Clаrence Taylor appeals from the district court’s order granting the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Taylor, serving a sentence for attempted murder, refused to answer questions put to him by a prison psychologist as part of the Powhatan Reception and Classification Center’s routine initial screening. The prison Adjustment Committee found Taylor guilty of hindering a prison employee in the performance of his duties and punished Taylor with fifteen days isolation. Taylor then brought a § 1983 action against Best, the staff psycholоgist who posed the questions, and Smith, Mills and Lester, members of the Adjustment Committee. Concluding that Taylor had not made out a violation of the fifth amendment’s protection against self-incrimination nor of his right to privacy, the district court granted summary judgment against him. We affirm.
I.
Shortly after his arrival at Powhatan Center, Taylor was interviewed by staff psychologist Best as part of the Center’s assessment process. The Center employs this process to determine the appropriate institutional assignment, custody level, and basic progrаm plan for treatment, rehabilitation, and training of new prisoners. According to Taylor, Best questioned him about his crime and conviction. Best prefaced these questions with assurances of confidentiality, but he did not give Taylor Miranda warnings nor did anyone extend use immunity. After Taylor refused to answer any questions concerning the crime, Best asked Taylor about his family background. Again Taylor refused to answer.
As a result of his refusals to answer the psychologist’s questions, Taylor was charged with “[djelaying, hindering or interfering with an employee in the performance of his duties”, a major offense under the prison disciplinary guidelines. The charge was heard before the institutional Adjustment Committee (consisting of appellees Smith, Lester and Mills). The Adjustment Committee concluded that Taylor’s refusal to answer the quеstions violated prison disciplinary guidelines and sentenced him to fifteen days of isolation.
Taylor argued before the district court that requiring him to answer questions about his crime violated his right against self-incrimination because he was in the process of apрealing his conviction. His right to privacy was also violated, Taylor argued, when Best required him to answer questions about his family.
The district court noted that Best swore in his affidavit “that information given by *222 the inmate during the interview is confidential and that the inmate is informed that the information is confidential and that it is used only for classification purposes.” (J.A. 58). The court concluded “that questions about a past criminal conviction, asked for classification purposes with a promise of confidentiality, are not incriminating for purpоses of the Fifth Amendment, even though the criminal conviction is still on appeal.” (J.A. 59). Addressing the alleged violation of privacy rights, the district court concluded that the requirements of the prison system relating to classification procedures outweighed any privacy interest Taylor might have.
II.
On appeal, the state urges us to hold that Taylor did not have a right to assert the fifth amendment. While we conclude in Part III that Taylor’s fifth amendment right did not arise during Best’s psychiatric evaluation, we disagree with the state’s threshold argument that thе conviction and sentencing of a criminal defendant results in the loss of the privilege against self-incrimination. In support of this argument, the state cites
Reina v. United States,
Taylor, however, had appealed his conviction at the time he was required to answer questions, a fact the state brushes aside too lightly. Whether or not Taylor’s appeal is “dead in the water” as the state asserts is a matter for the state appellate court to determine. We will not undercut Taylor’s right to appeal under state law by prematurely assessing the merits of his appeal in a collateral proceeding. If Taylor’s conviction were overturned on appeal, post-conviction evidence, if probative and otherwise admissible, might be used against him.
See Hummel v. Commonwealth,
Equally unavаiling is the state’s argument that by testifying at his trial, Taylor waived his right to claim the benefits of the fifth amendment. Insofar as Taylor may have waived the right at the first trial with respect to questions concerning the events to which he testified,
see Brown v. United States,
III.
We, nevertheless, conclude that in this case the fifth аmendment right against self-incrimination did not arise. The fifth amendment, made applicable to the states
*223
by the fourteenth amendment,
Malloy v. Hogan,
In Estelle v. Smith, the Court held that the fifth amendment applied to bar use of a psychiatrist’s report at a sentencing hearing when that report was based on incriminating statements made by the defendant during a psychiatric evaluation. In response to the state’s contention that Smith’s communications werе nontestimonial, the Court stated:
Dr. Grigson’s prognosis as to future dangerousness rested on statements respondent made, and remarks he omitted, in reciting the details of the crime. The Fifth Amendment privilege, therefore, is directly involved here because the State used as evidence against respondent the substance of his disclosures during the pretrial psychiatric examination.
