I am asked from time to time whether imprisonment terms for special probation (split sentences) may be run consecutively. I think they probably may. For example, suppose a prior conviction level III defendant is convicted of two Class 1 misdemeanor offenses. If the court imposes a 120-day suspended sentence for each conviction, the maximum permissible split sentence for each is 30 days—one-fourth the imposed sentence. G.S. 15A-1351(a). May the court run those 30-day splits consecutively, so the defendant serves 60 days in jail? I am inclined to say yes. G.S. 15A-1351(a) allows split sentences to be served noncontinuously. To impose “consecutive” splits, I think the judge is merely ordering that the second term of imprisonment begins after the first one ends. The only limitation on the judge’s authority to delay the start of the second term of imprisonment is that no split sentence confinement is allowed beyond two years of conviction, G.S. 15A-1351(a), but that limitation is likely to come into play only for felonies with lengthy suspended sentences that allow for very long splits. A possible argument against consecutive splits is that the requirement in G.S. 15A-1346(a) that probation periods run concurrently with one another also extends to any confinement ordered as a condition of each probation period. It’s not clear to me, though, that the concurrency of overlapping probation periods has anything to do with the particular conditions of supervision ordered in each case. Concurrent supervision periods are often subject to different conditions at different times (for example, one [...]
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