K.G. VS. NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD C.C. VS. NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD J.L. VS. NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD D.C. VS. NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD (NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD) (CONSOLIDATED) (RECORD IMPOUNDED) , 458 N.J. Super. 1 ( 2019 )


Menu:
  •                        RECORD IMPOUNDED
    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NOS. A-0042-16T2
    A-4339-16T1
    A-4343-16T4
    A-4797-16T3
    K.G.,                             APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    January 24, 2019
    Appellant,
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    v.
    NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD,
    Respondent.
    ___________________________________
    C.C.,
    Appellant,
    v.
    NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD,
    Respondent.
    ___________________________________
    J.L.,
    Appellant,
    v.
    NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD,
    Respondent.
    ___________________________________
    D.C.,
    Appellant,
    v.
    NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD,
    Respondent.
    ___________________________________
    Argued September 24, 2018 – Decided January 24, 2019
    Before Judge Sabatino, Sumners, and Mitterhoff.
    On appeal from the New Jersey State Parole Board.
    Michael C. Woyce argued the cause for appellants
    (Murphy & Woyce, attorneys; Michael C. Woyce, on
    the briefs).
    Christopher C. Josephson, Deputy Attorney General,
    argued the cause for respondent (Gurbir S. Grewal,
    Attorney General, attorney; Melissa Dutton Schaffer,
    Assistant Attorney General, of counsel in A-0042-16
    and A-4339-16; Melissa H. Raksa, Assistant Attorney
    General, of counsel in A-4343-16 and A-4797-16;
    Gregory R. Bueno, Deputy Attorney General, on the
    briefs in A-0042-16 and A-4797-16; Erica R. Heyer,
    Deputy Attorney General, on the brief in A-4339-16;
    Christopher C. Josephson, on the brief in A-4343-16).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    MITTERHOFF, J.S.C. (temporarily assigned).
    A-0042-16T2
    2
    Appellants K.G., C.C., J.L., and D.C. are convicted sex offenders who are
    monitored by respondent New Jersey State Parole Board (the "Board") as
    offenders who are subject to parole supervision for life ("PSL") under N.J.S.A.
    2C:43-6.4. Each appellant challenges certain conditions of PSL that the Board
    has imposed upon them. Most of the challenged conditions involve restrictions
    on appellants' Internet use. The instant appeals follow in the wake of the New
    Jersey Supreme Court's decision in J.I. v. N.J. State Parole Bd., 
    228 N.J. 204
    (2017), which addressed the parameters of the Board's authority to impose
    conditions restricting Internet access. The four appeals were calendared back-
    to-back, and we consolidate them for the purposes of this opinion.
    For the reasons that follow, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand
    in part. In particular, we reach the following major legal conclusions: (1) the
    Board's imposition of Internet monitoring conditions upon PSL offenders,
    including the use of monitoring software, mandatory password disclosure, and
    unannounced device inspections, does not facially violate the constitutional
    protections against unreasonable searches or the constitutional rights to privacy;
    (2) the Board's use of the terms "Internet-capable device," "social networking
    service," "frequenting establishments whose primary purpose is the sale of
    alcohol," and "sexually-oriented websites, material, information or data" does
    A-0042-16T2
    3
    not violate due process under the void for vagueness doctrine; (3) all conditions
    restricting Internet access, including monitoring conditions, should be
    reasonably tailored to the circumstances of the individual offender, "taking into
    account such factors as the underlying offense and any prior criminal history,
    whether the Internet was used as a tool to perpetrate the offense, the
    rehabilitative needs of the offender, and the imperative of public safety[,]" J.I.,
    228 N.J. at 224; and (4) in the administrative appeals process, PSL offenders are
    not entitled to discovery and are only entitled to a hearing when warranted based
    on "the timing of and justification for the Internet restriction, the severity and
    length of the restriction, whether facts are contested or uncontested, and whether
    credibility determinations must be made." Id. at 233.
    Table of Contents
    I. (Background) .............................................................................................. 5
    A. (Background on PSL) ............................................................................ 5
    B. (Statutes and Regulations on Internet-Access Conditions) ................... 11
    II. (Factual and Procedural Background) ....................................................... 18
    K.G. ......................................................................................................... 18
    C.C. ......................................................................................................... 21
    J.L. .......................................................................................................... 23
    D.C. ......................................................................................................... 27
    III. (Legal Discussion) .................................................................................. 30
    A. (Constitutional Challenges to Monitoring Conditions) ......................... 31
    B. (As-Applied Challenges) ..................................................................... 36
    A-0042-16T2
    4
    K.G. .................................................................................................... 36
    Internet-Access Conditions ............................................................. 36
    C.C. .................................................................................................... 40
    Internet-Access Conditions ............................................................. 40
    Procedural Due Process .................................................................. 41
    J.L. ...................................................................................................... 43
    Internet-Access Conditions ............................................................. 44
    Pornography Condition ................................................................... 45
    Alcohol Condition .......................................................................... 47
    Void for Vagueness ........................................................................ 48
    Procedural Due Process .................................................................. 50
    D.C. .................................................................................................... 51
    Internet-Access Conditions ............................................................. 52
    C. (Summary of Conclusions) .................................................................. 53
    I.
    (Background)
    A.
    (Background on PSL)
    We begin with a discussion of the PSL statute and of the constitutional
    limits on the Board's ability to impose conditions of PSL restricting Internet
    access. "Community supervision for life was 'designed to protect the public
    from recidivism by defendants convicted of serious sexual offenses.'"
    Jamgochian v. N.J. State Parole Bd., 
    196 N.J. 222
    , 237-38 (2008) (quoting
    Sanchez v. N.J. State Parole Bd., 
    368 N.J. Super. 181
    , 184 (App. Div. 2004),
    A-0042-16T2
    5
    certif. granted, 
    182 N.J. 140
     (2004), appeal dismissed, 
    187 N.J. 487
     (2006)). 1
    Individuals who have been convicted of certain sexual offenses enumerated in
    N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6.4(a) must serve, in addition to any existing sentence, a special
    sentence of parole supervision for life commencing upon the offender's release
    from incarceration. N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6.4(a) and (b).
    PSL offenders remain in the legal custody of the Commissioner of the
    Department of Corrections, are supervised by the Division of Parole, and are
    "subject to conditions appropriate to protect the public and foster rehabilitation."
    N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6.4(b). These conditions include general conditions that are
    imposed upon all PSL offenders and special conditions imposed upon individual
    PSL offenders that are "deemed reasonable in order to reduce the likelihood of
    recurrence of criminal or delinquent behavior." N.J.S.A. 30:4-123.59(b)(1); see
    also N.J.A.C. 10A:71-6.12(d) (listing general conditions); N.J.A.C. 10A:71-
    6.12(n) ("Additional special conditions may be imposed by the District Parole
    Supervisor . . . when it is the opinion that such conditions would reduce the
    likelihood of recurrence of criminal behavior."). A violation of a PSL condition
    1
    In 2003, the Legislature amended N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6.4 to replace all references
    to "community supervision for life" with "parole supervision for life" and to
    make other substantive changes to the statute. L. 2003, c. 267, § 1 (eff. Jan. 14,
    2004). Because appellants were convicted of enumerated offenses after January
    14, 2004, they were sentenced to PSL. See N.J.A.C. 10A:71-6.12(a).
    A-0042-16T2
    6
    may be prosecuted as a third-degree crime, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6.4(d), or treated as
    a parole violation, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6.4(b).        Additionally, an offender who
    violates a PSL condition may be subjected to additional special conditions. See
    N.J.S.A. 30:4-123.60(a).
    Appellants maintain that the restrictions imposed upon them cannot be
    sustained in light of the Supreme Court's decision in J.I. In J.I., a parolee subject
    to community supervision for life ("CSL") challenged a special condition that
    barred him from using a computer or Internet-capable device unless authorized
    by the District Parole Supervisor.      Id. at 210-11. After J.I.'s release from
    confinement in October 2009, the parole authorities discovered that J.I. had
    accessed multiple websites depicting nude minors in January 2010. Id. at 212.
    The parole authorities also arrested J.I. for possessing and using a cell phone
    with Internet capability in October 2010. Ibid. Thereafter, the Board found that
    J.I. had violated conditions of CSL and returned him to confinement at the Adult
    Diagnostic and Treatment Center. Ibid.
