Opinion
Kenneth E. Smith was convicted by plea of one count of committing a lewd act on a minor (his 13-year-old stepdaughter), a register-able sex offense. (Pen. Code, §§ 288, subd. (a), 290.) 1 A three-year state prison sentence was imposed and suspended, and probation was grаnted with the usual conditions, including that he obtain employment approved by his probation officer and obey all of the probation department’s regulations. When Smith learned from his probation officer that the Los Angeles County Probation Department has a regulation prohibiting “any [section] 290 offender” from leaving the county for any purpose, Smith asked the trial court for an order permitting him to leave the county on a day-to-day basis when required by his employer, explaining that he would return to his Lancaster home еvery evening. The prosecutor and the probation officer objected, claiming it would be more difficult to “monitor” Smith outside the county and *1248 insisting the regulation was reasonably related to Smith’s offense. The trial court agreed, finding a valid basis “for not allowing a prоbationer to freely travel out of the county [and instead] having a tight rein on someone who has been convicted of this type of offense.” As we will explain, the trial court’s failure to consider Smith’s particularized needs in approving the probation deрartment’s mass treatment approach does not serve either of the goals of probation, public safety or rehabilitation. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
DISCUSSION
A.
Smith’s conviction is based on a negotiated no contest plea. Prоbation (five years) was granted at his January 2006 sentencing hearing, at which time the court ordered Smith to attend various classes and programs, to follow all of the probation department’s regulations, and to maintain employment approved by his probation officer.
In March, Smith (who at all relevant times has been gainfully employed as a driver or dispatcher) appeared in court to ask the court for assistance because “his probation forbids him to leave the county on a day-to-day basis for purрoses of employment.” He explained that he would continue to live in his Lancaster home, and “would simply be traveling outside the county and returning in the evening.” He said his employer needed him to be able to drive out of the county. He said he had asked his probаtion officer, who told him he “had to put it before the court himself.”
At a hearing held later the same day, the probation officer explained that, since November of 2005, the Los Angeles County Probation Department “policy on any [section] 290 offender is not tо allow him out of the County of Los Angeles.” When defense counsel questioned the policy as it applied to Smith—who could drive 95 or more miles from his Lancaster home to Long Beach but could not drive 25 miles from his home to Mojave or, apparently, “have lunch in Rosamоnd, . . . which is only about ten miles north of here,” the probation officer responded, “[Section 290 offenders] are not to leave the County of Los Angeles. Period.”
The trial court rejected defense counsel’s claim that the condition was unreasonable and said it would not consider Smith’s request so soon after *1249 sentence had been imposed, in part because the court had not yet received a report about Smith’s compliance with the other terms and conditions of his probation.
B.
In May, Smith filed a formal motiоn for modification of the terms of probation to allow him to travel to “neighboring counties for the purposes of employment,” contending the probation department’s regulation had no relationship to his crime or to the prevention of future criminality, and that it was up to the court, not the probation department, to set the terms of probation.
At the hearing on Smith’s motion, the prosecutor (referring to off-the-record discussions with the probation officer) claimed the condition is necessary because it is difficult for the probation department to “monitor” Smith outside the county. In response, defense counsel pointed out that Smith was not monitored on a day-to-day basis and offered to have Smith notify his probation officer whenever he was required to leave the county and again upon his return.
The court denied Smith’s request, finding a valid basis “for not allowing a probationer to freely travel out of the county [and instead] having a tight rein on someone who has been convicted of this type of offense.” (Italics added.) In context, it is cleаr that the court’s order is based only on Smith’s crime and the probation department’s regulation (hence the references to “a” probationer and “someone” convicted of this type of offense), not on any factors relevant to Smith’s employment or Smith’s conduct on probation.
C.
Conditions of probation must foster rehabilitation and protect public safety. (§ 1203.1;
People
v.
Carbajal
(1995)
Probation conditions restricting a probationer’s exercise of his constitutional rights are upheld only if narrowly drawn to serve the important interests of public safety and rehаbilitation,
and
if they are “specifically tailored to the individual probationer.”
