State v. Vaden. ( 2023 )


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  • *** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAIʻI REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
    Electronically Filed
    Supreme Court
    SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
    15-MAR-2023
    10:02 AM
    Dkt. 20 OP
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAIʻI
    ---o0o---
    STATE OF HAWAIʻI,
    Respondent/Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    JONATHAN S. VADEN,
    Petitioner/Defendant-Appellant.
    SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
    CERTIORARI TO THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS
    (CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX; CASE NO. 2CPC-XX-XXXXXXX)
    MARCH 15, 2023
    RECKTENWALD, C.J., NAKAYAMA, AND EDDINS, JJ.; AND
    WILSON, J., DISSENTING, WITH WHOM McKENNA, J., JOINS
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY EDDINS, J.
    I.
    This case is about whether Hawaiʻi Revised Statutes (HRS)
    § 706-671 (2014) ever entitles a defendant to “double count”
    concurrently-earned detention or incarceration credit against
    later-imposed consecutive sentences.
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    We hold that under HRS § 706-671(1) presentence detention
    time must be counted only once against the aggregate of a
    defendant’s consecutive sentences.         This is true even if those
    consecutive sentences are spread across multiple cases.
    Likewise, we hold that under HRS § 706-671(2) time served
    against concurrently running probation sentences that are later
    revoked and converted to consecutive terms of imprisonment must
    be counted only once against the aggregate of a defendant’s
    consecutive sentences in one or more cases.
    We also hold that when detention or prison time is accrued
    before sentencing, or pursuant to a later-revoked probationary
    sentence, the double jeopardy clause’s prohibition on multiple
    punishments is not violated so long as the defendant’s total
    period of detention and imprisonment does not exceed the
    statutory maximum term for the offenses at issue.
    II.
    In 2018, the State charged Jonathan Vaden with drug and
    property crimes.       There were five unrelated cases, including the
    one at issue here, Case No. 2CPC-XX-XXXXXXX (2CPC-18-844 or this
    case).
    In May 2019, after spending several months in jail for all
    five cases, Vaden pled no contest to all but one charge 1.            The
    1     The parties agreed to dismiss count 1 (attempted promoting a dangerous
    drug in the first degree) in 2CPC-XX-XXXXXXX.
    2
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    court accepted Vaden’s pleas.        The parties waived a presentence
    report. 2     The court sentenced Vaden to four years of probation in
    each case.      All terms ran concurrently.     And in all five cases,
    the court sentenced Vaden to terms of imprisonment as
    discretionary conditions of probation.         Vaden got six months
    (for the misdemeanors) and twelve and eighteen months (for the
    felonies).
    In June 2019, Vaden petitioned for admission into the Maui
    Drug Court Program.       The Maui Drug Court approved the petition.
    It “re-sentenced” him to new probation terms, with the
    discretionary condition that he complete the drug court program.
    The court ordered that all previous probation terms and
    conditions that were “not inconsistent” with the new probation
    terms remain as probation conditions.
    A month later, in July 2019, Vaden was released from
    custody.      Vaden remained in the drug court program for a full
    five months before he violated its rules.          Vaden was detained
    2     The presentence report (PSR) has “many uses in the criminal justice
    process.” See State v. Carlton, 146 Hawaiʻi 16, 27, 
    455 P.3d 356
    , 367 (2019).
    It affords victims, or their families, an opportunity to be heard. See HRS
    § 706-604(3) (Supp. 2016). It is used by the Hawaiʻi Paroling Authority in
    determining defendants’ minimum term of imprisonment. HRS § 706-669(2)
    (2014). A copy is provided to defendants’ probation officers. HRS § 806-
    73(b)(3)(F) (2014 & Supp. 2017). And to mental health professionals
    conducting court-ordered assessments of defendants. HRS § 806-73(b)(3)(C).
    In some instances — for example where there is a recent pre-existing PSR –
    waiver of the PSR may be appropriate. But these reports play an important
    role in our criminal justice system and trial courts should not consent to
    their waiver as a matter of course. See HRS § 706-601(3) (Supp. 2016) (“With
    the consent of the court, the requirement of a pre-sentence diagnosis may be
    waived by agreement of both the defendant and the prosecuting attorney.”).
