OPINION OF THE COURT
As a condition of probation in connection with a negotiated plea and sentence, defendant consented in writing to provisions permitting his probation officer to search his person, his vehicle, and his “place of abode” for illegal drugs and narcotic implements, during the period of probation. Claiming that his. consent is legally inoperative, defendant asserts that the search provision is violative of his constitutional and statutory rights. We disagree, and hold that the provision served as a lawful basis for the seizure of evidence resulting in the charges on appeal.
Defendant was initially convicted of Criminally Negligent Homicide (a class E felony under Penal Law § 125.10) and Operation of a Vessel While Under the Influence of Alcohol or Drugs (an offense under Navigation Law § 49-a [2]) for having caused the death of a young woman who was swimming when he struck her with his motor boat, which he operated while he was impaired. Considering that the homicide conviction carried a potential maximum of four years imprisonment, the prosecution, the defendant, and the court agreed to a disposition by which the defendant would plead guilty, and the court would impose a sentence of probation with stringent supervision. For his part, and in order to obtain the benefits of the negotiated plea and sentence, defendant signed the terms of probation and waived his right to appeal. The terms included mandatory drug testing and drug treatment when ordered by the Probation Department. It also included the provision at issue before us:
“That you permit search of your vehicle and place of abode where such place of abode is legally under your control, and seizure of any narcotic implements and/or illegal drugs found, such search to be conducted by a Probation Officer or a Probation Officer and his agent.”
There was evidence at the suppression hearing that after defendant had been on probation for several days, his probation officer reviewed the terms of probation with him, including the provision at issue, as well as defendant’s obligation to provide urine samples to detect controlled substances. Over the next several months, defendant tested positively for drugs on four occasions. The probation officer intermittently warned defendant that these results could lead to a violation of probation. He also visited defendant, and increased defendant’s drug counseling sessions, but eventually concluded that defendant would have to continue his probation in an in-patient program for cocaine abuse, and told him so.
Shortly thereafter, approximately 10 months into the probation term, the probation officer received a call from the mother of the woman whose death defendant had caused. She told the probation officer that defendant was selling drugs out of his home and that she knew this because her son had bought drugs from him. Based on all of the circumstances and on the strength of the above-quoted condition of probation, the probation officer accompanied by the defendant 1 and by police officers, entered defendant’s house. In the ensuing search, the authorities discovered rifles, shotguns, illicit drugs, and a scale, resulting in defendant’s indictment for the instant drug and weapon charges.
Defendant moved to suppress the evidence, contending that in the absence of a search warrant, exigent circumstances, or a voluntary, contemporaneous consent, a probationer may be searched only if a court has issued a CPL 410.50 (3) search order. He claims that notwithstanding the consent-search provision, the search in issue violated his constitutional and statutory rights. After a hearing, Supreme Court agreed and granted
We begin with the premise that a probationer’s home is protected by the constitutional requirement that searches be reasonable
(see,
US Const 4th Amend; NY Const, art I, § 12;
see also, Griffin v Wisconsin,
Griffin v Wisconsin
(
The
Griffin
Court, however, did not simply dispense with the warrant requirement and let it go at that. The Court recognized, as this Court did in
People v Jackson
(
Although this Court has never addressed the issue of whether a consent search provision may be enforceable as a condition of probation, we note that such provisions have withstood constitutional challenge
(see, e.g., United States v Germosen,
We agree with this line of authority insofar as the court-ordered provision and consent were circumscribed to specified types of searches by probation officers acting within the scope of their supervisory duty and in the context of the probationary goal of rehabilitation. In making this determination, we note that a probationer’s status is defined by a number of considerations that have been developed under statutory and decisional
In New York, as in other jurisdictions, a sentence of probation is an option among various sentencing alternatives short of confinement. The probationer, although not physically confined, remains “in the legal custody of the court” for the probationary period (GPL 410.50 [1];
People v Rodney E.,
In reviewing the thrust of the probationary sentence before us, we conclude readily that the court concentrated on the statutory goal that the conditions be fundamentally rehabilitative
(People v McNair,
Defendant argues that this Court’s decision in
People v Jackson
(
CPL 410.50 (3) reads as follows:
“Search order. If at any time during the period of probation the court has reasonable cause to believe that the defendant has violated a condition of the sentence, it may issue a search order. Such order must be directed to a probation officer and may authorize such officer to search the person of the defendant and/or any premises in which he resides or any real or personal property which he owns or which is in his possession.”
