waters to which DOHSA does not apply. If Congress in 1920
           had included a definition o f “ high seas” as “ waters outside United
           States or state territorial waters, where no nation is sovereign,” as
           we believe it essentially did, the Proclamation would not change
           this definition. Indeed, if the Proclamation is construed to create
           a zone of federal territorial waters subject to DOHSA, then this
           would violate the disclaimer. DOHSA would effectively be
           amended by excluding federal territorial waters up to three miles
           from its coverage, but including federal territorial waters between
           three and 12 miles. Such an effect would be inconsistent with
           Congress’s intent to exclude all federal territorial waters from the
           scope of DOHSA.

Id. at 213-14. Although it is unclear whether or not the dissent also reflects the
view that our analytic framework was legally determinative,8 the dissent employed
that framework and found that in light of the specific language and legislative
history of the Act, DOHSA applied in the disputed zone. Id. at 219-20
(Sotomayor, J., dissenting) (noting that OLC’s analytical framework “ comports
with the classical canons of statutory construction” ).9

    8 The dissent’s view o f the effect of the disclaim er is unclear On the one hand, it says that “ [b]ecause the
 Proclamation expressly states that it does not ‘alter’ any ‘nghts, legal interests or obligations’ under federal law,
 an expansion o f the U.S tem tonal sea for international law purposes should not alter the breadth of the tem tonal
 seas for domestic purposes,” 209 F.3d at 217 (Sotomayor, J , dissenting), which would seem to suggest that the
 proclamation, standing alone, could have no affect on the reach o f any domestic statute On the other hand, only
 a few pages later, the dissent adopts the analytical framework o f our 1988 opinion and proceeds to apply it to
 DOHSA See id at 220 In any event, the dissenting opinion does not cause us to alter our view that the 1998
 proclamation has domestic legal effects with respect to particular statutes.
    9 A handful o f other cases that have considered the effect o f the disclaimer have reached results that are somewhat
 in tension with the Second C ircuit’s decision in In re Air Crash o ff Long Island For example, in Francis v. Hom beck
 Offshore (1991) C o rp , 1997 W L 20740 (E D La. 1997), a two paragraph unpublished decision, a district court
in Louisiana held that DOHSA did not apply to an accident occurring eight nautical miles from the coastline, noting
that “ Proclamation 5928, by its own terms, does not alter DOHSA’s application beyond one manne league from
shore.” Id at *1. This one sentence treatment o f the disclaimer’s effect, however, is, in our view, not as persuasive
or authontative as the Second Circuit’s reasoned decision. Likewise, in Blome v. Aerospatiale Helicopter C o rp ,
924 F Supp 805 (S D Tex 1996), o ffd , 114 F.3d 1184 (5th C ir 1997) (unpublished summary opinion), a distnct
court in Texas concluded “ that the only natural interpretation o f DOHSA is that the statute applies to deaths occum ng
more than one m anne league from shore unless the death occurred in state tem tonal waters ” Id at 812 In other
words, the court found that DOHSA could apply to waters within twelve miles from shore But the holding of
the case was simply that DOHSA does not apply to deaths occum ng in state tem tonal waters, and any observation
the court made regarding the geographical scope of DOHSA was dicta Finally, in United States v. One Big Six
 Wheel, 166 F 3d 498 (2d Cir. 1999), the Second Circuit held that a provision in the Antiterronsm and Effective
Death Penalty Act ( “ A ED PA ” ) defining tem to n al waters as extending out to twelve nules for purposes of cnminal
junsdiction did not affect the reach o f the Gambling Ship Act, which effectively defined tem tonal waters as extending
only to three miles The court noted that the AEDPA provision “ references Presidential Proclamation 5928, [but
that the] . . . Proclamation explicitly limits its application by declanng that ‘nothing in this Proclamation . . . extends
or otherw ise alters existing Federal or State law ” Id at 501. But One Big Six Wheel, as In re Air Crash o ff Long
Island notes, see 209 F 2d at 212, is consistent with In re A ir Crash o ff Long Island, because the court rested
its decision on an analysis o f the intent of Congress as expressed through the specific language of the Gambling
Ship Act. The court concluded “ There is no indication that Congress now intends to prohibit shipboard casinos
to the full extent o f the nation’s territonal reach.         [T]he term ‘tem tonal waters’ used [in the Gambling Ship
Act] is not coextensive with the extent of the nation’s cnm inal jurisdiction, rather, it specifies geographically where
a certain kind o f offshore gambling is a cnm inal activity and where it is licit. However one expands the territory

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    The Second Circuit’s analysis is persuasive. In light of its opinion, we believe
 it is appropriate to apply the analytical framework of our 1988 opinion to deter­
 mine whether the Antiquities Act applies in the 3-12 mile range. Analyzing the
 language of the statute, we think that Congress intended for the reach of the Antiq­
 uities Act to extend to any area that at the particular time the monument is being
established is in fact “ owned or controlled” by the U.S. Government, even if
 it means that the area covered by the Act might change over time as new lands
and areas become subject to the sovereignty of the nation. As our 1988 opinion
 indicates, the particularly difficult cases arise when statutes are ambiguous as to
whether they are linked to a specific and fixed geographic area or instead to a
potentially fluctuating area defined by the range and extent of U.S. sovereignty,
dominion, or authority. Unlike the hypothetical examples we considered in our
 1988 opinion, the Antiquities Act is not at all ambiguous as to this point. It refers
neither to the “ territorial sea” nor to an area that coincides with the original
three mile territorial sea. Instead, it simply refers to all lands “ owned or con­
trolled” by the U.S. Government. Because the reach of the Antiquities Act extends
to lands “ controlled” by the U.S. Government, its reach changes as the U.S.
Government’s control changes.10 One example that supports this interpretation of
the Act is President Kennedy’s designation of the Buck Island Reef National
Monument in the U.S. Virgin Islands, an area that was not part of the United
States or its territories in 1906, when Congress passed the Antiquities A ct."
Although the establishment of the Buck Island monument does not directly resolve
the issue presented to us here — the monument was established within 3 miles
of the baseline and before the 1988 proclamation — it does stand for the under­
lying principle that when the United States gains control over lands and areas
that it did not control in 1906, that land is nonetheless covered by the Antiquities
Act. Furthermore, the purpose of the Act — to authorize the President to take
action to protect the nation’s objects of historic and scientific interest, see S. Rep.
No. 59-3797, at 1 (1906) (noting that the preservation of historic and prehistoric
ruins and monuments on the public lands of the United States is “ of great impor­
tance” ) — is consistent with the notion that the President should be able to take
such an action in any area that is under U.S. Government control. Therefore, based

in which one’s conduct might be proscribed          that territorial expansion does not criminalize offshore gambling
lhat the Gambling Ship Act itself does not forbid ” 166 F.3d at 502.
   10 We also note that our conclusion, discussed below, that President Reagan’s proclamation extending the EEZ
to 200 miles gives the President authonty to establish a national monument under the Antiquities Act to protect
manne resources in the EEZ is an independent source o f authority for establishing a national monument in the
territorial sea from 3 -12 miles Prior to 1988, but after President Reagan extended the EEZ to 200 miles tn 1983,
the U.S. exerted as much control in the 3-12 mile zone as it currently does in the 12-200 mile zone. The extension
of the tem tonal sea from three to twelve miles in 1988 could hardly be said to have decreased U.S control over
the 3-12 mile region Thus, if the United States has sufficient control now over the EEZ for the President to establish
a national monument there to protect manne resources, it necessarily follows that, regardless of the meaning of
the disclaimer in the 1988 proclamation, the President has the authonty to establish a national monument to protect
marine resources in the 3—12 mile area
   “ Proclamation No 3443, 3 C F.R. 152 (1959-1963)

