Harold INGRAHAM, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
Carey Haughwout, Public Defender, and Nan Ellen Foley, Assistant Public Defender, West Palm Beach, for appellant.
Charles J. Crist, Jr., Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Daniel P. Hyndman, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.
PER CURIAM.
The narrow issue in this case is whether the trial judge "imposed a sentence" at a plea conference. We hold that a sentence was imposed, triggering double jeopardy protection. Therefore, the court was precluded from enhancing appellant's sentence for breaching a furlough agreement.
Appellant entered a guilty plea that contemplated a 36.45 month prison sentence. The state and the defendant agreed to a three-month furlough for medical reasons. Appellant signed a Guideline Sentence Waiver/Presentencing Release Agreement that provided, inter alia, that if he failed to return to court on a specified date, then the court would have the "total and complete *955 discretion" to sentence him to seventy-two months incarceration instead of the 36.45 months set forth in the plea agreement.
At the end of the plea conference, the trial judge said: "Accept each plea, adjudge you to be guilty, and impose the agreed 36.45 months, to run concurrent on each count with agreed credit. I stay and suspend execution of those sentences until Friday, February 23rd, of the year 2001." On the same day, the court entered a written judgment adjudicating appellant to be guilty; the court also entered a written sentence committing appellant to the Department of Corrections for a term of 36.45 months.
Ultimately, appellant failed to surrender as ordered and the trial court imposed enhanced concurrent sentences of forty-eight months incarceration.
Appellant challenges the enhanced sentences on double jeopardy grounds. Jeopardy "attaches when a court imposes a sentence, after which the double jeopardy clauses protect the defendant from receiving a punishment greater than the sentence already imposed." Joslin v. State,
Here, the trial judge orally pronounced the sentence at the plea conference. Under Joslin and Robie v. State,
We distinguish Adams v. State,
Here, the court's oral pronouncement of the sentence at the plea conference necessitates the finding that the sentence was imposed at the plea conference. As in this case, the Adams court orally stayed and suspended the execution of the sentence. Adams did not accord that statement any legal significance. Jeopardy attaches when a sentence has been imposed; the stay and suspension of execution of the sentence came after it was imposed, when jeopardy had already attached.
The two enhanced concurrent sentences imposed are reversed and the case is remanded to the trial court with directions to impose the concurrent 36.45 month sentences contemplated by the plea agreement.
STEVENSON, GROSS and MAY, JJ., concur.
