Court Opinion

ID: 6103672
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-14 18:01:12.001558+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:53:39.521788
License: Public Domain

Appellate Case: 21-8007     Document: 010110632142      Date Filed: 01/14/2022   Page: 1
                                                                                 FILED
                                                                     United States Court of Appeals
                                      PUBLISH                                Tenth Circuit

                       UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                      January 14, 2022

                                                                        Christopher M. Wolpert
                              FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT                         Clerk of Court
                          _________________________________

  UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

        Plaintiff - Appellee,

  v.                                                         No. 21-8007

  MONTY ENGLEHART,

        Defendant - Appellant.
                       _________________________________

                      Appeal from the United States District Court
                              for the District of Wyoming
                           (D.C. No. 2:12-CR-00026-ABJ-1)
                        _________________________________

 Eric K. Klein, Johnson & Klein, PLLC, Boulder, Colorado, for Defendant - Appellant.

 Timothy J. Forwood, Assistant United States Attorney (L. Robert Murray, Acting United
 States Attorney with him on the brief), Cheyenne, Wyoming, for Plaintiff - Appellee.
                         _________________________________

 Before HOLMES, KELLY, and MATHESON, Circuit Judges.
                   _________________________________

 MATHESON, Circuit Judge.
                    _________________________________

       Monty Englehart pled guilty to failure to register as a sex offender under the

 Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (“SORNA”) and was sentenced to

 time served and five years of supervised release. The conditions of his supervised

 release prohibited him from viewing sexually explicit materials.
Appellate Case: 21-8007    Document: 010110632142        Date Filed: 01/14/2022     Page: 2

       Mr. Englehart violated the conditions of his supervised release on three

 occasions by viewing legal, adult pornography. After a hearing, the district court

 amended the sexual material restriction and added additional conditions to Mr.

 Englehart’s supervised release, including (1) psychosexual evaluation and treatment

 and (2) mental health treatment.

       Mr. Englehart argues the district court failed to make particularized findings of

 compelling circumstances to justify the revised Sexual Material Prohibition and

 failed to give even a generalized statement of reasons to justify the Mental Health

 Condition. We agree, vacate those conditions, and remand for further proceedings.

 But we affirm the Psychosexual Evaluation and Treatment Condition because the

 district court provided an adequate generalized statement of reasons and did not

 improperly delegate sentencing authority to Mr. Englehart’s probation officer.

                                    I. BACKGROUND

                             A. Illinois State Court History

       In 1998, Mr. Englehart was convicted of Aggravated Criminal Sexual Abuse in

 Illinois state court (the “1998 Conviction”). The victim was H.W., a 15-year-old girl.

 As a result of this conviction, Mr. Englehart was required to register as a sex

 offender.

       In 2009, after two children under the age of 13 accused him of sexually

 abusing them between 2007 and 2008, Mr. Englehart was again charged in Illinois

 state court for sex crimes and possession of child pornography (the “2009 Charges”).

 He fled the jurisdiction before he could be arrested on those charges.

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       While Mr. Englehart was a fugitive, he was featured on the television show

 “America’s Most Wanted.” C.M., a viewer of the program, recognized Mr. Englehart

 and called in, stating that Mr. Englehart had abused her in 1999 or 2000, when she

 was 11 years old. In a 2012 interview, she told an Illinois State Police investigator

 that Mr. Englehart had touched her inappropriately when he was her mother’s live-in

 boyfriend.1

       In 2011, U.S. Marshals arrested Mr. Englehart in Wyoming, where he was

 living under an assumed name. Investigators found child pornography on a laptop in

 his home when he was arrested. He was extradited to Illinois to stand trial on the

 2009 Charges.

       In Illinois court, Mr. Englehart was found unfit to stand trial on the 2009

 Charges after a doctor who examined him reported that he was exhibiting behavioral

 symptoms of mental illness. ROA, Vol. 2 at 96. During the fitness proceedings, Mr.

 Englehart attempted to escape from custody and was charged with Felon Probationer

 Escape. He was found guilty of that charge after a jury trial in 2015.

       In July 2016, Mr. Englehart finally went to trial on the 2009 Charges.2 The

 jury could not reach a verdict, and the court declared a mistrial. The 2009 Charges

       1
         Although Mr. Englehart was charged for Aggravated Criminal Sexual Abuse
 based on this report, the charge was dismissed in 2013. The record does not specify
 the grounds for dismissal.
       2
        The record does not disclose what happened between the fitness
 determination and trial. Presumably, the Illinois court eventually found Mr.
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 were later dismissed in exchange for Mr. Englehart’s agreement to plead guilty to a

 separate state charge of failure to register as a sex offender. He was released from

 Illinois prison and transferred to federal custody in the District of Wyoming in 2018.

                      B. Wyoming Federal District Court History

    Indictment, Plea, and Sentencing

       While Mr. Englehart’s case was proceeding in Illinois state court, a federal

 grand jury in the District of Wyoming indicted him in 2012 for failing to register as a

 sex offender under SORNA, possession of child pornography, and Social Security

 fraud. After he was transferred back to Wyoming, Mr. Englehart entered a plea

 agreement in which he agreed to plead guilty to the SORNA charge and the

 Government agreed to dismiss the child pornography and Social Security fraud

 charges.

       In January 2019, the district court sentenced him to time served and five years

 of supervised release. It imposed special conditions of supervised release, which, as

 relevant here:

              (1) Prohibited Mr. Englehart from possessing, sending, or
                  receiving “any pornographic, sexually oriented, or
                  sexually stimulating visual, auditory, telephonic or
                  electronic signs, signals or sounds from any source.”
                  ROA, Vol. 1 at 36.

              (2) Required him to participate in and successfully
                  complete sex offender treatment. Id.

 Englehart fit to stand trial. C.M. testified at Mr. Englehart’s trial on the 2009
 Charges.

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              (3) Prohibited him from associating with children under
                  the age of 18. Id.

    Supervised Release Violations

       In October 2020, the Government petitioned the court to modify Mr.

 Englehart’s supervised release conditions (the “Modification Petition”). Mr.

 Englehart’s probation officer, Tracy Morton, alleged that Mr. Englehart had advised

 him of four violations of the conditions:

              (1) “On April 9, 2019, the defendant advised a female
                  brought a hand-held device to his residence and on the
                  device was a pornographic video that was shown to
                  him.” ROA, Vol. 1 at 44.

