Opinion
Berlinda Lee Craddock, appellant, originally indicted as Jackie Annette Page, appeals her convictions on three counts of uttering bad checks and three cоunts of grand larceny of the proceeds. She alleges that the trial judge erred in overruling her objections to the Commonwealth Attorney’s statements, made before only the trial judge during the sentencing phase of the trial, concerning her rejection of a plea bargain. The Commonwealth contends that appellant is barred from presenting this assignment of error on appeal because she did not request a mistrial at the time the objectionable comments were made.
Appellant was found guilty by a jury of uttering three forged checks and of grand larceny of the proceeds. The jury recommended a total punishment of forty-five years imprisonment. The trial judge granted appellant’s request to have a presentence report prepared.
At the sentencing hearing held before a judge, the Commonwealth’s Attorney stated that the presentence report was not favorable to appellant; that she had an extensive criminal record, was an admitted cocaine user and had lied to her probation officer about her emрloyment history. The Commonwealth’s Attorney, Douglas Barry, made several statements during his closing argument to which appellant’s counsel, Gary Hershner, objected:
*404 MR. BARRY: . . . .This woman, back beforе this jury trial, who is a career criminal, was offered a ten-year sentence. She was offered that not because she deserves that —
MR. HERSHNER: Objection. Objection to relevance, Judge, on sentencing. That’s not proper.
THE COURT: Continue the argument, Mr. Barry.
MR. BARRY: She was offered a ten-year sentence by this Commonwealth’s Attorney, not because that’s what she deserved, but having done trial work for a whilе, it was thought she would not take the stand, therefore, her record would not come into evidence, and I thought that was a fair offer. Mr. Hershner was not involved in that. She had a very competent attorney in that situation as well, Mr. White. Not only was that laughed at, but as I walked back to my office and she walked back to the jail, she taunted me the entire time about my ridiculous оffer.
MR. HERSHNER: Objection, Judge. It’s not in evidence.
THE COURT: This is the argument stage, Mr. Hershner. You may argue what you want when Mr. Barry gets through.
Go ahead, Mr. Barry.
Hershner made no further objections and did not move for a mistrial. In his own closing, Hershner admitted that the presentеnce report was “very bad,” but asked the court to suspend such portion of the jury’s forty-five year sentence so as to leave her with eight and one-half years to serve, which hе asserted was the median range according to the sentencing guidelines. The Commonwealth’s Attorney then replied that the median sentence was approximately the sentence that appellant had laughed at when he offered it to her in exchange for a guilty plea prior to the trial.
The court then imposed the jury’s recommended verdict оf forty-five years. In so doing, it stated, “The Court has reviewed the file. It’s read the letters that have come in and it’s heard the witnesses. The Court also heard the trial. I thought the jury probably was pretty lenient. In any event, I feel that the jury verdict ought to be confirmed.”
*405 I.
We find that our consideration of appellant’s assignment of error is not barred by her failure to request a mistrial. In so doing, we acknowledge that the Virginia Supreme Court “has repeatedly held that errors assigned because of a prosecutor’s improper comments or conduct during argumеnt will not be considered on appeal unless the accused timely moves for a cautionary instruction or for a mistrial.”
Martinez
v.
Commonwealth,
In this case, by contrast, the challenged remarks were made before the judge during the sentencing phase of the trial. We find no Supreme Court precedent that requires a judge to give himself or herself a cautionary instruction bаsed on improper comments made in a bench trial in order to preserve that issue for appeal. In addition, the granting of a mistrial based on an error occurring only during the sеntencing phase of the trial would result in a waste of judicial resources. The remedy for such error in the penalty phase of a trial is a new trial on the penalty alone.
See, e.g., Turner v. Murray,
*406 II.
On thе merits, appellant argues that the challenged statement was improper because (1) the consideration of appellant’s refusal to accept a plеa offer infringed her constitutional right to trial; (2) the prosecutor injected his own opinion as to the fairness of the offer; and (3) the prosecutor argued facts not in evidence. After reviewing the record, we conclude both that the prosecutor’s comments were improper and that the trial judge failed to recognize this fact. When the proseсutor mentioned during closing arguments that appellant had been offered a ten-year sentence in exchange for a guilty plea, appellant objected. The trial judgе told the prosecutor to “[cjontinue the argument.” The Commonwealth’s Attorney then repeated his statement about the plea offer and said that appellant actuаlly laughed and then “taunted [him] . . . about [his] ridiculous offer.” When counsel for appellant objected again, the court said: “This is the argument stage, Mr. Hershner. You may argue what you want when Mr. Barry gеts through. Go ahead, Mr. Barry.” The General Assembly has made clear its concern over the sentencing judge’s knowledge of rejected plea agreements. Under Code § 19.2-153, if a cirсuit court judge “has rejected a plea bargain agreement submitted by both parties and the parties do not agree that he may hear the case,” another judge must be aрpointed pursuant to the procedure outlined elsewhere in the Code.
The Commonwealth asserts that these comments were harmless, especially since they were mаde before the trial judge, who, unlike a jury, “is uniquely capable because of his training, experience and judicial discipline to disregard potentially prejudicial argument during the mеntal process of adjudication.”
Williams
v.
Commonwealth,
This case is clearly distinguishable from our recent holding in
Cole v. Commonwealth,
We do not address whether the sentence recommended by the jury was appropriate. However, because we cannot conclude that the prosecutor’s comments were harmless, we remand this case for resentencing by another judge pursuant to Code § 19.2-154.
Remanded for resentencing.
Benton, X, and Cole, X, concurred.
