These are consolidated appeals from three separate orders denying motions to suppress filed in connection with the government prosecution in United States v. Allen Dorfman. For the reasons stated below, we dismiss appeal No. 82-2209 for want of jurisdiction and affirm the orders of the district court in the remaining two appeals.
I. Factual Background
The five defendants in the underlying district court case
1
are charged in an eleven-count indictment with conspiracy to bribe a United States senator in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 201(b)(1), 371 (1976), travel in interstate commerce with intent to commit bribery in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1952 (1976), and nine separate counts of wire fraud and attempting to obtain money and property by means of false pretenses in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343 (1976). The indictment is partly the product of extensive electronic surveillance conducted under the authority of Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2510-2520 (“Title III”). On January 29, 1979 the Federal Bureau of Investigation received authorization under Title III to place a wiretap on telephones at Amalgamated Insurance Agency Services in Chicago and to intercept telephone conversations of Allen Dorfman and five other
*1220
named persons. The wiretaps continued for fourteen months pursuant to successive extensions of the original wiretap authorization. The surveillance produced more than 2,000 reels of recordings. The conversations of hundreds of persons were intercepted besides the five individuals charged in the indictment.
United States v. Dorfman,
On January 12 and. 13, 1982 the defendants filed motions to suppress the material obtained by the court-authorized electronic surveillance. The defendants contended that such interception violated Title III. The district court held suppression hearings in March and April of 1982,
2
and denied the motions in a lengthy memorandum opinion dated June 1, 1982,
In addition to the defendants’ appeal, two related appeals are pending before this Court. The first appeal has been taken by five persons whose conversations were intercepted but who have not been charged in the indictment. 4 Following entry of the district court’s June 1 order denying defendants’ motions to suppress, these persons filed a motion to suppress those intercepted conversations in which they participated and to obtain access to the transcripts of those intercepted conversations. The government objected to the nonparties’ standing to raise the suppression questions. The government also filed a statement indicating its intent to introduce at trial certain conversations of four of the movants in its case in chief. 5 The government also asserted in open court that none of the movants would be called as government witnesses at trial. On June 23 the district court denied any document disclosure to the movants, and denied the request for suppression, reasoning:
The fourth amendment exclusionary rule does not extend to a person against whom no evidence is offered. “No rights of the victim of an illegal search are at stake when the evidence is offered against some other party.” Alderman v. United States,394 U.S. 165 , 174 [89 S.Ct. 961 , 967,22 L.Ed.2d 176 ] (1969). Assuming *1221 arguendo that non-parties are “aggrieved persons” within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. § 2518(10) (Supp. II 1978), nevertheless Title III does not grant a suppression remedy broader than that encompassed in general fourth amendment law. See United States v. Dorfman,542 F.Supp. 345 , 377 (citing Scott v. United States,436 U.S. 128 , 139 [98 S.Ct. 1717 , 1724 n.30,56 L.Ed.2d 168 ] (1978)).
While a non-party may be able to prevent disclosure of intercepted conversations, see Anthony v. United States,667 F.2d 870 (10th Cir. 1981); 18 U.S.C. §§ 2215, 2517, a question we do not now decide, he cannot prevent the admission of intercepted conversations against defendants in a criminal case. Non-parties’ motions to suppress are therefore denied.
The five nonparties appealed. 6
The second related appeal has been filed by William E. Webbe, from the district court’s order denying his motion to suppress conversations in which he was a party. Webbe, named in the indictment as an unindicted co-conspirator, was subpoenaed before the grand jury, given immunity and did testify. Webbe has been subpoenaed as a trial witness and presumably will testify at that time pursuant to a grant of immunity. Six days after the entry of the order denying the nonparties’ motion to suppress, Webbe filed his own motion to suppress all conversations in which he was a party and all evidence obtained as a result of the intercepted conversations. The district court granted Webbe access to the transcripts and tapes of conversations in which Webbe was a participant and which the government intends to play at the trial, but subsequently denied the motion to suppress in a brief opinion that the court read into the record on July 1.
