Lead Opinion
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Montana’s Thirteenth Judicial District Court, Yellowstone County, sentenced Kristin Anne Moody to a two-year deferred sentence based on three separate charges. Prior to sentencing, Moody filed objections to several probation conditions recommended in the pre-sentence investigation (PSI) report. The District Court nonetheless imposed most of the proposed conditions. Moody now appeals. We affirm on the following issues:
¶2 1. Does requiring a probationer to keep her home open and available for the probation officer to visit at all times violate the Montana Constitution?
¶3 2. Did the District Court properly impose a travel restriction as a condition of Moody’s probation?
BACKGROUND
¶4 In responding to a report on May 7, 2004, Officers Wells and Ostermiller of the Laurel Police Department came across a gray van that had reached a complete stop in the middle of an intersection. Officers Wells and Ostermiller approached the van and found Moody, who appeared to be asleep at the wheel. The officers removed Moody from the van and verified that she did not need medical attention. Smelling of alcohol and unsteady on her feet, Moody swore at the officers and refused to perform any field sobriety tests or provide a breath alcohol sample. Moody could not find the registration for the
¶5 The State charged Moody by information with Count I, assault on a police officer, a felony in violation of § 45-5-210(l)(a), MCA; Count II, driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs, a misdemeanor in violation of § 61-8-401, MCA; and Count III, driving without required motor vehicle insurance, a misdemeanor in violation of § 61-6-302, MCA.
¶6 Moody pled guilty to all three counts pursuant to a plea agreement. Prior to sentencing, Probation Officer Barry Ivanoff prepared the PSI with recommendations for the conditions of Moody’s probation. Moody filed an objection to several of the proposed conditions, including 2 and 3, which read as follows:
2. The Defendant will not change [her] place of residence without first obtaining permission from [her] Probation/Parole Officer. The residence must be approved by [her] Probation & Parole Officer. The Defendant will make the home open and available for the Probation & Parole Officer to visit as required per policy. The Defendant will not own dangerous/vicious animals such as guard dogs, use perimeter security doors, or refuse to open the door of the residence when requested. [Emphasis added.]
3. The Defendant shall not leave [her] assigned district without first obtaining written permission from [her] Probation & Parole Officer.
¶7 Moody objected to the requirement that she make her home “open and available” to her probation officer on the grounds that this condition obviated the reasonable cause requirement for searches of probationers’ homes, and thus violated her constitutional rights of privacy and protection from unreasonable search and seizure. Moody also objected to the travel restriction, arguing that it inhibited her constitutional rights to travel and work and her freedom of association; she also argued that the restriction was not sufficiently related to her rehabilitative needs and did not protect society.
¶8 At the sentencing hearing, Moody called Officer Ivanoff to testify regarding the probation conditions he recommended. After Moody and the State argued their respective positions, the District Court issued the sentence, imposing both the second and third probation conditions.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶9 We review a District Court’s criminal sentence for legality only. State v. Eaton,
DISCUSSION
¶10 1. Does requiring a probationer to keep her home open and available for the probation officer to visit at all times violate the Montana Constitution?
¶11 Moody argues that Condition 2 of her probation, which requires that she keep her “home open and available for the Probation & Parole Officer to visit,” violates the reasonable cause standard applied by this Court to searches of probationers’ residences, as well as Admin. R. M. 20.7.1101(7), governing conditions on probation. Because we conclude that a “home visit” to a probationer’s residence does not qualify as a “search,” we affirm the District Court’s ruling.
¶12 The search of a person may be conducted pursuant to a valid search warrant or in accordance with a judicially recognized exception. Section 46-5-101, MCA. In Montana, a probation officer may search a probationer’s residence without a warrant so long as the officer has reasonable cause for the search. See State v. Roper,
¶13 The State points out that the United States Supreme Court has recently held that a suspicionless search, conducted pursuant to a California statute requiring parolees to agree in writing to be subject to searches with or without cause was constitutional. Samson v. California,_U.S._,
¶14 Moody contends that Samson is distinguishable since it involved search of a parolee on the street as opposed to a probationer in her home; further, since probationers such as Moody are much less of a threat than parolees, they have a higher expectation of privacy and freedom from unreasonable searches under the Montana Constitution.
¶15 The initial inquiry then is whether a “home visit” constitutes a “search” under Article II, Section 11, Montana Constitution.