    3
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    again in December 2019.    The circuit court terminated him from
    the Maui Drug Court Program and revoked his probation.
    In February 2020, the circuit court resentenced Vaden as
    follows.
    Case             Counts              New Sentences
    2CPC-XX-XXXXXXX    Ct. 1-11         5 years in each count
    Ct. 12,13        1 year in each count
    Ct. 14           30 days
    2CPC-XX-XXXXXXX                     5 years
    2CPC-XX-XXXXXXX    Ct. 1            5 years
    Ct. 3            30 days
    2CPC-XX-XXXXXXX                     5 years
    2CPC-XX-XXXXXXX    Ct. 2 (PDD2)     10 years
    (This case)        Ct. 3,4          5 years in each count
    Ct. 5            1 year
    The court ordered the sentences in the first four cases to
    run concurrently with each other; the aggregate term was 5 years
    (the 5-year sentence).    The court also ran the sentences in
    2CPC-18-844 (this case) concurrently with each other; the
    aggregate term was 10 years (the 10-year sentence).       The court
    ran Vaden’s 10-year sentence consecutively to his 5-year
    sentence.
    The Resentencing Order stated: “Credit given for time
    served.”
    The Department of Public Safety (DPS) did not give the
    court the required certificates of detention detailing the days
    Vaden was detained prior to sentencing and in connection with
    4
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    his probation sentence. 3      But it credited him 340 days against
    the 5-year sentence and one day against the 10-year sentence.
    Vaden moved the court to correct the credit he received: he
    wanted 340 days of credit against both the 5-year sentence and
    the 10-year sentence.       (DPS explained in an email to defense
    counsel that it declined to credit the 340 days against the 10-
    year sentence in order to avoid “double dipping”; Vaden
    submitted the email to the court.)         Vaden invoked HRS § 706-
    671(1) and (2), as well as the double jeopardy clause.
    The court denied Vaden’s motion.      It relied on State v.
    Tauiliili, 96 Hawaiʻi 195, 
    29 P.3d 914
     (2001).           There, the trial
    court had sentenced Tauiliili to two concurrent 10-year terms
    and one consecutive 5-year term within a single case; we held
    that under HRS § 706-671(1), “presentence” credit should be
    3     HRS § 706-671(1) requires that when a defendant has previously been
    detained, the officer who has custody of the defendant furnish the court with
    a certificate showing how long the defendant spent in detention before
    sentencing. HRS § 706-671(2) similarly requires that when a defendant who
    has been detained or imprisoned pursuant to an earlier sentence is re-
    sentenced, “[t]he officer having custody of the defendant” shall furnish a
    certificate to the court at sentencing showing “the period of imprisonment
    served under the original sentence.” Both subsections also instruct that the
    certificate be annexed to the “official records” of the defendant’s
    commitment.
    Here, the record contains no certificates of detention; Vaden was
    resentenced by the circuit court, but the court was not furnished with any
    certificates of detention by the Department of Public Safety. And there are
    no certificates of detention attached to the court’s judgment. The absence
    of a detention certificate is particularly problematic here because it
    appears that the DPS’s informal credit calculations may have been wrong to
    the extent they gave Vaden only 472 days’ credit for time served in 2CPC-18-
    0000315 when it appears that he was actually imprisoned for 532 days in that
    case.
    5
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    applied only once to the aggregate of consecutive sentences.
    Id. at 197, 199, 
    29 P.3d at 916, 918
    .     Citing Tauiliili, the
    circuit court ruled that Vaden could not get a “double credit”
    for his 340 days of imprisonment before the resentencing.
    The ICA affirmed.    It observed that Vaden’s claim
    implicated two different credit categories: “presentence” credit
    under HRS § 706-671(1) and “probation incarceration” credit
    under HRS § 706-671(2).    But, the ICA noted, neither Vaden nor
    the State addressed this distinction.     So the record was unclear
    as to “what portion of the 340 days constitutes presentence days
    and probation sentence days.”    The distinction between
    presentence detention and probation incarceration played no
    further role in the ICA’s analysis; the ICA concluded that
    Tauiliili was “dispositive”: Vaden could not get “double” credit
    for any of the 340 days.
