21-2577-cr
United States of America v. Kunz
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
August Term, 2022
Argued: November 30, 2022 Decided: May 22, 2023
Docket No. 21-2577-cr
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Appellee,
— v. —
VICTOR C. KUNZ
Defendant-Appellant.
B e f o r e:
LIVINGSTON, Chief Judge, CALABRESI and LYNCH, Circuit Judges.
Defendant-Appellant Victor C. Kunz appeals from a judgment of the
United States District Court for the Western District of New York (Siragusa, J.)
imposing, among other things, special conditions of supervised release making
Kunz’s internet and computer access contingent on his compliance with
computer monitoring terms devised by the U.S. Probation Office. Kunz
challenges both the court’s special conditions themselves, and the computer
monitoring terms they contemplate, on procedural reasonableness, substantive
reasonableness, and improper delegation grounds. Although Kunz’s appeal
raises legitimate concerns, nearly all of those concerns can be resolved by
construing his computer monitoring restrictions to avoid the troublesome
implications that, in a few cases, an expansive reading might suggest. We
therefore AFFIRM the district court’s judgment as so construed.
TIFFANY H. LEE, Assistant United States Attorney, for Trini E.
Ross, United States Attorney for the Western District of
New York, Buffalo, NY, for Appellee.
ANNE M. BURGER, Federal Public Defender’s Office,
Western District of New York, Rochester, NY,
for Defendant-Appellant.
GERARD E. LYNCH, Circuit Judge:
Defendant-Appellant Victor C. Kunz (“Kunz”), a convicted sex offender,
challenges the special conditions of supervised release imposed by the district
court (Charles J. Siragusa, J.) in response to Kunz’s latest in a long string of
supervised release violations. He targets several facets of his court-ordered
computer monitoring obligations, arguing that his restrictions are both
procedurally and substantively unreasonable, and that the district court
2
impermissibly delegated its judicial authority to the U.S. Probation Office
(“Probation”) by imposing them. We agree that an expansive reading of certain
of Probation’s Computer and Internet Monitoring Program (“CIMP”) terms
themselves, as well as the court-imposed special conditions requiring Kunz’s
compliance with those terms in order to access the internet, raise a number of
legitimate concerns. Nonetheless, because we believe that a sensible reading of
the restrictions neutralizes the most troubling of those concerns, we AFFIRM the
judgment of the district court as construed in the manner set forth below.
BACKGROUND
I. Kunz’s Past Offenses
The violation prompting the sentence at issue here is the latest in a series of
supervised release violations committed by Kunz, a 44-year-old man from
Pittsford, New York. In 2005, Kunz pled guilty to one count of possession of child
pornography, admitting to the receipt of images containing child pornography
over the internet. Later that year, he was sentenced to 71 months’ imprisonment
and a life term of supervised release, subject to special conditions that included
computer monitoring. He was released from prison and into supervised release
in December 2009.
3
Between 2010 and 2017, Kunz was accused of several violations of his
supervised release (“VOSR”), including failure to comply with both his court-
ordered sex offender treatment and computer monitoring obligations. He pled
guilty to violating the sex-offender program conditions five separate times – in
2011, 2012, 2013, 2015, and 2017 – prompting the district court to revoke his
supervised release on all five occasions, to sentence him to terms of
imprisonment ranging from 3 to 12 months, and to gradually reduce the duration
of his supervised release. In 2017, the district court sentenced Kunz to 9 months’
imprisonment and 38 years’ supervised release, subject to special conditions that
included the following:
The defendant must provide the U.S. Probation Office
advance notification of any computer(s), automated
service(s), or connected device(s) that will be used
during the term of supervision. The U.S. Probation
Office is authorized to install any application as
necessary to surveil[] all activity on computer(s) or
connected device(s) owned or operated by the
defendant. The U.S. Probation Office shall be notified
via electronic transmission of impermissible/suspicious
activity or communications occurring on such computer
or connected device, consistent with the computer
monitoring policy in effect by the probation office. As
triggered by impermissible/suspicious activity, the
defendant shall consent to and cooperate with
unannounced examinations of any computer equipment
4
owned or used by the defendant.
App’x 19. Kunz reentered supervised release in July 2018.
II. Kunz’s 2021 VOSR Proceeding
A. The Violation
This appeal concerns Kunz’s most recent VOSR proceeding. In February
2021, Probation reported that Kunz had once more violated his conditions of
supervised release by again failing to follow the rules of his court-ordered sex-
offender treatment program. This time, the offending conduct included
masturbating to pictures of 14-16 year-olds in a high school publication, watching
prostitutes on the street, using an adult telephone sex chat line, spying on women
in his neighborhood through their windows using binoculars, and neglecting to
disclose any of this to his treatment provider or his probation officer. Kunz
admitted that behavior and pled guilty to the violation. He does not challenge
any aspect of his sex-offender treatment program on this appeal.
B. The Computer and Internet Monitoring Program
In September 2021, Probation Officer Tom Gilbert emailed to the district
court several recommendations in advance of Kunz’s upcoming VOSR
sentencing. First, he proposed a sentence of time served plus a reduced 33-year
5
term of supervised release. He assured the court that, apart from “a few issues,”
Kunz’s “compliance has been good.” Gilbert Email 1. Second, Gilbert suggested
that because Kunz had originally been sentenced some 15 years earlier, it was
now “necessary to update his special conditions to reflect both the language and
philosophy being used in the supervision by the U.S. Probation Office at the
present time.” Id. He therefore proposed, among other things, a special condition
barring Kunz from using a computer or the internet unless he agreed to
participate in the CIMP, or unless authorized by the district court or Probation.
Id. at 2-3.
Kunz objected to that proposed special condition. He first took issue with
language in the proposed condition implying that Probation could unilaterally
alter the applicable CIMP terms in the future – that Probation “shall be notified
via electronic transmission of impermissible/suspicious activity . . . consistent with
the computer monitoring policy in effect by the probation office,” App’x 42-43
(emphasis added) – which he argued would constitute an impermissible
delegation of judicial authority. That same language had appeared in past
iterations of his conditions of supervised release, apparently without objection.
6
Separately, Kunz specifically flagged several of the CIMP terms themselves
as excessive and unworkable. To substantiate that latter point, he submitted an
unsworn declaration from a digital forensics expert who opined that many of the
terms were “extremely vague and would be difficult if not impossible for a user
to comply with as they are currently worded.” Id. at 52. Among the CIMP terms
relevant to Kunz’s objections were the following:
1. I, ______, have been placed in the Computer
Monitoring Program as ordered by the Court. I agree to
comply with all program rules set forth in this
agreement, and the instructions of my probation officer.
I agree to install, or allow to be installed at my own
expense[,] equipment or software to monitor my
approved computer or internet ready device. I agree to
waive any expectations of privacy from the supervising
probation officer, his or her designee, and the
monitoring company. . . .
5. I understand that I may be limited to the possession
and use of one Internet-capable device. . . .
7. I shall notify the U.S. Probation Office of any
alterations to computer(s)/connected device(s) and/or
passwords/screen names prior to executing change[s]
(i.e. new programs, email accounts, social networking
accounts, etc.). . . .
10. I understand that I will not use any encrypted email
accounts. . . .
13. I shall not utilize any service that conceals or spoofs
my Internet Protocol address. . . .
7
15. I agree not to employ any evidence cleaning utility,
or defragmentation technology unless preapproved by
[my] probation officer. This includes, but is not limited
to, utilizing the “system restore” or defragment
function.
16. I agree to obtain permission and coordinate with my
probation officer prior to ALL computer repairs and/or
alterations to my computer hardware and or software.
17. I shall not purchase, download, possess and/or
install any anti-virus, anti-spyware, firewall, and/or
internet security application without advance[]
authorization by the U.S. Probation Office and my
probation officer.
18. I shall not use any type of encryption unless
pre-approved by my probation officer. . . .
21. I shall not alter the current operating system (i.e.
Windows, Linux, etc.) on any authorized computer
without pre-approval and authorization from my
probation officer.
