Jason D. Ray v. State of Alaska ( 2019 )


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    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
    JASON D. RAY,
    Court of Appeals No. A-12135
    Appellant,              Trial Court No. 3KO-13-00627 CR
    v.
    O P I N I O N
    STATE OF ALASKA,
    Appellee.                  No. 2660 — October 17, 2019
    Appeal from the Superior Court, Third Judicial District, Kodiak,
    Steve Cole, Judge.
    Appearances: Amanda Harber, Assistant Public Defender, and
    Quinlan Steiner, Public Defender, Anchorage, for the Appellant.
    Stephen B. Wallace, District Attorney, Kodiak, and Jahna
    Lindemuth, Attorney General, Juneau, for the Appellee.
    Before: Mannheimer, Chief Judge, Allard, Judge, and Suddock,
    Superior Court Judge. *
    Judge MANNHEIMER, writing for the Court on all issues
    except the proper interpretation of AS 12.55.090(f), and
    certifying this last issue to the Alaska Supreme Court.
    *
    Sitting by assignment made pursuant to Article IV, Section 16 of the Alaska
    Constitution and Administrative Rule 24(d).
    Judge MANNHEIMER, Judge SUDDOCK, and Judge
    ALLARD, each writing separately on the proper interpretation
    of AS 12.55.090(f).
    In December 2013, pursuant to a plea agreement, Jason D. Ray pleaded
    guilty to theft in the second degree. The plea agreement called for Ray to receive a
    sentence of 24 months’ imprisonment with 20 months suspended (4 months to serve),
    followed by 3 years of probation. Ray served his 4 months, and he was released on
    probation.
    In the summer of 2014, Ray admitted that he had violated two of his
    conditions of probation, and he was adjudicated to have violated two others. Then, at his
    probation revocation disposition hearing, Ray announced that he wished to reject further
    probation.
    In Brown v. State, the Alaska Supreme Court construed Alaska’s probation
    statutes as giving criminal defendants the right to refuse probation at their initial
    sentencing, or to later refuse continued probation. 1
    Under Brown, when a defendant who has been on probation decides to
    reject further probation, the sentencing court must then give the defendant a “flat-time”
    sentence by imposing some or all of the defendant’s remaining suspended jail time and
    terminating the defendant’s probation. 2 The sentencing judge must not automatically
    impose all of the defendant’s remaining suspended jail time, but rather must evaluate all
    the circumstances of the defendant’s case and impose an appropriate sentence under the
    1
    Brown v. State, 
    559 P.2d 107
    , 111 n. 13 (Alaska 1977).
    2
    See Bland v. State, 
    846 P.2d 815
    , 818–19 (Alaska App. 1993).
    –2–                                       2660
    sentencing criteria established by the supreme court in State v. Chaney, 
    477 P.2d 441
    ,
    443–44 (Alaska 1970), and now codified in AS 12.55.005. 3
    But in Ray’s case, the superior court refused to honor Ray’s decision to
    reject further probation. Instead, the court imposed a sentence which continued to
    include suspended jail time, and which still left Ray on probation. In fact, the sentencing
    judge extended Ray’s term of probation — from 3 years to 5 years.
    The judge sentenced Ray to serve 16 months, which was all but 90 days of
    Ray’s suspended jail time. The judge then placed Ray on unsupervised probation for
    5 years after he completed serving the 16 months in jail. The only condition of this
    unsupervised probation was that Ray obey the law.
    (The judge’s apparent purpose for keeping Ray on unsupervised probation
    was to allow the court to impose a more severe sentence if Ray committed another felony
    before his 5 years of probation expired. Under AS 12.55.155(c)(20), if a person commits
    a felony while they are on felony probation, this fact allows the sentencing court to
    increase their sentence above the applicable presumptive sentencing range.)
    In this appeal, Ray challenges the superior court’s action on two grounds.
    First, Ray contends that the superior court committed error when the court
    ruled against him on the two contested violations of probation. Ray argues that the
    evidence presented at his revocation hearing was insufficient to support the superior
    court’s findings that Ray committed the two contested violations of probation.
    Second, Ray contends that the superior court acted illegally when the court
    kept Ray on probation after Ray declared that he wished to reject further probation.
    3
    DeMario v. State, 
    933 P.2d 558
    , 562 (Alaska App. 1997); Bland v. State, 
    846 P.2d 815
    , 818–19 (Alaska App. 1993).
    –3–                                        2660
    We conclude that the evidence was sufficient to support the judge’s
    findings that Ray violated the two conditions of probation. We further reject Ray’s
    contention that he had a constitutional right to reject further probation.
    But with regard to whether Ray had a statutory right to reject probation, this
    Court is unable to reach a majority decision — because no two of us are able to agree on
    the proper interpretation of a probation statute, AS 12.55.090(f). We therefore certify
    this issue of statutory interpretation to the Alaska Supreme Court. See AS 22.05.015(b).
    Background facts
    Jason Ray lived in Kodiak. In early July 2014, Ray’s probation officer, Jill
    Bunting, issued him a travel permit that allowed Ray to go to Anchorage and reside at
    the Brother Francis Shelter for one week while he looked for work.
    In mid-July 2014, Probation Officer Bunting asked the superior court to
    revoke Ray’s probation, alleging that Ray had violated several conditions of his
    probation. Of these various allegations, two are germane to this appeal: the allegation
    that Ray left the Brother Francis Shelter and went to stay elsewhere without obtaining
    the written permission of his probation officer, and the allegation that Ray consumed
    alcohol to excess while he was in Anchorage.
    Officer Bunting was the only witness at Ray’s adjudication hearing.
    Bunting testified that Ray violated the conditions of his travel pass by not staying at the
    Brother Francis Shelter while he was in Anchorage seeking work. According to Bunting,
    shortly after Ray arrived in Anchorage, Ray left several voice messages for her. In these
    voice messages, Ray told Bunting that he would be staying at the Ted Stevens
    International Airport because he did not want to stay at the Brother Francis Shelter.
    –4–                                         2660
    Bunting also testified that she received a report from the Anchorage Police
    Department that the police had responded to a fight in which Ray was purportedly
    involved. The police administered a portable breath test to Ray, and the breath-testing
    device registered a blood alcohol level of .121 percent.
    At the revocation hearing, Ray’s attorney argued that Ray had not violated
    the condition of probation requiring him to notify his probation officer of changes of
    residence, because the Brother Francis Shelter had not been Ray’s “residence”. The
