439 A.2d 456 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1981
In a two-count information, the defendant was accused of conspiracy to commit larceny in the fourth degree, in violation of General Statutes
On January 5, 1981, the court held a hearing to determine whether the defendant had successfully completed his probationary period as required by the accelerated rehabilitation program. At that time, the assistant state's attorney presented the court with a probation report, dated December 26, 1980, in which the defendant's probation officer stated that the defendant had "not conducted himself in a satisfactory manner" and had "been in further difficulty with the law." Specifically, the probation officer noted that on October 29, 1980, the defendant had been arrested and charged with larceny in the fourth degree. The court continued the hearing until February 5, 1981 to consider whether the defendant's October 29 arrest should justify termination of the defendant's participation in the accelerated rehabilitation program.
At the February 5 hearing, the court received testimony from the defendant's probation officer, Dominick Popillo, and admitted his December progress report, describing the October arrest, as an exhibit. Officer Popillo further testified that the defendant had been arrested again on January 30, 1981,1 on charges of assaulting a person over sixty years of age, robbery in the second degree and burglary in the first degree. At the date of the February 5 hearing, however, the defendant had not been convicted of any of the specified charges; moreover, no claim was made that the defendant had violated any specific conditions of the probation. Nevertheless, at the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court rescinded the defendant's accelerated rehabilitation status, reasoning that the defendant had not "successfully completed this term of probation under the A/R [accelerated rehabilitation] program." *855
The defendant has appealed from the revocation of his eligibility for dismissal of charges under accelerated rehabilitation, contending that mere proof of his arrests on undisposed charges while on accelerated rehabilitation did not provide a sufficient basis to support a finding that he had not satisfactorily completed his probation.
We may not consider the merits of the defendant's appeal unless we first ascertain that the decision sought to be appealed from is a final judgment. State v. Asherman,
Although we have not previously assessed the finality of a judgment refusing dismissal under the accelerated rehabilitation program, we recently held, on October 30, 1981, that a decision to deny an application for accelerated rehabilitation status is final for appeal purposes. State v. Whitney,
If the denial of an application for accelerated rehabilitation may be considered a final judgment, revocation of eligibility for dismissal under the accelerated rehabilitation program should certainly be deemed final for appeal purposes. Mindful of the qualitative difference that exists between losing a privilege one already has and not obtaining a privilege one is seeking, the United States Supreme Court has held that it requires more to revoke parole than it does to obtain parole release. Greenholtz v. Nebraska Penal Inmates,
General Statutes
Although
In applying this probation condition, the trial court could properly have revoked the defendant's eligibility for dismissal under accelerated rehabilitation upon a showing that the defendant violated any of the state's criminal laws. To evaluate the trial court's action, then, the pivotal issue before us is whether mere arrest on undisposed charges provides a sufficient base from which to conclude that the defendant violated a criminal law.
At the outset we note that although evidence of the defendant's two arrests was hearsay, it was nevertheless admissible. Because hearings of this nature are not full adversary proceedings and tend to be less formal, strict rules of evidence do not apply. United States v. Weber,
We hold, however, that the mere arrest of the defendant, without more, is an insufficient ground for revoking the defendant's eligibility for dismissal of charges pursuant to the accelerated rehabilitation program. See United States v. Lewis,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded to the trial court for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
In this opinion SHEA and COVELLO, Js., concurred.