App’x 48-49.
C. Kunz’s Special Conditions
At his sentencing hearing, Kunz reiterated that while he had “no objection
to there being computer monitoring” in general, he still strenuously opposed the
“unworkable” technological constraints embedded in the CIMP terms, App’x 59-
60, and any “sentence that would incorporate by reference any future new
programs with new terms that probation comes up with in the future,” id. at 61.
8
The district court overruled both objections with little explanation. It
remarked simply that it was “going to order the conditions proposed by
probation” and that “they are conditions that we’re ordering now.” Id. at 60.
Dispensing with Kunz’s counsel’s final plea to “at least remov[e] the sentence
that would incorporate by reference any future new programs with new terms
that probation comes up with in the future,” the court replied flatly: “It’s the
condition that we’ve been ordering in all these kind[s] of cases. . . . I’m going to
order the conditions as recommended by Probation.” Id. at 61-62.
With those objections resolved, the district court commended all parties for
Kunz’s progress: “Victor, I hope you keep going the way you are and I’m sure
there’s not going to be any other issues . . . .” Id. at 62. “[D]espite the missteps,”
the court continued, “you’ve always been intent on trying to deal with the issues,
and that’s certainly to your credit, and . . . I’m sure it’s to Mr. Gilbert’s credit
too.” Id. at 61. Addressing Kunz’s mother, the court added, “[i]t’s [to] your credit
too, ma’am.” Id. at 67.
The court ultimately ordered, as Probation had recommended, a
time-served sentence accompanied by a 33-year period of supervised release.
9
App’x 70-71. Among the court-imposed special conditions was the following,
which was identical to the language Gilbert had proposed:
The defendant shall not use or possess any computer,
data storage device, or any internet capable device
unless the defendant participates in the Computer and
Internet Monitoring Program (CIMP), or unless
authorized by the Court or the U.S. Probation Office.
The defendant must provide the U.S. Probation Office
advance notification of any computer(s), automated
service(s), or connected device(s) that will be used
during the term of supervision. The U.S. Probation
Office is authorized to install any application as
necessary to surveil all activity on computer(s) or
connected device(s) owned or operated by the
defendant. The defendant will be required to pay the
cost of monitoring services. The U.S. Probation Office
shall be notified via electronic transmission of
impermissible/suspicious activity or communications
occurring on such computer or connected device,
consistent with the computer monitoring policy in effect
by the probation office. As triggered by
impermissible/suspicious activity, the defendant shall
consent to and cooperate with unannounced
examinations of any computer equipment owned or
used by the defendant. This examination shall include
but is not limited to retrieval and copying of all data
from the computer(s), connected device(s), storage
media, and any internal or external peripherals, and
may involve removal of such equipment for the purpose
of conducting a more thorough inspection. Any such
monitoring or examinations shall be designed to avoid,
as much as possible, reading any privileged information
or any private material that is not illegal or reasonably
10
likely to lead to illegal material or evidence related to
illegal activity.
App’x 73. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
Kunz presents three basic arguments on appeal: (1) that the district court
failed to adequately justify its decision to order special conditions that were more
restrictive than those previously imposed; (2) that several of the CIMP terms are
technically vague or unworkable; and (3) that both the CIMP terms themselves
and the special condition permitting Probation to unilaterally alter those terms in
the future constitute an impermissible delegation of judicial authority. We
address each argument in turn.
I. Legal Standards
A. Standard of Review
“A district court retains wide latitude in imposing conditions of supervised
release, and we therefore review a decision to impose a condition for abuse of
discretion.” United States v. MacMillen, 544 F.3d 71, 74 (2d Cir. 2008).
Nevertheless, we will “carefully scrutinize unusual and severe conditions.”
United States v. McLaurin, 731 F.3d 258, 261 (2d Cir. 2013) (internal quotation
11
marks omitted). And where a challenged condition implicates an issue of law,
“we review the imposition of that condition de novo, bearing in mind that any
error of law necessarily constitutes an abuse of discretion.” MacMillen, 544 F.3d at
75.
B. Conditions of Supervised Release, Generally
“Under 18 U.S.C. § 3583(d), the imposition of certain conditions of
supervised release is mandatory, but district courts also have discretion to
impose other, non-mandatory conditions of supervised release, which are
commonly referred to as ‘special conditions.’” United States v. Browder, 866 F.3d
504, 510 (2d Cir. 2017) (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted). That
discretion is constrained by 18 U.S.C. § 3583(d)(1) and Sentencing Guidelines
§ 5D1.3(b), which each require, among other things, that the special conditions be
“reasonably related” to familiar sentencing factors such as the nature of the
offense, the history and characteristics of the defendant, broader deterrence and
public protection interests, and various needs of the defendant. Additionally,
both admonish that special conditions should involve “no greater deprivation of
liberty than is reasonably necessary” to achieve those purposes, and should be
12
“consistent with any pertinent policy statements issued by the Sentencing
Commission.” 18 U.S.C. § 3583(d)(2)-(3); U.S.S.G. § 5D1.3(b); see also United States
v. Johnson, 529 U.S. 53, 59 (2000) (“Supervised release fulfills rehabilitative ends,
distinct from those served by incarceration.”).
For sex offenses involving a computer, those policy statements recommend
in relevant part special conditions (A) imposing “treatment and monitoring,” (B)
“limiting the use of a computer or an interactive computer service,” and (C)
requiring the defendant to “submit to a search, at any time, with or without a
warrant, . . . of the defendant’s . . . computer, other electronic communication or
data storage devices or media . . . upon reasonable suspicion concerning a
violation of a condition of supervised release or unlawful conduct by the
defendant.” U.S.S.G. § 5D1.3(d)(7). Finally, it bears noting that district courts
retain broad discretion to “modify, reduce, or enlarge the conditions of
supervised release, at any time prior to the expiration or termination of the term
of supervised release.” 18 U.S.C. § 3583(e)(2).
II. Substantive and Procedural Reasonableness
Kunz’s first set of arguments attack the reasonableness of his special
conditions. Like other aspects of a sentence, conditions of supervised release are
13
reviewed for both substantive and procedural reasonableness. United States v.
Eaglin, 913 F.3d 88, 94 (2d Cir. 2019). The procedural inquiry looks to whether the
sentencing judge has properly accounted for the factors that constrain its
sentencing discretion; substantive reasonableness examines whether, after
accounting for those constraints, the district court’s exercise of its discretion can
be “located within the range of permissible decisions.” United States v. Matta, 777
F.3d 116, 124 (2d Cir. 2015) (internal quotation marks omitted).
A. Procedural Reasonableness: Failure to Explain
Although Kunz’s remark that his special conditions are “greater than
necessary to meet the purposes of sentencing” hints at a substantive
unreasonableness argument, Appellant’s Br. 17, the crux of his reasonableness
challenge is procedural. He does not suggest – except through his technology-
driven arguments, addressed below – that the restrictions are by their nature
necessarily more restrictive than is called for under these circumstances.1 Rather,
1
At oral argument, Kunz’s counsel expressly disavowed any contention that
Kunz’s computer monitoring obligations violate our edict, under United States v.
Lifshitz, that a defendant’s Fourth Amendment privacy interests require that
computer monitoring “be narrowly tailored, and not sweep so broadly as to draw
a wide swath of extraneous material into its net.” 369 F.3d 173, 190 (2d Cir. 2004).
Kunz also “raises no First Amendment challenge and thus waived [that]
14
he contends that the district court failed to adequately explain its decision to
impose those restrictions with “particularized findings” that they did not
“constitute a greater deprivation of liberty than reasonably necessary to
accomplish the goals of sentencing.” Id. at 20, quoting Matta, 777 F.3d at 124. We
disagree.