              (2) “On December 4, 2019, the defendant advised that a
                  male neighbor came across the hallway to his residence
                  with a hand-held device and showed the defendant a
                  pornographic video.” Id. at 45.

              (3) “On April 15, 2020, the defendant advised he was
                  hanging out with a female friend, Kimmy, who
                  requested the defendant walk her 4 year old daughter
                  to the local park. The defendant advised he began to
                  walk the minor to the park and remembered he must be
                  in the presence of an adult. He advised he immediately
                  called the minor’s mother and she joined them.” Id.
                  The probation officer confirmed that Mr. Englehart had
                  disclosed his background to the child’s mother. Id.

              (4) “On September 23, 2020, the defendant advised he has
                  been working through childhood trauma issues with his
                  mental health counselor. He advised he disclosed
                  something very traumatizing to her during a recent
                  counseling session. He advised he borrowed an
                  unauthorized cell phone from a friend in a motel where
                  he resides and watched pornography for ten days in a
                  row in response to disclosing his trauma. He spoke to
                  his mental health counselor about his response to
                  disclosing the traumatic information and advised she

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                  agreed he handled himself appropriately given the
                  situation.” Id. at 46.

       The Government requested that Mr. Englehart’s supervised release conditions

 be modified to add conditions requiring Mr. Englehart to:

              (1) Participate in a psychosexual evaluation and sex
                  offender treatment;

              (2) Participate in mental health treatment; and

              (3) Sign release forms authorizing his treatment providers
                  to disclose confidential information to his probation
                  officer.3

       The Government also requested that the sexual material prohibition previously

 imposed be replaced with a revised condition containing more specific language.

    Modification Hearing

       In January 2021, the district court held a hearing on the proposed modification

 of Mr. Englehart’s supervised release conditions (the “Modification Hearing”). At

 the hearing, the Government presented testimony from (a) Officer Tracy Morton;

 (b) FBI Special Agent Tory Smith; and (c) Dr. Charles Denison, a licensed forensic

 psychologist. We summarize the relevant testimony below.

       a. Probation Officer Morton

       The Government first called Officer Morton. She testified that Mr. Englehart

 was initially difficult to work with but was making progress under her supervision.

       3
        In addition to the conditions listed above, the Government also requested that
 Mr. Englehart be required to obtain full-time employment and find appropriate
 housing. Mr. Englehart does not challenge those conditions on appeal.

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 She then described the supervised release violations charged in the petition for

 modification, including that Mr. Englehart volunteered the information about the

 violations to her.

        Officer Morton testified that early in his supervised release, Mr. Englehart

 underwent a SOTIPS4 sex offender assessment “to assess his risk level for

 treatment.” Id. at 19. She said Mr. Englehart “assessed as a low risk on the higher

 end,” and “the counselor felt he was emotionally unstable at that time and suggested

 that he look into mental health treatment.” Id. at 19-20. Once Mr. Englehart was

 “emotionally stable,” the counselor “would reevaluate if he should complete another

 assessment.” Id. at 20. Officer Morton opined that an additional psychosexual

 evaluation would be helpful because, although Mr. Englehart completed a “very basic

 sex offender assessment,” the SOTIPS, “the probation office really doesn’t have a . . .

 detailed history[] for Mr. Englehart, so we can’t really determine what treatment he

 has had in the past or what he may need now.” Id. at 23.

        Officer Morton further testified that, although Mr. Englehart was voluntarily

 participating in mental health treatment, “it’s just important that he continues to

 participate in that, and I do believe he—he intends to.” Id. She described the

 proposed Mental Health Condition as a “safeguard.” Id. She also wanted Mr.

 Englehart to authorize the release of information for any treatment program.

        4
         SOTIPS stands for Sex Offender Treatment Intervention and Progress Scale.
 See SOTIPS: Sex Offender Treatment Intervention and Progress Scale, Nat’l Inst. of
 Corrs., https://perma.cc/8RE7-56VC.

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 Although Mr. Englehart had allowed her to participate in phone calls with his

 counselor and to attend in-person sessions, the Probation Office “like[s] to be able to

 have an open dialogue with the counselor just in case there’s something that needs to

 be discussed without the individual in the room.” Id. at 24. She later clarified that

 the Probation Office only wanted a release to “[c]onfirm attendance” at therapy,

 “maybe confirm progress,” and to know Mr. Englehart’s diagnosis. Id. at 44.

       b. Special Agent Smith

       The government next called Agent Smith. He testified about Mr. Englehart’s

 apprehension in Wyoming in 2011, the child pornography that was found on Mr.

 Englehart’s computer, and the details he learned during interviews with H.W. and

 C.M. in 2018. H.W., the victim in Mr. Englehart’s 1998 Conviction, disclosed

 additional details of the sexual assault. ROA, Vol. 2 at 91. C.M. disclosed additional

 details of Mr. Englehart’s assault and that, as a child, she once saw a large amount of

 pornography in the trunk of Mr. Englehart’s car.

       c. Dr. Denison

       Dr. Charles Denison testified regarding the Government’s proposed Sexual

 Material Prohibition. He had not examined Mr. Englehart, but he had reviewed the

 presentence report for Mr. Englehart’s SORNA conviction and reports from Agent

 Smith and Officer Morton.

       Dr. Denison testified that risk factors for recidivism by convicted sex

 offenders generally include substance abuse, the quantity and nature of previous

 sexual deviance, general mental and behavioral stability or instability, and the type of

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 offense. He said use of adult pornography could also be a risk factor depending on

 the presence of other risk factors. He also testified that persons who are “prolific”

 users of adult pornography often become habituated to it, which leads them to seek

 out other forms of pornography. Id. at 80.

       Dr. Denison concluded that “several . . . risk factors” were present here, but he

 was “certainly not making any judgments about [Mr. Englehart’s] risk level because I

 haven’t conducted a psychosexual evaluation of Mr. Englehart.” Id. at 81.

 “[S]peaking generally,” he concluded that “even the use of adult pornography would

 be contraindicated or—or problematic” based on the presence of other risk factors

 including his criminal and psychological history, his known use of child

 pornography, and his recent “very high use” of pornography. Id. at 81-83.

    District Court’s Findings

       After the Government’s three witnesses testified, both sides presented

 argument and Mr. Englehart addressed the court. The district court then made the

 following findings:

        Dr. Denison was a “significant authority” and had “provided some
         information to help the Court’s understanding.” ROA, Vol. 3 at 139.

