OPINION
MAY, Judge.
S.H. and S.C. (collectively, “Parents”) appeal a trial court order granting the State’s petition to compel their testimony by providing use immunity. Parents argue a prosecutor may not grant use immunity when there is no grand jury proceeding and the persons whose testimony is sought have not been charged with a crime.
We affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On September 27, 2010, S.C. gave birth at her home. When the child’s father, S.H., returned home, he found S.C. bleeding and took her and the infant to a hospital. The medical staff noted the baby showed signs of injury in the form of multiple puncture wounds. Police officers spoke with Parents and others, who offered differing accounts of the circumstances of the birth and the cause of the wounds. The police then searched Parents’ apartment.
The prosecutor petitioned for subpoenas compelling Parents’ testimony about the circumstances surrounding the birth, and they were issued. The parents asked the trial court to quash the subpoenas on the ground they violated Parents’ constitutional privileges against self-incrimination.
The trial court granted the motions to quash and then the State asked the court to grant use immunity and compel Parents to testify. The parents objected on the same ground, but the trial court granted use immunity
and ordered Parents to testify. At this point, although Parents had not been formally charged with any crime, the trial court appointed
public defenders to represent them
and directed the parties to agree to a date on which Parents would testify. The parents moved to correct error and the trial court denied the motion.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
The parents contend a prosecutor cannot circumvent the privilege against self-incrimination during a pre-charge investigation by granting use immunity. They argue the prosecutor has authority to compel testimony via use immunity in only two circumstances: (1) when there is a grand jury investigation; or (2) after charges have been filed. Because the prosecutor can compel testimony in grand jury proceedings by granting use immunity, the State argues the prosecutor has the same authority when conducting a pre-charge investigation without a grand jury. As a prosecutor’s ability to investigate and accumulate evidence is coextensive with that of a grand jury, we agree with the State.
The trial court phrased the issue before it as “[wjhether a prosecutor investigating a crime precharge and without a grand jury has the same authority to grant use immunity as a prosecutor using a grand jury?”
(App. at 43.) It answered in the affirmative, relying on our Indiana Supreme Court’s statement in
In re Order for Ind. Bell Tel. to Disclose Records,
274 Ind. 131, 134-35, 409 N.E.2d 1089, 1091 (1980):
In 1973, prosecuting attorneys were given the power to initiate criminal prosecutions by filing an information. It should be noted this same general power was given under prior law but the instrument was called an affidavit filed by the prosecutor, rather than an information. Under the statute the prosecutor has the authority to charge an individual with the commission of a crime without first submitting the evidence to a grand jury. Along with this power to charge a person with the commission of a crime, we hold that
the investigatory powers of the prosecutor now parallel those of the grand jury. A prosecutor has the same ability to accumulate evidence as the grand jury.
(Citation omitted) (emphasis added).
The parents correctly note the language of the statute governing use immunity, Ind.Code § 35-34-2-8, addresses such immunity only when there is a grand jury:
(a) Upon request by the prosecuting attorney, the court shall grant use immunity to a witness
before the grand jury.
The court shall instruct the witness by written order or in open court that any evidence the witness gives
before the grand jury,
or evidence derived from that evidence, may not be used in any criminal prosecution against that witness, unless the evidence is volunteered by the witness or is not responsive to a question by the grand jury or the prosecutor. The court shall then instruct the witness that he must answer the ques
tions asked and produce the items requested.
(Emphasis added.) The trial court acknowledged that portion of the statute, but determined
the authority of the prosecutor to offer use immunity does not depend upon the existence of a grand jury or legislative action, but such authority is implicit in the office of the prosecutor itself. Even if use immunity authority is derived solely from legislative consent, the Indiana Supreme Court has already addressed that issue [in
Indiana Bell],
(App. at 45.)
We decline to adopt the trial court’s position that a prosecutor’s authority to offer use immunity is “implicit in the office of the prosecutor itself.”
(Id.)
We stated otherwise in
Brune v. Marshall,
169 Ind.App. 637, 640, 350 N.E.2d 661, 663 (1976):
While the office of Prosecuting Attorney may have been created by the Constitution of Indiana, the rights and duties of that office are prescribed by statute.... (T)he Prosecuting Attorney has only such power as is enumerated within the four corners of the statutory enactment defining his duties, and he has no residual common law rights or powers.