¶16 A home cisii-where the probation officer stops by the probationer’s home to determine whether the individual is abiding by the conditions of his or her probation-operates as an important check on a probationer’s rehabilitation efforts. As the Department of Corrections states in its Probation and Parole Bureau Standard Operating Procedures, home visits are conducted to address the following:
* verify offender’s home address;
* observe and determine lifestyle factors;
* meet significant others, family members, other residents of home;
* observe residence for contraband, weapons, illegal or dangerous objects (if visual inspection of the residence provides reasonable suspicion that the offender has items banned by probation rules or court order, conduct a search per P&P 60-4, Searches of Offender’s Person, Vehicle, Residence Confiscation of Offender’s Property);
* observe residence for non-essential items such [as] VCR/ Cable/Computer-Intemet capabilities if offender’s financial obligations to victim, court and bureau are not being met;
* observe residence for cable/computer/Internet capabilities if offender is a sex offender and/or has restrictions;
* conduct visual inspection of home;
* observe neighborhood for potential public safety issues such as high crime area (gang graffiti), schools/parks (sex offenders) or other vulnerable neighbors;
* assess home environment for officer safety (may draft a floor*523 plan of home); and
* require offender to submit to breathalyzer/urinalysis screening for use of alcohol and/or drugs.
Chapter 60, “Sign-Up Procedure/Supervision Standards.”
¶17 As the above list indicates, probationary restrictions are meant to facilitate rehabilitation and ensure that the community is not harmed by the probationer’s conditional liberty status. Burke,
¶18 In determining whether a “search” has occurred, we look at three factors: (1) whether the person has an actual expectation of privacy; (2) whether society is willing to recognize that expectation as objectively reasonable; and (3) the nature of the State’s intrusion. State v. Elison,
¶19 “Probation is an act of grace by a sentencing court, intended to give the offender a chance to rehabilitate outside the prison setting.” State v. Boulton,
¶20 Even assuming arguendo that a probationer had an actual expectation that there would be no home visits during the period of supervision, home visits serve to ensure that the supervised felon is abiding by the conditions of her probation, thus addressing the
¶21 As to the nature of the state’s intrusion, home visits are a commonly imposed condition of probation which allow the probation officer to determine whether the individual is abiding by the conditions of probation and thus serve to protect the safety and welfare of society.
¶22 Other courts addressing the issue of whether a home visit constitutes a search have concluded that, although such visits can evolve into a search, the initial visit is not a search. See United States v. Workman,
Accordingly, consonant with the Supreme Court’s holding in Knights that “no more than reasonable suspicion” was required to search a state probationer’s home when that search was authorized by a condition of probation, we hold that the probable cause requirements of the Fourth Amendment do not apply to a federal probation officer conducting a home visit-a far less invasive form of supervision than a search-pursuant to a convicted offender’s conditions of supervised release. Furthermore, we hold that because home visits “at any time” are conducted pursuant to a court-imposed condition of federal supervised release of which the supervisee is aware, and because a home visit is far less intrusive than a probation search, probation officers conducting a home visit are not subject to the reasonable suspicion standard applicable to probation searches under Knights.
Reyes,
¶23 A probationer has no reasonable expectation of privacy that
¶24 Since a home visit is not a search, a probation officer may not open drawers, cabinets, closets or the like; nor may the officer rummage through the probationer’s belongings. While a home visit has the potential to turn into a search pursuant to an officer’s plain view observations, it must remain within the parameters of a home visit unless or until there is reasonable cause to engage in a search.
¶25 The dissent argues that the Court has gone astray in its analysis by relying on the fact that Moody was granted probation on the condition that she submit to home visits. In the dissent’s view, this condition of probation “plays no meaningful” role in determining whether the intrusion constitutes a search. Secondly, assuming that the Court has adopted a “consent” rationale for circumventing what would otherwise be a search, the dissent proceeds to argue lack of meaningful consent.
