OPINION
This is a sentence appeal from a conviction for assault and battery and robbery. The superior court imposed a sentence of six months for assault and battery, ten *289 years for robbery, with the two sentences to run concurrently. Five years of the sentence was suspended, with appellant to be on probation, and appellant was to be eligible for parole at the discretion of the Parole Board, after serving at least one third of the period of confinement imposed. Appellant asserts that the superior court improperly relied on his juvenile record in sentencing, that the court relied on unverified information in the presentence report, and that the sentence is excessive.
As to the reliance on his juvenile record, 1 Penn argues that Criminal Rule 32(c)(2), which provides for inclusion in pre-sentence reports of any finding of delinquency, is in conflict with the right to privacy 2 and with the provisions of AS 47.10.-080(g), which provides that no adjudication of delinquency shall afterward be deemed a criminal conviction, and that such an adjudication shall not be admissible against the minor in a subsequent case in any court. We have considered appellant’s arguments, and we are not convinced that our previous decisions on this question should be altered.
In both
Davenport v. State,
As to the contention that the superior court impermissibly relied on unverified information in the presentence report, our examination of the record convinces us that this point is without merit.
As to the excessiveness of the sentence, our review leads us to the conclusion that, in imposing this sentence, the superior court was not clearly mistaken. 3
AFFIRMED.