    Now, Vaden asks this court to consider whether the ICA
    gravely erred and violated his rights under HRS § 706-671 or the
    double jeopardy clause by “erasing” his incarceration credit and
    effectively adding 340 days to his 10-year sentence.
    III.
    A.   Vaden’s incarceration credit implicates both HRS § 706-
    671(1) and (2)
    Under HRS § 706-671(1) and (2), convicted defendants are
    entitled to credit for time served as follows:
    6
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    (1)   When a defendant who is sentenced to imprisonment has
    previously been detained in any State or local correctional
    or other institution following the defendant’s arrest for
    the crime for which sentence is imposed, such period of
    detention following the defendant’s arrest shall be
    deducted from the minimum and maximum terms of such
    sentence. . . .
    (2)   When a judgment of conviction or a sentence is
    vacated and a new sentence is thereafter imposed upon the
    defendant for the same crime, the period of detention and
    imprisonment theretofore served shall be deducted from the
    minimum and maximum terms of the new sentence. . . .
    These two subsections concern distinct types of credit.
    HRS § 706-671(1) controls credit for detention time between
    arrest and the initial sentence.
    HRS § 706-671(2), in contrast, deals with credit for time
    served as part of a sentence. 4         Though HRS § 706-671(2) refers to
    time served under a “vacated” sentence, our holding in State v.
    Delima confirms that HRS § 706-671(2) also applies to situations
    like Vaden’s where a defendant serves time pursuant to probation
    that is later revoked.        See 78 Hawaiʻi 343, 348, 
    893 P.2d 194
    ,
    199 (1995) (holding that six months imprisonment served by a
    defendant as a condition of a later-revoked, probation was “time
    spent imprisoned for the purposes of HRS § 706-671(2)” that must
    be deducted from the new sentence imposed on resentencing).
    The 340 days at issue here consist of three distinct time
    4     The Model Penal Code and Commentaries’ (MPC) discussion of a parallel
    section – MPC § 7.09 – also makes clear that subsection (1) applies to “time
    served prior to sentencing” while subsection (2) addresses “time served under
    a conviction[.]” MPC § 7.09 at 310 (emphasis added). Though MPC § 7.09 uses
    the word “conviction” in subsection (2), the commentary confirms that its
    principle “also extend[s] to a situation in which a court vacates a sentence
    and imposes a new one without vacating the conviction.” Id.
    7
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    periods:
    (1)   time served from his initial arrest to the initial
    sentencing;
    (2)   time served under probation; and
    (3)   time served between his (re)arrest in connection with
    his termination from the Maui Drug Court Program and
    resentencing.
    Category (1) is “presentence” time under HRS § 706-671(1).
    Under Delima, category (2) corresponds to “probation
    incarceration” time under HRS § 706-671(2).
    Regarding category (3), though it happened after the
    imposition of the initial sentences, it is comparable to
    “presentence” detention time since Vaden was not serving any
    “sentence” during that period.    Because HRS § 706-671(2) only
    governs time served under vacated or revoked sentences, we treat
    category (3) as “presentence” time under HRS § 706-671(1).
    B.   Under HRS § 706-671(1) Vaden is entitled to credit his
    presentence detention time once against the aggregate of
    his consecutive sentence terms
    In Tauiliili, we held that under HRS § 706-671(1), “when
    consecutive sentences are imposed, credit for presentence
    imprisonment is properly granted against only the aggregate of
    the consecutive sentence terms.”       96 Hawaiʻi at 199, 
    29 P.3d at
    8
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    918. 5    This holding is consistent with other courts that have
    interpreted laws concerning defendants’ entitlement to “credit”
    for presentence detention time as allowing for credit once
    against the aggregate of consecutive sentences.           See, e.g,
    Wilson v. State, 
    264 N.W.2d 234
    , 235 (Wis. 1978) (concluding
    that “where consecutive sentences are imposed, pretrial
    incarceration time should be credited as time served on only one
    of such sentences”). 6
    Vaden’s argument that Tauiliili is inapplicable because it
    concerns consecutive sentences within a single case as opposed
    to multiple cases lacks merit.        Vaden cites no authority
    allowing “double dipping” in the “presentence” credit context
    5     In Tauiliili we noted that the commentary to HRS § 706-671 states that
    the statute “provides for some equalization . . . between those defendants
    who obtain pre-sentence release and those who do not.” Allowing those who
    are detained prior to sentencing to get repeat credit, we said, would
    undermine the legislature’s equalization rationale. 96 Hawaiʻi at 199, 
    29 P.3d at 918
    .
