The fifth amendment exists, in part, to “assure that an individual is not compelled to produce evidence which later may be used against him as an accused in a criminal action.”
Maness v. Meyers,
I
The IRS initiated an investigation of Roger Sharp to determine his tax liability for the years 1977, 1978, 1980, 1981, and 1982, after determining that Sharp had failed to file a federal income tax return for those years. 1 As part of the investigation, an IRS Revenue Officer issued a summons in December of 1987, requiring Sharp to appear for questioning and to produce financial records and documents for the years in question. Sharp failed to comply with the summons, and the government, pursuant to 26 U.S.C. §§ 7402(a), (b), and 7604(a), petitioned the district court for judicial enforcement. The district court, after a hearing, entered an order enforcing the summons and directing Sharp to appear and comply with the summons. Sharp did appear on the appointed day but he refused to testify or produce any documents.
The government then petitioned for an order holding Sharp in contempt. Because he faced criminal penalties, the court appointed counsel for Sharp, who had been unrepresented up to this point. At the show cause hearing, Sharp provided some records to the IRS but these documents proved useless. As a result the court ordered Sharp to answer IRS questions concerning his employment and his assets for the years in question. Sharp, accompanied by counsel this time, appeared for further questioning by the IRS and was asked a series of questions designed to elicit information on (1) his income for 1977-1982; (2) bank records or real estate records pertaining to any income and assets for those years; (3) his employment; and (4) the location of the banks in which he kept income or assets. Sharp, through his court-appointed counsel, invoked his fifth amendment privilege against self-incrimination in response to each IRS question.
*1170 The district court then ordered Sharp to answer the IRS questions. The court rejected Sharp’s fifth amendment claim, finding that “in light of the government’s representation (implicit, if not express) that it has no present intention of pursuing criminal prosecution of respondent, ... respondent’s fear for self-incrimination is merely ‘trifling or imaginary.’ ” The court added that if Sharp faced criminal prosecution in the future, the court could then, if appropriate, either dismiss the charges or suppress information obtained from the compelled testimony.
Upon Sharp’s request, the district court certified the question for interlocutory appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), and we granted leave to appeal.
II
At the outset, we reject the government’s contention that Sharp’s claim of privilege came too late to be considered. Specifically, the contention is that he might have raised it earlier in resisting the court’s enforcement order; that he did not; that the order was therefore a final one from which he might have appealed but did not; and that he was therefore precluded by principles of res judicata from raising it thereafter.
Such a failure may in appropriate cases operate to preclude later assertions of the privilege,
see, e.g., United States v. Rylander,
III
The fifth amendment’s protection against self-incrimination applies in any type of proceeding whether civil, criminal, administrative, investigatory, or adjudicatory.
Maness,
Accordingly, it may apply in the context of an IRS investigation into civil tax liability, given the recognized potential that such investigations have for leading to criminal prosecutions.
Mathis v. United States,
In this context, as generally, the privilege may not, however, be invoked on no more than the mere assertion by one claiming the privilege that information sought by the government may be incriminating. Whether there is a sufficient hazard of incrimination is of course a question for the courts asked to enforce the privilege.
Hoffman v. United States,
In making this determination, a court asks essentially two things. The first is whether the information is incriminating in nature. This may appear in either of two ways. It may be evident on its face, in light of the question asked and the circumstances of its asking.
Id.
at 486-87,
*1171
If the incriminating nature of the information is established by either route, there remains the question whether criminal prosecution is sufficiently a possibility, all things considered, to trigger the need for constitutional protection. As to this, the proper test simply assesses the objective reasonableness of the target’s claimed apprehension of prosecution. And on the better view of things here, the reasonableness of a claimed apprehension should simply be assumed once incriminating potential is found, unless there are genuine questions about the government’s legal ability to prosecute.
2
That is to say, once incriminating potential is found to exist, courts should not engage in raw speculation as to whether the government will actually prosecute,
see Edgerton,
Here, the incriminating nature of the information sought from Sharp was evident from the very questions asked under the circumstances of their asking. Sharp was asked to provide information directly relating to his income and his knowledge of it for the years in which he was under investigation for failing to file returns. Willfulness is an essential element of the criminal offense of failing to file income tax returns. 26 U.S.C. § 7203. Hence, it is evident that the information sought would “furnish a link in the chain of evidence that could lead to prosecution,” and that suffices.
