Appellant Obet Lagumbay Ramilo pled guilty to charges of wire fraud, interstate transportation of stolen property, and credit card fraud. The district court imposed concurrent sentences of thirty months imprisonment followed by three years supervised release. The district court also ordered Ramilo to pay $454,841.97 in restitution during the term of his supervised release. Ramilo challenges the restitution order.
Ramilo argues that in ordering him to pay nearly half of a million dollars in rеstitution during the three year period of supervised release, the district court failed to consider Ramilo’s financial resources and future ability to pay, and points out that his yearly income prior to his arrest was $30,000, that he and his wife have combined assets of $23,000, and that he has six dependent children.
I.
The sole response made by the United States in its brief is that Ramilo’s plea agreement precludes him from challenging the restitution order. The government relies on 18 U.S.C. § 3663(a)(3) which authоrizes a district court to order restitution “to the extent agreed-to by the parties in a plea agreement.”
We need not consider the effect of section 3663(a). It is clearly not applicable to this case. The parties did not agree in the plea agreement that Ramilo would pay restitution. The provision relied upon reads: “the defendant understands that the court may order restitution ... to the following individuals in the amounts listed"—followed by a list of alleged victims аnd the amount each claimed to have lost. This was not an agreement that Ramilo would pay restitution in the amounts listed in exchange for a lighter sentence—such an agreement would have read quite differently. 1 The provision in this case did no more than specify the amount of the loss sustained by each victim and hence the amount the court might order Ramilo to pay as a result of his guilty plea. Its apparent purpose was to establish that Ramilo’s guilty plea was made knowingly and voluntarily and with full appreciation of the maximum penalty provided for by law. See Fed. R.Crim.P. 11.
II
In oral argument the United States offered an alternative ground in support of the order. The government conceded a restitution order must be supported by some evidence of present or future ability to pay but argued this showing is not required until the obligation to pay arises. Ramilo was sentenced to 30 months imprisonment followed by three years of supervised release, and, by the terms of the order, his obligation to make restitution did not arise until the period of supervised release began. The government contends defendant’s ability to pay need not be resolved unless and until defendant defaults and the court is asked tо enforce the order or to reduce the amount to be paid.
The government’s concession that at some point the record must reflect a possibility the defendant will be able to pay the amount fixed is supported by a reasonable reading of the language of the statute, the legislative history and case authority. We find no support, however, for the government’s contention that this possibility need not appear from the record at the time of sеntencing unless the obligation to pay arises at that time.
*335
The statute requires the court to consider the defendant’s financial resources and earning ability in determining the amount of restitution to be paid.
2
Although we have held the statute doеs not require express findings on these factors and grants the district court broad discretion in the kind and amount of evidence required, it does not “leave the district court free to disregard the statutory requirements.”
United States v. Cannizzaro,
We held in
United States v. Smith,
In contrast, the government’s argument that a deferral of the obligation to pay restitution also defers the court’s obligation to consider the defendant’s ability to pay the amount fixed, is inconsistent with the language and legislative history of the statute-and unsupported by authority.
By its terms the statute contemplates that the amount of restitution will be detеrmined at the time of sentencing, based upon the financial needs and earning ability of the defendant, among other factors. “[G]ongress plainly envisioned that the time when the balancing of the victim’s loss against the defendant’s resources аnd circumstances should occur was when the court was ‘determining whether to order restitution under section 3579 ... and the amount of such restitution’ ”.
United
*336
States v. Atkinson,
Under the statute, restitution is part of the criminal sentence. The judge must balance the victim’s need for сompensation against the other goals of sentencing, including rehabilitation.
Logar,
[A]t the time the court orders restitution it is most paramount that the defendant, in the all-important rehabilitative process, have at least a hope of fulfilling and complying with each and every order of the court. Thus, an impossible order of restitution, as made in this case, is nothing but a sham, for the defendant has no chance of comрlying with the same, thus defeating any hope of restitution and impeding the rehabilitation process.
Accordingly, we hold that at the time restitution is ordered the record must reflect some evidence the defendant may be able to pay restitution in the amount ordered in the future. In so holding, we acknowledge the “VWPA does not prohibit a sentencing court from imposing a restitutionary sentence on a defendant who is indigent at thе time of sentencing.”
United States v. Ruffen,
The only evidence in the record the government suggests supports the restitution amount is that Ramilo shipped abroad, without authorization, consigned art works valued at about $150,000 and traveled abroad shortly before his arrest for the avowed purpose of raising money. The record suggests some of the exported art work had been returned to the owners and does not indicate defendant’s money raising efforts met with success. The defendant reported total assets of $23,000, consisting of an 1986 Oldsmobile owned by his wife and art work valued at $20,000 owned by his art gallery. The only information regarding his future earning ability is that he received a Bachelor of Science degree from the College of Arts and Trade in Manila, that he was employed as a graphic arts salesman earning $1500 to $2075 per month until he opened his own art gallery, and that his income from the gallery before it failed was approximately $30,000 a year. The probation report concluded “defendant has limited resоurces to pay restitution and a fine,” and it adds “[i]f defendant becomes employed when released from custody, this *337 would increase his ability to pay.” The United States Attorney told the court “Mr. Ramilo, who is a foreign national, who does face eventual exclusion from this country, and who appears to be without funds, cannot realistically be expected to make restitution to his victims or even to pay a significant fine.” 6
This record does not suggest there is any possibility Mr. Ramilо could pay restitution in the amount of $454,841.97 within three years of completion of his prison sentence.
The order is VACATED and REMANDED for further consideration in light of this opinion.
Notes
.
See, e.g., United States v. Soderling,
.. The statute provides the court, in determining whether to order restitution “and the amount of such restitution, shall consider,” inter alia, "the financial resources of the defendant, the financial needs and earning ability of the defendant аnd the defendant’s dependents." 18 U.S.C. § 3664(a).
. S.Rep. No. 532, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. 32 (1982), reprinted in 1982 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2515, 2538. The Senate Judiciary Committee stated:
The committee recognizes that an offense— particularly one causing bodily injury or-death—may have lifelong cost implicаtions for the victim or the victim’s family, but it also recognizes that there may sometimes be a practical necessity in limiting both the amount of restitution ordered and the period during which restitution payments are ordered to be made. In line with the American Bar Association Criminal Justice Standard 18-2.3, the Committee’s intention is that the offender’s ability to pay will be a factor in the restitution order, and that the order will cover a period that will reasonably assure full and complete pаyment of the restitution order notwithstanding any maximum period of probation or incarceration the defendant could have served.
Id. at 2537-38. (Emphasis added.)
. See supra note 3.
. Our recent decision in United States v. Jackson, 982 F.2d 1279, 1284-85 (9th Cir.1992), is not inconsistent with our holding in this case. It does not appear that Jackson challenged the restitution award on the ground that he was or would be unable to make the ordered payments. Our opinion in Jackson merely restated the law by reiterating that a presently indigent defendant may be ordered to pay restitution whether or not he possesses sufficient assets at the time of sentencing if the possibility exists that he will have the ability to do so in the future. Jackson did not purport to break new ground. Nor did it purport to address the quantum of evidence that must be present to support a finding that there is, in fact, a reasonable possibility the defendant may be able to pay the amount fixed in the future.
. The district court remarked that if defendant were deported "he should not even be re-allowed in the United States until such time as he has made good on his obligation to those he has deprived.”
