Opinion by
On April 28, 1967, appellant Izell Clark was arrested and charged with two counts of larceny, receiving stolen goods, and conspiracy. Appellant pleaded guilty to the aforesaid charges and was given a sentence on November 6, 1967 of two years probation on each bill, both sentences to run concurrently.
On December 6, 1967, appellant was arrested on a charge of shoplifting. The probation officer entered a detainer and subsequently a violation of probation hearing was scheduled for March 8,1968 at which appellant failed to appear. Appellant was again arrested on February 18, 1970 and held for court on additional charges of larceny, receiving stolen goods, and conspiracy. A probation revocation hearing was held on March 24, 1970, less than five weeks after he was apprehended, at which time appellant’s probation was revoked and he was given a new sentence based on his failure to report to the probation officer from the time he was initially placed on probation. From March 8, 1968 until he was again arrested on February 18, 1970, appellant, as conceded by his counsel at the probation violation hearing, purposely avoided the probation office authorities for fear that he was going “to be sent away”.
Appellant contends that his new sentence at the revocation of probation hearing is invalid because it was not imposed with reasonable promptness.
*173 If the probationary period ended two years after his initial arrest on April 28, 1987, then the revocation of probation and new sentence were recorded eleven months after the probationary period had expired. If the probationary period ended two years after the date of sentence, then four and one-half months had elapsed beyond the probationary period.
With respect to sentences imposed after the expiration of the probationary period based upon a violation occurring within the period, the implications are clear under our statute
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that, for such a violation occurring within the probationary period, the probation may be revoked within a reasonable time after the expiration of that period.
Commonwealth v.
Fox,
In
Commonwealth v. Ferguson,
Furthermore this is not such a situation as was presented in the cases of
Commonwealth v. Bomberger,
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*176 Appellant further contends that there was insufficient evidence upon which the lower court could base a decision revoking his probation. Appellant contends that since the only testimony concerning his failure to report during his probation was that provided to the trial judge by his own counsel, the court therefore had no evidence before it upon which to revoke probation. We disagree. The notes of testimony establish that the probation officer was well aware of appellant’s case. He informed the judge of appellant’s arrest of December 6, 1967, of his failure to appear for the probation violation hearing scheduled for March 8, 1968, and of his apprehension on February 18, 1970, which made it possible to schedule the latest hearing. At that point, appellant’s counsel fortified the Commonwealth’s case when he informed the court: “Your Honor, to summarize briefly what the probation department stated here today; shortly after he was sentenced by your Honor, he was arrested for shoplifting, larceny. That case is still open. He was then arrested this year, in February, and that case is still open. But, he has not reported since the time that he was placed on probation by your Honor. I have spoken to the defendant, and he stated that the reason he did not report was because of the new arrest he was afraid he was going to be sent away; and that this is the technical violation up to this point.” It is clear from all that was divulged at the hearing that from the time appellant failed to appear at his 1968 hearing and until his subsequent arrest over two years later in 1970, he had not reported to his probation officer.
A revocation hearing is not required to be a highly formal proceeding where traditional rules of evidence or criminal procedures must be strictly observed. In
Commonwealth v. Fox,
supra, this court stated: “It is not obligatory on the court in inquiring into the conduct of the defendant while on probation to proceed
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according to the forms of law observed at the trial
nor is the evidence to he received hy the court limited to that ichich may come through the channel of a regular examination in court. It is the judgment of the court which is to he informed.
It is only when the person on probation has satisfactorily met the conditions of his probation that the court is required to discharge Mm. We find nothing in the statute nor in the purpose to be accomplished in its enactment which requires us to hold that sentence may not be imposed after the period of probation if the fact be that the defendant lias violated the conditions implied in the probation.”
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(Emphasis added.) In the instant case the evidence was sufficient to satisfy the lower court that defendant’s conduct was not what was required under the terms of his probation:
Rogers v. U. S.,
Order affirmed.
