This appeal arises from the revocation of a 1980 two-year first offender probation sentence, based only on a certified copy of a 1982 conviction in Toombs County for violation of the Georgia Controlled Substances Act. The Tattnall County trial court, in revoking appellant’s earlier probation, sentenced appellant to ten years, concurrent on each count, six years in confinement and four to be served on probation. Appellant enumerates four errors below. Held:
1. We find no merit in this appeal. Revocation was sought on grounds that appellant violated the probation terms that “he not violate the criminal laws of any governmental unit.” It is settled that “only slight evidence” of the occurrence of probation violation will support a revocation,
Puckett v. State,
2. The trial court did not err in imposing a greater sentence on appellant than the original first offender sentence. The 1980 first offender sentence of probation in each of the four counts plainly stated “ ‘If such probation is revoked or cancelled, the Court may adjudge the defendant guilty of the above offense and impose any sentence permitted by law for the ... offense.’ ”
Puckett,
supra, pp. 157-158. We have no doubt that this language authorizes the imposition of “any sentence permitted by law for the offense,” and thus expressly gave notice to the defendant that he could receive a greater sentence. Moreover, the record shows that when appellant pled guilty and received first offender status, he was expressly so informed. The first offender sentence in this case expressly sentenced appellant to “two years’ probation,” and not to a period of
confinementto
be served on probation, as in
Johnson v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