    When J.I. was released from confinement in October 2012, he was
    required to adhere to a general condition of supervision that prohibited him from
    accessing social-networking websites. Id. at 213. As of December 2013, J.I.
    had complied with this condition. Ibid. Nonetheless, in response to J.I.'s request
    A-0042-16T2
    7
    to modify the social-networking condition to allow J.I. to access LinkedIn, the
    District Parole Supervisor imposed a more stringent Internet restriction barring
    "J.I. from accessing the Internet for any purpose other than employment
    purposes, subject to his installing monitoring software on his computer." Ibid.
    The District Parole Supervisor justified this restriction based on J.I.'s previous
    violations of conditions of CSL in January and October 2010. Ibid.
    J.I. violated this special condition by visiting seemingly benign, non-
    work-related websites. Id. at 214. In a March 2017 meeting, the District Parole
    Supervisor stated that J.I. was only permitted to use a computer or access the
    Internet with advance approval from the District Parole Supervisor and only for
    work-related purposes. Ibid. On administrative appeal, the Board denied J.I's
    request for an evidentiary hearing and affirmed this near-total Internet ban,
    based on J.I.'s "willful disregard of the prohibition against accessing non -work-
    related websites." Id. at 215.
    The Supreme Court held that the Internet-use conditions imposed upon
    J.I. could not automatically be sustained. Id. at 230. Initially, the Court noted
    that "[t]o read our statutory scheme as allowing greater restrictions on the liberty
    of CSL offenders than are necessary would needlessly raise questions about its
    constitutionality." Id. at 227. In so holding, the Court cited various federal
    A-0042-16T2
    8
    court cases limiting Internet restrictions on parolees. See id. at 226-29; United
    States v. Albertson, 
    645 F.3d 191
    , 199 (3d Cir. 2011) (invalidating condition
    that required authorization for all Internet use in a child pornography case,
    because the offender did not use the Internet to contact any victims); United
    States v. Thielemann, 
    575 F.3d 265
    , 277-78 (3d Cir. 2009) (upholding a ten-
    year total Internet ban where the offender encouraged a friend in an online
    chatroom to sexually abuse a minor on a webcam); United States v. Crandon,
    
    173 F.3d 122
    , 127-28 (3d Cir. 1999) (upholding a three-year total Internet ban
    where the offender used the Internet to solicit sex from a minor). The Court
    "agree[d] with the position taken by federal courts that Internet conditions
    attached to the supervised release of sex offenders should not be more restrictive
    than necessary." J.I., 228 N.J. at 211.
    Accordingly, the Court instructed that "Internet conditions should be
    tailored to the individual CSL offender, taking into account such factors as the
    underlying offense and any prior criminal history, whether the Internet was used
    as a tool to perpetrate the offense, the rehabilitative needs of the offender, and
    the imperative of public safety." Id. at 224. The Court held on administrative
    law grounds that the restriction "denying J.I. access to the Internet for any
    purpose unrelated to employment was unreasonable because it was not tied to
    A-0042-16T2
    9
    criminal conduct, rehabilitation, or public safety."      Id. at 230.   The Court
    underscored that J.I. had not used the Internet in committing the underlying
    offenses and that J.I. had been compliant with supervision for over one year
    prior to the imposition of the condition. Id. at 229-30. The Court also found
    that the Board had failed to explain why other less restrictive Internet -access
    restrictions available under the PSL statute were not acceptable alternatives to
    advance the public safety and the offender's rehabilitation. Ibid.
    The Supreme Court further held that the imposition of conditions that
    restrict Internet use implicates a liberty interest and requires minimal due
    process. See id. at 231-34. The Court found that "the level of process required
    will depend on a number of variables, including the timing of and justification
    for the Internet restriction, the severity and length of the restriction, whether
    facts are contested or uncontested, and whether credibility determinations must
    be made." Id. at 233. The Court further noted that "[i]n the case of a Board
    panel's review of a District Parole Supervisor's imposition of stringent Internet
    restrictions, as here, due process will be satisfied by allowing the CSL offender
    'the opportunity to respond by letter with supporting attachments, su ch as
    certifications or affidavits.'" Ibid. (quoting Jamgochian, 
    196 N.J. at 247
    ). In the
    factual circumstances of J.I.'s case, however, the Court held that J.I. was entitled
    A-0042-16T2
    10
    to a hearing before the full Board.       
    Id. at 234
    .   In so holding, the Court
    emphasized "circumstances includ[ing] the fact that the parole authorities
    imposed more restrictive Internet conditions—amounting to a near-total ban—
    after J.I. had been compliant with his CSL conditions for thirteen months and
    that J.I.'s underlying conviction was unrelated to the Internet." 
    Ibid.
    Thus, in J.I., the Court provided specific factors that the Board must
    consider in deciding whether Internet-access conditions imposed upon PSL
    offenders accord with administrative and constitutional protections.              In
    resolving the cases before us, therefore, we must apply the precepts established
    by the Court in J.I.
    B.
    (Statutes and Regulations on Internet-Access Conditions)
    Before turning to the factual circumstances of each of the four appellants,
    we provide an overview of the statutory and regulatory framework governing
    the Board's ability to impose conditions of supervision that restrict Internet use .
    N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6.4(f) provides that the Board may impose the following
    restrictions on Internet access:
    (1) Prohibit the person from accessing or using a
    computer or any other device with Internet capability
    without the prior written approval of the court except
    A-0042-16T2
    11
    the person may use a computer or any other device with
    Internet capability in connection with that person's
    employment or search for employment with the prior
    approval of the person's parole officer;
    (2) Require the person to submit to periodic
    unannounced examinations of the person's computer or
    any other device with Internet capability by a parole
    officer, law enforcement officer or assigned computer
    or information technology specialist, including the
    retrieval and copying of all data from the computer or
    device and any internal or external peripherals and
    removal of such information, equipment or device to
    conduct a more thorough inspection;
    (3) Require the person to submit to the installation on
    the person's computer or device with Internet
    capability, at the person's expense, one or more
    hardware or software systems to monitor the Internet
    use;
    (4) Require the person to submit to any other
    appropriate restrictions concerning the person's use or
    access of a computer or any other device with Internet
    capability; and
    (5) Require the person to disclose all passwords used
    by the person to access any data, information, image,
    program, signal or file on the person's computer or any
    other device with Internet capability.
    [N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6.4(f)(1) to (5).]
    See also N.J.S.A. 30:4-123.59(b)(2) (listing identical provisions). Additionally,
    a general condition requires PSL offenders to "[r]efrain from using any
    computer and/or device to create any social networking profile or to access any
    A-0042-16T2
    12
    social networking service or chat room in the offender's name or any other name
    for any reason unless expressly authorized by the District Parole Supervisor."
    N.J.A.C. 10A:71-6.12(d)(25). 2
    While these appeals were pending, the Board proposed and adopted new
    regulations regarding the imposition of special conditions restricting Internet
    access in response to the Court's decision in J.I. N.J.A.C. 10A:72-14.1 to 14.4;
    49 N.J.R. 3408(a) (Oct. 16, 2017) (proposed); 50 N.J.R. 1154(a) (Apr. 16, 2018)
    (adopted). The Board sought to "codif[y] the procedures for the imposition of a
    special condition prohibiting a community or parole supervision for life offender
    from accessing the Internet, including the criteria, procedure, and review
    process." 49 N.J.R. 3408(a). The Board adopted the regulations with minor
    amendments on April 16, 2018. 50 N.J.R. 1154(a). 3
    The regulations adopted after J.I. establish new criteria and procedures for
    the imposition of a special condition restricting Internet access. The adopted
    2
    The regulation provides definitions for the terms "Chat room," "Internet
    website or application," "Peer-to-peer network," and "Social networking
    service." N.J.A.C. 10A:71-6.12(d)(25)(i) to (iv).
    3
    The Board received one comment in response to the proposed regulations. 50
    N.J.R. 1154(a). In response to the comment, the Board made minor amendments
    to the regulations regarding password disclosure and the mandatory annual
    review of Internet-access conditions. Ibid., see also N.J.A.C. 10A:72-
    14.1(c)(1)(vi) (password disclosure); N.J.A.C. 10A:72-14.4(a) (annual review).