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on the language and purpose of the Antiquities Act, as well as the administrative
practice under that Act, we conclude that the President can establish a national
monument under the Antiquities Act within the territorial sea from 3-12 miles
seaward from the baseline.
   The Fifth Circuit’s decision in Treasure Salvors, Inc. v. Unidentified Wrecked
and Abandoned Sailing Vessel, 569 F.2d 330 (5th Cir. 1978), is not to the contrary.
In that case, the court considered whether the remains of a Spanish Galleon located
on the outer continental shelf beyond the territorial sea were on lands “ owned
or controlled” by the Government for purposes of the Antiquities Act. The court
rejected the argument that the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, 16 U.S.C.
§§ 1331-1333 (1994 & Supp. IV 1998) (in relevant part) (authorizing U.S.
Government control over mineral resources on the outer continental shelf)
(“ OCSLA” ), gave the Government control over those lands for purposes of the
Antiquities Act. The Court there observed, “ an extension of jurisdiction for pur­
poses of controlling the exploitation of the natural resources of the continental
shelf is not necessarily an extension of sovereignty.” 569 F.2d at 339. The case,
however, was decided before President Reagan extended the territorial sea to
twelve miles, and its analysis regarding the OCSLA is inapposite because, unlike
the extension of the territorial sea, which gave the Government near total sov­
ereign control over the sea up to twelve miles seaward of baseline, the OCSLA
gave the Government control only over mineral resources, which is unrelated to
control over historic objects like the shipwreck at issue in the case. Treasure
Salvors did not consider the situation like the one at issue here, in which the
President, through an executive proclamation, has given the U.S. near complete
sovereignty over the area in question. Indeed, the decision was based on the
premise that there had not been such an extension of sovereignty. Id.
   The Department of Commerce, through NOAA, has argued that, because the
United States does not own the territorial sea in the traditional property sense,
but instead holds it in public trust for its citizens, Congress does not have power
under the Property Clause of the Constitution, U.S. Const, art. IV, § 3, cl. 2 (“ The
Congress shall have Power to dispose of and make all needful Rules and Regula­
tions respecting the Territory or other Property belonging to the United States
. . . .” ), to authorize the President through the Antiquities Act to establish a
national monument in that area. Letter for Randolph Moss, Acting Assistant
Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, from James Dorskind, General
Counsel, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (July 24, 2000)
(“ NOAA Letter” ). W e believe, however, that Congress does have such authority
under the Constitution. To begin with, we are not convinced that the Property
Clause provides the only source of authority for Congress to make such an
authorization; the Foreign Commerce Clause, which authorizes Congress to “ regu­
late Commerce with foreign Nations,” U.S. Const, art. I, §8, cl. 3, the Interstate
Commerce Clause, which authorizes Congress to regulate commerce “ among the

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several States,” id., and the Admiralty Clause, U.S. Const, art. Ill, § 2 ,12 might
also confer this authority upon Congress. Moreover, NOAA’s position would
appear to be inconsistent with the Court’s language in United States v. California
recognizing the President’s authority to establish a monument in the territorial
sea. Indeed, on at least one occasion, the President has exercised his authority
under the Antiquities Act to create a monument in the territorial sea — the Buck
Island Reef National Monument in the U.S. Virgin Islands. NOAA’s position
would call this long-standing monument designation into question. What is deci­
sive, however, is the fact that the Supreme Court has held that the Property Clause
authorizes Congress to dispose of lands within the territorial sea. See Alabama
v. Texas , 347 U.S. 272, 273-74 (1954) (per curiam). Although the public trust
doctrine, which the Court did not address in Alabama, might limit in some ways
the extent of the Government’s control over the territorial sea,13 the Government
nonetheless maintains ample room under the doctrine to exercise dominion over
that area to protect it and its resources for public enjoyment. Moreover, the cre­
ation of a national monument to protect living marine resources would be con­
sistent with the Government’s role as public trustee. See, e.g., Matthews v. Bay
Head Improvement A s s ’n, 471 A.2d 355, 360-65 (N.J. 1984) (explaining that the
“ public trust” doctrine, which holds that tidal waters are held for the public by
the sovereign in public trust, ensures that the public will have “ reasonable enjoy­
ment” of the sea). In our view, then, because the territorial sea is subject to the
sovereignty of the United States, Congress may regulate it under the Property
Clause.

    ]2See In re G arnett, 141 U.S. I, 12 (1891) (holding that Congress’s power to make amendments to the maritime
 law of the country “ is not confined to the boundaries or class o f subjects which limit and characterize the power
 to regulate commerce; but, in maritime matters, it extends to all matters and places to which the maritime law
extends” ); Grant Gilmore & Charles L Black, Jr., The Law o f Admiralty 41 (2d ed. 1975) ( “ A second inference
 . . from the conferring of the judicial power in admiralty cases was to the effect that Congress thereby was empow­
ered to alter and supplement the general mantime law. Many statutes — some of great importance — have been passed
in the exercise o f this power. None, apparently, has ever been declared unconstitutional Some have added to the
judicial junsdiction; some have changed or filled out substantive rules of maritime law; a few have added whole
new chapters o f law to the corpus.” ), see also id at 31 (noting that the high seas are “ [ojbviously” included
in maritime junsdiction)
   13 It is not entirely clear whether and how the public trust doctrine applies to federally controlled waters. Compare
 United States v 1 58 Acres, 523 F. Supp 120, 124-25 (D. Mass. 1981) (finding that federal government’s control
over land below the low water mark was restricted by public trust duties) with United Stales v I I 037 Acres, 685
 F Supp 214, 216-17 (N.D. Cal. 1988) (deciding that tidal land condemned in eminent domain proceedings by
 United States was no longer subject to state public trust easement). If the doctnne does apply in the tem tonal
sea, it would place some limits on the federal government’s control over that area For example, the public trust
doctnne might place some limits on conveying submerged lands subject to the doctnne outnght to pnvate individuals
or entities. See Andrea Marston, Aquaculture and the Public Trust D octrine* Accommodating Competing Uses o f
Coastal Waters in New England, 21 Vt L. Rev 335, 343-44 (1996) (summanzing public trust doctnne as it is
generally applied by the states), In re Sanborn, 562 P.2d 771, 776 (Haw 1977) (noting that ownership of land
held in public trust “ may not be relinquished, except where relinquishment is consistent with certain public pur­
poses” ). Moreover, the sovereign must take actions to protect the area held in public trust and to manage it for
the public benefit See Marston, supra, at 341 ( “ [TJoday, every stale is obligated to preserve and protect the public
trust waters for recognized trust uses.” ).

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B. The EEZ

  The EEZ is “ a belt of sea beyond the territorial sea that may not exceed 200
nautical miles from the baseline from which the breadth of the territorial sea is
measured.” Restatement Third § 5 1 1(d). The Restatement Third summarizes the
international customary laws governing the E E Z :14

          § 514 Exclusive Economic Zone

          In the exclusive economic zone . . .:

                      (1) The coastal state has

                        (a) sovereign rights for the purpose of exploring,
                      exploiting, conserving, and managing the natural resources
                      of the sea-bed and subsoil and of the superjacent waters,
                      and engaging in other activities for the economic exploration
                      and exploitation of the zone, and

                         (b) authority, subject to limitations, to regulate (i) the
                      establishment and use of artificial islands, and of installa­
                      tions and structures for economic purposes; (ii) marine sci­
                      entific research; and (iii) the protection of the marine
                      environment.

                      (2) All states enjoy, as on the high seas, the freedoms of
                      navigation and overflight, freedom to lay submarine cables
                      and pipelines, and the right to engage in other internationally
                      lawful uses of the sea related to these freedoms, such as
                      those associated with the operation of ships or aircraft.

Id. §514.

   14 Although this section is based on the Law o f the Sea Convention, which the United States has not ratified,
the basic rules contained in the section (concerning the EEZ) have also become “ effectively established as customary
law ” and are therefore binding as a matter of international law even on nations that are not party to the Convention
See Restatem ent Third § 514 cmt a. Moreover, several Presidents, including President Clinton, have stated publicly
that the United States should abide by general rules established in the Convention See, e.g., S. Treaty Doc. 103-
39, at III (Oct. 7, 1994) (President Clinton, upon submitting Convention to the Senate for its advice and consent
to ratification, noting that “ it has been the policy o f the United States to act in a manner consistent with its provisions
relating to traditional uses o f the oceans and to encourage other countries to do likewise” ), Statement On United
States Oceans Policy, I Pub. Papers of Ronald Reagan 378-79 (Mar. 10, 1983) (President Reagan characterizing
LOS Convention “ provisions with respect to traditional uses o f the oceans” as “ generally confirmling] existing
m antim e law and practice and fairly balancing] the interests o f all states” and stating that “ the United States
is prepared to accept and act in accordance with the balance o f interests relating to traditional uses of the oceans —
 such as navigation and overflight” ). See also The Paquete Habana, 175 U.S. 677, 700 (1900) (customary inter­
national law constitutes U.S. domestic law in the absence o f controlling executive or legislative action).