For essentially this reason, we have previously held that when a defendant raises the insanity defense, he may be compelled to submit to а sanity examination by the prosecution’s psychiatrist without a formal grant of use immunity.
United States v. Albright,
the purpose аnd result of the examination is not “the cruel, simple expedient of compelling it [incriminating evidence] from his own mouth.” To repeat an earlier statement, the purpose of the examination is not to determine whether a defendant did or did not do the сriminal acts charged, but whether he possessed the requisite mental capacity to be criminally responsible therefor, if other proof establishes that he did do them. So limited, we find nothing in the examination, *224 over a defendant’s objection, to violate a defendant’s privilege against self-incrimination.
Similarly, in this case the purpose of the examination is not to bypass the adversary system and extract incriminating statements from the defendant to be used against him in a subsequent criminal proceeding. The clear purpose is to evaluate the prisoner so that he may be assigned to the appropriate institution at the appropriate custody level with a basic program plan for treatment that fits his rehabilitation and training needs. In this context, Taylor’s right to be free from self-incrimination did not arise. Only if the state attempted to use the evaluation in a subsequent criminal proceeding
3
would Taylor’s right to assert the fifth amendment be triggered.
See Estelle v. Smith,
Taylor correctly points out that the likelihood of suppression at trial does not negate an investigator’s violation of the fifth amendment in the original course of questioning.
Gardner v. Broderick,
ner and Uniformed Sanitation Men, there was no violation of the fifth amendment in the first instance. In Gardner, the Court held that a state may not discharge a police officer for refusing to waive his fifth amendment right against self-incrimination. The court stated that
the great privilege against self-incrimination does not tolerate the attempt, regardless of its ultimate effectiveness, to coerce a waiver of the immunity it confers on penalty of the loss of employment. It is clear that petitiоner’s testimony was demanded before the grand jury in part so that it might be used to prosecute him, and not solely for the purpose of securing an accounting of his performance of his public trust. If the latter had been the only purpose, there would have bеen no reason to seek to compel petitioner to waive his immunity-
[I]f New York had demanded that petitioners answer questions specifically, directly, and narrowly relating to the performance of their official duties on pain of dismissal from public employment without requiring relinquishment of the benefits of the constitutional privilege, and if they had refused to do so, this case would be entirely different. In such a casе, the employee’s right to immunity *225 as a result of his compelled testimony would not be at stake.
Gardner
and
Uniformed Sanitation Men
are consistent with our holding that Taylor’s right against self-incrimination did not arise because the purpose and result of the examination was not to determine whether he did оr did not do the criminal acts charged or whether he should be sentenced to a longer term for doing them; rather, it was to determine whether he should be assigned to a particular institution, custody level, and treatment plan.
Cf. United States v. Albright,
IV.
Taylor also asserts that his right to privaсy was violated by compelling him to answer questions about his family background. The right to privacy,
see Griswold v. Connecticut,
In this case, Taylor asserts a privacy interest in keeping his family history from the staff psychologist. This interest, however, is weakened by Best’s promise of confidentiality.
See Nixon v. Administrator of General Services,
V.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Applying these concеpts, the Supreme Court has found the privilege applicable in a variety of settings that include police investigations and interrogations,
e.g. Miranda v. Arizona,
.
Other courts of appeals have held that a routine competency exam does not violate the fifth аmendment.
See, e.g., United States v. Cohen,
. In this context, the phrase, “subsequent criminal proceeding” includes a sentencing hearing as in Estelle and the analogous parole hearing. Taylor does not contend and the record does not indicate that the substance of Taylor’s answers was sought to be used against him in deciding how much of his sentence he should serve. Indeed, Best not only promised confidentiality but stated that the information is “used only by the Department of Corrections for classification purposes." (J.A. 34) Classification purposes do not include consideration for parole, and we decide this case based on that conclusion.
