ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
The defendant-petitioner, Alexander J. Anglemyer, seeks rehearing following our decision affirming his sentences for robbery and battery. We grant rehearing solely to clarify that a defendant who pleads guilty does not forfeit the opportunity to claim on appeal that the trial court should have considered his guilty plea a mitigating circumstance even though the defendant failed to assert this claim at sentencing.
A detailed recitation of the facts, procedural history, and background of this case is set forth in our original opinion.
See
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Anglemyer v. State,
Anglemyer pleaded guilty as charged under terms of a plea agreement that provided in part that the “sentence will not exceed sixteen (16) years executed.” App. at 8. The trial court imposed a sixteen-year sentence. On appeal, Anglemyer challenged his sentence as inappropriate under Indiana Appellate Rule 7(B). He also alleged trial court error in identifying and weighing aggravating and mitigating factors. Addressing this latter claim only, the Court of Appeals focused upon the scope of appellate review, as well as whether trial courts were still required to enter sentencing statements in light of the 2005 amendments to Indiana’s sentencing statutes. We granted transfer to address these issues. However, we also addressed Anglemyer’s claim about the inappropriateness of his sentence and his claim of trial court error in imposing sentence. Among other things, Anglemyer argued that the trial court overlooked as a mitigating factor his plea of guilty to the charges. Disposing of this argument, we observed that at his sentencing hearing Anglemyer did not mention his guilty plea as a factor in mitigation. We cited the general proposition that “the trial court does not abuse its discretion in failing to consider a mitigating factor that was not raised at sentencing.”
Anglemyer,
We acknowledge that this general proposition has at least one important exception, namely: pleas of guilty. As we observed in a footnote in
Francis v. State,
We have held that a defendant who pleads guilty deserves “some” mitigating weight be given to the plea in return.
McElroy v. State,
Here, faced with a Class B and a Class C felony, Anglemyer was exposed to a potential maximum sentence of twenty-eight years. In exchange for his plea, Anglemyer received the benefit of a twelve-year reduction in sentence. This alone was a substantial benefit. Further, several additional charges, including possession of marijuana as a Class A misdemeanor, false informing as a Class B misdemeanor, and illegal possession of alcohol by a minor as a Class C misdemeanor, were pending against Anglemyer at the time of his arrest. These charges were dismissed in exchange for Anglemyer’s guilty plea. App. at 8, 14. This was a benefit as well.
As for the acceptance of responsibility, the record shows that the plea agreement was “more likely the result of pragmatism than acceptance of responsibility and remorse.”
Mull v. State,
We grant rehearing and modify our original opinion as set forth herein. In all other respects the original opinion is affirmed.
