the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Myles Eaton (Eaton) appeals from the sentence imposed by the Eighteenth Judicial District Court, Gallatin County, following his plea of guilty to felony theft, ordering him to pay full restitution as a condition of his suspended sentence, and to pay a portion of his net income, including any income from sоcial security, toward his restitution obligation. We affirm in part and reverse in part and remand to the District Court.
¶2 We rephrase the issues on appeal as follows:
¶3 1. Did the District Court err in ordering Eaton to pay restitution as part of his suspended sentence?
¶4 2. Did the District Court err in ordering Eaton to pay restitution from his “net income,” which includes his social seсurity benefits?
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶5 On September 4, 1997, Eaton was appointed by District Court Judge Thomas Olson to act as a receiver in a lawsuit involving the Sunset Memorial Gardens of Bozeman (the Cemetery). As such, Eaton was charged with the fiduciary responsibility to act in the Cemetery’s best interest. However, the District Court begаn to have suspicions regarding Eaton’s actions as receiver in June 2001. On June 26, 2001, James Harris (Harris), Secretary for the Cemetery’s Owners Committee, wrote a letter to the District Court complaining that Eaton refused to disclose information regarding the Cemetery’s financial situation. Harris also exрressed concerns that the Cemetery’s bank had failed to pay checks written on the Cemetery’s account. Then, on August 9, 2001, Tom Baker (Baker), Dennis Carlson (Carlson), and Harris, members of the Cemetery’s Owners Committee, reiterated to the District Court their concerns regarding Eaton’s handling of *289 Cemetеry’s property. Further, on August 21, 2001, Carlson informed the Court that he had obtained documents showing questionable financial transactions on the Cemetery’s account. In a letter to the Court, he stated that it appeared that Eaton had withdrawn approximately $1,300.00 dollars from the Cemetery’s aсcount, depositing these funds into an account for the Beth Shalom Greater Yellowstone Jewish Community (Temple), for which Eaton was Treasurer.
¶6 Prior to the Cemetery’s Owners Committee expressing concerns about Eaton’s management of Cemetery funds, the District Court, on July 30, 2001, had ordered Eaton tо prepare an accounting in regard to the possible sale of the Cemetery, and set a hearing on the matter for September 10, 2001. At this point, Eaton’s financial house of cards began to crumble. At the hearing, the District Court questioned Eaton regarding the concerns expressed by the Cemetery’s Owners Committee. Eaton responded by stating any questionable transfer of monies from the Cemetery to the Temple were mere mistakes which he had fixed. However, on September 12, the District Court ordered the accounting firm of Veltkamp, Stannebein, and Bateson, P.C., to audit Eatоn’s receivership of the Cemetery. Joe Bateson (Bateson) of that firm examined bank statements, accounting records produced by Eaton, accounting records produced by Baker, various deeds and title reports, and copies of various receipts related tо Cemetery operations. In addition, Bateson conducted personal interviews with Eaton, members of the Cemetery’s Owners Committee and its bank, as well as the Riverside Country Club, to which Eaton belonged. In a report to the District Court, Bateson concluded that between September 1997 and Seрtember 2001, checks and other transfers were made from the Cemetery’s account to Eaton, or on his behalf, in the amount of $24,498.00. These transactions included deposits into Eaton’s personal bank account, payment of Eaton’s personal bills, including his Riverside Country Club dues and charges, and deposits into Eaton’s personal investment account with Charles Schwab.
¶7 Pending Bateson’s report, the District Court conducted a status hearing on November 26,2001, in which the court suspended Eaton as a receiver of the Cemetery’s property. The District Court removed Eaton as receivеr for the Cemetery on January 15, 2002, after the court received and reviewed Bateson’s report.
¶8 Meanwhile, as the Cemetery’s Owners Committee was growing suspicious of Eaton’s actions, so were the officers of the Temple, where Eaton acted as Treasurer. On or about August 23, 2001, Jennifer *290 Bordy (Bordy), Temple Director, and Bob Rasmus (Rasmus), Temple President, filed a complaint with the Bozeman Police Department alleging that Eaton had stolen from the Temple. Rasmus told Detective Gappmayer that he learned that checks written on the Temple’s account had been dishonored for insufficient funds, that there was an unpaid account opened by Eaton on behalf of the Temple at Staples supply store, and that there were two bank accounts with Western Security Bank in the Temple’s name, which the Temple officers (other than Eaton) never knew existed. Because of Rasmus’s findings, the Temple retained Certified Public Accountant Randy Newberg (Newberg) to audit its accounts. Newberg discovered that without the Temple’s approval, Eaton, on numerous occasions, had kept cash from Temple deposits, cashed and deposited Temple funds into his own personal account, and used Temple funds to pay personal bills, including credit cards, a car loan, telephone expenses, and Riverside Country Club dues and charges. Newberg noted that there were many unexplained ATM withdrawals and transfers betwеen the Temple and Cemetery, with only one connection, that being Eaton.
¶9 On March 29, 2002, the Gallatin County Attorney charged Eaton with two counts of felony theft, common scheme, in violation of § 45-7-301, MCA; one count of perjury, in violation of § 45-7-201, MCA; and one count of tampering with or fabricating physical evidence, in violation of § 45-7-207, MCA. Count I, theft, alleged that from September 1997, through August 2001, Eaton stole money totaling $24,498.00 from the Cemetery. Count II, theft, alleged that from April 1997 through August 2001, Eaton stole money from the Temple totaling $84,556.64.
