The district court ordered defendant-appellant John E. Paul to serve a prison term of forty-six months and, upon completion of that term, to undergo frequent drug testing as a condition of his three-year period of supervised release. See 18 U.S.C. § 3563(a)(5). Paul appeals the order that he undergo drug testing, contending that because he has no history of drug abuse, the court had no ground on which to impose this condition. We concludе that the court did not abuse its discretion in ordering the testing.
I.
After Paul pleaded guilty to a charge of wire fraud, see 18 U.S.C. § 1343, the district court ordered the Probation Depart *598 ment to prepare a pre-sentence report (“PSR”). In discussing Paul’s background, the PSR did not indicate that Paul had ever used narcotics illegally. However, the PSR’s summary of his criminal history did report that he had three convictions for operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol, that the last of those offenses also involved flight from a police officer, bail jumping, and resisting arrest, and that he was on probation from that third conviction when he committed the instant offense. R. 23, PSR ¶¶ 47-49. It noted further that although Paul had been “compliant” with a 2004 substance abuse treatment program in which he participated by court order, he reportedly did not view himself as an alcoholic, did not attend Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, and did not otherwise make an effort to establish more sober habits. R. 23, Addendum to PSR ¶ 72. In describing the supervision plan to which Paul would be subjected upon release from his incarceration, the PSR noted that among other сonditions, Paul would “be required to abstain from the use of alcohol and illegal drugs and participate in a program of substance abuse counseling and testing as directed” by the court. R. 23, PSR ¶ 94.
After hearing the partiеs’ arguments as to an appropriate sentence, the court ordered Paul to serve a prison term of forty-six months (in the middle of the range advised by the Sentencing Guidelines), to be followed by a three-yeаr term of supervised release. The court also ordered Paul to undergo drug testing as a condition of that release:
You are to abstain from the use of illegal drugs and alcohol and participatе in substance abuse treatment. You shall submit to drug testing beginning within 15 days of your release, 60 drug tests annually thereafter. The probation office may utilize the Administrative Office of the United States Courts!’] Phased Collection Process.
R. 26 at 16; see also R. 15 at 3 ¶ 7. The phased collection process referenced in the court’s order is a process by which a probation officer gradually decreases the number of drug tests administered to an individual as hе establishes a record of sobriety. See Administrative Office of U.S. Courts, Probation and Pretrial Services Division, Monograph 109: “The Supervision of Federal Offenders,” at IV-21 (revised Mar. 2007). After the court finished announcing the sentence, Paul’s counsel questioned the drug-testing requirement:
PAUL’S COUNSEL: Okay. And last, one of the conditions of supervised release was drug testing. I don’t see a history of drug use from Mr. Paul. I don’t know if that’s—
THE COURT: Well, he does have alcohol use.
PAUL’S COUNSEL: He does. But urine screens, I don’t know if — I understood it to bе urine screens. I don’t know if that would — I could understand counseling, but I don’t know if a urine drop—
THE COURT: And if his drug tests are all clear for a period of time, that’s why there is the provision for the Phased Collection Process.
PAUL’S COUNSEL: Okay. Then that’s all I have, Your Honor.
THE COURT: Okay. Court will recess.
R. 26 at 19-20.
Paul’s appeal repeats and expands upon the point his counsel made to the district court. Paul argues that in the absence of a history of illegal drug use, it is unreasonable for the court to require him to undergo testing for such drug use. He adds that the obligation to submit to sixty drug *599 tests per annum imposes a greater restriction on his liberty than is necessary to verify his compliance with the directive that he abstain from illegal drug use.
II.
We reject the government’s threshold contention that we lack jurisdiction over this appeal because Paul waived any objection he might have had to the drug testing requirement.
See United States v. Jacques,
We review the conditions a district court has imposed on a defendant’s supervised release for abuse of discretion.
E.g., United States v. Hook,
18 U.S.C. § 3583(d) identifies a number of mandatory conditions that a court “shall” impose on a defendant’s supervised release along with а second set of discretionary conditions that a court “may” impose in appropriate circumstances. Drug testing is one of those conditions that a court must impose, although Congress has granted the distriсt court discretion to exempt a defendant from complying with *600 this particular condition when the court is convinced a defendant is unlikely to abuse a controlled substance. Section 3583(d) states, in relevant part:
The court shall also order, as an explicit condition of supervised release, that the defendant refrain from any unlawful use of a controlled substance and submit to a drug test within 15 days of release on supervised release and at least 2 periodic drug test thereafter (as determined by the court) for use of a controlled substance. The condition stated in the preceding sentence may be ameliоrated or suspended by the court as provided in section 3563(a)(4).
Although the statute cross-references section 3563(a)(4), that is a mistake, for the intended cross-reference obviously is to section 3563(a)(5), a pаrallel provision concerning mandatory drug testing as a condition of probation.
See United States v. Tulloch,
This language is hortatory, rather than obligatory, and vests the district court with wide decisional latitude. If Congress wanted to grant low-risk defendants automatiс exemptions from drug testing, it could have written § 3563(a)(5) to read that the testing requirement “shall” or “must” be “ameliorated or suspended” if the defendant is a low risk for future substance abuse. It did not, however....
On the facts before us, we cannot say that the district court abused its broad discretion in declining to suspend or ameliorate the statutorily-mandated testing or in ordering Paul to submit to sixty drug tests per year. Paul has no history of drug abuse, but that alone dоes not demonstrate that the district court was compelled to suspend or ameliorate the testing.
See Guy,
III.
The district court did not abuse its discretion in requiring Paul to undergo drug testing as a condition of his supervised release. We therefore Affirm Paul’s sentence.
Notes
. Supervised release functions similarly to probation, although the two are recognized and treated as distinct means of supervising individuals outside of the prison setting.
See
U.S.S.G. Ch. 7, Pt. A, intro, comment, (n.2) (2007);
Knight v. U.S.,
