The jury convicted Mark Antonio Brinkley of several felony offenses arising out of a knife attack, and the trial court sentenced him to 25 years, to serve 18 years in confinement. On appeal from the denial of his motion for new trial, Brinkley contends that the trial court erred by considering improper evidence of an alleged prior conviction in aggravation of punishment. Because the evidence in question was inadmissible under the best evidence rule, Brinkley’s sentence must be vacated and the case remanded to the trial court for resentencing.
Following a criminal conviction, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict.
Johnson v. State,
Based on this evidence, the jury convicted Brinkley of aggravated battery and possession of a knife during the commission of a crime. 1 At the ensuing sentencing hearing, the state attempted to introduce evidence in aggravation of punishment that Brinkley had pled guilty to second degree murder in Baltimore, Maryland in 1990. The state called the assistant district attorney (“ADA”) from Maryland who handled the 1990 case, but the ADA did not testify that he recalled Brinkley pleading guilty. Nor did the state introduce a certified copy of the prior conviction. Instead, the state, over objection, had the ADA identify three exhibits allegedly relating to the Maryland case: an uncertified copy of the indictment; a document entitled “State’s Version of Offense” that had been prepared by the Maryland district attorney’s office “primarily for parole purposes so that. . . the parole authority would have information concerning the offense rather than just the title of the offense”; and a computer print-out of the purported case procedural history. The “State’s Version of Offense” contained a notation reflecting that the case had been resolved by guilty plea; similarly, the computer print-out contained an electronic entry reflecting that a guilty plea had been entered on January 22, 1990.
The state sought to have the three exhibits admitted into evidence. Brinkley objected and argued, among other things, that the three exhibits were inadmissible because a certified copy of the prior conviction was the best evidence of the conviction. The trial court asked the prosecutor in the instant case whether the state had attempted to obtain a certified copy of the original record of the prior conviction from the Maryland clerk of court. The prosecutor responded, “What I was told, Your Honor, was that the actual records were destroyed by a private records retention company, the original records.” The trial court admitted the three exhibits over objection.
In closing argument at the sentencing phase, the state argued that Brinkley deserved a longer term of confinement in part because of his Maryland conviction. The state argued that the prior conviction showed, along with the violent facts of the present case, that *829 Brinkley was a danger to the community and deserved to be treated with “severe harshness.”
Before handing down Brinkley’s sentence, the trial court commented with regard to the prior conviction:
I’m satisfied that the [s]tate has exercised due diligence, that they have been unable to obtain [a certified copy of the prior conviction] because of its destruction. They have done what they could do to obtain collateral proof of it. I’m satisfied that they have presented adequate evidence that Mr. Brinkley was previously convicted of a murder, second degree, in the city of Baltimore. I note that [the prior conviction] merely goes to the Court’s discretion with regard to sentencing in this case, it doesn’t invoke repeat offender treatment in this case, and, bluntly, in light of the violence of this crime, it doesn’t make a whole lot of difference to me other than cause me some concern with regard to a case where someone could easily have been killed.
The trial court also commented that the present case was “remarkably similar to the situation” in the prior conviction as described in the exhibit entitled “State’s Version of Offense.” The trial court then imposed sentence on Brinkley.
1. Although not enumerated as error, we conclude that the evidence discussed above was sufficient to authorize any rational trier of fact to find Brinkley guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of aggravated battery and possession of a knife during the commission of a crime.
Jackson v. Virginia,
*830 2. Brinkley contends that the trial court improperly considered the Maryland conviction in aggravation of punishment when the state failed to introduce the best evidence of the conviction. We agree.
The burden is on the state to produce competent evidence of a prior conviction for purposes of sentencing. See
State v. Slaton,
It is undisputed that the state failed to introduce a certified copy of the Maryland conviction. The trial court nevertheless permitted the state to prove that Brinkley pled guilty in that case by relying upon the notations to that effect in the “State’s Version of Offense” and the computer print-out introduced as exhibits at the sentencing hearing. The trial court allowed the state to rely upon this secondary documentary evidence based upon the court’s finding that the original record of the conviction had been destroyed and the state had exercised due diligence to obtain a certified copy of it. The trial court’s finding, however, was not supported by any competent evidence.
Significantly, the Maryland ADA did not testify as to what had happened to the original record of the conviction, and the ADA was
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never asked what search he conducted or steps he took in an effort to locate the record, if any. Rather, the trial court’s finding was predicated solely on the prosecutor’s statement that he “was told . . . that the actual records were destroyed by a private records retention company.” But a trial court cannot rely upon the hearsay statement of a prosecutor to establish a fact for purposes of sentencing. See
Humphrey v. State,
Furthermore, contrary to the state’s contention, the trial court’s comments prior to handing down Brinkley’s sentence show that the court gave at least some consideration to the Maryland conviction in arriving at the sentence imposed in this case. Brinkley’s sentence thus must be vacated and the case remanded to the trial court for resentencing. See
Williams v. State,
3. Additionally, Brinkley contends that the trial court improperly considered the Maryland conviction because the state failed to prove that he was represented by counsel in that case, and thus failed to establish that his plea of guilty to second degree murder was knowingly and voluntarily entered. See
Nash v. State,
It is true that the Maryland ADA who handled Brinkley’s case did not testify specifically about Brinkley’s guilty plea hearing. But the ADA testified that the customary practice in homicide cases that
*832
he prosecuted was for the defendant to be represented by an attorney who participated in the plea hearing. The ADA further testified that he had no recollection of any homicide cases he had personally handled where the defendant who pled guilty went unrepresented. This testimony was sufficient to prove that Brinkley was represented by counsel in the Maryland case. See
Bazemore v. State,
Sentence vacated and case remanded for resentencing.
Notes
While the jury also convicted Brinkley of aggravated assault, the trial court did not enter a judgment of conviction on that count, but merged it with the conviction for aggravated battery.
We do not address the sufficiency of the evidence with respect to Brinkley’s aggravated assault conviction since the trial court did not enter judgment on that count. See
Nelson v. State,
