In its opinion below,
I.
Defendant was alleged to have embezzled approximately $3,000 from a little league baseball organization. After investigation, the district attorney agreed that defendаnt was an appropriate candidate for acceptance into a preprosecution diversion program. This program enables a district attorney to suspend charges against an eligible defendant on the condition that he or she make restitution or participate in a program of rehabilitation when the district attorney believes that rehabilitation and conservation of criminal justice resources are appropriate. If the defendant successfully completes the program, the charges are dismissed; if the diversion agreement is materially breached, the state may resume prosecution. See generally Preprosecution Diversion Act, supra note 2.
Pursuant to this program, defendant and the district attorney entered into an agreement which required defendant, among оther things, to make full restitution to the little league in the amount of $2,853.98. This amount was to be paid in monthly installments of $200 over fourteen months commencing July 1987, with a final payment of $53.98 in the fifteenth month. Under the agreement, defendant’s prosecution was to be deferred for a period of two years, after which the state would be barred from prosecuting him on the embezzlement charge if he successfully completed the agreеment. Another provision permitted the district attorney to revoke the agreement if defendant failed to comply with its terms and conditions.
Defendant made the first two payments of $200 for July and August 1987, but made none for September or October. The following month, the director of preprosecution diversion met with defendant and his attorney about the lack of payments. The director agreed not to terminate the agreement upon defendant’s promise to make a payment of $250 on December 14, 1987, and to continue making payments thereafter. Defendant failed to make the December payment on time, but gave assurances that the payment would be made soon. He paid $100 on December 22 but failed to make any subsequent payments. The district attorney notified defendant by letter on January 21, 1988, that the PDA was terminated for his failure to pay restitution in violation of the agreement. Defendant
The parties agreed, and the court explicitly found, that defendant’s failure to pay restitution was not deliberate or wilful, but rather “was caused by his inability to pay restitution because of his financial situation.” During the period between execution of the agreement and its termination, defendant was employed only intermittently. At the time he made the agreement he was working in Arizona, but the job ended in August 1987. His two full payments were made during this period of employment. Thereafter, he worked for a supermarket in Silver City, but was laid off after a month when the supermarket discontinued the job. He subsequently had only part-time employment, working an average of two days per week as a substitute teacher for $25 per day. His wife was unemployed. In 1987, he and his family, which included five minor children, received food stamps equaling $420-450 per month, and he reported an income of $9,535 for that year.
The court determined that defendant would be unable to pay full restitution by July 7, 1989 — the end of the twenty-four month agreement — which was just over five months away by the time of the court’s decision. The court also found that it was impossible to extend the agreement tо allow additional time for payment, since under the statute diversion agreements may not exceed two years. NMSA 1978, § 31-16A-7(A). The only way to allow defendant additional time in which to make full restitution, the court found, was to terminate the diversion agreement and provide for additional time by way of probation if he was convicted.
The court recognized its obligation to follow the principles of Bearden, but concludеd that termination would not violate defendant’s constitutional rights because there were several alternatives to imprisonment after a conviction, including deferred or suspended sentences with probation, which could provide sufficient time for full restitution of the victim. The court therefore upheld the district attorney’s termination of the agreement.
The court of appeals reversed. Relying on Bearden and several cases from other jurisdictions applying its principles in the context of pretrial diversion termination, the court of appeals held:
[Wjhere the sole ground for revocation is premised upon a defendant’s failure to make restitution, and the district court determines that the defendant’s inability to make full restitution was not due to a wilful failure on his or her part, the court’s order upholding termination of the preprosecution agreement is contrary to law.
Jimenez,
II.
In Bearden, the Supreme Court recognized that the decision to terminate a defendant’s
Courts have held that the principles applicable to review of decisions to revoke parole or probation apply also to review of a defendant’s termination from a preprosecution diversion program. See State v. Devatt, supra note 4; Commonwealth v. Melnyk,
Both the district court and the court of appeals believed these principles to be applicable in this case, and we agree.
We therefore agree with the courts below that the principles of due process and equal protection considered in Bearden apply to the termination of preprosecution diversion, but we disagree over how those principles were applied in this case. The court of appeals’ holding indicates that the state may never terminate a diversion agreement if the defendant’s failure to pay is due solely to indigency. Such a result is plainly сontrary to Bearden, which permits termination for a nonwilful failure to pay so long as the court has first determined that there are no adequate alternatives which meet the state’s interests.
We believe Bearden struck the proper balance between the rights of indigent defendants and the interests of the state. We hold, therefore, that in proceedings to terminate a preprosecution diversion аgreement for failure to pay restitution, the court reviewing the termination must first inquire into the reasons for the failure to pay. Of course, if the defendant has wilfully refused to pay or has failed to make sufficient bona fide efforts legally to acquire the resources to pay, the state may revoke the agreement and begin prosecution of the alleged crime or crimes. If, however, the court determines that the defendant has not been at fault in failing to make restitution, then the court must consider whether there are alternatives to termination
We are convinced, moreover, that our decision reflects sound public policy. The decision of the court of appeals, prohibiting termination of a diversion agreement for nonpayment of restitution where the defendant is indigent, could well have a chilling effect on prosecutors’ use of these agreements. If district attorneys are not allowed to terminate PDA’s with defendants who are unable to make restitution, they might be reluctant to place on diversion defendants who cannot demonstrate an ability to pay. This would severely impair the efficacy of diversion programs and would frustrate the laudable goals which such programs serve. Those goals include: keeping individuals out of the criminal justice system who are most amenable to rehabilitation, providing services designed to assist such individuals tо avoid future criminal activity, securing restitution to victims of crime, and conserving community and criminal justice resources. See NMSA 1978, § 31-16A-2.
