OPINION
Thе only issues raised in this sentencing appeal concern the district court’s calculation of the amount of loss suffered by the victims in this case and of the amount of restitution that the defendants have been ordered to pay. A related question, raised in response to the Supreme Court’s recent opinion in United States v. Booker after briefing was completed, concerns the applicability of the ruling in Booker to the imposition of an order of restitution.
The defendants, Rachel Shannon Sose-bee and Jack Farris, were originally charged with fraud and conspiracy to defraud in a scheme involving bogus “charge backs” or discounts on orders their medical supply company placed with pharmaceutical manufacturer Pharmacia & Upjohn, Inc., now a part of Pfizer, Inc., and referred to here as “Upjohn.” Under a plea agreement reached with the government, the defendants waived the right to proceed by indictment and pleaded guilty instead to a one-count information charging misprision of a felony, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 4. Both were sentenced to five years’ probation.
The government’s agreement with defendant Farris included a requirement that he make restitution for “the losses caused by his activities,” which the district court later calculatеd at $2,300,597.99, the loss directly incurred by Upjohn. Farris now appeals the restitution order, contending that the calculation was erroneous, first, because there was no evidence of the fair market value of what he describes as the “diverted pharmaceuticals” and, second, because the loss amount should have been limited to the gross profits realized by virtue of the fraud ($268,000) and his liability limited to the amount of pecuniary harm that was “reasonably foreseeable” to him ($177,961.60), based on the 30-percent sales commission that he earned ($53,-682.52). For the reasons set out below, we find no error in connection with the restitution order entered against Farris and affirm that order.
The government’s plea agreement with Sosebee, by contrast, did not provide for restitution, although it did call for “a fine of $250,000.00 or twice the gross gain or gross loss resulting from the offense, whichever is greater .... ” The pre-sen-tencing report nevertheless recommended that the district court order restitution, jointly and severally, against both defendants in the amount of the actual loss to Upjohn. Although Sosebee objected to the loss calculation that was the basis of the recommendation, she did not object to the imposition of restitutiоn at the time of sentencing. On appeal, however, Sosebee argues that the district court committed plain error in ordering her to pay restitu *454 tion because Upjohn was not a “victim” of the specific offense to which she pleaded guilty; because the court did not comply with applicable provisions of the Victim and Witness Protection Act of 1982; and because the amount of restitution ordered was excessive. We find no plain error in connection with the district court’s determination that restitution was legally appropriate in Sosebee’s ease, nor in the court’s calсulation of the amount or manner of payment.
The propriety of the restitution order does not end there, however. Subsequent to the filing of briefs but before submission of the appeal for decision, the United States Supreme Court announced its opinion in
United States v. Booker,
543 U.S. -,
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
At the time that these events transpired, Shannon Sosebee was the owner of a company called Requirements, Inc., located in Alpharetta, Georgia. Prior to August 1996, Requirements was in the business of supplying industrial products to various federal government facilities. In July 1996, defendant Jack Farris, a licensed pharmacist and distant relative of Sose-bee’s, approached Sosebee to suggest expanding the compаny to include the sale of medical supplies and pharmaceuticals. So-sebee and Farris then created a new medical division of Requirements, and Sosebee named Farris as the division’s Vice President of Sales. Farris was to receive a 30-percent commission on all sales made by the new medical division.
Sosebee and Farris negotiated a contract with Upjohn authorizing Requirements to resell Upjohn pharmaceuticals. Some of Sosebee’s existing clients were government agencies and, as such, were eligible for reduced prices on Upjohn pharmaceuticals. Under her agreement with Upjohn, Sosebee could claim a “charge back” on the pharmaceuticals she purchased if she resold them to eligible federal and tribal health facilities. The contract terms called for Sosebee to pay the full price initially but, upon notification that the products had been sold to eligible facilities, Upjohn would credit Requirements’s account with the difference between the discounted price and the contract price. That difference was known as a “charge back.”