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   Under customary international law, coastal states may take certain actions to
protect the marine environment in their EEZ. Comments to the Restatement
explain that although coastal states do not have sovereignty over the EEZ, they
do possess sovereign rights for specific purposes. Id. §514 cmt. c. One of these
purposes is the conservation of the “ natural resources of the sea-bed and subsoil
and of the supeijacent waters.” Id. § 514(1 )(a); see a lso § 514 cmt. f ( “ The coastal
state is obligated to ensure, through proper conservation and management meas­
ures, that living resources in the exclusive economic zone are not endangered
by over-exploitation.” ). To further this purpose, coastal states possess the
authority to protect the marine environment. Id. § 514(l)(b)(iii). The authority of
coastal states to take actions to protect this environment, however, is limited by
a variety of customary rules of international law. For example, as §514(2) of
the Restatement notes, states may navigate ships through, fly planes over, and
install pipelines under the EEZs of other states. Moreover, coastal states may only
enforce rules and regulations to protect the environment if those rules are con­
sistent with international norms. As one comment explains: “ These grants of
power are further circumscribed by rules contained in Parts V, XII, and XIII of
the Convention . . . . Among these are rules requiring coastal states to ensure
that their laws and regulations for the prevention, reduction, and control of pollu­
tion from vessels conform and give effect to generally accepted international rules
and standards, to adjust their enforcement measures to the gravity of the violation,
and to impose only monetary penalties.” Id. §514 cmt. c; see a lso cmt. i (noting
that a coastal state can enforce its own laws and regulations “ adopted in accord­
ance with applicable international rules and standards” ).
   In 1983, President Reagan established the EEZ of the United States out to 200
miles. Proclamation No. 5030, 3 C.F.R. 22 (1984).15 The proclamation claimed
for the United States, “ to the extent permitted by international law . . . sovereign
rights for the purpose of exploring, exploiting, conserving and managing natural
resources, both living and non-living, of the seabed and subsoil and the supeijacent
waters.” Id. at 23. It further provided that, “ [w]ithout prejudice to the sovereign
rights and jurisdiction of the United States, the Exclusive Economic Zone remains
an area beyond the territory and territorial sea of the United States in which all
States enjoy the high seas freedoms of navigation, overflight, the laying of sub­
marine cables and pipelines, and other internationally lawful uses of the sea.”
Id. In the statement accompanying the proclamation, President Reagan explained:
“ The Exclusive Economic Zone established today will also enable the United
States to take limited additional steps to protect the marine environment. In this

   ,5 Pnor to this proclamation, Congress, in the Fishery Conservation and Management Act (now the MSFCMA),
asserted authority over the living resources of the Fishery Conservation Zone, which extended from the seaward
boundary o f the coastal states out to 200 miles, and continental shelf fishery resources beyond 200 miles. The
MSFCMA was amended after the proclamation to change the term “ Fishery Conservation Zone” to “ exclusive
economic zone “ See, e.g , 16 U .SC. § 1801(b)(1) (stating congressional purpose to exercise “ sovereign rights for
the purposes of . . . managing all fish within the exclusive economic zone established by Presidential Proclamation
5030, dated March 10, 1983.“ )

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                           Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 24

connection, the United States will continue to work through the International Mari­
time Organization and other appropriate international organizations to develop uni­
form international measures for the protection of the marine environment while
imposing no unreasonable burdens on commercial shipping.” Statem ent on U nited
S tates O ceans P olicy, 1 Pub. Papers of Ronald Reagan at 379.
    Although the question is closer than the previous question regarding the terri­
torial sea, we believe that the quantum of U.S. “ control” over the EEZ is suffi­
cient to allow the President to establish a national monument in the EEZ under
the Antiquities Act to protect the marine environment.16 We reach this conclusion
on the basis of a combination of two factors. First, under customary international
law and the 1983 proclamation, the United States maintains a significant amount
of overall authority to exercise restraining and directing influence over the EEZ.
It possesses sovereign rights to explore, conserve, and manage the natural
resources of the seabed and subsoil, and it may engage in activities for the eco­
nomic exploration and exploitation of the EEZ. Restatement Third §514(l)(a);
Proclamation No. 5030. S ee also Proclamation No. 2667, 3 C.F.R. 67 (1943-1948)
(President Truman proclaims that “ the United States regards the natural resources
of the subsoil and sea bed of the continental shelf beneath the high seas but contig­
uous to the coasts of the United States as appertaining to the United States, subject
to its jurisdiction and control” ). It also has the authority, albeit subject to some
limitations, to establish and use artificial islands, installations, and structures in
the EEZ for economic purposes, and to protect the marine environment. Restate­
ment Third § 5 14(b); Proclamation No. 5030. Finally, to the extent that the EEZ
overlaps with the contiguous zone o f the United States, which extends to 24 miles
seaward of the baseline as a result of President Clinton’s 1999 proclamation, see
Proclamation No. 7219, 3 C.F.R. 98 (2000), the United States also may exercise
 ‘‘the control necessary to prevent infringement of its customs, fiscal, immigration,
or sanitary laws and regulations within its territory or territorial sea, and to punish
infringement of the above laws and regulations. . . .” Id:, see a lso Convention
on the Territorial Sea and the Contiguous Zone, art. 24, 15 U.S.T. 1606 (entered
into force Sept. 10, 1964) (treaty to which U.S. is a party allowing coastal states,
 “ [i]n a zone of the high seas contiguous to its territorial sea” to “ exercise the
control necessary to: (a) Prevent infringement of its customs, fiscal, immigration
or sanitary regulations within its territory or territorial sea; [and] (b) Punish
infringement of the above regulations committed within its territory or territorial
sea.” ). The United States, in sum, exerts greater restraining and directing influence

   ,6 This does not necessarily mean, however, that the Antiquities Act would allow the President to establish a
national monument to protect other types o f objects or interests that the United States does nol have sovereign
rights over in the EEZ under customary international law The State Department has argued that even if the United
States “ controls” the EEZ for purposes of regulating natural resources, and can therefore establish a national monu­
ment to protect such resources, it does not “ control” the EEZ for purposes of regulating non-natural resources,
and could not establish a monument for those purposes State M emo at 1-2 We express no view as to whether
the President could establish a monument to protect non-natural resources such as historic shipwrecks.

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               Administration o f Coral R eef Resources in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands

over the EEZ than any other sovereign entity, and that influence, as an overall
matter, is extensive.
    Second, the United States possesses substantial authority under international law
to regulate the EEZ for the purpose of protecting the marine environment. This
is true under customary international law, see Restatement Third § 514(b)(iii), the
 1983 proclamation, see Proclamation No. 5030, and the Law of the Sea Conven­
tion,17 which appears not only to allow the United States to take action to protect
marine resources, but also to require some such actions. For example, the Conven­
tion requires coastal states to “ promote the objective of optimum utilization of
the living resources in the exclusive economic zone,” art. 62(1), “ determine the
allowable catch of the living resources in its exclusive economic zone,” art. 61(1),
 “ ensure through proper conservation and management measures that the mainte­
nance of the living resources in the exclusive economic zone is not endangered
by over-exploitation,” art. 61(2), and manage both anadromous and catadromous
species of fish in the EEZ, arts. 66-67. Moreover, the Convention provides that
nothing in the part of the convention governing the EEZ “ restricts the right of
a coastal State . . . to prohibit, limit or regulate the exploitation of marine mam­
mals more strictly than provided for” in that part. Art. 65. Finally, the Convention
provides that coastal states shall take “ all measures consistent with this Conven­
tion that are necessary to prevent, reduce and control pollution of the marine
environment from any source,” art. 194(1), and those measures “ necessary to
protect and preserve rare or fragile ecosystems as well as the habitat of depleted,
threatened or endangered species and other forms of marine life,” art. 194(5). In
our view, although a close question, the authority the United States possesses
under international law to protect the marine environment in the EEZ, in combina­
tion with the overall amount of restraining and directing influence that the United
States exerts in the EEZ, see supra, give the United States sufficient “ control”
over the EEZ for the President to invoke the Antiquities Act for the purposes
of protecting the marine environment.18
   As it does with respect to the territorial sea, NOAA also claims that Congress
does not possess authority under the Property Clause to authorize the President,
through the Antiquities Act, to establish a national monument in the EEZ because
the EEZ does not belong to the United States in the traditional property sense.
Although the question is closer than the question regarding the territorial sea, we
believe that Congress does possess such authority. As discussed previously, we
think that the Property Clause is not the only relevant source of Congressional
authority — both the Commerce Clause (foreign and interstate) and the Admiralty

