The defendant excepted to the denial of his motion to quash three indictments alleging violations of RSA 159:2 (Supp. 1975) which provides: “If any person shall commit or attempt to commit a crime when armed with a pistol or revolver, he shall, in addition to the punishment provided for the crime, be guilty of a class B felony .... The additional sentence of imprisonment hereby provided shall not be served concurrently with any other term; and no part of such additional term of imprisonment shall be suspended ....” The defendant contends that the constitutional prohibition of double jeopardy and the constitutional right of due process preclude his trial on these charges.
The three indictments in this case, which were returned in April 1974, accuse the defendant of acts which were also charged in three earlier indictments returned in January 1974. Two of the January indictments charged that the defendant had committed
Thereafter the defendant moved that his sentences be made concurrent as required by RSA 651:3 III (repealed Laws 1975, 158:2, effective July 25, 1975), and the court so ordered on March 1, 1974. The county attorney was not satisfied with the sentence thus imposed and secured the three indictments in the present case. Each of these indictments charge the commission of an offense charged in one of the January indictments with the additional allegation that the defendant was armed with a pistol when he committed the offense. The defendant moved to dismiss these indictments. The Court (Keller, C.J.) denied the motion, and the defendant pleaded guilty to each of the indictments, reserving his right to challenge them on appeal. The court deferred sentencing and reserved and transferred the defendant’s exceptions.
The prosecutor knew the facts on which the present charges are based at the time that the defendant pleaded guilty to the first three indictments. Nothing prevented the prosecutor from seeking the present indictments then. The submission and acceptance of the defendant’s pleas to the first three indictments must have contemplated that no further charges would be brought, for the defendant by his pleas deprived himself of any meaningful defense to the present charges.
State v. Thomas,
“From an examination of the record. .. we are convinced that the defendant anticipated that by pleading guilty to atrocious as
The. prosecutor is not entitled to dissolve an executed bargain or to vacate a guilty plea when he discovers that the bargain is unexpectedly advantageous to the defendant.
United States v. Hallam,
A defendant potentially facing multiple charges arising from a single transaction may not escape prosecution on all simply by pleading guilty to one, in the absence of an express or reasonably implied agreement with the prosecutor. See ABA Standards Relating to Criminal Justice, Joinder and Severance § 1.3 (d) (Approved Draft, 1968); cf. RSA 651:4 II (Supp. 1975; Laws 1971, 158:1). Where the defendant commits several offenses in a single transaction and the prosecutor has knowledge of and jurisdiction over all these offenses and the defendant disposes of all charges then pending by a guilty plea to one or more of the charges, the prosecutor may not prefer additional charges arising from the same transaction unless either he has given notice on the record at the time of the plea of the possibility that he may prefer further charges or the defendant otherwise knows or ought reasonably to expect that further charges may be brought.
Defendant’s exceptions sustained; indictments dismissed.
