Court Opinion

ID: 2739801
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-10-03 21:04:57.321849+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:19:39.526266
License: Public Domain

REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

          OF MARYLAND

               No. 2211

        September Term, 2012

           MARIO SIBUG

                  v.

      STATE OF MARYLAND

   Krauser, C.J.,
   Wright,
   Rodowsky, Lawrence F.
     (Retired, Specially Assigned),

                  JJ.

       Opinion by Krauser, C.J.

       Filed: October 2, 2014
       In 1999, Mario Sibug, appellant, was charged with multiple counts of assault and

related handgun offenses,1 all of which arose out of a single incident. That same year, he

pleaded not guilty, in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, to those charges and alleged

that he was not competent to stand trial. The Baltimore County circuit court subsequently

ordered him committed to the Clifton T. Perkins Hospital Center (“Perkins”) for inpatient

care and treatment. There, he remained for the next four years until Perkins, in a letter to the

circuit court, expressed its view that Sibug was now competent to stand trial.

       In May of 2004, Sibug was transported from Perkins to the courthouse, where he

entered a plea of not guilty, on an agreed statement of facts, to the 1999 charge of

second-degree assault, and was sentenced to a term of four-and-a-half years’ imprisonment

on that charge. A year later, however, the circuit court vacated his conviction and sentence,

concluding that Sibug’s trial counsel had rendered ineffective assistance of counsel by not

informing him of the immigration consequences of his assault conviction, and granted Sibug

a new trial.

       Sibug was retried in September of 2008. After a jury found him guilty of multiple

counts of assault, using a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence, and giving

minors access to a firearm, he was sentenced to a term of ten years’ imprisonment. Although

Sibug did not note an appeal from his convictions, three years later he did file a petition for

       1
        Sibug was charged with three counts of first-degree assault, two counts of
second-degree assault, three counts of reckless endangerment, one count of using a handgun
in the commission of a crime of violence, and one count of permitting a minor access to a
firearm.
post-conviction relief and was thereafter granted the right to file a belated appeal. Having

done so, he now presents two questions for our consideration. Rephrased to facilitate review,

they are:

               I. Was Sibug’s right to due process of law violated by the
               court’s failure to determine, prior to his new trial, that he was
               competent to stand trial?

               II. Did the trial court err in finding, at the sentencing hearing
               following Sibug’s new trial, that he was competent to stand
               trial?

       Finding no merit to either contention, we affirm.

                                         Background

       In October of 1998, Sibug called his five children to the kitchen table. When the

family had gathered as demanded, Sibug pulled out a handgun and pointed it at each of his

children, and then “cock[ed]” it to demonstrate that it was loaded. He then instructed his

frightened children that they were to stop acting “rebellious” and were to respect his authority

as their father.

       A month later, Sibug’s fifteen-year-old son called the police to report this incident.

He told them that Sibug, after becoming angry with him and his siblings, had pointed a gun

at him and that he was afraid that his father was going to kill him. When Baltimore County

police subsequently arrested Sibug, they found a handgun, as well as an assault rifle, lying

on shelves in Sibug’s bedroom at the family’s residence. Both guns were in cases, but

neither case was locked and both weapons were loaded and fully operable. Sibug was

                                               2
ultimately charged with multiple counts of both first-degree assault and second-degree

assault, reckless endangerment, and using a handgun in the commission of a crime of

violence, as well as permitting a minor access to a firearm.

       When Sibug subsequently alleged that he was not competent to stand trial, the

Baltimore County circuit court ordered the State Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

(“the Department”) to examine Sibug.2 In accordance with that order, Sibug was admitted

to Perkins for evaluation on November 2, 1999.

       A little more than a month later, Perkins sent a letter and a “competency evaluation”

of Sibug to the circuit court. In that evaluation, Perkins opined that Sibug was not competent

to stand trial and was suffering from a mental disorder that rendered him “dangerous” to

himself and others. The evaluation further disclosed that Sibug believed that his children

were “bad” and “lawless” in spite of his “godly instruction,” and that he had decided to

discipline his children according to the Bible and “God’s law.” Perkins ultimately diagnosed

Sibug as suffering from both a “Delusional Disorder, Mixed Type” and a “Narcissistic

Personality Disorder.” 3

       2
        The circuit court may order the Department to examine an accused to determine his
competence to stand trial. Md. Code Crim. Proc. § 3-105(a) (2001, 2008 Repl. Vol.). If the
court orders such an examination, the Department must send a copy of the report of its
findings to defense counsel, the State’s Attorney, and the court. Md. Code Crim. Proc.
§ 3-105(d) (2001, 2008 Repl. Vol.).
       3
           The record does not provide additional details as to the specifics of these diagnoses.

