Anyway, we could hash around war stories all night, but that’s what CLE meetings are for. So, here’s an analysis about probation conditions which a judge should not impose–even though they may seem like a good idea at the time. Let’s take a look.
Today’s case is Spano v. State, 60 So.3d 1108 (Fla. 4th DCA 2011). Spano was sentenced to community control following a plea to practicing law without a license. Somehow, she was ordered by the court to have no contact with her daughter (!?# huh?), possibly because they had a difficult relationship, with the daughter having obtained a restraining order against Spano. Eventually, Spano was issued a violation of probation (comm control, actually) by having contact with her daughter, against the order of the judge at sentencing.
The appeals court, thankfully, overturned this special condition of probation, ruling that the trial court abused it’s discretion in imposing a special condition that was not reasonably related to the practicing of law after suspension, nor reasonably related to Spano’s “rehabilitation” in regards to this criminality.
The urge here seems to be judicial conditions designed to fix the ‘human being’, rather than conditions designed to fix the criminality. For example, another court struck down a condition on a grand theft case that the defendant attend AA meetings, when the theft was not reasonably related to the use of intoxicants. Carter v. State, 677 So.2d 1349 (Fla. 4th DCA 1996). Now you know.