Appellant was convicted of three offenses arising out of an attempted armed robbery. The question presented by his appeal is whether the government may compel a suspect to make a sample of his handwriting when he has no counsel pres *818 ent and before he is taken to a committing magistrate. 1
(1) One issue raised is whether the Fifth Amendment is violated by compelling a suspect to make a handwriting sample. Is a handwriting sample testimonial and communicative evidence or is it tangible, physical evidence ? This distinction was utilized by Justice Holmes in 1910 when, writing for a unanimous Court, he rejected as “an extravagant extension of the 5th Amendment” a claim that an accused could not be compelled to put on a blouse alleged to belong to him in order to see if it fit him. The 5th Amendment privilege, said the Court prohibits “compulsion to extort communications from him, not an exclusion of his body as evidence when it may be material.” Holt v. United States,
This was reaffirmed by the Supreme Court recently in Schmerber v. State of California,
offers no protection against compulsion to submit to fingerprinting, photographing, or measurements,
to write
or speak for
identification,
to appear in court, to stand, to assume a stance, to walk, or to make a particular gesture.
As these cases indicate, the constitutional privilege is not designed to isolate the accused from the trial process. For instance, the presence of the accused in the courtroom to permit examination and identification by witnesses to the crime is the most obvious example of an accused being a “witness” against himself. But it is allowed because the accused’s presence is not a “communication.” For the same reasons, the handwriting exemplar does not fall within the privilege; written words used as a handwriting sample and not for their meaning communicate nothing about knowledge of a crime. An exemplar is relevant only for the shape and direction of some lines and marks which may identify the writer, as fingerprints and photographs do. Words can be used as physical evidence, apart from their communicative content; even if an accused were coerced to write out a full confession, random words of that confessipn could be used as an example of the accused’s handwriting, provided of course the jury did not learn they were from a confession.
The holding in Fitzsimmons v. United States, No. 8857, 10th Cir., Jan. 25, 1967,
2
that the Fifth Amendment does cover handwriting exemplars, was based on several assumptions we regard as unsound: the first is that the subject, by writing words on a sheet of paper, “communicates” that these marks represent his handwriting and thus the exemplar is communicative evidence. By this logic,
*819
however, the defendant in
Holt
who put on the blouse “communicated” that the blouse might be his because it fit him. This is not communication within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment. United States v. Wade,
(2) Appellant’s claim that the taking of the exemplar in the absence of counsel violated his Sixth Amendment right is equally without merit.
Gilbert, swpra
note 1, at 818. Not only is the taking of the exemplars not at a critical stage of the proceedings entitling an accused to the assistance of counsel, but Appellant has pointed to no function counsel could perform, were he present, save the futile advice not to give the sample; there is thus no right to counsel which is violated by taking an exemplar in the absence of counsel. Compare United States v. Serao,
(3) Appellant also argues that a violation of Mallory v. United States,
Appellant apparently cites Bynum v. United States,
We have considered Appellant’s other claims and find them without merit.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Gilbert v. State of California,
. The Fitzsimmons opinion was withdrawn by the Tenth Circuit after this opinion was issued and after the Supreme Court decision in Gilbert, supra note 1. At the same time the Tenth Circuit issued an order affirming Fitzsimmons without opinion, Fitzsimmons v. United States, aff’d by order, 10th Cir. No. 8857, July 12, 1967. While the original opinion is available only in slip form and will not be reported, we discuss it because of its relevance to the problem presented in this case.
