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Parents Jailed for Refusing to Testify Against Son

Dublin Core

Title

Parents Jailed for Refusing to Testify Against Son

Subject

Court Case
Parent-Child Privilege
Punishment

Description

A description of the consequences faced by the parents of a man on trial for rape. The parents refused to testify against their son citing parent-Child Privilege.

Creator

Ring, Wilson

Source

Ring, Wilson. "Parents Jailed for Refusing to Testify Against Son, 25; Courts: Vermont couple cite 'parent-child privilege' to justify silence at rape case inquest." L.A. Times. April 14, 1996, 3.

Publisher

HIST 298, University of Mary Washington

Date

1996-04-14

Rights

The materials in this online collection are held by Special Collections, Simpson Library, University of Mary Washington and are available for educational use. For this purpose only, you may reproduce materials without prior permission on the condition that you provide attribution of the source.

Format

3 JPGs
300 DPI

Language

English

Coverage

Williston, VT

Text Item Type Metadata

Text

FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY [spacing] Page 19
Citation [spacing] Search Result [spacing] Rank 9 of 63 [spacing] Database
4/14/96 LATIMES 27 [spacing] ALLNEWS
4/14/96 L.A. Times 27
1996 WL 5259955
(Publication page references are not available for this document.)

[centered] Los Angeles Times
Copyright, The Times Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times 1996 all rights reserved

[centered] Sunday, April 14, 1996

[centered] PART-A; Advance Desk

[centered] Parents Jailed for Refusing to Testify Against Son, 25; Courts: Vermont couple cite 'parent-child privilege' to justify silence at rape case inquest.
[centered] WILSON RING
[centered] ASSOCIATED PRESS

Arthur and Geneva Yandow have gone to jail in hopes of keeping their son out of one.

The couple refuse to testify at a prosecutor's inquest in a rape case in which the suspect is their 25-year-old son.

The Yandows claim that "parent-child privilege" gives them the legal and moral authority to refuse. So far, the courts and the couple's church disagree.

"My clients are absolutely adamant that they will not testify," lawyer Paul Volk said Wednesday. "They believe morally and based on their religious values they will not destroy their family and betray their son."

Craig Yandow, who lives with his parents and works in his father's construction business, has not been charged in the Feb. 14 attack, in which a woman was raped, beaten and left in the cold, unconscious and half-naked.

A jacket identical to the one the younger Yandow owns--blue, with "Saint John's Bay" on the back--was found at the scene. Also, Yandow had injuries "consistent with those a rapist would sustain from a struggling victim," prosecutors said in court papers.

District Judge Edward Cashman jailed the Yandows on March 28 for contempt of court after the couple refused his order to testify. There is no limit to how long they can be held. The judge set a hearing for April 27.

Once it becomes clear that jail won't change their minds, the [end page one]

[begin page two] judge will have to release them, Volk said.

Prosecutors have not said what they hope to learn from the couple.

Craig Yandow's attorney, Andrew Mikell, refused to answer questions about the case of say where his client is now. "He is concerned about his parents' situation," Mikell said. "Until he is charged, it's tough for me to do or say anything."

The state Supreme Court ruled 5 to 0 last month that, because Craig Yandow is a competent adult, his parents cannot claim parent-child privilege.

Similarly, the Rev Walter Miller, a canon lawyer for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Burlington, which includes all of Vermont, said no church doctrine would allow the Yandows to refuse to help prosecutors.

If the couple were to ask their parish priest for advice, only one answer would be possible, he said: "you'd be telling them to cooperate. This son of theirs is not a child."

But Volk said the Supreme Court ignored a number of legal precedents to the contrary. And he pointed out a section of the Catholic Church's catechism that lays out family responsibilities: "The citizen is obliged in conscience not to follow the directives of civil authorities when they are contrary to the demands of the moral order."

Volk said legal precedents in his favor include a 1979 case in which a court in New York state suppressed grand jury testimony of the father of a 23-year-old vehicular homicide suspect, citing parent-child privilege.

But Vermont prosecutors said in court papers that it appeared that New York's highest court overruled that decision in a separate 1994 case. They said courts nationwide "have overwhelmingly rejected parent-child privilege."

"Nearly all have concluded that the legal system's demand for truth, especially in a criminal proceeding, should not yield to a family's momentary desire for loyalty or harmony," prosecutors told Vermont's high court.

Michael Mello, a constitutional law professor at the Vermont Law School, said parent-child privilege is an unusual argument.

"It presents both dimensions of a fairly new, very interesting and extremely foundational question: the legitimacy of whether there is in fact parent-child privilege," Mello said. "Even if there is not, can a parent's refusal to become a police informant against her son [result in her being] incarcerated indefinitely? It's a family values issue."

[centered] ---- INDEX REFERENCE S----
STORY ORIGIN: WILLISTON, VT.

NEWS CATEGORY: WIRE

REGION: United States (US)

EDITION: BULLDOG EDITION

Word Count: 605
4/14/96 LATIMES 27
END OF DOCUMENT

Contributor of the Digital Item

Weinstein, Samuel

Student Editor of the Digital Item

Dickinson, Terra

Files

Citation

Ring, Wilson, “Parents Jailed for Refusing to Testify Against Son,” HIST299, accessed March 12, 2026, https://hist299.umwhistory.org/items/show/254.