¶10 On December 3, 2002, Eaton pled guilty to two counts of felony theft, common scheme, in violation of § 45-6-301, MCA, pursuant to a plea agreement. The District Court dismissed the other charges. Following a sentencing hearing, the District Court sentenced Eaton to two consecutive ten-year terms, for a total of twenty years, with fifteen years suspended, at the Montana State Prison. Further, the Distriсt Court ordered Eaton to pay restitution and fees totaling $114,520.32. At the sentencing hearing, the District Court ordered Eaton to make payments equal to 20 percent of his net income per month, from any source, including money received from his social security benefits. Eaton did not object tо the District Court’s order entered on January 21, 2003. He appeals.
*291 STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶11 We pause to clarify once again the appropriate standard of review for a challenge to a criminal sentence, an issue we addressed at length in
State v. Montoya,
DISCUSSION
¶12 Before addressing the issues Eaton raises on appeal, we first address the State’s procedural argument that Eaton effectively waived his right tо appeal the District Court’s imposition of restitution by “acquiescing” in that condition. The State argues that, because of Eaton’s failure to object at the sentencing hearing to the District Court’s order requiring him to pay full restitution as a condition of his suspended sentence, he failed to рreserve the issue for appeal. The State cites § 46-20-104, MCA, which provides that, generally, a criminal defendant must make a contemporaneous objection in order to preserve an issue on appeal. Further, the State argues that our holdings in both
State v. McLeod,
¶13 Unlike the defendants in McLeod and Micklon, Eaton did not “acquiesce” or “actively participate” in the imposition of the sentencing conditions which he now challenges on appeal. First, Eaton is not challenging inaccuracies contained in his presentence investigation report (PSI). See McLeod, ¶ 15 (defendant waived his right to challenge incorrect infоrmation contained in his PSI report where he had ample time to bring the inaccuracies to the district court’s attention and failed to do so). Second, although Eaton offered an apology to the District Court at his sentencing hearing for his failure to make any *292 restitution payments, madе statements regarding his assets, including the listing of his home for satisfaction of his sentence, and indicated his wish to make restitution, these statements did not equate with the “active acquiescence” we found had occurred in Micklon. See Micklon, ¶¶ 4, 10 (defendant waived his right to appeal the district court’s order imposing interest on his installment restitution payments when he requested the court allow him to make installment payments in satisfaction of his restitution requirements and agreed to pay interest thereon in response to the district court’s questions). Here, Eaton made no such special request to the District Court as did the defendant in Micklon. In contrast, Eaton’s statement was merely one of remorse. This does not constitute “active acquiescence” upon which we decided Micklon.
¶14 While this Court on numerous occasions has held that a defendant must raise an objection in a timely manner or risk waiver of the issue on appeal,
State v. Brister,
¶15 Did the District Court err in ordering Eaton to pay restitution as part of his suspended sentence?
¶16 Eaton contends that the District Court was without statutory authority to impose restitution as a condition of the suspended portion of his sentence under the 1999 amendments to § 46-18-201, MCA, for the thefts he committed after October 1, 1999. He argues that subsection (2) of § 46-18-201, MCA (1999), “mandate[s] restitution, in *293 addition to other penalties, only in cases where a deferred sentence is imposed.”
¶17 In making his argument, Eaton raises the same issue that we recently аddressed in Heath. We held in Heath, ¶ 36, that a codification error was made in the 1999 legislative amendments to § 46-18-201, MCA, “which was not intended to make any change in the substance or effect [to § 46-18-201, MCA (1997)],” imposing mandatory restitution when either the district court imposed a deferred or suspended sentence. Thus, based on Our holding in Heath, the Distriсt Court did not exceed statutory authority in ordering Eaton to pay restitution.
¶18 Did the District Court err in ordering Eaton to pay restitution from his “net income,” which is defined as including his social security benefits?
¶19 Eaton argues that the District Court abused its discretion when it ordered him to make restitution payments equal to the amount of 20 percent of his net income, including income from his social security benefits. He contends that this condition violates 42 U.S.C. § 407(a). While the State argues that the inclusion of Eaton’s social security benefits in his net income for the purpose of calculating the amount of monthly restitutiоn payments is not an “execution,” “levy,” “attachment,” “garnishment” or “formal legal process” in violation of § 407(a), we agree with Eaton that the District Court’s order improperly burdens his social security benefits.
¶20 Based on the evidence introduced at sentencing, including the testimony of accоuntants Bateson and Newberg, the District Court ordered Eaton to pay $114,520.32 in restitution. The court ordered Eaton to make payments of 20 percent of his net income and indicated that net income includes income from any source including social security or retirement benefits.
¶21 Howevеr, the District Court’s order conflicted with § 407(a), which provides that “none of the moneys paid or payable ... under [the Social Security Act] shall be subject to ‘execution,’ ‘levy,’ ‘attachment,’ ‘garnishment,’ or other ‘legal process.’ ”
See also Bennett v. Arkansas
(1988),
¶22 Here, the order is an improper attеmpt to subject Eaton’s social security benefits to “other legal process.” The State concedes that a direct attempt to levy upon social security benefits would violate § 407(a), but argues that Eaton can raise this defense at the time it would seek a levy. However, it is appropriate to eliminate the offending condition from the judgment in the first instance.
¶23 Thus, the judgment’s inclusion of Eaton’s social security income conflicts with the provisions of § 407(a), and we reverse the inclusion thereof.
¶24 We affirm in part, reverse in part and remand for entry of an amended judgment consistent herewith.