                                                 3
       As for Sibug’s competency to stand trial, the Perkins evaluation stated that, although

Sibug understood the operation and purpose of the judicial system, he was convinced that he

would not receive a fair trial because “the judicial system and its agents are ‘of Satan,’” and

the prosecution against him was a battle between the “righteous” and the “wicked.” He

therefore intended to base his defense on Scripture. The evaluation concluded that Sibug was

unable to “appreciate” the proceedings against him or to assist a lawyer in his defense,

particularly if the lawyer did not share his religious beliefs. In light of that evaluation, the

circuit court found, on January 13, 2000, that Sibug was not competent to stand trial and then

ordered that Sibug be committed to the Department for inpatient care and treatment at

Perkins until the court was “satisfied that [he was] no longer incompetent to stand trial.”

       Four months later, on May 1, 2000, Perkins sent the circuit court a letter and a new

evaluation that opined that, in its view, Sibug was now competent to stand trial and,

furthermore, it believed that he was “criminally responsible”4 at the time of the offense.

Sibug’s trial was subsequently set for August 28, 2000.5 But three-and-a-half weeks before

that trial was to occur, the court received, on August 3, 2000, yet another letter from Perkins.

       4
         An accused is considered to be “not criminally responsible for criminal conduct if,
at the time of that conduct, the [accused], because of a mental disorder or mental retardation,
lacks substantial capacity” to either “appreciate the criminality of that conduct” or “conform
that conduct to the requirements of law.” Md. Code Crim. Proc. § 3-109 (2001, 2008 Repl.
Vol.).
       5
        There is nothing in the record to suggest that the circuit court made any findings or
rulings as to Sibug’s competency after it received the May 1st letter from Perkins.

                                               4
This letter advised that Sibug’s condition had “deteriorated” and that, consequently, he was

currently not competent to stand trial.

       Almost three years later, on May 27, 2003, Perkins sent another letter to the circuit

court, informing it that Sibug’s condition had improved as a result of the medication he was

receiving and that, as a consequence, Sibug was now competent to stand trial. Although

Perkins requested that the court schedule a hearing to determine Sibug’s competence to do

so and attached, to that letter, a “draft order of competence” for the court to execute, the

record does not contain this order or provide any indication that a hearing was ever held.

       On September 22, 2003, Sibug entered, in the Baltimore County circuit court, pleas

of not guilty and not criminally responsible “at the time of the commission of the offenses

alleged,” but did not claim that he was not competent to stand trial. Two days later, the

circuit court, once again, ordered the Department to examine Sibug and determine whether

he was criminally responsible “at the time of [his] alleged criminal conduct.” But nothing

in that order required the Department to determine whether Sibug was presently competent

to stand trial.

       Perkins informed the court, in a letter received on October 20, 2003,6 of its conclusion

that Sibug was criminally responsible “at the time of the offense,” as indicated by the

accompanying report. That letter was followed by two additional letters from Perkins, the

       6
        It is unclear whether this letter was sent in direct response to the court’s September
24th order that Sibug be evaluated to determine whether he was criminally responsible at the
time of the alleged offenses.

                                              5
first on December 4, 2003, and the second on January 14, 2004; both of which reiterated that

Sibug was presently competent to stand trial.

       On May 11, 2004, four months after Perkins sent its final letter opining that Sibug was

competent to stand trial, Sibug appeared in Baltimore County circuit court and, though no

competency hearing had been held or a formal judicial finding of competency made, entered

a plea of not guilty, on an agreed statement of facts, to one count of second-degree assault.

The court then found Sibug guilty and sentenced him to a term of four-and-a-half years’

imprisonment, but granted him credit for time served, which resulted in Sibug’s immediate

release. During that proceeding, neither defense counsel, the State, nor the court raised the

question of Sibug’s competence to stand trial.

       Only two months later, Sibug filed a petition for writ of error coram nobis in the

Baltimore County circuit court, contending, among other things, that he had not been advised

of the effect a conviction for assault would have on his immigration status.7 On June 21,

2005, the circuit court, upon finding that Sibug’s trial counsel had rendered ineffective

assistance of counsel by not advising him of the immigration consequences of his assault

conviction, granted Sibug’s petition for writ of error coram nobis, vacated his sentence, and

granted Sibug a new trial.

