Torrance Juarez Jenkins v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedDecember 17, 2019
Docket1428184
StatusPublished

This text of Torrance Juarez Jenkins v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Torrance Juarez Jenkins v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Torrance Juarez Jenkins v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Humphreys and Russell Argued at Leesburg, Virginia PUBLISHED

TORRANCE JUAREZ JENKINS OPINION BY v. Record No. 1428-18-4 CHIEF JUDGE MARLA GRAFF DECKER DECEMBER 17, 2019 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF STAFFORD COUNTY Michael E. Levy, Judge

Cole Dadswell, Assistant Public Defender, for appellant.

Liam A. Curry, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Torrance Juarez Jenkins appeals a ruling of the circuit court revoking his suspended

sentence for two theft offenses.1 He contends that the trial court violated his due process rights

by admitting testimonial hearsay contained in a report. We hold that the court’s admission of the

report for sentencing purposes in the instant proceeding was not error. Consequently, we affirm

the revocation of the suspended portion of the appellant’s sentence.

I. BACKGROUND2

The appellant was convicted in 2003 for obtaining money by false pretenses and uttering

a forged check, in violation of Code §§ 18.2-172 and -178. He was sentenced to a total of twenty

1 The circuit court rendered separate sentences for these offenses but imposed the same terms and conditions on both suspensions and treated the sentences as unitary in all subsequent proceedings. As a result, this opinion refers to the appellant’s suspended sentences as a single unit. 2 On appeal of the revocation of a suspended sentence, the appellate court reviews the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the party who prevailed below. Jacobs v. Commonwealth, 61 Va. App. 529, 535 (2013). years in prison with fourteen years suspended. The suspension was conditioned, among other

things, on twenty years of good behavior and an indefinite period of supervised probation. In

2010, 2014, and 2018, the appellant was found to have violated the terms and conditions of his

suspended sentence. It is from the 2018 violation that he appeals, and he challenges the

admission of evidence from the 2010 proceeding in the 2018 revocation hearing.

A. The 2010 Revocation Proceeding

In a 2009 letter, Susan Sokol, a senior probation officer for District 21 in Fredericksburg,

notified the Commonwealth’s Attorney that she sought the issuance of a show cause order

against the appellant for violating his probation. In her 2009 letter and a 2010 addendum

(collectively the 2010 report), Sokol notified the court that the appellant violated his probation in

three different ways.

First, the appellant tested positive for cocaine use in April 2009, and he admitted having

used the drug four days earlier. Second, the appellant absconded from supervision. Sokol

reported that after his April 2009 visit to the District 21 probation office, she worked with

District 32 to make a home contact at the address that the appellant had provided for himself in

Henrico County. Sokol detailed some of the specific efforts that she personally took to try to

reach him, as well as “notice” provided by District 32 “that they attempted a[] home contact” in

July 2009 and were told by the appellant’s aunt that he no longer lived there. Sokol then

checked the local hospital, as well as the Virginia jails, and determined that his “whereabouts

[were] unknown.” Sokol concluded that the appellant had violated the condition of his

suspended sentence that he could “not abscond from supervision” and would be “considered an

absconder when [his] whereabouts [were] no longer known to [his] supervising officer.” Third,

Sokol related that the appellant had been arrested on new misdemeanor charges. The existence

of these new charges was confirmed by the appellant’s criminal history record.

-2- In the 2010 revocation proceeding, the appellant “pleaded guilty” to “having violated the

terms and conditions of . . . [the] suspension.” The court accepted the appellant’s

acknowledgment of guilt. After receiving evidence and hearing argument, it revoked his

previously suspended fourteen-year sentence and resuspended thirteen years, giving him a year

to serve.

B. The 2014 Revocation Proceeding

In 2014, the court held a second revocation proceeding based on a new violation. After

hearing evidence and argument, the court found that the appellant had again violated the terms of

his suspended sentence. It revoked his previously suspended thirteen-year sentence, imposed

one year, and resuspended the remaining twelve years.

C. The 2018 Revocation Proceeding

The court held a third revocation hearing in 2018. The appellant “conced[ed] the

violation,” and the court accepted his “plea.” The prosecutor then offered, specifically as

“evidence . . . on the issue of sentence,” the appellant’s criminal history report and his 2010

probation violation report.3 (Emphasis added). The appellant objected to the admission of the

report on testimonial hearsay grounds. He also argued that considering the 2010 report again in

the 2018 proceeding would constitute inappropriately “holding the same behavior against him on

multiple occasions.”

The court admitted the 2010 report. It did so based in part on a finding that the

appellant’s acknowledgment of guilt in 2010 amounted to a “concession of [the report’s]

reliability.” The judge noted that he would not “sentenc[e] the [appellant] again for the previous

violations.” He specifically mentioned that one of the allegations in the 2010 report was

3 The Commonwealth also offered the appellant’s 2014 probation violation report, but the court did not admit it because the order did not “ma[k]e clear” whether the appellant “contested” the matter or “conce[ded]” the violation. -3- absconding and “that[ was] one of the violations [in the 2018] case as well.” However, he

assured the appellant that he merely “want[ed] to see whether the behavior indicated [was] the

same, better, [or] worse” and that he would consider the prior violations only “in the sense that

they accumulate.”

The court then heard argument from the parties regarding sentencing, which included

general comments about the appellant’s recidivism. After argument, the court noted the

appellant’s criminal history of almost thirty years and imposed the four years recommended by

“[t]he guidelines . . . for this case, not for the previous violations.” Clarifying the ruling, the

court revoked the twelve years remaining on the appellant’s sentence, imposed four years, and

resuspended the remaining eight years. It imposed the same terms and conditions on the

suspended sentence, except that it removed the condition of probation.

II. ANALYSIS

The appellant argues that the admission of the 2010 report in the 2018 proceeding was

error. He asserts that although a defendant is entitled to less protection against the admission of

testimonial hearsay at a revocation hearing than at a trial, he should nevertheless have been

allowed some degree of confrontation. He suggests that the fact that he conceded at the 2010

hearing that he had violated the conditions of his suspended sentence, standing alone, was

inadequate to establish the degree of reliability required to admit the 2010 report in the 2018

proceeding over his objection.

A. Standard of Review on Appeal

An appellate court reviews evidence relevant to an admissibility issue “in the light most

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