Appellants have been convicted of criminal contempt for refusing to testify in the criminal triаl of one Donald Ward. At issue here is the question of whether or not their refusal to testify was protеcted by their privilege against self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment. We hold that their refusal was protеcted and therefore reverse their convictions.
In May of 1981, appellants pled guilty in a fеderal district court in Georgia to *1298 charges of passing counterfeit currency. In the course of his Rule 11 proceeding, and at his sentencing, appellant Richard Fortin testified that he purсhased the counterfeit currency from an unknown individual driving a truck near Tampa, Florida. At those sаme proceedings, appellant Janice Fortin testified that she received the currеncy from her husband, Richard. Both appellants, however, had previously given sworn statements to Secret Service Agents that the source of the currency was Donald Ward, Mrs. Fortin’s brother.
Both aрpellants were called by the Government to testify at the trial of Donald Ward in the Southern District of Florida. Relying upon the Fifth Amendment, they refused to testify concerning the source of the currency unless given immunity from any potential perjury prosecution. The Government refused. The court determined that, by virtue of their guilty pleas and previous statements, they had waived their right against self-incrimination. Upon their continued refusal to testify and their failure to show cause for such refusal, the court found them guilty of criminal contempt and gave them each six month sentences.
The law is clear, and the Government concedes, that a plea of guilty waives the right against self-incrimination only as to matters which might incriminate the defendant of the particular crime to which the pleа is made. It does not constitute a waiver with respect to information which could subject the dеfendant to a separate prosecution.
E.g., United States v. Metz,
Aрpellants’ argument is well taken. As a preface to its survey of the cases in which the privilege against self-incrimination had been found to have been waived, the Supreme Court noted in 1896 that it was only in cases where the testimony sought “[could not] possibly [have been] used as a basis for, or
in aid of,
a criminal prosecution against the witness” that the privilege had not been upheld.
Brown v. Walker,
Notwithstanding the above principles, however, the Government argues that appellants had waived their Fifth Amendment privilege by virtue of their prior inconsistent statements. The Government cites
Rogers v. United States,
While the rule being urged by the Government is a valid one, it is generally only аpplicable when the “disclosure of the details” is being sought in the same proceeding where the initial “criminating facts have been voluntarily revealed.”
E.g., United States v. St. Pierre,
[t]he privilege [against self-incrimination] attaches to the witness in each particular case in which he may be called on tо *1299 testify, and whether or not he may claim it is to be determined without reference to what he said whеn testifying as a witness on some other trial, or on a former trial of the same ease, and without rеference to his declarations at some other time or place.
In re Neff,
REVERSED and REMANDED with instructions.
