delivered the opinion of the court:
The defendant appeals from an order of the circuit court of Coles County finding him guilty of contempt оf court and confining him in the Coles County jail “until such time as the order to produce handwriting samples aforеsaid is complied with”. The defendant was released on a $1000 recognizance bond pending apрeal of the contempt order and sanction. We affirm.
The three indictments were brought against the dеfendant for forgery. He was tried by the jury on one and acquitted. Thereafter prior to trial on the othеr indictments, the prosecution during pretrial proceedings filed a motion asking that the defendant be оrdered to provide the prosecution with handwriting samples. The court ordered the defendant to “give handwriting samples of all the checks set forth in the indictments in the above-captioned cases, and said defendant is ordered to provide at least four samples of each check.” The cоurt was advised that the defendant would not comply with this order and the court then found defendant in contempt of court and ordered him committed to the Coles County jail. The order was entered prior to the еffective date of Rule No. 413(a) (viii), which requires a defendant to “provide a sample of his handwriting” — subjeсt to constitutional limitations. The order of the circuit court must be scrutinized to determine whether it invades аny of the defendant’s constitutional rights at the time it was entered. We conclude that they were not.
The basic thrust of the defendant’s position is that there is a vast difference between the language of the fifth amendment to the United States Constitution which provides “No person shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself # # and the Illinois Constitution. The defendant does not deny that under Gilbert v. California,
We think that this differentiation between the Federal and thе Illinois Constitution is without merit. In the recent case of People ex rel. Hanrahan v. Power,
It also quoted from United States v. Mam,
In the case at bar, there is a slight difference in the facts. Here the request аnd the order were for the defendant to make four copies of the forged check. The Statе’s Attorney readily said that these checks would be used by way of comparison and not offered in evidence to prove the substantive facts of the forgery. The refusal of the defendant to comply with this constitutional order of the circuit court is civil contempt and punishable as such.
Accordingly, the order adjudging the defendant in contempt of court is affirmed and the cause remanded to the circuit court to proceed in conformity herewith and impose such proper sanctions as may be required upon refusal of the defendant to comply.
Judgment affirmed; cause remanded for further proceedings.
CRAVEN, P. J., and TRAPP, J., concur.
