Defendant-appellant Daniel Mortimer appeals from a judgment (110-14) entered December 28,1995 in the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York, Howard G. Munson,
Judge,
that resen-tenced Mortimer following vacatur and remand of his initial sentence of restitution in
United States v. Mortimer,
On resentencing, the district court directed, inter alia, that Mortimer pay restitution while in prison according to a schedule to be determined pursuant to the Bureau of Prisons’ Inmate Financial Responsibility Program (the “IFRP”). Mortimer challenges only this aspect of his current sentence on this appeal.
We vacate the sentence of restitution and remand for resentencing.
Background
On April 21, 1993, a grand jury issued a superseding indictment that charged Mortimer and two codefendants with nine counts involving the use of the explosive nitroglycerin in connection with robberies of banks and department stores. Mortimer admits to having participated in five robberies in New York, Pennsylvania, and Vermont between December 3, 1990 and August 5, 1991. Nitroglycerin was either used or intended to be used in all or most of these robberies.
On December 1, 1993, Mortimer entered into a plea agreement with the government pursuant to which he pled guilty to transporting an unregistered firearm in interstate commerce in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 5861(j),
see also id.
§ 5871 (prescribing criminal penalty), and using and carrying an explosive
On the initial appeal, we affirmed the sentence except as to restitution, vacating the order of restitution partly on the basis that the district court had lacked a sufficient evi-dentiary basis to conclude that Mortimer was able to pay the restitution immediately.
See Mortimer,
On December 15, 1995, the district court resentenced Mortimer. It left unchanged the terms of incarceration and supervised release, and reimposed the $100.00 special assessment and $28,333.50 in restitution. With respect to the payment schedule for the restitution, the district court ordered as follows:
While in custody, the defendant shall participate in the Bureau of Prisons’ Inmate Financial Responsibility Program and make restitution in accordance with the policies of that program. Upon his release from imprisonment, the defendant shall make restitution payments in accordance with the terms of supervised release (in installments of $100 per month.)
Mortimer again appeals his sentence. He argues that the district court’s direction for payment of restitution during his term of imprisonment improperly delegated to the Bureau of Prisons the responsibility for devising a payment schedule.
Discussion
In
Porter,
we held that a district court may not delegate to a probation officer the responsibility to devise a restitution payment schedule or to determine the amount to be paid.
The IFRP was instituted on April 1, 1987,
see Prows v. Department of Justice,
The government attempts to distinguish Porter on the ground that in that case the district court delegated the power to set restitution schedules after the defendant was out of jail on supervised release. In the present case, Mortimer challenges only the direction to participate in the IFRP while he is incarcerated. The government argues in its brief on appeal that this distinction is significant because after a defendant is released from incarceration, “supervised release could be revoked and the defendant returned to prison because of his failure to comply with sentencing terms devised by a probation officer rather than [by] the court.”
In
Porter,
we reasoned that to allow a probation officer to determine the amount or payment schedule of restitution would be to “delegate the judicial functions inherent in the grant of restitution to the probation department.”
In reaching this conclusion, we are in accord with the Fourth Circuit’s recent ruling in
United States v. Miller,
Conclusion
We vacate Mortimer’s sentence with respect to restitution and remand for resen-tencing consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The latter of these two counts does not appear in the superseding indictment, but was included in an information that was filed at the time of Mortimer’s guilty plea.
See Mortimer,
. We note that a district court could properly draw upon the IFRP guidelines stated in the Code of Federal Regulations in fashioning an order of restitution that specifies the amounts to be paid, so long as discretionary authority to depart from the court's order is not vested in prison officials.