    A-0042-16T2
    13
    regulations "appl[y] to the imposition of a special condition prohibiting an
    offender access to the Internet[.]"     N.J.A.C. 10A:72-14.1(a).        Under the
    regulations, a District Parole Supervisor may impose an Internet-access
    condition if:
    1. There is a specific and articulable reason and a clear
    purpose for the imposition of the Internet access
    condition; and
    2. The imposition of the Internet access condition will
    act as an aid to the offender's re-entry effort, will
    promote the rehabilitation of the offender, is deemed
    necessary to protect the public, or will reduce
    recidivism by the offender.
    [N.J.A.C. 10A:72-14.1(b)(1) to (2).]
    Next, the regulations codify the restrictions that may be imposed on a PSL
    offender's Internet access:
    (c) The Internet access condition shall include, but not
    be limited to, the following:
    1. The offender is to refrain from the possession
    and/or utilization of any computer and/or device
    that permits access to the Internet unless
    specifically authorized by the District Parole
    Supervisor or designee. If the District Parole
    Supervisor or designee permits use of a computer
    and/or device that is capable of accessing the
    Internet, the offender shall be subject to the
    following restrictions and conditions:
    A-0042-16T2
    14
    i. The offender is to refrain from accessing
    the Internet from any computer and/or
    device at any time or for any reason unless
    authorized by the District Parole
    Supervisor or designee;
    ii. The offender is prohibited from
    possessing or using any data encryption
    techniques and/or software programs that
    conceal, mask, alter, eliminate, and/or
    destroy information, and/or data from a
    computer and/or device;
    iii. The offender agrees to install on the
    computer and/or device, at his or her
    expense, one or more hardware or software
    system(s) to monitor computer and/or
    device use if such hardware or software
    system(s) is(are) determined to be
    necessary by the District Parole Supervisor
    or designee;
    iv. The offender agrees to permit the
    monitoring of the computer and/or device
    activity by a parole officer and/or
    computer/device specialist through the use
    of electronic means;
    v. The offender is subject to periodic
    unannounced      examinations    of    the
    computer and/or device by a parole officer
    or designated computer/device specialist,
    including the retrieval and copying of all
    data from the computer and/or device and
    any internal or external peripherals and
    removal of such equipment to conduct a
    more thorough inspection; and
    A-0042-16T2
    15
    vi. The offender is to disclose all
    usernames and passwords used by him or
    her to access any computer/device, e-mail
    address, and approved social networking
    service or chat room, as well as any other
    username(s) and password(s) used by him
    or her to access any data, information,
    image, program, signal, or file on the
    computer/device deemed necessary by a
    parole officer to ensure compliance with
    the conditions of supervision.
    [N.J.A.C. 10A:72-14.1(c)(1)(i) to (iv).]
    In addition, the regulations detail the procedure for imposing a special
    condition restricting Internet access. N.J.A.C. 10A:72-14.2. A District Parole
    Supervisor must provide "written notice of the imposition of an Internet access
    condition[,] . . . includ[ing] the basis for imposition of the condition." N.J.A.C.
    10A:72-14.2(a).     The offender must also be "provided with a written
    informational statement that details the procedure for the imposition of the
    Internet access condition."    N.J.A.C. 10A:72-14.2(b).      "The offender shall
    indicate in writing whether he or she contests the allegations, the conclusions to
    be drawn from the allegations, or the justification supporting the imposition of
    the Internet access condition." N.J.A.C. 10A:72-14.2(c).4
    4
    The regulation is silent as to when the offender must indicate in writing
    whether he or she contests the imposition of the conditions. We suggest the
    regulation be revised to clarify the deadline.
    A-0042-16T2
    16
    A contesting offender has "[ten] business days to submit a written
    statement or documentation to the District Parole Office to be considered before
    the Internet access condition becomes effective." N.J.A.C. 10A:72-14.2(e)(1).
    If the offender submits a written statement or documentation within ten business
    days, the condition does not become effective until it is reviewed by a Board
    panel. N.J.A.C. 10A:72-14.2(e)(3). The Board panel shall review the basis for
    the imposition of the condition and the written statement of the offender and
    notify the offender and the District Parole Supervisor in writing whether it
    affirms or vacates the imposition of the condition. N.J.A.C. 10A:72-14.3(a) to
    (c).
    Finally, the regulations provide that a District Parole Supervisor will
    annually review the Internet-access condition. N.J.A.C. 10A:72-14.4(a). On
    review, the following criteria will be considered:
    1. There is a reasonable basis to preclude access to the
    Internet;
    2. Internet use is consistent with the continued
    rehabilitation of the offender and will not compromise
    public safety;
    3. The offender is in compliance with the conditions of
    supervision;
    A-0042-16T2
    17
    4. The offender has met the goals listed in his or her
    Case Plan Agreement and is progressing in a pro-social
    manner; and
    5. The offender's treatment provider, if the offender is
    presently participating in counseling, is of the opinion
    that Internet access will promote the rehabilitation of
    the offender and assist the offender's re-entry efforts.
    [N.J.A.C. 10A:72-14.4(c)(1) to (5).]
    If the offender contests the justification for continuation of the condition, the
    condition remains in effect pending review by a Board panel. N.J.A.C. 10A:72-
    14.4(e).
    We note that by adopting these new regulations, the Board has filled some
    regulatory gaps and has provided greater protections to PSL offenders than were
    available when these appeals were filed. We also reiterate that the statutory and
    regulatory scheme governing PSL is tempered by administrative and
    constitutional protections afforded to parolees. With these principles in mind,
    we now turn to the cases at hand.
    II.
    (Factual and Procedural Background)
    K.G.
    On February 15, 2013, K.G. pled guilty of one count of endangering the
    welfare of a child, N.J.S.A. 2C: 24-4(a). K.G. had sex with a fifteen-year-old
    A-0042-16T2
    18
    neighbor who became pregnant. He did not, however, use the Internet in the
    commission of the offense. K.G. was sentenced to PSL, which commenced
    immediately upon his conviction because K.G. was not sentenced to a term of
    incarceration. K.G. was subjected to general conditions under PSL, including a
    condition that he would refrain from using social-networking websites ("social-
    networking general condition") and that he was prohibited from leaving the state
    without permission.
    On August 20, 2015, parole authorities discovered that K.G. had been
    using Facebook, Instagram, and Snapchat. The parole authorities seized and
    searched K.G.'s cell phone, revealing that K.G. had used the online dating
    applications Tinder and Badoo and that K.G. had nude photographs of himself
    and other women, some involving sexual acts, on his cell phone. Additionally,
    K.G. admitted to traveling out of state without permission on two occasions.
    K.G. was arrested for these violations and was detained in jail pending a hearing.
    The Board conducted a parole revocation hearing on September 17, 2015,
    and concluded that K.G.'s PSL would continue with K.G. being subject to the
    Electronic Monitoring Program. K.G. was released on October 12, 2015. On
    November 9, 2015, the local parole office imposed a special condition of PSL
    prohibiting K.G. from accessing "any computer and/or device that permits
    A-0042-16T2
    19
    access to the Internet unless authorized by the District Parole Supervisor" ("no-
    Internet special condition"). If authorized to use such a device by the District
    Parole Supervisor, K.G. was required to (1) refrain from using any techniques
    or programs that concealed or destroyed information on his computers or
    devices, (2) install, at his own expense, software that allows for the monitoring
    of his computers or devices, if determined necessary by the District Parole
    Supervisor, (3) permit the Board to monitor his computers or devices through
    electronic means, (4) allow for periodic unannounced examinations of his
    computers or devices, and (5) disclose all passwords used to access any data,
    information, image, or program on file on his computers or devices ("monitoring
    special conditions").
    In December 2015, K.G. wrote to the District Parole Supervisor, seeking
    rescission of the no-Internet and monitoring special conditions. Alternatively,
    K.G. requested permission to use the Internet and electronic devices for ten
    specific purposes.      In January 2016, the Division of Parole affirmed the
    imposition of the special conditions, but authorized K.G. to use the Internet for
    nine of the ten requested purposes, except that K.G. was prohibited from using
    social-networking websites even for business purposes. The Board required
    K.G. to install monitoring software on his devices and to disclose all passwords.
