PER CURIAM.
Defendant Rumiejah Ukawabutu appeals from a June 25, 2014 Law Division order denying his motion seeking to correct an illegal sentence. Defendant argues his amended sentence improperly included an eight-year period of discretionary parole ineligibility without explanation or support in the hearing transcript. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
We discern the following facts from the limited record. In September 1998, defendant was found guilty of two counts of armed robbery. As a persistent offender, the court sentenced defendant to an extended sentence of life in prison. Under the No Early Release Act (NERA),
On January 17, 2003, after a hearing on a motion filed by defendant seeking post-conviction relief (PCR), the Law Division modified defendant's sentence, sua sponte. The court determined, due to a change in the law, NERA applied only to the twenty-year base term, and not the extended life sentence. The judge stated, simply, "I will ... modify the sentence ... to impose the NERA term only on the [twenty]-year base term, not on the extended term."
However, the amended judgment sentenced defendant to twenty-five years of parole ineligibility. The related order denying defendant's motion for PCR explained seventeen years was legally mandated under NERA, while the eight-year balance was "imposed discretionarily." The record before us includes no other explanation for the amended sentence.
In 2013, defendant filed a pro se motion to amend his sentence, and the Law Division denied the motion. Defendant then filed the motion under review in or about June 2014. The Law Division addressed the motion as one to correct an illegal sentence under
This appeal followed, with defendant presenting the following argument:
A sentence may be illegal because it exceeds the penalties authorized by statute, or was not imposed in accordance with law.
A sentencing court must state the factual basis and reasoning underpinning the sentence imposed,
Here, twenty-five years of parole ineligibility was expressly authorized by
As the alleged defects in defendant's amended judgment of conviction are not cognizable in a
Affirmed.