Elison Mirutil was charged with multiple offenses of burglary and theft committed on four separate occasions. He pled guilty to all of the charges, and the trial court imposed juvenile sanctions, committing him to a moderate risk program with aftercare. Mirutil successfully completed the moderate risk program and was close to completing the aftercare program when he was arrested and charged with several new offenses. After a heai'ing, the trial court granted the request of the Department of Juvenile Justice to terminate supervision, revoked the juvenile sanctions, and set the case for sentencing Mirutil as an adult.
At the sentencing hearing, the State offered evidence of the new violations “to show this defendant’s danger to the com
“The trial court may not rely upon impermissible considerations when sentencing a defendant.”
Cook v. State,
Mirutil argues that the trial court erred by sentencing him based on testimony concerning his subsequent arrests. The State maintains that “the statute doesn’t require a conviction.... It doesn’t say that he needs to be convicted of the new offense, just that he committed a new violation of law.” However, Section 985.565(4)(c), Florida Statutes, allows a “court [to] revoke the previous adjudication, impose an adjudication of guilt, and impose any sentence which it may lawfully impose ... if the child commits a new violation of law while under juvenile sanctions.” The trial court had already revoked Mirutil’s juvenile sanctions based on the new charges. The sentencing hearing was not tantamount to a probation violation hearing, where the court may consider the new crimes a defendant committed because he violated his probation by doing so; its sole purpose was to determine the appropriate sentence to be imposed based on the nature of the offenses for which the court had originally imposed the juvenile sanctions. Accordingly, as in any adult sentencing hearing, it was improper for the judge to consider the details of the pending charges alleged to have occurred after the offenses for which Mirutil was to be sentenced.
See Gray v. State,
“[T]he State has the burden to show from the record as a whole that the trial judge did not rely upon impermissible considerations in passing sentence upon the defendant where portions of the record
However, testimony regarding the new offenses was the central feature of the sentencing hearing. Discussion of the new offenses comprised forty-eight pages of the transcript, or eighty-five percent of the sentencing hearing, while the testimony of Mirutil’s character witnesses comprised only nine pages. The State presented testimony from three witnesses regarding the new offenses. Their testimony could not have been but extremely prejudicial.
Because we are “not at liberty to assume that items given such emphasis by the sentencing court, did not influence the sentence,” it befalls the State, as we have said, to convince us that these items played no part in the sentence imposed in the present case. While most assuredly there is more than ample justification for the sentence imposed, and our remand in no way precludes this or some equivalent sentence, we are not convinced, as we must be, that these impermissible items played no role in the sentence.
Epprecht,
Accordingly, we reverse and remand for resentencing by a different judge, “to preclude any perception on [Mirutil’s] part that the resentencing may not be conducted in a completely fair and impartial manner....”
Berry v. State,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. The scoresheet recommended between 8.12 years and eighty-five years.
