delivered the Opinion of the Court.
{1 This case requires us to determine whether the trial court properly revoked respondent Carl Daniel Ruch's probation for, among other things, refusing to enroll or participate in sex offender treatment based on his concern that in the course of such treatment, he would have been compelled to incriminate himself in violation of the Fifth Amendment.
~ T2 As a condition of probation, the trial court ordered Ruch to complete a sex offender polygraph and participate in sex offense specific treatment intervention. Ruch, however, refused to enroll or participate in such treatment, contending that participating would have violated his privilege against self-incrimination.
13 As a result of Ruch's refusal to enroll or participate in treatment, as well as his violations of certain other probation conditions, the trial court revoked Ruch's probation and sentenced him to a prison term. A division of the court of appeals concluded, however, that on the facts of this case, revoking Ruch's probation based on his refusal to attend sex offender treatment violated his Fifth Amendment rights, The division thus remanded the case to the trial court to determine whether Ruch's probation officer would have sought to revoke Ruch's probation based solely on the remaining probation violations and, if so, whether the court would have revoked Ruch's probation on those grounds. _ - j
{4 We reverse, Unlike the division, we perceive no Fifth Amendment violation here, where the trial court revoked Ruch's probation based on his total refusal to attend treatment. In these cirenmstances, Ruch's purported invocation of his Fifth Amendment rights was premature and amounted to a prohibited blanket assertion of the privilege.
15 Accordingly, we hold that the trial court. properly revoked Ruch's probation based on his refusal to attend treatment, and we- remand this case with instructions that the trial court's order be reinstated.
I. Facts and Pfoceduxjal History
T6 In the spring and summer of 2007, Ruch repeatedly contacted and sent unwanted text messages to the fifteen-year-old vie-tim, who was on the same high school cheer-leading team as Ruch's daughter (Ruch was the president of the booster club for the team). The victim eventually reported these contacts to the police and also alleged that Ruch had touched her butt during a party at his home.
T7 As a result of these allegations, Ruch was charged with sexual assault on a child by one in a position of trust and harassment-stalking (causing emotional distress). The case ultimately proceeded to trial, where the jury found Ruch not guilty of the sexual assault charge but guilty of the stalking charge. le
T8 Prior to sentencing, the trial court ordered Ruch to undergo a peychosexual evaluation, which the court said would provide it with information to consider at sentencing. Ruch participated in the evaluation, and the evaluator found him to be cooperative but cautious and at times evasive.
T9 The case proceeded to sentencing, and at the sentencing hearing, Ruch's counsel explained that Ruch had been cautious in discussing the charged conduct because he was contemplating an appeal, Accordingly, during the evaluation, he was trying to balance his court-ordered obligation to cooperate with his Fifth Amendment right to remain silent, about which counsel had advised him.
10 The court sentenced Ruch to ninety days in the county jail and six years of intensive supervision probation ("ISP"). The initial probation conditions did-not include a requirement of sex offender treatment. Subsequently, however, the probation department asked the court to add additional conditions of probation for sex offenders. Among these proposed conditions were requirements that Ruch complete a sex offender polygraph and participate in sex offense specific treat
' 11 Thereafter, Ruch filed a written objection to the additional conditions. In his objection, Ruch argued that (1) his treatment program would require him to admit to a sexual offense; (2) if he did not eventually do so, he would be terminated from the treatment program, which would constitute a violation of the terms and conditions of his ISP; (3) he had a Fifth Amendment right to remain silent during the pendency of his direct appeal; and (4) were he to speak about any aspect of this case, it could be used against him in any possible future trial, He thus requested that the court strike the additional conditions or hold them in abeyance until his direct appeal and any new trial that might result were completed.
{12 The trial court subsequently set a hearing on Ruch's objection, At this hearing, Ruch's probation officer testified that under the Sex Offender Management Board standards in effect at that time, probationers were allowed to deny committing the offenses for which they were convicted for the first three months that they were in sex offender treatment. If after these three months, the probationers were still in denial, then the probation department would file a complaint to revoke probation.
113 The court reaffirmed its prior order that Rueh's probation include the additional conditions, effectively overruling Ruch's objection to those conditions. Ruch then signed a form agreeing to the additional conditions, including the condition that he attend and actively participate in sex offender evaluation and treatment.
1 14 Thereafter, the probation department filed a complaint and an amended complaint to revoke Ruch's probation. The department alleged that Ruch had committed four probation violations, including failing to enroll in sex offender treatment. After a hearing, the court found that Ruch had committed all four of the alleged violations, and it ultimately revoked Ruch's probation and sentenced him to four years in the Department of Corree-tions.