¶26 The “condition of probation” focus, however, is separate from a “consent” analysis. The United States Supreme Court made this abundantly clear in Knights where, although the Court specifically declined to address the issue of “consent,” it nonetheless noted that the probation order clearly set out the probation search requirement; that Knights was “unambiguously’ aware of the condition and that his acceptance of a clear and unambiguous condition significantly diminished his reasonable expectation of privacy. In Knights, the probationary search which the Court upheld was predicated on both the probation condition and reasonable suspicion. In 2006, the Court in Samson addressed the question left unresolved inKnights-whether the search would have been reasonable under the Fourth Amendment had it been solely predicated upon the condition of probation. Samson,
¶27 In the present case, Moody was granted probation on certain conditions of which she was “unambiguously’ aware. Her expectation of privacy during her period of supervision, like Knights’ and Samson’s, was significantly diminished. Although the dissent likens
¶28 In conclusion, we hold that home visits, as a routine and reasonable element of supervising a convicted person serving a term of supervised release, are not searches and are thus not subject to the reasonable cause standard. The District Court, in requiring that Moody consent to home visits as a condition of probation, did not violate Moody’s constitutional rights to privacy or right to be free from unreasonable searches.
¶29 2. Did the District Court properly impose a travel restriction as a condition of Moody’s probation?
¶30 Moody also insists that the District Court erred by imposing Condition 3, requiring that she obtain written permission from her probation officer before leaving her assigned district. Although Moody concedes that this condition does not absolutely limit her travel beyond the multi-county district, she nonetheless argues that the condition improperly places her rights at the mercy of the supervising officer. We disagree.
¶31 Since probation is a form of punishment, probationers do not enjoy the absolute liberty afforded every citizen; rather, they are subject to conditional liberty properly dependent on special restrictions. Beaudry,
¶32 In this case, the offense resulted from Moody’s admitted problem with alcohol. Unless Moody maintains sobriety, she is likely to re-offend. The deferred sentence permitted Moody the opportunity to address her chemical dependency under the supervision of the probation office. This supervision properly includes a travel restriction
¶33 Affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring and dissenting.
¶34 I concur in the Court’s resolution of Issue 2, but I dissent from its decision on Issue 1.
¶35 I cannot agree that a “home visit”
¶36 When determining whether there has been an unlawful governmental intrusion into one’s privacy in search and seizure
(1) whether the person has an actual expectation of privacy; (2) whether society is willing to recognize that expectation as objectively reasonable; and (3) the nature of the State’s intrusion.
Elison, ¶ 48; see also Hulse, ¶ 22; Scheetz,
¶37 In the case at hand, the subject of the search is Moody’s home. That a person has an actual expectation of privacy in his or her home, which society is willing to recognize as objectively reasonable, is beyond dispute. Indeed, in State v. Graham,
At the risk of belaboring the obvious, private residences are places in which the individual normally expects privacy free of governmental intrusion not authorized by warrant, and that expectation is plainly one that society is prepared to recognize as justifiable. The fundamental purpose of the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures is to protect the privacy and security of individuals and safeguard the sanctity of the home against arbitrary invasions by governmental officials.
McLees, ¶ 25 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). And in Scheetz, we recited “the long-standing notion throughout this country, but especially in Montana, that a person’s residence and his homestead are secure from unwarranted government intrusion, be it by physical or technological means.” Scheetz,
¶38 Such an expectation of privacy is legitimately held by probationers. See Griffin v. Wisconsin,
¶39 As for the nature of the State’s intrusion, we consider “whether the state’s method of investigation is so personally invasive that we recognize the intrusion as a search that requires further justification, such as a warrant or other special circumstances.” Scheetz, 286 Mont.
¶40 Thus, given that “[t]he home is the most sanctified of all ‘particular places,’ ” Graham, ¶ 22, and that the purpose and extent of a probation officer’s “home visit” is to inspect the probationer’s home and gather evidence of noncompliance with probation conditions, the impingement on privacy brought about by such an intrusion unquestionably is a “search.”