    A-0042-16T2
    20
    K.G. administratively appealed the conditions to a Board panel, which
    affirmed the conditions. K.G. appealed the panel's decision to the full Board,
    which affirmed the conditions in a final agency decision on July 27, 2016. In
    its written decision, the Board found that the imposition of the special conditions
    was warranted based on K.G.'s failure to adhere to the social-networking general
    condition. It noted that "this behavior can be considered high risk and could be
    considered a trigger for possible re-offense given the ages of the users are not
    always known." Additionally, considering K.G.'s description of his offense in
    an October 14, 2015 psychological evaluation, the Board found that "the
    opportunistic and exploitive elements of [K.G.]'s crime underscore the concerns
    [the Board] has for permitting social networking access."
    K.G. appealed the final agency decision.5
    C.C.
    On January 29, 2007, C.C. pled guilty to attempted sexual assault,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(c)(4), and luring/enticing a child victim by various means,
    5
    While this appeal was pending, the Board granted K.G.'s requests to use a
    Fitbit, a business iPad, and a Nintendo Wii, but denied his requests to use a
    Smart TV and to access social media for business purposes. K.G. is required to
    install monitoring software on all Internet-capable devices. In September 2018,
    the Board granted K.G. permission to use a third party to advertise his business
    on social-networking websites, but K.G. is not permitted to access the social-
    networking websites that contain those ads.
    A-0042-16T2
    21
    N.J.S.A. 2C:13-6. C.C.'s offense involved using an AOL public chat room to
    contact an undercover detective posing as a fourteen-year-old girl, sending
    sexually explicit photos of himself, and arranging to meet in person to have sex.
    C.C. was sentenced to four years' incarceration and was granted parole on
    February 5, 2008, subject to PSL. Upon his release, C.C. was subjected to the
    social-networking general condition and the no-Internet and monitoring special
    conditions.
    On December 15, 2015, C.C. was arrested for violating the conditions of
    his PSL, including having unsupervised contact with two minors, maintaining a
    Facebook account and a personal advertisement on Craigslist, using an iPhone
    to access the Internet without permission, and lying to his parole officer about
    his employment. On December 15, 2016, C.C. was released under PSL, subject
    to the social-networking general condition and the no-Internet and monitoring
    special conditions.
    On February 27, 2017, C.C. filed an administrative appeal seeking to
    vacate the general and special conditions restricting his Internet access. On
    March 22, 2017, a Board panel affirmed the imposition of these conditions. On
    May 31, 2017, the full Board issued a final agency decision affirming the
    imposition of the conditions. In its written decision, the Board found that the
    A-0042-16T2
    22
    conditions were justified based on the nature of C.C.'s underlying offense and
    his previous violations of conditions of PSL. C.C. appealed the final agency
    decision.6
    J.L.
    In 2009, J.L. pled guilty to endangering the welfare of a child, N.J.S.A.
    2C:24-4(a), and was sentenced to two years' probation. 7 The underlying incident
    involved J.L. providing beer to minors during a camping trip and having sex
    with a fourteen-year-old girl. On February 28, 2013, J.L. pled guilty to one
    count of endangering the welfare of a child, N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4(a), and was
    sentenced to three years' incarceration and PSL. In the underlying incident, J.L.
    friend-requested a fifteen-year-old girl on Facebook and exchanged instant
    messages and nude photographs with the girl. J.L. arranged to meet the girl at
    6
    While this appeal was pending, C.C. again requested that the no-Internet and
    monitoring special conditions be rescinded. In response to this request, in
    September 2018, the Board revised the special condition to allow C.C. to use
    devices to access the Internet, provided that he notify his parole officer of all
    Internet-capable devices and comply with the monitoring special conditions on
    all devices ("notify-computer special condition").
    7
    It does not appear that J.L. was sentenced to PSL as a result of this conviction.
    A-0042-16T2
    23
    a movie theater. After meeting at the movie theater, J.L. used his phone to show
    the girl pornography and had sex with her. 8
    On July l6, 2014, J.L. was granted parole under PSL and was subjected to
    special conditions. One special condition prohibited J.L. from purchasing,
    possessing, or consuming alcohol and "from frequenting establishments whose
    primary purpose is the sale of alcohol (i.e. bars and liquor stores)." ("no-alcohol
    special condition"). J.L. was also subject to the no-Internet special condition
    and a condition prohibiting him from "purchasing, viewing, downloading,
    possessing and/or creating a picture, photograph, negative, film, movie,
    videotape, Blu-ray, DVD, CD, CD-ROM, streaming video, video game,
    computer generated or virtual image or other representation, publication, sound
    recording or live performance that is predominately orientated to descriptions or
    depictions of sexual activity." 9
    8
    The Adult Presentence Report for this conviction states that J.L.'s attorney
    provided a memorandum recounting the details of the offense and indicating that
    J.L. showed the victim pornography using his cell phone.
    9
    The condition further specified that materials "shall not be considered
    predominately orientated to descriptions or depictions of sexual activity unless
    the medium features or contains such descriptions or depictions on a routine
    basis or promotes itself based upon such descriptions or depictions."
    A-0042-16T2
    24
    On June 1, 2015, J.L. was arrested for violating conditions of his PSL
    regarding out-of-state travel and consuming alcohol. The Board revoked J.L.'s
    parole, and J.L. was released from incarceration on May 31, 2016 after serving
    a one-year term. Upon his release, the Board re-imposed the no-alcohol special
    condition, but did not re-impose the no-Internet or pornography special
    conditions.
    On September 12, 2016, J.L. submitted an administrative appeal seeking
    removal of the no-alcohol condition, as well as the no-Internet and pornography
    special conditions, both of which had not actually been re-imposed. In response
    to this appeal, the District Parole Supervisor affirmed the no-alcohol special
    condition and found that the no-Internet and no-pornography conditions had
    never been re-imposed. The District Parole Supervisor instead imposed the
    notify-computer special condition, which required J.L. to notify his parole
    officer before purchasing, possessing or utilizing any computer or device that
    permits access to the Internet and to adhere to the monitoring special conditions
    on all devices.10 The District Parole Supervisor additionally imposed a special
    10
    Counsel informed us at oral argument that J.L. is not currently required to
    install monitoring software on his Internet-capable deceives.
    A-0042-16T2
    25
    condition prohibiting J.L. "from accessing any sexually-oriented websites,
    material, information or data." 11
    In February 2017, J.L. requested the rescission of the social-networking
    general condition, the notify-computer special condition, the monitoring special
    condition, the special condition restricting access to sexually-oriented materials,
    and the no-alcohol special condition.       Both a private psychologist and a
    treatment center had evaluated J.L. and determined that he did not need
    substance abuse treatment. A District Parole Supervisor denied J.L.'s requests
    to rescind these conditions.
    In March 2017, a Board panel affirmed the conditions. J.L. appealed to
    the full Board, which affirmed the conditions in a final agency decision on May
    31, 2017.   In its written decision, the Board found that the social-networking
    11
    Unlike the previous restriction on pornography, this new special condition
    did not contain the "predominantly oriented" language in defining sexual-
    oriented materials. It instead contained the following definition:
    For the purposes of this special condition, sexually
    oriented material means any videotape, Blu-ray, DVD,
    CD, CD-ROM, streaming video, video game, computer
    generated or virtual image or other representation,
    publication, sound recording or live performance, that
    contains a description or depiction of actual or
    simulated acts such as, but not limited to, sexual
    intercourse, oral sex, anal sex, masturbation, bestiality,
    sadism and/or masochism.
    A-0042-16T2
    26
    general condition and the notify-computer special condition were justified based
    on J.L.'s use of social-networking websites and the Internet in his underlying
    offense. The Board also found that "sexually-oriented materials" was clearly
    defined in the language of the special condition and that this special condition
    was justified based on the fact that J.L. showed his victim pornography during
    the underlying offense. Finally, the Board found that the no-alcohol condition
    did not inhibit J.L.'s business and that J.L. had not demonstrated a long enough
    period of sobriety to warrant the discharge of this condition.
    J.L. appealed the final agency decision.
    D.C.