    defense attorney contended that the term “residence” implied more permanence than a
    short-term lodging.
    With regard to the allegation of intoxication, Ray’s attorney raised a
    hearsay objection to Bunting’s testimony about the reading of the portable breath test
    device, since Bunting had no personal knowledge of that reading, and she was only
    relaying what she had been told by the Anchorage police. The judge overruled this
    objection, since the hearsay rules do not apply at probation revocation hearings. See
    Alaska Evidence Rule 101(c)(2).
    Later, during the defense attorney’s summation to the judge, the attorney
    argued that the judge should place little or no weight on the portable breath test reading,
    because portable breath-testing devices had not been shown to meet the standard for the
    admission of scientific evidence established in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals
    and State v. Coon. 4 The defense attorney further argued that, without the result of the
    portable breath test, the State’s evidence was insufficient to prove that Ray was
    intoxicated when he was contacted by the police.
    4
    Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 
    509 U.S. 579
    , 
    113 S.Ct. 2786
    , 
    125 L.Ed.2d 469
     (1993); State v. Coon, 
    974 P.2d 386
     (Alaska 1999).
    –5–                                        2660
    The judge concluded that Ray had violated both of the conditions of his
    probation (as well as other conditions of probation that are not at issue in this appeal).
    Then, at Ray’s disposition hearing, Ray elected to reject further probation.
    At that time, Ray had 19 months of suspended jail time remaining on his sentence (less
    the time he had spent in jail awaiting the resolution of the petition to revoke probation).
    Probation Officer Bunting asked the court to impose all of Ray’s remaining
    suspended sentence, and to end his probation. She declared that she did not think
    anything could be achieved by returning Ray to probation.
    Notwithstanding Ray’s rejection of probation, and notwithstanding the
    probation officer’s endorsement of Ray’s request for an end to his probation, the judge
    decided to keep Ray on probation for 5 years after he finished serving his active term of
    imprisonment. More specifically, the judge sentenced Ray to 19 months in jail with
    3 months suspended, with probation for 5 years after he got out of jail. However, the
    judge amended Ray’s conditions of probation to make the probation unsupervised, with
    the sole condition that Ray obey all laws.
    (Although the judge did not explain his decision, the judge was apparently
    influenced by the prosecutor’s argument that Ray should be kept on probation so that,
    if he committed another felony in the future, his crime would be aggravated under
    AS 12.55.155(c)(20), which applies when a defendant commits a felony while on
    furlough, parole, or probation from a prior felony conviction.)
    Why we conclude that the judge properly found that Ray violated his
    conditions of probation
    On appeal, Ray renews his claim that neither the Brother Francis Shelter
    nor the Anchorage Airport constituted his “residence”, because these were only short­
    –6–                                        2660
    term lodgings. Ray asserts that, despite his travel to Anchorage, his residence continued
    to be the City of Kodiak (more specifically, the “streets of Kodiak”, because Ray was
    apparently homeless). Ray also argues that, regardless of where his “residence” was, the
    real point of the probation condition was to make sure that his probation officer knew
    where he was — and Ray points out that he told his probation officer that he intended
    to stay at the airport.
    But the superior court concluded that, despite whatever technical meanings
    the term “residence” might have, the intent of the probation condition was both (1) to
    make sure that Bunting knew where Ray was, and (2) to make sure that Ray stayed in the
    agreed-upon place (i.e., the shelter) unless he had Bunting’s permission to live
    elsewhere. The court further found that Ray knew what the probation condition required.
    This was a reasonable interpretation of the probation condition, and a
    reasonable conclusion regarding Ray’s state of knowledge. We therefore uphold the
    superior court’s ruling. 5
    With regard to the finding that Ray was intoxicated in Anchorage, Ray
    claims that the court should not have relied on the result obtained on the portable breath
    test device (the “PBT”), because these devices have not been shown to meet the standard
    for the admission of scientific evidence, and because the prosecutor made no attempt to
    5
    See Joubert v. State, 
    926 P.2d 1191
    , 1193 (Alaska App. 1996) (holding that, because
    the conditions of probation can be “likened to a contract between the court and the
    defendant”, a court must construe the meaning of a probation condition by “examin[ing] how
    a reasonable person in [the defendant’s] place would have understood it, taking into
    consideration the language of the disputed provision ... and the case law interpreting similar
    provisions”).
    –7–                                          2660
    lay an evidentiary foundation for this testimony under Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharma­
    ceuticals, Inc., and Daubert’s Alaska counterpart, State v. Coon. 6
    But as we have explained, when Bunting offered testimony concerning the
    PBT reading, the only objection that Ray’s attorney raised was a hearsay objection. This
    objection had no merit: Alaska Evidence Rule 101(c)(2) states that, apart from the rules
    pertaining to evidentiary privilege, the rules of evidence do not apply to probation
    proceedings.
    It was only later, during summation, that the defense attorney shifted her
    argument — no longer pressing her original assertion that Bunting’s testimony on this
    point was inadmissible hearsay, but instead asserting that, even if this testimony was
    admissible, little or no weight should be given to the PBT reading because the State had
    not laid a Daubert foundation for the PBT device.
    We note that the defense attorney did not frame her Daubert argument as
    a late objection to the admission of Bunting’s testimony. Rather, the defense attorney
    argued only that the testimony should be given little or no weight.
    Moreover, because the rules of evidence do not apply to probation
    revocation hearings, it is unclear whether Ray’s attorney could properly object to the
    PBT evidence under Daubert and Coon. Both Daubert and Coon are based on
    interpretations of Evidence Rule 702: Daubert established the foundational requirement
    for introducing scientific evidence under Federal Evidence Rule 702, and Coon adopted
    the Daubert test as the foundational requirement for introducing scientific evidence
    under Alaska Evidence Rule 702. But Alaska Evidence Rule 101(c)(2) declares that the
    rules of evidence (other than the rules of privilege) do not apply to probation revocation
    6
    Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 
    509 U.S. 579
     (1993); State v. Coon,
    