To be sure, the considerable leeway we afford district courts’ substantive
sentencing choices “is only warranted . . . once we are satisfied that the district
court complied with . . . procedural requirements, and this requires that we be
confident that the sentence resulted from the district court’s considered judgment
as to what was necessary to address the various, often conflicting, purposes of
argument on appeal.” Browder, 866 F.3d at 511 n.26, citing Packingham v. North
Carolina, 582 U.S. 98 (2017); see Eaglin, 913 F.3d at 96-97 (recognizing that “in
modern society, citizens have a First Amendment right to access the Internet,”
and therefore that “[i]n only highly unusual circumstances will a total Internet
ban imposed as a condition of supervised release be substantively reasonable”).
Finally, to the extent Kunz attempts any other generalized substantive
reasonableness challenge, it fails for the same reasons similar challenges have
failed for similar defendants. See, e.g., Browder, 866 F.3d at 512 (computer
monitoring was substantively reasonable because it was “reasonably related
to . . . the nature and circumstances of the [child pornography] offense and [the
defendant’s] history and characteristics” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
And as noted above, computer monitoring and computer search conditions are
generally supported by the Sentencing Commission’s policy statements.
15
sentencing.” United States v. Cavera, 550 F.3d 180, 189-90 (2d Cir. 2008) (en banc)
(emphasis omitted). Thus, “[f]or a sentence to be procedurally reasonable, a
District Court must make an individualized assessment when determining
whether to impose a special condition of supervised release, and . . . state on the
record the reason for imposing it.” Eaglin, 913 F.3d at 94 (internal quotation
marks omitted); see United States v. Coplan, 703 F.3d 46, 92 (2d Cir. 2012) (“A
district court commits procedural error where it . . . fails to adequately explain
the chosen sentence.”).
Accordingly, we have held that “[a] district court is required to make an
individualized assessment when determining whether to impose a special
condition of supervised release, and to state on the record the reason for
imposing it.”2 United States v. Betts, 886 F.3d 198, 202 (2d Cir. 2018); see Matta, 777
F.3d at 123 (“[A]ny condition that affects a significant liberty interest . . . must be
2
This is consistent with our approach to sentencing more generally. See United
States v. Brooks, 889 F.3d 95, 100 (2d Cir. 2018) (“Sentences for violations of
supervised release are reviewed under the same standard as for sentencing
generally . . . .” (internal quotation marks omitted)). We have long recognized
that a remand may be warranted either by a district court’s failure to sufficiently
explain its reasoning, see, e.g., United States v. Genao, 869 F.3d 136, 141-42 (2d Cir.
2017), or by its flawed explanation for imposing a given sentence, see, e.g., United
States v. Park, 758 F.3d 193, 199 (2d Cir. 2014).
16
imposed by the district court and supported by particularized findings that it
does not constitute a greater deprivation of liberty than reasonably necessary to
accomplish the goals of sentencing.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
Crucially, though, we have also been careful to qualify that while “the failure to
do so” is generally “error,” we may nonetheless affirm “if the district court’s
reasoning is self-evident in the record.” Betts, 886 F.3d at 202 (internal quotation
marks omitted).
That carve-out looms large here. Kunz is correct that the immediate
explanation offered by the district court in the moment – and reiterated when
pressed by defense counsel – was simply that these were the “conditions that
we’re ordering now.” App’x 60; see also id. at 62 (“It’s the condition that we’ve
been ordering in all these kind[s] of cases.”). Under other circumstances, a
similarly brusque and generalized explanation might indeed amount to
procedural error.
But under the circumstances of this case, the rationale for monitoring
Kunz’s computer access was “self-evident,” Betts, 886 F.3d at 202 (internal
quotation marks omitted), not just from the details of his original child
pornography conviction, but also from his prolific record of supervised release
17
violations since then (including several alleged violations of his computer
monitoring restrictions). This was the sixth time in ten years that the same judge
was tasked with sentencing the same defendant for violating conditions of
supervised release arising from the same underlying conviction. The shorthand
and familiar tone permeating the sentencing transcript reflects that shared
context: all participants understood why they were in the room; all understood
that they had been there many times before; and, for the most part, all agreed
about what needed to be done next. The reimposition of computer monitoring as
a special condition of supervised release, which had been part of the conditions
since the original judgment of conviction in 2005, was thus a foregone conclusion.
The court was under no obligation to recite that context pro forma, or to pick
through every condition and explain, point-by-point, how each was responsive to
the offending conduct. We have never required district judges to perform the
obvious.3 We see no reason to start now.
3
See, e.g., United States v. Forney, 797 F. App’x 31, 33 (2d Cir. 2019) (summary
order) (although the district court did not explain why it imposed a condition
requiring defendant to abstain from alcohol, the justification was “self-evident”
where the defendant had pled guilty to driving impaired while on pretrial release
(internal quotation marks omitted)); United States v. Lopez, No. 21-1450, 2022 WL
1572995, at *2 (2d Cir. May 19, 2022) (summary order) (similar, with respect to a
18
To the extent Kunz argues that the district court failed to adequately justify
the differences between prior iterations of his computer monitoring restrictions
(which Kunz did not appeal when imposed, and still takes no issue with), and
the purportedly more exacting restrictions ordered this time around, we again
disagree. On appeal, Kunz highlights just three differences between his prior,
apparently unobjected-to, special conditions and the current special conditions:
(1) the language conditioning his internet access on compliance with the CIMP
terms; (2) the requirement that Kunz himself “pay the cost of monitoring
services”; and (3) the provision ordering that, “as much as possible,” Probation’s
monitoring of Kunz’s computer activity be designed to avoid “reading any
privileged information or any private material that is not illegal or reasonably
likely to lead to illegal material or evidence related to illegal activity.”
condition restricting access to services that provide child pornography, because
even though the defendant had never purchased child pornography, he had
“repeatedly” taken other actions “intending to engage in criminal sexual conduct
with minors”); United States v. Deverso, No. 21-2815, 2022 WL 16753115, at *1 (2d
Cir. Nov. 8, 2022) (summary order) (similar, with respect to a condition barring
the defendant from viewing pornography where “the record shows that websites
containing pornographic content helped to facilitate [the defendant’s] sexual
contact with minors”); cf. United States v. Smith, 949 F.3d 60, 66 (2d Cir. 2020)
(“[W]e do not require district courts to engage in the utterance of ‘robotic
incantations’ when imposing sentences . . . .”).
19
Appellant’s Br. 19-20. Kunz is correct that the district court did not offer any
specific on-the-record justification for those changes.
Conspicuously, though, Kunz has neglected to demonstrate how any of
those changes meaningfully burdened a “significant liberty interest” and
therefore needed to be “supported by particularized findings.” Matta, 777 F.3d at
123 (internal quotation marks omitted). With respect to the newly imposed CIMP
terms, while the record does not illuminate precisely how the current monitoring
program compares as a practical matter with Probation’s past monitoring of
Kunz himself, defense counsel conceded at oral argument that prior generations
of the monitoring program enforced against other supervisees in the Western
District of New York included at least some identical restrictions, even as the
program appeared to have evolved in other respects. See, e.g., App’x 122-23,
United States v. Browder, 866 F.3d 504 (2d Cir. 2017) (No. 16-1322) (prohibiting the
supervisee from altering his operating system or using encryption without prior
approval, among other similar restrictions). More importantly, Kunz has not
identified any meaningful difference between his own former computer
monitoring regime and this new one. Any contention that the new CIMP
obligations themselves impose a heightened burden on Kunz’s liberty is routed
20
through his technology-centric arguments. We address those concerns below,
and construe the relevant CIMP terms in a manner that avoids the problematic
implications that might be suggested by an aggressively literal reading of their
text.
The other two cited changes are no more objectionable. As for the new
requirement that Kunz pay monitoring costs, Kunz does not even attempt to
articulate any impact on his liberty. Apart from (literally) highlighting (in yellow)
the relevant language from the judgment as newly imposed provision to which
he objects, his brief devotes no discussion to the issue whatsoever, and the record
is silent as to what, if any, costs Kunz will actually be forced to bear. See City of
New York v. Mickalis Pawn Shop, LLC, 645 F.3d 114, 137 (2d Cir. 2011) (“We
ordinarily deem an argument to be forfeited where it has not been sufficiently
argued in the briefs . . . .” (internal quotation marks omitted)). While we can
imagine scenarios where such a condition would impose a sufficiently onerous
burden on a supervisee to require a specific on-the-record justification, in the
absence of any showing that such a burden exists here, the self-evident rationale
– shifting reasonable monitoring costs to the person whose crime made the
monitoring necessary – provides sufficient justification. Similarly, Kunz does not
explain why altering his special conditions to expressly prohibit Probation from
21
indiscriminately reviewing his privileged and private information somehow
aggravates, rather than reduces, the burden on his liberty.
