Rаymond Hall appeals the portion of his sentence for sexual exploitation of a minor that imposes a no-contact order. We reverse the portion of the sentence containing the imposition of a no-contact order under Iowa Code chapter 664A (Supp. 2005). We remand to the district court for entry of the restrictions on communication and contact with minors as conditions of probation and for clarification of the restriction on communication with minors.
I. Background and Facts
On May 27, 2006, Hall brought his computer to the Geek Squad at Best Buy for assistance in recovering files from the comрuter. While working on the eomputer, employees discovered files that contained child pornography. The employees contacted the West Des Moines Police Department.
Hall admitted that he had images on his computer of children engaging in prohibited sexual activity and that he рossessed these images for his sexual gratification. He was charged with five counts of exploitation of a minor in violation of Iowa Code section 728.12(3) (2005). 1 On November 22, 2006, he pled guilty to one count of sexual exploitation of a minor. The State dismissed the other four counts. The district court accepted Hall’s guilty plea and placed him on probation for two years. As part of its sentencing order, the court entered a no-contact order under Iowa Code section 901.5(7A) (2005), which was repealed by 2006 Iowa Acts chapter 1101, section 16, but essentially recodified in Iowa Code chaptеr 664A pursuant to 2006 Iowa Acts chapter 1101, sections 5-12. The no-contact order read in pertinent part:
1. Defendant shall not communicate or attempt to communicate with the protected party[ 2 ] in person, in writing, by telephone, voice or electronic messaging systems or through any means inсluding third persons....
2. Defendant shall not be in the immediate vicinity of locations where children are normally found: schools, libraries, playgrounds, YMCA, YWCA, etc. Defendant shall stay away from such places and shall have no contact with minors [with the] exception [of] incidental contact in public places whеre other responsible adults are present. Defendant may also have supervised contact with his own biological nephew.
(Footnote added.)
II. Standard of Review
Hall appeals the portion of his sentence that imposes a no-contact order, asserting the order is not authorized by statute, is constitutionally overbroаd, and is unreasonable. When a defendant challenges his sentence on appeal, “[djepend-ing upon the nature of the challenge, the standard of review is for the correction of errors at law or for an abuse of discretion.”
State v. Valin,
III. Merits
The State asserts that Hall failed to preserve error. It first argues that, if Hall’s no-contact order was negotiated as part of his plea agreement, error was not preserved.
See State v. Sage,
The State also argues that Hall failed to preserve error because he did not object to the order or claim it was unconstitutionally overbroad at the sentencing hearing. As a general rule, “[i]ssues not raised before the district court, including constitutional issues, cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.”
State v. McCright,
A. Statutory Authority
Hall contends the district court erred in imposing a no-contact order pursuant to Iowa Code seсtion 901.5(7A) as part of his sentence because the order was not authorized by statute. He argues the court was not authorized to enter the no-contact order under Iowa Code section 901.5(7A)(a)-(b), because that subsection was repealed in 2006. He also argues the order was not authorized undеr section 664A.2, which authorizes no contact orders in connection with various crimes, because 664A.2 does not list section 728.12(3) as a triggering code section. Consequently, Hall argues, the only language which could have authorized the issuing of the no-contact order is section 664A.2’s “any other offense for whiсh there is a victim.” Hall further argues that, because there was no “victim,” defined in section 664A.1(3) as “a person who has suffered physical, emotional, or financial harm as a result of a public
The State contends that the no-contact order is authorized under section 907.6, which allows the sentencing cоurt to define probation conditions. 3 Pursuant to section 907.6, probations are subject to any “reasonable conditions which the court ... may impose to promote rehabilitation of the defendant or protection of the community.”
We agree with the State that the district court was authorized undеr section 907.6 to define reasonable probation conditions. Section 907.6 does not, however, authorize creation of a condition of probation that could result in criminal prosecution under section 664A. Section 664A.2 does not list section 728.12(3) as a triggering offense, and there was no “victim” as defined in section 664A.1(3). Therefore, the no-contact order was not authorized pursuant to section 664A.2 or section 907.6. We remand to the district court for entry of the restrictions on contact and communication with minors as conditions of probation without the imposition of a no-contact order under chapter 664A.
