Holly Dawn Tindall (“defendant”) appeals from judgments entered upon revocation of her probation. We reverse and remand.
On 21 November 2011, defendant pled guilty to forgery of an instrument, uttering a forged instrument, obtaining property by false pretenses, obtaining controlled substance (“CS”) by fraud, financial transaction card theft, three counts of financial transaction card fraud, and three counts of larceny. The court found, and defendant admitted to, an aggravating factor, namely that defendant committed the offenses while on pretrial release from another charge. The trial court sentenced defendant to a minimum of eight and a maximum of ten months for one count of larceny. Defendant was placed on supervised probation for sixty months. The trial court consolidated defendant’s sentences for obtaining CS by fraud, three counts of financial card fraud, financial card theft, forgery of an instrument, uttering a forged instrument and two counts of larceny. Defendant was sentenced to a minimum of eight and a maximum of ten months. For obtaining property by false pretenses, defendant was sentenced to a minimum of eight and a maximum of ten months. Defendant was ordered to comply with the conditions set forth in the previous sentence. All sentences were suspended, were to run consecutively and were to be served in the North Carolina Department of Correction. One of the conditions of defendant’s probation was that she was to comply with a substance abuse program at a facility called Crystal Lake.
Defendant was admitted to the Crystal Lake treatment facility on 28 January 2012. Defendant’s probation officer (“PO”) was contacted in February, after defendant was caught “partying” with other residents. Defendant admitted to snorting ten lines of cocaine. At the time defendant was arrested, the PO found a diet pill on defendant’s person. On 23 February 2012, the PO filed
At the probation revocation hearing in Moore County Superior Court, defendant’s PO testified that defendant had been “arrested.” The trial court found that defendant “did unlawfully willfully without legal justification violate [] the terms and conditions of her probation as alleged in the violation report, and the [c]ourt specifically [found] that she [] committed a subsequent offense while on probation.” The trial court then activated defendant’s suspended sentences, with modifications. The trial court sentenced defendant to three consecutive sentences of a minimum of six and a maximum of eight months in the North Carolina Division of Adult Correction. Defendant appeals.
Defendant contends that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to enter judgments revoking defendant’s probation on the basis of a probation violation that was not alleged in the violation report and of which she was not given notice. We agree.
Pursuant to statute, “probation may be reduced, terminated, continued, extended, modified, or revoked....” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1344(a) (2011). The Justice Reinvestment Act of 2011 (“the Act”) amended the statutes governing probation revocation. See State v. Jones, _ N.C. App. _, _,
Prior to revocation of probation, the court must hold a hearing, “unless the probationer waives the hearing....” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1345(e) (2011). “The State must give the probationer notice of the [probation revocation] hearing and its purpose, including a statement of the violations alleged.” Id. “The notice, unless waived by the probationer, must be given at least 24 hours before the hearing.” Id. “The purpose of the notice mandated by this section is to allow the defendant to prepare a defense and to protect the defendant from a second probation violation hearing for the same act.” State v. Hubbard,
This Court has reversed revocation of a defendant’s probation when the revocation was based, in part, on a violation for which defendant had no notice. State v. Cunningham,
In the instant case, the violation reports alleged that defendant violated two conditions of her probation: to “[n]ot use, possess or control any illegal drug” and to “participate in further evaluation, counseling, treatment or education programs recommended ... and comply with all further therapeutic requirements....” The specific facts upon which the State relied were that “defendant admitted to using 10 lines of cocaine while at Cosa Works Treatment Center on 2/19/2012” and that defendant failed to comply with treatment as ordered. In the judgments, the trial court found that defendant violated the conditions alleged in the violation reports and that defendant’s probation was revoked “for the willful violation of the conditions) that he/she not commit any criminal offense ... or abscond from supervision ....”
Defendant contends that Cunningham controls because the violation reports alleged that defendant violated her probation by using illegal drugs and failing to comply with treatment requirements, but her probation was revoked because she committed a criminal offense. Therefore, according to Cunningham, her judgments must be reversed. According to the reasoning in Hubbard, cited by the State, defendant had notice of conduct that potentially supported the revocation of her probation: use of illegal drugs. However, since Hubbard was decided prior to the Justice Reinvestment Act, we hold that it does not control in the instant case.
Here, although defendant received notice that she violated conditions of her probation, by using illegal drugs and failing to comply with treatment requirements, such violations do not support a revocation of her probation. See Jones, _ N.C. App. at _,
Reversed and Remanded.
