*579 Opinion
I. Introduction
On May 23, 1997, Lawrence Alford Draut (Draut) pleaded no contest to six of fifty-three counts charging that he fraudulently failed to report and remit state sales and unemployment insurance taxes between January 1, 1991, and January 19, 1996. Under a plea agreement, the other 47 counts were dismissed. On August, 4, 1998, the court sentenced Draut to seven years and four months in prison. Additionally, under Penal Code section 1202.4, 1 the court ordered Draut to pay $1,145,186.60 in restitution. At a subsequent sentencing hearing on August 5, the court, sua sponte, reduced the award to $150,000. The People appeal, arguing that the trial judge erred in reducing the award. We agree. Therefore, we reverse and remand with instructions to order restitution in the amount properly ordered on August 4, 1998.
II. Factual and Procedural Background
Draut, as sole proprietor, operated a retail computer business in Santa Rosa and, at times, in Napa. On March 8, 1996, during consultation with a Santa Rosa police officer on another matter, Draut revealed that, for the five years from approximately 1991 through 1995, he had failed to pay state taxes connected with the business. The officer referred the case to the State Board of Equalization (BOE). BOE investigators determined that Draut had failed to remit over $1 million in sales tax collected from customers. With costs, the total loss to BOE came to about $1,120,000. Employment Development Department (EDD) investigators determined that, for brief intervals during that period, Draut had also failed to remit unemployment insurance taxes withheld from his employees’ paychecks. EDD determined the loss, including investigative costs, to be around $37,000.
On September 13, 1996, the Sonoma County District Attorney filed a 43-count complaint against Draut, alleging that (1) he failed to pay these moneys, in violation of Revenue and Taxation Code sections 7152, subdivision (a) and 7153.5, (2) he aided and assisted in tax evasion in violation of Revenue and Taxation Code section 6071, (3) in doing so he committed grand theft, in violation of section 487, subdivision (a), and (4) the amount taken in that theft was greater than $150,000, in violation of section 12022.6, subdivision (b). On December 4, 1996, the same office charged Draut with *580 five counts each of unemployment insurance tax evasion and of failing to withhold or pay over unemployment insurance tax, in violation of Unemployment Insurance Code sections 2117.5 and 2118.5, respectively. The various charges under each statute were substantively the same; each count covered a different tax quarter.
On May 23, 1997, Draut entered into a plea agreement under which he pleaded no contest to six of the counts against him, and the remaining counts were dismissed. With respect to the dismissed counts, the agreement included Harvey waivers. 2
On August 4, 1998, the court sentenced Draut to seven years and four months in state prison. This sentence consisted of the two-year middle term for the first offense to which he pleaded no contest, five consecutive two-year sentences, which under the sentencing statute 3 translated to one-third of the base term or eight months each, and a two-year enhancement for taking property of a value in excess of $150,000 (§ 12022.6, subd. (b)). The court also ordered Draut to pay restitution of $1,145,186.60, pursuant to section 1202.4 (the restitution statute). That amount represented the total estimated loss suffered by the victims of Draut’s crimes, the BOB and the EDD.
On August 5, 1998, the parties came before the court again. The People sought an $11,000 increase in the restitution award, claiming that the probation department had calculated it erroneously. Instead, the trial judge" responded by, on his own motion, reducing the restitution award to $150,000, stating that the full award would burden Draut forever, and would restrict him from pursuing a productive life after he served his jail sentence.
The People timely filed this appeal on August 6, 1998.
III. Discussion
In reducing the restitution award, Judge Passalacqua, who had presided over Draut’s trial and sentencing, stated, “In fact he’s going to do seven years and four months. The fact that the Court ordered restitution of over a *581 million dollars yesterday is almost preposterous. . . . [¶] Once the man pays his dues to society for his indiscretions, then at that point he should be at least in a position to start life and live the rest of it in a normal fashion. And with a burden of $1,100,000 on his back, Mr. Draut is never going to get out from under the sentence of this Court. [¶] This Court feels that the interest of justice warrants that a sum far less than $1 million be imposed. I thought about that last evening. Just like the man who gets out of jail, serves his time in prison and now wants to go to work and can’t go to work because the Department of Motor Vehicles wants to punish him further by taking his driver’s license. Things like that just are preposterous. They’re not a deterrent to crime. I have yet to meet a dope salesman who says, T better not sell any, because the Department of Motor Vehicles wants my driver’s license.’ H[] Well, this man is in that same position, so to speak. This Magistrate will order restitution. And if those fellows from the Board of Control want to appeal it, let them go. I’m cutting it down to a hundred fifty thousand dollars.” At the close of the judge’s remarks, the People objected. Defense counsel was silent.