¶41 The Court’s contrary conclusion rests on a fundamentally erroneous application of the factors set forth in Elison. First, with respect to whether a probationer has an actual expectation of privacy in her home, the Court observes that “probationers do not enjoy the absolute liberty and heightened expectations of privacy afforded every Montana citizen” but, rather, “are subject to conditional liberty properly dependent upon special restrictions” and, thus, have a “diminished expectation of privacy.” ¶ 19. These observations, while true, do not establish that a probationer has no actual expectation of privacy in her home. Indeed, it goes without saying that a “diminished expectation of privacy” is not a nonexistent expectation of privacy. See State v. 1993 Chevrolet Pickup,
¶42 The Court reasons, in addition, that a convicted felon whose probation includes a “clearly expressed” condition that she make her home open and available for a probation officer to visit “does not have an actual expectation of privacy that would preclude home visits.” ¶ 19;
¶43 For one thing, the Court’s observation totally misses the point. The issue at hand is whether the probationer has an actual expectation of privacy in her home, not whether she has an actual expectation of privacy “that would preclude home visits from taking place.” No one is arguing that the State is precluded altogether from conducting home visits. Rather, the question is whether a home visit constitutes a “search,” which in turn would require further justification-such as a warrant or other special circumstances-not a complete ban. Likewise, no one has suggested that a probationer whose sentence includes the home visit condition could possibly have “an actual expectation that there would be no home visits during the period of supervision.” ¶20. Obviously, the probationer does expect that there will be home visits, given that this is a condition of her probation. Rather, the question, again, is whether such intrusions are so personally invasive that we require further justification for them.
¶44 Moreover, the question of whether an intrusion into a home constitutes a “search” is not contingent on whether the State has permitted the homeowner to have a privacy interest therein. Under the Court’s flawed reasoning, the State could vitiate every citizen’s expectation of privacy by the simple expedient of announcing that, henceforth, homes in this State are subject to suspicionless intrusions under the guise of “home visits.” However, as the Supreme Court explained in Smith v. Maryland,
Situations can be imagined, of course, in which [the] two-pronged inquiry [of Katz v. United States,389 U.S. 347 ,88 S.Ct. 507 (1967)] would provide an inadequate index of Fourth Amendment protection. For example, if the Government were suddenly to announce on nationwide television that all homes henceforth would be subject to warrantless entry, individuals thereafter might not in fact entertain any actual expectation of privacy regarding their homes, papers, and effects.... In such circumstances, where an individual’s subjective expectations had been “conditioned” by influences alien to well-recognized Fourth Amendment freedoms, those subjective expectations obviously could play no meaningful role in ascertaining what the scope of Fourth Amendment protection was. In determining whether a*531 “legitimate expectation of privacy” existed in such cases, a normative inquiry would be proper.
Smith,
¶45 In a similar vein, the Court is also mistaken to suggest that a “home visit” is not a search because the probationer had notice of and consented to this condition on her sentence. See ¶ 19. To the contrary, the officer’s intrusion may be a “search” nonetheless. See Vernonia School Dist. 47J v. Acton,
¶46 Furthermore, it is disingenuous to suggest that the probationer had a meaningful choice not to consent to such intrusions on her privacy. As Justice Stevens succinctly observed in Samson v. California,_U.S._,
[T]he State’s argument that a California parolee “consents” to the suspicionless search condition is sophistry. Whether or not a prisoner can choose to remain in prison rather than be released on parole, he has no “choice” concerning the search condition; he may either remain in prison, where he will be subjected to suspicionless searches, or he may exit prison and still be subject to suspicionless searches. Accordingly, “to speak of consent in this context is to resort to a manifest fiction, for the [parolee] who purportedly waives his rights by accepting such a condition has little genuine option to refuse.” 5 W. LaFave, Search and Seizure: A Treatise on the Fourth Amendment § 10.10(b), pp. 440-441 (4th ed. 2004).
Samson,
¶47 The same is equally true here. Moody’s “choice” was to accept either suspicionless entries into her home or suspicionless entries into
¶48 With respect to whether a probationer’s expectation of privacy in her home is one society is willing to recognize as objectively reasonable, the Court reasons that home visits “ensure that the supervised felon is abiding by the conditions of her probation, thus addressing the problem of recidivism” and that “ ‘more intensive supervision can reduce recidivism’ ” (citing Griffin,
¶49 Again, the question under the first two Elison factors is whether the probationer has an actual expectation of privacy that society is willing to recognize as objectively reasonable. As explained above, private residences are “places in which the individual normally expects privacy free of governmental intrusion not authorized by warrant, and that expectation is plainly one that society is prepared to recognize as justifiable.” McLees, ¶ 25 (internal quotation marks omitted). The fact that the probationer’s expectation of privacy is “diminished” (¶ 19 of the Court’s Opinion) merelyjustifi.es the lesser standard of “reasonable grounds” approved by the Supreme Court in Griffin and Knights and adopted by this Court in State v. Burke,
¶51 The Court attempts to bolster the result it reaches here with citations to the same five cases cited in the State’s brief for the proposition that a home visit is not a search-namely, United States v. Workman,
¶52 But, at a more fundamental level, even if the decisions of courts in other jurisdictions based on other constitutional and statutory provisions afford persuasive authority on the issue at hand, the cases cited by this Court at ¶¶ 22-23 are readily distinguishable, in that the “visits” mentioned in those cases either are undefined (in other words, the contours of a “visit” are not stated) or are far less intrusive than the “home visits” under our review. See Workman,
¶53 Simply labeling something a “home visit” does not afford an answer. Because the intrusions at issue in the foregoing cases were, in substance, not as invasive as the “home visit” at issue here, the Court’s reliance on those cases is, therefore, misplaced.