       7
         Sibug was born in the Phillippines but had been a permanent resident of the United
States since 1993. The Immigration and Nationalization Service issued a warrant for Sibug’s
arrest one day after he was found guilty of second-degree assault. Because of his assault
conviction, Sibug was facing deportation to the Phillippines.

                                              6
       Three years later, on September 10, 2008, Sibug’s new trial commenced before a jury

in the Baltimore County circuit court. The record reveals that, in the three years between the

circuit court’s order granting a new trial and the start of that trial, Sibug never pleaded that

he was not competent to stand trial, nor did he or his counsel give any indication to the court

that his competence was in issue.

       At trial, the jury heard testimony from three of Sibug’s children regarding the events

of October of 1998. Sibug’s oldest son, who had reported the incident to the police, recalled

Sibug pointing his handgun at each of the children and that he had been “scared” and

“thought [he] was going to die.”8 Then, testifying on his own behalf, Sibug admitted that he

placed his handgun on the kitchen table, while sitting with his children, but said that he was

only trying to “get [his children’s] attention” because they did not respect and love him and,

consequently, did not respect and love the teachings of the Bible. His display of a handgun

was, in his words, to “test” his children’s “faith.”

       The jury found Sibug guilty of two counts of first-degree assault, two counts of

second-degree assault, one count of using a handgun in the commission of a crime of

violence, and one count of giving minors access to a firearm. A motion for a new trial

followed in which Sibug alleged, for the first time, that he had not been competent to stand

       8
        Another child testified that he remembered Sibug placing the gun on the kitchen table
but did not recall whether his father pointed the gun at any of them, and the third and last
child to testify had no recollection of the incident at all.

                                               7
trial, which was bourne out, asserted the motion, by Sibug’s testimony at trial and “his lack

of intelligent communications with his trial attorney.” 9

       At Sibug’s sentencing proceeding on October 31, 2008, over a month after his trial

had ended, the court considered his motion for a new trial. At that time, the court asked

Sibug’s counsel whether he wished to proffer any “additional evidence” as to Sibug’s

competence to stand trial. Defense counsel responded that he was “not prepared” to do so.10

After observing that neither Sibug nor his counsel had ever alleged, either before or during

trial, that Sibug’s competency was in question; that the court file contained the January 14,

2004 letter from Perkins stating that, in its opinion, Sibug was competent to stand trial; and

that Sibug had “seemed to understand exactly what was going on” during his trial

proceedings, the court found that Sibug was competent to stand trial. It therefore denied

Sibug’s motion for a new trial and sentenced him to a total of ten years’ imprisonment with

credit for pre-trial detention, which included the time that Sibug had been committed to

Perkins.

       Although Sibug did not appeal his convictions, he filed, two-and-a-half years later,

on March 8, 2011, a pro se petition for post-conviction relief, seeking the right to file a

       9
         The circuit court noted that the certificate of service filed with Sibug’s motion for a
new trial “reflect[ed] a notice of appeal and not a motion for new trial.” Because of that
error, the court docketed the motion as “correspondence only” and did not rule on the motion.
       10
        Defense counsel also informed the court that Sibug wished to proceed to sentencing
and had asked him to withdraw his motion, but counsel felt he had “to make this motion as
his lawyer” and asked the court to grant a new trial so that Sibug’s competence could be
evaluated.

                                               8
belated notice of appeal. On December 18, 2012, with the consent of both sides to the

controversy, the circuit court entered an order granting Sibug the right to file a belated notice

of appeal within thirty days. This appeal followed.

                                          Discussion

                                               I.

       Sibug contends that the circuit court denied him due process of law in failing to

determine whether he had regained his competence to stand trial before proceeding with his

re-trial. He points out that, after the circuit court found him to be incompetent to stand trial

in 2000, the court never subsequently formally found him to be otherwise. The court erred,

he insists, in trying him in 2008 without rendering such a finding.

       It is “well established that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment

prohibits the criminal prosecution of a defendant who is not competent to stand trial.”

