STATE V. TALTY
814 N.E.2d 1201 (2004)
NATURE OF THE CASE: Talty (D) challenges the imposition of a condition of community
control that ordered him to make 'all reasonable efforts to avoid conceiving another child'
during his five-year probationary period.
FACTS: D was indicted on two counts of nonsupport. D plead no contest. The trial court
accepted D's no-contest plea and found him guilty of both counts of nonsupport. The trial
court sentenced D to community control for five years under nonresidential sanctions in the
form of the general supervision and control of the Adult Probation Department. As a
condition of that community control, the trial court ordered D to 'make all reasonable
efforts to avoid conceiving another child.' D appealed. The court of appeals concluded that
the reasonableness test enunciated in State v. Jones, governed the validity of the community
control sanction. The court of appeals held that the order was constitutional. In so
holding, the court reasoned that the condition was reasonably related to the three
objectives underlying the former probation statute: the rehabilitation of the defendant, the
administration of justice, and the prevention of future criminality. D challenges the
antiprocreation condition on both constitutional and nonconstitutional grounds. The parties
disagree, however, his constitutional challenge should be governed by a strict-scrutiny
analysis.
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
Get
free access to the entire content for Mac, PC or Online
for 2-3 days and free samples
of all kinds of products.
for 2-3 days and free samples of all kinds of products.
https://bsmsphd.com
© 2007-2016 Abn Study Partner
No comments:
Post a Comment