Shortly after Farris and Sosebee developed the medical division at Requirements, Farris introduced Sosebee to Bruce Storrs, owner of Cyprus Resources in Nevada. All the Requirements pharmaceutical sales at issue in this case were made to Cyprus Resources. Requirements sold Upjohn products to Cyprus at less than the price it actually paid Upjohn, and Cyprus resold the products on the wholesale market. In October 1996, Sosebee began submitting “charge backs” to Upjohn, claiming that Requirements had sold the products to specific eligible facilities when, in fact, they had been sold only to Cyprus. Sosebee later maintained that Storrs told her that Cyprus was reselling the products to eligible facilities, but Storrs denied this. In August 1997, Upjohn became suspicious *455 because of the high volume of discounted pharmaceuticals involved and contacted Sosebee for further verification that the products were actually being sold to eligible facilities. In response, Sosebee provided false information to Upjohn, claiming she could not provide full proof of payment because the eligible facilities had paid Requirements by electronic funds transfer. In reality, Cyprus had paid Requirements by check for each transaction. In Septembеr 1997, representatives from Upjohn called Farris to ask about the source of the sales. Farris knew at that time that Cyprus was not selling the products to eligible facilities, but he intentionally misrepresented the facts to Upjohn in an attempt to deter Upjohn from investigating further. The total amount of the improper “charge backs” was $2,300,597.99. Of this, Farris received $53,682.52 in commissions, and Requirements reportedly made a gross profit of $268,000.
After further investigation, Upjohn filed civil suit against Requirements in the Northern District of Georgia. In December 2000, the district court there granted Upjohn summary judgment in the amount of $7,422,061.12, plus costs and attorneys’ fеes. However, Sosebee had voluntarily dissolved Requirements in 1999, and it appears that no payments have been made on Upjohn’s civil judgment.
Subsequently, both Sosebee and Farris were indicted on criminal charges in the Western District of Michigan. Sosebee was charged with 12 counts of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud and commission of fraud. Farris was indicted on one count of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud. After successfully plea-bargaining with the government, Sosebee and Farris were allowed to plead guilty to an information charging a single count of misprision of a felony, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 4. At sentencing, the district court imposed on Farris and Sosebee, jointly and severally, a restitution order in the amount of $2,300,597.99, to be paid immediately. Farris had agreed in his plea agreement to make full restitution for “losses caused by his activities,” but he now appeals the amount of the restitution, claiming that the court wrongly calculated Upjohn’s loss. Sosebee had not agreed to pay restitution, although she did not object to the imposition of an order of restitution at her sentencing hearing. She now appeals the imposition of restitution, the calculation of the loss amount, and the mеthod of payment. In addition, both defendants question the propriety of a restitution order in the wake of the decision in Booker.
II. DISCUSSION
A. The Loss Calculation
On appeal, defendant Farris challenges the district court’s loss calculation for purposes of both determining his offense level and setting the restitution amount. Sosebee challenges the amount only as it applies to restitution. When a defendant’s challenge is to the amount of loss under the sentencing guidelines, we review the district court’s calculation for clear error.
United States v. Ware,
The pre-sentencing report calculated Upjohn’s loss as $2,300,597.99 for the purposes of determining the defendants’ offense levels under the sentencing guidelines. The district court used this same loss calculation as the appropriate amount of restitution. Calculations of loss under the sentencing guidelines аre governed by U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1.
See United States v. Moore, 225
F.3d 637, 642 (6th Cir.2000). The commentary notes to § 2B1.1 state that “fair market value” is ordinarily the proper determination of loss.
See id
at 642. We have developed a two-step process to guide district courts in determining the amount of loss. The initial determination is whether a market value for the stolen property is readily ascertainable. Second, if such a market value is ascertainable, we must determine whether that figure adequately measures either the harm suffered by the victim or the gain to the perpetrator, whichever is greater.
See United States v. Warshawsky,
The standard test for determining fair market value is to look at “the price a willing buyer would pay a willing seller at the time and place the property was stolen.” Id. (internal quotations omitted). Here, the government asserts that the original price at which Upjohn sold the pharmaceuticals to Requirements is the market price. We agree. Requirements and Upjohn were a willing buyer and a willing seller who exchanged goods on the free market and at the market price. The district court did not err in finding that the price Requirements paid was the fair market value of the drugs on the wholesale market. The loss is then calculated as the difference between the оriginal price and the discounted price, ie., the amount Requirements fraudulently induced Upjohn to “charge back.”
