Mark Douglas Schiek appeals the imposition of restitution as a condition of his probation because the indictment under which he was convicted failed to specify dollar amounts of actual damages suffered by his victims. We affirm. 1
FACTS
A grand jury indicted Schiek for mail and wire fraud under 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1343. The indictment alleged Schiek and an accomplice purchased $33,500 in travelers checks from several companies, cashed the checks, falsely reported them as lost, and collected an unspecified amount of refunds. At trial, the government proved that Schiek and his accomplice had received refunds of over $19,500 from the companies. A jury convicted Schiek on both counts.
The district court sentenced Schiek to five years in custody on the mail fraud count, suspended sentence on the wire fraud count, and placed Schiek on probation for five years. As a condition of probation, the court imposed restitution of $18,500.
DISCUSSION
We review the legality of a sentence de novo.
United States v. Whitney,
The requirement that, absent a plea agreement, the restitution amount be set forth in the indictment sets a ceiling which the restitution order cannot exceed, providing fair notice to defendants of the amount the government believes they caused victims to suffer.
See id.
at 825 (restitution order improper on indictment stating no dollar amount);
United States v. Black,
Schiek argues that the court could not order restitution of $18,500 because the indictment specified the $33,500 in travelers checks he falsely reported misplacing, not the companies’
actual
damages, the $19,500 they refunded to him. Schiek cites language in
Whitney
that an indictment must “state actual dollar losses sustained by the victims of [the defendant’s] fraud.”
We recognize that reliance on the indictment’s statement of actual loss as a ceiling
*945
establishes for the court “with certainty” a restitution figure that represents the loss for which the defendant is responsible.
Id.
at 825 (citing
Gering,
The indictment specified the sum that Schiek attempted to defraud his victims of, giving him fair notice of the amount of damages the government sought to prove. The restitution amount was less than both the indictment figure and the amount proved with certainty at trial to be the victims’ actual loss. The restitution order was both fair and reliable.
CONCLUSION
The district court’s imposition of restitution as a condition of probation is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Schiek also appeals the underlying conviction on several grounds, which we address in an unpublished memorandum filed concurrently.
