This opinion will be unpublished and
may not be cited except as provided by
Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2004).
STATE OF
IN COURT OF APPEALS
A04-1837
State
of
Respondent,
vs.
Appellant.
Filed September 6, 2005
Affirmed
Klaphake, Judge
Ramsey County District Court
File No. K7-03-4318
Mike Hatch, Attorney General, 1800 Bremer Tower, 445 Minnesota Street, St. Paul, MN 55101-2134; and
Susan Gaertner, Ramsey County Attorney, Mark N. Lystig, Assistant County Attorney, 50 West Kellogg Blvd., Suite 315, St. Paul, MN 55102 (for respondent)
Considered and decided by Lansing, Presiding Judge, Klaphake, Judge, and Halbrooks, Judge.
KLAPHAKE, Judge
On
appeal from his conviction of and sentence for second-degree assault, appellant
Because appellant never requested specific performance of the plea agreement and failed to request a hearing to determine whether he violated the conditions of his pre-sentencing release, he has waived the right to raise these issues on appeal. We therefore affirm.
Appellant claims for the first time on appeal that he is entitled to withdraw his guilty plea because he did not receive his bargained-for sentence of probationary jail time. He also claims that he was denied his right to a hearing on the allegations that he violated the conditions of his release pending sentencing. Prior to sentencing, appellant moved to withdraw his plea based on his claims that his attorney was ineffective and that she induced him to plead guilty; the district court rejected appellant’s claims and denied his motion to withdraw his plea. Following the submission of a presentence investigation report recommending that appellant receive the presumptive sentence of 51 months, appellant moved for a downward dispositional departure based on mitigating factors that included claims that the victim was the aggressor and that appellant was amenable to probation. The district court again rejected appellant’s arguments, denied his motion to depart downwardly, and imposed the presumptive sentence. On appeal from his sentence, appellant now claims that his plea should be withdrawn because he did not receive the bargained-for sentence.
An
appellate court is not required to consider issues not presented to the
district court and raised for the first time on appeal. State
v. Benniefield, 678 N.W.2d 42, 45 (
The interests of justice do not require us to consider appellant’s challenges for the first time on appeal. Appellant has raised successive challenges to his plea and sentence and has had multiple opportunities to argue that he did not receive the sentence he was promised. Moreover, the state likely would be prejudiced by allowing withdrawal of appellant’s plea at this point: a significant amount of time has passed since the November 2003 incident, and the state’s case against appellant may be hampered because the victim appears to support appellant and may now refuse to cooperate. We therefore decline to consider appellant’s current challenges for the first time on appeal.[1]
Appellant’s conviction and sentence are affirmed.
Affirmed.
[1]
We further note that appellant’s decision to move for a downward dispositional
departure strongly suggests that probationary jail time was not part of the
plea agreement and was merely a recommendation for sentencing. State
v. DeZeler, 427 N.W.2d 231, 234 (