concurring and concurring specially.
I agree with the majority opinion, and write to further explain a few points.
Defendant was being sentenced for violating her probation. The affidavit explained that Defendant violated her probation with a new offense (petit theft), which Defendant admitted. At the second sentencing hearing, after the trial court announced a longer sentence than announced at the first hearing, Defendant’s counsel repeatedly attempted to explain to the court that because nothing had changed that could reasonably affect the length of the sentence imposed, the sentence should not exceed the 18-months originally announced. As explained by the majority, this was sufficient to preserve the issue for review.
In response to counsel’s objections, the trial court initially indicated that the sentence was being increased because Defendant committed the new offense after the first sentencing hearing. This was not true. The offense was the basis for the violation to which Defendant originally pled. After Defendant’s counsel corrected this misimpression, the trial judge then explained that he was increasing the sentence because of facts relating to the new offense that had not been presented previously.
When Defendant’s counsel persisted by arguing that the same facts were before the court at the original sentencing hearing, the trial court then explained that it was “appropriate to give her a stiffer sentence because ... there’s not any mental issues about her competency.” There are two problems with this explanation. As addressed by the majority opinion, the trial judge certainly understood Defendant to be competent when he announced the first sentence, meaning that there were no changed circumstances relating to Defendant’s competency at the second hearing. Additionally, however, it should be clear that the fact of a defendant’s competence is an inappropriate sentencing consideration in any event. A defendant must be competent in order to proceed to sentencing, and thus, it makes no sense to suggest that a person can be punished for being competent, or for delaying proceedings for a competency determination.