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| Doesn't Speth v. State, 6 S.W.3d 530 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999) say that illegal conditions of (or the illegal granting of) probation will not make the conviction void:
An award of community supervision is not a right, but a contractual privilege, and conditions thereof are terms of the contract entered into between the trial court and the defendant. Therefore, conditions not objected to are affirmatively accepted as terms of the contract. Thus, by entering into the contractual relationship without objection, a defendant affirmatively waives any rights encroached upon by the terms of the contract. A defendant who benefits from the contractual privilege of probation, the granting of which does not involve a systemic right or prohibition, must complain at trial to conditions he finds objectionable.FN9 A trial objection allows the trial court the opportunity to either risk abusing his discretion by imposing the condition over objection FN10 or *535 reconsider the desirability of the contract without the objectionable condition.
Appellant did not object at trial to the imposition of the conditions. See fn.13, supra. The Court of Appeals erred in holding appellant could complain about the community supervision conditions for the first time on appeal.
-- Alabama seems to say that a plea bargain that includes banishment is void. Warren v. State, 706 So.2d 1316, 1318 (Ala.Crim.App. 1997) (�the plea agreement entered into between the appellant and the state was invalid because it was conditioned, in part, on the appellant's permanent banishment from the state following his release from prison-a violation of Art. I, � 30, Alabama Constitution of 1901. It makes no difference that the appellant agreed to this condition as a term of his negotiated plea agreement-a defendant cannot consent to a sentence that is beyond the authority of the court.�)
-- BTW, are you using a non-final conviction under TPC 12.42(g) or 49.09(d)? |
| Posts: 527 | Location: Fort Worth, Texas, | Registered: May 23, 2001 |
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| If the conviction has not been challenged in Alabama then it is entitled to every presumption in favor of validity. Obviously the defendant was not banished during the time he was serving his sentence. I would certainly argue any improper condition concerning his release on parole does not render the conviction (prior finding of guilt) void. |
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| Have a long list of folks I would love to be able to add as a condition of probation, "Get the Hell out of here. Go on - Git!" As they used to yell at us as the Jolly Fox was closing up, "Unless you're sleeping with someone that works here, or you plan on doing so, you gotta go. You don't have to go home, but you just have to go. |
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