    On June 25, 2008, D.C. pled guilty to second-degree sexual assault,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(c)(4), for engaging in sexual acts with a fourteen-year-old girl
    with the assistance of her aunt. D.C. did not use the Internet in the commission
    of this offense.   D.C. was sentenced to three years' incarceration and was
    released under PSL on August 31, 2009. Upon his release, D.C. was subject to
    the social-networking general condition.
    In December 2009, parole authorities found D.C. in possession of a
    computer and video gaming console. D.C. admitted that he had been using AOL
    Instant Messenger to communicate with friends, had been using X-Chat (a
    A-0042-16T2
    27
    social-networking website) to get technical assistance on his computer's
    operating system, and had a YouTube Account. Upon reviewing D.C.'s devices,
    the parole authorities did not discover any sexually deviant online activity. On
    January 28, 2010, in lieu of charging D.C. with a parole violation, the Board
    imposed the no-Internet special condition.
    Since 2010, the Board granted D.C. exceptions to the no-Internet special
    condition to allow D.C. to use the Internet in relation to his profession as an IT
    professional, including allowing D.C. to apply for employment online, create an
    online portfolio, use LinkedIn, and purchase a personal laptop computer to use
    for job training on web programming. The Board required D.C. to install
    monitoring software on his personal laptop.
    In December 2016, D.C. appealed the no-Internet and social-networking
    conditions to the Board, arguing that as he was employed in the IT field, he may
    need to access other people's computers while making repairs and may need to
    use blogs, video websites, and social-networking applications to stay up to date
    with technology and to network himself. In February 2017, a Board panel
    determined that the social-networking restriction would be held in abeyance and
    that D.C. would be permitted to access any social-networking service, provided
    that D.C. disclosed all user names and passwords for every profile. The panel
    A-0042-16T2
    28
    also relaxed the no-Internet condition, instead imposing the notify-computer
    special condition. Additionally, if D.C. chose to use a computer or Internet-
    capable device, he was subject to the monitoring special conditions.
    D.C. administratively appealed the panel's decision to the full Board,
    which affirmed the panel's decision in a final agency decision on May 31, 2017.
    In its written decision, the Board found that the monitoring special conditions
    were "necessary and appropriate to provide for the safety of the public, and
    minors in particular" and that "these provisions are the least restrictive means
    by which the Division of Parole can monitor [D.C.] for inappropriate Internet
    and social networking use." Further, the Board found that the monitoring special
    conditions required that D.C. install monitoring software on a device only when
    the District Parole Supervisor deemed it necessary, and that the Division of
    Parole had already determined that it was unnecessary to monitor D.C.'s work
    devices. The Board concluded "while D.C. has demonstrated a substantial
    compliance with supervision in general, the time elapsed during which [D.C.]
    has been responsibly using the Internet and social networking is insuf ficient to
    allow for the discharge of the monitoring and password requirements at this
    time."
    D.C. appealed the final agency decision.
    A-0042-16T2
    29
    III.
    (Legal Discussion)
    "Our review of the Parole Board's determination[s] is deferential in light
    of its expertise in the specialized area of parole supervision[.]" J.I., 228 N.J. at
    230. We will reverse a decision of the Board only if the offender shows that the
    decision was arbitrary or unreasonable, lacked credible support in the record, or
    violated legislative policies. Trantino v. N.J. State Parole Bd., 
    154 N.J. 19
    , 24-
    25 (1998); McGowan v. N.J. State Parole Bd., 
    347 N.J. Super. 544
    , 563 (App.
    Div. 2002). However, "the parole authorities do not have unbridled discretion
    to impose unnecessary or oppressive Internet conditions that do not advance a
    rational penological policy." J.I., 228 N.J. at 230. Moreover, the Board's actions
    may not violate constitutional protections. See J.B. v. N.J. State Parole Bd., 
    229 N.J. 21
    , 35 (2017) (considering whether the polygraph testing of PSL offenders
    violated constitutional privilege against self-incrimination, constitutional right
    to counsel, or constitutional right to privacy); H.R. v. N.J. State Parole Bd., ___
    N.J. Super ___, ___ (App. Div. 2018) (slip op. at 2-3) (considering whether the
    continuous satellite-based monitoring of sex offenders violated protection
    against unreasonable searches in New Jersey Constitution).
    A-0042-16T2
    30
    Guided by this standard of review, we first address the argument advanced
    by all appellants that the monitoring special conditions violate the constitutional
    protections against unreasonable searches.
    A.
    (Constitutional Challenges to Monitoring Conditions)
    Appellants contend that the monitoring special conditions, including the
    use of monitoring software and mandatory password disclosure, violate the
    protections from unreasonable searches contained in the Fourth Amendment of
    the United States Constitution and Article I, Paragraph 7 of the New Jersey
    Constitution. Appellants also argue that these conditions violate the rights to
    substantive due process and privacy under the Fourteenth Amendment of the
    United States Constitution and Article I, Paragraph I of the New Jersey
    Constitution. We reject these arguments.
    Constitutional claims made by PSL offenders "must be examined in the
    context of their distinctive status as sex offenders who have been released into
    the community after serving their custodial sentences, and who are now under
    the Parole Board's continued supervision through CSL or PSL." J.B. v. N. J.
    State Parole Bd., 
    433 N.J. Super. 327
    , 336 (App. Div. 2013). In Samson v.
    California, the United States Supreme Court upheld a California statute that
    A-0042-16T2
    31
    allowed for suspicionless searches of parolees. 
    547 U.S. 843
    , 857 (2006).
    Weighing parolees' diminished expectations of privacy by virtue of their status
    as parolees against the State's interest in supervising parolees and reducing
    recidivism, the Court concluded that suspicionless searches of parolees did not
    offend the Fourth Amendment. Id. at 850-57.
    The New Jersey Constitution, however, requires that suspicionless
    searches be evaluated under a "special needs" test rather than a general balancing
    test. State v. O'Hagen, 
    189 N.J. 140
    , 157-58 (2007). The New Jersey Supreme
    Court delineated the special needs test as follows:
    Under that test we must first consider whether there is
    a special governmental need beyond the normal need
    for law enforcement that justifies [the search] without
    individualized suspicion. If there is a special need, we
    must next examine the privacy interests advanced by
    defendant and any limitations imposed. Finally, we
    must weigh the competing governmental need against
    the privacy interests involved to determine whether [the
    search] ranks among the limited circumstances in
    which suspicionless searches are warranted.
    [Id. at 158 (internal quotations omitted).]
    Applying this test, we conclude that the State has a special governmental
    need justifying the suspicionless searches of PSL offenders' Internet-capable
    A-0042-16T2
    32
    devices.12 The State lacks a special governmental need where "the immediate
    purpose [of the suspicionless search] is to gather evidence against the individual
    for general crime control purposes." 
    Id. at 160
    . The State may have a special
    government interest, however, where "the core objective of the police conduct
    serves a special need other than immediate crime detection." 
    Ibid.
    In the cases before us, we are mindful that the Legislature enacted the CSL
    statute to address the concern that sex offenders recidivate at a relatively high
    rate. See Jamgochian, 
    196 N.J. at 237-38
    ; Doe v. Poritz, 
    142 N.J. 1
    , 14-18
    (1995). To advance this purpose, PSL offenders are "subject to conditions
    appropriate to protect the public and foster rehabilitation." N.J.S.A. 2C:43 -
    6.4(b); see also J.I., 228 N.J. at 211 ("Conditions imposed on CSL offenders—
    like those imposed on regular parolees—are intended to promote public safety,
    reduce recidivism, and foster the offender's reintegration into society."). In this
    regard, we find that the monitoring conditions serve two significant purposes
    beyond immediate crime detection.
    12
    As a threshold matter, the monitoring software, unannounced inspection of
    devices, and password disclosure conditions constitute searches, because the
    Board obtains information by intruding on an area (computer files) in which
    individuals have a reasonable expectation of privacy. See Grady v. North
    Carolina, 
    135 S. Ct. 1368
    , 1369-71 (2015) (holding that GPS monitoring of
    registered sex offenders constituted a search).
