Robert Lee Griffin appeals the district court’s order requiring a special master to deliver to the government redacted letters written by Griffin to Pamela Griffin, who is both his wife and his attorney, while Griffin was incarcerated in California state prison. The letters were seized during a search of Pamela Griffin’s residence pursuant to a valid search warrant. A special master redacted those portions of the letters protected by the attorney-client privilege and the work-product doctrine. The district court ordered that the redacted letters be turned over to the prosecution.
Griffin moved in the district court to prevent the special master from turning over the redacted letters, contending that they are protected marital communications. After the district court denied the motion, Griffin brought an interlocutory appeal in this court. He contends that we have jurisdiction to review the district court’s order on several bases, including the collateral order doctrine and the so-called Perlman rule. We hold that we have jurisdiction, and we affirm.
I. Background
Robert Leе Griffin has been indicted in federal district court on one count of conspiracy to conduct and participate in the affairs of the Aryan Brotherhood prison gang’s racketeering enterprise, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1962, and two counts of participating in the violent crime of murder in aid of the racketeering enterprise, in violation оf 18 U.S.C. § 1959(a)(1). Among other things, the indictment alleges that Griffin is one of the leaders of the prison gang and that he has ordered or approved the murders of seven, and the attempted murders of two more, named individuals.
Six boxes of documents were seized by law enforcement officials during a valid search of the residence of Griffin’s wife/attorney. The dоcuments include numerous letters written by Griffin while he was incarcerated in California state prison. These letters were sent in envelopes marked “Confidential” and were addressed to Pamela Griffin as an “Attorney at Law.” The magistrate judge appointed a special master to review the letters. The special master redacted all letters and portions of letters protected by the attorney-client privilege and the work-product doctrine. The special master then prepared to turn over to the government those letters and portions of letters not covered by either the attorney-client privilege or the work-product doctrine.
Griffin movеd to prevent these redacted materials from being turned over to the government. He did not object to the *1141 special master’s conclusion that they were not protected by the attorney-client privilege or the work-product doctrine. Rather, he contended that they were protected by the marital communications privilege. The special master recommended that the motion be denied. She concluded that Griffin had violated prison regulations by including non-legal, personal communications in letters designated as confidential attorney-client correspondence. The district court denied Griffin’s motion, but on the different ground that the marital communications privilege “generally” extends “only to the use of marital communications as evidence in judicial or grand jury proceedings.” Griffin appealed the district court’s order denying his motion and directing that the redacted letters be turned over to the office of the United States Attorney. The order has been stayed, and Griffin has remainеd incarcerated on an unrelated state court conviction, during the pendency of this appeal.
II. Discussion
A. Jurisdiction
This court generally has jurisdiction to review only “appeals from all final decisions of the district courts.” 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The Supreme Court has cautioned that “the delays and disruptions attendant upon intermediate appeal are еspecially inimical to the effective and fair administration of the criminal law.”
DiBella v. United States,
1. Collateral Order Doctrine
In
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
First, the district court’s order “conclusively determined] the disputed question” whether the government is entitled to read the communications between Griffin and his wife for which the privilege had been claimed. Further, the issue of privilege has been “fully devеloped” in two rounds of briefing before the special master and the district court.
Austin,
*1142
Second, appellate review would resolve an important issue “completely separate from the merits of the action.” We have held that claims of attorney-client and joint defense privilege qualify as “important” issues under
Cohen. Id.
at 1021. The marital communications privilege is designed to “protect[ ] ... marital confidences, regarded as so essential to the preservation of the marriage relationship as to outweigh the disadvantages to the administration of justice which the privilege entails.”
Wolfle v. United States,
Griffin’s “privilege claim is independent of ... criminal liability” because he does not challenge the merits of the charges against him in this appeal.
Austin,
Third, if we decline to hear Griffin’s appeаl at this time, and if he is correct in his assertion of privilege, by the time of trial he will have suffered “the very harm that he seeks to avoid,”
Sell,
We have previously invoked the collateral order doctrine to review pretrial orders that conclusively resolved important issues involving claims of privilege in habeas corpus cases. In
Bittaker v. Woodford,
*1143 2. The Perlman Rule
The Supreme Court’s decision in
Perlman v. United States,
The district court order in this case is directed at the special master, a disinterеsted third-party custodian of allegedly privileged documents. The special master, who has no personal stake in the proceedings, cannot be expected to flout the district court’s order and risk a contempt citation to facilitate an immediate appeal for Griffin’s benefit. Therefore, in the alternative, we hold that we may review the district court’s interlocutory order under the Perlman rule.