Medina v. California, 505 U.S. 437, 439 (1992); see also Trimble v. State, 321 Md. 248, 254

(1990) (“If a state fails to observe procedures adequate to protect a defendant’s right not to

be tried or convicted while incompetent, it denies him due process.”). To be “not competent

to stand trial” means that a defendant is not able “(1) to understand the nature or object of

the proceeding; or (2) to assist in [his] defense.” Md. Code Crim. Proc. § 3-101(f) (2001,

2008 Repl. Vol.). Conversely, “to be competent to stand trial” means that a defendant has the

“present ability to consult with his lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational

understanding” and a “rational as well as factual understanding of the proceedings against

                                               9
him.” Thanos v. State, 330 Md. 77, 85 (1993) (internal citation omitted). In any event, until

proven otherwise, a defendant is presumed to be competent to stand trial. Peaks v. State, 419
Md. 239, 251 (2011).

       In “plac[ing] the duty to determine competence to stand trial on the trial court,” Gregg

v. State, 377 Md. 515, 526 (2003), the legislature has mandated “precise actions to be taken

by a trial court when an accused’s competency to stand trial [is] questioned,” Roberts v.

State, 361 Md. 346, 363 (2000). Of particular relevance to any competency determination

is section 3-104(a) of the Criminal Procedure Article,11 which states:

                 If, before or during a trial, the defendant in a criminal case . . .
                 appears to the court to be incompetent to stand trial or the
                 defendant alleges incompetence to stand trial, the court shall
                 determine, on evidence presented in the record, whether the
                 defendant is incompetent to stand trial.

       In other words, there are three ways a trial court’s duty to determine a defendant’s

competence may be triggered: upon the motion of the defendant, upon the motion of the

defendant’s counsel, or “upon a sua sponte determination by the court that the defendant may

not be competent to stand trial.” Thanos, 330 Md. at 85. Once a defendant’s incompetence

to stand trial has been alleged, the actions a court must take in determining his or her

competence are organized into three successive steps:

                 (1) First, a determination of competency may be made at any
                 time before or during a trial; (2) Second, such a determination
                 must be made if the defendant in a criminal case appears to be

       11
            Md. Code Crim. Proc. § 3-104(a) (2001, 2008 Repl. Vol.).

                                                 10
              incompetent to stand trial or the defendant alleges incompetence
              to stand trial; and (3) Finally, the court must make its
              determination on the evidence presented on the record.

       Wood v. State, 436 Md. 276, 286 (2013) (quoting Roberts, 361 Md. at 364).

       The first step “specifies the time frame within which the question of the [defendant’s]

competency must be made,” the second step requires that the issue of competency be

“properly before the court,” and the third step ensures that the defendant’s due process rights

are protected. Id. at 286–87. Although the court’s determination of competence “need not

be in the form of a formal hearing,” Peaks, 419 Md. at 254, if the defendant’s allegation of

incompetence is “unsupported by any evidence on the record to that time,” the defendant

must be allowed to “present evidence on which a determination may be made,” Gregg, 377
Md. at 539. Finally, the court’s determination of competency “is to be held to a standard of

beyond a reasonable doubt.” Roberts, 361 Md. at 365–67.

       It is clear from the record that the issue of Sibug’s competence was properly before

the circuit court before his initial trial when he alleged, in 1999, that he was not competent

to stand trial. The sentence he subsequently received was vacated on the grounds of

ineffective assistance of counsel, and he was awarded a new trial. But the issue of Sibug’s

competence was never raised by counsel or Sibug’s courtroom behavior prior to or during

his new trial in 2008.

       Given that the reversal of a conviction “with an order for a new trial, ‘wipe[s] the slate

clean,’ and the case [begins] anew procedurally,” returning the case to the stage where “any

                                              11
pretrial motions could be filed and resolved,” Hammersla v. State, 184 Md. App. 295,

313–14 (2009), it was incumbent upon Sibug, or his counsel, to raise the issue of

incompetency anew. Cf. Harrod v. State, 423 Md. 24, 34–36 (2011) (explaining that the

grant of a mistrial, like the grant of a new trial, “requires the litigants to observe pretrial

procedures once again,” including the State’s obligation to give notice of its intent to

introduce a chemist’s report even though the same report had been introduced at the first

trial); Marshall v. State, 213 Md. App. 532 550–54 (2013) (concluding that the grant of a

new trial “effectively wipe[d] out the prior proceedings” and required the defendant to allege

at his second trial that the Maryland gang statute was unconstitutional even though he had

raised that same issue prior to his first trial).

