Eric Demetrius Campbell v. Commonwealth of Virginia

                                            COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA


              Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges AtLee and Friedman
UNPUBLISHED


              Argued at Fredericksburg, Virginia


              ERIC DEMETRIUS CAMPBELL
                                                                           MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
              v.     Record No. 0791-22-4                                  JUDGE FRANK K. FRIEDMAN
                                                                                 APRIL 25, 2023
              COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA


                               FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY
                                              Tracy C. Hudson, Judge

                              Kelsey Bulger, Senior Appellate Attorney (Virginia Indigent Defense
                              Commission, on briefs), for appellant.

                              Jason D. Reed, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares,
                              Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.


                     This appeal requires us to determine what special conditions of probation may be

              imposed upon a probationer who has never been convicted of a sexual offense. Eric Demetrius

              Campbell challenges the trial court’s ruling permitting his probation officer to impose sex

              offender special conditions of probation on him despite the fact that he has never been convicted

              of a sexual offense. He also argues that the trial court erred in concluding that sex offender

              probation conditions were reasonable under the circumstances. For the following reasons, and

              under the unique circumstances of this case, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand the

              matter for further proceedings.




                     *
                         This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413.
                                          BACKGROUND1

       Upon his guilty plea under North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25 (1970), the trial court

convicted Campbell for two counts of assault and battery upon a family member as a third or

subsequent offense within 20 years. The trial court sentenced Campbell to a total of 10 years’

imprisonment with 7 years and 11 months suspended and 4 years of probation. The sentencing

order required him to comply with “all the rules and requirements set by [his] [p]robation [o]fficer”

and with all terms of his probation contract.

       On March 24, 2020, after his release from incarceration, Campbell signed an agreement

with the probation and parole office to “the standard eleven conditions of [probation] supervision.”

Condition 6 required Campbell to “follow the [p]robation and [p]arole [o]fficer’s instructions” and

“be truthful, cooperative and report as instructed.” On April 7, 2020, the probation officer presented

Campbell with a separate document entitled “Sex Offender Special Instructions.” The document is

a Department of Corrections (DOC) pre-printed form that lists 30 enumerated conditions; the first

24 of which include boxes, every one of which was marked in the document proffered to Campbell

for his signature. Instructions 4, 6, 8-12, 14-16, and 24 also had a handwritten star next to them.

Campbell declined to sign or agree to the conditions.

       Campbell, by counsel, subsequently moved the trial court to remove what he characterized

as unreasonable probation conditions, namely the sex offender probation conditions imposed by his

probation officer. Campbell stated that, when he reported to probation as instructed, he was

presented with a list of additional conditions that are “generally imposed on sex offenders by order




       1
         “Although parts of the record are sealed, this appeal requires unsealing certain portions
to resolve the issues raised by [Campbell]. To the extent that certain facts are found in the sealed
portions of the record, we unseal those portions only as to those specific facts mentioned in this
opinion.” Khine v. Commonwealth, 75 Va. App. 435, 442 n.1 (2022). “The rest remains sealed.”
Id.
                                               -2-
of the court.” Campbell maintained that he had “never been convicted of any sex offense at all,” so

the additional conditions were unreasonable as applied to him.

        In a letter dated March 15, 2021, to the trial court, Senior Probation and Parole Officer

Rachel Taylor reported that Campbell was being supervised as a sex offender under DOC Operating

Procedure 735.3, which she stated governs “Supervision of Sex Offenders in Community

Corrections.” The DOC procedure “provides for intensive supervision of the most serious,

high-risk sex offenders,” whom DOC defines as probationers who are “required to register as a sex

offender,” have “a sex offense in their criminal history,” or have been “convicted of an offense of a

sexual nature.” The letter stated that the original rape charge lodged against Campbell, though

eventually amended to domestic assault and battery as a third offense, was “an essential component

underlying the Instant Offense[.]” Taylor stated that, upon referral for a psychosexual evaluation,

Campbell was determined to be “[a]bove [a]verage [r]isk for sexual offending.” Taylor reported

that Campbell was referred to the Sex Offender Awareness Program, which he had attended

regularly. In addition, Campbell had successfully completed an anger management program.