    974 P.2d 386
     (Alaska 1999).
    –8–                                        2660
    proceedings. It is therefore uncertain whether Ray’s attorney could properly object to
    the PBT results under Daubert and Coon.
    Even assuming that a Daubert-Coon objection would have been proper,
    Ray’s attorney did not make a contemporaneous Daubert-Coon objection to the
    admission of the probation officer’s testimony about the PBT result. Ray thus failed to
    preserve this issue for appeal. 7 And Ray does not argue that the judge committed plain
    error by failing to hold a Daubert hearing sua sponte.
    In any event, as the judge noted, the PBT result in Ray’s case (.12 percent)
    was substantially higher than the .08 percent threshold for DUI. Thus, even if the PBT
    reading was only an approximation of Ray’s blood alcohol level, the PBT reading was
    sufficient to support a finding that Ray had consumed alcohol to excess.
    For these reasons, we find no plain error.
    Introduction to the question of whether the superior court was authorized
    to subject Ray to further probation after Ray expressly rejected further
    probation
    As we explained in the introductory section of this opinion, the Alaska
    Supreme Court held in Brown v. State that, under Alaska’s probation statutes, a
    defendant has the right to reject probation and demand a “flat-time” sentence — i.e., a
    7
    See Mascenti v. Becker, 
    237 F.3d 1223
    , 1230–31 (10th Cir. 2001) (holding that a party
    failed to preserve an objection to expert testimony when the party failed to object to the
    testimony until after the close of the evidence); Christopher v. Cutter Laboratories, 
    53 F.3d 1184
    , 1192 (11th Cir. 1995) (same); Marbled Murrelet v. Babbit, 
    83 F.3d 1060
    , 1066–67 (9th
    Cir. 1996) (holding that the failure to raise a Daubert objection to expert testimony waives
    the issue on appeal); Clay v. Commonwealth, 
    291 S.W.3d 210
     (Ky. 2008) (holding that a
    litigant who fails to request a Daubert hearing fails to preserve the issue for appeal).
    –9–                                          2660
    sentence consisting solely of active imprisonment, with no suspended jail time and no
    probation. 8
    When Ray’s defense attorney announced at the disposition hearing that Ray
    had decided to reject further probation, the sentencing judge responded, “That certainly
    changes things.” The judge then questioned Ray about his understanding of the
    consequences of his choice, and about the voluntariness of Ray’s decision. After
    completing this inquiry, and without objection from the prosecutor, the judge accepted
    Ray’s decision to reject further probation.
    Nevertheless, as we have explained, the judge did not terminate Ray’s
    probation. Instead, the judge sentenced Ray to serve 5 years on unsupervised probation
    after Ray completed a sentence of 16 months in prison (leaving Ray with a further
    3 months of suspended jail time).
    On appeal, Ray argues that, because he expressly rejected further probation,
    the superior court was barred from imposing a sentence that included more probation.
    More specifically, Ray argues that criminal defendants have a constitutional right to
    reject probation — and thus, when Ray made his choice to refuse further probation, the
    judge was required to simply impose some or all of Ray’s remaining suspended jail time,
    and to release him from further probation supervision.
    The State, for its part, contends that a 2012 amendment to Alaska’s
    probation statutes, AS 12.55.090(f), prohibits a defendant from rejecting further
    probation if the defendant was initially sentenced under a plea bargain that called for a
    specific term of probation. As we have explained, Ray’s plea agreement stated that he
    would receive a 3-year term of probation. The State therefore argues that Ray had no
    right to request an early end to his probation.
    8
    Brown v. State, 
    559 P.2d 107
    , 111 n. 13 (Alaska 1977).
    – 10 –                                     2660
    As we are about to explain, we reject Ray’s argument that he has a
    constitutional right to reject probation. However, no two members of this Court are able
    to agree on whether Ray still has the statutory right to reject probation described by our
    supreme court in Brown.
    More specifically, no two members of this Court are able to agree on the
    proper interpretation of AS 12.55.090(f): whether, under this statute, defendants in
    Ray’s position still have a statutory right to reject probation — and, if they still have this
    right, what rules govern the sentencing court’s authority or duty with respect to the
    defendant’s final sentence of imprisonment.
    Because we cannot reach a majority decision on this issue of statutory
    interpretation, we certify this issue to the Alaska Supreme Court pursuant to
    AS 22.05.015(b).
    Why we reject Ray’s contention that he has a constitutional right to refuse
    further probation
    In support of his contention that criminal defendants have a constitutional
    right to refuse probation, Ray cites the Alaska Supreme Court’s decision in Brown v.
    State 9 as well as this Court’s decision in Sweezey v. State. 10 But even though both of
    these decisions affirm a probationer’s right to refuse probation, neither of these decisions
    says that this right is a constitutional right. Instead, both Brown and Sweezey declare that
    the right to refuse probation is derived from “[the Alaska] statutes governing probation”.
    See Brown, 559 P.2d at 111 n. 13, and Sweezey, 167 P.3d at 80.
    9
    