In
Bruñe,
we were unable to find statutory authority for a pre-charging deferral program to be initiated and/or operated by a prosecuting attorney as an alternative to prosecution, and we therefore concluded the prosecutor was acting beyond the scope of his authority when he established such a program and charged Bruñe a fee for participating in it.
Id.
at 641, 350 N.E.2d at 663.
Only two Indiana Code chapters appear to address a prosecutor’s authority to offer use immunity. Ind.Code §§ 35-37-3-1 through 3 provide for a grant of use immunity on a prosecutor’s request, if a witness, in any hearing or trial occurring
after an indictment or information has been filed,
refuses to answer any question or produce any item.
Those sections do not authorize use immunity in the case before us, as
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OPINION
MAY, Judge.
S.H. and S.C. (collectively, “Parents”) appeal a trial court order granting the State’s petition to compel their testimony by providing use immunity. Parents argue a prosecutor may not grant use immunity when there is no grand jury proceeding and the persons whose testimony is sought have not been charged with a crime.
We affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On September 27, 2010, S.C. gave birth at her home. When the child’s father, S.H., returned home, he found S.C. bleeding and took her and the infant to a hospital. The medical staff noted the baby showed signs of injury in the form of multiple puncture wounds. Police officers spoke with Parents and others, who offered differing accounts of the circumstances of the birth and the cause of the wounds. The police then searched Parents’ apartment.
The prosecutor petitioned for subpoenas compelling Parents’ testimony about the circumstances surrounding the birth, and they were issued. The parents asked the trial court to quash the subpoenas on the ground they violated Parents’ constitutional privileges against self-incrimination.
The trial court granted the motions to quash and then the State asked the court to grant use immunity and compel Parents to testify. The parents objected on the same ground, but the trial court granted use immunity
and ordered Parents to testify. At this point, although Parents had not been formally charged with any crime, the trial court appointed
public defenders to represent them
and directed the parties to agree to a date on which Parents would testify. The parents moved to correct error and the trial court denied the motion.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
The parents contend a prosecutor cannot circumvent the privilege against self-incrimination during a pre-charge investigation by granting use immunity. They argue the prosecutor has authority to compel testimony via use immunity in only two circumstances: (1) when there is a grand jury investigation; or (2) after charges have been filed. Because the prosecutor can compel testimony in grand jury proceedings by granting use immunity, the State argues the prosecutor has the same authority when conducting a pre-charge investigation without a grand jury. As a prosecutor’s ability to investigate and accumulate evidence is coextensive with that of a grand jury, we agree with the State.
The trial court phrased the issue before it as “[wjhether a prosecutor investigating a crime precharge and without a grand jury has the same authority to grant use immunity as a prosecutor using a grand jury?”
(App. at 43.) It answered in the affirmative, relying on our Indiana Supreme Court’s statement in
In re Order for Ind. Bell Tel. to Disclose Records,
274 Ind. 131, 134-35, 409 N.E.2d 1089, 1091 (1980):
In 1973, prosecuting attorneys were given the power to initiate criminal prosecutions by filing an information. It should be noted this same general power was given under prior law but the instrument was called an affidavit filed by the prosecutor, rather than an information. Under the statute the prosecutor has the authority to charge an individual with the commission of a crime without first submitting the evidence to a grand jury. Along with this power to charge a person with the commission of a crime, we hold that
the investigatory powers of the prosecutor now parallel those of the grand jury. A prosecutor has the same ability to accumulate evidence as the grand jury.
(Citation omitted) (emphasis added).
The parents correctly note the language of the statute governing use immunity, Ind.Code § 35-34-2-8, addresses such immunity only when there is a grand jury:
(a) Upon request by the prosecuting attorney, the court shall grant use immunity to a witness
before the grand jury.
The court shall instruct the witness by written order or in open court that any evidence the witness gives
before the grand jury,
or evidence derived from that evidence, may not be used in any criminal prosecution against that witness, unless the evidence is volunteered by the witness or is not responsive to a question by the grand jury or the prosecutor. The court shall then instruct the witness that he must answer the ques
tions asked and produce the items requested.
(Emphasis added.) The trial court acknowledged that portion of the statute, but determined
the authority of the prosecutor to offer use immunity does not depend upon the existence of a grand jury or legislative action, but such authority is implicit in the office of the prosecutor itself. Even if use immunity authority is derived solely from legislative consent, the Indiana Supreme Court has already addressed that issue [in
Indiana Bell],
(App. at 45.)
We decline to adopt the trial court’s position that a prosecutor’s authority to offer use immunity is “implicit in the office of the prosecutor itself.”