   17 The United States has recognized that it should generally abide by the rules established in the Convention.
See supra note 14
   18 For the same reasons, w e believe that Treasure Salvors, which was decided before President Reagan extended
the EEZ to 200 miles, does not govern this question. Unlike the OCSLA, which gave the U S sovereign rights
only over mineral rights on the Outer Conunental Shelf, the extension o f the EEZ gave the U.S. certain sovereign
nghts over the manne environment as well Unlike the OCSLA, then, the extension of the EEZ gave the U.S.
“ control” over that area for purposes o f establishing a national monument to protect marine resources

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Clause may give Congress sufficient power to authorize the President to establish
a monument in the EEZ. In any event, we believe that the Property Clause pro­
vides the requisite source of constitutional authority. Congress’s power under the
Property Clause is not limited to making rules and regulations to govern property
that the Government owns in fee simple. The Property Clause authorizes Congress
to take actions to protect and govern some lesser property interests as well. For
example, in 1957, Attorney General Brownell issued an opinion finding that the
Property Clause gave Congress the power to make needful rules and regulations
regarding an option to revert title included in a deed conveyed to Milwaukee,
Wisconsin that could be exercised if the conveyed land were ever alienated,
because such a right was a “ future interest and a species of property.” W aiver
o f O ption o f U n ited S tates to R e ve rt Title to Land in E vent o f A lienation, 41
Op. Att’y Gen. 311, 312-13 (1957).19 Although the operative phrase of the Prop­
erty C lause— “ belonging to” — may connote a stronger property interest than
the word “ control,” which is used in the Antiquities Act, we believe that the
significant amount of control and sovereign rights that the United States possesses
over the EEZ are sufficient to authorize Congress to make rules and regulations
governing the EEZ, at least with respect to protecting marine resources. First,
the sovereign rights possessed by the United States in the EEZ are more substan­
tial than the contingent future interest that was found to be sufficient for Property
Clause purposes in the Attorney General’s 1957 opinion; indeed, the “ sovereign
rights for . . . exploiting, conserving, and managing” possessed by the United
States constitute a property interest of great scope and significance. Moreover,
as the D.C. Circuit has held, the Property Clause applies to property essentially
held in trust by the government for private parties, A rizona v. Bow sher, 935 F.2d
332, 334—35 (D.C. Cir. 1991) (finding that Property Clause applies to moneys
held by the Department of Treasury even though individuals with unknown where­
abouts held claims against the United States in amounts exactly matching the
funds), and the “ sovereign rights for . . . conserving [] and managing” reflect
a similar authority to control property for purposes of stewardship. C f U nited
S tates v. L ouisian a, 339 U.S. 699, 705 (1950) (after holding that U.S. has

   19 See also United States v Brow n, 384 F.Supp 1151, 1157 (E.D. Mich. 1974) ( “ [F]or the Property Clause to
be properly invoked as a basis for congressional enactment, some actual and substantial property interest of the
federal government must be in v o lv ed ” ), rev'd on other grounds, 557 F 2 d 541 (6th C ir 1977), United States v.
Davis, 872 F. Supp 1475 (E D . Va. 1995) (adopting Brown’s Property Clause analysis), a ffd , 98 F.3d 141 (4th
Cir. 1996) Cf. Cappaert, 426 U S at 138 (Property Clause empowers United States to reserve unappropriated appur­
tenant water when it reserves land for a federal purpose to the extent needed to accomplish the purpose of the
reservation), Federal “ N on-Reserved" Water Rights, 6 Op O L C 328, 346 (1982) ( “ It is now settled that when
the federal government reserves land for a particular federal purpose, it also reserves, by implication, enough unappro­
priated w ater as is reasonably necessary to accomplish the purposes for which Congress authorized the land 10 be
reserved . . .” ). We recognize, however, that the Property Clause may not authorize Congress to make needful
rules and regulations to govern objects and areas over which it has only a very limited property interest. See, eg.,
Prize G erman Vessel Allocated to United States Transferred to Canada, 41 Op Att’y Gen. 41, 43 (1949) (Property
Clause does not apply when United States holds ship only as a bailee and when there is a “ binding obligation
upon the U nited States to transfer possession o f and such title as it may have to the [ship] to the country to which
it was finally allocated” ).

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                Administration o f Coral R eef Resources in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands

dominion in the three-mile belt of territorial sea, addressing claim that Louisiana
claimed property interest in area outside that belt and saying: “ If, as we held
in California’s case, the three-mile belt is in the domain of the Nation rather than
that o f the separate States, it follows a fortiori that the ocean beyond that limit
also is.” ).
   Although the President may establish a national monument in the EEZ, the rules
and regulations that govern activities within that monument must nonetheless be
consistent with recognized rules of international law,20 some of which might allow
activities otherwise prohibited in national monuments by Department of the
Interior regulations or require the United States to take certain international actions
before prohibiting certain conduct within the monument. Although we do not
undertake here exhaustively to identify all such rules, we note that customary
international law allows all states certain freedoms within the EEZs of other states,
including the freedoms of navigation and overflight, and the right to lay submarine
cables and pipelines. Moreover, the Law of the Sea Convention, the rules o f which
the United States generally abides by, see supra note 14, contains very specific
rules regarding regulation of pollution from vessels of other states. For instance,
the Convention provides that coastal states, “ acting through the competent inter­
national organization or general diplomatic conference, shall establish international
rules and standards to prevent, reduce and control pollution of the marine environ­
ment from vessels and promote the adoption, in the same manner, whenever
appropriate, of routing systems designed to minimize the threat of accidents which
might cause pollution of the marine environment.” Art. 211(1).21 The Convention
also contains specific provisions governing the rights and powers of coastal states
to enforce their laws and regulations. See Art. 220; Restatement Third §514 cmt
i. Therefore any designation of a national monument in the EEZ should specify

   20 President Reagan’s proclamation establishing the EEZ explicitly provided that the United States would only
exercise sovereign nghts there “ to the extent permitted by international law ” Proclamation No 5030. We have
assumed for purposes o f this opinion that the President intends to act in conformity with President Reagan’s proclama­
tion when taking any action to protect the coral reef resources o f the Northwest Hawaiian Islands
   21 In a section that appears particularly relevant to the issue o f what international law limitations might apply
to the establishment o f rules and regulations applicable within the monument, the Convention continues’
      W here the international rules and standards referred to (in the just-quoted section] are inadequate to meet
      special circumstances and coastal States have reasonable grounds for believing that a particular, clearly
      defined area o f their respective exclusive economic zones is an area where the adoption o f special m anda­
      tory measures for the prevention o f pollution from vessels is required for recognized technical reasons
      in relation to its oceanographical and ecological conditions, as well as its utilization or the protection o f
      its resources and the particular character o f its traffic, the coastal States, after appropriate consultations
      through the competent international organization with any other States concerned, may, for that area, direct
      a communication to that organization, submitting scientific and technical evidence in support and informa­
      tion on necessary reception facilities. Within 12 months after receiving such a communication, the organiza­
      tion shall determine whether the conditions in that area correspond to the requirements set out above
      If the organization so determines, the coastal States may, for that area, adopt laws and regulations for
      the prevention, reduction and control of pollution from vessels implementing such international rules and
      standards or navigational practices as are made applicable, through the organization, for special areas These
      laws and regulations shall not become applicable to foreign vessels until 15 months after the submission
      of the communication to the organization
Art 21 l(6)(a).

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that only regulations and restrictions that are consistent with international law will
apply within the monument.

