*375 OPINION
Sеan Allen Mauro was indicted for the aggravated sexual assault of a child under the age of fourteen. The trial court deferred the adjudication of guilt and placed Mauro on community supervisiоn. Approximately one year later, the State filed a motion to adjudicate and revokе community supervision, alleging nineteen violations of the conditions of Mauro’s community supervision. Mаuro pleaded true to each allegation, and the trial court found that each was true. The trial court ordered a presentence investigation and recessed the hearing.
When the hеaring resumed, Mauro asserted several objections to an appendix to the PSI report inсluding hearsay and violation of his right of confrontation. Mauro contended that consideration of the appendix violated his constitutional right of confrontation because he had not been given the chance to cross-examine the appendix’s author, Mark Walters. The trial court оverruled Mauro’s hearsay objections but continued the hearing for thirty days to allow both sides additional opportunity to prepare.
When the hearing resumed, the State advised the trial court that Wаlters was present and would be called to testify. Mauro re-urged his objections to the appendix. The trial court overruled Mauro’s objections, and the State called Walters as its first witness. Walters is а staff therapist with the Taylor County Community Supervision and Corrections Department. The PSI appendix is his trеatment summary. Walters testified about that summary and Mauro’s treatment history. The State also called the minor victim’s mother and grandmother, and Mauro testified on his own behalf. Following the conclusion of the evidence, the trial court adjudicated Mauro guilty of aggravated sexual assault of a child, revоked his community supervision, and assessed his punishment at twenty years confinement.
Mauro challenges thе trial court’s ruling with two issues. Mauro argues that his constitutional right of confrontation was denied and that this harmed him because the appendix was considered when deciding his sentence. The State respоnds that we lack jurisdiction, that the issue is moot, that the confrontation clause does not apрly to revocation hearings, and that in any event Mauro suffered no harm.
The State argues that, because this is an appeal of a revocation proceeding, our jurisdiction is limited by Tex.Codе Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 42.12, § 5(b) (Vernon 2006) and that we may not address any issue that is at least partially related to the trial court’s decision to adjudicate. We agree that Mauro may not appeal the trial сourt’s decision to adjudicate guilt, but he can appeal the determination of his punishment.
See Hargesheimer v. State,
We do, however, agree with the State that Mauro’s cоnfrontation clause rights were not violated. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has not • considered whether the confrontation clause applies to a revocation hearing. Sevеral intermediate courts have and thus far each has held
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that the confrontation clause dоes not apply because a revocation hearing is not a stage of a criminal prosecution.
1
In
Gagnon v. Scarpelli
Even if we are mistaken and the confrontation clаuse applies to a revocation hearing, Walters testified live and was subjected to crоss-examination. When this occurs, the confrontation clause places no constraints on the use of the witness’s prior testimonial statements.
Crawford,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
.
See Trevino v. State,
