Defendant was convicted by a jury of delivery of phencyclidine, MCL 335.341(l)(b); MSA 18.1070(41)(l)(b), and delivery of marijuana, MCL 335.341(l)(c); MSA 18.1070(41)(l)(c), and appeals.
Evidence presented at trial established that police officer Johnston went to a residence in Battle Creek in the company of an informant and purchased phencyclidine and marijuana from defendant. Defendant was not arrested until approximately three months later. Defendant argues that the delay deprived him of due process. However, it is prejudice resulting from delay, not the delay itself, which may result in a violation of due process.
People v Hernandez,
Officer Johnston testified that he took the drugs purchased from defendant to the building from which his drug enforcement unit operated and placed them in a locker to which only he had keys. He transported the drugs to the crime lab 11 days later. Because the officer declined to testify as to the location of the building where the drugs were kept, defendant argues that there was a break in the chain of evidence. However, defendant’s argument goes to weight, not admissibility, of the
*147
evidence. See,
e.g., People v Kremko,
Defendant raises three alleged instructional errors as issues for review. However, only one was preserved for review through objection. See,
e.g., People v Murry,
Defendant moved to suppress reference to his 1974 conviction of delivery of marijuana as impeachment evidence. See
People v Jackson,
This Court has recognized that the opinion in
Osteen
contained a mistake which, if followed, results in an upside down exercise of discretion.
People v Cash,
The issue of whether reference to prior convictions should be suppressed is one addressed to the
trial court’s
discretion.
Gordon v United States, supra,
does not per se bar every impeachment by similar convictions.
People v Cash, supra,
at 627;
Because the conviction may be affirmed, there is one other issue which we must reach. At sentencing, defense counsel objected to the trial judge conferring with a probation officer concerning defendant’s sentence outside the presence of the defense counsel. It is apparently the practice of the trial judge to confer alone with' probation officers prior to sentencing, a practice followed in the instant case. Defendant argues on appeal,
inter alia,
3
that the procedure deprived him of his right to counsel. We agree. Defendants are entitled to the assistance of counsel at those stages of criminal proceedings at which substantial rights may be affected. Sentencing is one such proceeding.
Mempa v Rhay,
If the trial court does not grant a new trial in this case, defendant shall be resentenced.
The remaining issues concerning sentencing are moot.
Reversed and remanded with instructions.
Notes
"THE COURT: Well, I think that there is obviously a risk of prejudice in disclosing any prior convictions. I’d agree with you up to that point. And it’s got to be weighed against the right of the jury to have knowledge of each witness, some knowledge of them in order to tell if they are telling the truth. It appears to me in view of the fact that these convictions are of recent origin and of a similar nature, somewhat similar, at least, to that with which he is now charged, that it is proper for the Prosecutor to inquire only, of course, whether he has been arrested and convicted of felonies and if so, what.”
"THE COURT: Strangely enough, Mr. Calderone, the Appellate Courts started to change the rule. They refer to the fact that the relationship between the prior offense, the similarity between the prior offense and the current offense was a factor to be considered in allowing it in which I’ll admit doesn’t make any sense to me, but if you remember back, the first case that I know of which was reversed, the Prosecutor showed a lot of misdemeanors, and the Court said none of them — only one of them was drug related, was a drug case and, therefore, they shouldn’t have gone in which to me is the opposite of what we are supposed to be doing * *
Defendant also argued that the procedure deprived him of his right to be present at trial. MCL 768.3; MSA 28.1026. We do not reach the issue because defendant did not object on this basis, and because our resolution of the right to counsel issue makes this issue moot.
Distinguish the situation where a probation officer provides information to a judge through a presentence report. There, counsel generally receives the same information, even if at a different time. GCR 1963, 785.12.
