Kieth 0. Stoural pleaded guilty to one count of conversion of collateral pledged to the Farmers Home Administration, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 658. The district court sentenced Stoural to five years probation, with six months home confinement, and ordered him to pay full restitution. In addition to the standard conditions of probation, the district court imposed the following special conditions of probation on Stoural:
1) ... [Stoural] shall not purchase or possess, use, distribute, or administer any alcohol, just the same as any other narcotic or controlled substance.
2) [Stoural] shall submit to and pay for such testing as any person involved in supervising the defendant’s probation may request to detect the presence of alcohol or controlled substances in the defendant’s body fluids and to determine whether the defendant has reverted to the use of any of them.
3) [Stoural] shall be subject to search and seizure of the defendant’s premises, vehicle or person, day or night, with or without warrant, at the request of any person involved in supervising the defendant’s probation to determine the presence of alcoholic beverages or controlled substances; any such person may make such a request without the cooperation of law enforcement officers.
*373 Stoural challenges the addition of these special conditions to his probation sentence. He contends that the provisions prohibiting the purchase, possession, and the use of any alcohol and subjecting him to warrant-less searches for alcohol and drugs at any time, are not reasonably related to the crime to which he pleaded guilty or to the purposes for his sentence.
In our recent case,
United States v. Prendergast,
Accordingly, we vacate the district court’s imposition of the restrictive conditions which we listed above, and remand the case to the district court for the imposition of appropriate probation conditions in light of Prendergast.
