Sounds cushy, but Larimer County Sheriff's Office spokeswoman Eloise Campanella insists that it's actually quite rigorous.
"We have been told we have the tightest home detention in the country," she says -- and in the case of Heene, the LCSO is determined to prove it.
"Heene went on home detention on March 17," Campanella says. "He will wear the ankle device until April 4. Under these conditions. he must be at home twelve hours a day, and in the twelve hours he's out, he's allowed to go to work, classes, lawyer, doctor visits, etc. -- and he will not get permission to be out for more than twelve hours.
"Staff will check on him both at home and at work," she continues. "If they knock on the door at two o'clock in the morning, he must be there, and he must open the door."
Presently, Heene is working for a contractor, Campanella notes, "so he must provide a bid sheet to prove his whereabouts. And he's not allowed to go to restaurants, for example. His wife could probably get food from a restaurant for him, though. And he can be breathalyzed by staff and patrol at any time. He will not know when that's going to happen."
Given the national embarrassment over the incident suffered by Sheriff Jim Alderden, who said on the Today show that he nearly threw up when he heard Heene denying wrongdoing after pleading guilty -- and because Heene lawyer David Lane has publicly challenged restitution charges -- such checks could take place early and often.