Vinсent Price appeals two orders finding him in violation of the conditions of his supervised probation. He claims the circuit court failed to give him proper written notice of the grounds for the alleged violations prior to the revocation hearing. Price also contends the court abused its discretion by imposing active incarceration in one of the two revocation orders. We disagree and affirm.
I.
Price was convicted in 1996 for possessing cocaine with intent to distribute. In 2001, Price was found guilty of statutory burglary. Hе received partially suspended sentences on each of these convictions, coupled with concurrent periods of suspension and supervised probation. The 2001 conviction caused Price to be in violation of the terms of his 1996 suspended sentence, resulting in a partial revocation and the imposition of eighteen months of incarceration. Within a week or so after being released from jail in 2005, Price tested positive for cocaine use. About a month later he failed to repоrt as ordered for a meeting with his probation officer. Shortly thereafter he was arrested again, this time for burglary and grand larceny.
Price’s probation officer advised thе circuit court of the new arrests and recommended a hearing to determine whether the court should revoke Price’s suspended sentences. The court issued a capias ordеring the arrest of Price and directing that he be brought before the court for a probation violation hearing. The capias listed Price’s recent arrests as the basis for the probаtion violation charge. The probation officer later forwarded to the court a major violation report identifying the new charges against Price. The report, however, also alleged that Price violated the conditions of probation due to his use of cocaine and his failure to report.
Price went to trial on his two new charges and was acquitted of both. After trial, the probation officer wrote a letter to the court suggesting that the probation violation proceeding be dismissed. At the revocation hearing, Price endorsed this view and added that due process principles required the court to dismiss because the capias listed only the new charges as the basis for the alleged probation violation. The additional allegations in the major violation report, Price argued, could not be considered. 1
The court rejected Price’s argument and held that the major violation report should be considered. Finding that Price violated the terms of probation by using cocaine and by failing to repоrt, the court revoked a portion of the remaining suspended sentence on the 1996 conviction and imposed three years of active incarceration. The court also revoked and resuspended in full the sentence on Price’s 2001 conviction.
II.
A. Written Notice of Probation Violation
On appeal, Price correctly points out that the
capias
mentioned his recent arrests but not the other two probation violations
Because a revocation proceeding is not “a stage of criminal prosecutiоn,” a probationer accused of violating the conditions of probation “is not entitled to the same due process protections afforded a defendant in a criminal prosecution.”
Logan v. Commonwealth,
Show-cause orders can satisfy the written notice requirement,
see, e.g., Howie v. Commonwealth,
In this case, Price received a major violation report from the probation officer prior to the hearing. The report stated that Price violated the conditions of probation by testing positive for cocaine, by failing to report, and by receiving new charges. The report listed each as a separate violation. The circuit court based its holding on Price’s use of cocaine and his failure to report. Prior to his hearing, therefore, Price received written notice of both grounds relied upon by the court for its conclusion that he violated the conditions of probation.
Unlike Price, we fail to see any constitutional significаnce in the fact that the capias noted only one of the three alleged probation violations. A capias is simply a bench warrant of arrest—not a charging document or some form of judicially-issued notice pleading. The function of a capias is to authorize а law enforcement officer to take the probationer into custody. See Black’s Law Dictionary 221 (8th ed. 2004). Certainly a capias can and sometimes does serve as a means of itemizing the allegations underlying a claimed probation violation. But due process does not require that it do so when other written notices suffice. 2
B. Imposition of Active Incarceration
Price also argues the circuit court abused its discretion by impоsing a period of active incarceration upon finding that he violated the conditions of probation. We again disagree.
Code § 19.2-306 authorizes a circuit court tо revoke a suspended sentence “for any cause deemed by it sufficient....” On appeal, a revocation decision “will not be reversed unless there is a clear showing of abuse of discretion.”
Davis v. Commonwealth,
Price squandered his conditional liberty when, within days of leaving his jail cell in 2005, he tested positive for coсaine use and, about a month later, failed to report for a required meeting with the probation officer. The circuit court did not abuse its discretion by responding to these circumstances with an active period of incarceration. For probation to have a deterrent effect on recidivism, real consequences must follow a probationer’s willful violation of the conditions of probation. By imposing an active period of incarceration in this case, the circuit court did nothing more thаn confirm that the conditions of probation were in fact conditions of probation.
III.
Finding no violation of due process or any abuse of discretion, we affirm the circuit court’s revocation orders.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Thе context of counsel’s remarks at the hearing suggested she received the report prior to the hearing, though she made no outright concession on the subject. At oral argument on appeal, however, Price’s counsel conceded without qualification that she received the report prior to the hearing.
See Logan v. Commonwealth,
. We accept, at least in principle, that confused notice is no better than no notice at all. The same can be said for untimеly notice. Price, however, raised neither of these concerns in the circuit court. He did not claim to be unprepared to defend himself or suggest the need for additional due diligence. Instead, in the circuit court as on appeal, Price claimed only that the failure of the capias to list all of the grounds for the probation violation charge constituted a “per se violation” of due process. Appellant’s Reply Br. at 2.