Although this section authorizes court-ordered searches, there is nothing in it or in Jackson to support defendant’s assertion that CPL 410.50 (3) preempts the lawfulness of the search in issue. Indeed, pursuant to the very next section, CPL 410.50 (4), a probation officer may take a probationer into custody and conduct a personal search when the probation officer has reasonable cause to believe that the probationer has violated a condition of the sentence. The section contemplates that the probation officer may do so without any court order or any prior court-imposed condition of probation. We conclude, therefore, that the constitutionality of a search provision ordered by a court in a sentence of probation as part of a negotiated agreement by the probationer was not defeated by the availability of CPL 410.50 (3).
Defendant contends that his consent may not be based on his having signed the conditions of probation, and that any such consent was the product of coercion. We disagree with this contention to the extent that defendant claims that his consent is invalid as a matter of law.
5
In order to obtain the benefits of a favorable sentence, defendant negotiated an agreement that assured his avoidance of a prison term. He had no “right” to a sentence of probation
(People v Oskroba,
Defendant argues that his consent, although the result of a negotiated plea, was a manifest “fiction” and not truly voluntary because, he claims, he did not have a realistic choice in the matter. The answer to this argument is simply that any defendant who, for example, bargains for a 10-year sentence to avoid a possibly longer one may be acting out of a sense of constraint, yet voluntarily “offers” to surrender a decade of liberty. A defendant’s offer to surrender a measure of liberty or privacy cannot be considered voluntary in every sense of the word, but
In the case before us, the defendant negotiated an arrangement by which he would be able to remain at liberty in exchange for a surrender of some of his rights, including a diminished expectation of privacy. Under these circumstances we reject defendant’s argument that he was coerced as a matter of law.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Bellacosa, Smith, Levine, Ciparick and Wesley concur.
Order affirmed.
Notes
. At the suppression hearing there was evidence that defendant did not object to the search when it was conducted. That acquiescence, however, was ostensibly based on his earlier, written consent to the terms of probation. The People do not rely on defendant’s acquiescence at the scene as justification for the search. Accordingly, and because it is not relevant to the issues before us, we need not and do not attempt to characterize defendant’s reaction to the search at the time it was conducted.
. Even though parolees are often said to occupy a position that for constitutional purposes is like probationers
(see, e.g., Griffin v Wisconsin,
. Before
Griffin
was decided there had been considerable debate over the warrant requirement relative to probationers
(see, e.g.,
Note,
Fourth Amendment Limitations on Probation and Parole Supervision,
1976 Duke LJ 71 [1976]; Williamson,
Search and Seizure Rights of Parolees and Probationers in the Ninth Circuit,
44 Fordham L Rev 617 [1975]; Note,
Striking the Balance Between Privacy and Supervision: The Fourth Amendment and Parole and Probation Officer Searches of Parolees and Probationers,
51 NYU L Rev 800 [1976]; White,
The Fourth Amendment Rights of Parolees and Probationers,
31 U Pitt L Rev 167 [1969]). In deciding that the “operation of a probation system * * * presents ‘special needs’ beyond normal law enforcement that may justify departures from the usual warrant and probable-cause requirements,” the
Griffin
Court (
. Considering that the case before us is based upon a consent provision we do not undertake to decide whether, when and to what extent a sentencing court may unilaterally impose search conditions in a sentence of probation.
. To the extent that he rests his coercion claim on a factual basis, we note that he did not raise this issue below. At no point did he timely claim that his consent was the product of confusion, mistake or any of the other factual assertions that could undermine the knowing and intelligent entry of a guilty plea. Such an argument is therefore unpreserved for our review.
