Justin L. Allen (Appellant) challenges the circuit court judge’s decision to revoke his probationary sentence. We affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Appellant was sentenced in 2002 to an aggregate term of seven years in prison on drug-related convictions, suspended on the service of one year and three years’ probation. Appellant was released from prison on probation in 2003.
Police responded to a shooting in the early morning hours of January 5, 2004, at an apartment complex in Greenwood. An agent of the South Carolina Department of Probation, Parole and Pardon Services issued a warrant for Appellant’s arrest based on his involvement in events immediately following the shooting. The agent charged Appellant with violating several conditions of his probation, including associating with a person who has a criminal record.
A police officer testified at the revocation hearing that a witness stated, soon after hearing gunshots, he saw two men help an apparent shooting victim get into a yellow Cadillac which then drove away. The witness did not identify the men. The officer testified a hospital security videotape showed Appellant getting out of the Cadillac at the emergency room entrance and entering the hospital. Appellant did not remain at the vehicle when he apparently heard or noticed approaching police, but entered the hospital’s emergency room and departed through another door. Police caught the other suspect in the vehicle, Nicholas Sanders, who was armed with a handgun, when he tried to flee after speaking with an officer near the vehicle. The victim, Lawson Hawkins, died of his wounds at the hospital.
A SLED agent testified the fingerprints of Appellant and Sanders were found on the Cadillac’s exterior. No fingerprints were found on the interior of the car. Police found over a half of an ounce of cocaine and a handgun inside the car while searching it.
Documents found in the vehicle contained Appellant’s name. A police officer testified the vehicle was registered in the name of Appellant’s grandfather. The officer testified Appel
Appellant did not testify at the revocation hearing, but invoked his Fifth Amendment right to remain silent because he had been charged with possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, unlawful possession of a firearm, and attempted armed robbery. The crimes allegedly occurred on the night of the shooting. 1
The trial court ruled Appellant had violated several conditions of his probation, including associating with Sanders, who has a criminal record. The trial court noted Appellant had not offered any evidence contradicting the State’s case, including any explanation of his actions in taking the shooting victim to the hospital or his furtive departure from the hospital. The trial court revoked Appellant’s probation and activated the remaining six years of the 2002 sentence, with probation terminating upon service of the sentence.
We certified this case for review on the motion of the Court of Appeals pursuant to Rule 204(b), SCACR. Appellant raises several issues, but we find it necessary to address only one:
Did the trial court abuse its discretion in revoking Appellant’s probation because he associated with a person who has a criminal record, a condition which is so overly broad that it violates due process?
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The determination of whether to revoke probation in whole or part rests within the sound discretion of the trial court.
State v. Miller,
An appellate court will not reverse the trial court’s decision unless that court abused its discretion.
White,
LAW AND ANALYSIS
A condition of Appellant’s probation, included on the standard probation form he signed, stated in pertinent part, “I shall not associate with any person who has a criminal record.” Appellant argues the trial court erred by revoking his proba
The State argues this condition is authorized by statute and reasonably furthers the goals of rehabilitating a probationer and protecting the public. The State relies on South Carolina Code Ann. § 24-21-430(3) (Supp.2005), which provides that a probationer shall “avoid persons or places of disreputable or harmful character.” The State does not address whether the condition is overly broad as a general rule, but asserts the trial court did not abuse its discretion in applying the condition under the facts of Appellant’s case.
We have found no South Carolina authority directly on point and only two South Carolina cases discussing the validity of “no-association” probation conditions. In
Beckner,
a PCR petitioner challenged a condition that he not “be in a place of business that sells alcohol.” We struck down the condition as unreasonable, finding it would prohibit the petitioner from entering or working in practically every grocery or convenience store, as well as many restaurants. The burden imposed on the petitioner was greatly disproportionate to any rehabilitative function the condition might serve.
Beckner,
In
State v. White,
The Legislature has set forth certain conditions of probation which may be imposed by the court, and the court has the discretion to impose additional or specific restrictions within limits. S.C.Code Ann. § 24-21-430 (Supp.2005) (listing thirteen conditions of probation and stating “[t]he court may impose by order duly entered and may at any time modify the conditions of probation and may include among them” the listed conditions or others not prohibited by this section);
State v. Brown,
The revocation of probation or parole is not a stage of criminal prosecution. However, a probationer or parolee has a constitutionally protected liberty interest and cannot be denied due process simply because probation has been described as an act of grace.