    559 P.2d 107
    , 111 n. 13 (Alaska 1977).
    10
    
    167 P.3d 79
    , 80–81 (Alaska App. 2007).
    – 11 –                                        2660
    Indeed, as our supreme court recognized in Pete v. State, 
    379 P.2d 625
    , 626
    (Alaska 1963), courts have no inherent authority to suspend a portion of a defendant’s
    sentence and to place a defendant on probation. This power must be granted by the
    legislature. See also Edwards v. State, 
    34 P.3d 962
    , 968 (Alaska App. 2001).
    Because the power to suspend a sentence and impose probation must be
    granted by statute, the scope and terms of this power are governed by the provisions of
    the granting statute. This is why, in Chinuhuk v. State, 
    413 P.3d 1215
     (Alaska App.
    2018), this Court upheld a special type of probation created by the legislature for sex
    offenders — a type of probation that expressly could not be rejected by the defendant —
    against the claim that Brown prohibited this type of non-refusable probation. Chinuhuk,
    413 P.3d at 1219–1220.
    We therefore reject Ray’s contention that he has a constitutional right to
    refuse further probation. Any such right must derive from statute.
    Why we certify the question of the proper interpretation of AS 12.55.090(f)
    to the supreme court
    More than forty years ago, in Brown, the Alaska Supreme Court construed
    our probation statutes as giving criminal defendants the right to reject probation. Indeed,
    during the probation revocation proceedings in Ray’s case, the sentencing judge
    seemingly acknowledged Ray’s right to reject further probation. The judge also
    expressly acknowledged that he should not automatically impose all of Ray’s remaining
    jail time — that he was required, instead, to evaluate Ray’s sentence under the Chaney
    sentencing criteria.
    Nevertheless, when the time came to impose sentence, the judge adopted
    the prosecutor’s suggestion of extending Ray’s probation to 5 years so that, if Ray
    – 12 –                                      2660
    committed another felony, he would be subject to an aggravated sentence under
    AS 12.55.155(c)(20).
    The proceedings in the superior court are notable in two respects. First,
    when Ray announced that he wished to end his probation, the prosecutor never argued
    that Ray was statutorily prohibited from rejecting further probation — which is the
    position that the State takes in this appeal. Second, when the prosecutor expressly asked
    the judge to extend Ray’s probation to 5 years, and when the sentencing judge followed
    the prosecutor’s recommendation, Ray’s attorney never objected that any continued
    probation was illegal — which is the position that Ray takes in this appeal. In other
    words, both parties to this appeal are litigating this case based on legal theories that they
    never articulated in the trial court.
    Ray’s position — that he had a right to reject further probation, and that the
    superior court acted illegally when it subjected him to continuing probation — is
    supported by longstanding Alaska case law, beginning with the supreme court’s 1977
    decision in Brown. The State’s position — that Ray had no right to reject further
    probation — is based on the legislature’s enactment of AS 12.55.090(f):
    Unless the defendant and the prosecuting authority
    agree ... , the court may not reduce the specific period of
    probation, or the specific term of suspended incarceration
    except by the amount of incarceration imposed for a
    probation violation, if
    (1) the sentence was imposed in accordance with a
    plea agreement under Rule 11, Alaska Rules of Criminal
    Procedure; and
    (2) the [plea] agreement required a specific period of
    probation or a specific term of suspended incarceration.
    – 13 –                                       2660
    As we explain in the three separate opinions that follow, no two members
    of this Court are able to agree on the proper interpretation of AS 12.55.090(f).
    Judge Mannheimer believes that, even after the enactment of
    AS 12.55.090(f), Ray retained his statutory right to reject probation. It was therefore
    improper for the sentencing judge to impose a sentence that left Ray on probation for an
    additional 5 years, and the judge should now re-sentence Ray in conformity with the
    Chaney sentencing criteria.
    Judge Suddock likewise believes that, even after the enactment of
    AS 12.55.090(f), Ray retained his statutory right to reject probation. However, Judge
    Suddock concludes that, in such cases, AS 12.55.090(f) requires the sentencing judge to
    impose all of a defendant’s remaining suspended jail time, regardless of whether such
    a sentence would be consistent with Chaney.
    Judge Allard believes that AS 12.55.090(f) eliminated a defendant’s right
    to reject further probation in all instances where the length of the defendant’s term of
    probation was a specified component of the defendant’s plea bargain.
    When the members of an appellate court are unable to muster a majority in
    favor of any disposition, the law declares that the judgement under review will stand as
    issued — but only by operation of law. The lower court’s judgement is neither affirmed
    nor reversed; it simply goes into effect because the appellate court is unable to decide the
    appeal. 11
    11
    See, e.g., Boldt Machinery & Tools, Inc. v. Wallace, 
    366 A.2d 902
    , 904 (Pa. 1976);
    Heritage Resources, Inc. v. NationsBank, 
    960 S.W.2d 619
    , 620 (Tex. 1997); State ex rel.
    Taxpayers of Pierce County v. Remann, 
    190 P.2d 95
    , 95 (Wash. 1948). See, in particular,
    Appeal of Levine, 
    95 A.2d 222
     (Pa. 1953), where the Pennsylvania Supreme Court was split
    three ways regarding the proper disposition of an appeal.
    – 14 –                                       2660
    Such an outcome would do little to advance the rights of the parties, or to
    ensure the proper application of AS 12.55.090(f) in future cases. We therefore certify
    this issue of statutory interpretation to the Alaska Supreme Court under AS 22.05.015(b).
    Conclusion
    The superior court’s decision to revoke Ray’s probation is affirmed; the
    evidence presented at Ray’s probation revocation hearing supported the superior court’s
    findings that Ray violated his probation by leaving the Brother Francis Shelter without
    permission, and by drinking alcohol to excess while he was in Anchorage.
    We further reject Ray’s contention that defendants who are on probation
    have a constitutional right to refuse further probation.
    But with regard to the meaning and effect of AS 12.55.090(f), this Court
    is unable to reach a decision, and we therefore certify this issue to the Alaska Supreme
    Court.
    If the Alaska Supreme Court rejects our certification, then the judgement
    of the superior court will stand, by operation of law.
    – 15 –                                    2660
    The three separate opinions of the members of this Court
    Judge MANNHEIMER.
    The question before us is the proper meaning and effect of AS 12.55.090(f),
    a provision of our probation statutes that was first enacted in 2012. Here is the pertinent
    language of this statute:
    Unless the defendant and the prosecuting authority
    agree ... , the court may not reduce the specific period of
    probation, or the specific term of suspended incarceration
    except by the amount of incarceration imposed for a
    probation violation, if
    (1) the sentence was imposed in accordance with a
    plea agreement under Rule 11, Alaska Rules of Criminal
    Procedure; and
    (2) the [plea] agreement required a specific period of
    probation or a specific term of suspended incarceration.
    Nothing in the language of this statute speaks directly to a defendant’s right
    to reject probation. That is, the statute does not expressly say that a defendant whose
    plea bargain contains a specific period of probation has no right to reject further
    probation during the life of the sentence. Instead, the statute says that when a defendant
    is sentenced under a plea bargain which calls for a specific term of probation, the court
    is prohibited from reducing the defendant’s term of probation unless both the
    government and the defendant agree.
    My colleague, Judge Allard, concludes that this is just another way of
    saying that defendants in this situation have no right to reject probation. But the
    – 16 –                                       2660
    legislative history of this provision — in particular, the lengthy testimony offered in
    support of the statute by Deputy Attorney General Richard Svobodny — shows that this
    language is addressed to a different problem: the problem of judges who unilaterally
    decide to terminate a recalcitrant defendant’s probation because they are tired of dealing
    with the defendant.
    AS 12.55.090(f) was proposed by the Department of Law, and the
    Department sent two different representatives — Assistant Attorney General Anne
    Carpeneti and Deputy Attorney General Svobodny — to explain the meaning of the
    proposed statute to the legislature.
    Of the two Department of Law representatives, Mr. Svobodny offered the
    most extensive description of the problem that AS 12.55.090(f) was intended to solve.
    According to Svobodny’s remarks to the House Judiciary Committee, this statute was
    intended to address the situation where a defendant violates their probation, and in
    response the judge imposes “two days in jail” for the probation violation and then cuts
    the defendant loose from any further probation — with the result that the “years of
    probation” that the State bargained for “are going to go away” simply because the judge
    has concluded that probation is not working. 1
    Not once during Mr. Svobodny’s lengthy remarks to the legislature did he
    assert that the new statute was intended to abrogate a defendant’s right to reject further
    probation. Instead, Mr. Svobodny described the problem as a judicial problem — judges
    who misuse their sentencing discretion in probation revocation proceedings:
    Mr. Svobodny: If the offender violates a condition of
    probation, ... the judge just can’t reward the person — can’t
    say, “This is all going away, because I’m tired of you.” ...
    1
    Minutes of the House Judiciary Committee for April 12, 2012, discussion of Senate
    Bill 210 @ 2:27 – 2:32.
    – 17 –                                     2660
    The judge [has] the discretion ... to impose any [sentence]
    from nothing up to [the full amount of the defendant’s
    remaining suspended jail time.] [But] what the judge
    couldn’t do would be [to] say, “Well, ... you have that four
    years of probation that was bargained for. I’m going to
    reduce that by half.” 2
    Two minutes later, Mr. Svobodny reiterated:
    Mr. Svobodny: What we’re trying to say [in subsec­
    tion (f)] is [that a] judge shouldn’t [be able to] say, “Okay,
    we’re done. Go away. I’m eliminating ... that four years [of
    probation]. ... The judge [shouldn’t be able to say],
    “Because there’s been a probation revocation, you’re going
    to get something less than you bargained for.” ... Kind of a
    reward for doing something bad. 3
    In other words, according to Mr. Svobodny, the Department of Law
    intended the new statute to restrict judicial sentencing discretion in probation revocation
    hearings, so that judges could not unilaterally reduce a defendant’s bargained-for term
    of probation when the judge grew tired of dealing with the defendant.
    Neither Ms. Carpeneti nor Mr. Svobodny ever informed the legislature that
    AS 12.55.090(f) was intended to eliminate a defendant’s right to reject probation.
    Ever since our supreme court’s decision in Brown v. State, 
    559 P.2d 107
    ,
    111 n. 13 (Alaska 1977), Alaska law has recognized that defendants have a statutory
    right to reject probation. If the Department of Law had wanted the legislature to
    eliminate this right for a class of defendants (those who resolve their cases through plea
    agreements that specify a term of probation — probably the majority of defendants), then
    2
    
