Owen v. State
This text of 601 P.2d 257 (Owen v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
OPINION
This is a sentence appeal.
The appellant pleaded nolo contendere to the offense of armed robbery in violation of AS 11.15.2401 and AS 11.15.295.2 He was sentenced to thirteen years imprisonment, with three years suspended and with appellant to be placed on probation during the suspended period.3
The appellant and his co-defendant, Gerald Putnam, entered a drug store in Anchorage in January of 1978. After Putnam held the pharmacist at gun point, the robbers took about $396 and six bottles of narcotic drugs from the premises.
The record in this case reveals that at the time of sentencing the appellant was twenty-five years old. He had worked primarily as a truck driver. He had used heroin first in 1972, after having been given other opiates in connection with medical treatment. In 1977 he started to use dilaudid, when he could obtain it, as a substitute for heroin.
In 1972 appellant was convicted of robbery and was placed on probation for three years, with ninety days to serve. He also was convicted of shoplifting in 1977.
[258]*258In this appeal, appellant contends that the sentence imposed on him was excessive, that the superior court was clearly mistaken in characterizing him as a consistent perpetrator of this type of crime, that appellant’s potential for rehabilitation was not adequately considered by the court, that armed robbery was basically a crime against property, and that appellant’s severe drug dependence or addiction, which caused him to commit robbery, should be a mitigating factor in determining his sentence.
After reviewing the record, we find appellant’s arguments to be unpersuasive, either because they are not borne out by the record or because they are not legally persuasive. It appears to us that the superior court properly applied the principles developed in our earlier decisions,4 that the court properly evaluated the various sentencing objectives, and that the court was not clearly mistaken in imposing the sentence that it did. McClain v. State, 519 P.2d 811, 814 (Alaska 1974).
AFFIRMED.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
601 P.2d 257, 1979 Alas. LEXIS 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owen-v-state-alaska-1979.