{In re Babak S.
(1993)
The defendant in
White,
convicted of soliciting an act of prostitution, chаllenged a probation condition that banned her from certain areas of “prostitution activity,” claiming it was unreasonably harsh and restrictive because she was unable to use a bus depot and other services in that area.
{In re White, supra,
The White court did not strike the condition but remanded with directions to the trial court to either modify the condition (with a laundry list of suggestions about how that might be done) or eliminate it, explaining that the “manifest goals of probation and the need for individualistic treatment compels the imposition of special probation conditions framed to meet the particular needs of each individual case. Particularized conditions of probation should be directed toward rehabilitation rather than reliance upon some general condition whiсh utilizes a mechanized mass treatment approach.” (In re White, supra, 97 Cal.App.3d at pp. 150-151.)
D.
Although Smith’s registerable sex offense is more serious than soliciting prostitution (§§ 288, subd. (a), 647, subd. (b)), the fundamental concepts expressed in White must be applied here. When they are, it becomes apparent that the trial court’s order is constitutionally infirm.
First and foremost, no consideration was given to Smith’s circumstances. The probation department’s blanket prohibition applies to all registered sex offenders without regard to their performance on probation оr to the reason they might need to leave the County of Los Angeles. It is the precise opposite of the particularized condition of probation contemplated by
White. (In re White, supra,
97 Cal.App.3d at pp. 150-151.) No consideration at all was given to Smith’s right to an opportunity to work (cf.
Gay Law Students Assn.
v.
Pacific Tel. & Tel. Co.
(1979)
Second, the prohibition bears no reasonable relation to the crime. While we agree with the Attorney General that the purpose of the
registration statute
is to promote the state’s interest in preventing recidivism by sex offenders
(Wright
v.
Superior Court
(1997)
Third, we consider it significant that Smith has not violated the ban against out-of-county travel. Instead, he realized therе was a conflict between the probation department’s regulation and his job duties, and twice sought relief from the court (the first time without a lawyer so that one was appointed for him that day). When his requests were denied, he continued to comply with the strict terms оf his probation. This ought to count for something. (See fn. 4, ante.)
We agree- with White that the appropriate remedy in these circumstances is to permit the trial court to fashion a less restrictive ban on out-of-county travel than that imposed by the probation department’s regulatiоn but subject to whatever specific travel limitations the court finds are appropriate in this case or, in the alternative, to eliminate the travel restriction with regard to Smith’s work.
*1253 DISPOSITION
The order denying Smith’s request for modification of the probation condition prohibiting out-of-county travel is reversed and the cause is remanded to the trial court with directions to fashion a less restrictive limitation based on Smith’s particularized circumstances or, in the alternative, to eliminate the travel restriction with regard to Smith’s work.
Mallano, Acting P. J., and Rothschild, J., concurred.
Notes
All section references are to the Penal Code.
Subdivision (j) of sеction 1203.1 authorizes the trial court to “impose and require any . . . reasonable conditions ... as it may determine are fitting and proper to the end that justice may be done, that amends may be made to society for the breach of the law, for any injury done to any person resulting from that breach, and generally and specifically for the reformation and rehabilitation of the probationer . . . .”
Lent
put it this way: “A condition of probation will not be held invalid unless it ‘(1) has no relationship to the crime of which the offender was convicted, (2) relates to conduct which is not in itself criminal, and (3) requires or forbids conduct which is not reasonably related to future criminality . . . .’
(People
v.
Dominguez
(1967)
The defendant in
White
was arrested when she was found in the prohibited area and again charged with solicitation of prostitution. Her probation was revoked.
{In re White, supra,
The fact that Smith’s employer had not yеt terminated his employment because of his restricted travel conditions does not mean that it could not happen in the future or that it has not happened during the pendency of this appeal.
It is worth noting that all of the conditions of Smith’s probation, including any travel restrictions, will terminate upon his successful completion of probation—whereas his registration obligations will continue for the rest of his life. Nothing in section 290 prevents a registered sex offender from leaving the county in which he is registered as part of his work.