The district court relied on four rationales to deny Webbe’s motion. First, the court rejected Webbe’s argument that because Webbe will be a trial witness he has a separate right to a separate adjudication of the lawfulness of the wiretaps as to him. The trial court concluded that Webbe was fully aware of the extensive evidentiary hearings held in March and April on the defendants’ motions to suppress, but chose not to participate, thus raising a “classic case for the application of the common law doctrine of laches.” Second, the trial court noted that Webbe challenged the lawfulness of the wiretaps before Chief Judge Parsons at the time he was compelled to testify before the grand jury. At that time Webbe did not challenge through contempt proceedings Chief Judge Parsons’ ruling on the lawfulness of the surveillance. The district court concluded that Webbe was not entitled to relitigate the issue in a suppression hearing. Third, the district court ruled that because Webbe was not a named intereeptee on the January 29, 1979 authorization order he lacked standing to challenge its facial validity; and, further, because the evidence will be introduced against defendants and not him, he lacks standing to seek its suppression. Finally, on the assumption that the preceding reasons might be insufficient justification to deny the motion to suppress, the district court addressed the merits of Webbe’s motion and concluded that the request for suppression must be denied for the reasons stated in the earlier decision of June 1, 1982 entered with respect to the defendants’ motions to suppress.
7
(United States v. Dorfman,
II. The Defendants’ Appeal
For purposes of the present discussion we treat separately the appeals of defendants *1222 and nondefendants. We turn first to the arguments raised on the appeal taken by the defendants from the June 1, 1982 order denying their motions to suppress. We conclude that the appeal has been taken from a nonfinal and nonappealable order and therefore must be dismissed.
A long line of cases clearly establishes that a defendant may not take an interlocutory appeal from an order denying a motion to suppress evidence.
E.g., Di Bella v. United States,
We cannot agree with the defendants that the rules forbidding interlocutory appeal differ when an appeal is filed challenging a ruling entered under Title III. Defendants argue that unless an interlocutory appeal of the suppression order is permitted, their privacy rights in the intercepted conversations will be impaired irremediably once the conversations have been disclosed to the public at trial.
Katz
v.
United States,
We might agree that the district court’s denial of suppression conclusively adjudicated the defendants’ rights to suppress the electronic surveillance under Title III, but we are not convinced that the ruling is “collateral” to the final judgment to be entered on the verdict or that the privacy rights of the defendants that might be infringed when the tapes are played at trial are so extensive that review of the suppression order ought not “be deferred until the case as a whole is adjudicated.”
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp., supra,
The statute shows that the legislators specifically focused on the problem of appealability. ... Yet neither the statute nor the legislative history, see S.Rep.No. 1097, 90th Cong.2d Sess. 107 (1968), reprinted in U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News pp. 2112, 2196, contain any indication that they intended to alter pre-existing principles of appealability with respect to orders denying suppression.
*1223
Bova v. United States, supra,
For similar reasons we also reject the defendants’ claim that the denial of their motions to suppress can be viewed as tantamount to the denial of an injunction that is appealable as of right under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). By virtue of Section 1292(a)(1) the courts of appeals have jurisdiction from “interlocutory orders of district courts . . . granting, continuing, modifying, refusing or • dissolving injunctions .. . . ” Section 1292(a)(1) is a major source of interlocutory appeals but “many orders that compel or restrain conduct are nothing more than exercises of the district court’s power to control the proceedings before it; they are not injunctions, even though they are cast in injunctive terms.” 9 Moore’s Federal Practice 1110.19[1], at 207-208 (2d ed. 1982). If defendants were correct in their argument on the injunctive effect of the suppression orders, the policy against pretrial appeals on suppression issues in criminal appeals would be “sidestepped.”
Smith v. United States,
Because we conclude that the suppression order is not final and appealable in its own right 9 and is not the appropriate subject for application of Cohen and Abney, the appeal of the defendants must be dismissed. For similar reasons we also deny defendants-appellants’ motion to intervene in the appeals of the nondefendants. Because the ability of the defendants and non-defendants to protect their respective privacy interests arguably are not the same and because the legal questions raised by the two sets of appellants in this case — -defendants and nonparty interceptees — are not the same, we cannot agree that the interlocutory review of one set of interests compels the simultaneous review of the other. It is true that third parties have been given the right to intervene in criminal cases, but to permit defendants to intervene in this case unnecessarily would circumvent the rule against the interlocutory appeal of suppression orders. Further, as discussed below, this Court addresses only the question of standing raised by the nondefendants’ motions to suppress and not the question of the legality of the wiretaps. It is only with respect to the latter question that defendants’ intimate familiarity with the actual wiretap materials would militate in favor of their participation in the appeals.
III. The Nonparties’ Appeals
The two appeals of the nondefendants raise at least three distinct but interrelated questions: (1) did the district court grossly *1224 abuse its discretion when entering the June 23, 1982 and July 1, 1982 orders so that the orders are reviewable by mandamus? (2) are the June 23, 1982 and July 1, 1982 suppression orders of the district court properly appealable under the Cohen doctrine? and (3) did the district court err in concluding that the nondefendants do not have standing to object to the use of the intercepted conversations in which they were a party? Each of these questions will be addressed in turn.
