Carpenter v. State
Annotate this CaseGlenn Carpenter was discovered passed out in the waiting room of a dental office. Police officers aroused Carpenter and handcuffed him. When searching Carpenter the officers found a handgun with an empty magazine, marijuana, cocaine, and a crack pipe. Carpenter was convicted for unlawful possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon and being a habitual offender. The trial court imposed a twenty-year sentence for the felony conviction and added twenty years for the habitual finding. On appeal, Carpenter challenged the appropriateness of his sentence. The Supreme Court affirmed Carpenter's conviction but reversed the sentence, holding that a forty-year sentence was inappropriate taking into account the adverse character of the offender and the unaggravated nature of the offense as a whole. Remanded with instructions to issue an amended sentence of twenty years, ten years for the felony and ten for the habitual.
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