    A-0042-16T2
    33
    First, the monitoring conditions allow the Board to ensure that PSL
    offenders adhere to any restrictions placed on their Internet use. See J.B., 229
    N.J. at 41 ("We have acknowledged that the State has a significant interest in
    ensuring adherence to the restrictive conditions imposed pursuant to PSL and
    CSL to protect the public from recidivism by defendants convicted of serious
    sexual offenses." (internal quotation omitted)).       Second, the monitoring
    conditions may deter PSL offenders from using the Internet to commit new
    offenses, particularly in cases where the offender has previously used the
    Internet to commit offenses. See H.R., ___ N.J. Super ___ (slip op. at 8) ("An
    offender is likely to be deterred from engaging in criminal activity that could be
    verified with monitoring data."). These two interests are special governmental
    needs beyond "gather[ing] evidence against the individual for general crime
    control purposes." O'Hagen, 
    189 N.J. at 160
    .
    Having determined that the monitoring special conditions serve a special
    need, we next examine PSL offenders' offsetting privacy interests. As stated
    earlier, PSL offenders' privacy interests are significantly diminished by virtue
    of their status as parolees. See Samson, 547 U.S. at 850-52; J.B., 229 N.J. at
    40-41. Weighing the State's special interests against PSL offenders' diminished
    privacy interests, we find that the State's interests outweigh the offenders'
    A-0042-16T2
    34
    privacy interests. See J.B., 229 N.J. at 41 ("In weighing the competing interests
    here, we find that the State's interest in ensuring that parolees adhere to the
    conditions of their release pursuant to PSL and CSL outweighs the parolees'
    privacy interest in the information obtained during a polygraph examination.");
    H.R., ___ N.J. Super. ___ (slip op. at 13-16) (holding that the satellite-based
    monitoring of registered sex offenders was an unreasonable search for an
    offender not subject to PSL, but was reasonable for an offender subject to PSL).
    Therefore, we find that the monitoring special conditions do not facially violate
    the protections of the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution or
    Article I, Paragraph 7 of the New Jersey Constitution.
    Similarly, based on the balancing of the relevant interests, we reject
    appellants' contention that these conditions infringe upon appellants' rights to
    substantive due process and privacy. See J.B., 229 N.J. at 40-43 (holding that
    polygraph examinations of PSL and CSL offenders did not violate constitutional
    right to privacy). We note, however, that the Board may not impose monitoring
    conditions on individual PSL offenders in an arbitrary or unreasonable manner.
    J.I., 22 N.J. at 230. In that regard, as with other Internet-use restrictions, the
    Board should tailor monitoring conditions to the needs of the individual
    offender. See id. at 224. Accordingly, we consider whether the monitoring
    A-0042-16T2
    35
    conditions imposed are arbitrary or unreasonable as applied to each individual
    appellant below.
    B.
    (As-Applied Challenges)
    K.G.
    K.G. argues that the no-Internet special condition, the monitoring special
    conditions, and the social-networking general condition, as applied to him,
    violate the constitutional protections of free speech and association and
    constitutional protections against unreasonable searches. He also contends that
    the conditions were imposed upon him without sufficient due process, as the
    Board did not provide discovery or a hearing during the administrative appeal.
    K.G. finally argues that the no-Internet special condition violates due process
    under the void for vagueness doctrine.
    Internet-Access Conditions
    Considering the factors discussed in J.I., we find that the no-Internet
    special condition, the monitoring special conditions, and the social-networking
    general condition are arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable as applied
    individually to K.G. Guided by the Court's decision in J.I., we consider "such
    factors as the underlying offense and any prior criminal history, whether the
    A-0042-16T2
    36
    Internet was used as a tool to perpetrate the offense, the rehabilitative needs of
    the offender, and the imperative of public safety." J.I., 228 N.J. at 224. As in
    J.I., K.G.'s underlying offense did not involve the use of the Internet and K.G's
    criminal history does not reveal any misuse of the Internet. See id. at 229.
    Indeed, whereas J.I. visited websites depicting nude minors while on parole,
    there is no evidence in the record suggesting that K.G. ever visited illegal or
    inappropriate websites. See id. at 212. Based on K.G.'s underlying offense and
    criminal history, therefore, the need to restrict his Internet use to protect public
    safety is diminished. On the other hand, K.G. may have legitimate needs to use
    the Internet to reintegrate into society, such as by marketing his business. See
    id. at 210 ("Today, the Internet plays an essential role in the daily lives of most
    people—in how they communicate, access news, purchase goods, seek
    employment, perform their jobs, enjoy entertainment, and function in countless
    other ways.").
    The Board primarily justified the imposition of these conditions based on
    K.G.'s violation of the social-networking general condition in August 2015. We
    find, however, that the Board never justified how a total ban on the use of social
    networking by K.G. was "reasonably tailored to advance the goals of
    rehabilitation or public safety." Id. at 229. The Board reasoned that "the
    A-0042-16T2
    37
    opportunistic and exploitive elements of [K.G.]'s crime underscore the concerns
    it has for permitting social networking access. By his own account, [K.G.]
    admits to engaging in a conversation that led to a sexual encounter without an
    awareness of the victim's age."      This rationale, however, is insufficient to
    support a total ban on social networking in a case such as K.G. where the
    offender has not used social networking or the Internet to contact minors or
    otherwise facilitate a sexual offense. Compare Albertson, 
    645 F.3d at 199
    (invalidating condition that required authorization for all Internet use in child
    pornography case, because the offender did not use the Internet to contact any
    victims), with United States v. Love, 
    593 F.3d 1
    , 12 (D.C. Cir. 2010) (upholding
    Internet ban where the offender downloaded child pornography and used the
    Internet to solicit sex with a minor).
    We do not condone K.G.'s violations of conditions of PSL and note that
    an offender must abide by conditions of PSL until relief is granted. J.I., 228
    N.J. at 229. Nonetheless, we cannot ignore that the social-networking restriction
    was overbroad when it was initially imposed upon K.G., and that the subsequent
    A-0042-16T2
    38
    imposition of the no-Internet and monitoring special conditions was not
    reasonably tailored to public safety or rehabilitative needs. See ibid.13
    We acknowledge that the Board has granted K.G. numerous exceptions to
    the   no-Internet   special   condition     that   advance   rehabilitative    needs.
    Nevertheless, these exceptions do not cure conditions that are overbroad to begin
    with. See United States v. Holena, 
    906 F.3d 288
    , 292-93 (3d Cir. 2018) (holding
    that condition of supervised release that barred an offender, who used Internet
    to solicit sex from a minor, from accessing the Internet without prior approval
    of probation officer was overbroad in scope).
    In sum, because K.G. did not use the Internet to commit an offense and
    because the Board has advanced no significant public safety concern to justify
    these conditions, we cannot conclude that the conditions are reasonably tailored
    to the individual offender. See J.I., 228 N.J. at 230. We therefore hold that the
    13
    We note that the United States Supreme Court held that a state law that
    prohibited registered sex offenders from accessing social-networking websites
    that could be accessed by minors was unconstitutionally overbroad and violated
    the First Amendment. See Packingham v. North Carolina, 
    137 S. Ct. 1730
    ,
    1736-37 (2017). Although Packingham is not on point because that case dealt
    with a criminal statute affecting registered sex offenders who were not on parole,
    the Court recognized significant First Amendment interests in access to social-
    networking websites. See 
    ibid.
    A-0042-16T2
    39
    no-Internet special condition, the monitoring special conditions, and social -
    networking general condition are arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable as
    applied to K.G. and hereby reverse the Board's imposition of these conditions.14
    C.C.
    C.C. argues that the social-networking general condition, the no-Internet
    special condition, and the monitoring special conditions are arbitrary,
    capricious, and unreasonable as applied to him. He also contends that the Board
    violated procedural due process by declining to provide him with a hearing and
    discovery during the administrative appeal. We reject these arguments.
    Internet-Access Conditions
    As noted above, while this appeal was pending, the Board relaxed the no-
    Internet special condition and instead imposed upon C.C. the notify-computer
    special condition. Based on consideration of the factors in J.I., we find that the
    social-networking general condition, the notify-computer special condition, and
    the monitoring special conditions are reasonable as applied to C.C.
    In its final agency decision, the Board cited, among other things, the
    following facts as justifications for the imposition of the Internet-use
    14
    Having reversed the conditions at issue, it is not necessary to address K.G.'s
    remaining arguments.