       Although no appellate decision has stated that a defendant’s incompetence to stand

trial must be raised anew, by court, counsel, or circumstances, after a new trial has been

granted, the Court of Appeals’ decision in Gregg v. State has lent helpful guidance to us in

reaching the conclusion that we do today. In that case, the District Court of Maryland

ordered a competency evaluation of John Leon Gregg, who was charged with second-degree

assault. 377 Md. at 518. At the competency hearing that followed, the district court—after

reviewing the report prepared by the facility where Gregg had been evaluated, hearing

testimony from one of Gregg’s evaluators, and questioning Gregg directly—found Gregg

competent to stand trial. Id. at 518–22. Gregg subsequently prayed a jury trial and the case

was transferred to the circuit court, where Gregg was tried by a jury and found guilty. Id. at

                                                12
523. He thereafter noted an appeal, contending that the circuit court had a duty to inquire

into his competence to stand trial and had erred in failing to do so. Id. at 524–25.

       The Court of Appeals explained that, when Gregg’s case was removed to the circuit

court, “the proceedings properly began anew,” and the circuit court was not bound by the

district court’s ruling on “pre-trial matters,” including any prior determination of Gregg’s

competence. Id. at 542–43. Since the circuit court trial was a “separate and distinct”

proceeding from the district court trial, the issue of Gregg’s competence to stand trial had to

be “raised anew in the Circuit Court proceedings,” according to the Court of Appeals, “in

order to compel the need for a competency determination.” Id. at 545. Because that issue

was not raised anew in the circuit court, and because Gregg’s behavior at trial did not trigger

any obligation of that court to evaluate his competence sua sponte, the issue of Gregg’s

competency “was not properly before the court,” said the Court of Appeals, and thus the

circuit court did not err in failing to address it. Id. at 541–45.

       As Gregg’s circuit court trial was “separate and distinct” from the preceding district

court proceeding, so too was Sibug’s new trial “separate and distinct” from his first trial. It,

in effect, “wiped the slate clean.” Hammersla v. State, 184 Md. App. at 313. It is therefore

clear that the issue of competence had to be raised afresh at Sibug’s new trial, a conclusion

particularly compelling in the instant case, given that four-and-a-half years had passed since

his first trial and that he was ultimately assessed as competent, if not by the court then at least

by the evaluators at Perkins.       Thus, if Sibug wished to again raise the issue of his

                                                13
competence, he was required to bring that issue to the court’s attention before or during his

new trial.

       But, at no time before or during his new trial did Sibug or his counsel allege, suggest,

or give the slightest indication that his competence might be at issue. And, since the court

was never asked to evaluate Sibug’s competency by anyone, the “only way” in which the

question of competency could have been placed before the circuit court was if Sibug

“appear[ed] to the court to be incompetent to stand trial,” triggering the court’s “sua sponte

duty” to evaluate his competence. Gregg, 377 Md. at 545. But there was nothing about

Sibug’s appearance, conduct, or behavior that indicated to the court that such an evaluation

was appropriate.

       As we have previously explained, a defendant is considered competent to stand trial

if he has the “present ability to consult with his lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational

understanding” to assist in his own defense, as well as a “rational as well as factual

understanding of the proceedings against him.” Thanos v. State, 330 Md. 77, 84–85 (1993).

The circuit court, in finding at sentencing that Sibug was competent to stand trial, recalled

its observations of Sibug during the trial and concluded that Sibug “seemed to understand

exactly what was going on” during the proceedings. The court’s conclusion is supported by

the record.

       At no time during trial did it appear from the transcript of that proceeding that Sibug

did not have the ability to work with his lawyer and to assist in his own defense. In fact,

                                              14
when he was called to the stand, he gave coherent responses to his counsel’s questions,

elaborating lucidly upon those responses when asked to do so. Then, on cross-examination,

Sibug responded to the State’s questions without any outbursts or digressions and even

engaged in efforts to correct the State when he believed it had mis-characterized his

testimony.12

       Furthermore, Sibug appeared to have a complete understanding of why he was being

prosecuted and what his role was in the proceedings against him. Before taking the stand to

testify, Sibug informed the court that he could not “swear” but that he could “appear . . . for

the record,” indicating that he understood the importance of testifying under oath. And,

although his testimony was heavily infused with references to Scripture, Sibug provided a

rational, albeit disturbing, justification for his actions, explaining that he brought his handgun

out in front of his children not to scare them but to “test their faith.” Their faith needed to

       12
         The following exchange is illustrative of Sibug’s ability to comprehend and disagree
with the State’s questions on cross-examination:

               [STATE’S ATTORNEY]: You felt it was okay to scare your
               kids by putting the gun in front of them, right?

               [SIBUG]: No, sir. You are the one who said it. Don’t put
               something in my mouth.

               [STATE’S ATTORNEY]: I’m asking you a question.

