Probation revoked for Caleb Crum; court sentences defendant to three years with deadly-weapon finding
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In case 2023CR2669, the defendant Caleb Crum pleaded true to a probation violation; the court granted the state's motion to revoke supervision, found the defendant guilty and sentenced him to three years in prison with affirmative findings of a deadly weapon and family violence.
The court called case 2023CR2669, State v. Caleb Crum, and confirmed appearances. The prosecutor alleged a violation of condition number 39 arising from the defendant’s unsuccessful discharge from a state-contracted intermediate sanction facility. The defendant — identified in court as Caleb Crum — pled "true" to the alleged violation.
During the hearing the state proposed a negotiated resolution: grant the state's motion to revoke supervision, find the defendant guilty of the underlying offense, and sentence him to three years in prison with affirmative findings that a deadly weapon was used and that family violence occurred. The defense agreed to the recommendation and the defendant waived appeal rights as part of the agreement.
The judge accepted the parties' agreement, granted the motion to revoke, found the violation true, found the defendant guilty, and ordered a three-year prison term. The court announced the affirmative finding of a deadly weapon and an affirmative finding of family violence and imposed related restrictions (including no contact and limits on household residency with minors). The court explicitly stated the potential statutory exposure discussed during the colloquy — that a true plea to the violation could expose the defendant to up to 20 years in prison and a fine up to $10,000 — but the parties' agreement limited the sentence to three years.
The court entered the revocation and sentencing order and closed the matter.
