• Weinberg was subpoenaed to appear as a witness before the April grand jury which *395 was investigating an alleged conspiracy by Arthur Flegenheimer and others to violate the National Prohibition Act. The witness was informed that by virtue of section 30 of title 2 of said act (27 USCA § 47) he was given an immunity from prosecution for any matter arising out of his testimony, and was then asked what his business was in 1929 and 1930, and whether the signatures on two bank account cards in the names of “Abe Berg” and “Jack Berg,” respectively, were his. Each of these questions he refused to answer on the ground that “it would tend to degrade and incriminate me.” Thereupon the grand jury caused him to be taken before the District Court and a presentment was handed up charging him with willfully obstructing their investigation by refusing to answer the questions put to him. Stenographic minutes of the questions and answers were read, and Weinberg was asked by the court whether he understood the situation and whether he still refused to answer these questions. To both inquiries he replied in the affirmative, and the court thereupon sentenced him to sixty days’ imprisonment. The foEowing colloquy then occurred:
“Defendant Weinberg: You want me to testify against myself, when they are looking up my income taxes?
“The Court: You cannot be prosecuted.
“Defendant Weinberg: I can be on the income tax law. Will you grant me immunity on the income tax law and the Federal Prohibition Act?
“Mr. Sharp: The statute speaks for itself.
“The Court: Whether or not you are granted immunity as to an income tax violation, can be determined after indictment, if one should be rendered for that violation.
“Defendant Weinberg: I am asked questions about the bank cards here; I am just indicting myself.
“The Court: I would think offhand, without having to decide it at this time, that you could not be prosecuted for any crime as to whieh you had given evidence under this compulsion, but I am not deciding that. It is unnecessary for me to decide that at this time. Your remedy is to raise that in defense to any indictment that might be obtained against you, and then we will determine whether or not you were given immunity under the law, but at the present time I direct you to answer these questions, and if you do not answer them, we will put you in jail. You must either answer them or not.
“Defendant Weinberg: I refuse to answer it on the same grounds.
“The Court: AE right, sixty days.”
The appellant contends that the judgment of contempt was erroneous because the National Prohibition Act gives immunity from prosecution only for offenses against that act, and therefore he can claim the constitutional privEege against self-incrimination in so far as his testimony may disclose some other crime. It is urged that his answers would disclose a violation of the income tax law. To justify silence under the constitutional privilege (Const. Amend. 5), it must appear that an answer to the question will directly tend to incriminate; a remote possibility of danger will not suffice. Mason v. United States,
In Counselman v. Hitchcock,
It is further contended that the appellant’s refusal to answer was not contumacious because the court did not give him absolute assurance of immunity from prosecution under the tax laws. The contention is without merit. The judge stated that in his opinion the appellant could not be prosecuted for any crime as to which he had given evidence. He could properly go no further. The actual adjudication of immunity can be made only in a subsequent prosecution of the witness for a crime concerning which he had testified. See Heike v. United States,
The judgment was correct and is affirmed.
