Appellant was convicted, after an evi-dentiary hearing, of one count of criminal *710 contempt. On appeal he contests the sufficiency of the evidence agаinst him and argues that certain hearsay evidence was erroneously admitted. He also maintains that the trial court did not properly exercise its discretion in finding him guilty of only one cоunt. We reject all of these arguments and affirm appellant’s conviction.
I
On July 23, 1999, the Superior Court issued a civil protection order (“CPO”) against appellant which barred him from all сontact with Ms. Malvena West for a period of twelve months. Appellant and Ms. West had known each other for about a year and a half and were the parents of a young dаughter. The CPO was issued in response to actual and continuing threats of violence against Ms. West,.her family, and their infant child. It required appellant not to have any contact with Ms. West and specifically prohibited telephone contact. Appellant was personally served in open court with a copy of the CPO on July 23, the day it was issued.
Barely ten days lаter, on August 2, Ms. West filed a motion to hold appellant in criminal contempt after he telephoned her in violation of the CPO. In her motion, Ms. West alleged that appellant cаlled her on July 25 and again on July 31, and that on each occasion she hung up the phone after she realized who was calling. Later, on September 15, Ms. West filed an amended motiоn for contempt in which she stated that appellant called her sixteen times on eight different dáys between August 23 and September 1.
At the hearing on the contempt motion, Ms. West testified about the unwelcome telephone calls from appellant. She stated- — over objection — that during two of those calls she told appellant he should not call her any more because such calls were in violation of the CPO. In total, she recalled having received calls from appellant eighteen times after the CPO was issued, although on a few occasions she had to have her memory refreshed in order to remember the exact dates of the calls.
Ms. West was the only witness. After she testified and various documents (including telephone company records reflecting some of the calls) were admitted into evidence, defense counsel unsuccessfully moved for a judgment of acquittal. Aрpellant did not take the stand and presented no evidence.
Despite counsel’s attempts in closing argument to persuade the court that appellant never understоod the terms of the CPO, the court found him guilty of “the offense of criminal contempt.” The court based its. finding on undisputed evidence that appellant “willfully violated the [CPO]” by calling Ms. West on sevеral occasions. Furthermore, given that appellant had been personally served with a copy of the CPO, the court found that appellant knew it was a violation to call Ms. West, noting that Ms. West specifically told him not to call her because it was a violation.
Finally, the court stated that it was “only considering, for purposes of this hearing, one cоntempt violation.” After noting appellant’s “extensive criminal history,” the court sentenced him to six months in jail.
II
Historically, trial judges have had the power to punish individuals for contempt of court in order to maintain an orderly system of justice.
See Bloom v. Illinois,
In this casе, appellant asserts prejudice in the trial court’s failure to identify which one of his eighteen violations of the CPO gave rise to his single conviction of criminal contempt. He claims that not knowing which specific act was the basis of his conviction placed him in an “untenable situation.” This argument overlooks the fact that a trial court has the authority to rеduce a series of contemptuous actions to a single instance of contempt, so long as each episode is supported by substantial evidence.
See, e.g., In re L.G.,
Thе trial court found that appellant had committed eighteen separate contemptuous acts, each of which was proven independently of the others by Ms. West’s testimоny. Appellant’s actions did not collectively give rise to a single charge of criminal contempt, but separately constituted eighteen independent violations. The fact that the court found appellant guilty of only one count of contempt actually did him a service, since the court could have considered each telephonе call as a separate instance of contempt, thereby increasing considerably appellant’s exposure to criminal punishment. On the record before us, we find no prejudice and therefore no ground for reversal.
Ill
Appellant maintains that there was no evidence presented in his contempt hearing to show that he understood the “ramifications” of the CPO, “except for hearsay statements by [Ms. West].” He also claims that Ms. West’s supposed hearsay testimony regarding his awareness was improperly admitted. Both of these arguments are without merit.
With respect to appellant’s first contention, the evidence showed that appellant was handed a copy of the CPO by the courtroom clerk in open court on July 23. The text of the document specifically and plainly prohibited contact with Ms. West, 1 and there was no indication that appellant had any difficulty in understanding what it said. The trial court was correct when it ruled that the government was not required “to put on direct evidence that he understands the English language to meet that requirement” — i.e., the requirement thаt he “not contact [Ms. West] ... by telephone.” To argue that appellant did not understand the implications of the CPO when he was personally *712 served with a copy of it is, on this record, essentially frivolous.
Appellant’s other contention, that hearsay evidence was erroneously admitted against him, is equally unavailing. The evidence established that on ten seрarate dates appellant called Ms. West eighteen different times. During at least two of these calls, Ms. West specifically told appellant that he was violating the CPO. Defense counsel objected to this testimony as hearsay, but the court correctly overruled his objection.
Hearsay is a statement, other than one made by the declarant while testifying at a trial, offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted.
See, e.g., In re D.S.,
We therefore find no error in the court’s admission of Ms. West’s statements to appellant that he should stop calling her because they showed that appellant had notice that his conduct was violative of the CPO. Moreover, even if that testimony were excluded, there was sufficient other evidence of appellant’s knowledge of the CPO (the clеrk’s hand delivery in open court) and his willful violation of it (eighteen separate calls) to support his conviction.
IV
For these reasons, appellant’s conviction of contempt is
Affirmed.
Notes
. The CPO, which is in the record, states in part that appellant "shall not contact [Ms. West] in any manner, including but not limited to: by telephone; in writing; in any other manner, either directly or indirectly through a third party” (emphasis added).
