Opinion
The question presented is whether the revocation of probation at bench violated due process as defined in
Morrissey
v.
Brewer
(1972)
Appellant was sentenced to state prison having pleaded guilty to a charge of selling heroin. Execution of sentence was suspended. Probation was granted on condition that appellant serve one year in the county jail and not use or possess narcotics except as prescribed by a licensed phy
*73
sician.
People
v.
Youngs,
The record shows without contradiction that appellant failed to appear for an alleged probation violation on January 28, 1972. A bench warrant issued and on February 4, 1972, appellant appeared and admitted the violation. The court, however, felt the violation to be of insufficient dimension to revoke probation. A subsequent proceeding to revoke for a different violation was conducted on May 4, 1972. The public defender representing appellant waived a formal hearing. The court stated it had read and considered a two-page report filed by a senior probation officer, which revealed that appellant had recently been arrested on a charge of forgery and that heroin was found in his possession.
The court found appellant in violation of probation, noting that appellant’s probation order was “quite specific” that he not possess any narcotics.
Appellant contends that there was not a sufficient quantum of evidence and that the court did not judicially weigh the evidence which was submitted and asserts that as a consequence of those two defects the revocation was not justified.
In
Morrissey
v.
Brewer, supra,
the United States Supreme Court set out certain minimal procedural requirements of due process for parole revocation proceedings. In
In re Thomas,
Since appellant’s probation was revoked in May 1972, he was not entitled to a hearing to deny or explain the alleged violation, but in any event it appears from the record that appellant was present in person and represented by the public defender and stated that the formal hearing was not desired. The rule, as it existed in May of 1972, was correctly followed. Further, even if Morrissey were applicable, Vickers, supra, holds “. . . the revocation hearing itself may be waived by the parolee . . . ,” and at bench appellant’s counsel waived formal proceedings.
Under the law as it existed
pre,-Morrissey
and
Vickers,
when probation is granted
after
sentence has been pronounced,
(People
v.
Nelson, supra,
p. 467) revocation of probation is normally a matter of discretion.
People
*74
v.
Hayko,
All that is required is that the grounds for revocation be clearly and satisfactorily shown. They need not be established beyond a reasonable doubt.
(People
v.
Hayko, supra; People
v.
Vanella,
In the instant case the trial judge read and considered the two-page report submitted by Probation Officer Hunt which stated that appellant had been arrested on a charge of forgery and that heroin was found in his possession. The court noted that one of the conditions of probation was that appellant not possess any narcotics. In addition, Mr. Hunt stated that appellant had failed to turn himself in as instructed by his probation officer. On the basis of this probation report appellant was found to be in violation of probation.
It is clear from the record that the trial judge in the case at bench based his finding of violation of probation on the probation officer’s report.
Judgment is affirmed.
Fleming, J., and Compton, J., concurred.