    Id.
     @ 2:31 – 2:32.
    3
    
    Id.
     @ 2:34:00 – 2:34:52.
    – 18 –                                      2660
    one would expect the Department of Law’s representatives to (1) explicitly identify this
    issue and (2) explicitly ask the legislature to change the existing law on this point. But
    the legislative history contains no such discussion.
    For these reasons, the meaning of the statute is, at best, ambiguous on the
    question of whether defendants retain their pre-existing right to reject probation. Alaska
    law therefore directs us to construe this penal statute against the government and in favor
    of criminal defendants’ pre-existing right to reject probation. 4
    Judge Suddock agrees that AS 12.55.090(f) was not meant to abrogate a
    defendant’s right to reject probation. However, Judge Suddock concludes that the statute
    was intended to alter the consequences of a defendant’s rejection of probation. Under
    Judge Suddock’s view, when a defendant rejects a term of probation that was specified
    in the defendant’s plea bargain, the sentencing court must automatically impose the full
    remaining amount of the defendant’s suspended jail time, even if such a sentence would
    otherwise be incompatible with the Chaney sentencing criteria.
    This Court addressed this same sentencing issue in State v. Henry, 
    240 P.3d 846
     (Alaska App. 2010). In Henry, we held that even when a defendant rejects further
    probation and asks for a “flat-time” sentence, the sentencing judge is not allowed to
    automatically impose all of the defendant’s remaining jail time. Instead, the judge is
    required to evaluate the defendant’s case under the Chaney sentencing criteria, and to
    4
    See State v. Andrews, 
    707 P.2d 900
    , 907 (Alaska App. 1985), opinion adopted by the
    supreme court in State v. Andrews, 
    723 P.2d 85
    , 86 (Alaska 1986) (“Ambiguities in criminal
    statutes must be narrowly read and construed strictly against the government.”); see also
    Wells v. State, 
    706 P.2d 711
    , 713 (Alaska App. 1985) (“It is well established that, in
    accordance with the rule of lenity, ambiguities in penal statutes must be resolved in favor of
    the accused.”).
    – 19 –                                        2660
    impose an appropriate sentence under the Chaney criteria — a sentence which might be
    shorter than the full amount of the defendant’s remaining suspended jail time. 5
    In Henry, we addressed the argument that this rule should not apply to a
    defendant whose plea agreement expressly called for the defendant to receive a specific
    term of suspended imprisonment — the argument that, when a defendant accepted such
    a plea bargain, the defendant impliedly waived their right to have the judge impose a
    sentence based on the Chaney criteria, and thus the sentencing judge was required to
    impose the full remaining amount of the defendant’s suspended sentence, even if that
    sentence might not be supportable under the Chaney criteria. 6
    In Henry, this Court rejected the argument that these defendants had
    impliedly waived their right to be sentenced under the Chaney criteria when they
    accepted their plea bargains. We did not resolve the question of whether a defendant
    could ever lawfully waive their right to a sentence that was supportable under the Chaney
    criteria. But we did hold that, if the State wished to have a defendant waive their right
    5
    Henry, 
    240 P.3d at 848
    –49; DeMario v. State, 
    933 P.2d 558
    , 562 (Alaska App. 1997).
    6
    Henry, 
    240 P.3d at 849
    . Here is how the Henry opinion described the State’s
    contention on appeal:
    According to the State, if a defendant agrees to a sentence that includes probation and
    suspended jail time, the defendant necessarily relinquishes the right to later terminate
    their probation and ask the sentencing court to impose an active sentence of imprisonment
    based on the Chaney sentencing criteria. Rather, if the defendant violates the conditions
    of their probation, the sentencing court must impose the entire amount of the previously
    suspended jail time (regardless of whether the court believes that such a sentence
    comports with the Chaney criteria) — or, alternatively, the court must allow the State to
    rescind the plea bargain and return the parties to the status quo ante (a rescission of the
    defendant’s conviction and sentence under the plea bargain, a return of that criminal
    charge to a pre-trial posture, and a reinstatement of any other charges that were dismissed
    as part of the plea bargain).
    – 20 –                                        2660
    to a Chaney-compliant sentence, at the very least the defendant’s plea agreement had to
    expressly say so. 7
    Judge Suddock points out that, at one point during the legislative discussion
    of AS 12.55.090(f), Assistant Attorney General Carpeneti indicated that the proposed
    statute was intended to address the situation discussed in Henry. Because of this passing
    remark, Judge Suddock concludes that AS 12.55.090(f) should be interpreted as
    reversing the holding in Henry that a probationer’s sentence must be compatible with
    the Chaney criteria. Judge Suddock concludes that, under AS 12.55.090(f), when a
    defendant rejects a previously bargained-for probation, the defendant must receive all of
    their remaining suspended jail time, even if such a sentence would not be supportable
    under Chaney.
    But this interpretation of the statute is inconsistent with the statute’s
    legislative history. During the hearings on the proposed legislation, both Ms. Carpeneti
    and Mr. Svobodny told the legislature that, under AS 12.55.090(f), the sentencing of
    probationers would continue to be governed by Chaney.
    Ms. Carpeneti told the House Judiciary Committee that when a judge
    imposed sentence under these circumstances, the judge was not obligated to impose the
    full amount of the defendant’s remaining jail time. Rather, the sentencing judge was
    required to consider the nature of the defendant’s conduct in light of the applicable
    sentencing law, and to impose an appropriate sentence. 8 And Mr. Svobodny likewise
    told the Committee that the Department of Law was not trying to tie the judge’s hands
    7
    Henry, 
    240 P.3d at 851
    .
    8
    Minutes of the House Judiciary Committee for April 11, 2012, discussion of Senate
    Bill 210, testimony of Assistant Attorney General Anne Carpeneti @ 1:39 – 1:40.
    – 21 –                                      2660
    with respect to the amount of suspended jail time that should be imposed — that this
    decision was up to the judge. 9
    A second, independent reason for rejecting Judge Suddock’s interpretation
    of the statute is that appellate courts should normally try to construe statutes in a way that
    does not create constitutional problems, if we can avoid it. As our supreme court has
    said, an appellate court generally seeks to construe statutes “to avoid constitutional
    infirmity where that can be done without doing violence to the legislature’s intent.” 10
    The sentencing criteria established by the Alaska Supreme Court in State
    v. Chaney are constitutionally based. The supreme court declared that these criteria
    derive from the mandate of Article I, Section 12 of the Alaska Constitution that penal
    administration be based on the principles of reformation and protection of the public. 11
    Because the Chaney criteria are constitutionally based, if AS 12.55.090(f)
    were construed as a legislative mandate to exempt a category of sentencing decisions
    from the Chaney criteria, this would raise significant constitutional problems. And there
    is little in the legislative history to suggest that the legislature intended to take on these
    constitutional issues.
    For these reasons, I reject Judge Suddock’s suggestion that AS 12.55.090(f)
    should be interpreted as requiring judges to automatically impose all of a defendant’s
    remaining suspended jail time if the defendant rejects further probation.
    In conclusion, I believe that the legislative history of AS 12.55.090(f)
    shows that this statute was not intended to abrogate the statutory right to reject probation,
    9
    Minutes of the House Judiciary Committee for April 12, 2012, discussion of Senate
    Bill 210, testimony of Deputy Attorney General Richard Svobodny @ 2:31.
    10
    Barber v. Dept. of Corrections, 
    314 P.3d 58
    , 68 (Alaska 2013).
    11
    State v. Chaney, 
    477 P.2d 441
    , 444 (Alaska 1970).
    – 22 –                                        2660
    nor was it intended to abrogate a defendant’s right to a sentence that is supportable under
    the Chaney sentencing criteria.
    I would therefore reverse the judgement of the superior court and direct that
    court to terminate Ray’s probation. However, because it was illegal for the superior
    court to continue Ray on probation, the superior court should be allowed to reconsider
    its sentencing decision — in particular, its decision not to impose the remaining 90 days
    of Ray’s suspended jail time.
    – 23 –                                      2660
    Judge SUDDOCK.
    In our 2010 case State v. Henry, we characterized the State’s position on
    appeal as follows:
    According to the State, if a defendant agrees to a sentence
    that includes probation and suspended jail time, the defendant
    necessarily relinquishes the right to later terminate their
    probation and ask the sentencing court to impose an active
    sentence of imprisonment based on the Chaney sentencing
    criteria. Rather, if the defendant violates the conditions of
    their probation, the sentencing court must impose the entire
    amount of the previously suspended jail time (regardless of
    whether the court believes that such a sentence comports with
    the Chaney criteria). . . .[1]
    We rejected this formulation, holding that when such a probationer rejects probation, the
    sentencing court must instead apply the Chaney criteria and sentence the defendant
    accordingly, even if this were to lead to a less than full imposition of the suspended time
    specified in the plea agreement.2
    Two years after we issued our decision in Henry, the Department of Law
    proposed legislation addressing the topic of a judge’s sentencing discretion in probation
    proceedings. A representative from the Department of Law testified before the
    legislature that the proposed legislation was intended to overrule our decision in Henry.
    I accordingly conclude that AS 12.55.090(f), as enacted in 2012, bars a sentencing court
    from ever absolving a defendant from the suspended time to serve specified in a plea
    agreement, absent the State’s consent. Thus, when a defendant voluntarily rejects
    probation, they must serve all of their remaining suspended time.
    1
    State v. Henry, 
    240 P.3d 846
    , 849 (Alaska App. 2010).
    2
    
