2005 Federal Sentencing Guidelines
CHAPTER FIVE - PART F - SENTENCING OPTIONS
§5F1.2. Home Detention
Home detention may be imposed as a condition of probation or supervised release,
  but only as a substitute for imprisonment.
Commentary
Application Notes:
1. "Home detention" means a program of confinement and supervision that restricts
  the defendant to his place of residence continuously, except for authorized
  absences, enforced by appropriate means of surveillance by the probation office.
  When an order of home detention is imposed, the defendant is required to be
  in his place of residence at all times except for approved absences for gainful
  employment, community service, religious services, medical care, educational
  or training programs, and such other times as may be specifically authorized.
  Electronic monitoring is an appropriate means of surveillance and ordinarily
  should be used in connection with home detention. However, alternative means
  of surveillance may be used so long as they are as effective as electronic
  monitoring.
2. The court may impose other conditions of probation or supervised release
  appropriate to effectuate home detention. If the court concludes that the amenities
  available in the residence of a defendant would cause home detention not to
  be sufficiently punitive, the court may limit the amenities available.
3. The defendant’s place of residence, for purposes of home detention,
  need not be the place where the defendant previously resided. It may be any
  place of residence, so long as the owner of the residence (and any other person(s)
  from whom consent is necessary) agrees to any conditions that may be imposed
  by the court, e.g., conditions
  that a monitoring system be installed, that there will be no "call forwarding" or "call
  waiting"
  services, or that there will be no cordless telephones or answering machines.
Background: The Commission
  has concluded that the surveillance necessary for effective use of home detention
  ordinarily requires electronic monitoring. However, in some cases home detention
  may effectively be enforced without electronic monitoring, e.g.,
  when the defendant is physically incapacitated, or where some other effective
  means of surveillance is available. Accordingly, the Commission has not required
  that electronic monitoring be a necessary condition for home detention. Nevertheless,
  before ordering home detention without electronic monitoring, the court should
  be confident that an alternative form of surveillance will be equally effective.
In the usual case, the Commission assumes that a condition requiring that
  the defendant seek and maintain gainful employment will be imposed when home
  detention is ordered.
Historical Note: Effective
  November 1, 1987. Amended effective November 1, 1989 (see Appendix
  C, amendments 271 and 302).