This is an expedited appeal from an order of the district court for the Southеrn District of Florida holding the appellant Dominic Santarelli in contempt of сourt pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1826.
In April 1984, the appellant was served with a subpoena requiring his appearance before a federal grand jury on May 22. The appellant was informed that his father was one of the targets of the grand jury’s investigation. Santarelli subsequently filed a motion to quash the subpoena on several grounds, the one relevant to this appeal being the claim that a common law parent-сhild privilege is embodied in Rule 501 of the Federal Rules of Evidence which justified his refusal to testify. The motion was denied, and Santarelli was directed to appear on July 10. Santarelli appeared as ordered, but refused to answer all relevаnt questions, again invoking a parent-child privilege.
In light of Santarelli’s refusal to testify, thе court conducted a contempt hearing. Appellant’s counsel requеsted that a hearing be held to allow Santarelli to present evidence in suрport of a parent-child privilege. The district court held that an evidentiary hearing was unnecessary, and found Santarelli in civil contempt.
The sole issue in this aрpeal is characterized by the appellant as follows: “whether
*817
the distriсt court erred in refusing to conduct an evidentiary hearing concerning apрellant’s invocation of the parent-child privilege in response to a grаnd jury subpoena, and further erred in holding appellant in contempt for refusing to testify.” The district court bottomed its conclusion that Santarelli’s refusal to testify could not be based on a parent-child privilege, upon the former Fifth Circuit’s decision in
In re Grand Jury Proceedings (Starr),
The holding in
Starr
is consistent with that of every court of appeals that has had occasion to address questions of family privilege outside the context of interspousal communications.
In re Matthews,
Santarelli seeks to avoid the binding effect of
Starr
on two grounds: first, that the appellant in
Starr
had failed to develoр the facts necessary to sustain a successful claim of parent-child privilege, and second that the
Starr
court rejected the appellant’s claim on the ground that there was “no federal judicial support” for a family privilege, but that since
Starr
was decided, two district courts have found that such a privilege exists.
See In re Agosto,
AFFIRMED.
