On application of the State we granted certiorari to consider a ruling of the First Judicial District Court, Parish of Caddo, Louisiana, which denied the State’s motion for an order requiring the defendant to give handwriting exemplars to the officers of the police department.
The defendant William Earnest Thompson was arrested and charged with the theft of $378.59. In its motion for handwriting exemplars the State alleged that the defendant used lost and stolen credit cards issued to customers of Humble Oil & Refining Company in order to submit false invoices to which he forged the signatures of the owners of these credit cards. The defendant was under arrest 1 when the State filed its motion requesting handwriting samples, and one of the judges of the district court signed an ex parte order on March 4, 1970, ordering the defendant to furnish handwriting exemplars. When the motion and order were made known to the defendant in open court, he objected, and a hearing was set. On March 20, 1970, another judge of the district court rescinded the original order and denied the State’s request for the handwriting specimens. The State objected to this ruling, reserved a bill of exception, and made application to this court for writs.
The trial judge in his per curiam to the bill of exception treated the motion as one seeking discovery, and in refusing it cited State v. Hunter,
In Gilbert v. California,
Our own court in State v. Tarrance,
It is argued for the defendant that notwithstanding all of this authority an accused should not be ordered or coerced to furnish a sample of his handwriting. Schmerber v. California, supra, specifically held that in the face of refusal to submit to a blood test a defendant may be compelled to furnish a blood sample by physical invasion with needle and extraction of blood by a physician. Schmerber likened the taking of a blood sample to the “ * * * compulsion to submit to fingerprinting, photographing, or measurements, to zvrite or speak for identification, to appear in court, to stand, to assume a stance, to walk, or to make a particular gesture”. (Emphasis supplied.) While the court in Schmerber did not necessarily approve the past application of the distinction, it recognized the rule: “ * * * The distinction which has emerged, often expressed in different ways, is that the privilege [against self-incrimination] is a bar against compelling ‘communications’ or ‘testimony,’ but *939 that compulsion which makes a suspect or accused the source of ‘real or physical evidence’ does not violate it.” (Emphasis supplied.)
The Wade case, supra, held that the exhibition of a defendant for observation by prosecuting witnesses in a lineup before trial involved no compulsion of the accused to give evidence having testimonial significance. It adopted the language of Schmerber, quoted above.
Finally, although Gilbert v. California did not involve the question of an order for the production of handwriting, the court treated the sample of the defendant’s handwriting as having been given involuntarily or under compulsion. It said: “We pass the question of waiver since we conclude that the taking of the exemplars violates none of petitioner’s constitutional rights.” Gilbert is bottomed on the rationale and the language of Schmerber, and it is an affirmative holding that a defendant may be compelled to submit a handwriting sample.
We specifically hold here that one under arrest may be ordered to furnish handwriting exemplars to the proper officers. The use of court orders and of the court’s contempt power is certainly more humane than physical coercion. While not necessarily the only method, this is a proper and legal method for compelling one under arrest to give handwriting exemplars.
For the reasons assigned the order of the district court refusing the State’s request for handwriting exemplars from the defendant is recalled and set aside, and the defendant is ordered to make and give to the officers of the Shi'eveport Police Department handwriting exemplars as requested in the State’s written motion. The writ of mandamus is issued, and the district court is ordered to implement as necessary the judgment of this court in accord with the reasons herein stated.
Notes
. It is apparently conceded, and for the purposes of this opinion we accept as true, that the arrest and detention of the defendant wore legal.
. See also Lewis v. United States, 127 U.S. App.D.C. 269,