¶54 The same is true of the State’s conclusory assurance that the Department of Corrections “distinguishes between home visits and probationary searches.” The State fails to point to any such distinction in the Department’s policies and procedures. Indeed, the State provides no explanation whatsoever of what a probation officer may do in a probationary search that the officer may not do in the course of a home visit. The Court assumes that the probation officer (during a home visit) “may not open drawers, cabinets, closets or the like; nor may the officer rummage through the probationer’s belongings.” ¶ 24. Yet, such restrictions do not appear anywhere in the Department’s policies and procedures concerning supervision of probationers. Rather, the Court has simply inserted its own language, unfortunately created from whole cloth and contrary to the actual record, into the definition of a “home visit.” In point of fact, the home visits under our review instruct probation officers, without qualification, to “inspectD” the probationer’s home and, during that inspection, to “observe” for
¶55 Notably, Latta (cited by the Court at ¶ 22) actually supports the conclusion that a “home visit” is a search. In Latta, the Ninth Circuit, in the context of addressing whether a parole officer’s “warrantless search of [a parolee’s] home violated the Fourth Amendment,” Latta,
The purposes of the parole system give the parole authorities a special and unique interest in invading the privacy of parolees under their supervision. In order to fulfill his dual responsibilities for helping the parolee to reintegrate into society and evaluating his progress, and for preventing possible further antisocial or criminal conduct by the parolee, it is essential that the parole officer have a thorough understanding of the parolee and his environment, including his personal habits, his relationships with other persons, and what he is doing, both at home and outside it. It is equally important that this information be kept up to date. Much of this information can be obtained by methods which necessitate little or no invasion of the parolee’s privacy, such as interviews with the parolee himself or with his employer, family, or friends and visits to his house. However, these techniques have inherent limitations. For example, it may be impossible to determine whether a parolee is using alcohol or narcotics, whether he is keeping weapons or other contraband in his home, whether he is using or preparing to use his home as a base for improper or unlawful activities, whether he is making a real effort to obtain employment, or the general nature of his home environment, without conducting some type of search.
Latta,
¶56 The Comb points out that “home visits” serve important goals and purposes-namely, to “ensure that the supervised felon is abiding by the conditions of her probation”; to “addressD the problem of
¶57 This is not to say that the goals and purposes served by “home visits” are irrelevant. To the contrary, this factor bears on the degree of certainty or suspicion required to support the officer’s decision to intrude. See Knights,
¶58 The “reasonable grounds” standard was sufficient, we held in Burke, to accommodate two often opposing interests: the probation officer’s duty to supervise the probationer and the probationer’s reduced, but nevertheless existent, privacy interest. Quoting Griffin, we reasoned as follows:
[T]he probation agency must be able to act based upon a lesser degree of certainty than the Fourth Amendment would*537 otherwise require in order to intervene before a probationer does damage to himself or society. The agency, moreover, must be able to proceed on the basis of its entire experience with the probationer, and to assess probabilities in the light of its knowledge of his life, character and circumstances.
Griffin, [483 U.S. at 879 ,]107 S.Ct. at 3171 . Thus, the special needs of the probation system strongly militate toward the “reasonable grounds” standard.
