The defendant, Elizabeth Flood, appeals a ruling of the Superior Court (Abramson, J.) denying her motion to continue a hearing to impose a suspended sentence until after the disposition of collateral criminal proceedings. We affirm.
The record supports the following. In May 2007, the defendant pled guilty to the misdemeanor of operating after suspension, RSA 263:64 (Supp. 2007) (amended 2008). The trial court sentenced the defendant to ninety days in the house of corrections, deferred for one year conditioned upon her good behavior. Near the end of the deferral period, the defendant could petition the court to show why the deferred commitment should be suspended, which she did in April 2008. The State objected to the defendant’s petition and moved to impose the suspended sentence because a Derry police officer had arrested her in May 2008 for operating after being certified as a habitual offender.
At the hearing on the motion to impose sentence, the defendant moved for a continuance until the criminal charges arising from the May 2008 arrest were resolved. The trial court denied the motion, and proceeded with the hearing. The trial court heard testimony from the officer who arrested the defendant in May 2008. The defendant chose not to testify. After *355 hearing the evidence and arguments from counsel, the trial court imposed the suspended sentence and ordered the defendant to serve the underlying ninety days.
On appeal, the defendant contends that the trial court’s denial of her motion to continue the hearing until after her criminal trial violated due process. Specifically, she asserts that the trial court’s ruling unconstitutionally forced her to choose between two due process rights: her right to testify at the imposition hearing and her right to remain silent at the trial in the criminal proceeding. We disagree. We first address this argument under the State Constitution and cite federal opinions for guidance only.
State v. Ball,
There is no question that a defendant has a due process right to a hearing before a court can impose a suspended or deferred sentence of incarceration.
Stapleford v. Perrin,
We recognize that the decision whether to remain silent or to testify on one’s own behalf becomes particularly acute when the trial court holds an imposition hearing prior to a related criminal prosecution. The defendant must weigh whether to testify and risk incrimination in the underlying criminal prosecution, or to remain silent and be exposed to an adverse decision, including imprisonment. By remaining silent, the defendant cannot personally present mitigating circumstances at the imposition hearing or personally deny committing the alleged violations. While difficult, this decision is a strategic one. This choice does not force the defendant to make an impermissible election between two constitutional rights.
See State v. Hearns,
*356
Contrary to the defendant’s assertion, our decision in
State v. Burgess,
The strategic choice the defendant faces here is similar to the decision a defendant must make whether to testify or remain silent at a probable cause hearing. In Williams, we held that a defendant’s testimony at a probable cause hearing was admissible at a subsequent trial because a defendant is under no constitutional compulsion to testify at the probable cause hearing. Id. at 442 (“Although a defendant may have a right, even of constitutional dimensions, to follow whichever course he chooses, the Constitution does not by that token forbid requiring him to choose.”).
Indeed, no court that has recently addressed this issue has found the tension between one’s right to testify at an imposition or revocation hearing and one’s right to remain silent to be of constitutional magnitude or import.
See, e.g., Coleman,
At most, several jurisdictions have held that the practice of holding a revocation or imposition proceeding prior to the disposition of the related
*357
criminal charges adversely affects the public “policies underlying the privilege against self-incrimination.”
Coleman,
The defendant, here, advances only a constitutional argument. She did not preserve an argument based upon public policy at the trial court level and, therefore, we do not decide today whether public policy would dictate a grant of use immunity. We do note that a trial court cannot grant use immunity
sua sponte
under the immunity statutes; the power to give use immunity lies with the State.
See, e.g., State v. Rogers,
Nevertheless, for constitutional purposes, all that matters is whether the defendant had the option to testify at her imposition hearing. Here, she did. Even though she chose not to testify, she retained her rights to cross-examine the State’s witnesses and to present evidence and witnesses in her own defense.
See Stapleford,
The Federal Constitution offers the defendant no greater protection than does the State Constitution under these circumstances.
See Flint,
Affirmed.