                     II. Establishing a National Wildlife Refuge

   The Department of the Interior has argued that, in addition to establishing a
national monument under the Antiquities Act, the President could also designate,
in either the territorial sea or the EEZ, a national wildlife refuge that would be
governed by the NWRSAA and regulations applicable to that Act. Because the
NWRSAA does not itself contain a provision authorizing the President to with­
draw land for a wildlife refuge, however, the Department of the Interior argues
that the President could rely on the implied authority to reserve public lands recog­
nized in U n ited S ta tes v. M idw est O il Co., 236 U.S. 459 (1915). In that case,
President Taft, responding to a rapidly depleting supply of oil available to the
federal government, issued a proclamation withdrawing several million acres of
oil rich lands from private mineral entry pending legislation to keep the lands
in federal ownership. The Supreme Court affirmed the President’s implied power
to withdraw public lands in the public interest without specific statutory authoriza­
tion, relying on a long historical practice that Congress, through inaction, had
affirmed through its acquiescence. As the Court said in connection with the .252
instances o f Presidential withdrawal that it had identified:

        The Executive, as agent, was in charge of the public domain; by
        a multitude of orders extending over a long period of time, and
        affecting vast bodies of land, in many States and Territories, he
        withdrew large areas in the public interest. These orders were
        known to Congress, as principal, and in not a single instance was
        the act of the agent disapproved. Its acquiescence all the more
        readily operated as an implied grant of power in view of the fact
        that its exercise was not only useful to the public, but did not inter­
        fere with any vested right of the citizen.

Id. at 475.
   As the Department of the Interior also recognizes, however, the Federal Land
Policy and Management Act, 43 U.S.C. §§ 1701-1784 (1994 & Supp. IV 1998)
(“ FLPM A” ), enacted in 1976, provides that “ [e]ffective on and after the date
of approval of this Act, the implied authority of the President to make withdrawals
and reservations resulting from acquiescence o f the Congress (U.S. v. Midwest
Oil Co., 236 U.S. 459) . . . [is] repealed.” FLPMA § 704(a), 90 Stat. at 2792.
The plain language of this statute would appear to preclude the President from
relying on the authority of M id w est O il to establish a national wildlife refuge.
To support its view that such authority is still available to the President, the

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Department of the Interior points to the definition section of the FLPMA, which
provides that the term “ public lands” means “ any land and interest in land owned
by the United States within the several States and administered by the Secretary
of the Interior through the Bureau of Land Management . . . except — (1) lands
located on the Outer Continental Shelf.” 43 U.S.C. § 1702(e). This provision,
along with the history leading up to the enactment of the FLPMA,22 the Depart­
ment of the Interior argues, indicates that the repeal of the M idw est O il authority
extends only to withdrawals of lands that are not on the Outer Continental Shelf
and would therefore not preclude the President from using this authority to with­
draw lands for a national wildlife refuge in either the territorial sea or the EEZ.
   The Department of the Interior also argues that the relationship between the
executive and legislative branches regarding public land withdrawals “ reflects a
continuing dialogue” and that the FLPMA’s purported repeal of the M idw est O il
power “ does not mean the Presidential authority is completely dead.” For this
latter point, the Department of the Interior points to the fact that after Congress
passed the Pickett Act in 1910,23 which authorized the President to make tem­
porary withdrawals for public purposes (subject to private mining exploration and
purchase), Presidents continued to make permanent withdrawals based on the M id ­
w est O il power, Attorney General Jackson issued an opinion upholding this prac­
tice,24 and at least one court affirmed the President’s power to make such with­
drawals, P ortlan d G en eral E lectric Co. v. K leppe, 441 F. Supp. 859, 861-62 (D.
Wyo. 1977). The Department further cites what it refers to as the “ leading public
land law treatise,” which, pointing to the Pickett A cU K leppe example, says:
“ [T]he implied executive withdrawal power did not arise from affirmative legisla­
tion; it arose from congressional inaction in the face of executive action. It logi­
cally follows that the nonstatutory power is not subject to simple repeal. Instead,
it would seem regenerable and effective against private benefit seekers until Con­
gress objects to its exercise.” 2 George Cameron Coggins & Robert L. Glicksman,
Public N atural R esources L aw § 10D.03[2][b] (2000).
   Based on the materials submitted to us, we are unconvinced that the President
has the authority to establish or expand a wildlife refuge within the U.S. territorial
sea or the EEZ using the presidential authority recognized in M id w est O il.25
   22 The FLPM A's withdrawal provisions, we* are told by the Department of the Interior, grew out of a study done
for the Public Land Law Review Commission by Charles Wheatley. Neither this study nor the Commission’s subse­
quent report, we have been further informed, appears to have devoted any attention to withdrawals of areas in marine
waters The Commission’s report led directly to the enactment o f the FLPMA According to the Department of
the Intenor, this history indicates that “ [tjhere is no evidence that Congress was concerned at all with executive
branch withdrawals in manne waters when it sought to repeal the implied authonty of the President upheld in Midwest
Oil in the Federal Land Policy and Management Act.” See Memorandum for William Treanor & Jay Wexler, Office
of Legal Counsel, from John D Leshy, Solicitor, Department of the Interior 1 (Aug. 11, 2000)
   23 June 25, 1910, ch. 421, 36 Stat 847 (repealed by FLPMA)
   24 Withdrawal o f Public Lands, 40 Op. Att’y Gen 73, 77 (1941)
   25 We express no view, however, on whether the President could establish a national wildlife refuge for national
defense or foreign affairs purposes Such an action might be justified as an exercise of the President’s constitutional
authonty, as opposed to implied authonty rooted in practice To our knowledge, no defense or foreign affairs rationale
                                                                                                           Continued

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                            Opinions of the O ffice o f Legal Counsel in Volume 24

Although it does appear that Congress was not concerned with the territorial sea
or the EEZ when it enacted FLPMA, the section repealing the M id w est O il power
contains no exceptions, and the most natural reading o f that section is that Con­
gress intended to restrict the President’s withdrawal authority to only that authority
specifically provided by statute. T he Department of the Interior’s position would,
in effect, read the phrase “ public lands,” defined by the Act to exclude lands
located on the Outer Continental Shelf, into § 704(a). That section, however, does
not include that phrase, but instead appears to cover all possible withdrawals.
Moreover, the legislative history of FLPMA supports the view that Congress
intended to repeal all implied withdrawal power. See H.R. Rep. No. 94-1163,
at 29 (1976) ( “ The main authority used by the Executive to make withdrawals
is the ‘implied’ authority of the President recognized by the Supreme Court in
U.S. v. M id w est O il C o. (236 U.S. 459). The bill would repeal this authority and,
with certain exceptions, all identified withdrawal authority granted to the President
or the Secretary of the Interior.” ); H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 94—1724, at 66 (1976)
(“ The House amendments (but not the Senate bill) provided for the repeal of
practically all existing executive withdrawal authority. The conferees agreed to
this repeal to the extent provided for by the House.” ). Given the plain language
of the statute, we think it likely that a court would find that § 704(a) of the
FLPMA prohibits the President from relying on the implied M id w est O il authority
to withdraw lands, regardless of where those lands are located.
   Moreover, while it may be the case that the history of executive withdrawal
of public lands has taken place as part of a dialogue with Congress, we do not
think this history makes it clear that the President may continue to make M idw est
O il withdrawals in the territorial sea or EEZ following the enactment of FLPMA.
First, the current situation is distinguishable from the situation addressed in
Attorney General Jackson’s 1941 opinion and in K leppe. There, Congress had
enacted a law that specifically authorized the President to make temporary with­
drawals, and the question was whether that law implicitly repealed the President’s
authority under M id w est O il to make permanent withdrawals. The Attorney Gen­
eral opinion, in upholding the President’s authority to make permanent with­
drawals, said that: “ All that the act of 1910 expressly does is to authorize such
temporary withdrawals, subject to certain limitations. It expressly negatives no
power possessed by the President.” 40 Op. Att’y Gen. at 77. Here, by contrast,
the question is whether Congress’s clear language repealing the M idw est P o w er
really means what it seems to mean, and, unlike in the case of the Pickett Act,
here Congress has indeed “ expressly negativ[ed]” a power previously possessed
by the President. In light of this difference, we do not think the President could
properly rely on the 1941 Attorney General opinion or K leppe to withdraw lands

has been put forward as a justification for the potential national wildlife refuge in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands.
We also express no view as to whether the President possesses statutory authonty under the OCSLA to set aside
areas for the protection o f fish and wildlife resources.