Taylor recommended that Campbell be required to “comply with all standards of Sex Offender

Probation Supervision to include Sex Offender Treatment and routine polygraph testing.”

        At an April 2, 2021 hearing on Campbell’s motion to remove the probation conditions, he

argued that the trial court had not delegated to the probation and parole office the authority to

impose sexual offender special conditions. Specifically, Campbell contended that he had not been

convicted for any sexual offense and that he would not accept responsibility for any sex offense,

which would be part of sex offender treatment required under the proposed conditions. Campbell

asserted that the sex offender special conditions were “totally inappropriate” considering the manner

in which the case “ultimately [was] resolved.” He noted that, while the trial court had “imposed




                                                  -3-
special conditions in this case,” the Commonwealth had not requested sex offender conditions

and the court had not ordered them.

       The Commonwealth argued that the probation officer’s authority to impose sex offender

special conditions was derived from “their statutory supervising authority”2 and the trial court’s

“inherent authority” to delegate “certain aspects of probation.” In the Commonwealth’s view,

the “statutory supervising authority” and the delegated authority from the trial court permitted

the probation officer to “look at the nature and circumstances of what was alleged, any sort of

proffer that was made in the [pre-sentence investigation report], any allegations made by a

complaining witness, and any information that’s derived from the accused during the course of

their supervision” and impose sex offender conditions. Moreover, under Code § 19.2-304 the trial

court had the authority to revoke or modify the probation conditions upon proper hearing and

notice. The Commonwealth asserted that, in its proffer of evidence at the hearing upon Campbell’s

Alford guilty plea, it had advised the trial court that Campbell sexually assaulted the complaining

witness during the incident.3

       The trial court acknowledged that the initial charges against Campbell included a rape

charge. The trial court concluded that, through Condition 6 of the probation contract, it delegated to

the probation and parole office the authority to impose sex offender conditions if the conditions

were reasonable. The trial court postponed any decision about whether imposing sex offender

conditions was reasonable under the circumstances.

       Campbell also asked the trial court to expunge his criminal record of “everything except for

the things for which he was convicted.” Thus, the record of conviction would be only for the two



       2
           Code § 53.1-145 delineates the powers and duties of probation and parole officers.
       3
      The record on appeal does not contain a transcript of the plea hearing, including the
Commonwealth’s proffer of the evidence it would have presented had the matter gone to trial.
                                            -4-
domestic assault and battery, third or subsequent offense, convictions. The trial court granted

Campbell’s petition to expunge his record of any reference to the charges that were amended or

nolle prossed because “he should [not] be saddled with” such charges on his record. Subsequently,

the record in the case, other than the Commonwealth’s version of events in the pre-sentence

investigation report,4 was redacted to remove references to the unadjudicated charges.

       At the hearing to determine the reasonableness of the sex offender probation conditions, the

Commonwealth introduced evidence that on April 7, 2020, Probation and Parole Officer Andrea

McDowell presented Campbell with “Sex Offender Special Instructions,” which included

conditions that he have no contact with anyone under the age of 18, refrain from use of social

networking, complete a sex offender treatment program, and inform those with whom he has a

significant relationship of his “sexual offending behavior as directed by” his supervising officer.

Campbell did not sign the document setting forth the special instructions for his probation.5 As

noted above, the document McDowell presented to Campbell had the box marked for every

condition listed on the pre-printed form.

       Taylor testified that she was Campbell’s supervising probation officer for about three

months in 2020 after she took over his supervision from McDowell. Taylor visited Campbell’s

home on September 16, 2020, to meet with him. Due to restrictions related to the COVID-19

pandemic, Taylor phoned Campbell to have him come out of the house to verify his address.

Campbell agreed to come outside, but then did not appear. Concerned for Campbell’s safety as well

as her own, Taylor waited outside in her vehicle, but spoke with Campbell by phone.




