MEMORANDUM OPINION
This matter is before the court on two motions. The government first moved to direct the Clerk of the Court to call an irrevocable letter of credit and pay over the entire amount to the Treasury of the United States. The defendant opposed that motion and orally moved to abate the $75,-000.00 fine for which the letter of credit was deposited with the Clerk of the Court. For the reasons stated below, the defendant’s motion to abate the fine is granted and the government’s motion to call the irrevocable letter of credit is denied.
*934 Because the procedural history of this case is relevant to the disposition of these motions, it will be recounted here. After a jury trial in December 1977, defendant Thomas J. Bowler was convicted on one count of a Sherman Act violation and on thirty-seven counts of mail fraud. He was then sentenced to thirty months imprisonment and fined $75,000.00 on the Sherman Act charge and $1,000.00 on each mail fraud charge. On June 8, 1979, the defendant’s conviction was affirmed by the court of appeals and the Supreme Court denied defendant’s petition for a writ of certiorari on October 1, 1979. Defendant then served his prison sentence and paid $37,000.00 of the $112,000.00 in fines imposed. Defendant moved to correct the judgment entered on the Sherman Act count, upon which the $75,000.00 fine was imposed. The motion was denied, but this court stayed execution of the $75,000.00 fine pending appeal. As a condition of the stay, defendant was ordered to deposit with the Clerk of the Court an irrevocable letter of credit in the amount of $75,000.00. 1
On February 25, 1981, the denial of defendant’s motion to correct sentence was affirmed. Two weeks later the defendant died. The day after defendant’s death, his attorneys moved in the court of appeals for an extension of time for filing a petition for rehearing or rehearing en banc. Such extension was granted to April 10, 1981 and again to May 6,1981. On June 10,1981, the court of appeals denied a third extension of time and on June 18, 1981, the court issued its mandate. On October 16, 1981, the government filed its motion in this court requesting an order directing the Clerk of the Court to draw and pay into the Treasury of the United States the entire amount of the letter of credit.
In opposition to the government’s motion and in support of the motion to abate the fine, defendant’s attorneys rely on the principle that the death of a defendant abates a criminal prosecution from its inception, in-eluding the entry of judgment and the penalty or sentence imposed. In addition, it is argued that the same issue presented in this case has been resolved by the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in
United States
v.
Morton,
The government presents three arguments in response to defendant’s motion to abate the fine. First, it contends that
United States v. Morton,
It is well-established that the death of a criminal defendant pending appeal of his conviction abates the criminal prosecution from its inception.
Durham v. United States,
This court is not persuaded that the Morton decision is distinguishable on its facts or that its reasoning is unsound. Morton did present a case where the government could have, but did not collect the fine before the defendant’s death. However, Morton is in no way dependent upon some assessment that the government wasted an opportunity or was dilatory. 3 Rather, the court simply reasoned that once the defendant is dead, there is no longer a justification for the fine. Although the Morton court did note that it would not speculate on a case where a fine could not have been collected before death, it did not indicate what was meant by “could not have been collected” nor why that fact might make a difference. If the Morton court was referring to a situation where the defendant had no assets with which to satisfy the fine before death, then the court’s footnote limitation has no application here. 4 The “could not *936 collect" notation might refer to a situation such as the one in this case where the final mandate from the court of appeals had not been issued. Yet, in that situation the posture of the case is more like that of one on direct appeal of a conviction because the judgment is not final, at least as to the $75,000.00 fine. Thus, application of the principle of abatement in this situation is just as appropriate, if not more, as in Morton.
Finally, the government’s contention that the decision in Morton is wrong because fine collection matters should be treated differently than appeals of convictions is unpersuasive. The government states that it is sensible to dismiss an appeal when a criminal defendant dies because to do otherwise would be an inefficient use of resources. In contrast, the government suggests that the collection of a fine after judgment would not be an inefficient use of resources and if a fine is not collected, the substantial efforts of the court and prosecutors would not be vindicated. However, the principle of abatement is not based entirely upon a policy favoring the efficient use of judicial resources. If it were, then criminal appeals only would be dismissed, not the underlying judgment and indictment. Instead, as the Morton court suggested, the rationale of the. principle of abatement is that an indictment, conviction and sentence are charges against and punishment of the defendant and if the defendant is dead, there no longer is a justification for them. Thus, whether a criminal defendant dies pending appeal of his conviction or dies before a fine is collected, the principle of abatement applies. 5 Therefore, this court follows the Morton decision 6 and abates the remaining $75,000.00 fine imposed upon Thomas J. Bowler.
Accordingly, defendant’s motion to abate the fine is granted and the government’s motion to direct the Clerk of the Court to call the irrevocable letter of credit is denied.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. The letter of credit was issued on October 24, 1979. It will not expire until April 23, 1982, after two extensions.
. In
Durham v. United States,
. Even if this were a relevant factor, in this case the government waited four months after the Seventh Circuit’s mandate to attempt to collect the fine via the letter of credit.
. The government has never specifically stated why it was unable to collect the fine before defendant’s death. Presumably, though, it was because the mandate from the Seventh Circuit had not been issued. There has been no suggestion on this motion that defendant was financially unable to pay the fine and the exist *936 ence of the letter of credit would refute such a contention.
. Of course, it does not apply to fines already paid, since the purposes of the fines were served insofar as they denied defendant some of his resources before his death.
United States
v.
Morton,
. The court finds no merit in the government’s argument that abating this fine will encourage other post-affirmance appeals of fines. As pointed out by defendant’s attorneys, it is difficult to conceive of other defendants “buying time” for purposes of dying before a fine could be collected. In addition, the contention that the Supreme Court has retreated from a strong rule on abatement is contrary to the Seventh ■ Circuit’s interpretation of
Dove v. United States,