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                Administration o f Coral R eef Resources in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands

pursuant to M id w est O il.26 Second, although a pattern or practice of executive
withdrawals of lands in the territorial sea or EEZ made pursuant to the implied
M idw est O il power following the enactment of FLPMA might indicate Congres­
sional acquiescence to such withdrawals and might provide a basis for justifying
the continued assertion of the M idw est O il power in those areas, we have been
told by the Department of the Interior that no such practice exists.27

                                          III. Management Issues

A. Management of National Monuments

   We have been asked a number of questions relating to how a national monument
in the territorial sea or the EEZ could lawfully be managed. The first set of issues
is whether management for a monument established in either the territorial sea
or the EEZ could be delegated to an agency other than the Department of the
Interior and whether management for such a monument could be shared between
the Department of the Interior and another agency. The short answer is as follows:
The President may delegate management responsibilities for such a monument
to an agency other than the Department of the Interior if that agency has some
independent statutory authority to manage the relevant resource, but the Depart­
ment of the Interior must maintain concurrent management of the monument.
Management for such a monument can generally be shared between the Depart­
ment of the Interior and another agency, but if the monument overlays a national
wildlife refuge area, the Fish and Wildlife Service (“ FWS” ) of the Department
of the Interior must maintain sole management authority over the part of the
monument that is also a refuge area.
   Although the Antiquities Act does not itself restrict the President’s ability to
delegate management of a national monument to whichever agency he deems
appropriate, current law does require that the Department of the Interior maintain
management authority over all national monuments. Acting under a 1933 statute
that authorized the President to reorganize the Government, see Title IV, Act of

   26 The Department o f the Intenor points out that on at least one occasion it has relied upon its interpretation
of FLPMA to transfer junsdiction over offshore submerged lands from one Interior agency to another without going
through the procedurally elaborate withdrawal provisions o f §204 o f FLPMA Memorandum for William Treanor
& Jay Wexler, Office o f Legal Counsel, from John Leshy, Solicitor, Department of the Intenor (Aug. 14, 2000)
Our conclusion regarding the continuing effectiveness o f the Midwest Oil power, however, turns solely on our
interpretation of the specific language and legislative history o f § 704(a) o f FLPMA and should not be read to affect
how the Department of the Interior may interpret § 204 of that Act.
   27 We have been told that Presidents have established several national wildlife refuges encompassing oceanic
waters See Joint Memo, attached Coral Reefs Background Paper at 5 (descnbing the establishment of the Yukon
Delta National Wildlife Refuge in 1929, the Hawaiian Islands National Wildlife Refuge in 1909, and the Midway
AtoiJ National W ildlife Refuge in 1903). NOAA, on the other hand, claims that “ [rjefuge jurisdiction over submerged
lands and manne resources in some existing refuges is also unclear, at best ” NOAA Letter at 2. The answer to
the question posed to us does not turn on which of these accounts is correct, however, because none of the information
we have received from the interested agencies indicates lhat the President has attempted to rely on the Midwest
Oil power to withdraw submerged lands following the enactment of FLPMA

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                            Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 24

March 3, 1933, ch. 212, 47 Stat. 1489, 1517, amended by Title III, Act of March
20, 1933, ch. 3, 48 Stat. 8, 16, President Roosevelt issued a reorganization plan
providing in part that: “ All functions of administration of . . . national monu­
ments . . . are consolidated in the National Park Service in the Department of
the Interior . . .; except that where deemed desirable there may be excluded from
this provision any public building or reservation which is chiefly employed as
a facility in the work of a particular agency.” Exec. Order No. 6166, reprin ted
in 5 U.S.C. §901 note (1994). Congress subsequently ratified this reorganization
plan in 1984. Act o f Oct. 19, 1984, Pub. L. No. 98-532, 98 Stat. 2705.28 Although
Executive Order No. 6166 requires that administration of national monuments be
consolidated in the National Park Service (“ NPS” ), the Secretary of the Interior
may exercise his authority under Reorg. Plan No. 3 of 1950, 3 C.F.R. § 1003
(1950), 43 U.S.C. § 1451 note (1970), 64 Stat. 1262 (1950), also ratified by Con­
gress in 1984, which permits him to authorize the performance of any function
of a Department officer, agency, or employee by any other officer, agency, or
employee of the Department, to redesignate NPS’s authority over the monument
to any other agency within the Department, including the FWS. Letter for Thomas
Lambrix, Domestic Policy Council, from Larry A. Hammond, Deputy Assistant
Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel (Aug. 30, 1979) (“ Although the Park
Service is vested by Executive Order No. 6166 with the authority to administer
monuments, the Secretary of the Interior, under Reorganization Plan No. 3 of
1950 . . . has discretionary authority to transfer the functions of administering
monuments elsewhere within his Department.” ).
  We have previously opined that nothing in Executive Order No. 6166 precludes
the President from designating an agency other than the Department of the Interior
as a management authority for a national monument, so long as the Department
of the Interior has a concurrent role in management and so long as the other
agency has some independent statutory authority to manage the relevant resource.

   28This Act provided: “ Section 1 The Congress hereby ratifies and affirms as law each reorganization plan that
has, pn o r to the date o f enactment o f this Act, been implemented pursuant to the provisions of chapter 9 of title
5, United States C ode, or any predecessor Federal reorganization statute Sec. 2. Any acuons taken prior to the
date o f enactment o f this Act pursuant to a reorganization plan that is ratified and affirmed by section 1 shall
be considered to have been taken pursuant to a reorganization expressly approved by Act of Congress.” The legisla­
tive history o f this Act indicates Congress w as concerned that certain reorganization plans had been promulgated
pursuant to statutes that contained legislative veto provisions invalidated by INS v. Chadha, 462 U S 919 (1983),
and w anted to “ ensure that the authority of agencies affected by past reorganization plans is not disrupted,” H R .
Rep. No. 98-1104, at 4426 (1984). Although the 1933 statute that provided the President authonty to issue Executive
O rder No. 6166 did not contain a legislative veto provision, nothing in the plain language of the statute limits
its application to reorganization plans issued pursuant to unconstitutional statutes, and it would seem anomalous
for Congress to have decided to ratify as law only those reorganization plans that were in effect illegal, while
not ratifying those that were issued pursuant to constitutional statutes We therefore disagree with the suggestion
of the Congressional Research Service that the 1984 Act might not have in fact ratified as law the 1933 execuUve
order. See Pamela Baldwin, Congressional Research Service, Legal Issues Raised by the Designation o f the Grand
Staircase-Escalanie National Monument 14 (Dec. 13, 1996) (arguing that because the 1933 statute did not suffer
from a Chadha problem, the “ 1933 EO . and associated reorganization were not defective and did not need to
be ratified as law by Congress in the 1984 A c t” and that therefore “ arguably, the consolidation o f management
o f national monuments in the NPS was and is wholly an executive act, and may not need a subsequent act of
Congress to change the consolidation of management \n N PS” ).

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              Administration o f Coral R eef Resources in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands

See M anagem ent o f A dm iralty Island an d M isty Fiords N ational M onum ents , 4B
Op. O.L.C. 396 (1980) (“ Hammond Memo” ). In a dispute that arose after the
designation of national monuments on national forest lands, we explained that
because neither the designation of a national monument under the Antiquities Act
nor Executive Order No. 6166 expunged the national forest status of the under­
lying lands, the Department of Agriculture was not legally barred from helping
to administer those lands through that Department’s Forest Service, the agency
responsible for the management of national forest lands. Id. at 398. We further
concluded that under Executive Order No. 6166, the NPS was also “ authorized
to participate in the management of these monuments.” Id. at 399. In light of
the fact that both agencies possessed appropriate authority, we approved of a plan
for the two agencies to “ enter into a memorandum of understanding to govern
the management of these monuments, accounting for the land use standards
binding on the departments and specifying each department’s regulatory and budg­
etary responsibilities.” Id. We have subsequently approved for legality several
national monument proclamations authorizing agencies other than the Department
of the Interior to assume primary management authority but requiring those agen­
cies to consult with the Secretary of the Interior when developing management
plans and regulations to govern the monument. See, e.g., Proclamation No. 7295,
65 Fed. Reg. 24,095, 24,098 (2000) (establishing Giant Sequoia National M onu­
ment, authorizing Secretary of Agriculture to manage national monument on
national forest lands, and requiring the Secretary of Agriculture to consult with
the Secretary of the Interior when “ developing any management plans and any
management rules and regulations governing the monument” ).29 Although no pre­
cise rules have been developed to govern how management authority must be
allocated between the Department of the Interior and other managing agencies,
the administrative practice discussed above requires that the Department of the
Interior be consulted on all significant management decisions relating to the
national monument and have the opportunity to bring any issue upon which it
disagrees with the other managing agency or agencies to the President or his
delegee for resolution.
   Next, we were asked whether it would affect the President’s management
options if the monument encompassed a portion of the coral reef ecosystem cur­
rently within the Northwest Hawaiian Islands National Wildlife Refuge. We con­
clude that the President’s options would be limited in such a situation because
the NWRSAA requires that the FWS maintain sole and exclusive management
authority over all national wildlife refuge areas. Although the plain language of
the statute does not itself expressly mandate such exclusive management — the
statute only says that all refuge areas “ shall be administered by the Secretary
through the United States Fish and Wildlife Service,” 16 U.S.C. §668dd(a)(l)
(Supp. IV 1998) — the legislative history of the amendments to the Act adding