III.
The sole ground for termination in this case was defendant’s failure to pay restitution in a timely manner, and there is no dispute that defendant was not at fault for his failure to pay. It is apparent from the record, however, that the district court did not adequately consider alternatives to terminatiоn from the program.
Initially, we emphasize an important distinction between the alternatives which, under Bearden, must be considered in the probation revocation context and those to be considered in the context of diversion termination. Bearden requires the sentencing court to consider, before revoking probation for a nonwilful failure to pay a fine or restitution, whether alternatives to imprisonment are adequate to serve the relevant state interests in punishment and deterrence.
But different considerations apply to termination of a preprosecution diversion agreement. As indicated earlier in this opinion, a defendant accepted into a diversion program has a protected liberty interest in remaining free from prosecution. This interest is distinct from the interest in freedom from imprisonment upon revocation of probation. It is the former interest that is entitled to constitutional protection in a diversion termination case. The relevant alternatives in such a case, therefore, are not alternatives to imprisonment but alternatives to termination from diversion and consequent prosecution.
Additionally, the relevant state interests, which must be of sufficient importance to justify infringing upon a defendant’s conditional liberty, are different. The inquiriеs into alternatives which would satisfy those interests are therefore also different in both contexts. As the Court said in Bear-den, the decision to place a defendant on probation “reflects a determination by the sentencing court that the State’s penological interests do not require imprisonment.”
Just as the state’s interests in placing a defendant on probation may be adequately served by finding alternatives to imprisonment when an indigent defendant is unable to pay a fine or restitution, so may the state’s interests in diverting a defendant be adequately served by pursuing alternatives to prosecution when the defendаnt similarly is unable to pay in compliance with a PDA. The proper alternatives to consider in both contexts are therefore pretermination alternatives which would allow an indigent defendant to comply with the probation or diversion program which the state has already determined meets its penal interests in a particular case.
Thus, alternatives such as reducing the amount of restitution, extending the timе for payments, or directing the defendant to perform public service or specified work for the victim in complete or partial substitution for cash payment may sometimes adequately serve the state’s interests in carrying out an effective diversion program. See Bearden,
In connection with the option of extending time for payment, we note that the trial court in this case believed the diversion period continued to run during the pendency of defendant’s challenge to the district attorney’s termination. Wе believe the court of appeals was correct in holding, however, that in a diversion termination case the diversion period should be tolled as of the date the state notifies the defendant of the termination. Jimenez,
With respect to the alternative of reducing the amount of restitution, we note, as did the court of appeals, that the Act itself cоuntenances tailoring the amount of restitution to the resources of a defendant. Under the statute, restitution is only required “to the extent practical.” Section 31-16A-5(B). Moreover, our legislature has recognized that victim restitution may be limited by what a defendant can reasonably afford to pay. NMSA 1978, § 31-17-1(A) (Repl. Pamp.1990).
We recognize that reducing the amount or extending the time of payment on account of the limited resources of a particular defendant may not always be adequate to meet the state’s interests. Under our decision today, the court therefore should also consider whether partial restitution or other alternative measures are adequate to achieve the goals of diversion once the issue has been raised by the state. The relevant penological interests of the state may include the goals of rehabilitation, punishment (i.e., retribution), deterrence, and securing meaningful restitution to the victims of crime. As to the last of these, the victim of a particular crime might well be satisfied with less than full restitution, particularly if partial restitution is accompanied by some sort of services in kind or public service restitution. See § 31-16A-5 (public service restitution may be required in addition to monetary restitution).
For the reasons set out above, the decision of the court of appeals is vacated. The order of the district court is reversed
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. State v. Jimenez,
. NMSA 1978, §§ 31-16A-1 to -8 (Repl.Pamp. 1984).
. Under State v. Trammel,
. The court of appeals relied heavily on the following language from State v. Devatt, 173 N.J-Super. 188, 194-95,
”[T]he mere failure to make full restitution within the prescrihed time period may not in itself support the conclusion that defendants have failed or refused to cooperate in such a wilful and knowing manner as to have forfeited their right to further participation____
"... Even where restitution is an appropriate condition of probation, the offender may not he institutionalized nor probation terminated solely because of inability tо pay. A similar standard is appropriately applicable in pretrial intervention termination proceedings. [Citations omitted.]”
Jimenez,
. And so does the state. The state does not contest the applicability of Bearden, contending only that the district court properly complied with it by considering the adequacy of alternatives. As developed later in this opinion, we disagree with the state on this point; the district court considered alternatives to imprisonment but not alternatives to termination of the agreement.
Since its decision in this case, the court of appeals (by a different panel) has clarified its holding below: “In essence, we held [in Jimenez ] that the guidelines established in Bearden were applicable to preprosecution diversion terminations.” State v. Bowie,
. Although we vacate the court of appeals’ opinion in our disposition of this case, its holding on this issue is hereby incorporated into this opinion. We note that the state agreed with this holding.
