OPINION
This case again presents the issue of the propriety of warrantless searches of probationers.
See Gonzales v. State,
At 6:30 in the morning of February 11, Murray, Preshaw and two other probation officers arrived at the trailer where Soroka was living. They found Soroka there alone. In the living room, in plain view, the officers saw a tray with razor blades and glass tubes, one of which contained a white powder. Field tests revealed this powder to be cocaine. A subsequent search of the trailer turned up a set of current Alaska license plates, which an investigation showed belonged to a recently stolen automobile.
Soroka was indicted for receiving and concealing the stolen vehicle. The state also petitioned to revoke his probation for the first stolen property conviction. His motion to suppress the fruits of the February 11 search was denied. Soroka then entered a no contest plea to the new stolen property charge, reserving his right to appeal the search and seizure issue. 4 Judge Van Hoomissen ordered his probation revoked. On August 25, 1977, Judge Blair sentenced Soroka to two years on the new charge, such sentence to run consecutively to any sentence imposed in the probation revocation proceedings. On September 12, Judge Van Hoomissen sentenced him to two years on the original charge. Soroka has appealed, claiming that the license plates and evidence gained as a result of their seizure should have been suppressed in both proceedings and that the two-year sentence imposed after revocation was excessive.
A. Search and Seizure
We find no error in Judge Blair’s denial of the suppression motion, as we conclude
We must begin our discussion by noting that this search was not made pursuant to Soroka’s conditions of probation, as those conditions only required that he submit to requests by correctional officers to search his person. Therefore, the probation officers had to establish probable cause for their search in order that it be held valid.
5
Roman v. State,
B. Sentence
We find that the two-year sentence imposed by Judge Van Hoomissen after revoking Soroka’s probation must be vacated, and the case remanded for resentencing. The judge stated that he was basing his sentence only on the first offense and the probation violation. The first offense involved concealing property which was stolen by a juvenile and left with Soroka at his mobile home.
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The judge, in imposing sentence upon revocation of probation, did not discuss the nature of the original offense or the criteria to be considered in sentencing set forth in
State v. Chaney,
The conviction in No. 3624 is affirmed. The probation revocation in No. 3692 is also affirmed, but the sentence imposed is vacated, and the case is remanded for resentenc-ing.
BURKE and MATTHEWS, JJ., dissent from the remand for resentencing because they believe that the trial judge adequately explained his reasons for imposing the sentence and that it is not excessive.
Notes
. A violation of AS 11.20.350.
. The property which was the subject of Soro-ka’s conviction had been stolen by a juvenile residing with him.
. He admitted to possessing the drug about two months prior to the conversation, but denied any cocaine use since that time.
.Pursuant to
Cooksey v. State,
. If the conditions of Soroka’s probation had extended to searches on demand of his residence, no showing of probable cause would have been necessary.
State v. Montgomery,
. Soroka’s association with juveniles clearly did not furnish probable cause to indicate any breach of his probation conditions, and his admission of cocaine use was stale by the time of the search. Murray’s decision to search was largely based on his mistaken belief that Soro-ka had admitted very recent possession of the drug.
. While we would not ordinarily countenance such visits at 6:30 a. m., the purpose of this visit, to discover whether Soroka was harboring juveniles overnight, required an early hour.
. Had Soroka not been a probationer, or had this search occurred after the date of the
Roman
decision, the discovery of the cocaine would not have justified an immediate search of other areas of the trailer, but would simply have supplied the basis for obtaining a warrant.
State
v.
Spietz,
. Soroka has argued that the search was instigated by Trooper Preshaw and was made solely for law enforcement purposes, and hence the seized evidence was inadmissible in the criminal proceedings under
State v. Sears,
. The indictment describes the property as a Litton microwave oven, a Sony eight-track tape player, a Sharp digital calculator, a black eight-track carrying case, a woman’s false fur parka, and a white alarm clock.
.
McClain v. State,