       4
         Campbell noted at the hearing, “We provided our own proffer.” He consistently had
contested the Commonwealth’s version of events.
       5
         Because Campbell disputed the sex offender conditions, the probation office did not
attempt to enforce any of the conditions against him.
                                                 -5-
        Eventually, Campbell appeared in a truck, got out of the vehicle, and fell against the side of

the cab. He made a series of statements indicating he did not need supervision but that he wanted to

talk to Taylor. He said he was not “flirting with” Taylor and asked her to move her car into the

driveway. Campbell’s conduct made Taylor “extremely uneasy, given the fact that he was trying to

disarm [her] with saying nice things.” Taylor remained on the phone with Campbell for a period of

time until she drove away and ended the contact. From his demeanor and comments, Taylor was

concerned that Campbell was intoxicated or “having some kind of a stroke.” She contacted the

police to perform a welfare check on Campbell. When Taylor called Campbell the following day,

he said that he did not recall her visit to the home.

        Taylor stated that the probation office’s standard procedure was to assess probationers for

sex offender treatment if there was “a sexual allegation in the series of events of the crime” even if

there was no conviction for a sex offense. The purpose of this procedure was to “comprehensively

ensure” that probationers receive the appropriate treatment to prevent recidivism and to “protect the

community.” In determining the appropriate services for an individual, the probation officer

considered the history of the case, the person’s criminal record, and other relevant factors.

        Taylor also stated that it is “typical” for all the boxes on the “Sex Offender Special

Instructions” form to be checked, so that probationers are “aware of all of the conditions of sex

offender supervision.” But during the meeting between the probation officer and the probationer,

“we explain to [probationers] which ones do and do not apply to them.” Taylor further explained

that “[i]t’s not uncommon for the probation officer to check all boxes and have them sign and not

impose all of [the conditions].” When the trial court inquired how a probationer was “supposed

to know what they’re to do and not do” if the probation officer checks every box for every

probationer, Taylor claimed that “for liability reasons we have them acknowledge all of them,

because if something were to happen later on that we were aware of and didn’t have them go

                                                   -6-
back and sign it, this way we—It’s essentially a way to protect the overall instruction or any

future conversation.”

       Taylor indicated that the narrative of Campbell’s underlying offenses contained in the

pre-sentence report included an allegation of rape, although he was not convicted for that offense.6

Taylor testified that Campbell was “resistant to anything that related to sex offender supervision.”

In her assessment, Taylor considered Campbell’s history of substance abuse, the fact that a minor

lived in the home with him, and his access to the internet (which in her estimation, correlated to

access to victims). Taylor deemed Campbell as being at high risk for sexual violence.

       Madalyn Humphreys testified at the hearing as an expert in the field of sex offender

treatment. Humphreys conducted a sexual offender intake evaluation in October 2020 upon referral

by the probation office. In completing her evaluation, Humphreys considered both the

Commonwealth’s and Campbell’s versions of the incident in question, which involved Campbell’s

adult female partner, L.B. Specifically, Humphreys relied on information from the pre-sentence

report that L.B. alleged to the police that Campbell attacked her while he was intoxicated, held her

at knifepoint, and raped her. Campbell denied the allegations to Humphreys, explaining that he and

L.B. had an argument but “made up” and had consensual sexual intercourse.

       As a component of determining Campbell’s “risk for sexual reoffending,” Humphreys

explored both static and dynamic risk factors. Humphreys stated that together the static and

dynamic risk factors “develop a rubric for predicted recidivism.” Static risk factors included factors

that could not be changed, such as “sex offense history” and circumstances relating to the victim of

the sex offense. Dynamic risk factors related to things that are subject to change such as personal




       6
          We further note that no fact-finder made any finding concerning that allegation because
of the disposition of the case.
                                                -7-
choices to engage in impulsive or risky behaviors that “increase an individual’s risk for sexual

reoffending.”7

       Administering both the Static-99R and Static-2002R risk factor assessments upon Campbell,

Humphreys concluded he was at average or above average risk for “predicted sex offender

recidivism.” Humphreys conceded that the Static-99R and the Static-2002R instruments applied to

those who have “committed previous sexual offenses” and considered any lapse of time between

commission of those offenses. Humphreys affirmed that both instruments were for evaluating

“recidivism,” and had no validity for a person who had not committed a prior sexual offense.

