OPINION
On March 19, 1997, a grand jury handed up a 15-count indictment charging Jeanet-tia and Amos Searan with one count of conspiracy to file a materially false application to participate in the Electronic Filing Program (a violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1)) and conspiracy to assist and advise others in the preparation and presentation of materially false income tax returns (a violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(2)), in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, and thirteen separate counts of assisting and advising others in filing materially false tax returns, in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(2) and 18 U.S.C. § 2. On May 3, 1999, a jury convicted both on those fourteen counts. The district court sentenced Amos to 27 months of imprisonment and two years of supervised release. The court sentenced Jeanettia to five years of probation, with the first twelve months to be served in home detention with electronic monitoring. Both defendants timely appealed in Case Nos. 00-5007 (Amos) and 00 5008 (Jeanettia), challenging the sufficiency of the evidence supporting their convictions and certain aspects of Amos’s sentence. The district court subsequently revoked Jeanettia’s probation for noncompliance with its conditions and sentenced her to four months of community confinement followed by two years of supervised release. She timely appealed the revocation order in Case No. 00-5469. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the district court’s judgments of conviction
I
Amos Searan and his mother Jeanettia Searan owned and operated Searan’s Tax Service, a division of Amos & Company, in the Antioch neighborhood of Nashville, Tennessee. From 1990 to 1993, the Sear-ans prepared and electronically filed individual income tax returns for their clients, which returns omitted income, inflated deductions, and included false forms. In violation of Internal Revenue Service (IRS) regulations, the Searans collected a percentage of the refund amount as their fee, in addition to what they described as “logging” expenses of approximately $150 per taxpayer.
At trial, the administrator of the Electronic Tax Return Program in Tennessee and Kentucky explained how the program works. An Electronic Return Originator (“ERO”) enters a taxpayer’s data into a commercially available computer software program, then electronically transmits the information via modem to the IRS for processing as a tax return. When the IRS receives the information, it conducts a series of verifications to check for mathematical errors and ascertain whether the social security numbers correspond to those in IRS records. Upon completion of this process, the IRS sends an electronic message back to the ERO reporting that it has accepted the return. The acknowledgment indicates only that the return has successfully completed the initial screening process; it does not state whether the deductions taken on the return are allowable or otherwise appropriate. According to IRS guidelines, the taxpayer must verify and sign IRS Form 8453 after the return has been prepared but before the ERO transmits it electronically. Form 8453 contains a summary of figures on the return and a statement authorizing the ERO to file the return electronically on the taxpayer’s behalf. The taxpayer must be given a copy of the prepared return at the time of signature, as well as a copy of the signed Form 8453 upon its completion.
The government does not regulate tax practitioners, who need not be certified public accountants; nor does it evaluate their competence to prepare returns or their familiarity with the tax code. The IRS does, however, screen tax practitioners who want to become EROs and, of course, requires applicants to complete a form. It requires EROs to file their own tax returns on time and will not allow anyone who has been penalized for negligence in the preparation of tax returns to participate in the program. Additionally, people convicted of monetary crimes may not participate. The IRS conducts seminars for tax practitioners who want to become EROs, informing them of the program’s benefits and requirements, such as the forms that they must provide to taxpayers. Jeanettia Searan attended one such seminar in 1992.
Lawrence Sweeney engaged Searan’s Tax Service in April 1992 to prepare his return for tax year 1991. He met both Amos and Jeanettia and gave them a list of his expenses for 1991. The Searans explained that they knew of deductions other people did not, knew what they described as “industry standard” deductions, had access to IRS archives enabling them to check returns from years past to ascertain whether the taxpayer had additional money coming, and had all of the returns they prepared “pre-audited.” They explained their percentage fee and the “logging” fees they charged. They offered that, in addition to preparing Sweeney’s 1991 return, they could amend his 1987 return, so he brought them his 1987 re
In response, the IRS Criminal Investigation Division began an undercover investigation. On February 19, 1998, Special Agent Doug McEwen, assuming the identity of tax client “Doug Malone,” contacted Searan’s Tax Service to prepare his 1992 return. -He presented fabricated W-2 forms and other supporting documentation that, if properly reported, would have resulted in a small amount of tax due. The Searans produced a return showing a refund of $3683. On April 5, 1993, agents executed a search warrant at the Antioch office of Searan’s Tax Service, seizing records relating to 93 false returns prepared for 65 clients, many of whom were audited as a result of the investigation and had to pay unexpected tax liability, sometimes in large amounts.