    Id. at 851
    .
    – 24 –                                      2660
    AS 12.55.090(f) (2012) reads in relevant part as follows:
    Unless the defendant and the prosecuting authority
    agree at the probation revocation proceeding or other
    proceeding, the court may not reduce the specific period of
    probation or the specific term of suspended incarceration
    except by the amount of incarceration imposed for a
    probation violation, if
    (1) the sentence was imposed in accordance with a
    plea agreement under Rule 11, Alaska Rules of Criminal
    Procedure; and
    (2) the agreement required a specific period of
    probation or a specific term of suspended incarceration.
    Judge Mannheimer and I conclude that this statute does not abrogate a defendant’s
    statutory right to reject probation. I further conclude that, since the statute precludes
    forgiveness of any suspended time specified in a plea agreement, the statute’s logic
    requires an imposition of all suspended time when a defendant rejects probation.
    Judge Mannheimer analyzes the testimony of the two representatives of the
    Department of Law and arrives at a contrary construction of the statute. He reasons in
    part that these witnesses testified that the statute was not intended to eliminate
    consideration of the Chaney factors when a judge sentences a probationer, and therefore
    that the Chaney factors remain applicable when a defendant rejects probation. Under this
    construction of the statute, the sentencing judge would be free to impose a less-than­
    maximum sentence and to terminate any residual period of probation, contravening the
    terms of the original plea agreement.
    I read the testimony of the State’s witnesses quite differently. Their oft-
    repeated overarching theme was that, because “a deal is a deal,” a court should not be
    – 25 –                                     2660
    authorized to unilaterally stray from the terms of an original plea agreement. When these
    witnesses indicated that the Chaney factors remain applicable, this was with respect to
    a hypothetical sentencing for a routine probation violation. There, as to the amount of
    suspended time to be imposed consistently with the original plea agreement, the
    witnesses testified that the judge must apply the Chaney factors. Their point was that,
    if the judge imposed less than the maximum sentence for a probation violation, the judge
    could not then prospectively excuse the defendant from the remaining suspended time,
    or from any portion of the remaining probationary period.
    But the two State’s witnesses never suggested that the proposed legislation
    did not also apply to a probationer who rejects probation altogether. As will be seen, two
    other witnesses did address that circumstance, and both of these witnesses testified that
    the legislation would require an automatic full imposition of all suspended time when a
    probationer rejects probation. One of the State’s witnesses then acknowledged the point
    and did not contradict it.
    Fairly read, nothing in the testimony of the two State’s witnesses suggested
    that, under the State’s proposed remedial legislation, a court could ever act inconsistently
    with the original plea agreement. Indeed, they testified that such judicial discretion was
    anathema to the Department of Law, because allowing judges to contravene an original
    plea bargain was poor public policy.3
    Accordingly, I conclude that via this legislation, the Department of Law
    succeeded in its announced goal of legislatively overruling our holding in Henry that a
    3
    See Minutes of House Judiciary Comm., Senate Bill 210, testimony of Assistant
    Attorney General Anne Carpeneti, 1:44-1:45 p.m. (Apr. 11, 2012); Minutes of House
    Judiciary Comm., Senate Bill 210, testimony of Deputy Attorney General Richard Svobodny,
    2:27 p.m. (Apr. 12, 2012).
    – 26 –                                       2660
    court has the authority to sentence a probationer who rejects probation inconsistently
    with an original plea agreement.
    To explain my conclusion, I turn to the testimony of four witnesses who
    testified before the House Judiciary and Finance Committees. On April 11, 2012,
    Deputy Public Defender Douglas Moody appeared before the House Judiciary
    Committee. Moody testified that, under the proposed legislation, a sentencing judge
    would be required to impose all of a defendant’s remaining suspended time if the
    defendant rejected probation.4 That is, Moody testified that the legislation would
    abrogate our holding in Henry.5 Moody argued that the legislature should not adopt the
    proposed legislation, but rather should leave standing the rule in Henry that a judge must
    sentence a rejecting probationer to a Chaney-compliant sentence, and not be required to
    automatically impose all remaining suspended time.6
    This point was reinforced the following day by Public Defender Quinlan
    Steiner. Like Moody, Steiner testified that the proposed legislation would unwisely
    require a judge to impose a maximum sentence when a probationer rejects probation:
    When a client rejects probation, all of their time is imposed,
    [but under existing law] that can be subject to shortening of
    the [full] amount of suspended time. What this section does
    is kind of shifts the current law from that . . . to exactly the
    opposite . . . .
    ....
    4
    Minutes of the House Judiciary Comm., Senate Bill 210, testimony of Deputy Public
    Defender Douglas Moody, 2:23-2:24 p.m. (Apr. 11, 2012).
    5
    See 
    id. 6
    Id. at 2:30
     p.m.
    – 27 –                                  2660
    [T]he imposition of [all suspended time] would be statutorily
    required, absent an agreement . . . .[7]
    Steiner also indicated that he had discussed this understanding with one of the State’s
    witnesses, Assistant Attorney General Anne Carpeneti, and that they were on the same
    page as to the effect of the legislation.8
    Deputy Attorney General Richard Svobodny was present during Steiner’s
    testimony, and he testified immediately thereafter. Svobodny prefaced his remarks by
    noting that the principle impelling the Department of Law to seek legislative redress was
    that “a deal is a deal.”9 Svobodny then expressly acknowledged Steiner’s testimony
    regarding the act’s consequence when a probationer rejects probation, without
    contradicting that testimony.10 Svobodny instead turned his attention to what he termed
    the vastly more common situation (“probably 95% of the times that this comes up”) of
    a probationer who commits a probation violation but does not reject probation.11 In a
    clear nod to our 2010 decision in Henry, Svobodny stated:
    What the decisions in the last year have said is basically the
    judge can say . . . you have violated the law, that was a
    violation of your conditions of probation, but I’m not going
    7
    Minutes of House Judiciary Comm., Senate Bill 210, testimony of Public Defender
    Quinlan Steiner, 2:17-2:18 p.m. (Apr. 12, 2012).
    8
    
