PER CURIAM.
Defendant Jack Cordero, Jr. appeals the sentence imposed after he entered a guilty plea to his third conviction of driving while intoxicated (DWI),
On March 21, 2005, defendant was charged in the Township of Old Bridge with DWI, reckless driving,
Pursuant to
Defendant was first convicted of DWI in September 2003. He was also charged with DWI in Wall Township sometime after the 2005 Old Bridge arrest, on a date not specified in the record. Because defendant was administered a Breathalyzer — and not an Alcotest — after his arrest, however, he was convicted and sentenced on that charge in August 2005, literally years prior to the disposition of his earlier Old Bridge offense.
On October 14, 2005, a few months after issuance of the Old Bridge summonses, the Law Division stayed all DWI Alcotest prosecutions in Middlesex County. Ultimately, the Supreme Court on January 10, 2006, directed that prosecution of repeat offenders was to proceed "in the normal course," except where the conviction resulted solely from an Alcotest reading. Any defendant could, at his or her option, enter a guilty plea while reserving the right to challenge the conviction if the Alcotest was found unreliable.
On March 17, 2008, the Supreme Court issued its final opinion in
At the time of defendant's first arrest in 2003, the DWI statute and a supplementary provision explaining permissible sentences read in pertinent part:
On January 20, 2004, "Michael's Law" was enacted, making sweeping changes to New Jersey's repeat DWI offender punishment scheme. Third or subsequent offenders would now be sentenced to at least 180 days imprisonment in the county jail, with the possibility of spending the final ninety days in an Intoxicated Driver Resource Center approved in-patient treatment facility. L. 2003, c. 315, § 2. Additionally, such offenders were no longer eligible to reduce their period of incarceration through participation in work release or outpatient treatment programs.
Thus, after January 20, 2004, a third time offender could only be sentenced to a term of imprisonment proportionately reduced by treatment at an inpatient facility. As this court made clear in
On appeal, defendant contends because he was not made aware of these increased penalties at either the time of his first offense in 2003 or by the Wall Township municipal court following its disposition of defendant's chronological third DWI charge, he cannot be subject to the enhanced penalties set forth in Michael's Law. He further contends that he was improperly denied his right to a speedy trial by the 2006
Certainly courts are required to notify defendants of the consequences of additional DWI convictions,
A defendant has no vested right to be sentenced in the manner previously explained to him. Instead, the punishment imposed must accord with the law in effect at the time. "When the Legislature imposes minimum penalties for certain offenses, the judiciary must enforce that mandate . . . . No defendant can claim a legitimate expectation of finality in a sentence below the statutorily mandated minimum."
Defendant's speedy trial argument is equally flawed. In determining whether a defendant's right to a speedy trial has been abrogated, we utilize the four-prong test created in
In this case, defendant never requested an expedited hearing. The substantial delay was occasioned entirely by the Supreme Court's necessary determination of whether the Alcotest is reliable, which examination benefited the public as a whole, including defendant. Defendant does not assert that had he proceeded to trial in 2005, instead of entering a guilty plea in 2009, the outcome would have been different.
Insofar as any prejudice, as the State points out, there is every reason to believe a defendant facing a ten-year loss of license and 180-day potential jail term in 2005 would perceive a benefit from his silence and the resulting delay. The net effect was that defendant's right to drive was reinstated after the conclusion of his suspension from Wall Township. By law, suspensions must be consecutive.
Affirmed. The stay of defendant's jail term is vacated.