Moreover, even were Kunz’s liberty meaningfully affected in some way by
the changes, it is self-evident from the record that in adopting all of Probation’s
proposed updates to Kunz’s special conditions, the district court generally
credited Gilbert’s recommendation that Probation’s modern monitoring
approach would be more effective than prior iterations of the monitoring
program at aiding the rehabilitation of a defendant who was originally sentenced
during the relative infancy of computer monitoring, see United States v. Sofsky, 287
F.3d 122, 126 (2d Cir. 2002) (collecting early computer monitoring cases from the
late 1990s and early 2000s), who had violated his supervised release many times
since then, and who since his most recent sentencing had now offended yet
again.
In sum, although “the defendant, the public, and appellate courts should
not be required to engage in guesswork about the rationale for a particular
sentence,” Genao, 869 F.3d at 142, it requires no “guesswork” to understand why
the district court imposed the conditions it imposed in this case. Given the nature
both of Kunz’s underlying offense and of his repeated violations of supervised
release, the longstanding general computer monitoring requirement that Kunz
22
has never (including now) objected to, and Gilbert’s justification for the
recommended updates, the district court’s rationale for imposing this sort of
computer monitoring program was apparent on this record. We thus discern no
procedural error in the sentence it imposed.
B. Substantive Reasonableness: Technological Issues
Kunz’s substantive reasonableness challenge centers on his contention that
Probation’s computer monitoring requirements are technically vague or
unworkable. We are not convinced.
Kunz points us to the portion of his digital forensics expert’s declaration
describing various technical predicaments stemming from the expert’s
interpretation of the CIMP terms. The particular terms at issue include
restrictions requiring Kunz to notify Probation of “any alterations to
computers(s)/connected device(s) and/or passwords/screen names prior to
executing [the] change” and to obtain Probation’s permission prior to “alter[ing]”
any software or operating systems. App’x 48-49. According to Kunz’s expert,
those restrictions “would be difficult if not impossible for a user to comply with
as they are currently worded.” App’x 52. For example, many programs and
operating systems update automatically without the user’s intervention or
23
knowledge, and such “alterations to [Kunz’s] computer . . . software” thus cannot
realistically be cleared in advance. App’x 44. Similarly, passwords for many
services expire automatically, periodically forcing users of those services to
immediately update their credentials upon login, making it impractical for users
to seek prior approval. Finally, a broad reading of the provision barring the use
of “any type of encryption” without prior approval would preclude Kunz from
using a machine with preloaded standard encryption, or any of the countless
websites with URLs that begin with “https,” because that prefix indicates that the
website encrypts information as it is transferred to or from the user.
Were we required to read the CIMP terms as broadly as Kunz’s expert
does, we might be persuaded. Fortunately, we are not. Those terms are obviously
and reasonably intended to preclude a defendant’s active attempts to avoid
monitoring, not to punish a passive defendant for innocuous day-to-day
activities that trigger changes initiated by forces outside of his control.
Importantly, the CIMP terms themselves suggest that they should be read
that way. All of the challenged provisions are phrased in terms of what “I”
(Kunz, the supervisee) will or will not actively do. Thus, for example, Kunz is
required to pledge that he shall “notify the U.S. Probation Office” of certain
24
changes before “executing” those changes. App’x 48 (CIMP ¶ 7). On its own
terms, that language does not require Kunz to notify Probation of automated
changes initiated by a vendor or developer, which are not “execut[ed]” by Kunz
himself. Id. Similarly, it is Kunz who is required to pre-clear “alterations” to his
software. Id. at 49 (CIMP ¶ 16). By personalizing that obligation to Kunz, the
CIMP language gives no indication that Probation somehow expects Kunz to
perform “the impossible,” United States v. Johnson, 446 F.3d 272, 281 (2d Cir.
2006), either by predicting the unpredictable, or by otherwise assuming
responsibility for automatic, unannounced, third-party updates that he plays no
active or intentional role in initiating. And for those updates that do require a
user to take some active, intentional step to trigger the change, nothing prevents
Kunz from notifying his probation officer before taking that step. Likewise,
nothing in the CIMP terms precludes Kunz from seeking, or the probation officer
from granting, blanket permission for Kunz to install standard program updates
initiated by the likes of Microsoft or Apple.
In sum, even a stubbornly literal reading of the challenged CIMP terms
does not require the interpretation offered by Kunz’s expert. We thus construe
the requirements to prohibit Kunz from initiating without prior permission any of
25
the above processes or changes;4 they do not, nor do we think they could sensibly
be read to, compel him to seek prior approval for processes entirely outside of his
control and of which he himself has no advance notice. See United States v. Young,
910 F.3d 665, 671-72 (2d Cir. 2018) (construing a condition ordering mental health
treatment as excluding “inpatient treatment,” notwithstanding that a literal
reading might have extended that far, thereby mooting any concern that the
district court had failed to adequately justify that “restrictive” treatment type).
Nor do we believe that a sensible reading of the conditions requires Kunz
to seek prior approval each time he “use[s],”5 App’x 49 (CIMP ¶ 18), common
4
At oral argument, Kunz’s counsel offered that the spirit of these restrictions
could be captured by language providing that Kunz “shall not attempt to
circumvent the monitoring software and/or hardware in any way,” followed by a
non-exhaustive illustrative list closely mapping the current CIMP terms. Oral
Argument 6:00. We believe our construction accomplishes the same thing while
avoiding the potentially imprecise implications of the word “circumvent.” Under
our reading, it does not matter what Kunz’s subjective goal may be in initiating
the barred process – be it to deliberately evade his monitoring restrictions or not.
What matters is only whether it is Kunz himself who actively initiates (or causes
to be initiated) the barred process, or whether Kunz passively experiences the
effects of a process caused by some force entirely beyond his control.
5
Once again, we are guided by the language in the CIMP term personalizing the
obligation to Kunz, and attaching an active verb – “use” – to that obligation.
While one might plausibly suggest that a computer user who purchases
household items online through a secure payment interface in some sense
“use[s] . . . encryption,” App’x 49 (CIMP ¶ 18), when the vendor encrypts the
26
electronic resources or services that happen to employ encryption in a manner
that does not frustrate the purposes of Probation’s monitoring. We think it would
be absurd to interpret Probation as purporting to require Kunz to ask permission
every time he attempts to access a website whose URL happens to begin with the
characters “https” (signifying that the website “encrypts the data as it is
transferred,” App’x 54) or every time he uses a messaging service that encrypts
messages while they are en route from sender to recipient,6 where that encryption
transmitted financial information to protect it from hackers, see Mark A. Lemley,
The Splinternet, 70 DUKE L.J. 1397, 1423 (2021), such a reading is certainly not
compelled by that language. Nor is that even remotely the most natural reading;
few ordinary, non-expert computer users would ever liken behavior of that sort
to “us[ing]” encryption. Cf. United States v. Carlineo, 998 F.3d 533, 536 (2d Cir.
2021) (supervised release restrictions must “put an ordinary person on notice of the
prohibited conduct” (emphasis added)). Therefore, construing the provision in
light of its evident purpose, as discussed throughout this section, we think a fair
reading of the CIMP’s encryption restriction does not encompass such “use” that
is effected by the vendor, invisible to the user, and inconsequential to Probation’s
ability to monitor its supervisees’ purchasing activity.
