Former Athens, Georgia police officer H.G. Erwin appeals a decision of the district court for the middle district of Georgia upholding his termination for refusing to answer questions concerning an off-duty *669 gun-pointing incident. Because a public employee who is not required to waive his fifth amendment privilege against self-incrimination may properly be disciplined for refusing to answer questions narrowly and specifically related to official duty, we affirm.
I.
While off duty on a Saturday afternoon Officer Erwin, after several drinks, got into an altercation at a package liquor store with a citizen named Arnold. When Erwin pulled his car up to the door of the store, Arnold allegedly yanked open the car door, called him an insulting name and accused him of running over his leg. Erwin reached into his glove compartment and ostentatiously pulled out his gun and showed it to Arnold to forestall any trouble. He told Arnold that if he had a complaint he should call the police and that Erwin would await their arrival. Arnold retreated across the street but continued to hurl epithets at Erwin. Erwin told police at the scene, and later testified in the court below, that he then pointed his finger at Arnold and pretended to shoot at him. This had the desired effect of sending Arnold scurrying. Arnold accused Erwin of actually pointing the gun, a criminal offense under Georgia law.
When Erwin arrived at work the following Tuesday he was handed a letter from police chief Price directing him to give a truthful and detailed statement about the incident to Major Winston Dill and after-wards to report for a polygraph test. The letter, and Major Dill independently, informed Erwin that the results of the examination would be used for departmental purposes only and that no information from it would be used in any criminal proceedings. Erwin replied that he understood but wanted his Miranda rights read. Dill refused because the warnings did not apply: nothing said there would be used in criminal proceedings. The record shows that Erwin received at least three other assurances that he was not being asked to waive his fifth amendment privilege and that nothing stated during the investigation could be used against him in a criminal proceeding. He also was familiar with Athens Police Department Special Order 79-089-09 and General Order 78-4 which in substance state that police officers must answer questions narrowly related to their official duties, that answers will not be used in any subsequent criminal investigation and that refusal to testify will be considered insubordination subject to discipline including dismissal. Despite these assurances Erwin repeatedly refused to answer directly whether he pointed his gun and said he would make no comments on the gun-pointing incident until the matter was heard in court. He repeated this refusal in a note to Chief Price.
Erwin was then suspended and ultimately dismissed for insubordination for refusing to respond to questions during the administrative investigation. Erwin filed suit in district court claiming that he was protected by the fifth amendment privilege against self-incrimination from having to answer what he considered to be unlawful questions. The district court held that Erwin had no fifth amendment right to refuse to answer questions narrowly and specifically directed to his official duties and upheld his firing.
II.
It is settled that the fifth amendment privilege against self-incrimination permits a person “not to answer official questions put to him in any other proceeding, civil or criminal, formal or informal, where the answers might incriminate him in future criminal proceedings.”
Lefkowitz v. Turley,
We have held that the privilege against self-incrimination thus “affords a form of use immunity which, absent waiver,
automatically
attaches to compelled incriminating statements
as a matter of law.” Hester v. City of Milledgeville,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. There is no Georgia statute permitting such a grant in this situation. The closest statute requires there to be a pending criminal prosecution. Ga.Code § 24-9-28.
. Plaintiff also argues that language in
Kastigar v. United States,