    A-0042-16T2
    40
    restrictions: (1) C.C.'s underlying offense involved the use of the Internet and
    social-networking websites to solicit the minor; (2) C.C. consciously violated
    his previous Internet-use conditions; (3) C.C. had not yet demonstrated a
    substantial period of compliance with conditions of PSL since his release from
    custody in December 2016; and (4) C.C. was working at a convenience store
    and had not demonstrated the need to use the Internet or social -networking
    websites for a professional purpose.
    Considering the nature of C.C.'s underlying offense and his history of
    violating PSL conditions restricting Internet access, we find that the conditions
    imposed upon C.C. are reasonably tailored to advance goals of public safety and
    rehabilitation and are not arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable as applied to
    C.C. See, e.g., Crandon, 
    173 F.3d at 127-28
     (upholding condition of supervised
    release restricting Internet use where the offender used the Internet to solicit sex
    from a minor).
    Procedural Due Process
    We also reject C.C.'s contention that he was entitled to a hearing before
    the Board. In assessing whether C.C. was entitled to a hearing, we consider "the
    timing of and justification for the Internet restriction, the severity and length of
    the restriction, whether facts are contested or uncontested, and whether
    A-0042-16T2
    41
    credibility determinations must be made." J.I., 228 N.J. at 233. These factors
    distinguish C.C.'s case from the circumstances in J.I. that warranted a hearing.
    The Board initially imposed the Internet restrictions upon C.C.'s release from
    incarceration in 2008 for an offense in which he used the Internet to lure a minor.
    Additionally, in 2016, the Board re-imposed the conditions upon C.C.'s release
    from incarceration for violating the conditions of his PSL that restricted Internet
    access. This timing is distinguishable from J.I., where "J.I. complied for thirteen
    months with the Internet conditions set on his release date, and the Parole
    District Supervisor justified imposing extreme restrictions based on conduct that
    predated his release." Id. at 232. Moreover, C.C. did not allege any factual
    disputes in his administrative appeal to the Board.        For these reasons, we
    conclude that C.C. was not entitled to a hearing to contest the imposition of the
    conditions.
    We finally reject C.C.'s argument that he was entitled to discovery, as
    neither the Court in J.I. nor the Board's regulations establish a right to discovery
    in the agency appeals process.
    C.C. also claims that he was deprived procedural due process because he
    received an entirely redacted copy of the Board panel's decision sheet in March
    2017 and therefore could not adequately challenge the specific factual or legal
    A-0042-16T2
    42
    basis for the panel's decision in his appeal to the Full Board. On the facts of this
    case, we find that C.C. had sufficient notice of the justification for the
    imposition of the special conditions, as the conditions were imposed upon his
    release from incarceration for previous violations of conditions of PSL
    restricting the use of the Internet and social networking. We note, however, that
    the Board should ordinarily provide the offender with an unredacted decision
    sheet, unless it has a substantial security or safety need that requires redaction.15
    J.L.
    J.L. argues that the social-networking general condition and the notify-
    computer special condition, as applied to him, violate constitutional protections.
    Additionally, J.L. contends that the special condition restricting his access to
    sexually-oriented materials and the no-alcohol special condition are arbitrary,
    capricious, and unreasonable. J.L. also contends that all of the aforementioned
    conditions violate due process under the void for vagueness doctrine. Finally,
    J.L. argues that the conditions were imposed upon him without sufficient
    procedural due process because he did not receive a hearing or discovery during
    the administrative appeal. We address each of these arguments in turn.
    15
    We also note that the adopted regulations require that the offender be notified
    in writing of the Board panel's decision. N.J.A.C. 10A:72-14.3(c).
    A-0042-16T2
    43
    Internet-Access Conditions
    We first address the social-networking general condition and the notify-
    computer special condition. We again turn to the factors described in J.I. Like
    C.C., J.L. used the Internet and social-networking websites to commit the
    underlying offense. Thus, the Board's need to restrict J.L.'s Internet use is more
    significant than in J.I. See 228 N.J. at 229. Additionally, unlike the no-Internet
    condition in J.I., J.L. faces the less restrictive notify-computer special condition
    and is not currently required to install monitoring software on his devices.
    Under the notify-computer special condition, the Board may authorize J.L.
    to access the Internet for purposes conducive to rehabilitative needs. In this
    regard, the notify-computer special condition is a "less restrictive alternative[]
    . . . [to] achieve the goal of public safety and rehabilitation."       Id. at 224.
    Considering the Board's interest in ensuring that J.L. does not use the Internet
    or social-networking websites to commit new crimes, we find that the social-
    networking general condition and the notify-computer special condition are
    reasonably tailored to advance public safety and rehabilitative needs and
    conclude that these conditions are not arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable as
    applied to J.L.
    A-0042-16T2
    44
    Pornography Condition
    We next turn to the condition restricting J.L.'s access to sexually-oriented
    materials. Initially, we note that like restrictions on Internet use, this restriction
    implicates First Amendment rights. See United States v. Gnirke, 
    775 F.3d 1155
    ,
    1163 (9th Cir. 2015). Nonetheless, given the role of pornography in J.L.'s 2013
    offense, we find that a restriction on him accessing pornography is reasonably
    related to the goal of protecting the public. See, e.g., United States v. Rock, 
    863 F.3d 827
    , 832 (D.C. Cir. 2017) (upholding total ban on pornographic materials
    in child pornography case because condition was related to the underlying
    offense); Thielemann, 
    575 F.3d at 277-78
     (upholding ban on "sexually explicit"
    materials where the offender encouraged a friend in an online chatroom to
    sexually abuse a minor on a webcam).
    We note, however, that the pornography restriction J.L. currently faces is
    significantly broader than the restriction initially imposed in July 2014. As
    detailed above, the July 2014 condition barred access to materials that were
    "predominantly orientated to descriptions or depictions of sexual activity,"
    whereas the current condition bars access to all "sexually-oriented materials."
    For example, based on the special condition's definition of "sexually-oriented
    materials," a film containing a single depiction of simulated sexual intercourse
    A-0042-16T2
    45
    would be prohibited. See Gnirke, 775 F.3d at 1165 ("Applied literally, the
    language of the condition would prevent [the offender] from viewing Oscar-
    winning films like American Beauty and Brokeback Mountain, television shows
    like The Wire, or sexually explicit works of art that appear in museums; yet such
    non-pornographic materials receive full protection under the First Amendment."
    (citing Reno v. Am. Civil Liberties Union, 
    521 U.S. 844
    , 874 (1997))); United
    States v. Simons, 
    614 F.3d 475
    , 483-85 (8th Cir. 2010) (holding that condition
    prohibiting an offender from possessing any material that depicts nudity
    involved a "greater deprivation of liberty than [was] reasonably necessary.").
    On the record before us, we unable to conclude that the less restrictive
    condition limiting J.L.'s access to materials that are "predominantly orientated
    to descriptions or depictions of sexual activity" was insufficient to protect the
    public. Therefore, we remand to the Board to consider whether a less restrictive
    pornography condition than the one currently imposed upon J.L. can adequately
    protect the public safety or to provide a more specific justification for the current
    condition.16 We do not necessarily require that the Board hold a hearing on
    remand, but the Board should consider the factors described in J.I. to determine
    if a hearing is warranted. See J.I., 228 N.J. at 233.
    16
    The current condition will remain in effect pending this remand.
    A-0042-16T2
    46
    Alcohol Condition
    We next address whether the no-alcohol special condition is arbitrary,
    capricious, and unreasonable as applied to J.L. The record indicates that two
    clinical evaluations have deemed that J.L. did not need substance abuse
    treatment. Further, although J.L's 2009 offense involved the use of alcohol,
    there is no indication in the record that J.L. has subsequently engaged in offenses
    involving alcohol or has violated the no-alcohol special condition since June
    2015. Moreover, the special condition is broad, prohibiting not only consuming
    alcohol, but also purchasing alcohol for others and frequenting establishments
    whose primary purpose is the sale of alcohol.