       When completing her evaluation, Humphreys considered numerous factors including

Campbell’s personal history and social functioning, family and sexual relationships, substance

abuse, medical history, judgment, and mental health status and issues. This also included details

Campbell had provided to Humphreys regarding his prior intimate relationships and sexual

activities. Based upon the evaluation, and concluding that he was at above average risk for

“reoffense,” Humphreys recommended that Campbell complete two levels of the Sex Offender

Treatment Program and submit to sexual history polygraphs, among other things.8 She confirmed

that Campbell’s risk “for sexually re-offending” necessarily “assume[d] that he has committed a

sexual offense.” Humphreys said that she diagnosed Campbell with “Adult Sexual

Abuse: Confirmed” based upon the offense for which he was convicted.




       7
         In the process of being interviewed by Humphreys, details about Campbell’s intimate
relationships and sexual practices were raised. Both Humphreys and Taylor also noted that
Campbell made sexually inappropriate, crass, and flippant comments in his dealings with them.
       8
        In addition, Humphreys concluded that Campbell should “participate in a Substance
Abuse Evaluation to determine any treatment needs,” “participate in a Batter’s [sic] Intervention
Program,” “have no contact with his victims,” “have no contact with minors,” “not be allowed to
view any forms of pornography,” “refrain from participating in any type of sexually deviant
behavior,” and “complete all of the successfully [sic] requirements of his current legal situation.”
                                               -8-
        Campbell argued to the trial court that the sex offender treatment conditions were

unreasonable considering the crimes of conviction—domestic assault and battery—and the

surrounding circumstances. The trial court found Humphreys’ testimony persuasive and

compelling, and her conclusion that Campbell was at above average risk for “reoffending” was not

based solely on the pre-sentence report narrative of the offenses. The court concluded that the sex

offender terms “imposed by probation and recommended” by Humphreys were “entirely reasonable

and required for the safety of the public in exchange for Mr. Campbell retaining his liberty versus

incarceration.”9 The trial court thus denied Campbell’s motion to remove most of the special

probation conditions. The trial court removed the requirement that Campbell complete the second

phase of sex offender treatment, which would have required acknowledging guilt for a sexual

offense. The trial court further ruled that he was not prohibited from contact with his own minor

children.

        Campbell appeals. He argues that the trial court erred in refusing to find that his

supervising probation officers exceeded their authority by imposing sex offender probation

conditions when he had never been convicted of a sexual offense. He also maintains that the trial

court’s decision to impose sex offender probation conditions was unreasonable. We need not

rule upon the first issue because our conclusion on Campbell’s second claim requires us to

reverse the trial court’s decision.

                                            ANALYSIS

        “We review conditions of probation imposed by a trial court as part of its sentencing

determination for abuse of discretion.” Murry v. Commonwealth, 288 Va. 117, 122 (2014). A

trial court abuses its discretion


        9
         The trial court further explained its ruling: “To be clear, the [c]ourt going forward now
incorporates the terms in Ms. Humph[reys’] report into the order that will be entered today, so
there’s no question of what I expect Mr. Campbell to comply with.”
                                                 -9-
               when a relevant factor that should have been given significant
               weight is not considered; when an irrelevant or improper factor is
               considered and given significant weight; and when all proper
               factors, and no improper ones, are considered, but the court, in
               weighing those factors, commits a clear error of judgment.

Slusser v. Commonwealth, 74 Va. App. 761, 774 (2022) (quoting Landrum v. Chippenham &

Johnston-Willis Hosps., Inc., 282 Va. 346, 352 (2011)).

       After a criminal conviction, the trial court “may suspend imposition of sentence or

suspend the sentence in whole or part and in addition may place the defendant on probation

under such conditions as the court shall determine.” Code § 19.2-303. “This statute authorizes a

trial court to impose such reasonable terms and conditions of probation as it deems appropriate.”