6
The record is silent as to whether any of the increasingly common encrypted
messaging services that employ “end-to-end encryption” or other “technical
impediments to law enforcement” may stymie Probation’s monitoring efforts
here. See Alan Z. Rozenshtein, Surveillance Intermediaries, 70 STAN. L. REV. 99, 106
(2018). In our view, Probation’s legitimate interest in restricting the use of such
services extends only to the point where the service’s encryption interferes with
Probation’s monitoring capabilities. At any rate, the pre-approval process
provides Probation with the capacity to evaluate the risks of particular types of
services.
27
does not thwart Probation’s ability to keep tabs on Kunz (via, for example, the
monitoring software it has installed on Kunz’s devices). The clear intention of the
prohibition is to prevent Kunz from hiding behind the veil of encryption any
efforts to, for example, access child pornography, make forbidden contact with
minors, or engage in any other illegal activity or violations of his conditions of
supervised release. To that end, so long as no encryption is initiated by or at the
behest of Kunz, and so long as any encryption initiated by external forces does
not meaningfully impair Probation’s ability to monitor Kunz’s behavior
consistent with both the special conditions and the other CIMP terms, we
construe the encryption restrictions to allow the reasonable use of services and
resources that happen to employ encryption in some way.
Interpreting the contested CIMP terms this way should assuage any
technical concerns Kunz harbors, while also preserving both the spirit and the
efficacy of the restrictions. Interpreting them otherwise, by contrast, would run
them headlong into our requirements that such restrictions provide an ordinary
person with “clear notice”7 of whether a given action is prohibited or not, and not
7
To the extent Kunz’s technical vagueness theory doubles as a due process
vagueness challenge, we similarly hold that the restrictions, as we construe them,
are “sufficiently clear to give the person of ordinary intelligence a reasonable
28
“demand the impossible” of a supervisee. Johnson, 446 F.3d at 281; see United
States v. Carlineo, 998 F.3d 533, 536 (2d Cir. 2021).8
Construed in that way, we find no procedural or substantive
unreasonableness in Kunz’s computer monitoring obligations. We thus turn next
to his improper delegation arguments.
opportunity to know what is prohibited, so that he may act accordingly.” United
States v. Simmons, 343 F.3d 72, 81 (2d Cir. 2003) (internal quotation marks
omitted); cf. United States v. Burdick, 789 F. App'x 886, 888-89 (2d Cir. 2019)
(summary order) (holding that the defendant’s overbreadth and vagueness
challenges to his CIMP terms were “unripe,” emphasizing that “[t]he district
court retains the discretion to remedy a potential ambiguity in the language of a
special condition”).
8
Separately, Kunz’s expert also declared that the CIMP term barring use of any
service that “conceals or spoofs” his IP address could make life difficult for any
user who works for a company that requires the use of a VPN, because that sort
of connection would technically run afoul of that restriction. App’x 52, 54. Here,
we need not construe to avoid anything. This is a hypothetical worry that, unlike
the other seemingly more intrusive CIMP restrictions, would require a simple
modification request should a change in Kunz’s employment circumstances
warrant as much. Cf. United States v. Balon, 384 F.3d 38, 47 (2d Cir. 2004)
(“[C]hanging computer technology is an appropriate factor to authorize a
modification of supervised release conditions under Section 3583(e).”). That is not
an unworkable constraint; it is merely a less convenient one than Kunz would
understandably prefer.
29
III. Delegation of Judicial Authority
Kunz argues that the district court impermissibly delegated its authority to
Probation in two ways: (1) by endorsing CIMP terms that, as currently written,
leave too much to Probation’s discretion; and (2) by leaving the door ajar for
Probation to unilaterally alter Kunz’s CIMP terms in the future. Although we are
sensitive to Kunz’s concerns, we once again construe the language he
underscores in a way that should, with one exception, obviate those concerns.
“The power to impose special conditions of supervised release . . . is vested
exclusively in the district court.” Matta, 777 F.3d at 122. By contrast, “the
extensive supervision mission of federal probation officers includes executing the
sentence but not imposing it.” Id. (internal citation, quotation marks, and
alteration omitted). Thus, we have explained, while a district court may delegate
to Probation authority “over certain minor details of supervised release,” it may
not delegate “decisionmaking authority which would make a defendant’s liberty
itself contingent on a probation officer’s exercise of discretion.” United States v.
Birkedahl, 973 F.3d 49, 54 (2d Cir. 2020) (internal quotation marks omitted); see,
e.g., Matta, 777 F.3d at 123 (“[T]he discretion to require either inpatient or
outpatient drug treatment was an impermissible delegation of judicial sentencing
30
authority.”); United States v. Peterson, 248 F.3d 79, 85 (2d Cir. 2001) (“If [the
defendant] is required to participate in a mental health intervention only if
directed to do so by his probation officer, then this special condition constitutes
an impermissible delegation of judicial authority to the probation officer.”).
While these formulas are easily recited, they are less easily applied; they
require that we survey many gray areas and draw many subtle lines. When a
sentencing court orders a special condition of supervised release imposing a
particular form of treatment or supervision (such as “mental health treatment” or
“computer monitoring”), that generic term encompasses many possible
variations and operational components. Of course, all of those options concern, in
the broadest sense of the word, the “details” of the required condition, and all
affect, to some degree, the supervisee’s liberty. But assessing whether the details
left to Probation’s discretion involve significant impositions on the supervisee’s
liberty (like the choice between inpatient and outpatient drug treatment, see
Matta, 777 F.3d at 123) or matters of “minor” detail (such as the choice of a
particular treatment provider, see Peterson, 248 F.3d at 85) demands a careful and
contextual analysis of both the nature of the overall condition and the relative
importance of the specific choice to the broader intrusion upon the supervisee’s
liberty.
31
A. The CIMP Terms as Currently Written
For the most part, Kunz’s first delegation challenge, which targets the
CIMP terms as currently conceived, presents no great difficulties. He urges that
by rubber-stamping CIMP terms that “demand [Probation’s] prior approval
before . . . even commonplace and automatic computer activity” the district court
impermissibly delegated its judicial authority. Appellant’s Br. 27. But that theory
is really just a rejiggering of Kunz’s earlier contention that the CIMP terms are
vague and unworkable. Having already construed them in a manner that
neutralizes Kunz’s reasonable concerns, we disagree that the district court’s
decision to condition his internet access on compliance with those terms
constituted an impermissible delegation. Naturally, the various CIMP provisions
that permit certain computer activity only with Probation’s approval delegate to
the probation officer authority to approve or disapprove those activities. But in
the context of the broader monitoring regime ordered by the court (again,
without objection), those decisions are properly understood as matters of detail.
The sentencing judge cannot reasonably be expected to compile a detailed list of
the kinds of software updates or password changes or “use[s]” of encryption that
do or do not interfere with Probation’s ability to monitor a supervisee’s activities
32
to detect illicit conduct. Once those provisions are understood in light of that
goal, Probation is equipped with a standard of decision that constrains its
discretion and avoids arbitrary use of its delegated authority.
Kunz raises a different issue, however, that presents a more difficult
question. He argues, and we agree in part, that certain of the CIMP terms
contradict the express language of the special conditions, and therefore exceed
the authority actually delegated by the district court. To be sure, not all of the
language Kunz characterizes as contradictory is actually anything of the sort. For
example, he insists that the CIMP term requiring him to “waive any expectations
of privacy from the supervising probation officer, his or her designee, and the
monitoring company,” App’x 48 (CIMP ¶ 1), contradicts the special condition
providing that monitoring and examination of his devices “shall be designed to
avoid, as much as possible, reading any privileged information or any private
material that is not illegal or reasonably likely to lead to illegal material or
evidence related to illegal activity,” App’x 73. But we read the two together to
mean simply that Kunz agrees that he is entitled to no greater expectation of
privacy than that which is implied by the special condition. Although they tread
similar ground, those two provisions target different things. The special
33
condition’s text constrains the supervisors in their surveillance of Kunz by
requiring them not to abuse their power and access; the CIMP provision instructs
Kunz that he has no standalone expectation of privacy beyond that. Together, the
two provisions convey to Kunz that he can expect no greater privacy from his
supervisors than what is guaranteed to him by the special condition. Though
they may diverge in focus and in thrust, they are not contradictory, and pose no
delegation problems.
