State v. Bouffard

35 A.3d 909, 2012 R.I. LEXIS 7, 2012 WL 124165
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 17, 2012
DocketNo. 2009-343-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 35 A.3d 909 (State v. Bouffard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bouffard, 35 A.3d 909, 2012 R.I. LEXIS 7, 2012 WL 124165 (R.I. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

Justice INDEGLIA,

for the Court.

George Bouffard (Bouffard or defendant) appeals from an order partly denying his motion to correct his sentence under Rule 35 of the Superior Court Rules of Criminal Procedure. On appeal, the defendant challenges the resulting restructure of his sentencing package by the hearing justice upon the determination that the particular sentence at issue was either illegal or illegally imposed. This case came before the Supreme Court for oral argument on October 27, 2011, pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be summarily decided. After reviewing the record and considering the parties’ written and oral submissions, we are satisfied that cause has not been shown, and we proceed to decide the appeal without further briefing or argument. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the order of the Superi- or Court.

I

Facts and Travel

An analysis of Bouffard’s arguments on appeal requires review of the charges, convictions, pleas and sentences that have shaped his criminal history and accompanying sentencing profile over the last two decades.

A

Bouffard’s Criminal History

On September 23, 1991, Bouffard entered pleas of nolo contendere to charges of aiding and abetting and conspiracy to commit extortion in Superior Court case number P2/91-1454A (the 1991 case). As to the charge of aiding and abetting, the court imposed a sentence of fifteen years, the first six years to serve and the remaining nine years suspended, with nine years of probation. In regard to the conspiracy charge, the court imposed a sentence of ten years, defendant to serve six years, with four years suspended and four years of probation. The court directed that the sentences run concurrently and apply retroactively to April 10, 1991. Bouffard served his six-year term of incarceration imposed in the 1991 case at the Adult Correctional Institutions (ACI) and was released in April 1997.

Within three months of his release, Bouffard was arrested and charged with breaking and entering into a dwelling. As a result of this charge, Bouffard was presented in the Superior Court on July 29, 1997, as a violator of his probation originating from the 1991 case. Ultimately, Bouffard waived a violation hearing and, on the breaking-and-entering charge, he entered a plea of nolo contendere on September 12, 1997, in Superior Court case number P2/97-3061A (the 1997 case), resulting in the imposition of a ten-year sentence — three years to serve and seven years suspended, with seven years of probation to commence upon his release from the ACI.1 On that date, the sentencing justice also continued Bouffard on the same sentence imposed in the 1991 case.

[912]*912The record reflects that Bouffard served his time incurred from the 1997 case and was released from the ACI. Soon thereafter, however, Bouffard again was arrested and charged with breaking and entering as the result of an incident occurring on June 21, 2000. The state consequently presented Bouffard as a violator of his probation terms imposed in both the 1991 case and the 1997 case in a violation notice filed July 18, 2000, pursuant to Rule 32(f) of the Superior Court Rules of Criminal Procedure.2 Bouffard pled not guilty to the underlying breaking-and-entering charge in Superior Court case number P2/00-2368A (the 2000 case), but nonetheless was adjudged a violator of his suspended and probationary sentences in May 2001. Specifically, the Superior Court justice determined that Bouffard violated the sentences associated with the 1991 case and removed the suspension on the nine remaining years, committing him to serve six of those nine years, with the rest suspended. As to the 1997 case, the hearing justice continued Bouffard on the same sentence, which at that time comprised seven years remaining suspended. After Bouffard received this six-year sentence, the Superior Court allowed him to withdraw his original plea of not guilty in the 2000 case and enter a plea of nolo contendere. In consideration of this plea, Bouffard, on October 9, 2001, received a fifteen-year sentence, with six years to serve and nine years suspended, with nine years of probation.3

After serving six years at the ACI for the June 2000 crime, Bouffard was released, only to find himself faced with yet another breaking-and-entering charge in July 2006.4 In view of that allegation, the state filed a Rule 32(f) notice of violation on July 5, 2006, contending that Bouffard violated the terms and conditions of his probation imposed in both the 1997 case and the 2000 case. A violation hearing— presided over by a magistrate of the Superior Court — ensued over the course of two days in December 2006. During the hearing, the state presented several witnesses, and the magistrate ultimately determined that Bouffard had violated the terms of his probation by failing to keep the peace and be of good behavior as a result of his conduct on the day of the incident. Thereafter, the magistrate sentenced Bouffard as a violator, removing the suspension on the seven years remaining in the 1997 case and continuing him on the same sentence in the 2000 case. During Bouffard’s sentencing, the prosecutor requested that the nine years suspended on the 2000 case likewise be removed; however, the magistrate denied this request and expressed his [913]*913intent that the court “have * * * a hold on [Bouffard] when he gets finished with [the seven-year] sentence.” Following this adjudication of probation violation, Bouffard appealed to this Court in State v. Bouffard, 945 A.2d 305, 306 (R.I.2008), challenging the authority of the magistrate and the sufficiency of the evidence presented against him. This Court affirmed the judgment of the Superior Court. Id. at 313.

Prior to this Court’s affirmance of Bouf-fard’s violation in 2008, the state, on April 3, 2007, dismissed the underlying breaking-and-entering charge set forth in the 2006 case.5 Two days later, Bouffard timely filed a pro se motion under Rule 35 to correct what he alleged to be an illegal sentence imposed in the 1997 case.6 After several continuances while Bouffard’s appeal to this Court was pending, and after the appointment of counsel,7 Bouffard’s Rule 35 motion was heard by a Superior Court justice on April 3, 2009. Specifically, Bouffard requested that the Superior Court correct the sentence imposed by the magistrate as a result of Bouffard’s 2006 probation violation because the suspension that the magistrate removed from the seven-year sentence in the 1997 case was no longer available for revocation at that time. Bouffard argued that, when the hearing justice removed the suspension on the sentence in the 1991 case and committed him to six years of incarceration (upon finding Bouffard a violator based on the June 2000 incident), that hearing justice should also have removed the suspension on six years from his concurrently running seven-year suspended sentence in the 1997 case. Thus, according to Bouffard’s calculations, only one year suspended actually remained on the 1997 case upon his completion of the six-year sentence at the ACI in 2006.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 A.3d 909, 2012 R.I. LEXIS 7, 2012 WL 124165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bouffard-ri-2012.