wow
I'm not a cop or lawyer, but I can say that it smells not just illegal, but unconstitutional. IN my state, a probation officer cannot enter your home unless you, the person on probation, is at home. Now if a person answers the door and says you aren't there, but they have reasonable cause to believe you are, then that is a different story. Just as if a warrant is being served. The police can knock on your door, but they have no right to enter your home unless you refuse to come out, or you don't answer, but they know you are there because they saw you walk in the house two minutes before they came calling. Turning your keys over to someone else, absurd. I mean, a landlord doesn't possess the right to have keys to a house they own but are renting to you. They can tell you they do, but by law, they cannot enter without your permission or they have given you notice that they need to get in for a specific reason, and you have the right to be there. They never have the right to enter without you being present if they haven't notified you first. The same would have to apply to a probation officer, after all, there are other people's rights that must be respected, that is if you don't live alone. As the other respondent stated, the liability would be more than most jurisdictions would want to shoulder, I believe.