MEMORANDUM DECISION
[1] Kente Lamonte Barker appeals the Marion County Re-Entry courts (“REC”) order denying his petition for modification of his sentence. Barker presents a single issue for our review, namely, whether the REC erred when it found that it did not have the authority to grant Barkers petition. We affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
[2] In February 2001, the State charged Barker with dealing in a narcotic drug, as a Class A felony. In 2006, Barker pleaded guilty as charged, and the trial court sentenced him to thirty-eight years in the Department of Correction. On September 30, 2019, while Barker was on parole, the Parole Board “ordered [Barker] to participate in REC as a stipulation to [Barker]’s parole conditions[.]” Appellants App. Vol. II p. 30. Accordingly, the REC moved the trial court to transfer Barkers case to the REC “for purposes of monitoring [Barker] while he participates” in the REC. Id. The REC also stated in its motion that “the sole purpose of the file transfer is to allow the REC to include in the sentencing file all documentation related to [Barker]’s progress in the REC” and “[t]hat the REC will not assume any jurisdiction over [Barker]’s case with respect to Petitions for Post-Conviction Relief, appeals[,] or any challenges to aspects dealing with the [Barker]’s original sentence.” Id.
[3] On October 1, the trial court granted the RECs motion, and Barker entered the re-entry program. However, within two weeks, Barker was arrested and incarcerated.
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Accordingly, on January 10, 2020, without a hearing, the REC terminated Barkers participation in the re-entry program. And on February 6, the Parole Board revoked Barkers parole. On February 27, Barker asked the REC to schedule a hearing on his termination from the re-entry program. The REC ordered that a hearing be scheduled.
[4] While a hearing on the February 27 motion was pending, on May 22, Barker, pro se, filed with the REC a Motion for Relief from Judgment or Order pursuant to Trial Rule 60(B). In that motion, Barker asked the REC “to order the dismissal of the Parole Revocation Judgement or Order against [him] with prejudice and return him back to the Marion County Jail to resume his Evidentiary Hearing in the Criminal Court 14 Re[-]Entry Drug Court.” Id. at 45. Barker alleged in relevant part that the Parole Board “did not have Subject Matter or Personal Matter Jurisdiction over [him] when it ordered the retaking of [him] and entered Judgement against [him] to revoke his parole.” Id. at 45–46.
[5] On June 30, the REC held a hearing on Barkers 60(B) motion and concluded that it
would take him back in Re-entry Court and start over again. Start fresh. Hes been incarcerated now for quite some time, and I think re-entry would be appropriate for him. [W]e could ․ I can lift our hold here so he could be taken back to the parole board and we can convey this information to parole, that Re-entry Court will accept him back.
Tr. Vol. II p. 45. The REC clarified that its agreement to accept him back in the re-entry program was “subject to” the Parole Boards determination whether Barker would be placed “back on parole.” Id. at 48–49.
[6] Pending the Parole Boards determination, on November 30, Barker filed a petition for modification of his sentence. However, during a December 11 evidentiary hearing regarding Barkers previous termination from the re-entry program, the REC stated that it did not “have jurisdiction for the modification.” Id. at 61. At the conclusion of that hearing, the REC reversed its termination of Barker from participating in the re-entry program but reiterated that it was up to the Parole Board “whether to send him back to us.” Id. at 77.
[7] On June 22, 2021, Barker wrote a letter to the REC asking that it “order D.O.C. to place [him] back into [the re-entry] program.” Appellants App. Vol. II p. 63. The same day, the REC denied Barkers request, stating that it would “not order the DOC to put [Barker] back in our program” but that, “as previously stated[, if] the parole board believes that our REC is appropriate for [Barker,] then we will accept him back.” Id. Barker filed a motion to correct error, which the REC denied. This appeal ensued.
Discussion and Decision
[8] Barker contends that the REC erred when it denied his June 22, 2021, request to be reinstated to the re-entry program. On appeal, the parties treat Barkers pro se letter as a petition for modification of his sentence. A trial courts decision regarding a petition for a modification of a sentence is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Merkel v. State, 160 N.E.3d 1139, 1141 (Ind. Ct. App. 2020). An abuse of discretion occurs where the decision is clearly against the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances. Id.
[9] Barker maintains that, despite the RECs assertion to the contrary, the REC has the authority to reinstate him into the re-entry program without the Parole Boards determination. In particular, Barker alleges that Indiana Code Section 35-38-1-17 grants the REC the authority to modify his sentence in this regard. However, in support of his contention, Barker cites subsection (e) of the statute, which states, generally, that a trial court may “reduce or suspend the sentence and impose a sentence that the court was authorized to impose at the time of sentencing.” But Barker ignores subsection (j) of the statute, which provides in relevant part that “[a] convicted person who is not a violent criminal may file a petition for sentence modification under this section ․ not more than one (1) time in any three hundred sixty-five (365) day period ․ without the consent of the prosecuting attorney.”
[10] Barkers June 22, 2021, petition for sentence modification was his second such petition within one year, the first having been filed on November 30, 2020. Thus, because Barker did not get the consent of the prosecuting attorney to file the June 22, 2021, petition, the REC did not have statutory authority to even consider it. See Vazquez v. State, 37 N.E.3d 962, 964 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015) (holding Indiana Code section 35-38-1-17(j) “mandate[d]” dismissal of defendants second petition for sentence modification within three months); see also, e.g., Merkel, 160 N.E.3d at 1141 (holding trial court had no statutory authority to consider petition for sentence modification under Indiana Code section 35-38-1-17(k) where violent criminal filed petition without prosecuting attorneys consent).
[11] Moreover, the REC is a “problem solving court” and, as expressly acknowledged in its 2019 motion to the trial court, the RECs jurisdiction is limited. See I.C. §§ 33-23-16-8, -12. Again, the REC stated in its motion to the trial court that the REC would “not assume any jurisdiction over [Barker]’s case with respect to Petitions for Post-Conviction Relief, appeals[,] or any challenges to aspects dealing with [Barker]’s original sentence.” Appellants App. Vol. II p. 30 (emphasis added). Thus, we agree with the State that only the sentencing court, not the REC, may consider Barkers petition for modification of his sentence.
[12] Finally, Barker acknowledges that “he was originally placed in the re[-]entry program as a condition of parole.” Appellants Br. p. 12. After the Parole Board revoked his parole in February 2020, Indiana Code Section 35-50-6-1(c) required that Barker be “imprisoned for all or part of the remainder of [his] fixed term.” And the Parole Board had the sole authority to reinstate Barker on parole “at any time after the revocation.” Id. Thus, the REC correctly found that Barkers reinstatement to the re-entry program was subject to the Parole Boards determination. For these reasons, the REC did not abuse its discretion when it denied Barkers petition for modification of his sentence.
[13] Affirmed.
FOOTNOTES
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. The record suggests that, ultimately, no new criminal charges were filed.
Mathias, Judge.
Bailey, J., and Altice, J., concur.