This appeal by David Howard Craig of the restitution order imposed for his violation of the Child Support and Recovery Act (the “Act” or “CSRA”), 18 U.S.C. § 228, requires us to decide whether restitution under the Act must be limited to the time period during which the defendant lives in a state different than that of his children and whether district courts should inquire into a defendant’s ability to pay prior to ordering a restitution award. We also must determine whether the particular restitution order entered against Craig violated the Commerce Clause or the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
We have jurisdiction to consider Craig’s appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
We conclude that restitution under the Act properly includes the entire past due support obligation, that district courts need not inquire into a defendant’s ability to pay prior to ordering restitution and that the restitution award against Craig was not unconstitutional.
I.
Craig and his ex-wife were separated in 1992 and divorced in 1993. In 1992, the Superior Court of California entered an order requiring Craig to pay child support for his two daughters in the amount of $741 per month. Upon a finding that Craig’s income had declined, the award subsequently was reduced to $649 per month. In July 1996, when Craig’s older daughter turned 18 years of age, the amount was further reduced to $324.50 per month.
Craig failed to meet his child support obligation and, on June 7, 1993, the Placer County Superior Court issued a contempt order. Craig made five voluntary child support payments from June 1993 through November 1993, but made no payments thereafter. In mid-1995, Craig moved to *1126 Nevada while his daughters remained in California. In Nevada, Craig intermittently worked in construction but did not pay any portion of his child support obligation.
On January 3, 1997, Craig was indicted for violating the Act. The indictment charged that Craig:
from on or about July 31, 1995, and continuing through on or about December 20, 1996, resided in a different state with respect to his minor children ..., and, having the ability to pay, did willfully fail to pay a known past due support obligation with respect to such children as ordered by the Superior Court of the State of California for the County of Placer.
ER at 1. Craig pleaded guilty to the crime on June 5, 1997, but specifically reserved his right to appeal the amount of the restitution award ordered by the magistrate judge. In the factual basis of his plea agreement, Craig admitted only that he was financially able to pay part of the past due child support obligation that he owed. In addition, he argued to the district court that restitution should be limited to the amount incurred during the period charged in the indictment, to-wit, July 31, 1995 to December 20, 1996. The magistrate judge disagreed and ordered restitution in the full amount of arrearage sought by the Placer County District Attorney’s Office, including all amounts unpaid while Craig lived in California. Craig was ordered to pay $33,968.50.
Craig appealed the order of restitution to the district court, which denied Craig’s appeal and affirmed the restitution order in its entirety. This appeal followed.
II.
We first address whether restitution under the Act must be limited to the dates specified within the indictment. This court reviews the legality of an order of restitution
de novo. United States v. Baggett,
18 U.S.C. § 228 1 states, in relevant part:
(c) Upon a conviction under this section, the court shall order restitution under section 3663 in an amount equal to the past due support obligation as it exists at the time of sentencing.
18 U.S.C. § 228(c). The Act defines “past due support obligation” as any amount determined by court order to be due as child support that has remained unpaid for more than one year or is greater than $5,000. 18 U.S.C. § 228(d)(1).
Craig contends that the order of restitution-in an amount exceeding those child support payments that became delinquent during the period charged in the indictment-is outside the court’s limited authority to order restitution. He bases this argument on the Act’s incorporation of the Victim Witness Protection Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3663, which limits restitution to the amount of damages suffered by the victim as a result of the criminal conduct charged in the indictment.
See Hughey v. United States,
It is clear from the language of the statute, however, that the criminal conduct in a case pursuant to the Child Support and Recovery Act is the willful failure to pay a past due child support obligation. Section 228(a) states:
Whoever willfully fails to pay a past due support obligation with respect to a child who resides in another State shall be punished as provided in subsection (b).
In
United States v. Mussari,
Because the criminal conduct charged in the indictment includes the willful nonpayment of child support prior to the time period specified in the indictment, the statutory language of § 228(c)-“at the time of senteneing”-evinces Congress’ desire to charge the parent for all unpaid child support, including support that accrued before the indictment was issued. Rather than delineate the period of restitution, the time period charged in the indictment merely provides the jurisdictional basis for a federal court to order restitution for the total amount of arrearage, including state-incurred debt. Not imposing restitution to include amounts that accrued outside the period of the indictment would appear to render the clause “as it exists at the time of sentencing” a nullity.
See Wilshire Westwood
Assocs. v.
Atlantic Richfield Corp.,
This outcome is consistent with the Act’s legislative history, which indicates that Congress enacted the statute to help states collect billions of dollars of uncollected child support by creating a federal mechanism to enforce state child support orders regardless of a parent’s flight from state to state.
