*367 OPINION OF THE COURT BY
Appellant was convicted of possession of marijuana on the basis of evidence obtained when she was searched by prison officials as a condition of entry to the prison. The appeal challenges, on constitutional grounds, both the admissibility of the evidence obtained by the search and the validity of a condition upon which appellant was granted probation. We affirm.
I
Appellant sought entry to Hawaii State Prison (“the prison”) to visit a prisoner. After she entered the prison, appellant was taken to a room where she was left alone with a prison matron. The matron patted down appellant’s upper body, including inserting her hands into appellant’s bra. Without first patting appellant down between the legs, the matron pulled down appellant’s panties and saw between her legs a plastic packet in which vegetable matter was visible. The packet was seized and subsequently found to contain marijuana. 1
*368 The matron testified that although she noticed signs of drug intoxication in appellant’s appearance and behavior, her decision to subject appellant to a strip search was non-discretionary and was based on “rules and regulations” of the prison. No formal rule of the prison requiring such a search has been brought to our attention. Prior to the search in question, however, the matron had thoroughly searched forty or more women, removing the panties of those who, like appellant, were wearing loose clothing. There is also uncontradicted evidence in the record, contained in the testimony of the matron, that the matron had strip searched appellant in a manner similar to the present case on several previous visits by appellant to the prison.
We recently stressed the importance of institutional order and security at the prison in
Holdman v. Olim,
The standards by which any governmental search is to be judged is always its reasonableness, in light of the constitutional guarantee of freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures. Reasonableness, of course, varies with the circumstances. What is reasonable restraint and search “depends on a balance between the public interest and the individual’s right to personal security free from arbitrary interference by law officers.”
United States v. Brignoni-Ponce,
Appellant seeks to apply here the standards developed by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals for judging the reasonableness of border searches. They are not automatically transferable to the situation before us. Comparing standards developed for persons crossing streets with those to be applied to persons crossing borders, the court said in United States v. Guadalupe-Garza, supra:
“In either context, official action must meet the standard of reasonableness. The scope of the particular intrusion, the manner of its conduct, and the justification for initiating it must all be considered. The test of reasonableness is incapable of comprehensive definition or of mechanical application; in each case the need for the particular search is balanced against the invasion that the search entails.”421 F.2d at 878 .
A similar balancing is necessary to arrive at an appropriate measure of the search which may reasonably be imposed upon a prison visitor. Authority is scanty. The extreme
*370
step of body cavity search has been held to lie within the sound discretion of prison officials and not necessarily to be unreasonable as applied to convicted prisoners entering or leaving the prison.
Daugherty v. Harris,
We consider that a fundamental difference exists between the detention and search of an individual engaged in the exercise of a constitutional or statutory right, such as travel on city streets or across the border, and search without detention imposed as a condition of admission of the individual into a prison. In the first case, the liberty interest and expectation of privacy of the individual are substantially unaffected by the activity engaged in, and the burden is heavy upon government to justify the invasion. But appellant has not suggested that she possessed a constitutional or statutory *371 right to enter the prison. The implication is strong from the record that she applied for entry with awareness that she would be routinely subjected to a strip search. To have avoided the search appellant need only have refrained from seeking admission, a situation far different from being, in the course of otherwise lawful travel, intercepted and forced to undergo search as a condition to continuing that travel.
In
United States v. Sihler,
Without suggesting that the constitutional protections of prison visitors may not exceed those enjoyed by prison inmates, we consider that an individual who seeks entry into a prison in a purely personal capacity may not claim immunity from security measures which are reasonable as applied to the prison inmates.
Cf. Lanza v. New York,
II
Appellant also challenges a condition attached to her probation by the trial judge, i.e., that she “refrain from the company of people of questionable character”. She argues that this condition, which is essentially a restatement of the condition that the defendant refrain from “consorting with *372 disreputable persons” specifically authorized by HRS § 706-624(2)(f), is vague and overbroad and infringes on rights preserved to her by the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution.
Appellant’s personal relationships could be considered by the trial judge in setting sentence, as one of the many factors the court may consider in inquiring into the character and circumstances of a convicted offender.
Williams v. New York,
If the challenged conditions had been embodied in a penal statute, so that the proscribed conduct was defined only as “keeping company with people of questionable character”, our first task would have been to ascertain whether the statute gave fair notice of what conduct was prohibited. Since appellant challenges the condition in advance of any attempt to enforce its provisions, the question would have been whether the language used to designate the prohibited conduct adequately described any conduct with sufficient specificity to support a conviction.
State v. Manzo,
*373
We have not been referred to any authority which extends the doctrine of overbreath to the conditions upon which probation has been granted. We think it is clear that probation may be granted upon conditions which restrain the defendant’s association with other members of the community to an extent which could not validly be imposed by penal statutes upon persons who had not been convicted of crime.
Malone v. United States,
Probation may be revoked, in the absence of conviction of another crime, only if the court is satisfied after notice and hearing “that the defendant has inexcusably failed to comply with a substantial requirement imposed as a condition” of the probation order. HRS § 706-628. It is manifest that a probation condition which is so vague that it fails to provide a guide for the defendant’s behavior would not support a revocation of probation.
Cf. Glenn v. State,
The standard of specificity to be applied to the condition under appellant’s facial challenge is whether there are any conceivable circumstances to which the condition applies with sufficient clarity to give appellant fair warning that her conduct may be in violation. Who are persons of “questionable character” may be difficult to determine in all circumstances but should present appellant with no difficulty in at least some situations. The term has a commonly understood meaning which clearly embraces persons who by reason of prior conviction or reputation are generally regarded as engaged in criminal activities. Certain individuals are commonly referred to in the media as leaders or members of the underworld. Appellant could not be aware of such notoriety without being aware that the character of such individuals is “questionable” within the meaning of the probation condition. We need not go further to establish that the condition is facially valid, leaving the perimeter of its meaning to be determined in any proceeding which may be instituted to revoke appellant’s probation.
Affirmed.
Notes
Appellant has challenged only the body search which discovered the packet, and has not contended that the opening of the packet and the analysis of its contents were improper in themselves. In
State v. Kaluna,
