In this pending civil rights action, the District Attorney for Suffolk County in Massachusetts seeks to appeal from an order mandating that various investigative materials in his possession be disclosed to plaintiffs. Because we lack jurisdiction to entertain such an interlocutory challenge to a discovery order, the appeal will be dismissed.
I.
The underlying action arises out of the investigation of Willie Bennett for the murder of Carol DiMaiti Stuart. Eight relatives and acquaintances of Bennett complain of unlawful searches of their homes and seizures of their persons and property in connection with that investigation. In particular, they contend that the defendants — the City of Boston, its police commissioner and five police officers — coerced two teenagers into giving false statements implicating Bennett and thereafter wrongfully used such statements to obtain search warrants and for other investigative purposes.
In the course of pretrial proceedings, plaintiffs served upon the Suffolk District
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Attorney (a non-party to the case) a subpoena duces tecum requesting an assortment of materials pertaining to the murder investigation. Among the items sought were grand jury transcripts, witness statements, and various materials concerning witness interviews and the procurement of search warrants
(e.g.,
police reports, audio and video tapes, transcripts, and physical evidence). The District Attorney moved to quash, arguing that such items were privileged investigative materials and thus were exempt from disclosure.
See, e.g., United States v. Cintolo,
II.
Each of the District Attorney’s attempts to establish appellate jurisdiction is effectively rebuffed by our decision in
Corporacion Insular de Seguros v. Garcia,
While acknowledging that incurring a contempt citation is the ordinary route to appellate review in this context, the District Attorney argues that his status as an elected government official and the county’s chief law enforcement officer calls for a different procedure. He relies in this regard on
United States v. Nixon,
To require a President of the United States to place himself in the posture of disobeying an order of a court merely to trigger the procedural mechanism for review of the ruling would be unseemly, and would present an unnecessary occasion for constitutional confrontation between two branches of the Government.
Id.
at 691-92,
In several of these cases, it is true, the courts relied on the principles underlying the
Nixon
exception to conclude that the circumstances were sufficiently exceptional to warrant mandamus relief.
See In re United States,
Several factors underlie this conclusion. First, the District Attorney has satisfied neither of the traditional prerequisites to mandamus relief: (1) a showing of some special risk of irreparable harm, and (2) a demonstration of clear entitlement to the relief requested, i.e., that the district court’s order is palpably erroneous.
See, e.g., Doughty,
The appeal is dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. The temporary stay issued on March 22, 1995 is hereby dissolved. Appellant’s motion to stay the appeal is denied as moot.
Notes
. The District Attorney has also made reference, secondarily, to a privilege embracing "prosecuto-rial or deliberative processes or work product.”
. Contrary to the District Attorney’s suggestion,
Socialist Workers Party v. Grubisic,