 29 Our office reviews all executive orders and proclamations for form and legality. See 28 C F.R. § 0.25(b) (1999)

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                     Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 24

this language and subsequent court decisions make clear that exclusive jurisdiction
is required. As the legislative history indicates, the amendments to the Act were
intended to redress the existing problem of dual management over refuge areas,
which the Senate thought undermined protection of fish and wildlife resources
in those areas. S. Rep. No. 94-593, at 2 (1976) (noting that “ [j]oint jurisdiction
over [refuge] areas has been a source of difficulty for both [FWS and the Bureau
of Land Management], and it has long been felt that there should be a resolution
to the problem” ); id. (quoting several reports noting problems with split adminis­
tration of refuge areas); id. at 5 (explaining rejection of House version which
would have allowed “ unworkable” dual administration of refuge areas). The
Senate Report accompanying the bill amending the Act specifically explained, in
language that could hardly be clearer, that dual administration of refuge areas
would be prohibited by the Act:

        Subsection (a)(1) of the bill would amend the first sentence of sec­
        tion 4(a) of the Administration Act by adding a new provision that
        would require all units o f the system to be administered by the
        Secretary of the Interior through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
        This will address two problems that have been brought to the
        Committee’s attention. First, the Fish and Wildlife Service would
        be clearly designated as the agency through which the Secretary
        would be required to administer the units of the System, thereby
        eliminating the possibility o f the Secretary delegating this authority
        to the Bureau of Land Management or any other Interior agency.
        Second, th ere w ill be no jo in t adm in istration o f any units within
        the S ystem b y the U.S. F ish an d W ildlife S ervice an d any oth er
        agen cy.

Id. at 6 (emphasis added). Relying on this legislative history, a district court in
Alaska, in a decision summarily affirmed by the Ninth Circuit, held that the
Department of the Interior could not designate lead management responsibility
over a national wildlife refuge area to the U.S. Geological Survey. Trustees f o r
A la ska v. W att, 524 F. Supp. 1303, 1308-10 (D. Alaska 1981) (“ Joint administra­
tion over the Refuge is forbidden by Congress.” ), a f f d , 690 F.2d 1279 (9th Cir.
1982) (per curiam); see also W yom ing v. U nited S tates, 61 F. Supp.2d 1209, 1220
(D. Wyo. 1999) (analyzing text o f the NWRSAA and concluding that “ it is evi­
dent that Congress left little room for any other entity to exert management control
over national refuges” ). In light o f this legislative history and case law, we believe
that if a monument encompasses a wildlife refuge area, the part of the monument
that is also a refuge area would have to be managed exclusively by FWS and
that the Secretary of the Interior would not be able later to transfer such manage­
ment authority over that area to any other agency within the Department of the

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               Administration o f Coral R eef Resources in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands

Interior.30 The rest of the monument could be managed by FWS, NPS, or a com­
bination of either of these two agencies and an agency outside of the Department
of the Interior which has some statutory authority for managing the relevant
resources.

B. Effect of the MSFCMA on Establishment and Management of National
Monuments

   The next set of management questions posed to us regards the effect of the
MSFCMA on the potential establishment and management of a national monument
in the EEZ. We were asked whether the fact that such a monument may encom­
pass a portion of the coral reef ecosystem that is subject to fishery management
under the MSFCMA would have any bearing on management issues or whether
it would have any effect on the President’s authority to estabUsh the monument.
The fact that such a monument would encompass an area subject to fishery
management under the MSFCMA would not have any bearing on whether the
President could establish a monument there. Such an overlap would, however,
have some bearing on which agencies the President could designate to manage
the monument to the extent that in such overlapping areas NOAA would have
independent statutory authority to manage fishery resources and could therefore
be designated as a management authority for that region for the purposes of con­
serving fishery resources consistent with the MSFCMA.
   The Antiquities Act provides only that the President may designate a national
monument on any lands “ owned or controlled by the Government of the United
States.” 16 U.S.C. §431 (1994). Nothing in that Act precludes the President from
declaring a national monument on lands that are currently managed by an agency
under any other statute or applicable law. Nor have we found any provision in
the MSFCMA that would preclude the President from designating a monument
in waters administered under that statute. Moreover, this Office has several times
approved for legality proclamations designating monuments on lands already
reserved under other statutes for management by agencies other than the Depart­
ment of the Interior. See, e.g., Hammond Memo (monument on national forest
lands); Proclamation No. 7319, 65 Fed. Reg. 37,253 (2000) (establishing Hanford
Reach National Monument on lands managed by the Department of Energy);
Proclamation No. 7295, 65 Fed. Reg. 24,095 (2000) (establishing Giant Sequoia
National Monument on national forest lands). Therefore, the fact that the Depart­

   30 With respect to transfemng management o f a refuge from FWS to another agency within the Department of
the Intenor, the Reorganization Act o f 1950. in our view, would be trumped by the more specific amendments
to the NWRSAA, which prohibit such a transfer We do not believe the same can be said, however, o f the 1984
Act ratifying Executive Order No 6166, which requires the NPS to administer all national monuments The language
of Executive Order No. 6166 does not provide for exclusive NPS jurisdiction over national monuments, and we
are aware o f no legislative history, analogous to the relevant legislative history of the NWRSAA, which would
indicate an intention on the part o f President Roosevelt or the Congress to require such exclusive junsdiction over
national monuments

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                    Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 24

ment of Commerce might be authorized by statute to manage fishery resources
in the area to be designated as a national monument does not prohibit the Presi­
dent’s designation of that area as a monument under the Antiquities Act.
   Resolution of the management question requires consideration of the specific
provisions of the MSFCMA. That Act establishes a national program to conserve
and manage the nation’s fishery resources and habitats. Section 101(a) of the Act
provides that the United States ‘‘claims, and will exercise in the manner provided
for in this chapter, sovereign rights and exclusive fishery management authority
over all fish, and all Continental Shelf fishery resources, within the exclusive eco­
nomic zone.” 16 U.S.C. § 1811(a). The Act establishes eight regional Fishery
Management Councils that are required to develop fishery management plans to
manage and conserve fishery resources. Id. §§ 1851, 1852, 1853(a). The plans
are submitted to the Secretary of Commerce for approval. Id. § 1854(a). The Sec­
retary of Commerce may also, in certain specified situations, develop his own
fishery management plans. Id. § 1854(c). Fishery management plans, we are told
by NOAA, can incorporate a wide range of fishery management measures,
including time and area closures, size and bag limits, gear restrictions, permit
requirements, or the establishment o f marine reserves where all fishing is prohib­
ited. NOAA Letter at 6. The Act provides that all fishery management plans must
be consistent with “ national standards, . . . regulations implementing rec­
ommendations by international organizations in which the United States partici­
pates . . . and any other applicable law,” id. § 1853(a)(1)(c), and that the Sec­
retary of Commerce must review all plans to determine “ whether [they are] con­
sistent with the national standards, the other provisions of this chapter, and any
other applicable law,” id. § 1854(a)(1)(A).
   Because the MSFCMA only gives the Department o f Commerce the authority
to manage one type of activity — namely fishery conservation — in certain areas,
rather than giving it general management authority over those areas, and because
the Act provides that the fishery management plans developed or approved by
the Secretary of Commerce must be consistent with other applicable laws, there
would not seem to be any inherent management conflicts between the MSFCMA
and a monument established under the Antiquities Act. The President could give
general management authority over the monument to the Department of the
Interior, and the Department of Commerce would continue to approve and develop
fishery management plans for the relevant area consistent with other laws
applicable to the area covered by the national monument, including regulations
that apply to land under the jurisdiction of the Department of the Interior and
any specific measures set out in the proclamation designating the monument.
Alternatively, for areas of the monument that do not overlap a refuge area but
do overlap areas managed by the Department of Commerce under the MSFCMA,
the President could provide in the proclamation that the Department of Commerce
will share management authority for those portions o f the monument with the