Subdivision (f) of the restitution statute states that, where a crime results in an economic loss to the victim, the court shall order the person convicted of that crime to pay full restitution to the victim for his loss, unless the trial court finds “compelling and extraordinary” reasons to order a lesser award. 4 (§ 1202.4, subd. (f), italics added; see also Cal. Const., art. I, § 28, subd. (b); 3 Witkin, Cal. Criminal Law (2d ed., 1999 supp.) Punishment for Crime, § 1325A, subd. (e), p. 45 [“[t]o the extent possible, the restitution order must be prepared by the sentencing court . . . and must be sufficient to fully reimburse the victim for every economic loss resulting from the defendant’s criminal conduct”].)
The trial “court’s allocation of restitutionary responsibility must be sustained unless it constitutes an abuse of discretion or rests upon a demonstrable error of law.”
(In re S.S.
(1995)
Subdivision (g) of the restitution statute indicates specifically that the defendant’s “inability to pay” is not an extraordinary and compelling circumstance that would justify a court ordering less than full restitution. (§ 1202.4, subd. (g).) To permit this would ignore the fact that restitution is aimed at reversing the harm to the victim to the extent possible.
(People
v.
Moser
(1996)
It is evident from the trial court’s statement, quoted in full above, that the underlying reason for the court’s action was a belief that the defendant would be unable to pay restitution in the amount required. This is explicitly prohibited by the restitution statute. Thus, the trial court, in reducing the award, committed a demonstrable error of law because it based its order on the defendant’s inability to pay, in violation of section 1202.4, subdivision (g).
Even if not based on a statutorily impermissible inability to pay theory, the trial court’s reduction of the restitution award constituted an abuse of discretion because the circumstances here, while perhaps compelling to the trial court, were not extraordinary. In
People
v.
Rowland
(1997)
Furthermore, in determining the reduced amount, the trial court did not use the required rational method, and whatever method it did use was not made evident in the record as the statute requires.
(People
v.
Thygesen, supra,
Nor can the reduced amount be said to come anywhere near reasonably making the victim whole as the statute requires. (§ 1202.4, subd. (f); People v. Thygesen, supra, 69 Cal.App.4th at p. 992.) The evidence supporting the determination that BOE and EDD lost $1,145,186.60 due to Draut’s illegal activity was uncontroverted. Thus, there was no question as to the amount required to make the victim whole. Awarding a lesser amount, absent a compelling and extraordinary reason stated in the record, or a rational method aimed at making the victim whole, was an abuse of discretion.
IV. Disposition
The order of the trial court reducing the restitution award is reversed, and the case is remanded for entry of a restitution order awarding the full amount lost by the victims of Draut’s crimes, to wit $1,145,186.60.
Lambden, J., and Ruvolo, J., concurred.
Notes
All statutory references herein are to the Penal Code, unless otherwise noted.
“While ‘[jjmplicit in . . . a plea bargain . . . is the understanding . . . that defendant will suffer no adverse sentencing consequences by reason of the facts underlying, and solely pertaining to, the dismissed count,’ such adverse sentencing consequences may properly be imposed if there was agreement to the contrary. This ‘contrary agreement’ proviso is what has since been called a
‘Harvey
waiver.’ ”
(People
v.
Beck
(1993)
Section 1170.1, subdivision (a).
The relevant portion of the restitution statute states “(f) In every case in which a victim has suffered economic loss as a result of the defendant’s conduct, the court shall require that the defendant make restitution to the victim or victims in an amount established by court order, based on the amount of loss claimed by the victim or victims . . . . . . . EH (3) To the extent possible, the restitution order . . . shall be of a dollar amount that is sufficient to fully reimburse the victim or victims for every determined economic loss incurred as a result of the defendant’s criminal conduct. . . .” (§ 1202.4, subd. (f).)
