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Florida Sex-Related Probation Conflict Explained

In Gonzalez Garcia v. State (No. 4D2025-0471, Sept. 3, 2025), the Fourth District Court of Appeal reversed a written probation condition that conflicted with the oral pronouncement. As a result, the decision shows how a Florida probation conflict can unfairly expand conditions beyond what a judge actually ordered.
Case Background: Probation After Reduced Charges
The defendant faced charges of sexual battery and lewd or lascivious conduct. However, through a plea deal, those charges were reduced to aggravated child abuse and child abuse. He was sentenced to prison followed by probation.
The judge required him to:
- Complete a sex offender treatment program,
- Avoid victims and minors, and
- Follow specific conditions agreed to in court.
Importantly, the court did not impose full sex offender probation, which would have carried far stricter rules.
Florida Probation Conflict Between Written and Oral Sentence
After release, the probation officer attempted to enforce broad restrictions from the written sentencing order. Specifically, the order directed him to “follow all sex offender rules.”
Because of this, the appellate court found a Florida probation conflict. Florida law requires written orders to match oral pronouncements. Otherwise, a defendant faces restrictions that were never part of the official sentence.
Court’s Decision on the Probation Conflict
The Fourth DCA reversed and ordered the trial court to remove the “follow all sex offender rules” condition. The court emphasized:
- Probation must follow what is said in court.
- Written documents cannot expand restrictions.
- Defendants are protected from unlawful probation conflicts.
Why Florida Probation Conflicts Matter
When probation conditions go beyond the oral pronouncement, defendants face unnecessary risks:
- Harsher supervision,
- Greater chance of violation,
- Unfair restrictions not part of their plea.
An experienced attorney can spot and challenge these conflicts quickly.
Protecting Your Future in Florida Courts
Probation conditions should never be harsher than what the judge actually ordered in court. When that happens, defendants and their families face unfair restrictions that were never part of the sentence. In these situations, you deserve immediate help from an attorney who knows how to challenge unlawful probation terms.
That is why at The Brancato Law Firm, P.A., attorney Rocky Brancato draws on more than 25 years of criminal defense experience, including years in an elite sex crimes unit, to protect clients and fight for fair outcomes.
Contact us today at (813) 727-7159 for a confidential consultation.