IRS Revenue Agent Robin Baldwin participated in the audits and interviewed all of the taxpayers whose false returns form the basis of the instant criminal charges. She reviewed the documents connected with each of the taxpayers who testified in this case and explained the appropriate tax calculations. The thirteen tax returns forming the basis of Counts Two through Fourteen all claimed substantial refunds that, when compared to the proper calculations, resulted in substantial tax deficits properly owed to the government, ranging from $1691 to $7960. The aggregate tax deficiency owed to the government by the taxpayers for whom the Searans prepared and filed returns came to $205,533. Over the years they operated Searan’s Tax Service, the Searans received at least $32,379 from taxpayers, which they split evenly.
Amos’s base offense level was 14, pursuant to USSG § 2T1.4(a) (1992), which directed application of the § 2T4.1 table for the corresponding tax loss to the government, here $205,533,
see
USSG § 2T4.1(I) (1992).
1
Because Amos committed the of
Jeanettia’s offense-level calculation tracked her son’s, but her criminal history score put her in Criminal History Category II. At sentencing, the court granted Jeanettia’s motion for a downward departure pursuant to USSG § 5K2.0 (1992) from her guidelines range of 30-37 months’ imprisonment (for offense level 18 and Criminal History Category II) to a guidelines range of 6-12 months (for offense level 9 and Criminal History Category II), which, under USSG § 5C1.1(c)(3) (1992), enabled the court to sentence her to five years of probation, with the first twelve months in home detention with electronic monitoring at her expense.
The defendants were each ordered to pay a $700 special assessment, and they were held jointly and severally liable for $24,256 in restitution, representing the percentage fees and logging fees paid by the 51 victims that the government could locate at the time of sentencing. On February 23, 2000, the court issued a summons to Jeanettia to appear for a hearing on noncompliance with the conditions of her probation. At a March 10, 2000, hearing, the court determined that she had failed to pay for her electronic monitoring device, as ordered, and failed to pay her special assessment of $700. The court determined that she had the financial resources to pay the assessment and cost of monitoring and found that the device’s cost was not the primary reason it had not been installed. For a grade C violation, see USSG § 7Bl.l(a)(3)(B) (1992), the court revoked her probation, see USSG § 7B1.3(c)(l) (1992), and sentenced her to four months of community confinement and two years of supervised release, see USSG § 501.1(e)(2), under the same conditions as the previously imposed probation.
II. Amos Searan (Case No. 00-5007)
A. Sufficiency of the Evidence
As to each of the fourteen counts, Amos Searan challenges the sufficiency of the evidence on which the jury convicted him. On appeal, this court must decide “whether, after reviewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution,
any
rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Jackson v. Virginia,
1. Count 1 (Conspiracy to Aid or Assist the Filing of False Returns)
A criminal conspiracy exists when “two or more persons conspire either to commit any offense against the United States, or to defraud the United States, or any agency thereof in any manner or for any purpose, and one or more of such persons do any act to effect the object of the conspiracy.” 18 U.S.C. § 371. Conceptually, the federal crime of conspiracy requires proof of specific intent, actual or implied, to violate federal law.
See United States v. Garafola,
The law prohibits assisting others to file false tax returns: “Any person who — (2) Willfully aids or assists in, or procures, counsels, or advises the preparation or presentation under ... the internal revenue laws, of a return ..., which is fraudulent or is false as to any material matter, whether or not such falsity or fraud is with the knowledge or consent of the person ... required to present such return ... shall be guilty of a felony....” 26 U.S.C. § 7206(2). The elements of this crime are 1) willfully aiding, assisting, procuring, counseling, advising, or causing, 2) the preparation or presentation of a federal income tax return, 3) that contains a statement of any material .matter known by the defendant to be false.
See United States v. Sassak,
To convict Amos of the conspiracy charged in the indictment, then, the government had to prove 1) that Amos intentionally entered into, 2) an agreement with another, 3) to willfully aid, assist, procure, counsel, advise or cause, 4) the preparation or presentation of a federal income tax return, 5) containing a statement of a material matter Amos knew to be false, and 6) a member of the conspiracy took an overt act in furtherance of the agreement. Pointing to what he described as evidence that most of the taxpayers went to his mother for assistance in preparing their returns and that he did not personally file the returns, Amos claims that the government failed to prove that he intentionally entered into an agreement to break tax laws or that he had knowledge of the returns’ falsity.