    6     See also State v. Price, 
    50 P.3d 530
    , 535 (Mont. 2002) (holding that
    Montana statute governing credit for incarceration prior to conviction
    “entitles defendants to credit for presentence incarceration only once
    against the aggregate of all terms imposed when multiple sentences are
    imposed consecutively”); Schubert v. People, 
    698 P.2d 788
    , 795 (Colo. 1985)
    (“When consecutive sentences are imposed, crediting the period of presentence
    confinement against one of the sentences will assure the defendant full
    credit against the total term of imprisonment.”); Cox v. State, 
    522 P.2d 173
    ,
    176 (Kan. 1974) (holding that defendant was not entitled to credit
    presentence detention time against his state sentence where he had already
    received credit for that time against federal sentence he was serving
    consecutively to his state sentence); Nissel v. Pearce, 
    764 P.2d 224
    , 228
    (Or. 1988) (“In light of the underlying purposes of statutes giving credit
    for presentence time served and the absence of any indication that the
    legislature intended (or even contemplated) duplicate credit for consecutive
    sentences, we hold that the plaintiff was not entitled to receive credit on
    each of his consecutive sentences.”).
    9
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    where the sentences at issue run consecutively to those in
    unrelated cases. 7,8
    Tauiliili remains good law and is dispositive of our
    analysis of Vaden’s arguments to the extent they concern
    presentence credit time: under Tauiliili, Vaden is entitled to
    credit his presentence HRS § 706-671(1) time once against the
    aggregate of any later imposed consecutive sentences.
    C.      Under HRS § 706-671(2) Vaden is entitled to credit for time
    served as a condition of probation once against the
    aggregate of his consecutive sentences
    Vaden also argues that HRS § 706-671(2) entitles him to
    credit time served as a discretionary condition of probation
    against each of the consecutive sentences imposed following the
    revocation of that probation.        We disagree for three reasons.
    First, nothing in the plain text of HRS § 706-671(2)
    suggests that the legislature intended that time earned under
    HRS § 706-671(2) should be credited against multiple consecutive
    sentences.      The statute’s use of the singular “sentence”
    reflects the fact that the word may refer not only to a
    7     At least one state court of appeals has held that such “double dipping”
    is not allowed. See Ransone v. State, 
    20 So.3d 445
    , 447, 449 (Fla. Dist. Ct.
    App. 2009) (refusing to double credit presentence jail time against
    consecutive sentences in two separate cases when the defendant was held in
    custody for both).
    8     Vaden correctly argued that transferring credit to an unrelated case is
    prohibited. See State v. March, 94 Hawaiʻi 250, 255, 
    11 P.3d 1094
    , 1099
    (2000) (holding that a sentence that credits Defendant with the time served
    for an unrelated offense is illegal). But no such transfer happened here.
    The 340 days were simultaneously accrued in all five cases.
    10
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    particular term of incarceration imposed for a conviction on a
    single criminal count, but also to the sum of the terms of
    incarceration and other penalties imposed on a defendant for
    their crimes.   Multiple consecutive sentences are really just
    one sentence.   The order of resentencing in Vaden’s case
    describes the ten terms of incarceration (imposed for ten
    different counts across five different cases) as a single
    “sentence” imposed “with this order.”     Cf. State v. Percy, 
    612 A.2d 1119
    , 1127 (Vt. 1992) (“When all is said and done, a number
    of consecutive sentences becomes one sentence, and it is against
    this sentence, as ‘imposed,’ that pretrial detention is
    credited.”).
    Second, though Tauiliili does not control our analysis, its
    implicit interpretation of the word “sentence” in HRS § 706-
    671(1) is persuasive.   Tauiliili treats HRS § 706-671(1)’s
    “sentence” as referring to the aggregate of consecutive
    sentences imposed in connection with the defendant’s crimes, not
    a particular term of imprisonment imposed in connection with a
    specific crime.   It makes sense to use the same definition of
    “sentence” in HRS § 706-671(2).    Adopting a more atomistic
    approach and reading “the new sentence” in HRS § 706-671(2) as
    referring to each consecutive term of incarceration imposed
    following the revocation or vacatur of probation would
    effectively require holding that the word “sentence” as used in
    11
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    HRS § 706-671(2) has a different meaning from that of the same
    word in HRS § 706-671(1).