        Mr. Englehart had, by his own admission, viewed pornography in violation
         of his supervised release on three separate occasions, with the final incident
         involving “10 days straight” of viewing pornography. Id. at 139, 144.

        Mr. Englehart has a history of alcoholism and mental illness. Id. at 142.

        Mr. Englehart was convicted of sexual abuse of a minor in 1998. Id.

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          Mr. Englehart has been accused of sexually abusing another minor in a
           similar fashion.5 Id. at 142.

          Mr. Englehart’s computer contained child pornography when he was
           arrested in 2011. Id. at 144.

          People at the motel where Mr. Englehart lives are “viewing and passing
           around pornographic materials,” and “we know from Dr. Denison’s
           testimony, looking from the back forward, the danger of that for persons
           such as Mr. Englehart who do have that history in their background.” Id. at
           148.

  “As a consequence” of these findings, the district court reimposed the Sexual

  Material Prohibition with the Government’s proposed modifications. Id.

         The court then addressed whether Mr. Englehart should be required to submit

  to a psychosexual evaluation. It noted that nearly two years had passed since Mr.

  Englehart’s last evaluation, and during that time Mr. Englehart had committed three

  violations of supervised release involving pornography. One of those violations, the

  court noted, involved “10 days straight of viewing pornography not under any kind of

  supervision whatsoever.” Id. at 149. The court was not “impress[ed]” that Mr.

  Englehart’s therapist “may or may not have said that it was okay and part of

  treatment in this case.” Id. The court “f[ou]nd in that kind of situation with that

  progression that that is something that deserves to be looked into . . . to restore trust,

  if nothing else, and to give us some direction going forward with regard to this

  defendant.” Id. at 150.

         5
          The district court did not mention the allegations of the two children leading
  to the 2009 Charges.

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         Finally, the Government asked the court “to clarify about the mental health

  treatment program as well as the release forms.” Id. at 151. The court responded: “I

  don’t think there’s any requirement—I think he needs to continue with mental health,

  and there will be a requirement that he participate in mental health and that the

  information that needs to be furnished is . . . the diagnosis, is he compliant, is he

  attending.” Id.

     Modified Conditions

         The district court entered an order imposing the following modified or

  additional conditions of supervised release:

                Sexual Material Prohibition
                The Defendant shall not possess, in any form, materials
                depicting child pornography, child erotica, or nude or sexual
                depictions of any child; or any materials described at
                18 U.S.C. § 2256(8).
                The Defendant shall not access, possess, send, or receive any
                visual depictions of sexually explicit conduct as defined in
                18 U.S.C. § 2256(2)(B), if the materials taken as a whole, are
                primarily designed to arouse sexual desire.6

                Mental Health Condition
                The defendant shall participate in and successfully complete a
                mental health treatment program approved by the U.S.
                Probation Officer, and abide by the rules, requirements, and
                conditions of the treatment program. The defendant shall not

         6
           Mr. Englehart notes that § 2256(2)(B)’s definition of “sexually explicit
  conduct” was taken from a child pornography statute. He suggests “it is unclear if
  the terms of the condition as stated in the district court’s order actually prohibit legal,
  adult pornography.” Aplt. Br. at 10-11 n.5. Apart from his failure to adequately
  develop this argument, it was clear at the Modification Hearing that the condition
  would apply to adult pornography. The district court cross-referenced to a definition
  in the statute and did not incorporate the statutory scheme.

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               discontinue treatment without the permission of the U.S.
               Probation Officer.7

               Psychosexual Evaluation & Treatment Condition
               The defendant shall participate in and successfully complete a
               psychosexual evaluation with either Dr. Amanda Turlington
               or Dr. William Heineke. The cost of the evaluation will be
               paid for by the probation office. The defendant shall sign a
               release of authorization allowing the probation office to
               communicate with the provider and obtain the results of the
               evaluation. He shall participate in and successfully complete
               any recommended treatment in a program approved by the
               United States Probation Officer, and abide by the rules,
               requirements, and conditions of the treatment program. The
               defendant shall not discontinue treatment without the
               permission of the Probation Officer.

  ROA, Vol. 1 at 51-52.

                                    II. DISCUSSION

                                 A. Standard of Review

        When a defendant objects to a special condition of supervised release at the

  time it is announced, we review the imposition of the special condition for abuse of

  discretion. United States v. Flaugher, 805 F.3d 1249, 1251 (10th Cir. 2015). “A

        7
          The district court also imposed the following Release Form Condition:
                The defendant shall sign limited release forms authorizing the
                release of confidential information for any treatment program
                he is participating in to allow for communication between the
                treatment provider and the probation officer. The information
                to be released shall include any diagnosis, defendant
                compliance and progression, and attendance.
        This condition applies to “any treatment program”—which would include both
  mental health and psychosexual. At the Modification Hearing, however, the court
  considered it only for the Mental Health Condition. See App., Vol. 3 at 24, 43-44,
  151.

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  district court abuses its discretion only where it (1) commits legal error, (2) relies on

  clearly erroneous factual findings, or (3) where no rational basis exists in the

  evidence to support its ruling.” United States v. A.S., 939 F.3d 1063, 1070 (10th Cir.

  2019) (quotations omitted).

           B. Legal Background on Special Conditions of Supervised Release

        We review special conditions of supervised release for both substantive and

  procedural reasonableness. See United States v. Pacheco-Donelson, 893 F.3d 757,

  759-761 (10th Cir. 2018).

     Substantive Requirements

        Conditions of supervised release must “(1) be ‘reasonably related’ to the

  nature and circumstances of the offense, the defendant’s history and characteristics,

  the deterrence of criminal conduct, the protection of the public from further crimes of

  the defendant, or the defendant’s educational, vocational, medical, or other

  correctional needs; (2) ‘involve no greater deprivation of liberty than is reasonably

  necessary’ for the purposes of deterring criminal activity, protecting the public, and

  promoting the defendant’s rehabilitation; and (3) be consistent with any pertinent

  policy statements issued by the Sentencing Commission.” United States v. Martinez-

  Torres, 795 F.3d 1233, 1236 (10th Cir. 2015) (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 3583(d))

  (alteration omitted).

     Procedural Requirements

        “This court’s precedents create something of a hierarchy as to the extent of

  justification required when a district court imposes conditions of supervised release.”

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  United States v. Koch, 978 F.3d 719, 724-25 (10th Cir. 2020). Mandatory

  conditions—those required by statute—do not require an individualized assessment.

