*416 OPINION
Appellant was found guilty by a jury of one count of grand theft and was placed on probation for three years after the imposition of sentence was suspended for that period. As a condition of the probation, appellant was ordered to make full restitution in the amount of $2,430.00, $1,000 to be paid within one month after sentencing and the remainder to be paid within the following six months. Appellant raises four points on appeal.
The crime involved, theft by false pretenses, centers around the scheme by which appellant received money from a victim in exchange for a promise to provide him with immigration papers. The documents were never delivered. Appellant claimed she was acting as an unsuspecting agent for a third party and never deprived the victim of any of his money. Introduced at the trial was a tape recording made by the victim of a conversation between him and another party alleged to be the appellant. Appellant’s first argument is that the trial court erred in prohibiting her from testifying about her voice identification. Appellant did testify that the voice was not hers, however, and she testified that the voice sounded like that of the victim’s sister. Testimony directly contradicted the victim’s and the issue was placed before the jury for its resolution. In addition, appellant attempted to have her voice recorded in the courtroom and then played and compared with the victim’s tape so the jury could decide if indeed it was her voice on the tape. However, there was no showing that the conditions of the proposed demonstration were similar to those under which the victim’s tape was made.
Ong v. Pacific Finance Corporation of California,
Appellant also submits that the court erred in not allowing her to testify in Spanish so the jury could compare her intonation in the language used on the tape recording. We note that our court proceedings are conducted in English,
State v. Cordova,
The second point raised by appellant is that the evidence is insufficient to sustain a verdict of theft by false pretenses. In order to prove defendant guilty, the State had to show that she made false statements or representations and took the victim’s money with the felonious intent to permanently deprive him of it.
State v. Joseph,
Appellant’s third argument is that she was not afforded effective assistance of counsel. She bases her charge on four grounds: (1) counsel’s failure to
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prevent the admission of exhibits; (2) counsel’s lack of preparation to show the voice on the tape was not his client’s; (3) counsel’s failure to move for a judgment of acquittal; and (4) counsel’s failure to move for a new trial. Appellant’s trial counsel has submitted an affidavit saying it was due to his neglect and oversight that he did not submit a written motion for a new trial in accordance with Rule 24.1, Rules of Criminal Procedure. Appellant’s present counsel on appeal claims that this, along with the other allegations of incompetency, together deny appellant her right to the effective assistance of counsel. However, the test to be used is whether the assistance of counsel was so ineffective as to turn the defense into a farce or a sham.
State v. Swingle,
The last point raised is whether the trial court, in the exercise of its power to sentence, abused its discretion by ordering the appellant to make full restitution by June, 1975. It is true that probation is a matter of grace, not right,
State v. Goodloe,
