Opinion by
On October 2,1973, the Appellant, Daniel Nathaniel Mack, Jr. entered a plea of guilty to a charge of Bobbery with Accomplice by Violence. 1 He claims that the guilty plea colloquy was deficient in two particulars:
(1) There is allegedly no showing that defendant understood the nature and elements of the charge to which he pled guilty; and
*598 (2) There is allegedly no showing that the defendant understood that he was presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
In making both claims, appellant relies on
Commonwealth v. Ingram,
We have examined the record closely and have found that the lower court clearly explained to the appellant the factual basis for the charges against him. Appellant during the colloquy acknowledged that he and a cohort had forcefully stolen a purse containing money from a female pedestrian on the date charged in the indictment. This satisfied the requirement (in effect at the time of the plea) that the appellant have a factual understanding of the charge so as to enter a valid plea. See
Commonwealth v. Campbell,
The second claim of the appellant is that his plea should be voided because the presumption of innocence was not explained to him during the colloquy. We have examined the record and found that this assertion is true. Rule 319, paragraph (a) of the Pennsylvania Rules of Criminal Procedure provides that the trial court shall make an inquiry on the record to satisfy itself that the plea is “. . . voluntarily and understandingly tendered.” The Comments to this Rule note that the trial court, to satisfy the requirements of the Rule, question the defendant, inter alna, on the following: “(4) Does the defendant understand that he is presumed innocent until he is found guilty?”
*599
In
Commonwealth v. Ingram, supra,
the Supreme Court discussed in detail Rule 319 and the matters discussed above. It was pointed out that cases prior to
Ingram,
and the language of the Comment, merely indicated that the Comment questions and suggestions were the “preferred practice”. See also
Commonwealth ex rel. West v. Rundle,
Affirmed.
Notes
Appellant also entered a plea of guilty to a charge of being an accessory to a murder at Lancaster County No. 1269 of 1973. The sentence on that plea has not been put into question by the instant appeal.