To support a conspiracy conviction, the defendant “need not be an active participant in every phase of the conspira
Amos’s depiction of the proof presented at trial is not complete. Most of the taxpayers testified that his name or his business’s name (Amos & Company) appeared on their service agreements or fee contracts. Several taxpayers recall either Amos or Jeanettia telling them to make their checks payable to Amos & Company. Other victims remember both defendants being present during meetings with them, and Lawrence Sweeney testified that Amos himself claimed to know of certain deductions most people did not know because his business was similar to Sweeney’s. Rhonda Sweeney also met with Amos, and he assured her of his competence in the tax-preparation business by claiming that he had prepared returns for lawyers and others associated with Nashville’s Music Row. While Rhonda and Jean-ettia Searan sat at a computer terminal preparing her return, Rhonda asked a variety of questions, and on the occasions when Jeanettia was unsure of the answer, she turned to Amos for help before proceeding. When Lawrence visited the Searans after becoming suspicious, Jeanet-tia refused to provide him a copy of his return because Amos was not there and he “wouldn’t like this.” Similarly, when Tammy Garza called asking for copies of her return, Jeanettia explained that she would have to consult Amos. After the IRS informed her that it would conduct an audit, Melissa Gray contacted the Searans, and Amos told her that — for an additional fee — he would explain what they had done with her return; Amos later sent her a letter confirming the substance of their conversation. Janet Dodd also contacted the Searans after being informed of an audit, demanding that they provide her copies of her 1992 return. Amos refused to do so, became increasingly angry on the phone, and ultimately sent her a question- and-answer form letter — under Amos & Company letterhead, signed by Amos Searan — on which she was to describe any items that raised questions in her mind. When Linda Freeman contacted the Sear-ans to obtain a copy of her return being audited by the IRS, Amos assured her that all was well, as Amos’s attorney was supposedly giving the IRS a hard time and making them mad.
Robert Dowell testified that, when Jean-ettia gave him a tour of the Searans’ apartment, Amos was in a back room at a computer terminal preparing or transmitting a return. Tiffany Dowell remembered Jeanettia showing her the room Amos worked in and also recalled Amos preparing her fee contract. Both defendants were present when agent McEwen, posing as Doug Malone, met with them at their apartment. At that meeting, Amos explained that he needed to gain an understanding of Malone’s business in order to prepare his tax returns. Daniel Hartle dealt only with Amos, who explained that he had taken over his mother’s business.
These facts provide more than enough evidence from which a jury could conclude that Amos had intentionally entered into an agreement with his mother to aid or assist others to present materially false tax returns. In this case, the terms of the conspiratorial agreement were that the conspirators would act to make false
2. Counts 2-14 (Aiding or Assisting the Presentation of False Returns)
The grand jury charged Amos with both the substantive offense of aiding or assisting the presentation of false returns and the accomplice crime of aiding and abetting another to aid or assist the presentation of false returns. Presented with a special verdict form giving it the option of convicting Amos of either the substantive offense or aiding and abetting the substantive offense, the jury convicted him of the substantive charge, i.e., a violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(2). Amos claims that his acts as proven to the jury do not fall within the ambit of § 7206(2).
As explained above, the elements of this crime are 1) willfully aiding, assisting, procuring, counseling, advising, or causing, 2) the preparation or presentation of a federal income tax return, 3) that contains a statement of any material matter known by the defendant to be false. Designed to punish tax preparers and others who willfully prepare or present false tax returns on behalf of taxpayers regardless of the taxpayer’s knowledge of the falsehood, this statute relies on a theory of liability akin to complicity: it criminalizes an act that facilitates another person’s crime when the act is undertaken willfully and with knowledge of the circumstances that make the other person’s act illegal.
This court long ago recognized that the “willfully aiding, assisting, procuring, counseling, advising, or causing” language of § 7206(2) effectively incorporates into this statute the theory behind accomplice liability. In
Sassak,
this court observed that, “[theoretically, anyone who causes a false return to be filed or furnishes information which leads to the filing of a false return could be guilty of violating 26 U.S.C. § 7206(2).”