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                Administration o f Coral R eef Resources in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands

Department o f the Interior with respect to fishery-related activities,31 so long as
the Department of the Interior maintains at least consultation authority with respect
to all significant management decisions.
   Next, we were asked whether regulations made applicable to a national monu­
ment take precedence over inconsistent MSFCMA regulations. Because the
MSFCMA provides that fishery management plans must be consistent with “ any
other applicable law,” we think that monument regulations would take precedence
over inconsistent fishery management plans developed pursuant to the MSFCMA,
unless the regulations provide otherwise. NOAA argues that the “ other applicable
law” language in the MSFCMA applies only to “ other laws for preparing and
implementing fishery regulations.” 32 Letter for William Treanor, Deputy Assist­
ant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, from James A. Dorskind, General
Counsel, NOAA at 4 (Aug. 14, 2000). In our view, however, the language of
MSFCMA — which specifically refers to “ any other applicable law,” is not lim­
ited to certain types of laws but is instead comprehensive in scope and would
apply to any other law applicable in the area governed by the Act, including regu­
lations applicable to national monuments. The legislative history of the Act con­
firms that fishery management plans must be consistent with all other applicable
laws.33 Moreover, case law from the Ninth Circuit and elsewhere indicates that
the “ any other applicable law” language of the MSFCMA is broad in scope and
encompasses both procedural and substantive laws.34 We do not address, however,
the extent to which the President could fashion the monument proclamation to
allow the development of fishery management plans that would provide for taking

   31 We do not address whether the Department o f Commerce may draw upon its statutory authonty under the
NMSA to manage a national monument with respect to activities that are not related to fishery management.
   32 NOAA also argues that the MSFCMA provides that fishery management authonty within the EEZ shall be
exercised “ in the manner provided for in” that Act . On this basis, it argues that the Secretary of Commerce has
exclusive authority to manage fish in the EEZ NOAA Letter at 5 -7 But that exclusive authonty is subject to
the terms o f the Act itself, which provides that all fishery management plans must be consistent with other applicable
laws. Moreover, the Department o f Commerce contends that because the Antiquities Act does not apply in the EEZ,
it does not constitute an “ other applicable law” for purposes o f the MSFCMA. Id at 7. But our answ er to this
question assumes that the Antiquities Act does apply in the EEZ, if it does not, then the President could not establish
a monument there in the first instance, and management issues would not even arise
   33 See, e.g , S. Rep. No. 94-711, at 40 (1976) ( “ The Secretary’s review shall be designed to determine whether
the fishery management plan is consistent with the national standards for fishery conservation and management,
the other provisions and requirements o f this legislation and any other applicable law ” (emphasis added)); S Rep.
Mo 94—416, at 37 (1975) (“ Once a council completes its plans and recommended regulations and submits them
to the Secretary, the Secretary would review the regulations and determine whether they are consistent (1) with
the nauonal standards, and (2) with the provisions and requirements o f this Act and any other applicable law ”
(emphasis added)), H.R. Rep. No 94-948, at 40 (1976) (“ The Secretary’s review shall be designed to determine
whether the fishery management plan is consistent with . . any other applicable law.” (emphasis added))
   34 See. e g . Parravano v. Babbitt, 70 F 3d 539, 544 (9th Cir. 1995) ( “ Indian fishing nghts that exist under federal
law may constitute ‘any other applicable la w ’ ” ); id at 547 (“ When the [fishery management] councils’ rec­
ommendations threaten conservation goals or undermine other federal laws and obligations, the Secretary must reject
them.” ), Washington State Charterboat Ass'n v Baldrige, 702 F 2 d 820, 823 (9th Cir 1983) (holding that treaties
negotiated between the United States and several Pacific Indian tnbes in the 1850s establishing the nghts of treaty
fishers constituted “ other applicable law” under the MSFCMA), Greenpeace v. National Marine Fisheries Serv.,
80 F Supp.2d 1137, 1144 n 7 (W D Wash. 2000) (noting that the National M anne Fishenes Service had admitted
to the court that fishery management plans must comply with the Endangered Species Act under “ any other applicable
law” provision o f MSFCMA)

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                    Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 24

of some fish within the monument or refuge by providing, for example, that any
regulations pertaining to the monument would have to be consistent with the
fishery plans developed under the MSFCMA.

C. Effect of Establishment of a National Monument on the Secretary of
Commerce’s Authority to Establish a National Marine Sanctuary under
the NMSA

  Finally, we were asked whether regulations applicable to a national monument
would preclude the establishment o f a marine sanctuary under the NMSA or would
take precedence over regulations issued under the NMSA. The NMSA authorizes
the Secretary o f Commerce to:

       designate any discrete area of the marine environment as a national
       marine sanctuary and promulgate regulations implementing the des­
       ignation if the Secretary — (1) determines that the designation will
       fulfill the purposes and policies of this chapter and (2) finds that
       (A) the area is of special national significance due to its resource
       or human-use values; (B) existing state and Federal authorities are
       inadequate or should be supplemented to ensure coordinated and
       comprehensive conservation and management of the area, including
       resource protection, scientific research, and public education; (C)
       designation of the area as a national marine sanctuary will facilitate
       the objectives in subparagraph (B); and (D) the area is of a size
       and nature that will permit comprehensive and coordinated con­
       servation and management.

 16 U.S.C. § 1433(a). The Secretary is required to consider various factors when
determining whether a proposed sanctuary meets these standards, id. § 1433(b),
and must follow a detailed process for designation and promulgation of applicable
regulations, id. § 1434. The Act makes it unlawful for anyone to destroy or injure
sanctuary resources. Id. § 1436.
   The existence o f regulations applicable to a monument would not preclude
establishment of a marine sanctuary under the NMSA. Indeed, the Act specifically
envisions that other regulatory schemes could be applicable to the area sought
to be designated as a sanctuary. For example, the Act lists as one of its purposes
the need “ to provide authority for comprehensive and coordinated conservation
and management of these marine areas, and activities affecting them, in a manner
that complements existing regulatory a u th orities.” Id. § 1431(b)(2) (emphasis
added). The existence of other regulatory schemes, however, might limit the
discretion of the Secretary of Commerce to designate a marine sanctuary because
the NMSA allows the Secretary to designate such a sanctuary only if existing

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           Administration o f Coral R eef Resources in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands

federal authorities are “ inadequate or should be supplemented.” Id.
§ 1433(a)(2)(B). The Secretary of Commerce would therefore have to consider
whether the designation of the relevant area as a monument sufficiently protected
the marine resources in question, and could only designate the area as a marine
sanctuary if he found that such a designation was insufficient to protect those
resources or that the regulations applicable to the monument should be supple­
mented to protect those resources. On the other hand, that very limitation also
suggests an intent on the part of Congress that NMSA regulations that are more
stringent with respect to protecting marine resources would in fact trump other
relevant regulations, such as monument regulations, that are not so stringent. The
purpose of the NMSA would appear to be to allow the Secretary of Commerce
the authority to provide more protection to marine areas than is already provided
by other regulatory regimes.

                                       IV. Conclusion

  We have concluded that the President may establish a national monument pursu­
ant to the Antiquities Act in both the territorial sea and the EEZ. We are uncon­
vinced, however, that the President would have the authority to establish a national
wildlife refuge in either the territorial sea or the EEZ using the implied power
of M idw est Oil. With respect to management issues, we find that, authority to
manage monuments can, under certain circumstances, be shared between the
Department of the Interior and other agencies, that the FWS must maintain sole
management authority over any national wildlife refuge area within a monument,
that regulations applicable to national monuments trump inconsistent fishery
management plans, and that the establishment of a national monument would not
preclude the establishment of a national marine sanctuary in the same area.

                                                             RANDOLPH D. MOSS
                                                           A ssistan t A ttorn ey G en eral
                                                             O ffice o f L egal C ounsel

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