Michael Carl Remillong appeals the district court’s sentencing order requiring him to make restitution of $29,251.00, the amount to which he pled guilty of robbing from ten banks. This is the third time that we have reviewed Remillong’s sentencing by Judge G. Kendall Sharp in this case.
1
See United States v. Canzater,
The use of restitution as part of a sentence is governed by 18 U.S.C. §§ 3663 and 3664. Section 3664(a) states as follows:
(a) The court, in determining whether to order restitution under section 3663 of this title and the amount of such restitution, shall consider the amount of the loss sustained by any victim as a result of the offense, the financial resources of the defendant, the financial needs and earning ability of the defendant and the *574 defendant’s dependents, and such other factors as the court deems appropriate.
Also, U.S.S.G. § 5E1.1 establishes rules for the district courts to consider when imposing restitution. One element which must be fully considered is the financial condition and the ability of a defendant to pay. The record in this case demonstrates that the district court failed to adequately considеr the statutory factor of ability to pay under 18 U.S.C. § 866k(a). This constitutes an abuse of discretion requiring remand for resentencing in accordance with the statute.
Remillong II, slip op. at 3-4 (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 3664(a)) (emphasis added).
Following our Remillong II opinion, Rem-illong filed a motion to correct his sentence. Judge Sharp, however, refused to eliminate the restitution order. Instead, Judge Sharp handwrote across the top of Remillong’s motion to correct his sentence: “Because this case involves a bank robbery and defendant had physical possession of the money, restitution of $29,251.00 is appropriate.” Rl-57; see Appendix. Consequently, this third appeal from Remillong’s sentencing ensued. 3
We review a district court’s restitution order for abuse of discretion.
4
United States v. Husky,
While we have determined that a “defendant’s indigency at the time of sentencing is not a bar to an order of restitution under the VWPA,”
United States v. Stevens,
The defendant bears the burden of demonstrating his financial resources by a preponderance of the evidence. 18 U.S.C. § 3664(d). At sentencing, Remillong testified that he had no financial ability to pay the orderеd restitution, no cash flow, and no money in a bank. R5-9. Additionally, he testified that he committed the bank robberies because he “needed money” because of his “economic problems” resulting from not having a job. Id. at 7. Remillong’s Presen-tence Report (“PSR”) shows that his only asset was a 1979 Ford pickup truck valued at approximately $1,000.00, and that he had a loan liability of $3,000.00. 7 The PSR, which Judge Sharp adopted at sentencing, states that “it does not appear that [Remillong] has the ability to pay a fine.” PSR at 15. No evidence was presented to show his ability to pay the restitution ordered within the statutory limitations period. 8 Despite this record evidence and in blatant contravention of the adopted PSR, Judge Sharp ordered restitu *576 tion of the cumulative amount taken from the ten banks.
We have determined that district courts are not required to make factual findings whenever they impose a restitution order
if the appellate record provides sufficient reasons for the decision to order full restitution. United States v. Hairston,
After specifically being instructed by this court in Remillong II to assess on remand Remillong’s financial capability to pay restitution pursuant to section 3664(a), Judge Sharp’s cryptic handwritten notation that Remillong owes full restitution because he once had physical possession of the money is more than irresponsible, it is defiant. Far from performing the assessment that he explicitly was instructed to conduct in Remil-long II, 10 Judge Sharp’s cursory handwritten notation dashed at the top of Remillong’s motion to correсt his sentence evidences Judge Sharp’s disregard for this court’s instruction and mandate. 11 The problem in this ease is not that restitution was ordered, but that Judge Sharp failed to evaluate Rem-illong’s financial ability to pay as statutorily required and as mandated by this court.
Regrettably, this case is not an aberration. We previously have reversed and/or remanded cases to Judge Sharp for failing to providе factual and legal explanations for his rulings.
See, e.g., Imperial Residential Design, Inc. v. Palms Dev. Group, Inc.,
We have gently chided Judge Sharp for his failure to provide reasoning for dismissing a claim “ “without prejudice and without lеave to amend’ ” by stating that, “[wjhile the failure of a lower court to give reasons for its disposition of an action makes review difficult, it does not necessarily preclude affir-mance where appropriate reasons for dismissal are readily apparent.”