Murry, 288 Va. at 122. A reasonable probation condition is one that considers “the nature of the

offense, the defendant’s background, and the surrounding circumstances.” Id.

       A convicted defendant does not “have a right to be placed on probation under his own

terms and conditions.” Fazili v. Commonwealth, 71 Va. App. 239, 249 (2019). “Inherent in the

very nature of probation is that probationers ‘do not enjoy the absolute liberty to which every

citizen is entitled,’” “but only . . . conditional liberty properly dependent on observance of

[probation conditions][.]” Id. at 252 (first and second alterations in original) (first quoting

United States v. Knights, 534 U.S. 112, 119 (2001); and then quoting Morrissey v. Brewer, 408

U.S. 471, 480 (1972)). Nevertheless, the Commonwealth’s authority to impose conditions on

probation is not unfettered. Murry, 288 Va. at 124. The conditions imposed must be tailored to

the rehabilitation of the specific offender. Fazili, 71 Va. App. at 255.

       In Fazili, as a condition of his probation for aggravated sexual battery of a child under the

age of 13, the trial court prohibited the defendant from having or using any device that could

access the internet unless approved by his probation officer. 71 Va. App. at 245-46. The record

did not show that “computers or the internet played any role in Fazili’s offense and the circuit


                                                - 10 -
court articulated no justification for how imposing this restriction on Fazili’s fundamental right

to free speech would serve any rehabilitative or public safety purpose.” Id. at 253. This Court

concluded that there was no “showing why the broad restriction” on internet use was warranted,

and therefore held that the restriction was not “narrowly tailored” to “effectuate specific

purposes related to probation.” Id.

        In Murry, upon the defendant’s numerous convictions for sex offenses against his

stepdaughter, the trial court imposed a probation condition requiring him to submit to warrantless

searches and seizures of his person or property for the rest of his life. 288 Va. at 121. In an

appeal challenging the probation condition, the Supreme Court of Virginia observed that

“[b]ecause ‘[a] [s]tate’s operation of a probation system . . . presents “special needs” beyond

normal law enforcement’ to ensure that probation restrictions are followed, ‘departures from the

usual warrant and probable-cause requirements’ for searches may be justified.” Id. at 124

(second through fourth alterations in original) (quoting Griffin v. Wisconsin, 483 U.S. 868,

873-74 (1987)). “The permissible range of departure, however, ‘is not unlimited.’” Id. (quoting

Griffin, 483 U.S. at 875). The Court found that although “the Commonwealth ha[d] a legitimate

interest in ensuring that [the defendant] complete[d] a meaningful period of rehabilitation and

that society not be harmed by [his] being at large as a sex offender,” those interests did not

justify the total surrender of the defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights. Id. at 127. The Court

found that the record did not support a conclusion that a complete waiver of the defendant’s

Fourth Amendment rights was “necessary to facilitate his rehabilitation and protect the public.”

Id. at 128.

        Here, the record does not support a finding that special sexual offender probation

conditions were necessary or “narrowly tailored” to promote Campbell’s rehabilitation or for the




                                               - 11 -
protection of the community.10 The trial court imposed supervised probation as a condition of

Campbell’s partly suspended sentence for two convictions of domestic assault and battery.

Applying what Taylor expressly identified as the DOC’s criteria for supervising sex offenders,

Campbell did not meet the DOC’s definition because he is not required to register as a sex

offender, does not have a sex offense in his criminal history, and has not been “convicted of an

offense of a sexual nature.” Thus, the record established that under DOC Operating Procedure

735.3, Campbell was not subject to probation supervision as a sex offender. Nevertheless,

Campbell was referred to Humphreys for a sex offender intake evaluation.