We established in
Warskawsky
that the market value rule should be bypassed only if the market value is not readily-ascertainable or inadequately measures the harm or gain.
See Warshawsky,
To support this argument, the defendants rely on an Eleventh Circuit case,
United States v. Yeager,
The district court did not abusе its discretion nor commit clear error by using the market price rule to determine the loss attributable to Farris and Sosebee. Nor did the court err in finding that such a loss determination adequately correlated with the actual harm suffered by Upjohn. The defendants claim that they should not be required to pay back more than they profited, but it was the defendants, not Upjohn, who decided to resell the products at such a low price on the unrestricted market.
B. Loss Calculation under Booker
As for defendant Farris’s claim that the loss calculation improperly affected the court’s determination of his offense level under the guidelines, we find that this claim has no merit. Farris argues that, by increasing his offense level based on the amount of loss, the trial court violated his Sixth Amendment rights under
United States v. Booker,
543 U.S. -,
We need not address whether there is error that is plain, because Farris cannot show that the district court’s determination of his offense level affected his substantial rights. Based on the amount of lоss, Farris received an offense level of nine, which subjected him to four to ten months imprisonment under the Guidelines. Without the enhancement for the amount of loss, the sentence range would have been zero to six months. Farris actually received a sentence of five years probation. A sentence of probation is authorized by 18 U.S.C. § 3551(b)(1) and §§ 3561-66 and does not depend on the Sentencing Guidelines for validity. Given that the district court sentenced Farris based on statutory provisions rather than on the Sentencing Guidelines, this court has no reason to believe that a lower offense level under the Guidelines would have affected the sentence in any way. When there is no indication that a sentence would be lower absent the error, this court cannot find that the defendant’s substantial rights were affected.
C. The Restitution Order
Although Sosebee objected to the amount of restitution as calculated in the pre-sentencing report, she did not object to the imposition of restitution in some amount at the time restitution was recommended by the probation department or at the sentencing hearing. On appeal, Sose-bee nevertheless claims that the restitution was improperly imposed under the restrictions of 18 U.S.C. § 3663 and § 3663A, аnd she requests that the restitution order be stricken from the district court’s judgment. When “no objection is made to the order of restitution at sentencing, the appellate court reviews for plain error.”
United States v. Hall,
Undoubtedly, the wrongful imposition of a restitution order for over two million dollars would affect a defendant’s substantial rights and would seriously impugn the integrity and public reputation of the court that imposed such an order. That leaves the disputed issues here: whether there was error at all and, if so, whether it was “obvious or clear.” The district court ordered restitution pursuant to the Victim and Witness Protection Act, 18 U.S.C. § § 3663-3664, which permits an order of restitution to the “victim” of the offense for which the defendant wаs convicted. 18 U.S.C. § 3663(a)(1)(A). Under § 3663(a)(2), “victim” is defined as “a person directly and proximately harmed as a result of the commission of an offense for which restitution may be ordered.” Sose-bee contends that restitution may not be ordered in this case because Upjohn was *459 not a “victim” of her offense — that Upjohn suffered no harm as the result of the specific offense to which she pleaded guilty, i.e., misprision of a felony — and that the district court committed an obvious error in awarding restitution to Upjohn. We find no legal merit to this argument and, therefore, no error, plain or otherwise.
In
Hughey v. United States,
Here, there is no question that Upjohn was the victim of fraud and conspiracy. Sosebee points out, however, that she pleaded guilty not to fraud or conspiracy but only to misprision of a felony. Because that offense is made applicable under 18 U.S.C. § 4 to one who, “having knowledge of the actual commission of a felony cognizable by a court of the United States, conceals and does not as soon as possible make known the same to some judge or other person in civil or military authority under the United States,” she argues that she is not liable for an order of restitution, because her act of concealment took place only after the loss from the fraud occurred. We disagree.
The record supports a determination that Sosebee knew of the fraud while the conspiracy was in progress, perhaps even from its beginning (there would seem to be no legitimate business reason to sell goods to Cyprus at less than the defendants had paid Upjohn for them), and concealed the scheme while it was in progrеss. Had her knowledge and concealment come only
after
the scheme came to an end, she would have been guilty of no more than being an accessory after the fact. This, however, was not the case here.
