Thе five plaintiffs in this suit are presently licensed and registered as professional engineers with the Maryland Board of Registration for Professional Engineers and Professional Land Surveyors (hereinafter “the Board”). 1 Having been charged by the Board with professional misconduct, plaintiffs have responded by filing a civil action in this Court, seeking injunctive and declaratory relief. 2
Inasmuch as the charges pending before the Board arise out of the immunized testimony givеn by each plaintiff as a witness in a federal criminal case, the plaintiffs here claim that the proposed state disciplinary proceedings will violate the immunity conferred upon them pursuant to 18 U.S.C. §§ 6001-03 and will infringe upon their Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. Plaintiffs therefore seek (1) a declaratory judgment that their immunized testimony may not support, either directly or indirectly, any suspension, revocation or refusal to renew their individual certificates of registration as professional engineers, and (2) a permanent injunction restraining the Board from so using that testimony. 3 Named as defendants herein are the members of the Board, who are sued both individually and in their official capacities. 4 This Court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1343(3). 5
The parties have stipulated to the essential facts. Although plaintiffs appeared and testified as government witnesses during the criminal trial of Dale Anderson before Judge Young аnd a jury in this Court,
United States v. Anderson,
Md.,
Thereafter, the Board ordered each plaintiff to appear and answer charges of professional misconduct which, as the Board concedes, “are based directly on the testimony and evidence [each] plaintiff . . . was compelled to give pursuant to [the federal immunity statute].” It is further agreed that at the impending administrative hearings on these charges, transcripts of the immunized testimony “will be offered into evidence as a basis for and in support of all charges brought by Orders of the Boаrd . against plaintiffs pursuant to Article 75V2, Section 17(a)(2) of the Annotated Code of Maryland . . . ” In the event that a majority of the members of the Board votes in favor of sustaining the charges against any plaintiff, the Board is empowered to suspend, revoke or refuse to renew that plaintiff’s certificate of registration. Md.Ann.Code, Art. 75V2, § 17(e). Without such a certificate, an individual cannot practice engineering in Maryland. Id. at § 17A. Thus, each plaintiff is now faced with thе prospect that he may no longer be entitled to continue his career as an engineer because of disclosures of professional misconduct made while testifying under a grant of immunity in a federal criminal trial.
Although plaintiffs’ testimony was compelled under the federal immunity statute, the scope of the immunity thereby conferred does not, as plaintiffs suggest,
8
depend upon the statute itself. A statute may effectively displace the Fifth Amendment privilеge against self-incrimination only by granting protection commensurate with that privilege.
Murphy
v.
Waterfront Commission,
Tracking the constitutional language, Section 6002 of the immunity statute prohibits the direct or indirect use of any testimony compelled thereunder “against the witness in any criminal case.” 18 U.S.C. § 6002. The legislative history of this statute clearly reveals a congressional intent that a “statutory [claim of immunity] be as broad as, but no broader than, the privilege against self-incrimination.” H.R.Rep. No. 1549, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. 42 (1970); 1970 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News, pp. 4007, 4017. In
Kastigar
v.
United States,
The self-incrimination clause of the Fifth Amendment, now fully applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment,
Malloy v. Hogan,
The basic questiоn before the Court in this case therefore is whether a disciplinary proceeding before a State administrative agency empowered to revoke a registrant’s right to practice his profession amounts to a “criminal case” within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment. An affirmative answer would entitle plaintiffs to the relief prayed for in their complaint, while a negative one would permit the Board, consistent with the Fifth Amendment, to consider the plаintiffs’ immunized testimony in the pending administrative proceedings. For the reasons hereinafter stated, this Court finds that a hearing before the Board to determine the fitness of a professional engineer to continue in that profession is not a criminal case for purposes of the privilege against self-incrimination.
In support of their position here, plaintiffs rely mainly on two Supreme Court cases decided in the last century, namely
Boyd v. United States,
Although extending the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination to cases other than standard criminal prosecutions,
Boyd
and
Lees
nevertheless require that the proceeding be “unquestionably criminal in nature” before “a defendant cannot be compelled to be a witness against himself.”
Lees v. United States, supra,
If the government prosecutor elects to waive an indictment, and to file a civil information against the claimants (that is, civil in form) can he by this device take from the proceeding its criminal aspect and deprive the claimants of their *433 immunities as citizens, and extort from them a production of their private papers, or, as an alternative, a confession of guilt? This cannot be. The information, though technically a civil proceeding, is in substance and effect a criminal one As, therefore, suits for penalties and forfeitures, incurred by the commission of offenses against the law, are of this quasi- criminal nature, we think that they are within the reason of criminal proceedings for . . . that portion of the fifth amendment which declares that no person shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself
Boyd
thus establishes that a prosecutor may not circumvent a person’s privilege against self-incrimination by invoking a civil remedy to enforce a criminal statute. To the same effect is
Lees v. United States, supra,
The Supreme Court’s opinion in
Ullmann v. United States, supra,
further demonstrates that the holding in
Boyd
was based on facts involving the enforcement of a criminal statute by means of a civil proceeding. Despite a grant of immunity, the petitioner in
Ullmann
had persisted in his refusal to testify before a grand jury investigating espionage and Communism and had then been found to be in contempt of court. Challenging the constitutionality of the immunity statute under which the government sought to compel his testimony, the petitioner there argued that the immunity conferred by statute was insufficient because it would not protect him from “disabilities . . . such as loss of job, expulsion from labor unions, state registration and investigation statutes, passport eligibility, and genera] public opprobrium . .”