A. Mandamus
Nonparty appellants seek issuance of a writ of mandamus directing Judge Marshall to vacate his pretrial orders on suppression. We are unpersuaded by the arguments advanced by petitioners in support of the writ and accordingly deny the petition.
The jurisdictional prerequisite to the invocation of the writ of mandamus by federal appellate courts traditionally has been “to confine an inferior court to a lawful exercise of its prescribed jurisdiction or to compel it to exercise its authority when it is its duty to do so.”
Roche v. Evaporated Milk Ass’n,
Petitions for mandamus issue under the terms of the Judicial Code pursuant to the All Writs Act. The Act requires the issuing court to conclude that the writ is “in aid of [the issuing court’s] respective jurisdiction” and that the issuance is “agreeable to the usages and principles of law.” 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a). In accordance with the first clause of the Act, mandamus has been restricted to those situations in which the lower court has taken an action which it has no power to take or when the court has acted and so abused its discretion that there is a sort of “usurpation of power” which will justify the entry of the writ.
De Beers Consol. Mines Ltd. v. United States,
In the instant case, the district court did not rule on any matters outside its jurisdiction, and mandamus will not lie to control the judicial discretion of the judge or court.
Will v. Calvert Fire Ins. Co.,
B. Interlocutory Appeal Under Cohen and Abney
Nonparty appellants also contend that the district court’s orders on suppression are appealable under application of the
Cohen
“collateral order” doctrine. With respect to the nonparties’ motions to suppress, the trial court concluded that the nonparties lacked standing to file suppression motions. Because the nonparties’ appeals raise unsettled questions of law regarding the standing of third parties to file suppression motions under Title III, because of the breadth of the surveillance at issue and because the nonparty appellants may not be
*1225
able to obtain appellate review of their privacy claims at any point in the future, we conclude that the three-pronged test of
Cohen
has been satisfied and we accept jurisdiction over their appeals. “Our consideration of the issues raised will neither halt nor disturb the orderly progress of the criminal proceeding.”
United States v. Hubbard,
C. Nonparty Standing to File Motions to Suppress
In concluding that the nonparties do not have standing to move for suppression of their intercepted communications in this case, the district court reasoned, first, that the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule cannot be invoked by a person against whom no evidence is offered, and second, that the statutory suppression remedy created in Title III is no broader than the Fourth Amendment rule. The court then appeared to qualify the statutory hprn of its analysis by acknowledging that a “non-party may be able to prevent disclosure of intercepted conversations,” citing
Anthony v. United States,
1. Standing Under The Fourth Amendment
The Fourth Amendment “affords protection against the uninvited ear[;] oral statements, if illegally overheard, . . . are . .. subject to suppression.”
Alderman v. United States,
In the present case the challenged evidence is not to be used against the non-party movants. Thus, as noted by the district court, even though the nonparties are allegedly the victims of illegality, they cannot move to suppress the evidence in the defendants’ trial on the basis of the Fourth Amendment.
United States v. Kember,
2. Standing Under Title III
Apart from their Fourth Amendment argument, the nonparties also contend that they have a separate right under Title III to contest the legality of the interceptions of their conversations and to suppress illegally seized communications. This argument presents a complex statutory question, one apparently of first impression. Thus we analyze it at some length.
Title III provides “a comprehensive scheme for the regulation of wiretapping and electronic surveillance.”
Gelbard
v.
United Stales,
Whenever any wire or oral communication has been intercepted, no part of the contents of such communication and no evidence derived therefrom may be received in evidence in any trial, hearing, or other proceeding in or before any court, grand jury, department, officer, agency, regulatory body, legislative committee, or other authority of the United States, a State, or a political subdivision thereof if the disclosure of that information would be in violation of this chapter.
18 U.S.C. § 2518(10)(a), in turn, provides the means for invoking that sanction:
Any aggrieved person in any trial, hearing, or proceeding in or before any court, department, officer, agency, regulatory body, or other authority of the United States, a State, or a political subdivision thereof, may move to suppress the contents of any intercepted wire or oral communication, or evidence derived therefrom, on the grounds that—
(i) the communication was unlawfully intercepted;
(ii) the order of authorization or approval under which it was intercepted is insufficient on its face; or
(iii) the interception was not made in conformity with the order of authorization or approval. . . .
Finally, 18 U.S.C. § 2510(11) defines the class of persons entitled to invoke the sanction through the motion to suppress:
“[Aggrieved person” means a person who was a party to any intercepted wire or oral communication or a person against whom the interception was directed.
