(1) The court may, for the duration of the supervision or for a shorter period, direct the convicted person
1. not to leave his place of domicile or his residence or a specified area without the permission of the supervising authority;
2. not to frequent specified places which may induce him to commit further offences;
3. not to make or maintain contact with the victim, or certain persons or persons from a certain group who may induce him to commit further offences, nor to employ, train or harbour them;
4. not to engage in particular activities which in certain circumstances may be exploited for criminal purposes;
5. not to possess, carry or entrust to another for safekeeping particular objects which could induce him to commit further offences;
6. not to possess or drive motor-vehicles or particular types of motor-vehicles or other vehicles, which in certain circumstances may be misused by him for criminal purposes;
7. to report at particular times to the supervising authority, to another public authority or to the probation officer;
8. to report promptly every change of residence or employment to the supervising authority;
9. to report in the case of unemployment to the Public Employment Agency or to another authorised employment agency;
10. not to consume alcohol or other drugs, if based on certain information there is reason to believe that their consumption will contribute to the commission of future offences, and to undergo alcohol and drug tests of a non-invasive nature; or
11. to present himself at certain times or at certain intervals to a doctor, a psychotherapist or the forensic ambulance service, or
12. to carry the equipment for the electronic monitoring of his whereabouts in working order with him at all times and not to tamper with them.
The court shall indicate the prohibited or required conduct as precisely as possible in its directions. A direction under the 1st sentence No 12 above shall be inadmissible, unless
1. the supervision was triggered by having served the totality of a sentence of imprisonment or by an aggregate sentence of no less than three years’ imprisonment or on the basis of a spent measure,
2. the sentence or aggregate sentence of imprisonment or the detention were ordered for one or more offences as mentioned in section 66(3) 1st sentence,
3. there is a danger that the convicted person may commit further offences as mentioned in section 66(3) 1st sentence, and
4. the direction appears necessary to prevent the convicted person from committing further offences as mentioned in section 66(3) 1st sentence, by means of data processing under section 463a(4) 2nd sentence of the Code of Criminal Procedure, in particular for the purposes of monitoring compliance with directions imposed under the 1st sentence Nos 1 or 2 above.
The requirements of the 3rd sentence No 1 in conjunction with No 2 above are met irrespective of whether the supervision under section 68e(1) 1st sentence referred to therein has been terminated.
(2) The court may, for the duration of the supervision or for a shorter period, give directions to the convicted person, particularly in relation to education, employment, leisure, ordering of financial affairs, or the fulfilment of maintenance obligations. The court may direct the convicted person to undergo psychiatric, psycho—or sociotherapy (therapy direction). Section 56c(3) shall apply mutatis mutandis, also for the direction to undergo invasive alcohol or drug tests.
(3) No unreasonable demands may be made in the directions on the lifestyle of the convicted person.
(4) If by the commencement of a supervision period an already existing state of supervision is deemed terminated pursuant to section 68e(1) 1st sentence No 3, the court shall include the directions issued under the previous supervision in its own order.
(5) To the extent that the supervision of a convicted person in the cases of subsection (1) No 11 above or his treatment under subsection(2) above is not carried out by a forensic ambulance service section68a(8) shall apply mutatis mutandis.