               [SIBUG]: No, sir. I just said, you know, testing their faith.

                                               15
be tested, he said, because they were “rebellious” and “wicked,” and they did not respect his

authority as their father.

       Moreover, Sibug’s attentive and appropriate behavior at trial stands in stark contrast

to the actions of defendants who, in other cases, such as Trimble v. State, 321 Md. 248

(1990), and Thanos v. State, 330 Md. 576 (1993), later claimed on appeal that their behavior

at trial was so abnormal as to warrant a competency hearing. Although the actions of the

defendants in those cases were, unlike Sibug’s trial conduct, disruptive, the Court of Appeals

held that such behavior did not raise a question of competency to stand trial. See Trimble,
321 Md. at 254–56 (concluding that the court was not required to hold an additional

competency hearing despite the defendant’s “bizarre behavior,” which included painting a

red cross on his shaved head and making obscene gestures); Thanos, 330 Md. at 584–87

(holding that the defendant’s documented history of mental illness and his “obnoxious

comments and angry outbursts throughout the proceedings” did not obligate the court to

inquire into his competence when the defendant interacted with the court and his attorney and

“clearly understood the proceedings against him”)

       In contrast, the transcript of the trial proceedings reveals that Sibug presented himself

as an individual with strong religious views which, he believed, supported his actions. But

there were no outbursts from Sibug during the trial, no obnoxious or aggressive comments

to the court or to counsel, and no vulgar gestures or actions. Indeed, his participation in his

trial was respectful and his testimony was responsive to the questions posed by defense

                                              16
counsel and the State. Quite simply, there is nothing in the record that would indicate to the

court that Sibug lacked a rational or factual understanding of the proceedings or the ability

to assist in his own defense.

       We conclude that the issue of Sibug’s competence to stand trial was never before the

circuit court at his new trial as it was not raised by counsel, the court, or Sibug’s courtroom

behavior. As such, the circuit court did not err in not determining whether Sibug was

competent, because the issue was not before it.

                                           II.

       Sibug contends that the circuit court erred in finding, at the sentencing hearing

following his second trial, that he was competent when he stood trial, without holding a

competency hearing, as his counsel requested. He further claims that the court did not base

its decision that Sibug was competent on an “adequate record.”

       As we previously noted, section 3-104(a) of the Criminal Procedure Article requires

a judicial determination of a defendant’s competence to stand trial only if the question of

competence is raised before or during the trial.        And, as we stated earlier, Sibug’s

competence to stand trial was never made an issue before or during his trial. Accordingly,

section 3-104(a) is not applicable to this case, and the court had no obligation to make a

judicial determination of Sibug’s competence.

       Nonetheless, the court decided that it “could” hold a hearing under the auspices of

section 3-104(c) of the Criminal Procedure Article, which states: “At any time before final

                                              17
judgment, the court may reconsider the question of whether the defendant is incompetent to

stand trial.” And, although the court was only required, under section 3-104(c), to consider

“evidence presented on the record during the course” of the trial with regard to Sibug’s

competency, Peaks, 419 Md. at 259, the court nonetheless gave Sibug’s counsel the

opportunity to proffer additional evidence in support of the allegation that Sibug was not

competent to stand trial. Sibug’s counsel, however, responded that he was “not prepared”

at that time to present evidence “to suggest competency or incompetency” and that he was

basing his request for a competency determination on his “observation[s] and [his] consistent

contact” with Sibug. The court then determined that Sibug was competent to stand trial.

       In concluding that Sibug was competent to stand trial, the court noted that neither

Sibug nor his counsel had alleged, before or during the trial, that his competence was in

question. Then, after noting that the last letter from Perkins stated that, in its opinion, Sibug

was competent to stand trial, and after observing that Sibug “seemed to understand exactly

what was going on” at trial, the court found that Sibug understood “the nature of the

proceedings against him, [that] he was able to assist in his own defense,” and that he was

therefore competent to stand trial.

       In sum, at Sibug’s sentencing, the court held a hearing on the issue of Sibug’s

competence, even though it was not required to do so. At that time it offered Sibug’s counsel

the opportunity to present additional evidence on that issue and, when no further evidence

was offered, it based its determination that Sibug was competent on the information provided

                                               18
in the court file and on its personal observations of Sibug during trial. We find that the court

did not err in so finding.

                                     JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
                                     BALTIMORE COUNTY AFFIRMED. COSTS TO
                                     BE PAID BY APPELLANT.

                                              19