       Humphreys then used diagnostic analysis that presupposed Campbell had been convicted

of a sexual offense. Humphreys conceded that the evaluation instruments she used were invalid

for those who have not committed a sex offense. Nonetheless, Humphreys recommended that

Campbell complete two levels of the Sex Offender Treatment Program, submit to sexual history

polygraphs, and comply with numerous other conditions, including having no contact with

minors. But those restrictions were not tethered to any facts in the record. The victim of the

assaults was Campbell’s adult domestic partner. The record does not suggest that Campbell

presented any risk to minors or that his internet use played any role in the crimes of conviction.

       Not only was there no prior sexual offense conviction on Campbell’s criminal record, the

trial court had expunged his record of any reference to a sexual offense charge. In granting

Campbell’s petition for expungement, the trial court removed from Campbell’s criminal record any

reference to the sexual offense for which he was charged but not convicted. See Code § 19.2-392.3


       10
          Although not dispositive here, the record includes testimony regarding a pre-printed
form with all the “boxes” checked used with all probationers. The Court notes that routinely
checking every box on a pre-printed form and then picking and choosing which conditions to
impose (and when) is not narrowly tailored to the probationer, does not fairly put the probationer
on notice of which conditions apply to him, and creates an opportunity for arbitrary enforcement.
See Fazili, 71 Va. App. at 255 (holding that probation conditions must be narrowly tailored to
the rehabilitation of the probationer).
                                               - 12 -
(prohibiting disclosure of expunged records). “Virginia law permits a person charged with a

criminal offense to seek the expungement of police and court records relating to a criminal charge if

the person has been acquitted or a ‘nolle prosequi is taken or the charge is otherwise dismissed.’”

A.R.A. v. Commonwealth, 295 Va. 153, 157 (2018) (citing Code § 19.2-392.2(A)(1), (2)).11

       Humphreys’ evaluation—performed prior to the expungement—relied upon information

from the pre-sentence report that included an unproven allegation that Campbell had sexual

intercourse with his domestic partner against her will. The trial court later erroneously relied upon

the already-expunged material by finding Humphreys’ testimony and conclusions persuasive and

imposing the sex offender conditions she recommended, even though at that time, no competent

evidence supported her conclusions. As expunged, Campbell’s record contained no allegation,

much less a conviction, of a sexual offense for the probation supervisors, Humphreys, or the trial

court to consider. Indeed, the trial court had found already that Campbell should not be “saddled

with” the stigma of such charges.

       While the trial court heard testimony that Campbell behaved crassly to Taylor and

Humphreys and made sexually inappropriate comments to them, these circumstances alone did

not justify imposing sex offender probation conditions. Indeed, no evidence supports the

conclusion that Campbell presented a high risk for sex offender “recidivism” because he has



       11
          The record does not explain why every reference to the expunged offense was removed
from every part of the record except the Commonwealth’s unproven version of the offense in the
pre-sentence investigation report. But the expungement statute provides that:

               If the court finds that the continued existence and possible
               dissemination of information relating to the arrest of the petitioner
               causes or may cause circumstances which constitute a manifest
               injustice to the petitioner, it shall enter an order requiring the
               expungement of the police and court records, including electronic
               records, relating to the charge.

Code § 19.2-392.2(F) (emphasis added).
                                                - 13 -
never been convicted of a sex offense and Humphreys used diagnostic instruments that were

invalid under the circumstances. We thus conclude that the trial court’s imposition of sex

offender probation conditions was unreasonable in this case and constituted an abuse of the trial

court’s discretion.12

                                         CONCLUSION

       We find that it was unreasonable for the trial court to impose sex offender conditions

where Campbell had never been convicted for a sex offense and the trial court had expunged the

criminal record indicating that he was charged with one. We reverse the trial court’s judgment

imposing special sex offender probation conditions and remand the matter to the trial court for

further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

                                                                   Reversed, vacated, and remanded.




       12
         Given our conclusion, we need not consider whether the trial court erred in
determining that the probation office had the authority to impose sex offender probation
conditions. “[T]he doctrine of judicial restraint dictates that we decide cases ‘on the best and
narrowest grounds available.’” Butcher v. Commonwealth, 298 Va. 392, 396 (2020) (quoting
Commonwealth v. White, 293 Va. 411, 419 (2017)).
                                               - 14 -