Sassak,
The recognition that the first element of a § 7206(2) charge effectively incorporates “aiding and abetting” complicity liability means that charging a defendant with “aiding and abetting,” under 18 U.S.C. § 2, the “aid[ing], assisting],
“Whoever ... aids, abets, counsels, commands, induces or procures [the] commission [of an offense against the United States], is punishable as a principal. Whoever willfully causes an act to be done which if directly performed by him or another would be an offense against the United States, is punishable as a principal.” 18 U.S.C. § 2(a), (b). Judge Learned Hand read this complicity statute to require that the defendant “in some sort associate himself with the venture, that he participate in it as in something that he wishes to bring about, that he seek by his action to make it succeed.”
United States v. Peoni,
“ ‘Knowledge that a crime is being committed, even when coupled with presence at the scene, is generally not enough to support a conviction on the basis of aiding and abetting.’ ”
United States v. Bryant,
The government’s theory of Amos’s liability in this case holds that he aided or assisted either taxpayers or his mother to file tax returns that he knew contained a
The evidence described above with respect to the conspiracy charge indicates that Amos was not merely present at the scene of his mother’s activities assisting taxpayers. Rather, he actively participated in her criminal acts by assuring victims of his and his mother’s competency to file tax returns, particularly returns containing allegedly legitimate “deductions” known to few other people. He personally prepared certain tax returns for Searan’s Tax Service and at various times held himself out as a partner in, proprietor of, and successor to his mother’s tax-preparation operation. And he received payment from the victims on behalf of the business he jointly operated with his mother, evenly splitting the proceeds with her. These acts, willfully undertaken by Amos, contributed to the execution of the crimes.
See Phillips,
The record also contains sufficient evidence to show that Amos knew the returns filed contained false statements of material fact. Each of the filings occurred in a span of time when he continually lent support to his mother’s criminal activity and occasionally engaged in his own criminal aiding and assisting. Additionally, Amos’s knowledge of and participation in the conspiracy to assist others in filing false returns and his aiding his mother to file returns that she knew contained falsehoods provide evidence from which a jury could conclude that Amos engaged in his contributing acts while knowing that the returns ultimately filed would contain false statements of material fact. “The fact that some of th[is] evidence may have served double duty by also supporting the charge of conspiracy is of course immaterial.”
Nye & Nissen,
Because this circumstantial evidence could lead a jury to find each of the elements of Counts 2-14 proven beyond a reasonable doubt, the district court properly denied Amos’s motion for judgment of acquittal.
B. Variance
“Obtaining a reversal of a conviction because of a variance between the indictment and the evidence requires satisfaction of a [two-part] test: (1) ‘the variance itself must be demonstrated; and (2) the variance must affect some substantial right of the defendant.’ ”
United States v. Gibbs,
Amos claims that the indictment charged him with filing tax returns directly with the IRS. The theory of his defense, he claims, was to demonstrate his innocence by showing that he never filed a tax return directly with the IRS. He is correct in asserting that no proof at trial showed that he filed a tax return on behalf of anyone listed in the indictment directly with the IRS. But this fact is of no legal consequence, because Amos’s reading of the indictment is flawed. He points to the document’s first paragraph, which declares: “At all times material herein, Jean-ettia Searan ... and Amos Searan operated a business of preparing and filing tax returns for taxpayers, utilizing the Electronic Filing Program, whereby they electronically filed tax returns on behalf of taxpayers directly with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The defendants operated under the names of Amos & Company, Inc., and/or Searan Tax Service and/or Searans Tax Service and/or Searan’s Tax Service.” Obviously, Amos attaches great significance to the word directly. His error lies in the simple but significant point that this paragraph does not describe a crime or a criminal charge.
The indictment described his crime in the succeeding paragraphs, wherein the grand jury charged,
From on or about the 19th day of November, 1991, up to and including May 14, 1993, in the Middle District of Tennessee, Jeanettia Searan ... and Amos Searan, the defendants herein, did combine, conspire, confederate and agree together with each other and with diverseother persons to the Grand Jury unknown to commit the following offenses against the United States:
To willfully aid and assist in, and procure, counsel, and advise the preparation and presentation to the IRS income tax returns, form 1040s, either individual or joint, for taxpayers, which were false and fraudulent as to material matters for the calendar years shown in the tax return, in violation of Title 26 United States Code, Section 7206(2).
During the period of the conspiracy the defendants prepared and caused to be filed numerous tax returns including, but not limited to, those returns listed in the overt acts, which contained false items.
