In Docket Number 158700, defendant pleaded guilty of possession of less than twenty-five grams of a mixture containing cocaine, MCL 333.7403(2)(a)(v); MSA 14.15(7403)(2)(a)(v), and unarmed robbery, MCL 750.530; MSA 28.798. In Docket Number 158699, defendant was convicted by a jury of entering without breaking, MCL 750.111; MSA 28.306, and of being an habitual offender, fourth offense, MCL 769.12; MSA 28.1084. The trial court sentenced defendant to a prison term of ten to twenty-five years for the habitual offender conviction, to be served consecutively to a ten- to fifteen-year term for the unarmed robbeiy conviction, which in turn is to be served consecutively to a IV2- to 4-year term for the possession conviction. Defendant appeals as of right and his appeals have been consolidated. We affirm.
In June 1991, defendant was arrested and charged with possession of less than twenty-five grams of cocaine and with being an habitual offender, third offense, MCL 769.12; MSA 28.1084. In July 1991,
While awaiting sentencing for these pleas, defendant and a cohort entered an aрartment in Grand Rapids and took various pieces of personal property from the residence. Subsequently,, defendant and his brother returned to the apartment to take more items. While transporting these goods to the home of their mother, defendant and his brother dropped the stolen proрerty and ran from the scene when they realized that they were being tracked by the police. The police tracked defendant to his mother’s home and arrested him in January 1992. Defendant was charged with breaking and entering an occupied building with the intent to commit a larceny, MCL 750.110; MSA 28.305, and being an habitual offendеr, fourth offense.
At the sentencing hearing for his earlier plea-based convictions, defendant moved to withdraw the pleas. In February and March 1992, the trial court held two evidentiary hearings regarding defendant’s motion. At the completion of these hearings, the trial court took the matter under advisement. At the start of the trial for the breaking and entering charge, the trial court orally denied defendant’s motion. The trial court memorialized that decision with an order in late May 1992 and a written opinion in July 1992.
In April 1992, a jury convicted defendant of entering without breaking. In May 1992, another jury convicted defendant of being an habitual offеnder, fourth offense. Defendant was sentenced in July 1992.
i
Defendant raises two issues pertaining to his guilty pleas. First, defendant claims that the trial court
erred in denying his motion to withdraw his pleas because they were based upon coercion and an unfulfilled promise of leniency. Because defendant presеrved this issue by moving to withdraw his guilty pleas before sentencing, we must determine whether the trial court abused its discretion in denying defendant’s motion.
People v Spencer,
There is no absolute right to withdraw a guilty plea after a trial court has accepted it.
People v Gomer,
On the defendant’s motion or with the defendant’s consent, the court in the interest of justicе may permit an accepted plea to be withdrawn before sentence is imposed unless withdrawal of the plea would substantially prejudice the prosecutor because of reliance on the plea.
Thus, the defendant has the burden “to establish a fair and just reason for withdrawal of the plea.”
People v Jackson,
.
Our review of the record shows that defendant’s claim that his pleas werе the result of an unfulfilled promise of leniency is no more than an unsupported assertion. The only promise made at the plea hearing was the dismissal of the other pending charges in exchange for the pleas, and defendant acknowledged that this was the complete agreement without any
other promises. Defendant failed to introduce any evidence to the contrary during the two-day evidentiary hearing. Similarly, defendant failed to sustain his burden of establishing that he had been coerced into making the pleas or was innocent of the crimes. At best, the record shows that defendant introduced contradictory evidence that he may not have been the person who stole the vehicle, but the record is devoid of any evidence that defendant had been coerced. Because defendant failed to satisfy his burden of persuasion, the burden
Alternatively, defendant contends that the trial court erred in ruling that his plea of guilty of unarmed robbery was a “conviction” within the meaning of that term as it is used in MRE 609 because he had not been sentenced with regard to the plea at the time of trial. In pertinent part, MRE 609(a) provides:
For the purpose of attacking the credibility of a witness, evidence that the witness has been convicted, of a crime shall not be admitted unless the evidence has been elicited from the witness or established by public record during cross examination .... [Emphasis added.]
It is well settled that a sentence is not an еlement of a conviction, but rather a declaration of its consequences.
People v Funk,
Still, defendant argues that his motion to withdraw his pleas rendered his pleas infirm until such time that the trial court issued an order denying the motion. However, at the time evidence of the convictions was admitted, the trial court had orally denied the motion. The trial court’s oral denial of the motion to withdraw the pleas effectively resolved the matter because such a ruling has the same weight and effect as a written order.
McClure v H K Porter Co, Inc,
h
Defendant next challenges the conduct of his two trials below. First, he argues that prosecutorial misconduct during the trial for breaking and entering denied him a fаir trial. For allegations of prosecutorial misconduct, we examine the pertinent portion of the record below and evaluate the prosecution’s conduct to determine whether it denied the defendant a fair trial.
