Michael R. Holden (appellant) appeals the circuit court’s order revoking his suspended sentence. Appellant contends the court lacked jurisdiction to revoke his suspended sentence and in doing so violated his right to due process. We disagree and affirm.
On December 29,1986, appellant was sentenced to ten years imprisonment for aggravated sexual battery on an eleven-year-old boy. The court suspended five years of appellant’s sentence “conditioned upon the Defendant’s good behavior.” After appellant had apparently served time on an unrelated offense, the Commonwealth obtained letters written by appellant while in prison in which he graphically described his desire to have sex with children. The Commonwealth sought *41 to revoke appellant’s suspended sentence on the basis that he had violated the condition of “good behavior.” Although the letters appear to be part of an ongoing correspondence, the Commonwealth alleged that the writing of the letters, rather than the use of the mails, constituted a violation of the good behavior condition.
At a revocation hearing, appellant admitted writing the letters but contended the court lacked jurisdiction to revoke his suspended sentence because the Commonwealth did not allege or prove that appellant had violated the law. Appellant’s prison counselor testified that after she confronted appellant about the letters in group therapy, he admitted he spent many hours watching children’s programs on television. She testified that appellant’s thoughts of sexual contact with children are related to his behavior and that appellant had shown “very limited” progress in restructuring his thoughts about sexual involvement with children. The court overruled appellant’s motion.
I.
Good Behavior Requirement
Pursuant to its authority under Code § 19.2-306, “[t]he court may, for any cause deemed by it sufficient ... revoke the suspension of sentence.” This language gives the court “wide discretion in the determination of the sufficiency of the cause for revoking the suspension.”
Slayton v. Commonwealth,
Appellant’s suspended sentence was conditioned solely upon his “good behavior.” “[W]hen the accused has complied with conditions specified, he has a right to rely upon them, and the suspension will stand.”
Griffin v. Cunningham,
Appellant argues the court did not have evidence of failure to maintain good behavior because the evidence presented by the Commonwealth did not constitute an unlawful act. We disagree. In the context of appellant’s appeal from the revocation of his probation for the same misconduct, this Court recently held, “[g]ood behavior is not limited to an avoidance of criminal activity.”
Holden v. Commonwealth,
This Court has held that iniquitous, but not necessarily illegal, conduct justifies a court’s revocation of a suspended sentence.
See Bryce v. Commonwealth,
Appellant contends the decisions of this Court are in conflict with the decisions of the Supreme Court of Virginia, which has noted that, “ ‘[g]ood behavior’ has been defined as meaning ‘conduct conforming to the law.’ ”
Griffin,
Our interpretation of
Griffin
is consistent with other Virginia law. In
Griffin,
the Supreme Court stressed that a court may revoke a suspended sentence “for any cause deemed by it sufficient.”
Id.
at 354,
In accordance with the precedents of the Supreme Court of Virginia and this Court, we hold that a court may revoke a defendant’s suspended sentence for substantial misconduct not involving violation of law.
Marshall,
II.
Due Process Violation
Appellant contends the phrase “good behavior” does not provide him with constitutionally sufficient notice as to what behaviors may trigger revocation of his suspended sentence.
2
Because the revocation of a suspended sentence results in the loss of liberty, the Due Process Clause governs the revocation.
See Lux v. Commonwealth,
Appellant was convicted of aggravated sexual battery on an eleven-year-old boy, and five years of his sentence were suspended on the condition that he exhibit good behavior. The record makes clear that appellant had actual notice that writing letters containing graphic pedophilic material was inconsistent with conduct constituting good behavior. Appellant’s letters, graphically describing his desire to sexually abuse children, are closely related to aggravated sexual battery on a child for which he was incarcerated. He also failed to disclose his activities during his prison group therapy sessions, in which the participants were encouraged to discuss their sexual thoughts in a therapeutic setting for therapeutic purposes. Furthermore, when confronted about his letter writing in his prison sex offender group therapy session, he admitted to spending a great deal of time in planning ways to act on his pedophilic obsession, acknowledging implicitly his understanding of the relationship between his letters and the conduct for which he was incarcerated. Indeed, appellant’s counselor characterized his letters as part of a “continued and escalating involvement in deviant sexual fantasies.” Finally, appellant attempted to hide his letters from prison authorities, an act which is inconsistent with his contention that he lacked knowledge that his letter-writing activities might be viewed as incompatible with the condition of his suspended sentence.
The record thus establishes that appellant knew that indulging in such conduct was inconsistent with the court’s condition that he be of good behavior. “[T]he fair warning doctrine
*46
does not provide a safe harbor for probationers who choose to ignore the obvious.”
Gallo,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant does not argue that his conduct does not rise to the level of substantial misconduct.
. Appellant also argues that Code § 19.2-306 does not provide constitutionally sufficient notice that writing letters describing his pedophilic desires may trigger a revocation of his suspended sentence and that Code § 19.2-306 is unconstitutionally vague. These claims are procedurally defaulted because defendant did not present them to the trial court.
Connelly,
