On 17 September 1996, the Baltimore City Department of Social Services (BCDSS) took then five year old Ariel G. into protective custody from his mother, Teresa B. BCDSS promptly filed a petition in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City alleging that Ariel was a Child in Need of Assistance (CINA) based on his mother’s refusal to provide him with appropriate medical treatment for his severe asthma. After the court entered an order placing Ariel in protective custody, but before an: adjudicatory hearing could be held, Teresa absconded with Ariel.
After three and a half years of eluding the authorities, Teresa was found and arrested on 27 March 2000. Although she refused to disclose Ariel’s whereabouts, he subsequently was found and committed by the court to BCDSS under an order of shelter care. The court found Teresa in direct contempt for preventing the court from exercising its jurisdiction over Ariel. She also later was convicted of a violation of the terms of her probation. 1
Later that year, the court found Ariel to be a CINA and placed him in a foster home in Carroll County. Ariel remained in the foster home until the morning of 9 January 2001, when the foster parents discovered that Ariel was missing from his bedroom. Attempts to locate his mother were unsuccessful, and it was widely speculated that Teresa again had fled with Ariel.
Over the next few months the juvenile court held hearings during which evidence was adduced that, if believed, strongly indicated that Teresa was involved in Ariel’s latest disappearance and that Ariel was with her currently. In fact, the prosecutor in Carroll County charged Teresa with kidnapping. 2 In addition, the State charged her with constructive *243 criminal contempt for conduct unrelated to Ariel’s 9 January 2001 disappearance. 3
Teresa was apprehended once more and jailed in Baltimore City pending a bail hearing. Ariel’s whereabouts, however, were unknown. On 3 August 2001, the Circuit Court for Baltimore City held a bail hearing. The court instructed Teresa’s counsel in the CIÑA case to appear with Teresa at a hearing that afternoon. The court, now sitting as a juvenile court, directly questioned Teresa concerning Ariel’s whereabouts. Teresa refused to answer, claiming that she was not required to do so based on her Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. The court found Teresa in direct contempt and ordered her detained until she purged herself of the contempt by disclosing Ariel’s whereabouts. The court periodically brought her back over the ensuing months, but each time she refused to answer questions concerning Ariel’s whereabouts, resulting in her continued incarceration.
On 5 June 2002, Teresa was brought before the juvenile court once more and given the opportunity to purge her contempt by disclosing the whereabouts of Ariel. Teresa responded by indicating that, because she had been detained for the last ten months, she no longer had knowledge as to Ariel’s present location. The court then suggested Teresa could purge the contempt by disclosing where she was the last time she saw Ariel prior to her capture and confinement. Teresa refused to answer this question, invoking again her right against self-incrimination. After Teresa refused once more at a hearing on 26 September 2002 to disclose any information concerning her child’s whereabouts, Ariel nonetheless was found by BCDSS and placed with relatives. Teresa was released from custody. 4
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Teresa appealed to the Court of Special Appeals from the Circuit Court’s 5 June 2002 order finding her in contempt for her refusal to answer questions concerning the last known whereabouts of Ariel.
5
On 10 December 2003, the intermediate appellate court reversed the decision of the juvenile court, concluding that Teresa had a Fifth Amendment privilege to refuse to answer questions regarding her knowledge of Ariel’s whereabouts.
In re Ariel G.,
I.
The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that “No person ... shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.” U.S. Const. Amend. V. In order to invoke successfully the protection of the Fifth Amendment, an individual’s statement must be compelled, testimonial, and self-incriminating.
Fisher v. U.S.,
As a threshold matter, it is clear that the questions posed to Teresa at the several pertinent hearings in the Circuit Court, including the question posed at the 5 June 2002 hearing, all had the potential, if answered, to implicate her in the charged crime of kidnapping Ariel.
8
The Supreme Court has held that
*246
to invoke the right against self-incrimination, “it need only be evident from the implications of the question, in the setting in which it is asked, that a responsive answer ... might be dangerous because injurious disclosure could result.”