    Id. at 2:16-2:18
     p.m.
    9
    Minutes of House Judiciary Comm., Senate Bill 210, testimony of Deputy Attorney
    General Richard Svobodny, 2:21 p.m. (Apr. 12, 2012).
    10
    
    Id. 11
    Id. at 2:22
     p.m.
    – 28 –                                 2660
    to do anything, and I’m going to just say that what you have
    done now is it.[12]
    If Svobodny had disagreed with the assessment of the two witnesses from
    the Public Defender Agency that the legislation required imposition of all suspended
    time when a probationer rejects probation, he clearly would have said so; to fail to do so
    would have been misleading. But Svobodny instead characterized that situation as rare,
    and addressed the balance of his remarks to a different context — that of sentences for
    probation violations not accompanied by a rejection of probation. In this context,
    Svobodny agreed that the Chaney principles applied, but he testified that judicial
    discretion to shorten any remaining suspended time or probationary period should be
    prohibited.13
    In my view, Judge Mannheimer goes astray when he generalizes
    Svobodny’s remarks about sentences for routine violations of conditions of probation,
    to the separate and vastly rarer context of the consequence of a rejection of probation.
    The clear tenor of Svobodny’s remarks was that a judge should never be allowed to
    deviate from the terms of a plea bargain, and that decisions such as Henry should be
    overruled by the legislature. Surely the Department of Law did not trouble itself to draft
    legislation to remedy a situation that rarely occurs — arbitrary judicial reductions in
    probationers’ sentences — only to leave intact the holding of the case with which it
    expressly disagreed, Henry.
    Assistant Attorney General Anne Carpeneti also testified, to both the House
    Judiciary and Finance Committees. Carpeneti discussed Henry in the context of
    Svobodny’s example about judges who, without justification, shorten the sentence of a
    12
    