  Id. at 725. “When, however, neither the Sentencing Commission nor Congress has

  required or recommended a condition, we expect the sentencing court to provide a

  reasoned basis for applying the condition to the specific defendant before the court.”

  Martinez-Torres, 795 F.3d at 1237. “That is, before a district court can impose upon

  a defendant a special condition of supervised release, the district court must analyze

  and generally explain how, with regard to the specific defendant being sentenced, the

  special condition furthers the three statutory requirements set out in 18 U.S.C.

  § 3583(d).” Koch, 978 F.3d at 725. Although we generally are “not hypertechnical

  in requiring the court to explain why it imposed a special condition of release—a

  statement of generalized reasons suffices—the explanation must be sufficient for this

  court to conduct a proper review.” Id. (quotations omitted).

        The next step in the hierarchy is “when a court imposes a special condition

  that invades a fundamental right or liberty interest.” United States v. Burns, 775 F.3d

  1221, 1223 (10th Cir. 2014). The court must justify such a condition with

  “compelling circumstances.” Id. “Particularly where the condition of release

  implicates constitutional interests, such as the right to possess sexually oriented

  materials involving adults, more detail may be required if the reasons for the

  restriction are not matters of common knowledge.” Koch, 978 F.3d at 725

  (quotations omitted).

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         Our case law thus “mandates that the district court engage in an on-the-record

  analysis of the propriety of all special conditions of supervised release and a

  particularly meaningful and rigorous analysis when the special condition implicates a

  fundamental right or interest.” Id. at 726.

                                         C. Analysis

         As we discuss below, the Sexual Material Prohibition and the Mental Health

  Condition cannot withstand procedural challenge. The Psychosexual Evaluation and

  Treatment Condition is procedurally reasonable, and the authority it grants to the

  probation officer is substantively reasonable.

     Sexual Material Prohibition

         Although the district court may have had sufficient evidence to make

  particularized findings of compelling circumstances to justify the Sexual Material

  Prohibition, it failed to do so. The district court generally discussed Mr. Englehart’s

  personal and criminal history, but it failed to connect this history to the Sexual

  Material Prohibition or address the statutory criteria for imposing special conditions

  of supervised release. We must therefore vacate the condition and remand for the

  district court to attempt to remedy this deficiency under our precedent.8

         8
          Mr. Englehart also argues that the Sexual Materials Prohibition must be
  vacated because the district court relied on clearly erroneous findings of fact. Aplt.
  Br. at 13-16. Because we vacate the condition on the ground that the district court’s
  explanation was insufficient to allow for meaningful appellate review, we do not
  reach this argument.

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        a. Legal background on sexual material prohibitions

        In a recent appeal from the Wyoming federal district court, this court said that

  “[t]he Supreme Court has made clear that the First Amendment protects the right of

  individuals to possess sexually explicit materials involving adults, let alone non-

  explicit sexually oriented materials.” Koch, 978 F.3d at 724 (citing United States v.

  Williams, 553 U.S. 285, 288 (2008).9 “This right, like other rights enshrined in the

  First Amendment is fundamental.” Id. “[I]t is now patently clear in the Tenth

  Circuit that before a district court can impose a special condition implicating a

  fundamental right, including a condition like the Sexual Material Prohibition, the

  district court must set forth, on the record, defendant-specific findings that show a

  compelling interest.” Id. at 726.

               i. Martinez-Torres

        In United States v. Martinez-Torres, we vacated a condition that prohibited the

  defendant from “viewing or possessing any material depicting or describing sexually

  explicit conduct or child pornography as defined in 18 U.S.C. § 2256.” 795 F.3d

  at 1236. We agreed with the defendant that the condition “involve[d] a greater

  deprivation of liberty than [wa]s necessary to deter criminal activity, protect the

  public, and promote his rehabilitation.” Id. at 1237. “The district court’s sole

  expressed reason for the condition was that Defendant had been convicted of a sex

        9
          Mr. Engelhart does not challenge the portion of the Sexual Material
  Prohibition that prohibits child pornography. Aplt. Br. at 11.

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  offense . . . . But that is not enough.” Id. Rather, we explained, the district court

  “needed to make an individualized assessment of whether it was appropriate for

  Defendant.” Id. Although it was “quite relevant that Defendant was a convicted sex

  offender,” the district court still “needed to explain why the restriction of legal

  sexually explicit material was supported by the statutory factors in this case.”

  Id. at 1238.

                 ii. Koch

        In United States v. Koch, we also vacated a prohibition on sexual materials

  because the district court did not adequately justify the condition with compelling

  circumstances. 978 F.3d at 725, 730. The district court “merely noted the following:

  (1) the extent of Koch’s criminal history (i.e., sexual contact with thirteen-year-old

  and fifteen-year-old girls and possession of child pornography); (2) a personal doubt

  offenders like Koch were amenable to rehabilitation; and (3) a desire to address

  Koch’s ‘cognitive thinking errors.’” Id. at 725. The court did not “analyze or

  explain how restricting [the defendant’s] access to sexually oriented (but non-

  pornographic) materials, specifically including such materials only involving adults,

  would aid in [his] rehabilitation or protect the public.” Id. For example, the court

  did not “find that accessing sexual material involving adults impaired [the

  defendant’s] rehabilitation because it rendered him unable to undertake tasks

  associated with daily life,” or “acted as some kind of sexualizing gateway leading to

  the consumption of child pornography.” Id.

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        b. Application

               i. The district court’s inadequate findings

        The district court’s explanation for its decision was deficient for the same

  reasons discussed in our recent decision in Koch. Here, as in Koch, the district court

  merely “reviewed [Mr. Englehart’s] personal and criminal history,” “repeatedly noted

  [Mr. Englehart’s] prior conviction” of sexual abuse as well as allegations for which

  he was not convicted, and deemed this history “concerning.” Id. at 723. Here, as in

  Koch, the district court failed to mention the three statutory requirements set out in

  18 U.S.C. § 3583(d), let alone “analyze and generally explain how, with regard to the

  specific defendant being sentenced, the special condition furthers” those criteria.

  Id. at 725. And here, as in Koch, the court failed to connect any of its “findings” to

  the Sexual Material Prohibition, let alone justify the condition with a showing of

  “compelling circumstances.” Id. at 726. Instead, the district court generally

  summarized Mr. Englehart’s past and vaguely referenced the testimony of the

  Government’s witnesses. The court “made no specific findings with regard to the

  special conditions of supervised release.” United States v. Dunn, 777 F.3d 1171,

  1178 (10th Cir. 2015).

