Anthоny Jones argues that the trial court plainly erred in finding him guilty of criminal contempt for his failure to comply with a Civil Protection Order (“CPO”). Appellant argues thаt the specific requirement that he abstain from using illegal substances as contained in the CPO was a condition relating only to his ability to have unsupervisеd visitation with his son, and therefore, his use of drugs generally could not serve as a basis for finding him guilty of criminal contempt. We agree and reverse.
I.
Appеllant and Ms. Leslie Akinola, the mother of his son, were involved in a domestic altercation, which led to Ms. Akino-la’s filing of a petition for a CPO. Judge Saddler hеld a hearing and in June 2010 issued a CPO, which ordered appellant to stay away from Ms. Akinola and her mother, and not assault, threaten, harass, or stalk Ms. Akinolа and her family or destroy her property. Finding that appellant loved his child and would do him no harm, Judge Saddler provided that, “[appellant] may havе unsupervised visitation with the parties’ minor child so long as [appellant] does not use illegal drugs.” After appellant explained that when dealing with the petitioner, “I’m going to need everything on paper,” Judge Saddler informed the parties that the CPO would read in the following manner: “[appellant] may have unsupervised visitation with the parties’ minor child as long as [appellant] does not use illegal substances around the child or otherwise.” The trial court also ordered that appellant participate in a drug testing program administered by the D.C. Court Services and Offender Supervision Agenсy (“CSOSA”) and then commented, “[y]ou shouldn’t being using illegal substances anyway.”
II.
Appellant does not argue that he abstained from using illegal substances. Instead, he аrgues, for the first time on appeal, that the CPO required him to abstain from using illegal substances only as a condition of his right to unsupervised visitation with his son and that, although this right could be withdrawn if he was found to have used drugs, the CPO by its terms did not subject him to a contempt adjudication for drug usage.
“To establish the elements of a criminal violation of a CPO, the government must present evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant engaged in (1) willful disobedience (2) of a protective court order.” In re Sobin,
In applying the foregoing standards to thе evidence in this case, we are satisfied that Judge Holeman’s finding that appellant violated the terms of the CPO is plainly wrong and that no rational fаct finder could have found appellant guilty of criminal contempt beyond a reasonable doubt. Our conclusion is not a difficult one to reach because the government wholly failed to produce any evidence that appellant willfully disobeyed the CPO. In this case, Judge Holeman fоund that appellant had violated the terms of the CPO by using marijuana on several occasions based on positive drug tests that were administered periodically by the probation office. However, by its express terms, the CPO only required appellant to abstain from the use of illegal substancеs as a condition of his continued right to visit with his child. It carried no free-standing
“[C]riminal contempt is ‘a special situation.’ ” In re Robertson,
In our cases addressing the revocation of probation, where a probationer’s release is revoked for violating court-imposed conditions, we have made it clear that, “probation may not be revoked in the absence of a threshold determination thаt there has been a violation of the express conditions of probation, or of a condition so clearly implied that a probationer, in fairness, can be said to have notice of it.” Resper v. United States,
Our review of the record supports our reading of the CPO. At the time the CPO was issued, Judge Saddler’s only expressed concern was appellant’s use of drugs when visiting with his child. In fact, after setting forth the condition that appellant not use drugs around the child during unsupervised visitation, Judge Saddler commented, “[appellant] shouldn’t be using illegal substances anyway.” This admonishment by the trial court reveals that CPO did not contemplate that the CPO would prohibit all drug use under pain of contempt. Had the court intended contempt — rather than or in addition to withdrawal of unsupervised visitation — to be a sanction for drug use, it surely would have known how to draft that order.
Therefore, for thesе reasons, we reverse appellant’s conviction for criminal contempt.
So ordered.
Notes
. Appellant concedes that the trial court could rеasonably have found that he violated the CPO for failing to report for drug testing, as he did not challenge the allegation that he had missed testing apрointments. Therefore, appellant only challenges his conviction for criminal contempt based on his failure to abstain from substance abuse.