Morrissey v. Brewer,
Various conditions of probation generally have been upheld unless (1) the condition is so unreasonable or overly broad that compliance is virtually impossible and the burden imposed on the probationer is greatly disproportionate to any rehabilitative function the condition might serve; (2) the condition has no relationship to the crime of which the offender was convicted; (3) the condition requires or forbids conduct which is not reasonably related to future criminality; (4) the condition relates to conduct which is not in itself criminal unless the prohibited conduct is reasonably related to the crime of which the offender was convicted or to future criminality; (5) the condition violates due process because it is
A probationer’s “association” with a person who has a criminal record must entail more than incidental or unknowing encounters before the probationer will be found in violation of the condition. “Association” generally has been interpreted to mean intentional, knowing and substantial contact, or the development of a significant or meaningful relationship, with a convicted criminal over a substantial period of time.
E.g. Arciniega v. Freeman,
In the present case, we reject Appellant’s arguments and uphold the validity of the standard condition that Appellant not associate with persons with a criminal record. The condition is not so overly broad as a general rule that it violates due process in all cases; nor does application of the condition under the facts and circumstances of this case violate
We further hold, as the trial court and other courts have recognized, that the no-association condition implicitly requires a finding that the probationer knew the person in question had a criminal record during the period of association, and that the association was not simply an unknowing or incidental encounter. Thus, in order to demonstrate a prima facie violation, the State must present sufficient evidence, which may be direct or circumstantial, that a probationer intentionally had knowing and substantial contact with a person who has a criminal record, or developed a significant or meaningful relationship with that person over a substantial period of time. The probationer then has the opportunity to demonstrate a lack of knowledge of the person’s criminal record, a lack of any association with the person or an association which amounts to no more than an unknowing or incidental contact, or offer an explanation for the forbidden contact sufficient to excuse it.
Appellant attempted to portray himself as a mere passerby who helped carry an injured person to the hospital. We find no evidence in the record supporting this position. We have little doubt the result in this case would have been different if the evidence showed Appellant merely happened to drive by a crime scene and, acting as a Good Samaritan, unknowingly ferried a felon or two to the hospital.
When the trial court’s revocation decision is upheld on one ground, it ordinarily is immaterial whether probation was properly revoked on other grounds unless the entire proceeding was tainted by a given error.
See State v. Williamson,
We uphold the validity of the standard probation condition that a probationer not associate with a person with a criminal record. The condition is not so overly broad as a general rule that it violates due process in all cases. Application of the condition under the facts and circumstances of Appellant’s case does not violate due process. We further hold that the no-association condition implicitly requires a finding that Appellant knew the person in question had a criminal record during the period of association, and that the association was not simply an unknowing or incidental encounter. We conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in revoking Appellant’s probation because the record contains sufficient evidence that Appellant associated with a person with a criminal record.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The trial court declined to continue the revocation hearing until the criminal charges against Appellant were resolved. This ruling was permissible because the State did not attempt to revoke Appellant's probation based solely on those charges.
See State v. Gleaton,
. Appellant does not explicitly cite the Due Process Clause or freedom of association principles based on the First Amendment, but his arguments implicitly are grounded in those provisions. See U.S. Const, amends. I and XIV, § 1; S.C. Const, art. I, §§ 2 and 3.
. In the present case, the totality of all the evidence produced supports the decision to uphold the rulings of the courts below. First, there was a witness who testified that after hearing gunshots, she saw two men carry a wounded man into the backseat of a yellow Cadillac. A short period later, a yellow Cadillac was found at the emergency room of the local hospital. That vehicle contained documents with Appellant's name on them, and was registered under the Appellant’s grandfather. A hospital security camera showed the Appellant and another man getting out of the Cadillac at the emergency room drop off area.
Second, the Appellant abandoned his car and fled through the emergency room on foot after noticing police inquiry into the vehicle. Nicholas Sanders, the man accompanying the Appellant in the car, also tried to leave the scene after speaking with police. He was a convicted felon and was armed with a handgun.
Third, the Appellant was additionally charged with possession with intent to distribute cocaine, possession of a firearm, and attempted robbery. All of these crimes allegedly occurred during the night of the shooting.
Fourth, while Appellant was serving a probationary sentence for prior drug related convictions, there were 8.72 grams of cocaine and a .22 caliber handgun found in the yellow Cadillac.
Fifth, there was a body found oozing life in the backseat of the yellow Cadillac. That gentleman later died at the hospital from gunshot wounds.
