Opinion by Chief
Defendant, Terry Lee Benavidez, appeals the consecutive sentence imposed following his conviction of second degree assault committed whilе lawfully confined or in custody. We affirm.
Defendant was in custody awaiting disposition of pending charges in two separate cases when he assaulted an officer working in the detention facility. He was then also charged with second degree assault in violation of section 18-8-208(1)(f), C.R.S8.2008. In a consolidated disposition, defendant pleadеd guilty to one count each of theft from a person, misdemeanor assault, and second degree assault of a peace officer; the remaining charges were dismissed. The district court sentenced defendant to (1) concurrent terms of six years in the custody of the Department of Corrections (DOC) and two years in jail on the theft and misdemeanor assault convictions, respectively, and (2) six years in the custody of the DOC on the second degree assault of a peace officеr conviction, to be served consecutively to the sentences for theft and misdemeanor assault. The court noted that although it had discretion whether to impose consecutive sentences in some cases, in this instance section 18-8-208(1)(f) required that the sentences be consecutive.
On appeal, the single issue raisеd by defendant is whether the district court misapprehended the seope of its discretion at sentencing when it concluded that section 18-8-2083(1)(f) required consecutive sеntences. We conclude that it did not.
IIL. Standard of Review
The interpretation of a statute is a question of law, which we review de novo. Hendricks v. People,
III Discussion
Under section 18-8-208(1)(f), a person cоmmits the crime of second degree assault when:
while lawfully confined or in custody as a result of being charged with or convicted of a crime, . he or she knowingly and violently applies physical force against a person engaged in the performance of his or her duties while employed by or under contract with a detentiоn facility.
(Emphasis supplied.) The statute also contains the following sentencing provision: "A sentence imposed pursuant to this paragraph (£) shall be served in the department of corrections, and shall rum consecutively with any sentences being served by the offender ...." (Emphasis supplied.)
Defendant contends that the phrase "any sentences being served by the offender" must be read to mean that any sentence imposed for second degree assault on a peace officer pursuant to section 18-3-208(1)(f) shall be made consecutive only to "any sentence being served by the offender at the time of the assault." Thus, defendant argues, becausе he was not yet serving a sentence for theft and misdemeanor assault at the time of the second degree assault, the statute did not require that the sentence for the latter offense be consecutive to the sentence for the former. We disagree for two reasons.
First, and most obviously, defendant's proposed construction would require that the phrase "at the time of the assault" be read into the statute. But, in interpreting a stat
Indeed, had the legislature intended to make sentences for assault of a peace officer or worker in a detentiоn facility consecutive only to the sentence being served at the time of the assault, it knew how to do so. Seq, e.g., § 18-8-209, C.R.98.2008 (specifically stating, with regard to convictions invоlving escape or other offenses related to custody, that "[alny sentence imposed following conviction of an offense under [certain enumerated sections] shall run consecutively ... with any sentence which the offender was serving at the time of the conduct prohibited by those sections"); see also Turbyne,
Second, defendant's interpretation is contrary to the statute's clearly expressed intent.
As pointed out above, by its terms, section 18-3-203(1)(f) imposes sanctions оn assaults which occur not only when an offender has been convicted and is serving a sentence, but also when an offender is confined or in custody "as a result of being charged with" a crime. § 18-83-203(1)(f) (emphasis supplied). Thus, as shown by this plain language, the purpose of the statute is to punish offenders who engage in assaultive behavior toward workers at the detention facility while confined, regardless of whether they have already been convicted of and sentenced for another crime.
Interpreting the statute to limit the requirement of consecutive sentences to only those offenders who commit assaults while confined after a conviction, as defеndant suggests, is inconsistent with the clearly expressed intent of the legislature to deter any assaults against peace officers and other workers within custodial settings by mаndating additional punishment.
People v. Andrews,
Consequently, we conclude here that, because defendant was in custody awaiting disposition of other charges when he assaulted the officer аt the detention facility, the sentencing court was required, pursuant to seetion 18-8-208(1)(f), to make his sentence for second degree assault consecutive to the sеntences he received upon conviction for those other charges. Accordingly, contrary to defendant's contention, the court did not misapprehend the seope of its authority.
The sentence is affirmed.