        There may be good reasons to impose the Sexual Material Prohibition given

  Mr. Englehart’s history and background. But the district court failed to connect Mr.

  Englehart’s background and the Sexual Materials Prohibition to the statutory factors.

  “If the district court believed that there was some relationship between the

  defendant’s possession and use of adult pornography and the likelihood that he would

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  engage in sexual misconduct involving young girls, the court should have explained

  the basis for that conclusion.” United States v. Peraza-Mercado, 553 F.3d 65, 76

  (1st Cir. 2009); see also Martinez-Torres, 795 F.3d at 1240. In other words, the

  district court “needed to explain why the restriction on legal sexually explicit material

  was supported by the statutory factors in this case.” Martinez-Torres, 795 F.3d

  at 1238 (emphasis added). It failed to do so. See Koch, 978 F.3d at 726 (“Nor did

  the district court consider any of the other potentially numerous valid reasons for

  restricting [the defendant’s] access to constitutionally protected materials.”).

  “Absent such analyses on the part of the district court, it is simply impossible for

  [Mr. Englehart] to contest, or for this court to resolve as a substantive matter,

  whether a prohibition like the Sexual Material Prohibition satisfies the statutory

  imperatives set out in [§ 3583(d)], let alone the requirement that any such special

  condition, given that it implicates a fundamental right, serves a compelling

  governmental interest.” Id.

         Further, “even if the condition served ‘some unexplained rehabilitative,

  deterrent or penological purpose,’ the purpose needed ‘to be balanced against the

  serious First Amendment concerns endemic in such a restriction.’” Martinez-Torres,

  795 F.3d at 1240 (quoting United States v. Voelker, 489 F.3d 139, 151 (3d Cir.

  2007)). Here, the district court failed to (1) identify the rehabilitative, deterrent, or

  penological purpose of the condition; and (2) balance any such purpose against First

  Amendment concerns.

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               ii. Dr. Denison

        The district court’s vague reference to Dr. Denison’s testimony does not

  suffice to establish the required nexus. The court said simply that “we know from

  Dr. Denison’s testimony, looking from the back forward, the danger of [pornography]

  for persons such as Mr. Englehart who do have that history in their background.”

  ROA, Vol. 3 at 148. It did not elaborate on the “danger[s]” that Dr. Denison’s

  testimony established.

        In Koch, we suggested that one justification for a Sexual Material Prohibition

  might be a finding that sexual material involving adults “acted as some kind of

  sexualizing gateway leading to the consumption of child pornography.” 978 F.3d at

  725. But the district court’s analysis of that issue here was inadequate to allow “this

  court to resolve as a substantive matter, whether a prohibition like the Sexual

  Material Prohibition . . . serves a compelling governmental interest.” Id. at 726.

  Other than its conclusory reference to Dr. Denison’s testimony, the court did not

  analyze or explain how that testimony showed the Sexual Material Prohibition is

  “reasonably related” to Mr. Englehart’s particular “history and characteristics, the

  need to protect the public from future crimes, and his need for correctional

  treatment.” United States v. Bear, 769 F.3d 1221, 1228 (10th Cir. 2014).

        Further, Dr. Denison’s analysis and conclusions provide limited value because

  he did not examine Mr. Englehart. See United States v. Mike, 632 F.3d 686, 693

  (10th Cir. 2011) (relying in part on results of psychological evaluations to support

  conditions); United States v. Barela, 797 F.3d 1186, 1193 (10th Cir. 2015) (same).

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  His testimony regarding “habituation” thus amounts to little more than an abstract

  possibility. Dr. Denison’s general observation that a high percentage of those who

  commit sexual offenses also consume pornography is not the kind of “individualized

  assessment” that our cases require. Martinez-Torres, 795 F.3d at 1237. As we

  previously noted in Martinez-Torres, “there is certainly expert literature suggesting,

  at the least, that a more nuanced approach is preferable to painting with a broad

  brush.” Id. at 1240 (collecting authorities). Indeed, Dr. Denison “hesitate[d] to make

  statements about this particular defendant because[, he said,] I don’t know him—I’m

  certainly not making any judgments about his risk level because I haven’t conducted

  a psychosexual evaluation of Mr. Englehart.” ROA, Vol. III at 81.

        Dr. Denison’s testimony may have established that the use of adult

  pornography could be a “risk factor” for Mr. Englehart. But before determining that

  the risk was sufficient to justify the Sexual Material Prohibition, the district court

  needed to consider the presence of other risk factors, as well as any mitigating

  factors, and balance the risks “against the serious First Amendment concerns endemic

  in such a restriction.” Martinez-Torres, 795 F.3d at 1240 (quotations omitted). The

  district court’s conclusory reference to the “danger” of pornography for individuals

  with Mr. Englehart’s “history” was insufficient. ROA, Vol. III at 148.

               iii. Government’s counterarguments

        The Government fails to demonstrate the district court made the requisite

  findings. It merely summarizes the testimony that it presented at the modification

  hearing and argues that, based on this testimony and Mr. Englehart’s criminal

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  history, the district court had ample basis to impose the Sexual Material Prohibition.

  Maybe so, but that is not the same as showing that the district court “set forth, on the

  record, defendant-specific findings that show a compelling interest.” Koch, 978 F.3d

  at 726. Instead, the Government relies extensively on record evidence and testimony

  that the district court never discussed. We express no opinion whether the Sexual

  Material Prohibition could have been justified by the evidence available in the

  record. To enable meaningful appellate review, the district court must do so. We

  remand for the district court to try again.