Burke,
¶59 With no apparent justification for modifying this balance-indeed, as noted above, the Court merely reiterates the exact rationales by which we approved the “reasonable grounds” standard in the first place, compare Burke,
¶60 Yet, nothing in the record supports the notion that the “reasonable grounds” standard inhibits a probation officer from supervising the probationer or renders the officer’s expertise meaningless. Indeed, we adopted the reasonable grounds standard precisely to accommodate probation officers’ expertise in supervising probationers. See Burke,
¶62 In sum, I cannot agree that calling something which is, for all intents and purposes, a search a “home visit” necessarily changes what probation officers are actually doing: seeking and gathering evidence. Nor can I agree that by the simple expedient of renaming a search a “home visit,” the privacy of a presumably innocent probationer becomes subject to greater infringement (given that the Court requires no cause for a “home visit”) than is the privacy of a probationer of whom the probation officer actually has a reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing.
¶63 Before concluding, it is appropriate to address the extensive arguments presented to us by Moody and the State based on Samson v. California,_U.S._,
¶64 First, Samson involved the search of a parolee, not a probationer. Notably, the Samson majority went to great lengths to characterize
¶65 Thus, the Court in Samson did not broaden the holding of Knights, supra, that “[w]hen an officer has reasonable suspicion that a probationer subject to a search condition is engaged in criminal activity, there is enough likelihood that criminal conduct is occurring that an intrusion on the probationer’s significantly diminished privacy interests is reasonable.” Knights,
¶66 Second, Samson involved a search of Samson’s person on a street, not a search of his house. As explained above, one’s expectation of privacy is at its pinnacle in the home. See McLees, ¶ 25 (The fundamental purpose of the prohibitions against unreasonable searches and seizures “is to protect the privacy and security of individuals and safeguard the sanctity of the home against arbitrary invasions by governmental officials.” (internal quotation marks omitted)); Graham, ¶ 22 (“[T]he home... is historically the raison d’etre for the constitutional protection.”). To say that a probation officer may enter a probationer’s home without reasonable cause because a police officer may conduct a suspicionless search of a parolee on the street is to disregard entirely the fundamental and crucial difference between these two contexts: the heightened expectation of privacy in the former.
¶67 Third, the suspicionless search system approved by the Supreme Court in Samson did not, in the Court’s view, give officers “unbridled discretion to conduct searches.” Samson,
¶68 Unfortunately, the same cannot be said about the “home visits” at issue here, the implementation of which is not constrained by any standards, guidelines, or procedures at all. Indeed, the only parameters imposed on a probation officer’s otherwise unfettered ability to enter and inspect a probationer’s home under the guise of a “home visit” are set forth in this Court’s Opinion; namely, the officer “may not open drawers, cabinets, closets or the like” or “rummage through the probationer’s belongings”-at least not until the inspection made possible by the officer’s suspicionless intrusion into the house has given him or her reasonable cause to begin rummaging (see ¶ 24 of the Court’s Opinion).
¶69 Finally-and perhaps most fundamentally-Samson was decided under the Fourth Amendment, whereas we are bound, in addition, by the provisions of the Montana Constitution. See State v. Tackitt,
¶70 In conclusion, a probation officer’s entry into a probationer’s home to conduct a “home visit,” as that term is presently defined by the Department of Corrections, constitutes a search. The Court decides otherwise on the grounds that the probationer was “granted” this condition on her sentence and that home visits are one “commonly imposed” condition of probation. However, neither of these considerations establishes that the probationer does not have a legitimate expectation of privacy in her home that is infringed by suspicionless intrusions to “inspectü” and “observe” for evidence of “contraband, weapons, illegal or dangerous objects.” The Court also reasons that home visits “serve to protect the safety and welfare of society.” However, the importance of the goal served by an officer’s intrusion into a home does not determine the nature of that intrusion and, thus, is not a factor by which we determine whether the intrusion constitutes a search. Otherwise, the citizens of this State are protected only from unimportant intrusions, and the constitutional protections against unreasonable searches and seizures are meaningless.
¶71 I would require reasonable grounds to conduct the “home visits” at issue here. I dissent from the Court’s contrary conclusion.
Notes
The Department of Corrections uses the term “home contact” in its procedures manual. However, the parties and the Court use the term “home visit”; thus, for consistency, I also am using the term “home visit.”
In Reyes, the probation officers “walk[ed] on the driveway toward the backyard to determine whether anyone was at home” and, in so doing, discovered marijuana plants in plain view in Reyes’s yard. Beyes,
Notably, the Grubbs court held that evidence discovered in plain view by a probation officer during a “visit” to a probationer’s home may be used only in probation violation proceedings; the seized evidence is not admissible to prove a new criminal offense. Grubbs,