    Third, reading HRS § 706-671(2) as requiring that probation
    incarceration time be applied against each consecutive sentence
    imposed after the revocation of probation would lead to unfair
    and arbitrary results.   The defendant who served a year of
    probation incarceration time and then, following probation
    revocation, was sentenced to two consecutive five-year terms
    would, in total, spend a year less in prison than a defendant
    who served the same year as a condition of probation but was
    sentenced to a single ten-year term.     Cf. Tauiliili, 96 Hawaiʻi
    at 199, 
    29 P.3d at 918
     (explaining that allowing repeat credit
    for presentence detention time against consecutive sentences
    would “defeat the legislative purpose underlying consecutive
    sentencing” since if multiple credit were allowed, “the more
    consecutive sentences a criminal defendant received, the more
    credit [they] would accrue for presentence imprisonment”).
    Further, this reading of HRS § 706-671(2) would curb
    courts’ ability to impose consecutive sentences.      For instance,
    if a defendant commits five misdemeanors in five separate cases
    and serves one year before sentencing, they would receive five
    years of credit if the court imposes consecutive statutory
    maximum terms (one year for each misdemeanor).      In that
    situation, the defendant would ultimately serve no additional
    12
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    jail time, and the court’s decision to impose consecutive
    sentences would be pointless.         Id.    Indeed, any consecutive
    sentence would be meaningless.
    For these reasons, we hold that HRS § 706-671(2) entitles
    Vaden to incarceration credit earned pursuant to a later-revoked
    probationary sentence once against the aggregate of his later-
    imposed consecutive sentences.         As in the HRS § 706-671(1)
    context, this holding applies irrespective of whether the
    sentences are in one case or spread across multiple cases.
    D.      The double jeopardy clause does not require that Vaden be
    awarded incarceration credit against each of his
    consecutive sentences
    Along with his statutory arguments, Vaden advances a
    constitutional claim: he says the court’s refusal to deduct 340
    days from his 10-year consec sentence violates his double
    jeopardy rights.       We disagree.
    The constitutional guarantee against double jeopardy 9
    “protects against multiple punishments for the same offense.”
    North Carolina v. Pearce, 
    395 U.S. 711
    , 717 (1969).            This
    guarantee “absolutely requires that punishment already exacted
    must be fully ‘credited’ in imposing sentence upon a new
    conviction for the same offense.”           
    Id. at 718-19
     (emphases
    9     See U.S. Const. amend. V (guaranteeing that a person “subject for the
    same offence” shall not be “twice put in jeopardy of life or limb”); Haw.
    Const. art I, § 10 (same except that article I, section 10 omits “life or
    limb”).
    13
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    added) (footnote omitted).
    If Vaden’s incarceration time was earned pursuant to a
    probationary sentence that was later vacated, a trial court’s
    refusal to credit that time against a sentence imposed in
    connection with a “new conviction for the same offense” would
    implicate Vaden’s double jeopardy clause rights. 10          But that’s
    not what happened here.       Vaden’s 340 days were served either
    before sentencing 11 or pursuant to a sentence of probation that
    was later revoked, not vacated. 12        So his double jeopardy rights
    would only come into play if his total punishment in this case
    10    See State v. Thompson, No. SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX, 
    2020 WL 2846618
    , *3 (Haw.
    June 1, 2020) (SDO) (acknowledging that applying time served on vacated
    sentences only once against the aggregate of new consecutive sentences for
    the same crimes “would raise very serious double jeopardy issues” and result
    in “unconstitutional ‘multiple punishments’ for the same offense.” (Citation
    omitted)).
    11    Several courts have held that the denial of prison credit for
    presentence detention time generally does not raise constitutional issues
    unless it operates to extend the defendant’s total incarceration beyond the
    statutory maximum term. See, e.g., Faye v. Gray, 
    541 F.2d 665
    , 667 (7th Cir.