(Id.)
We stated otherwise in
Brune v. Marshall,
169 Ind.App. 637, 640, 350 N.E.2d 661, 663 (1976):
While the office of Prosecuting Attorney may have been created by the Constitution of Indiana, the rights and duties of that office are prescribed by statute.... (T)he Prosecuting Attorney has only such power as is enumerated within the four corners of the statutory enactment defining his duties, and he has no residual common law rights or powers.
In
Bruñe,
we were unable to find statutory authority for a pre-charging deferral program to be initiated and/or operated by a prosecuting attorney as an alternative to prosecution, and we therefore concluded the prosecutor was acting beyond the scope of his authority when he established such a program and charged Bruñe a fee for participating in it.
Id.
at 641, 350 N.E.2d at 663.
Only two Indiana Code chapters appear to address a prosecutor’s authority to offer use immunity. Ind.Code §§ 35-37-3-1 through 3 provide for a grant of use immunity on a prosecutor’s request, if a witness, in any hearing or trial occurring
after an indictment or information has been filed,
refuses to answer any question or produce any item.
Those sections do not authorize use immunity in the case before us, as
there are no witnesses testifying at a trial or hearing occurring after an indictment or information was filed.
The second statutory provision that addresses use immunity is Ind.Code § 35-34-2-8 which, as noted above, appears explicitly limited to grand jury proceedings.
The State relies
on Indiana Bell
to support the premise that because “the investigatory powers of the prosecutor now parallel those of the grand jury” and a prosecutor “has the same ability to accumulate evidence as the grand jury,” 274 Ind. at 135, 409 N.E.2d at 1091, the prosecutor must necessarily have the same authority to offer use immunity as is available in grand jury proceedings. Interpreting the statutes as Parents suggest, the State argues, would lead to the absurd result that prosecutors would have fewer investigative tools before deciding whether to bring charges than they have after charges are filed.
The parents argue the trial court applied
Indiana Bell
too broadly, because of the inherent differences between the grand jury system and the charging information process, and because of the type of information sought in that case.
Indiana Bell
involved a subpoena
duces tecum,
which compels production of documents or other materials in a person’s possession and does not implicate one’s privilege against self-incrimination, whereas this case involves a subpoena
ad testificandum,
which compels a person to appear as a witness and testify. Such a subpoena does implicate that privilege, especially where, as here, the subpoena is served on the person who is the subject of a criminal investigation.
The
Indiana Bell
subpoena was issued on a third party who was neither a suspect nor a witness. It therefore did not raise any concerns about self-incrimination. The parents argue
Indiana Bell
should be “considered in the context of the case in which it was decided,” (Br. of the Appellants at 15), so its holding should be restated as “prosecutors share the same investigatory powers as grand juries do when it comes to serving subpoenas
duces tecum
on persons who were neither suspects nor witnesses to the crime.”
(Id.
at 15-16.)
The parents note a grand jury “remains under the supervision of the court which convenes it,”
State ex rel. Pollard v. Criminal Court of Marion County, Div. One,
263 Ind. 236, 247, 329 N.E.2d 573, 582 (1975), and its proceedings are governed by a detailed set of statutes,
see
Ind.Code ch. 35-34-2.
See Oman v. State,
737 N.E.2d 1131, 1138 (Ind.2000) (“indirect judicial oversight is an inherent part of all grand jury proceedings, which by their
nature are secretive: this arrangement militates against the possible prejudicial impact of testimonial or physical evidence improperly gathered by a prosecutor during his or her pre-charge investigation”),
reh’g denied, cert. denied
534 U.S. 814, 122 S.Ct. 38, 151 L.Ed.2d 12 (2001). When there is no grand jury, by contrast, the court does not exercise the same oversight until the prosecutor has decided to file charges.
While Parents’ argument is persuasive, we cannot reconcile the result they advocate with our Indiana Supreme Court’s statement that a prosecutor has the same ability to accumulate evidence as does a grand jury. We must agree with the State that the legislature’s explicit reference to grand jury proceedings in Ind. Code § 35-34-2-8 cannot be read to restrict the right of a prosecutor to seek use immunity when prosecution is initiated by means of an information rather than an indictment. Nor could the legislature have intended that prosecutors have fewer investigative tools before deciding to bring charges than they do after charges are brought. We accordingly affirm the trial court.
Affirmed.
BAKER, J., and BROWN, J., concur.