4 15 Ruch appealed, arguing, as pertinent here, that by requiring him to attend treatment while his appeal was pending, the trial court had violated his Fifth Amendment right against self-inerimination. People v. Ruch,
¶ 16 The division agreed with Ruch. Id. As pertinent here, the division first concluded that Ruch had properly invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination:
[UJnder the cireumstances presented here, Ruch was not required to wait until a counselor asked an incriminating question to raise his Fifth Amendment objection. Rather, he was only required to raise his objection once it became known that the terms of his probation required him to incriminate himself or otherwise risk revocation.
Id. at I 54.
17 Having concluded that Ruch had sufficiently invoked his Fifth Amendment right, the division proceeded to consider whether the trial court had violated that right when it based its decision to revoke Ruch's probation, in part, on Ruch's decision not to enroll in and attend treatment. Id. at 159-68. The division began by discussing a prior division's analysis in People v. Guatney,
¶ 18 We granted the People's petition for certiorari.
II. Standard of Review °
19 We review de novo the application of the Fifth Amendment to the undisputed facts in this case. See People v. Roberson,
IH. Analysis
120 The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which is applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment, see Malloy v. Hogan,
121 These rights, however, are not unlimited. As more fully set forth in Roberson, 122-383, which we also decide today, the Fifth Amendment prohibits only compelled testimony that is incriminating, Testimony is incriminating not only when it would itself support a conviction, but also when it would furnish a link in the chain of evidence needed to prosecute the accused. Id. at T 28. Thus, when a witness demonstrates a possibility of prosecution that is more than fanciful, he or she has demonstrated a reasonable fear of prosecution sufficient to meet constitutional muster, Id.
$22 Testimony is compelled when the state threatens to inflict "potent sanctions" unless the privilege against self-incrimination is surrendered. Id. at 32 (quoting Leftowitz v. Cunningham,
123 The privilege against self-inerim-ination, however, "is an option of refusal, not a prohibition of inquiry." People v. Austin, 159 Colo, 445,
< 24 Allowing the Fifth Amendment privilege to be asserted as a blanket claim in anticipation of questions actually propounded would 'impermissibly convert the privilege from a constitutionally justified option of refusal into a prohibition against inquiry, Feigin,
1 25 Here, the People assert that the division below erred in concluding that requiring Ruch to attend sex offender treatment violated his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. For several reasons, we agree. _ '
(26 First, as numerous courts have recognized, simply requiring a sex offender to attend treatment is not, in and of itself, incriminating. See, eg., Huschak v. Gray,
127 As the United States Supreme Court made clear in Murphy,
1 28 Second, the Righth Cireuit has recognized that although a state cannot penalize a prisoner for invoking his or her Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination, it may deny benefits like parole if the denial is based on the prisoner's refusal to participate in rehabilitation and not on the invocation of his or her Fifth Amendment privilege. Doe v. Sauer,
129 Third, although Ruch expressed concern regarding what might potentially be asked during sex offender treatment, he had not been asked a single question requiring him to incriminate himself, the probation department had not threatened him with revocation, and nothing in the trial court's order precluded him from invoking his right against self-incrimination in response to specific questions asked of him during treatment. Again, this case is similar to Murphy, 465 U.S, at 437,
{30 The same is true here. Although Ruch's probation officer indicated that probationers were entitled to deny committing their offenses of conviction for a period of time but would ultimately have to acknowledge the conduct for which they were on probation, neither she nor anyone else from the probation department had threatened to revoke Ruch's probation, and nothing in Ruch's probation conditions either addressed his Fifth Amendment rights or reqmred him to waive those rights.
131 Finally, to the extent that any questions asked of Ruch in treatment would have related to the sexual assault charge, he could not properly have asserted the privilege against self-incrimination because he had already been acquitted of that charge, and double jeopardy principles prevented him from being re-tried on that count, regardless of what he said in treatment. See People v. Porter,
182 For these reasons, we conclude that Ruch's refusal to attend treatment based on his hypothetical concerns as to what might have been asked of him amounted to a blanket claim of privilege in advance of any questions being propounded, and this blanket claim was both ineffective and premature. See Salinas,
IV. Conclusion
1 33 For these reasons, the division's order is reversed, and the case is remanded with instructions that the trial court's order revoking Ruch's probation and sentencing him to four years in the Department of Corree-tions be reinstated.
Notes
. . We granted certiorari to review the following issues: ,
1. Whether the defendant's blanket refusal to attend the sex offender treatment program was a legitimate and effective invocation of his Fifth Amendment privilege.
2. Whether the trial court violated the defendant's Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination by revoking his probation based on his refusal to attend sex offender treatment.
. Some courts have noted a narrow exception to the blanket invocation rule and allow a blanket assertion of privilege when "there is a reasonable basis for believing a danger to the witness [of self-incrimination] might exist in answering any relevant question." United States v. Thornton,