See
138 Cong. Réc. H11071, H11071-11072 (daily ed. Oct. 3, 1992) (statements of Reps. Hyde, Hoyer, Mazzo-li). More specifically, the Act was enacted to counter parents’ efforts to evade state jurisdiction.
See United States v. Sage,
III.
We next address whether the district court erred by ordering restitution in the full amount of the past due child support obligation without inquiring into Craig’s ability to pay. The district court determined that Craig’s guilty plea constituted an admission of his willful failure to pay a known past due child support obligation.
In the factual basis of his plea- agreement, Craig admitted only that he was partially able to pay the past due child support obligation that he owed. He argues that this “partial admission” does not suffice to establish willfulness on his part. Accordingly, he seeks a federal court hearing to determine that portion of his child support obligation that he “could .have afforded to pay.” Br. of Appellant at 18.
Thus, in addition to arguing that his total obligation to pay was limited .to the support payments that accrued between the dates charged in the indictment, Appellant argues that the federal district court should have conducted a hearing, similar to a state family court, to determine his ability to pay. He cannot point to any specific decision of this court that would entitle him to such relief but instead relies on a statement in
United States v. Mussari,
Subsequent to the briefing and oral argument in this case, we decided
United States v. Ballek,
■We made it clear in Ballek that a parent who' considers himself or herself unable to pay an order of child support must seek a modification of the order from the state court and not from the federal district court in. a CSRA prosecution: ■
A parent who is subject to an order for child support must seek a modification of the order before making such a lifestyle change; The .family court judge can then determine whether such a change is consistent with the parent’s prior, .obligation to support the children.
Id.
at 875 (emphasis added). Accordingly, a “non-custodial parent who does not have the funds to satisfy the child support award, and who does not obtain a reduction or remission of the award because of inability to pay,
will almost certainly be engaged in willful defiance of the state court’s child support order.” Id.
at 873 (emphasis added);
see also United States v. Bailey,
By analogy, the reasoning of Ballek is equally applicable to excuses presented by David Howard Craig for non-payment of his child support order. In his guilty plea, Craig admitted that he knew of his past due support obligation. ER at 9. His contention that he was unable to pay seems to place the blame for all of his financial woes on his ex-wife’s shoulders:
His ex-wife refused to return the tools, business records, and other work supplies that had remained in the home.... Craig’s credit was also affected by the financial consequences of the divorce .... He lost his truck.... As a result of these circumstances he was unable to maintain his business, and therefore was unable to make the ordered child support payments. He lost his contractor’s license as a result of non-payment, which further impaired his ability to earn a living.... In the years since the divorce Mr. Craig moved repeatedly in search of work, living from hand to mouth and sometimes relying upon his parents for support.... He held numerous short-term construction jobs, providing intermittent income.
Br. of Appellant at 5 (citations omitted). Although he contended that he was unable to pay the entire award, Craig did not seek a modification of the child support order in state court, which had reduced Craig’s monthly support obligation on two prior occasions.
We are confident that a competent state tribunal would have made a proper evaluation of his mournful apologia had it been presented to a family court prior to his *1129 federal indictment. He chose not to do so. Accordingly, by the time he was the subject of a federal indictment, it was too late to avoid the consequences by pleading financial inability to pay the state court order.
We conclude that the teachings of Ballek reflect an explicit rejection of the obitum dictum’s suggestion in Mussari II that incorporation of the Victim Witness Protection Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3663, requires a federal court to consider “the financial resources of the defendant” in ordering an award of restitution under the Act. In Ballek, we decided that it is the responsibility of the federal defendant to make his or her presentation to the state family court to demonstrate that he or she lacks the financial resources to meet the support obligations imposed by the state court system. In Ballek, we did not ignore the incorporation of § 3663 into the Child Support Recovery Act; rather, we made the judgment that in considering the allocation of judicial competencies, the state court system is better-equipped to exercise expertise in child support cases relating to “the financial resources of the [parent], the financial needs and earning ability of the [parent] and the [parent’s] dependents.” 18 U.S.C. § 3663(a)(l)(B)(i)(II).
IV.
Finally, we hold that the restitution order in this ease did not violate the Commerce Clause or the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. We review
de novo
the constitutionality of the district court’s interpretation of this statute.
United States v. DeLaCorte,
Although this court has held that the Act itself does not violate the Commerce Clause,
see Mussari I,
In addition, Craig’s due process rights were not violated by the magistrate judge’s order, which awarded restitution without considering Craig’s ability to pay. Craig’s guilty plea constituted an admission of all elements of the offense charged.
United States v. Cazares,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. All references to the Act are to the prior version, 18 U.S.C. § 228 (1994 & Supp. IV 1998), in effect at the time of Craig’s conviction.