    Id. at 2:27
     p.m.
    13
    
    Id. at 2:22-2:24
     p.m.
    – 29 –                                     2660
    probationer who has violated applicable terms of probation but who does not reject
    probation. But her clear point was that the original plea agreement should always remain
    inviolate whenever a judge sentences a probationer, and accordingly that our holding to
    the contrary in Henry should be overruled.14
    I conclude that the Department of Law, aggrieved by our decision in Henry,
    drafted legislation to deprive judges of the discretion to alter the terms of a plea bargain
    when a probationer is subsequently re-sentenced, and thereby to legislatively overrule
    Henry. My reading of the legislative history convinces me that the legislature intended
    to comprehensively constrain judicial discretion in this way. I would accordingly
    remand the case to the trial court, directing the judge to instruct Ray about the
    consequences of a rejection of probation. If Ray then persists in his desire to reject
    probation, the judge must sentence him to serve all of his remaining suspended time.
    14
    Minutes of House Finance Comm., Senate Bill 210, testimony of Assistant Attorney
    General Anne Carpeneti, 7:37-7:38 p.m., 7:45-7:46 p.m. (Apr. 13, 2012).
    – 30 –                                      2660
    Judge ALLARD.
    I disagree with Chief Judge Mannheimer’s and Judge Suddock’s
    interpretations of AS 12.55.090(f). Instead, I agree with the State that AS 12.55.090(f)
    was intended to prohibit a defendant from unilaterally rejecting probation in cases where
    the parties specifically agreed to a probationary term as part of a plea agreement.
    I come to this conclusion based on the plain language of the statute and the
    accompanying legislative history. First, the plain language of the statute indicates that
    the purpose of AS 12.55.090(f) was to ensure that the parties to a plea agreement that
    involved a specific period of probation or a specific term of suspended incarceration are
    held to that agreement. As originally enacted in 2012,1 AS 12.55.090(f) stated:
    Unless the defendant and the prosecuting authority
    agree . . . , the court may not reduce the specific period of
    probation, or the specific term of suspended incarceration
    except by the amount of incarceration imposed for a
    probation violation, if
    (1) the sentence was imposed in accordance with a
    plea agreement under Rule 11, Alaska Rules of Criminal
    Procedure; and
    (2) the [plea] agreement required a specific period of
    probation or a specific term of suspended incarceration.
    In other words, under the plain language of the statute, a court has no authority to reduce
    a specific agreed-upon period of probation unless the parties to the original agreement
    agree to that reduction.
    1
    Alaska Statute 12.55.090(f) was amended slightly in 2016, but the language quoted
    here remains the same.
    – 31 –                                      2660
    In my view, this language necessarily implicates a defendant’s right to
    formally reject probation and be resentenced to a “flat-time” sentence — i.e., a sentence
    without a probationary term or suspended time — because such a resentencing cannot
    take place if the court is not authorized to conduct that resentencing.
    As a practical matter, a defendant can “reject” probation simply by refusing
    to abide by their probation obligations. Such non-compliance will inevitably lead to
    multiple petitions to revoke probation, and eventually to imposition of all of the
    probationer’s suspended time — thereby “ending” the defendant’s probation because
    there is no longer any suspended time left to impose. Alaska law has historically allowed
    a defendant to avoid such a long drawn-out process by allowing a defendant to formally
    reject probation and be resentenced under the Chaney criteria to a “flat-time” sentence.2
    But a defendant cannot formally reject probation and be resentenced to a flat-time
    sentence unless the court is authorized to conduct that resentencing. Thus, under the
    plain language of AS 12.55.090(f), the court cannot reduce a bargained-for probationary
    term — and a defendant cannot elect to reject probation — “[u]nless the defendant and
    the prosecuting authority agree” to that resentencing.3
    The legislative history supports this reading of the statute. Although not
    as clear as it could be,4 the legislative history does make clear that AS 12.55.090(f) was
    2
    See Brown v. State, 
    559 P.2d 107
    , 111 n.13 (Alaska 1977); State v. Henry, 
    240 P.3d 846
    , 848-49 (Alaska App. 2010).
    3
    In 2016, the legislature amended AS 12.55.090(f) to also allow for reduction of a
    probationary term in cases where “the person qualifies for a reduction under
    AS 33.05.020(h)” or “a probation officer recommends to the court that probation be
    terminated and the defendant be discharged from probation under (g) of this section or
    AS 33.05.040.” SLA 2016, ch. 36, §80.
    4
    I acknowledge that the Public Defender Agency representatives had a different view
    (continued...)
    – 32 –                                     2660
    introduced in response to this Court’s decision in State v. Henry. In her initial remarks
    at the April 11, 2012 House Judiciary Committee Meeting, Assistant Attorney General
    Anne Carpeneti stated that the amendment “deal[s] with the situation that arose . . . in
    State v. Henry.”5 Ms. Carpeneti then described Henry as involving a defendant who
    “was sentenced under [a] plea agreement . . . violated his probation . . . and asked for the
    period of probation to be reduced.”6 Ms. Carpeneti explained that the the State opposed
    any reduction in the defendant’s probationary term because it was a bargained-for term
    of the plea agreement; but the Court of Appeals permitted the trial court to end the
    defendant’s probation and to resentence the defendant under the Chaney criteria.7 Ms.
    Carpeneti’s description of the State’s position in Henry was consistent with the State’s
    position in its briefing in Henry (although inconsistent with our description of the State’s
    position in our decision in Henry8).
    4
    (...continued)
    of the legislation than the Department of Law representatives, and that this discrepancy was
    never explicitly addressed or resolved.
    5
    Minutes of House Judiciary Comm., Senate Bill 210, testimony of Assistant Attorney
    General Anne Carpeneti, 1:37 p.m. (Apr. 11, 2012).
    6
    Id. at 1:39 p.m.
    7
    Id.
    8
    I note that we partially misdescribed the State’s position in our opinion in Henry. In
    Henry, we described the State’s position as allowing a defendant to reject probation but
    requiring either imposition of the remaining suspended time or rescission of the original plea
    agreement. Henry, 
    240 P.3d at 849
    . However, a review of the briefing in Henry makes clear
    that the State’s primary position in Henry was that a defendant who agreed to probation as
    a bargained-for term of their plea agreement should not be allowed to unilaterally reject
    probation. This is the same position that the State takes now, and that I view the Department
    of Law representatives as taking at the legislative hearings on AS 12.55.090(f).
    – 33 –                                       2660
    In a subsequent hearing before the House Finance Committee, Ms.
    Carpeneti reiterated that the purpose of the statutory amendment was to address a recent
    Court of Appeals opinion and to prevent the court from reducing the amount of the
    probationary term unless both parties agreed.9 Thus, under AS 12.55.090(f), the court
    would “look at the Chaney criteria to decide what effect this violation of probation
    should have,” but the sentence for the probation violation could not include reduction of
    the defendant’s bargained-for probationary term.10
    Deputy Attorney General Richard Svobodny’s testimony to the House
    Judiciary Committee is in accord with Ms. Carpeneti’s description of the purpose of
    AS 12.55.090(f). Mr. Svobodny stated that the new legislation required judges to abide
    by the precept that “a deal is a deal.”11 According to Mr. Svobodny, it is not fair for a
    trial court to terminate probation when it is part of a bargained-for exchange because
    “both sides have negotiated in good faith over what is an appropriate sentence” and it is
    not “justice” for a judge to reduce the amount of probation that was bargained for.12
    Mr. Svobodny also noted that there were other parties’ interests at stake and
    that “lots of times, a period of probation . . . is determined based upon getting [the]
    victim paid [restitution].”13 As Mr. Svobodny pointed out, victims would have to resort
    to civil courts to get restitution if a judge eliminated a bargained-for probation
    9
    Minutes of House Finance Comm., Senate Bill 210, testimony of Assistant Attorney
    General Anne Carpeneti, 7:36-7:38 p.m. (Apr. 13, 2012).
    10
    Minutes of House Judiciary Comm., Senate Bill 210, testimony of Assistant Attorney
    General Anne Carpeneti, 1:39-1:40 p.m. (Apr. 11, 2012).
    11
    Minutes of House Judiciary Comm., Senate Bill 210, testimony of Deputy Attorney
    General Richard Svobodny, 2:21 p.m. (Apr. 12, 2012).
    12
    
    Id. at 2:23-2:24
     p.m.
    13
    
    Id. at 2:27
     p.m.
    – 34 –                                     2660
    requirement by imposing a flat-time sentence.14 Lastly, Mr. Svobodny emphasized that
    the statutory amendment did not “tie the judge’s hands” as to how much suspended time
    to impose for a violation.15
    Based on the plain language of the amendment and the accompanying
    legislative history, I conclude that AS 12.55.090(f) was enacted to prevent a defendant
    from unilaterally rejecting probation if the term of probation was part of a bargained-for
    term of the defendant’s plea agreement.
    14
    
    Id. at 2:28
     p.m.
    15
    
    Id. at 2:31
     p.m.
    – 35 –                                    2660