Lead Opinion
Tyrone Madry appeals the revocation of his probation and ensuing prison sentence. He alleges that the State failed to meet its burden of proof at the revocation hearing because it relied on an out-of-court declaration by a witness who testified at the hearing that he never made any declaration out of court and did not “know any person by the name of Tyrone Madry.” Unable to distinguish Baugh v. State,
At issue at the revocation hearing were various alleged new law violations: attempted armed robbery of one David Smith, aggravated assault with a firearm on the same David Smith, and possession of a firearm at the same time and place. David Smith testified at the revocation hearing that somebody with a gun tried to rob him on August 1, 2006. But he denied giving any written or oral statement to a deputy sheriff investigating the crime, specifically denied identifying Tyrone Madry as the perpetrator, and testified he did not know Tyrone Madry. Three alibi witnesses put Mr. Madry elsewhere at the time of the attempted robbery.
On the other hand, a deputy sheriff who investigated the attempted robbery testified that Mr. Smith had identified Mr. Madry as his assailant, both orally and in writing. Mr. Smith was shown a written statement (which he denied writing) that identifies “Tyrone Magice,” not “Tyrone Madry,” as the malefactor. (In different handwriting, the paper on which the written statement appears contains the notation “Madry” with an arrow pointing toward “Tyrone Magice,” but the deputy sheriff was not certain who had written “Madry,” and nobody testified that Mr. Smith had done so.)
At the hearing, trial counsel objected, “I think the State is attempting to convict my
Hearsay is admissible, moreover, in revocation hearings, although revocation of probation cannot be based on hearsay alone. See Stewart v. State,
Although we are not reviewing a criminal conviction here, Baugh is instructive. In Baugh, the defendant had been convicted of capital sexual battery on the basis of a “recanted out-of-court statement” and other, circumstantial evidence of guilt,
Reversed.
Concurrence Opinion
concurs.
I concur. Here the state charges a new law violation as the sole reason for revocation of Appellant’s probation. Since the new law violation cannot result in a conviction as a matter of law, I conclude it cannot support a violation of Appellant’s probation. See Baugh,