See Hoffman,
That leads to the second inquiry, whether Sharp’s asserted apprehension of criminal prosecution was a reasonable one under the circumstances. It was on this point that the district court rejected his claim — on the express basis that “in light of the government’s representation (implicit, if not express) that it has no present intention of pursuing criminal prosecution ... [Sharp’s] fear of prosecution is merely ‘trifling or imaginary.’ ” 3 As our statement of the proper test has indicated, the district court erred in this conclusion.
With the incriminating nature of the information facially evident, the reasonableness of Sharp’s apprehension of prosecution should have been assumed, unless there were reasons (other than the government’s express or implied representation of its present intention) to question the government’s legal ability to prosecute. In the district court, the government suggested no such constraints, relying simply on its assertion of present intention, and the district court obviously relied on no extrinsic legal constraints on prosecution.
On this appeal, however, the government has sought to raise for the first time the proposition that the six-year statute of limitations applicable to willful
*1172
failure to file, 26 U.S.C. § 6531, has expired “with respect to all years under investigation and for which information has been sought.”
4
While we might be justified in declining to consider this newly advanced alternative theory for affirmance,
see Singleton v. Wulff,
Sharp was being investigated for,
inter alia,
tax years 1981 and 1982. According to the concededly thin case law on this question,
see United States v. Doelker,
IV
As indicated, the district court sought to buttress its rejection of Sharp’s claim by observing that if prosecution did ensue, the court could then act to protect him by either dismissing the charges or suppressing evidence. Presumably recognizing that this cannot act as a substitute for the constitutional protections provided by the self-incrimination clause, the government does not rely upon this proffer by the district court as an alternative basis for affirmance. We nevertheless address the point briefly in view of the district court’s apparent reliance upon it.
In brief sum, a court may not on this basis find a person’s fifth amendment right sufficiently protectible by the court that his answers to incriminating questions may be compelled. The appropriate device for achieving this end is the grant of use immunity under 18 U.S.C. §§ 6002, 6003,
Kastigar v. United States,
V
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the order of the district court compelling the appellant, at peril of a contempt sanction, to answer questions propounded by the IRS. This is of course without prejudice to the government’s right to seek com *1173 pulsion by other, valid means if so disposed.
REVERSED
Notes
. Sharp’s counsel submitted at oral argument that Sharp is a "tax protester." That he may be is irrelevant to the fifth amendment issue he raises.
. An assumption sufficiently justified, indeed compelled, by the existence of the government's general constitutional obligation faithfully to execute its criminal (as other) laws, U.S. Const. Art. II, § 3, principally by prosecuting (subject of course to prosecutorial discretion) all those whose commission of crime it has sufficient evidence to prove. Certainly an apprehension that in a particular case that general obligation will be carried out could not be thought unreasonable.
. In so holding, the district court relied on
United States v. Reis,
. There is the oddity about the government’s position that if it has indeed understood from the outset — whether correctly or not — that it could not prosecute, it could long since have acted decisively on that understanding and proceeded with its civil investigation without interruption. As Sharp notes in responding to this newly raised theory, had the government committed itself on the matter in some binding way this appeal never would have occurred. Appellant’s Reply Br. at 3. In the end, the government equivocates on the point even as it raises it. At one point in its brief it suggests that "when the possibility of prosecution ap pears to be remote (as when the statute of limitations has run) rejection of a claim of privilege is proper.” Appellee’s Br. at 10-11 (emphasis added). At another, it asserts even more disarmingly that "since the applicable statutes of limitations have expired, we cannot fathom how taxpayer could possibly be incriminated....” Id. at 11. What the government has not yet done is formally to relieve the target’s apprehension — as obviously it could by either of several available means — that prosecution remains a possibility. So long as the government thus attempts to keep this anchor to windward while this appeal is pending, Sharp's apprehension is not relieved.
