NAJAM, Judge.
Denielle R. Pharr appeals the trial court's revocation of her work release and reinstatement without credit time of the remainder of her sentence. She presents a single issue for review: whether the trial
On February 22, 2011, the State charged Pharr with resisting law enforcement, as a Class D felony; operating a vehicle while intoxicated endangering a person, as a Class A misdemeanor ("OVWI"); and failure to stop at an accident, as a Class B misdemeanor. On August 16, Pharr pleaded guilty to OVWI and resisting law enforcement, and the State dismissed the remaining count. The trial court subsequently sentenced her to one year for OVWI and three years for resisting law enforcement, to be served concurrently. The court ordered Pharr to serve eighteen months in a work release program and suspended the remaining eighteen months to formal probation.
On February 27, 2013, the State filed a petition to revoke Pharr's placement in the work release program. The State alleged that Pharr had watched YouTube videos when she was supposed to be searching for a job online, had not taken her medication as prescribed, had tested positive for benzodiazepines, and was in arrears $2051 for the cost of her community corrections placement. On April 4, the court held a hearing on the petition, and Pharr admitted that she had violated the terms of her direct placement. The trial court then revoked her community corrections placement. The order provides, in relevant part:
Appellant's App. at 47-48. Pharr now appeals.
Pharr does not challenge the revocation of her community corrections placement, but she contends that the trial court erred when it denied her credit time
Indiana Code Section 35-38-2.6-3 authorizes trial courts to "suspend a sentence and order a person to be placed in a community corrections program as an alternative to commitment to the department of correction." And Indiana Code Section 35-38-2.6-6(a) provides that a "person who is placed in a community corrections program is entitled to earn credit time under" Indiana Code chapter 35-50-6. But a person who is placed in a community corrections program "may be deprived of earned credit time as provided under the rules adopted by the department of correction under [Indiana Code chapter] 4-22-2." Ind.Code § 35-38-2.6-6(b).
We have interpreted Indiana Code Section 35-38-2.6-6(b) to mean that only the Department of Correction may deprive a community corrections participant of credit time earned under Indiana Code Section 35-38-2.6-6(a). In Campbell v. State, 714 N.E.2d 678 (Ind.Ct.App.1999), overruled on other grounds, Robinson v. State, 805 N.E.2d 783 (Ind.2004), the trial court denied Campbell's request for credit time for the period he had spent on work release. On appeal, we construed Indiana Code Section 35-38-2.6-5 to allow only the Department of Correction ("DOC") authority to deny credit time. Campbell, 714 N.E.2d at 683-85. As such, we held that the trial court had exceeded its authority when it denied Campbell credit time for time spent on work release. Id. at 683-84. We also stated that "credit time should be initially determined by the DOC, not the trial court." Id. at 682.
Subsequently, the Indiana Supreme Court in Robinson corrected that notion in Campbell, holding that the trial court "determines credit for time served as of the date of sentencing subject to modification by the DOC pursuant to statute, not that the DOC makes the initial determination of credit for time served." 805 N.E.2d at 792. Although that statement in Robinson is phrased in terms of credit for the period of incarceration before sentencing, the supreme court's application of that rule to Campbell, a case involving credit time for the period served in a community corrections program, shows that the rule applies equally in such cases.
Here, the trial court denied Pharr credit time earned under Indiana Code Section 35-38-2.6-6 while she was in the Community Corrections Program. But the statutes do not authorize trial courts to deprive offenders of credit time while in a community corrections program. The trial court exceeded its authority in doing so. See Robinson, 805 N.E.2d at 791-92. The trial court was authorized only to determine the credit time earned while Pharr was in the community corrections program, and only the Department of Correction has authority to deprive Pharr of any of that credit time. See id. We acknowledge
The trial court did not have the authority to deprive Pharr of credit time earned while she was in the community corrections program under Indiana Code Section 35-38-2.6-6. As such, we reverse that part of the trial court's judgment and remand for the trial court to issue a revised abstract of judgment in compliance with this decision.
Reversed and remanded with instructions.
MATHIAS, J., and BROWN, J., concur.