B. Reasonableness and Breadth
Hall also contends the no-contact order, which prevents him from having contact with any child, is “overbroad because it impacts his freedom of speech, his right to associate with others, and his right to travel” and is an “unreasonable and arbitrary condition of probation.” He asserts that the order would prevent him from going to рublic places where children are present, and that there are numerous “situations where one is forced to communicate with a child under the age of eighteen, whether it be the paper boy, the clerk at the grocery store, or the ticket seller at the movie theater.”
“The legislаture has given the courts broad, but not unlimited, authority in establishing the conditions of probation.”
State v. Jorgensen, 588
N.W.2d 686, 687 (Iowa 1998). “[Conditions of probation cannot be unreasonable or arbitrary.”
State v. Rogers,
A condition of probation promotes the rehabilitation of the defendant or the protection of the community when it addresses some problem or need idеntified with the defendant, or some threat posed to the community by the defendant. A condition is reasonable when it relates to the defendant’s circumstances in a reasonable manner and is justified by the defendant’s circumstances. Thus, the inquiry into the reasonableness of a condition of probation bоils down to whether the statutory goals of probation are reasonably addressed. As a result, whether a condition meets the statutory goals of probation and whether it is reasonable are questions that are best addressed together.
Valin,
In child pornography cases, probation conditions which reasonably limit contact and communication with minors have been uniformly found to be valid in state and federal courts.
See, e.g., United States v. Kerr,
We disagree with Hall’s assertion that the restriction on contact with minors would prevent him from going to public places where children are present because the restriction contains an exception for “incidental contact in public places where other responsible adults are present.” We find the prohibition against being “in the immediate vicinity of locations where children are normally found,” with an exception for incidental contact, is neither an overbroad nor unreasonable condition of Hall’s probation.
We are concerned, however, with the restriction on communicating or attemрting to communicate with any child under eighteen years of age. That section does not include an exception for incidental communication, such as with a minor grocery store clerk, movie ticket taker, or fast-food clerk. These examples illustrate the day-to-day impossibility Hall would enсounter in attempting to comply with this restriction as written. A total ban on all communication with all minors without an exception for incidental communication where other responsible adults are present would, in effect, require Hall to become a hermit.
Courts may not impose probation cоnditions that involve “a greater deprivation of liberty than is reasonably necessary” and that is not reasonably related to the rehabilitation of the defendant or protection of the community.
United States v. Voelker,
While we do not believe the district court would abuse its discretion in imposing a condition of probation which restricts Hall’s communication with minors, “we find the condition as written ambiguous and, depending on its meaning, excessively broad.”
United States v. Peterson,
This remand should not be construed to mean that exact precision in conditions of probation is required.
[Tjhough a probationer is entitled to notice of what behavior will result in a violation, so that he may guide his actions accordingly, fair warning is not to be confused with the fullest, or most pertinacious, warning imaginable. Conditions of probation do not have to be cast in letters six feet high, or to describe every possible permutation, or to spell out every last, self-evident detail. Conditions of probation may afford fair warning even if they are not precise tо the point of pedantry. In short, conditions of probation can be written-and must be read-in a commonsense way.
United States v. Gallo,
C. Conclusion
We reverse only the portion of the sentence contained in the no-contact order. Because the no-contact order was not authorized by statute, we remand to the district court for entry of the restrictions on communication and contact with minors as conditions of probation without the imposition of a no-contact order under Iowa Code chapter 664A. We also remand for clarification of the restriction on communication with minors to allow an exception for incidental communication with minors where other responsible adults are present. We affirm the rest of Hall’s sentence.
REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.
Notes
. This case predates
State v. Muhlenbruch,
. The no-contact order identifies the protected party as any child under eighteen years of age, with the exception of Hall’s biological nephew.
. Even though the no-contact order references section 901.5(7A), "the court’s authority under [section 907.6] is not lost when the court fails to cite the provision in pronouncing sentence.”
State v. Steuk,