B. Standard of Review
Griffin appeals a legal determination of the district court. We review de novo the district court’s legal conclusions.
United States v. Montgomery,
C. Marital Communications Privilege
Federal Rule of Evidence 501 provides that, except as otherwise required by the Constitution, federal statute, or Supreme Court rule, “the privilege of а witness ... shall be governed by the principles of the common law as they may be interpreted by the courts of the United States in the light of reason and experience.” Fed.R.Evid. 501. Partly based on Rule 501, federal courts recognize a marital communications privilege that exists to “protect[] the integrity of marriages and ensur[e] that spouses frеely communicate with one another.”
United States v. White,
There are two marital privileges recognized by the federal common law. The first, usually called the “adverse spousal testimony” privilege, allows a spouse to refuse to testify adversely to his or her spouse.
Trammel v. United States,
Griffin contends that the marital communications privilege is not merely a privilege protecting against the introduction of evidence at trial or before the grand jury. He contends that it is a broader privilege, protecting against disclosure of rеcordings or documents containing confidential marital communications to an adverse party during an investigation, whether or not those recordings or documents are eventually introduced into evidence. The primary decision supporting Griffin’s argument is
SEC v. Lavin,
in which the D.C. Circuit addressed an attempt by a married couple to quash a Securities and Exchange Commission’s (“SEC”) subpoena requiring disclosure of tape recordings of conversations between them. Ill F.3d at 923. The SEC issued its subpoena as part of an ongoing investigation of fraudulent sales practices.
Id.
The conversations between an employee of a securities firm and his wife had been recorded by the employer in the ordinary course of business.
Id.
at 923-24. The D.C. Circuit held that if the conversations had been confidential they were protected by the marital communications privilege from compelled disclosure to the SEC during its investigation.
Id.
at 925, 933-34;
see also Kasza v. Browner,
We will assume, without deciding, for purposes of our opinion that Lavin correctly describes the sсope of the marital communications privilege. That is, we will assume that a recording or document containing a confidential marital communication is protected from disclosure to an adverse party during an investigation. Nevertheless, we hold in the circumstances of this case that Griffin cannot claim the privilege.
It is common ground between the parties that if Griffin had sent a letter to his wife not containing any privileged attorney-client or work-product material, prison authorities would have had the right to read the letter. There is no free-standing marital communications privilege, under either federal or state law, allowing a California prisoner to send cоnfidential letters from prison to his or her spouse. The question in this case is whether communications between Griffin and his wife that are protected by neither the attorney-client nor the work-product doctrine, and that would not be protected by the marital communications privilege standing alone, are protected by the marital сommunications privilege merely because they are placed in an envelope on which Griffin wrote “Attorney at Law.” We think they are not.
California law nowhere provides that an inmate may correspond confidentially with his or her spouse. See Cal.Penal Code § 2601(b). California regulations provide that outgoing nonconfidential mail mаy be read by prison authorities, as follows:
*1145 All nonconfidential inmate mail is subject to being read in its entirety or in part by designated employees of the facility before it is mailed for or delivered to an inmate.
CaLCode Regs. tit. 15, § 3138(a). The regulations further provide that an inmate may not use confidential mail to protect nonconfidential сorrespondence from scrutiny:
(b) Confidential correspondence is a right guaranteed by law. Using the means of confidential correspondence for personal non-business correspondence, the transmission of contraband items, or the smuggling of letters and other communications to be forwarded to persons not listed in subsection (c) is an abuse of this right and such proven abuse may be subject to disciplinary action
(c) Persons ... with whom inmates may correspond confidentially include:
(6) An attorney at law listed with a state bar association.
CaLCode Regs. tit. 15, § 3141(b), (c) (emphasis added).
Griffin does not argue that the material he seeks to protect under the marital communications privilege is something other than “personal non-business correspondence” within thе meaning of § 3141(b). Under these circumstances, we hold that Griffin has no right to protect from disclosure to the government as privileged marital communications those portions of his letters to his wife/attorney that were improperly included in the envelopes on which he wrote “Attorney at Law.”
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that we have appellate jurisdiction under both the collateral order doctrine and the Perl-man rule. We affirm the order of the district court requiring the special master to deliver the redacted letters and portions of letters from Griffin to his wife that are not protected by either the attorney-client privilege or the work-product doctrine.
AFFIRMED.