These paragraphs state the crime the grand jury charged Amos with committing. The preceding paragraph, on which Amos places so much emphasis, merely describes background facts believed by the grand jury to be true. The crime charged in the indictment nowhere specified that Amos must have filed returns “directly” with the IRS. Instead, it charged Amos with conspiracy to “willfully aid and assist in ... the preparation and presentation to the IRS....” Nothing in the indictment called for proof that he directly filed anything with the IRS. And nothing in the statute calls for such proof, as the elements of the crime, described above, make clear. The district court properly ruled that proof of whether the returns were directly or indirectly filed with the IRS was irrelevant to the charged offense. The proof at trial did not vary from the crime charged in the indictment.
C. Sentencing
Amos challenges two aspects of his sentence: the district court’s denial of his motion for a minor- or minimal-participant reduction in his offense level and the court’s conclusion that he derived a substantial portion of his income from his tax fraud.
A defendant must prove entitlement to a minor- or minimal-role reduction by a preponderance of the evidence.
See United States v. Perry,
The guideline provides: “Based on the defendant’s role in the offense, decrease the offense level as follows: (a) If the defendant was a minimal participant in any criminal activity, decrease by 4 levels, (b) If the defendant was a minor participant in any criminal activity, decrease by 2 levels. In cases falling between (a) and (b), decrease by 3 levels.” USSG § 3B1.2 (1992). This guideline “provides a range of adjust
Amos argues that “[i]t is clear from the record that [he] is substantially less culpable than his mother,” such that he deserves at least a two-level minor-role reduction in his offense level. He adds that the “record further indicates that [he] lacked the knowledge and understanding of the scope and structure of the enterprise being conducted by his mother,” meaning he deserves a four-point minimal-role reduction. In support of these grand contentions, he points out that his mother filed the IRS Form 8633 application to participate in the Electronic Filing Program. He further cites testimony by some victims that they were referred to his mother, not him, for tax services; that he was not present or not involved when they gave their tax information to his mother; that his mother, not he, prepared their returns; and that his mother’s signature, rather than his, appeared on their tax documents. Amos’s own description of the evidence implicitly acknowledges that some victims came to him for tax services, that he was present (actually, he was quite actively involved, as Rhonda Sweeney’s testimony indicated) when some victims supplied their financial information to the tax service, and that he prepared some returns. Moreover, Amos ignores the volumes of evidence, described above, that he actively participated in the tax fraud scheme and that he admitted splitting the proceeds of the crime equally with his mother. The district court did not clearly err in finding him “deeply involved in the offense conduct.”
Amos next objects to the district court’s finding that he participated in the tax fraud conspiracy as part of a pattern or scheme from which he derived a substantial portion of his income, which resulted in a two-point offense-level enhancement pursuant to USSG § 2T1.4(b)(l) (1992). This court reviews a finding of this sort for clear error.
See United States v. Luster,
Obviously, application of this guideline requires comparison of his tax-fraud income to his income from other sources. Amos filed no tax returns for the years
D. Downward Departure
'Amos argues that the district court erred in declining to grant him a downward departure on the basis of his clean criminal record, the non-violent nature of his offense, his employed status, his status as caretaker of his parents, his status as the parent of two minor children, the requirement of immediate restitution, and the alleged facts that the government suffered no actual loss and he “was clearly less culpable tha[n] his co-defendant” mother. As the quotation in Part I shows,
supra
at 439 - 440, the district court’s recognition of its discretion to depart downward from the guidelines range is indisputable. This court has no jurisdiction to review a district court’s refusal to depart downward when the court knew of its discretion and declined to exercise it.
See United States v. Dellinger,
III. Jeanettia Searan (Case Nos. 00-5008, 00-5469)
Jeanettia Searan argues that the district court erred in denying her motion for judgment of acquittal. The elements of Jeanettia’s offenses are set forth above in Part II.A, as is the standard of review applied by this court. Although Jeanet-tia’s appellate brief is cryptic in its brevity, she summarized her primary contention: Her lack of formal training in tax preparation, supposed problems she had in the past with proper completion of tax returns, and her “relatively low” I.Q. of 74 raise “some doubt as to whether [she] fully understood the nature of her actions while preparing and filing tax returns for the various taxpayers whose inaccurate returns led to [her] indictment in this case.”
