18 U.S.C. § 3563(c) – Modification of Conditions of Probation
This provision gives federal courts continuing authority to change probation conditions during the probation term.
What § 3563(c) covers.
Subsection (c) addresses a narrow but important issue: the court’s power to modify, reduce, or enlarge probation conditions after sentencing.
It allows changes to probation conditions at any time before probation expires or is terminated, rather than locking the defendant into the original set of conditions for the entire term.
Scope of the court’s authority.
Under § 3563(c), the court may:
- Modify existing probation conditions
- Reduce the scope or burden of conditions
- Enlarge or add conditions
Any modification must follow:
- The Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure governing probation modifications, and
- The same statutory principles that apply when probation conditions are initially imposed
This ties probation modifications back to the sentencing framework in § 3553 and prevents arbitrary changes.
How this provision is used in practice.
Section 3563(c) is commonly invoked when:
- A defendant’s circumstances materially change
- Compliance issues arise that do not yet warrant revocation
- Treatment, employment, or residency conditions need adjustment
- The court responds to a probation officer’s recommendation
Unlike § 3565, this subsection deals with adjustment, not punishment.
If your probation conditions are being modified or challenged, contact our federal criminal defense attorneys now to discuss how the court’s authority applies in your case.