McDONALD, J.
The defendant, Ron Peterson, was charged by bill of information with sexual battery, a violation of La. R.S. 14:43.1. He pled not guilty and, following a jury trial, was found guilty as charged. The defendant was sentenced to seventy-five years imprisonment at hard labor with the first twenty-five years of the sentence to be served without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence. The defendant filed a motion to reconsider sentence, which was denied. The State filed a multiple offender bill of information. Following a hearing on the matter, the defendant was adjudicated a second-felony habitual offender. The trial court vacated the previously imposed seventy-five-year sentence and resentenced the defendant to ninety-nine years imprisonment at hard labor. The defendant now appeals, designating two assignments of error. We affirm the conviction, habitual offender adjudication, and sentence.
Michelle had been dating the defendant for a few years. They both lived in Lacombe, but in separate houses. Sometimes when Michelle was at work, the defendant would watch her two children, her son and M.H., her daughter, at his house. One day during the summer of 2010 when M.H. was ten years old, she and her brother were at the defendant's house. At some point, while they were watching a movie, the defendant grabbed M.H.'s hand and put it on top of his clothes in his genital area.
In the two related assignments of error, the defendant argues the trial court erred in denying the motion to reconsider sentence, and the sentence imposed is unconstitutionally excessive. Specifically, the defendant contends that his ninety-nine-year sentence as a second-felony habitual offender is excessive.
The defendant filed a motion to reconsider sentence after the trial court imposed the original seventy-five-year sentence. However, a thorough review of the record indicates the defendant did not make or file a second motion to reconsider sentence after the original sentence was vacated and the new ninety-nine-year sentence was imposed at the habitual offender hearing.
These assignments of error are without merit.
I respectfully dissent.
Under the facts of this case, I would address the merits of a constitutionally excessive sentence.