Hoffman,
Because of the pending kidnapping charges, Teresa had “reasonable cause to apprehend danger from a direct answer” to the court’s question concerning Ariel’s whereabouts.
Hoffman,
Furthermore, the threat of prosecution was not hollow or speculative, but rather immediate and certain.
See Choi v.
State,
II.
BCDSS, however, argues that this Court should apply
Baltimore City Department of Social Services v. Bouknight,
In
Bouknight,
a mother refused a court order to produce her child.
Id.
at 552,
The Supreme Court held that the Fifth Amendment could not be invoked successfully to resist the order of the court to produce the child.
Id.
at 555,
A.
Although
Bouknight,
at first blush, may appear similar factually to the present case, its reasoning is not applicable to the present case. First, in the present case, the juvenile court’s contempt order was not based on Teresa’s failure to
produce
Ariel, but rather upon her failure to
testify
regarding her knowledge of his whereabouts, first couched in the present
*249
tense and later framed in terms of the relatively near past. The Supreme Court long ago held that the Fifth Amendment is inapplicable to a court order requiring the production of documents or other tangible objects.
See Fisher,
Teresa, however, was not held in contempt for her failure to produce Ariel, but rather for her refusal to give a purely testimonial communication. At the time of the 5 June 2002 hearing, the juvenile court appeared satisfied that she may not be aware of the present whereabouts of Ariel due to the fact that she had been incarcerated for the previous ten months. Nonetheless, the court surmised that the circumstances of her last contact with Ariel might be of assistance to the authorities in determining his present location. Although Teresa may have been required to produce Ariel if he was within her control, compelling her to inform the court of the whereabouts of the subject of the production order is foreclosed by the Fifth Amendment, if properly asserted as here.
See U.S. v. Hubbell,
In
Curdo,
the Supreme Court held that a custodian of corporate records could not be compelled to testify regarding the whereabouts of documents that the custodian was required to produce pursuant to a court order.
B.
In
Bouknight,
the Supreme Court also concluded that because the mother consented to the conditions imposed by BCDSS on the retention of her physical custody of the child, Bouknight subjected herself to the “routine operation of the regulatory system” and therefore her ability to invoke the Fifth Amendment was reduced.
Nonetheless, BCDSS argues that
Bouknight
reaffirms and even extends the holding of
California v. Byers,
In
Byers,
the Supreme Court upheld a California statute that required drivers of motor vehicles involved in accidents to stop at the scene and provide their names and addresses.
In the present case, it is quite clear that requiring Teresa to testify about her knowledge of Ariel’s whereabouts
*252
is completely testimonial and not “an essentially neutral act.”
See Hubbell,
The primary distinction between
Bouknight
and
Byers
on the one hand and the present case is that the compelled statement sought from Teresa meets the threshold test for a situation where the Fifth Amendment may be invoked properly, namely, the information sought was compelled, testimonial in nature, and bore a sufficient likelihood of being incriminating. Furthermore, Teresa did not subject herself voluntarily to the regulatory scheme of the BCDSS, and she obviously
*253
feared the potential use of her responses in the pending criminal proceeding.
Bouknight
counsels us that the Fifth Amendment retains its vigor, despite the existence of a regulatory regime, when the compelled disclosures are of the type normally covered by the Fifth Amendment.
III.
Although we conclude that Teresa was entitled to refuse to answer the inquiries of the court, our holding does not carry with it any blessing of Teresa’s role, if any, in spiriting Ariel from foster care. When a child is taken properly into State custody to prevent further abuse, it is imperative that the State do all within its power to ensure that the child is provided with a safe and healthy environment.
See Bouknight,
The State argues that the “societal interest in protecting children transcends the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination and cannot be a barrier to compelling the disclosure of information necessary to protect human life.” Viscerally and emotionally, this is an argument of some persuasive force. Although it is true that the interest in protecting children, especially children in the custody of the State, is an extremely important interest, however, such an interest does not justify abandonment of our constitutional
*254
foundations.
