Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 113 Part 3.djvu/97

 PUBLIC LAW 106-120—DEC. 3, 1999 113 STAT. 1615 (b) APPROPRIATE CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEES DEFINED. —AS used in this section, the term "appropriate congressional committees" means the Committee on International Relations and the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of Representatives and the Committee on Foreign Re lations and the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate. SEC. 313. REAFFIRMATION OF LONGSTA>fDING PROHIBITION AGAINST 50 USC 403-8. DRUG TRAFFICKING BY EMPLOYEES OF THE INTEL- LIGENCE COMMUNITY. (a) FINDING. —Congress finds that longstanding statutes, regulations, and policies of the United States prohibit employees, agents, and assets of the elements of the intelligence community, and of every other Federal department and agency, from engaging in the illegal manufacture, purchase, sale, transport, and distribution of drugs. (b) OBLIGATION OF EMPLOYEES OF INTELLIGENCE COMMUNITY.— Any employee of the intelligence community having knowledge of a fact or circumstance that reasonably indicates that an employee, agent, or asset of an element of the intelligence community is involved in any activity that violates a statute;, regulation, or policy described in subsection (a) shall report such knowledge to an appropriate official. (c) INTELLIGENCE COMMUNITY DEFINED. —In this section, the term "intelligence community" has the meaning given that term in section 3(4) of the National Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 401a(4)). SEC. 314. SENSE OF THE CONGRESS ON CLASSIFICATION AND DECLAS- SIFICATION. It is the sense of the Congress that the systematic declassification of records of permanent historical value is in the public interest and that the management of classification and declassification by executive branch agencies requires comprehcinsive reform and the dedication by the executive branch of additional resources. SEC. 315. SENSE OF THE CONGRESS ON INTELLIGENCE COMMUNITY CONTRACTING. It is the sense of the Congress that the Director of Central Intelligence should continue to direct that <jlements of the intelligence community, whenever compatible with the national security interests of the United States and consistent with operational and security concerns related to the conduct of intelligence activities, and where fiscally sound, should competitively award contracts in a manner that maximizes the procurement of products properly designated as having been made in the United States. TITLE IV—CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY SEC. 401. IMPROVEMENT AND EXTENSION OF CBJNTRAL SERVICES PRO- GRAM. (a) SCOPE OF PROVISION OF ITEMS AND SERVICES.— Subsection (a) of section 21 of the Central lntelligenc<i Agency Act of 1949 (50 U.S.C. 403u) is amended by striking "and to other" and inserting 69-194-01-4: QL3Part3

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