Court Opinion

ID: 9898833
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-11-15 15:04:00.99558+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:18:35.000405
License: Public Domain

Cite as 2023 Ark. App. 526
                     ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
                                      DIVISION IV
                                      No. CR-23-245

                                              Opinion Delivered November 15, 2023
 HUGHEY BROOKS
                              APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE WASHINGTON
                                        COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
 V.                                     [NOS. 72CR-18-2086; 72CR-18-370;
                                        72CR-18-1185; 72CR-18-1217; 72CR-18-
                                        1657; 72CR-19-496; 72CR-19-594; 72CR-
 STATE OF ARKANSAS                      19-600; 72CR-19-1228]
                               APPELLEE
                                        HONORABLE MARK LINDSAY,
                                        JUDGE

                                              AFFIRMED; REMANDED TO
                                              CORRECT SENTENCING ORDER

                          N. MARK KLAPPENBACH, Judge

       Hughey Brooks appeals the order of the Washington County Circuit Court revoking

his probation. We affirm the revocation and remand to correct the sentencing order.

       In 2019, Brooks entered a negotiated plea in eight felony cases and was sentenced to

six years’ suspended imposition of sentence (SIS) on each count. In 2020, he pleaded guilty

to two counts in a ninth case, No. 72CR-19-1228, and was placed on four years’ probation.

A revocation hearing was held in January 2023, wherein the State sought to revoke Brooks’s

SIS and probation.
       At the beginning of the hearing, the State introduced several exhibits, including a file-

marked copy of the conditions of Brooks’s probation, which was signed by Brooks. The

exhibit was admitted without objection. Brooks’s probation officer testified regarding several

of the conditions of probation Brooks had violated and testified that Brooks was aware of

those conditions. Brooks testified that he had used drugs in 2021, and he admitted that the

use of drugs was a violation of his probation. The circuit court revoked Brooks’s probation

and SIS and sentenced him to an aggregate of thirty years’ imprisonment.

       On appeal, Brooks contends that there was insufficient evidence to revoke his

probation because it was not clear that the circuit court knew the conditions of probation or

knew that Brooks had knowledge of the conditions. He raised a variation of this argument

below. We find no merit in this argument because, as noted above, the signed conditions

of probation were admitted into evidence, and Brooks’s probation officer testified that

Brooks violated known conditions. Accordingly, we affirm the revocation of Brooks’s

probation.

       Although we affirm the revocation, we must remand for correction of a scrivener’s

error in the amended sentencing order. Offenses two through seven and offense ten

incorrectly state that Brooks entered a negotiated plea of guilty in addition to being found

guilty by the court and sentenced by the court. Therefore, we remand for the circuit court

to correct the sentencing order. See Palmer v. State, 2023 Ark. App. 178, at 7, 663 S.W.3d

436, 441.

       Affirmed; remanded to correct sentencing order.

                                               2
HARRISON, C.J., and BARRETT, J., agree.

Trent T. Thomas, for appellant.

Tim Griffin, Att’y Gen., by: David L. Eanes, Jr., Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.

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