“The interdiction of the 5th Amendment operates only where a witness is asked to incriminate himself, — in other words, to give testimony which may possibly expose him to a criminal charge. But if the criminality has already been taken away, the amendment ceases to apply.”
That the majority in
Ullmann
did not consider the disabilities mentioned by the petitioner there to be in fact criminal in nature is quite apparent from the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Douglas.
Id.
at 440,
That plaintiffs will suffer adverse consequences if they lose their right to practice their profession is clear. But the denial of that right by the Board would not amount to the imposition of a criminal sanction. Moreover, the fact that plaintiffs’ compelled admissions of criminal conduct would support the charges pending bеfore the Board would not transform the proposed disciplinary hearings into “criminal cases”.
See Boulware v. Battaglia,
In
Tippett v. Maryland,
The purpose of requiring and thus the reason for revoking a certificate of registration for рrofessional engineers, as de
*435
dared, by the Maryland statute, is “to safeguard life, health and property, and to promote the public welfare . . .” Md. Ann.Code, Art. 75½, § 1. Since
Dent v. West Virginia,
Maryland has here legislatively determined that a registered professional engineer who “[h]as committed any . misconduct in the practice of engineering” is not worthy of public trust and that therefore his certificate may be suspended, revoked or not renewed by the Board. Md. Ann.Code, Art. 75½, § 17(a)(2). Whether the disclosures made by plaintiffs in their compelled testimony amount to professional misconduct is for the Board, not this Court, to decide. If it finds such misconduct, the Board has no authority to imprison a plaintiff, to find him or to impose any other criminal sanction. Rather than enforcing a criminal statute, the Board if it acts will be exercising the power of the State to protect its citizenry from fraud and deception and will be endeavoring to preserve public confidence in the integrity of the engineering profession. Any revocation order by the Board would thus be remedial rather than punitive in nature.
See Hawker v. New York,
When presented with the precise claim advanced herein by plaintiffs, other courts, both federal and state, have reached a similar conclusion and have held that immunized testimony may be introduced as evidence in a disciplinary proceeding without offending the Fifth Amendment.
11
Cf. Baxter v. Palmigiano,
In
Sugarman,
the Maryland Court disbarred an attorney (also a reluctant witness at the
Anderson
trial) for professional misconduct revealed by his immunized testimony. The Court found no conflict with the Fifth Amendment privilege because disbarment “ ‘is not by way of punishment; but
*436
the court, on such cases, exercise their discretion whether a man whom they have formerly admitted, is a proper person to be continued on the roll or not.’ ”
Plaintiffs further argue that
Garrity v. New Jersey,
For the reasons stated, this Court concludes that the use of plaintiffs’ immunized testimony at pending proceedings before the Board will not violate the immunity conferred upon them by federal statute and will not violate their Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. Accordingly, judgment is hereby entered in favor of the defendants, with costs.
Notes
. The Board is part of the Maryland Department of Licensing and Regulations, Md.Ann. Code, Art. 75½, § 3.
. Plaintiffs John C. Childs, Lester Matz, Jerome B. Wolff and Robert A. Whiteford originally filed this action individually and as representatives of a class. At the suggestion of the Court, the Attorney General notified other engineers of the pendency of this action and of their right to intervene. Subsequently, plaintiff Walter P. Weigand was granted leave to intervene. An Order was then entered granting plaintiffs’ motion to withdraw their request that this suit be determined to be a class action.
. Plaintiffs filed this suit on April 21, 1975, and by Order dated June 30, 1975, this Court enjoined the Board from taking any further action against plaintiffs pending a decision in this case.
. The cоmplaint also named as defendants certain federal officials who either were responsible for transcribing and authenticating plaintiffs’ testimony or had possession of the transcripts. These defendants answered the complaint by stating that they “take no position, one way or the other, with respect to this lawsuit . . . ” Since the plaintiffs and state defendants have now stipulated that the federal defendants have already provided an Assistant Attоrney General of Maryland with authenticated transcripts for presentation to the Board, the claim against the federal defendants is now moot.
. Plaintiffs originally requested that a three-judge court be convened. Following a hearing, this Court on September 12, 1975, granted the defendants’ motion opposing the convening of a three-judge court.
. Plaintiffs have not and on this record cannot complain that the government did not follow the statutory procedures for obtaining immunity for a witness. Thus, plaintiffs do not attack the propriety of the Orders granting them immunity.
. Anderson was subsequently convicted and sent to prison. His conviction was affirmed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.
. Noting that earlier federal immunity statutes protected a witness from any “penalties or forfeitures” as well as “answering criminally,” plaintiffs argue that the present statute is equally as broad. The legislative history of the present immunity statute does not support such an argument.
. Alternatively, the dissent hypothesized that “[t]he Court may mean that if disqualification for government employment or ineligibility for a passport is a forfeiture within the meaning of the
Boyd
case, Congress has lifted these disabilities in exchange for the witness’ testimony.”
. Nothing in
In re Ruffalo,
. Plaintiffs’ reliance upon
Lurie v. Florida State Bd. of Dentistry,
.
Lefkowitz v. Turley,
