This is an appeal from an order revoking a suspended sentence entered by the Jefferson Circuit Court.
In 1974 the Jefferson County Grand Jury returned two indictments, Numbers 151391 and 151687, charging Robert Lee Brown, appellant, with two separate crimes of armed robbery. On June 10, 1974 appellant entered a plea of guilty to both charges. Sentencing was passed on the motion for probation until July 25,1974 when the court entered an order sentencing appellant to five years imprisonment as to Indictment Number 151391. The court also entered an order withholding rendition of judgment on Indictment Number 151687 for a period of five years after his release from the sentence to be served on Indictment Number 151391.
Appellant escaped from custody, committed another crime for which he was charged and convicted under Indictment Number 156219. On February 7, 1977 the Commonwealth Attorney filed a motion, and served it on appellant’s counsel, to revoke the prior suspended sentence. At a hearing held on March 3, 1977 counsel for appellant objected to the revocation because appellant had not yet begun serving his probationary period. At the conclusion of the hearing the court entered an order revoking the suspended sentence that appellant had received under Indictment Number 151687.
Appellant maintains that the action of the court in revoking a suspended sentence before the commencement of its stated term was in excess of the court’s jurisdiction and that appellant was thereby deprived of his constitutional protection against ex post facto laws and his right to due process of law. We do not agree.
At the time the court entered the order awarding appellant probation on Indictment Number 151687, K.R.S. 439.260 provided that the court “may postpone the entering of a judgment and the imposing of sentence and place the defendant on probation . . .” K.R.S. 439.270 provided that the period of probation fixed by the court “shall not exceed five years . Appellant cites
Curtsinger v. Commonwealth,
Ky.,
Appellant relies upon K.R.S. 439.300 and asserts that only “during probation” can revocation of probation properly occur. The United States Court of Appeals was confronted with a similar argument in
United States v. Ross,
[t]he appellant would have us read this provision as exclusive; only if an individual is “on probation” may probation be revoked. Otherwise, he asserts, there are no conditions of probation which a potential probationer could violate and hence he would have no notice as to a course of conduct by which he could avoid revocation.
Aside from the fact that Section 3653 is not by its terms exclusive, case law and sound policy reject Ross’s contentions.
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Sound policy requires that courts should be able to revoke probation for a defendant’s offense committed before the sentence commences; an immediate return to criminal activity is more reprehensive than one which occurs at a later date.
Davis v. Parker,
[probation may be revoked for cause if a court is satisfied after a hearing that a defendant’s conduct has been such that the ends of justice and the interest of society and the defendant will be served by revocation. It is not a prerequisite to such a revocation that the conditions of probation be actually operative at the time .
The 6th Circuit has referred to both
Ross, supra,
and
Davis, supra,
in
Tiitsman v. Black,
Appellant’s contention that revocation amounted to an ex post facto law as it “increased the consequences of escape retrospectively” is also without merit. The appellant was on notice that commission of any crimes would be a violation of probation conditions. The revocation did not amount to a sentence imposed for the crime of escape or the conviction of armed robbery committed prior to the commencement of the probationary period, but rather was an imposition of the sentence which appellant had already received for conviction of another crime. Probation is recognized as a privilege rather than a right. It is entirely within the trial court’s discretion whether a defendant is given his liberty conditionally.
Ridley v. Commonwealth,
Ky.,
Appellant relies upon
Gagnon v. Scarpelli,
The order of the Jefferson Circuit Court revoking appellant’s probation is affirmed.
All concur.