Kunz’s objection to the CIMP term providing that he “may be limited to . . .
one Internet-capable device,” however, has merit. App’x 48 (CIMP ¶ 5). That
restriction, he argues, cannot be reconciled with the district court’s use of the
“(s)” device at the end of terms like “computer(s), automated service(s), or
connected device(s),” apparently allowing for the possibility that each of those
nouns could be plural. App’x 73. Though we are skeptical that the two provisions
are truly contradictory – Kunz’s formulation of the argument ignores the fact that
the “(s)” also contemplates the possibility that each noun could be singular – we
share the larger concerns lurking within his argument.
We think a restriction limiting a supervisee to just one internet-connected
device would pose a significant burden on his liberty, and therefore would need
34
to be imposed by the court and justified by particularized on-the-record findings.
See Matta, 777 F.3d at 123. Even setting aside the proliferation of the “Internet of
Things,” which has exploded the category of devices that could qualify as
internet-connected, see Chris Jay Hoofnagle et al., The Tethered Economy, 87 GEO.
WASH. L. REV. 783, 785 (2019), such a restriction would force Kunz to choose
between using a computer and using a smart phone, both of which are
“indispensable to participation in modern society.” Eaglin, 913 F.3d at 98, quoting
Carpenter v. United States, 138 S. Ct. 2206, 2220 (2018) (discussing cell phones); see
Peterson, 248 F.3d at 83 (same for computers). We do not suggest that such a
severe restraint on internet access could never be warranted, but rather that it
would require particularized justification by the court. And for the same reason,
any special condition granting Probation discretion to decide whether or not to
restrict a supervisee to a single internet-connected device would constitute an
impermissible delegation of the court’s judicial authority. See Matta, 777 F.3d at
122-23.
Fortunately, the plain language of the court’s special conditions here
avoids those traps. Neither relevant passage purports to restrict Kunz to one
35
internet-connected device, or to delegate to Probation the authority to determine
how many internet-connected devices Kunz may use. The first relevant passage –
requiring Kunz to give Probation “advance notification of any computer(s),
automated service(s), or connected device(s) that will be used,” and authorizing
Probation to install surveillance software on those “computer(s) or connected
device(s)” – simply orders Kunz to proactively notify Probation of any device, or
devices, that he intends to use while under supervision so that they may be
outfitted with surveillance software. App’x 73. Similarly, the second passage –
requiring Kunz to cooperate with Probation’s examinations of any “computer(s),
connected device(s), storage media, and any internal or external peripherals” –
simply cautions that any device, or devices, that Kunz intends to use will be
subject to unannounced searches. Id. In both instances, the court’s language
implies that it is Kunz himself, not Probation, who is empowered to decide how
many internet-connected devices he wishes to use. We therefore discern no error
in the district court’s special condition.
But that still leaves the language in the CIMP terms that purports to
reserve for Probation the right to restrict Kunz to a single device. We conclude
that this term exceeds the authority actually delegated to Probation by the district
36
court, and therefore may not be enforced as written. Thus, although we affirm the
judgment of the district court, we do so with the stipulation that Probation may
not enforce any provision of the CIMP that purports to authorize the probation
officer to limit Kunz to one internet-connected device. See United States v.
Villafane-Lozada, 973 F.3d 147, 153 (2d Cir. 2020) (explaining that where Probation
“does overstep [its] authority,” the sentencing court may provide relief). Such a
harsh restriction would need to be specifically imposed by the district court and
justified by an express, case-specific rationale for imposing it. See Matta, 777 F.3d
at 123. None of that happened here.
B. The Monitoring Policy “In Effect” by Probation
Kunz’s next, and trickier, delegation challenge centers on language in the
district court’s special conditions imposing restrictions “consistent with the
computer monitoring policy in effect by the probation office.” App’x 73.
As Kunz observes, when read literally, the “policy in effect” phrase
appears to vest Probation with the power to unilaterally update his CIMP terms –
a reading Kunz contends would amount to an impermissible delegation of the
district court’s judicial authority. In essence, he argues, because the district court
37
reviewed and endorsed these particular CIMP terms at sentencing, surely these
particular terms must be frozen in time, subject to tinkering by the court alone.
Appellant’s Br. 28-29. The government counters by proclaiming without
qualification that the terms of Kunz’s computer monitoring are “minor details,”
apparently as a matter of law, and therefore that their modification simply would
not “implicate the judicial decision-making duty.” Appellee’s Br. 10. We do not
altogether agree with either party.
We begin by acknowledging the challenges inherent in answering this
question prospectively, before (as far as the present record reveals) Probation has
actually endeavored to alter the CIMP terms. On the one hand, Kunz’s reasonable
concern seems to be that by greenlighting unilateral CIMP changes, the district
court has empowered Probation to make extrajudicial updates that may
meaningfully restrict his liberty. That would indeed be problematic. On the other
hand, the current record grants no insight into what those future changes might
conceivably be, much less that any have actually occurred or even been
contemplated. That makes it difficult to determine whether those undefined
hypothetical changes would be better classified as the sort of minor details
typically within Probation’s purview, or the sort of liberty-burdening changes
38
that pose delegation problems.
For that reason, at first glance, this case presents something of a ripeness
problem. The ripeness requirement “prevents a federal court from entangling
itself in abstract disagreements over matters that are premature for review
because the injury is merely speculative and may never occur.” United States v.
Traficante, 966 F.3d 99, 106 (2d Cir. 2020) (internal quotation marks omitted)
(adding that because the doctrine derives from Article III jurisdictional limits, a
court may raise the matter sua sponte and for the first time on appeal).
We have on occasion held that challenges to a defendant’s conditions of
supervised release fail that requirement. For example, in United States v. Balon, we
determined that a challenge to a condition subjecting a defendant convicted of a
child pornography offense (whose supervised release would not begin for several
years) to remote monitoring of his electronic communications was unripe. 384
F.3d 38, 46-47 (2d Cir. 2004). Our opinion in that case grappled with themes that
resonate with this one: “The technology that holds the key to whether the special
condition in this case involves a greater deprivation of liberty than reasonably
necessary is constantly and rapidly changing,” and it was therefore “impossible”
to predict whether whatever technological tools Probation would be employing
39
in the future would “unnecessarily deprive[]” that defendant of his liberty. Id. at
46 (adding that “the issue here is distinctly a matter of fact beyond the prescience
of this court”).9
What separates this appeal from those cases is that Kunz is not challenging
a restriction that may or may not be imposed based on unspecified developments
at an unspecified time in the future. He is challenging a specific condition,
imposed right now, applicable right now, and seeming to delegate authority right
now; and it is only that presently delegated authority which can be read to
empower Probation to make indeterminate future changes for indeterminate
future reasons.
1. Already-Delegated Authority
Insofar as Kunz challenges power that the district court has already
9
See also Traficante, 966 F.3d at 104, 106 (deeming unripe a vagueness challenge to
a condition of supervised release that permitted Probation to compel the
defendant to notify others “[i]f the court determines in consultation with your
probation officer that, based on your criminal record, personal history and
characteristics, and the nature and circumstances of your offense, you pose a
risk” to third parties, reasoning that the question was “just an abstraction” as
applied to a defendant who had not yet been found to pose such a risk); United
States v. Rasheed, 981 F.3d 187, 200 (2d Cir. 2020) (similar); United States v. Bryant,
976 F.3d 165, 182 (2d Cir. 2020) (similar).
40
delegated to Probation – here, the discretion to unilaterally update the CIMP
terms in the future – rather than whatever Probation might do with that power in
the future, his challenge is ripe. We said as much in Villafane-Lozada, 973 F.3d at
149. There, the defendant challenged a condition of supervised release requiring
him to “submit to a polygraph, computerized voice stress analyzer, or any other
such testing,” arguing that this condition impermissibly delegated to Probation
“the choice of which verification testing technology to employ, whether it be
polygraph, computerized voice stress analysis, or something else entirely.” Id. at
150-52. We explained that the issue was ripe for review because it constituted a
challenge to “the already realized delegation of judicial power to a probation
officer, not some hypothetical decision that this delegation might allow in the
future.“ Id. (emphasis in original). And we went a step further: we distinguished
that (ripe) delegation dispute from the defendant’s separate (unripe) attack on
the use of future computerized voice stress analysis, which he argued had not
been “scientifically proven” to be reliable. Id. at 151. That second issue, unlike the
immediate delegation of authority, hinged on an uncertain question of future
technology – that is, “what the state of computerized voice stress analysis
41
technology will be when [defendant] begins his term of supervision in six
years.” Id.