                                       *    *        *   *

        On remand, the district court must (1) make particularized findings that are

  specific to Mr. Englehart’s history and characteristics, (2) explain how the specific

  condition furthers the statutory goals of supervised release, and (3) balance those

  goals against the First Amendment concerns raised by the condition. Only

  compelling circumstances will overcome those concerns.10

        10
           The Government has conceded that, as a substantive matter, the Sexual
  Material Prohibition is overbroad to the extent it prohibits Mr. Englehart from
  accessing “in any form . . . nude . . . depictions of any child.” ROA, Vol. 1 at 52. It
  argues only that “prohibiting the Defendant from viewing photographic depictions of
  nude children is a valid supervision condition and is not overly broad.” Aplee. Br.
  at 35 (emphasis added). But the condition is not limited to photographic depictions.
  It includes non-photographic depictions of child nudity that could be seen, for
  example, in many public art museums.
          Generally, “where a broad condition of supervised release is ambiguous and
  could be read as restricting a significant liberty interest, we construe the condition
  narrowly so as to avoid affecting that significant liberty interest.” Bear, 769 F.3d
  at 1230. But we cannot manufacture an ambiguity or rewrite the condition
  altogether. Here, as in Koch, a “narrow reading of the condition” as a restriction on
  photographic depictions alone “is simply not possible.” 978 F.3d at 722-23 n.1. The
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     Mental Health Condition

         Mr. Englehart challenges the procedural reasonableness of the Mental Health

  Condition, arguing that the district court failed to justify it with particularized

  findings of compelling circumstances. Under our precedent, the Mental Health

  Condition does not implicate a fundamental liberty interest. Although the district

  court therefore needed to provide only a statement of generalized reasons to justify

  the condition, it failed to do so. We vacate the condition.

         a. Legal standard

         The parties dispute whether the Mental Health Condition implicates a

  “fundamental liberty” and thus requires the district court to make particularized

  findings of compelling circumstances. Mr. Englehart relies on our statement in

  United States v. Bear that “conditions requiring a mental health evaluation and

  treatment affect a liberty interest and must be supported by particularized findings by

  the district court.” 769 F.3d at 1230. The Government, relying on United States v.

  Jereb, 882 F.3d 1325 (10th Cir. 2018), counters that the imposition of mental health

  treatment does not intrude on a “fundamental” liberty interest and thus need only be

  justified by “generalized reasons.” We agree with the Government.

  Sexual Material Prohibition unambiguously proscribes all “depictions,” photographic
  or otherwise. We therefore cannot save the child nudity ban by imposing a limiting
  construction.
         On remand, if the district court reimposes a more limited child nudity ban, it
  must analyze and explain the reasons why the ban is reasonably related to the
  relevant statutory factors and no more restrictive than necessary to achieve those
  purposes.

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        Although Bear referred to “liberty interests” and “particularized findings,” it

  did not conclude that mental health conditions implicate fundamental liberties, and it

  did not suggest that such conditions need to be justified by “compelling

  circumstances.” See 769 F.3d at 1230-31.11 Four years after Bear, we explained that

  “[d]istrict courts enjoy broad discretion to order special conditions of supervised

  release, including mandatory mental health treatment.” Jereb, 882 F.3d at 1342. We

  did not mention any requirement of “particularized findings” or “compelling

  circumstances.” Rather, we said that a “statement of generalized reasons is enough,

  provided the district court’s explanation is sufficient to allow proper appellate

  review.” Id. at 1343.

        Thus, to justify the Mental Health Condition, the district court needed only to

  provide “generalized reasons . . . sufficient to allow proper appellate review.” Id.

  We need not be “hypertechnical in requiring the court to explain why it imposed” this

  condition. Id. (quoting Martinez-Torres, 795 F.3d at 1238).

        b. Application

        Although the district court was not required to make particularized findings of

  compelling circumstances before imposing the Mental Health Condition, it failed to

        11
            By contrast, we acknowledged elsewhere in Bear that “a father has a
  fundamental liberty interest in maintaining his familial relationship with his
  children.” 769 F.3d at 1229 (quotations and alteration omitted). We also said,
  “Given the importance of this liberty interest, special conditions that interfere with
  the right of familial association can do so only in compelling circumstances.” Id.
  (quotations omitted).

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  provide even a statement of generalized reasons. We therefore vacate the condition

  and remand for the district court to give an appropriate explanation.

        As discussed above, we have not required district courts to find compelling

  circumstances before imposing mental health treatment conditions. Further, “we

  have generally found a defendant’s commission of a sex crime enough to require an

  initial mental health assessment and treatment consistent with that assessment.”

  Bear, 769 F.3d at 1230.

        But here the district court failed to provide even the “statement of generalized

  reasons” that we require when a special condition does not implicate a fundamental

  liberty. Martinez-Torres, 795 F.3d at 1238 (quotations omitted). The entirety of the

  district court’s discussion was: “I think he needs to continue with mental health, and

  there will be a requirement that he participate in mental health and that the

  information that needs to be furnished is as I discussed, the diagnosis, is he

  compliant, is he attending.” ROA, Vol. 3 at 151. Again, we express no view on

  whether the Mental Health Condition might be appropriate for Mr. Englehart based

  on the record before the district court.12 As an appellate court, we will not make

  those findings in the first instance. And the district court failed to make on-the-

  record findings to support the condition.

        12
          The Sentencing Guidelines recommend that “a condition requiring that the
  defendant participate in a mental health program approved by the United States
  Probation Office” should be imposed “[i]f the court has reason to believe that the
  defendant is in need of psychological or psychiatric treatment.” U.S.S.G.
  § 5D1.3(d)(5).

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        Moreover, the condition imposed by the district court was materially different

  from the condition the district court and the parties discussed at the Modification

  Hearing. At the Modification Hearing, the Government agreed to limit the required

  release of information to “the diagnosis, is he compliant, is he attending.” ROA,

  Vol. 3 at 151. The district court said, “Very well. We can put that limitation right

  into it.” Id. But the court’s order modifying Mr. Englehart’s conditions of

  supervised release does not contain that limitation. It instead requires Mr. Englehart

  to sign release forms “authorizing the release of confidential information for any

  treatment program he is participating in to allow for communication between the

  treatment provider and the probation officer. The information to be released shall

  include any diagnosis, defendant compliance and progression, and attendance.”

  ROA, Vol. 1 at 52. By its unambiguous terms, the condition requires Mr. Englehart

  to sign a release form authorizing his probation officer to access confidential

  information including, but not limited to, diagnosis, compliance and progression, and

  attendance. That is not what was contemplated at the Modification Hearing, and the

  district court made no findings to support such a broad provision.

                                      *    *        *   *

        Because the district court failed to supply a statement of generalized reasons

  justifying the Mental Health Condition, and because the condition imposed does not

  reflect the court’s ruling at the Modification Hearing, we vacate the Mental Health

  Condition and remand for the district court to make the necessary findings and

  provide an appropriate explanation for its decision.