The nonparties in this case were all participants in conversations intercepted under the court authorizations in question. Further, their conversations are to be used in a “trial . .. before ... [a] court ... of the *1227 United States.” 13 Thus under a literal reading of the statute they are “aggrieved persons” in a position to move for suppression pursuant to Section 2518(10)(a). The district court refused to accord them that status, however, on the ground that they fail to meet the standing- requirement— adopted from Fourth Amendment law-— that a movant must be a person against whom the challenged evidence is to be used. We must determine whether such a requirement is in fact implied in the statute.
The district court’s no-standing decision was based on the premise that “Title III does not grant a suppression remedy broader than that encompassed in general Fourth Amendment law.” As a general characterization that maxim has some credence. The legislative history of Title III indicates that the statutory suppression sanction was meant “largely [to] reflect[] existing law.” S.Rep.No.1097, 90th Cong., 2d Sess. 96, reprinted in 1968 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 2112, 2185. It was not intended “generally to press the scope of the suppression role beyond present search and seizure law.”
Id.
See
Scott
v.
United States,
The Supreme Court has observed that Title III (and particularly Section 2515) is the result of a “congressional effort to afford
special safeguards
against the unique problems posed by misuse of wiretapping and electronic surveillance.”
United States v. Calandra,
414 U.S.,
supra,
at 355 n.11,
In
Gelbard
the Court held that “grand jury witnesses . . . are entitled to invoke the prohibition of § 2515 as a de
*1228
fense to contempt charges brought against them for refusing to testify.”
In Anthony the defendant was convicted of unlawful interception of the wire communications of several individuals, among them, Dr. Vernon S. Sisney. After entry of the verdict the defendant moved (1) for a new trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence, and (2) for discovery of the contents of tapes of intercepted communications (including some of Dr. Sisney’s) that the defendant had made and that the government had subsequently seized. In response, Dr. Sisney filed a motion to intervene for purposes of opposing the discovery and to suppress the contents of the tapes under Section 2515. The district court denied Dr. Sisney’s motion, reasoning that he did not have standing to suppress the information. The court of appeals reversed, holding that Dr. Sisney was in fact an “aggrieved person” entitled to invoke the sanction of Section 2515 through the motion prescribed in Section 2518(10)(a). Id. at 878.
Although the Tenth Circuit did not explicitly discuss the significance of Dr. Sisney’s status as a nonparty in terms of his standing to suppress, 14 it is clear from the Court’s overall discussion that its decision was motivated by a concern to protect Dr. Sisney’s privacy interest in nondisclosure of the admittedly illegally intercepted communications. 15
In the present case the district court acknowledged this privacy interest in nondisclosure, yet failed to account for the risk to that interest in denying the nonparties’ motions. Instead the court imposed an absolute bar (at least in criminal trials) to nonparty standing under the statute. 16 We do not think that such a broad prohibition is necessarily dictated by the language or pur *1229 pose of Title III. Rather, a no-standing decision based on a movant’s nonparty status must be responsive in some way to the risk of disclosure of unlawfully seized communications. 17 A comparison of the relative risks in Anthony and this case, however, convinces us that despite the gap in the district court’s analysis, its no-standing decision was in fact correct.
In
Anthony,
absent Dr. Sisney’s involvement, there would have been no one in a position to contest the use or disclosure of the intercepted communications. The only other party to the proceeding, the government, clearly was not an “aggrieved person” as to the challenged conversations. Thus, had the court denied Dr. Sisney standing, his privacy interest in nondisclosure would have been left totally unprotected.
18
In contrast, in the present case, even without the involvement of the nonparties, the defendants were able to test the legality of the interceptions of all the communications that the government intends to use at trial.
United States v. Dorfman, supra,
at 393 n.56.
19
Denying the nonparties standing in this context did not deny the court an opportunity to evaluate the legality of the underlying interceptions.
20
Rather, it simply foreclosed the nonparties from separately retesting the legality of the interceptions of their conversations. See
Scott v. United States,
Accordingly, the orders of the district court are affirmed.
Notes
. Allen M. Dorfman, Roy L. Williams, Joseph Lombardo, Amos Massa and Thomas O’Malley.
. The defendants earlier appealed the district court’s oral ruling denying defendants’ request for complete closure to the public of the suppression hearing. This Court accepted jurisdiction over the appeal, reasoning that the “denial of defendants’ motion is in the nature of denial of an injunction because the motion was grounded in the defendants’ substantive right of privacy under Title III.” The Court nonetheless affirmed the district court order on the ground that the district court judge did' not abuse the broad discretion accorded him in “balancing the competing values at stake” and in fashioning, if necessary, a remedy less restrictive than complete closure of the hearing. United States v. Dorfman, No. 82-1462, slip op. at 3 (7th Cir. Mar. 25, 1982).
