← FORMVANA NC FORMS
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01
CASE IDENTIFICATION
02
CURRENT OFFENSE CLASS
03
PRIOR RECORD LEVEL
Haven't calculated Prior Record Level yet? Complete AOC-CR-600 first →
04
MITIGATING FACTORS (G.S. 15A-1340.16(e))
Mitigating factors selected: 0
05
AGGRAVATING FACTORS (G.S. 15A-1340.16(d))
Aggravating factors selected: 0
06
PUNISHMENT CELL DETERMINATION
Presumptive: Neither mitigating nor aggravating substantially outweigh each other.
Mitigated: Mitigating factors substantially outweigh aggravating factors. Court must make written findings.
Aggravated: Aggravating factors substantially outweigh mitigating factors. Jury must find or defendant must admit.
Mitigated: Mitigating factors substantially outweigh aggravating factors. Court must make written findings.
Aggravated: Aggravating factors substantially outweigh mitigating factors. Jury must find or defendant must admit.
07
SENTENCE RANGE
MINIMUM SENTENCE RANGE (MONTHS) · G.S. 15A-1340.17
MITIGATED CELL
—
months minimum
PRESUMPTIVE CELL
—
months minimum
AGGRAVATED CELL
—
months minimum
DISPOSITION:
—
REFERENCE ONLY — Ranges from G.S. 15A-1340.17 (enacted minimum sentence ranges). The judge sets the minimum within the applicable cell; the maximum is automatically fixed per statutory table. Verify all figures against the official NC AOC punishment chart before using in court. Class A and B1/B2 maximum terms are governed by separate statutes.
SELECTED COUNTY
— Select above —
← START WITH CR-600
You need the Prior Record Level before completing this worksheet. Calculate it on the CR-600 form first.
OPEN CR-600 WORKSHEET →DISPOSITION TYPES
- A = Active — Prison sentence required; no community alternatives
- I = Intermediate — Judge may impose active, intensive supervision, or drug treatment court
- C = Community — Judge may impose community, intermediate, or active punishment
STATUTORY REFERENCE
G.S. 15A-1340.17Punishment limits / grid
G.S. 15A-1340.16Aggravating / mitigating
G.S. 15A-1340.14Prior record level
AOC-CR-601Official worksheet
KEY RULES
- Aggravating factors must be found by jury beyond reasonable doubt or admitted by defendant (Blakely v. Washington)
- Factors already used to prove the offense cannot be used to aggravate the sentence
- Court must make written findings to impose mitigated sentence
- Defendant has right to jury determination of aggravating facts in non-capital cases
- Prior record is found by judge — not a Blakely issue