But for
her continuing concealment of the losses being incurred by Upjohn, those losses might have been avoided altogether or stemmed to a significant degree, or — in the alternative — Upjohn might have had a realistic chance to recoup assets of Requirements that apparently have since been dissipated. We have no hesitation in concluding that Sosebeе’s misprision of the felony involved in this case was a direct and proximate cause of some or all of the victim’s losses, even if it was not the sole cause. It follows that the restitution order was legally appropriate under the Act. This case is distinguishable, for example, from that of
Ratliff v. United States,
D. The Amount of Restitution
Sosebee argues for the first time on appeal that the district court erred by failing to take into account her financial *460 situation and ability to pay when ordering restitution. Under the Victim and Witness Protection Act:
(i) The court, in determining whether to order restitution under this section, shall consider—
(I) the amount of the loss sustained by each victim as a result of the offense; and
(II) the financial resources of the defendant, the financial needs and earning ability of the defendant and the defendant’s dependents, and such other factors as the court deems appropriate.
18 U.S.C. § 3663(a)(1)(B)®. Sosebee argues that the district court made no findings relating to her finаncial situation and thus failed to take her lack of ability to pay into account. We have held, however, that “the district court is not required to make findings on the defendant’s financial conditions” when ordering restitution.
United States v. Hall,
Furthermore, the Act does not require the judge to consider the defendant’s financial situation in determining the amount of the restitution but only whether or not restitution should be ordered. See 18 U.S.C. § 3663(a)(1)(B). Once the court determines that restitution is appropriate, 18 U.S.C. § 3664(f)(1)(A) requires that the court “order restitution to each victim in the full amount of each victim’s losses as determined by the court and without consideration of the economic circumstances of the defendant.”
Nor do we find any error in connection with the district court’s order that restitution be paid immediately. This issue, raised for the first time on appeal, cannot be sustained, given the defendant’s failure to supply information to the court that would support her claim that she is unable to make a lump-sum payment of restitution.
E. Restitution under Booker
Finally, Sosebee challenges the validity of the restitution order in light of
Booker.
She argues that her sentence violates her Sixth Amendment rights because the restitution order is based on a factual determination by the district court, the amount of loss to Upjohn, that was neither found beyond a reasonable doubt by a jury nor admitted to by the defendant. Because Sosebee did not raise a Sixth Amendment challenge to her sentence before the district court, this court may only reverse upon a finding of plain error by the district court.
See United States v. Oliver,
*461
We have yet to decide explicitly whether
Booker
applies to orders of restitution. In
United States v. McDaniel,
It is true that under Sixth Circuit case law, restitution constitutes punishment.
See United States v. Schulte,
In addition, five of our sister circuits have recently addressed the issue of whether
Booker
affects restitution orders. Although they rely on different reasoning, all five circuits have uniformly declined to reverse an order of restitution based on the concerns raised in
Blakely
or
Booker. See United States v. Antonakopoulos,
First, restitution orders are authorized by statute, 18 U.S.C. §§ 3663, 3663A, and 3664, and in this sense are distinct and separate from the United States Sentencing Guidelines. Although the guidelines mandate imposition of restitution where allowable under the statutes, the restitution statutes function independently from the guidelines and do not rely on the guidelinеs for their validity. Thus, the Booker Court’s holding that the Sentencing Guidelines are now merely advisory does not affect orders of restitution. Nor does the Booker’s analysis of the Sixth Amendment affect restitution, because a restitution order for the amount of loss cannot be said to “exceed the statutory maximum” provided under the penalty statutes. Finally, the Victim and Witness Restitution Act and the Mandatory Victim Restitution Act specifically state that the amount of restitution should be equal to the “amount of each victim’s losses as determined by the court.” 18 U.S.C. 3664(f)(1)(A) (emphasis added). Where, as here, a statute mandates that a judge exercise his or her discretion, Booker provides no impediments to a judicial determination of the necessary underlying facts.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set out above, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment against Farris and Sosebee.