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     Psychosexual Evaluation and Treatment Condition

        Mr. Englehart challenges the Psychosexual Evaluation and Treatment

  Condition on the procedural ground that the district court did not adequately justify

  the condition, and on the substantive ground that the condition impermissibly

  delegates his punishment to the probation officer. We reject both arguments.

        a. The district court’s statement of reasons

               i. Legal standard

        This court has not specifically addressed how a district court must justify a

  psychosexual evaluation and treatment condition of supervised release.13 As with the

  Mental Health Condition, Mr. Englehart argues the Psychosexual Evaluation and

  Treatment Condition implicates a fundamental liberty and therefore must be justified

  by particularized findings of compelling circumstances. Aplt. Br. at 25. He again

  relies on our decision in United States v. Bear. Aplt. Br. at 25 (citing Bear, 769 F.3d

  at 1230).14 But as we explained above, Bear does not require more than a generalized

        13
           In United States v. Mike, we said that residential or in-patient sex offender
  treatment “affects a significant liberty interest” and must be “supported by
  particularized findings that it does not constitute a greater deprivation of liberty than
  reasonably necessary to accomplish the goals of sentencing.” 632 F.3d at 696. But
  Mr. Englehart has not been ordered to participate in a residential or in-patient
  program.
        14
           The Government points to an unpublished Ninth Circuit decision holding “a
  psychosexual evaluation does not implicate a particularly significant liberty interest
  such that the district court was required to make heightened findings before imposing
  it.” United States v. Newbill, 588 F. App’x 632, 633 (9th Cir. 2014) (unpublished)
  (quotations omitted); See also United States v. Silver, 685 F. App’x 254, 256 (4th
  Cir. 2017) (unpublished).

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  statement of reasons to justify a mental health treatment condition. Because Mr.

  Englehart’s briefing treats the Psychosexual Evaluation and Treatment Condition as a

  form of “mental health evaluation and treatment,” id. (quoting Bear, 769 F.3d at

  1230), we analyze it under the same standard we applied above to the Mental Health

  Condition.15 Under that standard, the district court needed only to provide

  “generalized reasons . . . sufficient to allow proper appellate review.” Jereb, 882

  F.3d at 1343.16

        15
            Mr. Englehart argues that psychosexual evaluations are “incredibly
  invasive,” Aplt. Br. at 25, but he does not adequately distinguish psychosexual
  evaluation from other forms of mental health evaluation. And the record provides
  little detail about the psychosexual evaluation ordered here. The Government’s
  Motion to Modify Conditions requests that the “defendant . . . participate in and
  successfully complete a psychosexual evaluation,” ROA, Vol 1 at 42, but does not
  detail what it would entail. Nor does Mr. Englehart’s Objection to Proposed
  Modifications of Supervised Release and Motion to Terminate Supervised Release.
  ROA, Vol. 2 at 115-19. Nor does the Order Modifying Terms of Supervision. ROA,
  Vol. 1 at 51-53. And although Dr. Denison testified at the Modification Hearing
  about “what goes into a sex offender evaluation,” including polygraph testing, ROA,
  Vol. 3 at 75-80, he did not address how it would be conducted with Mr. Englehart or
  how it might compare with mental health treatment.
        16
           This determination does not foreclose a future court from deciding that a
  heightened standard of review may be necessary depending on the nature of the
  required evaluation and treatment. But neither Mr. Englehart’s briefing nor the
  record allows us to do so here. See United States v. Bainbridge, 746 F.3d 943, 952
  n.11 (9th Cir. 2014) (“Because Bainbridge has not presented any authority which
  would compel this [c]ourt to determine that requiring a sexual deviancy evaluation
  implicates a ‘significant liberty interest,’ and we have likewise found no such
  authority, we decline to do so here.”).

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               ii. Application

        Applying this generalized-reasons standard to the district court’s explanation

  of reasons for imposing the Psychosexual Evaluation and Treatment Condition, we

  conclude the district court did not abuse its discretion. Before imposing the

  condition, the court noted that “nearly two years have gone by” since Mr. Englehart’s

  SOTIPS evaluation, and in that time Mr. Englehart had committed four violations of

  supervised release, including three violations involving pornography, with

  “increasing issue.” ROA, Vol. 3 at 149. The court found “in that kind of situation

  with that progression that that is something that deserves to be looked into to . . .

  restore trust, if nothing else, and to give us some direction going forward with regard

  to this defendant.” Id. at 150.

        The district court’s explanation was thin. But it was sufficient for us to

  discern that the psychosexual evaluation is reasonably related to both “the history and

  characteristics of the defendant” and “the need to . . . provide the defendant with

  needed educational or vocational training, medical care, or other correctional

  treatment in the most effective manner.” 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(1), (2)(D). Although

  the district court should have considered each § 3553(a) factor, a special condition

  need not be reasonably related to all of the factors. See United States v. Barajas, 331

  F.3d 1141, 1146-47 (10th Cir. 2003). The court’s “statement of generalized reasons,”

  though minimal, sufficed. Martinez-Torres, 795 F.3d at 1238 (quotations omitted).

        Mr. Englehart counters that he already underwent an initial sex offender

  assessment, and that assessment concluded he was a “low need” for sex offender

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  treatment. Aplt. Br. at 26; ROA, Vol. 3 at 45. He also argues he is a “different man”

  than at the time of his 1998 conviction because he is now “emotionally stable” and

  sober. Aplt. Br. at 27. That may be so. But his SOTIPS evaluator also said that

  “[o]nce he is able to control his emotions in a healthy manner, we can look at the

  possibility of getting him . . . sex offender treatment . . . if needed.” ROA, Vol. 3

  at 45. The district court reasonably concluded that, considering Mr. Englehart’s

  behavior since his initial assessment, a reevaluation with the possibility of treatment

  was warranted.

                                       *   *        *   *

        Because, under our precedent, the Psychosexual Evaluation and Treatment

  condition does not implicate a “fundamental right or interest,” the district court was

  not required to conduct the “particularly meaningful and rigorous analysis” that we

  require when such an interest is at stake. See Koch, 978 F.3d at 726. The district

  court’s “statement of generalized reasons,” though minimal, sufficed. Martinez-

  Torres, 795 F.3d at 1238 (quotations omitted).

