OPINION
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
David Baker appeals the trial court’s decision to revoke his probation and order executed the two (2) years of his suspended sentence for having committed another crime while serving the executed portion of his sentence.
We affirm.
ISSUE
Whether the trial court erred in revoking probation because Baker had not yet begun to serve the probationary period of his sentence.
FACTS
On September 26, 2007, the State charged Baker with two counts of class B felony burglary. 1 Pursuant to plea negotiations, on December 6, 2007, the State filed an amended information, in which it charged Baker with two counts of burglary, as class C felonies, and Baker agreed to plead guilty to both counts. Baker signed the plea agreement, which provided that the State would recommend that he be “sentenced to five (5) years in the Indiana Department of Correction with two (2) years suspended” on each count, with said sentences to be “served concurrently with each other.... ” (App. 43). Further, according to the CCS, on December 6, 2006, the trial court held a plea hearing. 2
On January 3, 2008, the trial court accepted Baker’s guilty pleas; entered judgment of conviction and sentencing. The trial court ordered Baker to serve concurrent five-year terms on each count, with two years suspended and placement on probation during the suspended term. Also on January 3, 2008, the trial court issued its order of probation, which in-
On January 16, 2008, the State charged Baker with battery, as a class A misdemeanor, alleging that on January 9, 2008, while waiting to be transported to the Indiana Department of Correction, he battered inmate Dani Gill. Subsequently, on January 22, 2008, the State filed a petition to revoke Baker’s probation, based on the allegation.
On April 15, 2008, the trial court held a fact-finding hearing. Gill testified that on January 9, 2008, he was an inmate in the Wabash County Jail, and that Baker had hit him several times with his fist on the sides and back of his head. Gill further testified that he had done nothing to provoke Baker and had not hit him first. Baker admitted having signed the order providing his probation terms on January 3, 2008, and that he had received a copy.
On April 16, 2008, the trial court found that Baker had violated the terms and conditions of probation and set the matter for disposition. Specifically, the trial court found that the State had proven by a preponderance of the evidence that on January 9, 2008, “while incarcerated in this cause,” he had “committed a battery upon a fellow inmate.” (App. 74). At the disposition hearing on May 5, 2008, the trial court ordered the two-year suspended sentence to be executed.
DECISION
Baker argues that the trial court erred when it revoked his probation because “the jail house battery which the trial court found that [he] committed on January 9, 2008” was not committed during his “probationary period” but rather “while he [wa]s serving the executed portion of his sentence in a penal facility.” Baker’s Br. at 4, 5. Baker urges that we decline to follow
Ashley v. State,
The trial court may revoke a person’s probation if the person “has violated a condition of probation during the probationary period.” Ind.Code § 35-38-2-3(a)(1). In
Ashba v. State,
In
Gardner v. State,
when a trial court grants a defendant probation in lieu of an executed sentence, the trial court is taking many aspects of the defendant’s character into account. When the defendant commits a crime or violates a term of the probation, the trial court should be able to weigh that violation in its reevaluation of whether the defendant should be or should have been granted probation.
Id. Citing Ashba and Johnson, we affirmed the revocation of Gardner’s probation. Id. at 402.
In
Ashley v. State,
More recently, in
Crump v. State,
We find no reason to stray from the well-established precedent that a defendant’s probationary period begins im
Affirmed.
Notes
. As noted by the State, the probable cause affidavit submitted to the trial court in support of the charging information stated that another suspect, Scott Glass, had admitted to an officer with the Wabash County Sheriff's Department that Glass and Baker broke into the Radabaugh residence and took a safe, and that he and Baker also broke into the Huston residence. The affidavit reflected that at the time of Glass’s interview, law enforcement had already received reports of both residential burglaries.
. Baker did not include a transcript of that hearing with his appeal.
