Thе defendant, Daniel Matton, appeals the order of the Superior Court {Brown, J.) denying his motion to preclude the State from seeking an extended term of incarceration under RSA 651:6,11(a) (2007). We affirm.
I
The relevant facts are not in dispute. In 1998, the defendant was convicted of arson and sentenced to seven and оne-half to fifteen years in state prison, all suspended, and five years of probation. In 1999, the *412 defendant was found to have violated the terms of his probаtion, and was ordered to serve three and one-half to seven years at the prison. In 2002, the defendant was convicted of assault by a prisoner, and was sentenced to prison for one and one-half to three years.
On December 13, 2010, the defendant pleaded guilty to one count of second degrеe assault. The State, pursuant to a capped plea agreement, indicated its intent to request an extended term of incarceration under RSA 651:6, 11(a) (2007) based upon the defendant’s prior record. The defendant moved to preclude the application of RSA 651:6,11(a), arguing that he had only one quаlifying prior conviction (that for assault by a prisoner) because his imprisonment on the arson charge resulted from a probation violation rather than from the original, suspended, sentence he received on the arson conviction. The superior court denied the motion, ruling that the defendant had served two terms of imprisonment within the meaning of the statute.
On appeal, the defendant argues that he cannot be sentenced to an extended term оf imprisonment under RSA 651:6, 11(a) because (1) the language of the statute is ambiguous, thus entitling him to benefit from the rule of lenity, and (2) the statute is unconstitutionally vague.
II
RSA 651:6,11(a) provides:
A convictеd person may be sentenced [to an extended term of imprisonment] if the court finds, and includes such findings in the record, that such person:
(a) Has twice been convicted in this state, or in another jurisdiction, on sentences in excess of one year.
We first address the defendant’s contention that RSA 651:6, 11(a) is ambiguous. We are the final arbiters of legislative intent as expressed in the words of the statute considered as a whole.
State v. Beauchemin,
*413
The defendant argues that the “convicted ... on sentences” phrase in RSA 651:6, 11(a) rendеrs the statutory language “not simply ambiguous, but incomprehensible.” For support, the defendant relies primarily on our opinion in
State v. Dansereau,
Our review of the legislative history in
Dansereau
showed that prior to 2003, the statutory scheme permitted a trial court to impose an extended term of imprisonmеnt if it found any of several factors, one of which being that the defendant had “twice previously been
imprisoned,
in this state or in any other jurisdiction,
on sentences in excess of one
year.” RSA 651:6, 1(c) (2002) (emphases added);
see Dansereau,
The purpose of the 2003 amendments was to bring RSA 651:6 into compliance with the United States Supreme Court’s decisiоn in
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
Just as we did in Dansereau, we note again today that the “convicted ... on sentences” phrase within RSA 651:6,11(a) is сonfusing. A person cannot be convicted on sentences; rather, he is convicted of a crime and then sentenced on that conviction. Nonetheless, we сonclude that, as construed in Dansereau, RSA 651:6, 11(a) does not support the defendant’s position that he cannot be sentenced to an extended term of imprisonmеnt in this case.
As discussed above, we made it clear in
Dansereau
that the legislature did not substantively amend RSA 651:6, 11(a) in 2003. Despite the change from “imprisoned” to “convicted,” RSA 651:6,11(a), as it stands today, still requires a trial court to find, before it imposes an extended term of incarceration, that the defendant (1) was previously
imprisoned
twice, resulting from (2) sentences in excess of one year.
See id.
at 599;
see also State v. Scognamiglio,
Unlike the defendant in Dansereau, who had not been imрrisoned on his suspended sentences, the defendant here served two terms of imprisonment resulting from sentences in excess of one year. Prior to his 2010 cоnviction of second degree assault, the defendant was convicted in 2002 of assault by a prisoner and was sentenced to serve a term of imprisonment of one and one-half to three years. He also was convicted of arson in 1998, and although he initially received a suspended sentence and probation on that conviction, he later violated his probation and was imprisoned on a sentence of three and one-half to seven years in prison. The defendant, therefore, was imprisoned twice as a result of his two prior convictions.
Cf. State v. Hammett,
*415 III
The defendant also argues that RSA 651:6, 11(a) is void because it is unconstitutionally vague. The defendant did not raise this constitutional argument before the superior court, however, and we therefore conclude that it has not been preserved for our review.
See State v. Moscone,
Affirmed.