Without citation to authority, Jeanettia claims that her “inferior mental capacity and inability to reason like a normal person, in and of itself, casts [sic] a big shadow of doubt on the element which requires that the crime was committed knowingly and willfully.” Thus she seems to claim that her mental functioning was so low that she did not have the capacity to know the tax returns contained falsehoods and that she could not form the intent to willfully aid or assist the taxpayers in preparing and presenting them. She makes these contentions despite volumes of record testimony by victims that she seemed quite alert and knowledgeable of her surroundings and activities when she prepared the tax returns containing material falsehoods.
Fed.R.Crim.P. 12.2(a) requires a defendant to notify the prosecution of her intention to rely on the so-called insanity defense, and failure to comply with the rule bars raising the defense at trial. Through a series of sealed ex parte motions, Jeanet-tia sought and finally won the district court’s permission to file her Rule 12.2 notice late. Although Rules 12.2(a) and (b) require a defendant to file with the clerk of the court a copy of her notice to the government of intent to raise the insanity defense and call expert witnesses in support thereof, the record contains no indication that she ever did so. Nevertheless, the government questioned victims about Jeanettia’s apparent capacity to reason and awareness of her acts and surroundings, and Jeanettia called an expert witness. The district court instructed the jury that “Mrs. Searan says that she is not guilty of these charges because her mental deficiency prevented her from acting in a willful and knowing manner.... Since it was not her intention to do something which the law forbids, Mrs. Searan submits she is not guilty of these charges.” Because the mental disease or defect argument went to the jury and the government has not argued that Jeanettia failed to present it properly below, we will consider her contention that the government failed to prove that she had the mental capacity to form the intent to willfully aid and assist the preparation or presentation of tax returns she knew to be false.
Jeanettia called Vanderbilt University Medical Center neuropsychologist and practicing clinical psychologist Dr. Pamela Mary Auble, who testified extensively about her evaluation of Jeanettia’s intelligence, memory, reasoning capacity, and personality. Dr. Auble testified that Jeanettia’s reasoning “seemed to be pretty impaired,” her verbal reasoning “was significantly below average,” and her full-scale age-adjusted I.Q. of 74, in the fourth percentile of the general population, placed her in the borderline range of functioning. Following this assessment of Jeanettia’s intelligence, which barely — if at all — called into question whether her “reason and mental powers are ... so deficient that [s]he has no will, no conscience, or controlling mental power,”
Davis,
Finally, Jeanettia argues that the district court improperly revoked her probation for failure to comply with its conditions, including her not obtaining a monitoring device, when it allegedly refused to consider her ability to pay for the device. For the proposition that courts must consider the financial resources of the defendant in determining whether to order restitution, she cites “18 U.S.C. § 3663(a)(B)(I),” by which she apparently means 18 U.S.C. § 3663(a)(l)(B)(i)(II). Jeanettia contends that her probation officer should have worked with her to come up with a feasible payment plan based on her family budget and ability to pay.
As a preliminary matter, the government contended in its brief that this issue would become moot by the time of argument because Jeanettia began serving her four-month term in community confinement while this case was pending on appeal and her release was approaching as the parties filed their briefs, eight months before oral argument. The government has not provided this court with any documentation of the release it anticipated during briefing, nor has it addressed how the district court’s sentencing Jeanettia to two years of supervised release under the same conditions as her original probation affects its mootness argument. On the record presently before this court, Jeanet-tia’s appeal in case no. 00-5469 does not appear to be moot.
The statute Jeanettia cites does not require consideration of financial resources in revoking probation for failure to pay for electronic monitoring and failure to pay the special assessment. It instead deals with restitution, which did not factor into the district court’s revocation decision. Moreover, as noted above, the district court found that Jeanettia had the financial resources to pay the assessment and cost of monitoring while, in addition, the monitoring device’s cost was not the primary reason it had not been installed. Jeanettia has not challenged these factual findings on appeal, and her claim of procedural defect lacks a basis in law. The district court committed no error.
IV
The district court’s judgments of conviction and sentence as to Amos Searan, case no. 00-5007, and Jeanettia Searan, case no. 00-5008, are AFFIRMED in all respects. The district court’s order revoking Jeanet-tia Searan’s probation and sentencing her to four months of community confinement followed by two years of supervised release is also AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The district court used the version of the United States Sentencing Guidelines effective Nov. 1, 1992, in sentencing Amos because changes to the guidelines effective after completion of the offense conduct raised
ex post facto
concerns.
See
USSG § IB 1.11(b)(1)