    1976); State v. Warde, 
    570 P.2d 766
    , 768–69 (Ariz. 1977) (“[A] number of
    state and federal appellate courts . . . have held that a defendant, as a
    matter of equal protection, must be credited with presentence jail time when
    such time, if added to the maximum sentence imposed, will exceed the maximum
    statutory sentence.” (Emphasis added.)).
    12    “[T]he imposition of confinement when an offender violates his term
    of probation has never been considered to raise a serious double jeopardy
    problem.” Ralston v. Robinson, 
    454 U.S. 201
    , 220 n.14 (1981). This is
    because the revocation of a defendant’s probation and the imposition of a new
    sentence is a modification of the defendant’s original sentence, not a
    “second” or “multiple” punishment for double jeopardy purposes. So, as the
    Supreme Court explained in Ralston, there is no “double jeopardy” problem
    when the offender “by his own actions, trigger[s] the condition that permits
    appropriate modification of the terms of confinement.” 
    Id.
     Cf. United
    States v. DiFrancesco, 
    449 U.S. 117
    , 137 (1980) (stating that the double
    jeopardy clause “does not provide the defendant with the right to know at any
    specific moment in time what the exact limit of his punishment will turn out
    to be” and observing that “there is no double jeopardy protection against
    revocation of probation and the imposition of imprisonment”).
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    exceeded the maximum statutory penalty for the crimes at issue. 13
    Cf. Jones v. Thomas, 
    491 U.S. 376
    , 381 (1989) (“[I]n the
    multiple punishments context, [the interest that the double
    jeopardy clause seeks to protect] is ‘limited to ensuring that
    the total punishment did not exceed that authorized by the
    legislature.’”).     The sum of Vaden’s 10-year sentence and the
    340 days of presentence and probation incarceration 14 at issue in
    this case is just shy of 11 years, far below the 21 years of
    incarceration Vaden could have received in this case if the
    court ran his terms of imprisonment consecutively. 15
    Since Vaden’s punishment in this case does not exceed the
    13    In Faye, the Seventh Circuit explained that in the context of
    presentence incarceration, unconstitutional “double punishment” happens only
    “when the [uncredited] pre-sentence time together with the sentence imposed
    is greater than the statutory maximum penalty for the offense.” 
    541 F.2d at 667
    . It stands to reason that the double jeopardy clause would also prohibit
    a court from imposing terms of imprisonment following the revocation of
    probation that, if combined with time already served pursuant to the
    probation, would exceed the maximum statutory total punishment for the crimes
    at issue in the case.
    14    The record is unclear as to how many of the 340 days were accrued
    before sentencing and how many were accrued in connection with Vaden’s
    probation sentence.
    15    The Faye court viewed “the statutory maximum penalty” as the maximum
    consecutive terms a court can impose for the offenses at issue. 
    541 F.2d at 666-67
    . There, the court sentenced the defendant to two concurrent seven-
    year terms for two counts of rape; the statutory maximum for each was 30
    years. 
    Id. at 666
    . Because the presentence time plus the two concurrent
    sentences was less than “the maximum punishment of 60 years which he could
    have received [if the trial court ran the two 30-year terms consecutively],”
    the court concluded that uncredited presentence time did not violate the
    guarantee against double jeopardy. 
    Id. at 667
    . Here, the maximum
    consecutive terms the court could have imposed for the offenses at issue is
    21 years: ten years for Count 2, five years each for Counts 3 and 4, and one
    year for Count 5.
    15
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    statutory maximum total punishment for the crimes at issue, and
    since his probation incarceration credit was not accrued under a
    vacated sentence, the trial court did not violate Vaden’s double
    jeopardy clause rights by declining to credit the 340 days
    against Vaden’s 10-year sentence.
    IV.
    As described above, we affirm the ICA’s Judgment on Appeal.
    We remand this case to the circuit court so that the court may:
    (1) order the Department of Public Safety to furnish the court
    with certificates of detention that comply with HRS § 706-671(1)
    and (2); and (2) file an amended judgment that affixes those
    certificates of detention.
    Benjamin E. Lowenthal                  /s/ Mark E. Recktenwald
    for petitioner
    /s/ Paula A. Nakayama
    Richard B. Rost                        /s/ Todd W. Eddins
    for respondent
    16