    In affirming the no-alcohol special condition, the Board found that the
    condition did not inhibit J.L.'s business activities and that J.L. had not
    demonstrated a long enough period of sobriety to warrant the discharge of this
    condition. In light of the clinical evaluations finding that J.L. did not need
    substance abuse treatment, however, we conclude that these justifications are
    insufficient to reasonably support such a comprehensive restriction on
    consuming alcohol, purchasing alcohol, and attending establishments whose
    primary purpose is the sale of alcohol. We therefore find that the no -alcohol
    A-0042-16T2
    47
    special condition is arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable as applied to J.L. and
    reverse the Board's imposition of this condition.
    Void for Vagueness
    We next consider whether the terms of any of the conditions challenged
    by J.L. violate due process under the void for vagueness doctrine. Specifically,
    J.L. contends that the terms "Internet-capable device," "social networking
    service," "frequenting establishments whose primary purpose is the sale of
    alcohol," and "sexually-oriented websites, material, information or data" are
    unconstitutionally vague and overbroad. We find that none of the challenged
    terms violate due process under the void for vagueness doctrine.
    "A law is void if it is so vague that persons 'of common intelligence must
    necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its application.'" State, Twp. of
    Pennsauken v. Schad, 
    160 N.J. 156
    , 181 (1999) (quoting Town Tobacconist v.
    Kimmelman, 
    94 N.J. 85
    , 118 (1983)). "The vagueness doctrine requires that
    laws that impose criminal penalties or impede First Amendment interests be
    strictly scrutinized." 
    Id. at 182
    . Accordingly, a special condition of parole is
    reviewed for vagueness under strict scrutiny. Pazden v. N.J. State Parole Bd.,
    
    374 N.J. Super. 356
    , 370 (App. Div. 2005). Nonetheless, even under strict
    scrutiny, a rule may use "broad terms, provided it is controlled by a sufficient
    A-0042-16T2
    48
    basic norm or standard. It need not be minutely detailed to cover every possible
    situation." Karins v. City of Atl. City, 
    152 N.J. 532
    , 542 (1998). In sum, "[a]
    law is void as a matter of due process if it is so vague that persons 'of common
    intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its
    application.'"   Pazden, 
    374 N.J. Super. at 370-71
     (alternation in original)
    (quoting Town Tobacconist, 
    94 N.J. at 118
    ).
    Applying these standards, we conclude that each term challenged by J.L.
    "is controlled by a sufficient basic norm or standard." Karins, 
    152 N.J. at 542
    .
    As to the term "Internet-capable device," common intelligence supports that the
    term means any device capable of accessing the Internet, whether it be a
    computer, cell phone, wristwatch, or other device. 17 As to the term "social
    networking service," the Board's regulations clearly define the terms "Social
    networking service," "Chat room," "Internet website or application," and "Peer-
    to-peer network." N.J.A.C. 10A:71-6.12(d)(25)(i) to (iv). As to the terms of
    the no-alcohol special condition, the second sentence of the provision reads, "I
    am to refrain from frequenting establishments whose primary purpose is the sale
    of alcohol (i.e. bars and liquor stores)." A plain reading of the provision and the
    17
    The relevant portion of the special condition states: "I am to refrain from the
    possession and/or utilization of any computer and/or device that permits access
    to the Internet unless specifically authorized by the District Parole Supervisor."
    A-0042-16T2
    49
    example indicates that the prohibition only applies to bars and liquor stores, not
    any establishment that sells alcohol. Further, as discussed above, a plain reading
    of the term "sexually-oriented materials" and the corresponding definition in the
    special condition clearly indicates that the prohibition applies to any medium
    that contains any actual or simulated description or depiction of sexual
    intercourse, whether it be a movie, television show, novel, or pornographic
    website.
    For these reasons, we conclude that none of the challenged terms violate
    due process under the void for vagueness doctrine. To the extent that any of
    these conditions are overbroad as applied to an individual offender, that offender
    may seek that the Board grant an exception to the plain meaning of the condition
    and may in turn seek judicial review of the Board's decision.
    Procedural Due Process
    We next address J.L.'s contention that he was deprived procedural due
    process because the Board denied him a hearing during the administrative
    appeal. Considering the factors in J.I., we find that the circumstances did not
    warrant a hearing.    Most notably, J.L.'s underlying offense involved using
    Facebook to lure a fourteen-year-old girl. J.L. also did not have an extended
    period of compliance with the conditions of his supervision prior to the October
    A-0042-16T2
    50
    6, 2016 imposition of the special conditions at issue in this appeal. J.L. was
    released from a one-year term of incarceration for previous parole violations on
    May 31, 2016, so he had roughly a five-month period of compliance prior to the
    imposition of the special conditions.        In this regard, the Board's delay in
    imposing the special conditions is not as egregious as the thirteen-month gap in
    J.I. See 228 N.J. at 232. Moreover, J.L. did not allege any factual disputes in
    the administrative appeal. For these reasons, we conclude J.L. was not entitled
    to a hearing in the administrative appeal.
    Finally, as in C.C., we reject J.L.'s contention that he was entitled to
    discovery during the administrative appeal. While the Board provided J.L. only
    with an entirely redacted copy of the panel's decision sheet, J.L. had sufficient
    notice of the justifications for the imposition of the special conditions through
    the "Notice of Special Condition" forms he was provided when the conditions
    were imposed.
    D.C.
    D.C. argues that the notify-computer and monitoring special conditions
    are both arbitrary and unreasonable, as well as unconstitutional, as applied to
    him. He also contends that the conditions were imposed upon him without
    A-0042-16T2
    51
    sufficient procedural due process.     We agree that the notify-computer and
    monitoring special conditions are arbitrary and unreasonable as applied to D.C.
    Internet-Access Conditions
    Turning to the factors in J.I., we first emphasize that D.C. never used the
    Internet to commit any crimes. Additionally, as in K.G., the Board's primary
    justification for the imposition of the monitoring conditions is D.C.'s previous
    violations of the social-networking general condition in 2009, but the Board
    never provided a justification supporting that the social-networking condition
    was reasonably tailored when it was initially imposed. Moreover, using the
    monitoring software, the parole authorities have not detected any inappropriate
    Internet use by D.C. since the monitoring condition was imposed in 2010,
    significantly diminishing the need for the Board to continue monitoring D.C.'s
    Internet use.
    Importantly, D.C. also presented the Board with evidence supporting the
    rehabilitative need for unrestricted Internet access based on his profession in the
    IT field. In his administrative appeal, D.C. certified, among other things, that:
    (1) his prospective work in the IT field would require the use of virtual machines
    that allowed access to other people's servers and computers, (2) running the
    Board's monitoring software on these machines would create a security risk for
    A-0042-16T2
    52
    clients and possibly interfere with the functioning of the virtual machines, and
    (3) he would necessarily use encryption software when working for clients .
    Although the Division of Parole has not yet required D.C. to install monitoring
    software on his work devices, we find that a parole officer's discretion to relax
    the monitoring special conditions does not remedy this unnecessary restriction.
    In sum, the record reflects that D.C. did not use the Internet to commit an
    offense, the Board's monitoring detected no unauthorized Internet use in the
    seven years prior to its final agency decision, the Board has advanced no
    significant public safety concern to justify these conditions, and D.C. has
    presented a rehabilitative need for unrestricted Internet use. For these reasons,
    we hold that the notify-computer and monitoring special conditions are arbitrary
    and unreasonable as applied to D.C. and reverse the Board's imposition of these
    conditions.18
    C.
    (Summary of Conclusions)
    In summary, in K.G., (A-0042-16), we reverse the Board's imposition of
    the no-Internet special condition, the monitoring special conditions, and the
    18
    Having reversed the imposition of the conditions at issue, it is not necessary
    to address D.C.'s remaining arguments.
    A-0042-16T2
    53
    social-networking general condition.        In C.C., (A-4339-16), we affirm the
    Board's imposition of all special conditions at issue. In J.L., (A-4343-16), we
    affirm the Board's imposition of the social-networking general condition and the
    notify-computer special condition, remand for further consideration consistent
    with this opinion on the issue of the sexually-orientated materials special
    condition, and reverse the Board's imposition of the no-alcohol special
    condition. In D.C., (A-4797-16), we reverse the Board's imposition of the
    notify-computer special condition and the monitoring special conditions.
    We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-0042-16T2
    54