The defendant pled guilty to uttering and publishing a forged cheek 1 and was sentenced to 10 to 14 years’ imprisonment. He appeals, asserting that his plea was induced hy charge and sentence concessions promised hy the prosecutor.
The claim that his plea was induced hy a promise that another charge pending against him would not be prosecuted is supported in the record.
2
However, no claim is made that the promise not to prosecute that charge was not fulfilled. A fulfilled promise of charge reduction is not a ground for vacating a guilty plea even if the plea was induced thereby.
People
v.
Byrd
(1968),
The defendant supports his assertion that he was promised a sentence concession with an affidavit stating that he was led to believe hy the prosecutor’s staff or office that his sentence would he “very minor.” The affidavit does not identify the person in the prosecutor’s office or on his staff who led the defendant to that belief, nor does it state what such unidentified person said or did that prompted the defendant to entertain that belief. The trial judge did not err in failing to order a testimonial hearing on this issue. See
People
v.
Scruggs
(1968),
Affirmed.
Notes
MCLA § 750.249 (Stat Ann 1962 Rev § 28.446).
In this ease, the trial judge stated that even though the Michigan Supreme Court,