Both sides of that coin are relevant here. As in Villafane-Lozada, Kunz
argues that the district court in this case has already delegated the challenged
authority to Probation. “In other words, it is the probation officer’s
already-granted authority” to unilaterally update the CIMP terms, not
necessarily “the particular [term] that will be chosen,” that Kunz argues is
unlawful. Villafane-Lozada, 973 F.3d at 151. And because that purportedly
improper delegation has already occurred, Kunz’s challenge to that aspect of his
sentence is ripe.
2. Construing the Special Condition
But, also as in Villafane-Lozada, the shadow of uncertain technological
change still clouds this case. On one side, the most reasonable rationale for
Probation’s apparent wish to retain discretion to update the CIMP terms is
because (as Kunz’s examination of the current CIMP’s potential technical snags
itself illuminates) both the monitoring technology Probation employs and the
means defendants may summon to evade that technology are fickle and
42
evolving. Probation has a legitimate interest in retaining the flexibility to respond
to emergent technology free from the administrative headache of seeking
individual, judicially approved modifications of conditions for every supervisee
under its care whenever a new response to a new means of evading supervision
is invented. On the other side, we also recognize Kunz’s interest in remaining “on
notice as to what conduct could trigger a charge of violating the condition,”
Carlineo, 998 F.3d at 537, and in serving out his term of supervised release free
from the specter of extrajudicial overreach further restricting his liberty – in
addition to the burden he and other supervisees would have to bear should the
onus to litigate CIMP changes fall to them on the back end, rather than to the
government on the front end.
This tug-of-war is not entirely novel. The precise language Kunz complains
of – “consistent with the computer monitoring policy in effect by the probation
office,” App’x 73 – appears in special conditions imposed in scores of cases across
the Western and Southern Districts of New York over recent years.10 It also
10
See, e.g., United States v. Dantz, No. 1:09-CR-00146 (W.D.N.Y. Sep. 28, 2009), Dkt.
No. 17 (judgment); United States v. Deak, No. 1:15-CR-00659-JSR-1 (S.D.N.Y. Aug.
30, 2016), Dkt. No. 28 (judgment); see also, e.g., United States v. Skvarla, No.
6:09-MJ-00546-JWF-1 (W.D.N.Y. Mar. 27, 2009), Dkt. No. 2 (imposing this
condition for pretrial supervision).
43
featured in previous iterations of Kunz’s own special conditions, none of which
he appealed.
On at least one occasion, we have upheld by summary order the exact
same (verbatim) special condition in the face of the very argument Kunz now
presents. See United States v. Vietor, 806 F. App’x 60, 63 (2d Cir. 2020) (summary
order); Appellant’s Br. 7, Vietor, 806 F. App’x 60 (No. 19-1315) (“That delegation
of authority presumes that the Probation Office would have the authority to
revise its computer monitoring program on its own, as it sees fit.”). In our
summary order, we at least implicitly rejected that argument, though not
necessarily embracing the defendant’s framing of the issue. See Vietor, 806 F.
App’x at 63 (“While the condition at issue here delegates authority to the
probation office to select and administer the specific monitoring program, within
the condition’s confines, it is the district court, not the probation office, restricting
[the defendant’s] internet access.”). And because the defendant in Vietor had not
raised the delegation argument before the district court, we reviewed the
judgment for plain error only, id. at 62, further dampening that already
44
nonbinding summary order’s persuasiveness here.11
On at least one other occasion, we have upheld effectively identical
language by construing it to avoid the temporal question now squarely before us.
11
We have also on many occasions affirmed criminal judgments from the
Western, Northern, and Southern Districts of New York that included similar (or
indeed often the same) language in cases where the defendants did not directly
challenge that language on appeal. The Vietor panel itself observed that we had
endorsed “similarly worded condition[s]” before. 806 F. App’x at 62-63. It cited
our summary order in United States v. Savastio, where we (again applying plain
error review) upheld special conditions of supervised release imposed by a
district court in the Northern District of New York prohibiting a defendant from
“us[ing] or possess[ing] any computer, data storage device, or any internet
capable device unless you participate in [computer monitoring]” and requiring
that he “comply with all of the rules of the program and pay the costs associated
with the program.” 777 F. App’x 4, 7 (2d Cir. 2019). The special conditions in that
case were also worded in a way that seemed to allow Probation to unilaterally
alter the operative CIMP terms in the future: “Your internet use will be limited
and/or restricted under conditions to be set by the U.S. Probation Office in
accordance with their Computer and Internet Monitoring Program.” Id. at 5
(emphasis added). Similarly, in United States v. Leone, 813 F. App’x 665 (2d Cir.
2020) (summary order), we affirmed a judgment containing a substantially
identical special condition to Kunz’s; there, though, the defendant’s delegation
argument was limited to the purported vagueness of certain computer
restrictions as currently written. See Appellant’s Br. 19-20, Leone, 813 F. App’x 665
(No. 19-1670). And those cases have plenty of company. See, e.g., United States v.
Swartz, 459 F. App’x 47, 48 (2d Cir. 2012) (affirming a judgment containing the
exact language Kunz challenges, where that language was not at issue on
appeal); United States v. Petix, 767 F. App’x 119, 123 (2d Cir. 2019) (same); United
States v. Asch, 775 F. App’x 15, 19 (2d Cir. 2019); United States v. DeCapua, 822 F.
App’x 16, 18 (2d Cir. 2020).
45
Our opinion in United States v. Browder, which also concerned a defendant
convicted of a child pornography offense, centered on an effectively identical
special condition providing that the defendant’s “computer or computers will be
subject to monitoring by the U.S. Probation Office, consistent with the computer
monitoring policy then in effect by the probation office.” 866 F.3d at 509 (emphasis
added). We immediately flagged from that language the prospect that the
condition “may be subject to challenge as an impermissible delegation of judicial
authority to the Probation Office.” Id. at 510. And although we ultimately upheld
the condition, we did so with two conspicuous asterisks. First, because the
defendant did not challenge the condition as an impermissible delegation, we
concluded he had “waived” that issue on appeal. Id. And second, for that reason,
we construed the “then in effect” language to mean “whatever computer
monitoring policy was used by the Western District’s Probation Office at [the
defendant’s] release.” Id. (emphasis added).
In this case, the issue is assuredly not waived, and we therefore are not
bound by the Browder panel’s approach. Nonetheless, we find that approach
instructive, and adapt it to reach the outcome that we think best balances the
interests and constraints we have laid out in this opinion.
46
Here, we construe the language at issue as permitting Probation to make
future unilateral changes to the terms of Kunz’s computer monitoring, much the
same as it may make certain unilateral changes to other aspects of his supervised
release, but only to the extent that those changes are the sort of “minor details of
supervised release” already within Probation’s purview. Birkedahl, 973 F.3d at 54.