. In its opinion the district court held: (1) that the government’s original wiretap application and subsequent applications for extensions each recited facts sufficient to establish probable cause on which the authorizing judge could warrant surveillance, see 18 U.S.C. § 2518(3); (2) that the defendants failed to demonstrate that the government’s applications were made in bad faith under the rule of
Franks v. Delaware,
. David Dorfman, Sol Schwartz, Morris Weiser, Morton J. Harris and Ira M. Burman. Sol Schwartz was named in the January 29 authorization and David Dorfman was named in the second authorization order.
. In particular the government advised the non-party movants that it intended to offer the following conversations:
1) David Dorfman' — conversations between him and certain defendants and between him and other non-indicted parties; and
2) Messrs. Schwartz, Harris and Burman— conversations between each and certain defendants.
The government does not intend to offer any of the conversations involving Morris Weiser in the case in chief.
. The district court also denied Harris and Bur-man’s request for suppression on the ground that the subject matter of their conversations with defendants was covered by the attorney/client privilege. The district court correctly reasoned that the privilege is the defendant-client’s and may be asserted by him in an in limine proceeding to exclude the relevant conversations once the government attempts to have them admitted into evidence.
. See note 3, supra, for a discussion of the June 1 order.
. See note 2, supra.
. Because suppression orders entered against defendants are not final orders, we need not address appellee’s argument that the defendants’ appeal was untimely filed. Appellee’s Brief at 8-9; Defendants-Appellants’ Reply Brief at 3-4.
. Like the defendants-appellants, nonparty appellants also argue that they are entitled to appeal the denial of their motions to suppress under Section 1292(a)(1). For the reasons stated with respect to the defendants’ appeal, we reject the argument that the suppression orders are appealable as of right as injunctions.
. The court expressly stated this conclusion in its order of June 23, 1982, see pages 1220-1221, supra, and incorporated it by reference in its order of July 1, 1982, see p. 1221, supra.
. Because our review is limited to the question of the nonparties’ standing, we express no view regarding the district court’s alternative bases for denying Webbe’s motion to suppress. See pages 1221-1222, supra.
. There is one exception to this point. The government does not intend to offer any of the conversations involving Morris Weiser in the case in chief. See note 5, supra. Thus he is not an “aggrieved person” within the meaning of the statute.
. The controversy in Anthony focused on whether § 2518(10)(a) applies to interceptions by private individuals. The Court concluded that it does. Id.
. A similar concern was recognized in an analogous situation in
In re Applications of Kansas City Star,
. See pages 1220-1221, supra.
. This conclusion is not inconsistent with the Second Circuit’s decision in In re Vigorito, supra, finding that one whose conversations are overheard pursuant to court-ordered electronic surveillance and who is not a criminal defendant or grand jury witness may not move to suppress the use of recordings of his conversa- . tion before a grand jury. Because of the “secret” nature of such proceedings, the risk of disclosure was not at issue in that case.
. Dr. Sisney presumably could have used the statute’s civil remedy (§ 2520) to gain compensation after the disclosure was complete. He could not have used the civil remedy to prevent the impending harm. See S.Rep.No. 1097, supra, reprinted in 1968 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad. News at 2196 (“Injunctive relief ... is not intended to be available [under § 2520].”).
. The position of Allen Dorfman is of particular significance. Because he has a proprietary interest in Amalgamated, the site of the wiretap, he had “standing to object to the conduct of the surveillance as a whole.. .. ”
Id.
Cf.
Alderman v. United States,
. Thus the present case is different from
Anthony.
In that case, had the Court denied the nonparty stánding to move for suppression, the Court would have been placed in the anomalous position of overseeing the disclosure of admittedly unlawfully intercepted conversations. See
Anthony v. United States,
. In Scott the Supreme Court found it unnecessary to address the question of whether the defendant, Scott, could raise a Title III interception minimization requirement challenge (see 18 U.S.C. § 2518(5)) based upon the interception of conversations to which he was not a party, reasoning that a second defendant, Thurmon, was a party to some of the conversations and thus had standing. The Court explained:
[E]ven if we were to decide that Scott has no standing we would be compelled to undertake the decision of these issues. If, on the other hand, we were to decide that Scott does have standing, we would simply repeat exactly the same analysis made with respect to Thurmon’s claim and find against Scott as well.
Id.
An examination of the district court’s evaluation of the merits of Webbe’s claim, see pages 1221-1222, supra, demonstrates that a similar redundancy would arise in granting the non-parties standing in this case.
