253 A.2d 671 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1969
The defendant pleaded guilty to a charge of using a motor vehicle without the owner's permission in violation of General Statutes §
Although the records of the court and the motor vehicle department indicate that the defendant was seventeen years old at the time of sentencing, he stated at the hearing on this application that he was twenty years old.
On August 27, 1968, at about 10 p.m., a police officer observed a car operating at a high rate of speed and gave chase. The car struck three vehicles on Winchester Street, New Haven. Apparently the defendant was not the operator of the car, but he was one of the occupants, the other two being juveniles of eleven and fourteen years. The defendant claimed that he had accepted a ride home from the two juveniles, who had taken the car previously. It was not claimed that the defendant did not realize the car was being used without the owner's permission.
The defendant's criminal record showed three prior convictions for using a motor vehicle without the owner's permission during the five-month period preceding his first confinement in the reformatory, on September 21, 1967, for this offense. He was paroled on June 28, 1968, about two months before his arrest in the instant case.
The defendant's juvenile record included referrals for theft of money from a bakery, a bicycle, bicycle parts taken from bicycles parked at Yale University, fighting, striking a teacher, and several purse snatchings from women. He was given a suspended sentence to the Meriden school for boys on February 7, 1966, as a result of the latter escapades.
The defendant's father and mother are divorced or separated, and the defendant has been raised by his mother with four sisters. He has a poor school record both scholastically and in deportment. Psychiatric examinations made because of earlier difficulties indicate some personality disorder. *139
The defendant was regarded as a poor prospect for probation by the probation officer. It is interesting to note the criticism in this officer's report of the decision to retain jurisdiction in the Circuit Court rather than bind the case over to the Superior Court, in view of the number of previous violations of the same statute, which would subject the defendant to the charge of being a repetitive offender with a maximum term of fifteen years. General Statutes §
Although we have remarked that "in the absence of highly extraordinary circumstances . . . a person committed to the reformatory ought not to be held in confinement longer than the statutory maximum term for the particular offense involved";State v. Brezina,
It is clear that the statutes authorize detention in the reformatory for a maximum of two years where the maximum punishment for the offense involved is a jail sentence of one year. General Statutes §§
In a case involving the same question, the federal Youth Corrections Act, which permits indeterminate sentences not exceeding four years for misdemeanors carrying a one-year penalty;
The sentence is affirmed.
BARBER, WALL and SHEA, JS., participated in this decision.