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        b. Improper delegation

        Mr. Englehart contends the district court impermissibly delegated authority to

  the probation officer in the Psychosexual Evaluation and Treatment Condition.17 We

  disagree.18

                i. Legal background

        “Article III of the United States Constitution confers the authority to impose

  punishment on the judiciary, and the judiciary may not delegate that authority to a

  nonjudicial officer.” Bear, 769 F.3d at 1230. “In determining whether a particular

  delegation violates this restriction, courts distinguish between those delegations that

  merely task the probation officer with performing ministerial acts or support services

  related to the punishment imposed and those that allow the officer to decide the

  nature or extent of the defendant’s punishment.” Mike, 632 F.3d at 695. We “focus[]

  on the liberty interest implicated when determining whether a particular delegation is

  infirm.” Id. When a condition “touch[es] on a significant liberty interest[],”

  “granting the probation officer the discretion to decide whether such conditions will

        17
           Mr. Englehart also challenges the Mental Health Condition on this ground.
  Because we vacate the Mental Health Condition for procedural reasons, we consider
  this argument only as it relates to the Psychosexual Evaluation and Treatment
  Condition.
        18
           The parties dispute whether Mr. Englehart has adequately preserved this
  issue for our review. We assume without deciding that the issue is preserved because
  Mr. Englehart’s arguments fail under either plain error or abuse of discretion review.

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  be imposed is tantamount to allowing him to decide the nature or extent of the

  defendant’s punishment.” Id. at 695-96.

        Our decisions in Mike and Bear guide us here. “In Mike, we explained that

  certain mental health treatment tools, like residential treatment, penile

  plethysmograph testing, and the involuntary administration of psychotropic drugs

  constitute greater infringements on a defendant’s liberty than outpatient mental health

  care or other more routine treatment and assessment tools.” Bear, 769 F.3d at 1230

  (citing Mike, 632 F.3d at 695-96). Conditions that touch on such significant liberty

  interests, we said, cannot be delegated to the discretion of the probation officer

  because that would be “tantamount to allowing him to decide the nature or extent of

  the defendant’s punishment.” Mike, 632 F.3d at 696.

        The condition in Mike,19 “due to its open-ended language,” “could be read to

  delegate such discretion.” Id. But rather than invalidate the condition, we opted to

  construe it narrowly. We said, “When reviewing challenges to non-specific,

  all-encompassing conditions like the one here, other courts have opted to construe

  them in a manner that does not make them infirm.” Id. “Construing the challenged

  condition as not delegating to the probation officer the authority to decide whether to

        19
           The challenged condition in Mike required the defendant to “immediately
  undergo a psychosexual evaluation upon release and begin participating in sex
  offender treatment, consistent with the recommendations of the psychosexual
  evaluation, and furthermore, the defendant shall submit to clinical polygraph testing
  and any other specific sex offender testing, as directed by the probation officer.”
  632 F.3d at 690.

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  subject Mike to inpatient treatment or plethysmograph testing, we conclude that it

  does not delegate the duty of imposing Mike’s punishment to the probation officer.”

  Id. We thus rejected appellant Mike’s challenge to the condition under an abuse of

  discretion standard. Id. at 695-96.

        The condition in Bear required the defendant to “submit to a sex offender

  mental health assessment and a program of sex offender mental health treatment, as

  directed by the U.S. Probation Officer, until such time as the defendant is released

  from the program by the probation officer.” 769 F.3d at 1225. Reviewing for plain

  error,20 we interpreted this condition to “reflect the probation officer’s representation

  to the district court that the results of the assessment would dictate the scope of any

  treatment plan.” Id. at 1231. We also “read the condition as not delegating to the

  probation officer the authority to impose conditions that implicate Mr. Bear’s

  significant liberty interests, such as residential treatment, penile plethysmograph

  testing, or the involuntary administration of psychotropic drugs.” Id. So construed,

  we held that the condition did not improperly delegate judicial authority to the

  probation officer. Id.

        20
            Although Bear was a plain error case, its holding applies here because we
  resolved this issue on the first plain error element. See 769 F.3d at 1231 (“Construed
  narrowly, the trial court did not err in imposing the mental health assessment and
  treatment conditions of supervised release because they do not improperly delegate
  judicial authority to Mr. Bear’s probation officer.”). Mr. Englehart is therefore
  wrong that “the government’s reliance on the plain-error analysis in Bear . . . is
  misplaced.” Aplt. Reply Br. at 21.

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        District courts thus may not grant the probation officer the discretion to decide

  whether conditions involving significant liberty interests will be imposed. Mike, 632

  F.3d at 696. We will narrowly construe a broadly worded mental health treatment

  condition to ensure it does not delegate authority to a probation officer to impose

  conditions that implicate significant liberty interests—such as inpatient treatment.

               ii. Application

        Applying these lessons here, we “read the condition as not delegating to the

  probation officer the authority to impose conditions that implicate [Mr. Englehart’s]

  significant liberty interests.” Bear, 769 F.3d at 1231. As read, the challenged

  condition does not unconstitutionally delegate authority to Mr. Englehart’s probation

  officer to “decide the nature or extent of the defendant’s punishment.” Mike, 632

  F.3d at 696. Instead, it merely “task[s] the probation officer with performing

  ministerial acts or support services related to the punishment imposed.” Id. at 695.

        Mr. Englehart’s attempts to distinguish Mike and Bear are unavailing. He

  argues that this case is different from Mike because “the Court knows the treatment

  contemplated is very invasive, will require Mr. Englehart to disclose his entire sexual

  history, and will require Mr. Englehart to disclose extremely painful, dark, and

  traumatic experiences from his past.” Aplt. Br. at 29. He also notes that the

  “landscape has changed” since Mike in that we now require conditions implicating

  fundamental liberties to be justified with particularized and compelling justifications.

  Id. at 30 & n.10. But as discussed above, neither mental health treatment nor

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  psychosexual evaluations of the type at issue here implicate such a fundamental

  liberty.

         In his reply brief, Mr. Englehart attempts to distinguish Bear, arguing we

  “interpret[ed] [the condition] to reflect the probation officer’s representation to the

  district court that the results of the assessment would dictate the scope of any

  treatment plan.” 769 F.3d at 1231; Aplt. Reply Br. at 25. Here, he notes, there is no

  such representation. But that was not the basis for our separate decision in Bear to

  “[s]imilarly . . . read the condition as not delegating to the probation officer the

  authority to impose conditions that implicate Mr. Bear’s significant liberty interests.”

  768 F.3d at 1231.

                                    III. CONCLUSION

         We vacate the Sexual Material Prohibition and the Mental Health Condition

  and remand for further proceedings. We affirm the Psychosexual Evaluation and

  Treatment Condition.

                                              35