While that construction may appear circular, we think it the most sensible
reading of the “consistent with the computer monitoring policy in effect by the
probation office” language at the core of this dispute.12 Cf. Villafane-Lozada, 973
F.3d at 153 (avoiding an impermissible delegation obstacle by construing a
condition requiring periodic truth-verification testing via a seemingly open-
ended list of potential methods as nonetheless precluding “the use of a
verification test that is materially more restrictive on [the defendant’s] liberty
12
It also echoes the assumption implicit in our ripeness determination in Balon:
that the Probation Department would select the particular means of computer
monitoring it deemed appropriate at the time of the defendant’s release. See 384
F.3d at 46-47. While recognizing that a challenge to the restrictiveness of the
chosen method would ripen at that time, we did not question the propriety of
effectively delegating the choice of technology to Probation in the first instance,
rather than reserving the selection to the court. See id. Allowing Probation to
select the means of monitoring at the future commencement of supervision is not
meaningfully different from allowing it to adapt to new technology by updating
the means it initially selected.
47
than” methods the court had expressly authorized); United States v. Corbett, 767 F.
App’x 191, 192-93 (2d Cir. 2019) (summary order) (similar, construing a
seemingly open-ended condition ordering “anger management and any
additional mental health treatment that the defendant should require,” which the
district court had expressly linked to “the issues that were identified by [a
doctor’s psychological evaluation],” as authorizing Probation “to ensure that [the
defendant] receives mental health treatment to address only those issues
identified” in his psychological evaluation).
Surely, Kunz is correct that no one in his position can rightfully be asked to
bear the risk of Probation imposing “significantly greater restrictions on [his]
liberty” on its own, as a literal reading of the relevant language might suggest is
possible. Carlineo, 998 F.3d at 537-38. That power is “reserved exclusively for the
district court.” Id. We are thus precluded from upholding any construction of the
complained-of language suggesting that the district court delegated any more
than our reading of its language suggests. See Villafane-Lozada, 973 F.3d at 153
(reasoning that the special condition at issue “cannot reasonably be construed” to
subject the defendant’s liberty “to the whims of his supervising probation
officer”).
48
Nor would it be reasonable to conclude that the district court delegated
any less than our reading suggests. It certainly does not appear to have intended
to do so; Kunz voiced his objection to the “policy in effect” language several
times below, imploring that the court consider “at least removing the sentence
that would incorporate by reference any future new programs with new terms
that probation comes up with in the future.” App’x 61. The court refused.
More importantly, Kunz – who, unlike the defendant in Browder, has
actually raised the issue on appeal – has failed to identify any meaningful
principle that can distinguish computer monitoring from other species of
supervised release in this respect. We can discern no reason why sufficiently
“minor” adjustments to his CIMP terms would be subject to fundamentally
different rules than, say, the “start date and nightly duration” of a court-ordered
curfew, United States v. Degroate, 940 F.3d 167, 177 (2d Cir. 2019), “the selection of
a therapy provider and schedule” for court-ordered therapy, Peterson, 248 F.3d at
85, or the precise “type of testing” chosen to carry out court-ordered truth-
verification testing, Villafane-Lozada, 973 F.3d at 153 (emphasis omitted).13 We
13
To the extent someone in Kunz’s position might suggest that what
distinguishes the CIMP terms from other aspects of his supervised release is that
they are expressly spelled out in a writing, styled here as an “Agreement,” Kunz
49
have held that Probation is permitted to make those kinds of changes
unilaterally, and we are bound by those holdings here. Thus, we are left with no
conclusion to draw other than that the district court meant what it said and said
what it meant – that Probation may unilaterally alter the minor details of Kunz’s
computer monitoring – and that what it meant is permissible under our
precedents.
3. Future CIMP Updates
All of that notwithstanding, however, we appreciate that Kunz’s
misgivings may prove prescient. We expect that many future changes Probation
might be inclined to make (like tweaks to its monitoring software) would be
did not argue anything of the sort in his brief, and mustered only a single
unsupported, conclusory sentence to that effect at oral argument. See Oral
Argument 18:50 (“The problem is by codifying, they’ve frozen these . . .
provisions.”). Thus, that argument has not been adequately presented to us and
is therefore forfeited. See Browder, 866 F.3d at 510; Mickalis Pawn Shop, 645 F.3d at
137. In any event, we are reticent to use the fact that Probation has memorialized
its policies in a writing as a hook to strip its authority over the kinds of minor
details otherwise within its purview. In particular, we are loathe to create any
further disincentive for Probation to furnish those under its care with detailed,
written notice of its expectations, lest we exacerbate the risk that future
supervisees will be left to fend without a “sufficiently clear” understanding of
exactly what is expected of them. Carlineo, 998 F.3d at 536. As Kunz’s own expert
submission forebodes, that risk is particularly acute in the context of highly
technical computer-based restrictions.
50
entirely appropriate, but it may well also be that other future changes (such as
attempting to limit Kunz to one internet-connected device) would cross the
threshold from minor detail into major imposition on Kunz’s liberty. Matta, 777
F.3d at 122. That is always a risk. Probation is entrusted to act unilaterally in
many contexts, and in each of those many contexts there is some chance that it
will outpace its discretion to “execut[e]” the court’s sentence and instead purport
to impermissibly “impos[e]” its own. Id. (internal quotation marks omitted); see
Villafane-Lozada, 973 F.3d at 153 (“[I]t is always possible that a probation officer
might find some way to abuse his delegated authority.”); see also, e.g., Degroate,
940 F.3d at 177 (acknowledging that Probation may have “exceeded its delegated
authority” to set the start date and duration of the defendant’s curfew “by
imposing a total ‘lock-down’”). We take that risk seriously in all contexts, but our
precedents provide no basis for us to treat computer monitoring differently from
other classes of generalized conditions whose details we permit Probation to
manage.
That holds true even as we recognize that as a practical matter, computer
monitoring may prove more fraught than other areas of supervised release, if for
no other reason than the sheer ubiquity of internet-connected devices and the
51
“nearly essential” nature of internet access to many aspects of modern life. Eaglin,
913 F.3d at 96. Against that backdrop, some future incremental computer
monitoring adjustment may perhaps impose a greater burden on a defendant’s
day-to-day existence than a superficially more jarring adjustment to a less
omnipresent aspect of that defendant’s life.
But that is a discussion for another day. For now, we are precluded from
deciding such hypotheticals – not only because the parties have failed to present
us with any particular future scenarios to evaluate, but also because even had
they done so, we would lack jurisdiction to rule on them. Speculative future
developments of that sort no longer concern “the already realized delegation of
judicial power to a probation officer” that we deemed ripe for review in
Villafane-Lozada (and again here); rather, they amount to the very “hypothetical
decision[s] that this delegation might allow in the future” that we deemed unripe
for our review. 973 F.3d at 147, 151 (emphasis omitted). Should Probation make
such a decision in the future, the issue will become ripe.14 It is not today.
14
At that point, “if the probation officer does overstep his authority,” Kunz may
“seek recourse before the sentencing court.” Villafane-Lozada, 973 F.3d at 153,
citing Fed. R. Crim. P. 32.1 advisory committee’s notes (1979) (“(1) [T]he
probationer should be able to obtain resolution of a dispute over an ambiguous
term or the meaning of a condition without first having to violate it; and (2) in
52
CONCLUSION
We have considered Kunz’s other arguments and conclude that they are
without merit. Thus, for the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the
district court, as construed in the manner set forth in this opinion, and on the
understanding that the Probation Department may not enforce any CIMP term
that purports to allow it to limit Kunz to a single internet-connected device.
cases of neglect, overwork, or simply unreasonableness on the part of the
probation officer, the probationer should have recourse to the sentencing court
when a condition needs clarification or modification.”). Meanwhile, Kunz may at
any time ask the court to “modify, reduce, or enlarge” a restriction under 18
U.S.C. § 3583(e)(2). See United States v. Lussier, 104 F.3d 32, 36 (2d Cir. 1997)
(“Section 3583(e) provides the district court with retained authority to revoke,
discharge, or modify terms and conditions of supervised release following its
initial imposition of a supervised release term in order to account for new or
unforeseen circumstances.”); see also Villafane-Lozada, 973 F.3d at 152 & n.2
(although, generally, “the illegality of a condition of supervised release is not a
proper ground for modification under 18 U.S.C. § 3583(e)(2) . . . [t]here is an
exception to this rule for new or unforeseen circumstances, which include,
among other things, technological changes” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
53