See In re Gault,
Several other courts have addressed whether the assertion of the right against self-incrimination should be balanced against the State’s interest in protecting abused or missing children.
See, e.g., In re J.A.,
Likewise, the State here may not rely on a “best interests of Ariel” argument to compel Teresa to incriminate herself. She was not offered or granted use immunity for her role, if any,
*255
in Ariel’s disappearance on 5 June 2002
11
Once a recalcitrant parent is granted use immunity, the threat of using his or her statement against that person is lifted and the parent must testify or face contempt of court charges. The court may then punish a parent who refuses to testify without offending the constitutional guarantees of the Fifth Amendment.
See Kastigar v. U.S.,
All that the Fifth Amendment requires is that a criminal defendant not be forced to give testimony that could be used to incriminate himself or herself. The State is free to pursue kidnapping charges against Teresa, but it must do its own homework. The State may not force Teresa to condemn herself any more than the State may force the common thief to be a witness against himself or herself.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS AFFIRMED. COSTS TO BE PAID BY PETITIONER.
Notes
. On 19 January 2001, the Court of Special Appeals, in an unreported opinion, overturned the conviction for direct contempt and the violation of probation.
. At the time of oral argument in the present case, we were informed that the kidnapping charge against Teresa remained pending.
. This charge was based on Teresa’s interference with a master’s shelter care order. Although Teresa was convicted of this offense also, the Court of Special Appeals reversed the conviction in another unreported opinion filed 12 November 2003.
. Although Teresa was released from custody, she retained a right of appeal as to the contempt determination because Maryland law allows
*244
individuals to appeal from a contempt finding despite having been released from the imprisonment brought about by the contempt.
Droney v. Droney,
. Although the juvenile court held Teresa in contempt on several occasions over the relevant 13 month period, the Court of Special Appeals held that Teresa's appeal was timely only as to the 5 June 2002 order.
In re Ariel G.,
. The sole question posed in BCDSS’s petition for certiorari was: "Did the Court of Special Appeals misconstrue
Baltimore City Department of Social Services v. Bouknight,
. In certain situations in certain civil proceedings in Maryland courts, such as when a party in a divorce case invokes the Fifth Amendment rather than answer a question regarding whether he or she committed adultery, there may be adverse consequences short of incarceration, such as the drawing of an adverse inference where the information sought is material to the proceedings. See
Robinson v. Robinson,
. Because the kidnapping statute, Md.Code (2002), § 3-502 of the Criminal Law Article, explicitly excludes situations in which a minor child is abducted by the child's parent, we presume that the Carroll County prosecutor charged Teresa under Md.Code (2002), § 3-503 of *246 the Criminal Law Article. Section 3-503 describes the crime of child kidnapping: "A person may not, without color of right:
(i) forcibly abduct, take, or carry away a child under the age of 12 years from:
1. the home or usual place of abode of the child; or
2. the custody and control of the child’s parent or legal guardian;
(ii) without the consent of the child’s parent or legal guardian, persuade or entice a child under the age of 12 years from:
1. the child’s home or usual place of abode; or
2. the custody and control of the child's parent or legal guardian; or
(iii) with the intent of depriving the child's parent or legal guardian, or any person lawfully possessing the child, of the custody, care, and control of the child, knowingly secrete or harbor a child under the age of 12 years.”
. Although the Carroll County prosecutor’s theory is not clear in the record, the kidnapping charge was apparently based on the supposition that although Ariel may have left the foster home by his own will, he may have returned to his mother, and she had a duty to return him to foster care.
. The Court explained that the act of stopping one's vehicle at the scene of an accident was less testimonial “than requiring a person in custody to stand or walk in a police lineup, to speak proscribed words, or to give samples of handwriting, fingerprints, or blood."
Byers,
. Md.Code (1973, 2002 Repl.Vol.), § 9-123 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article allows a prosecutor to seek a grant of use immunity from the court when the testimony of a witness may be necessary to the public interest or the prosecutor anticipates that the witness will invoke the Fifth Amendment.