People v Legrone,
During rebuttal, the prosecutor commented that defense attorneys often attack the thoroughness of the police investigation as a ploy to convert the case to one against the police. Defendant asserts that this remark was an attempt to personally attack the credibility of his trial counsel and to mislead the jury. A prosecutor cannot pеrsonally attack the defendant’s trial attorney because this type of attack can infringe upon the defendant’s presumption of innocence.
People v Moore,
Nevertheless, we do not review the prosecutor’s remarks in such a vacuum; the remarks must be read in context.
People v
Lawton,
Defendant also argues that instructional error during the trial for the supplemental charge infringed upon his right to a fair trial. However, defendant did not object to the jury instructions in question and thus failed to preserve this issue.
in
Last, defendant challenges the sentences handed down for his drug possession, unarmed robbery, and entering without breaking convictions. Precisely, defendant argues that the consecutive nature, for an aggregate of 2IV2 years, renders his sеntences disproportionate.
In Michigan, a defendant’s sentence must be proportionate to the seriousness of the crime and the defendant’s prior criminal history.
People v Milbourn,
Yet, defendant first argues that this methodology of reviewing consecutive sentences is improper because
People v Warner,
However, defendant’s reliance upon
Chambers
and
Rushlow
is misplaced. First,
Chambers
stands for the proposition that only the last judge in multiple sentencing situations has the discretion to impose consecutive sentences.
Chambers, supra
at 230. In contrast, our Supreme Court noted that the
Chambers
last-in-time rule has no applicability in situations where the same judge at the same sentencing hearing has an opportunity tо sentence a defendant to consecutive sentences for multiple crimes.
People v Morris,
Last, defendant argues that the trial court improperly imposed consecutive sentences as punishment for his attempt to withdraw his guilty pleas. Once more, defendant’s proffered authority for resentencing pursuant to this ground is misplaced. In
People v Sickles,
Unless there is something in the record which indicates the higher sentence was imposed as a penalty for the accused’s assertion of his right to trial by jury, the sentence imposed will be sustained. Nothing in the record indicates who plаced the x in the initial sentencing form, why it was placed there, or who crossed it out. In the absence of something in the record, we will not presume retaliation. [Id. Citation omitted and emphasis added.]
First, the trial court scored defendant at level II-D for his conviction of possession of less than twenty-five grams of cocaine and sentenced defendant to IV2yeаrs’ incarceration for this conviction. The guidelines recommend a minimum sentence in the range of six to thirty months. Because this sentence falls within the guidelines’ range, it is presumed proportionate.
Albert, supra
at 75. Consequently, defendant’s sentence is proportionate because he failed to provide us with аny reason to justify a downward departure.
People v Clark,
Second, the trial court scored defendant at level III-D for the unarmed robbery conviction and sentenced defendant to ten years. The guidelines recommend a minimum sentence in the range of 48 to 120 months. Again, this sentence is presumed proportionate because it falls within the guidelines’ range. Albert, swpra. Consequently, defendant’s sentence is proportionate because he again failed to provide us with any reason to justify a downward departure. Clark, supra.
Last, defendant was sentenced for being an habitual offender, fourth offense. The guidelines do not apply to the appellate review of sentences for an habitual offender.
People v Gatewood,
Defendant was convicted of being an habitual offender, fourth offense, and entry without breaking. The statutory maximum for the underlying conviction of entry without breaking is five years. MCL 750.111; MSA 28.306. As a result, defendant is liable for a sentence of life or any term of years. MCL 769.12(1)(a); MSA 28.1084(1)(a). To justify its ten-year sentence, the trial court stated:
There isn’t any prospect for rehabilitation. In other words, I feel I have got to act to protect the community from you for these reasons. By my count, [defendant], this is your sixth felony conviction, which by definition means you haven’t learned anything from the prior ones. You have been in prison before, and obviously that doesn’t hold any fear because if it did you wouldn’t have done these particular things. You committed the robbery while on bond for the сocaine charge. My thought on it is a person on bond if they want to obey the law are going to do their damdest to obey the law because a guy like me in a black robe is going to confront them one of these days. The last thing they want to do is have to admit to the judge that they did something while they were on bond, but it hаppened.
* * *
In short, [defendant], you are going to continue to commit crimes, they’re going to be serious ones. This robbery was serious. This entry without breaking is very serious, and what I have got to do is see to it that if you keep doing the things that get you in trouble and they’re going to keep happening, they’re at least in an еnvironment which doesn’t hurt the rest of this community, especially when I add into the fact that you have got some prior convictions for some very serious offenses. I can’t preserve and protect the safety of this community by showing leniency to you.
All these considerations are proper sentencing considerations.
People v Cervantes,
Affirmed.
Notes
Judge Fitzgerald continues to adhere to his position that the cumulative effect of the sentences should be considered in determining whether the sentences are proportionate. See, e.g.,
People v Hadley,