Grant v. County of Seminole,
Additionally, we specifically have addressed Judge Sharp’s handwritten notations for failing to give reasons for dispositive orders.
Seamon v. Vaughan,
The basis for the district court’s award of attorney fees is unclear. The court failed to make any findings of fact to support the $25,000.00 amount. Its only explanation was a cryptic handwritten comment relating to duplication of attorney services. The district court did not explain why it eliminated half of the claimed attorney fees as duplicative. As a result, we are unable to review the district court’s exercise of discretion, either on appeal or cross-appeal.
Id. (emphasis added).
We are grеatly troubled that Judge Sharp continues to ignore or to circumvent specific directives and mandates from this court in his adjudication of eases before him. His deliberate defiance of our mandate in Remil-long II, however, not only shows a disregard for our explicit instruction, complete with our quoting the governing statute to him, but also disregard for Remillong, who is before Judge Sharp for a just resolution of his case. Further, the third sentencing appeal in this case exemplifies the judicial inefficiency that results from such obstinate conduct.
Apparently, the only way that we can obtain compliance from Judge Sharp in this case is to reverse or vacate his rulings outright with the instruction that he cannot rule a particular way, as evidenced by Remillong’s first two sentencing appeals. See supra note 1. When he had the opportunity to exercise discretion, as with the evaluation of Remil-long’s ability to pay restitution, Judge Sharp stubbornly persisted in his questioned decision without reasonable explanation or justification. We again hold that Judge Sharp abused his discretion in complying with the requirements of section 3664(a) in evaluating Remillong’s ability to pay restitution and, further, speсifically defied our mandate in Remillong II. From Judge Sharp’s rulings on the two prior remands in this case, we have no confidence that he will perform the appropriate evaluation of Remillong’s financial condition on another remand concerning the same restitution issue.
Accordingly, we VACATE Remillong’s restitution order and REMAND this case to the Chief Judge of the Middle District of Florida to REASSIGN to a different district judge for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. 12 As we have ex- *578 plained herein, the present record will not support a conclusion that Remillong, at sentencing, or within the statutory limitations period, could pay the cumulative amount taken from the victim banks of $29,251.00. It appears that an evidentiary hearing would be useful in assessing Remillong’s present financial status as well as his ability to pay restitution within the statutory limitations period. 13
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Notes
. In the first appeal of Ms sentence, we determined that Judge Sharp "clearly erred” in enhancing Remillong's sentence by two levels for an express threat of death in connection with the bank robberies as defined by U.S.S.G. § 2B3.1(b)(2)(D) (presently U.S.S.G. § 2B3.1(b)(2)(F)).
United States v. Canzater,
Rеmillong appealed Judge Sharp’s amended sentencing order on two bases: (1) the three-level enhancement for possessing a dangerous weapon pursuant to § 2B3.1(b)(2)(E), and (2) abuse of discretion for ordering restitution without considering fully Remillong's financial condition and ability to pay. Concerning possession of a dangerous weapon, we vacated Remillong’s sentence and "remand[ed] for resentencing with directions that Remillong be resentenced without the three-level enhancement for possession of a dangerous weapon” in accordance with Canza-ter.
United States v. Remillong,
No. 93-3034, slip op. at 3,
.
United States v. Remillong,
. Remillong has completed the incarceration portion of his sentence.
. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3663(a)(1), a district court “may order" restitution as part of a sentence.
Id.
Thus, restitution is a "discretionary, not mandatory, element of defendant's sentence, and it can only be imposed if the sentencing court сonsiders” a defendant's financial ability to pay pursuant to § 3664(a).
United States v. Tortora,
.When district courts have ordered restitution without consideration of financial ability to pay, other circuits have remanded for this specific evaluation under § 3664(a).
See, e.g., United
*575
States v. Turcks,
. Other circuits have held that restitution under the VWPA does not include consequential damages, such as attorney fees and expenses.
See, e.g., Virgin Islands v. Davis,
. Remillong's PSR shows thаt he has a high school education, and that he worked sporadically at minimum wage for several years before the robberies.
. "The potential for repayment cannot be based on mere chance.”
McIlvain,
.
Accord United States v. Reese,
. Judge Sharp has shown himself capable of considering financial ability to pay restitution; in a previous case, he ordered restitution to be one half of the amounts shown in the PSR.
Stevens,
.As the government candidly recognizes in its appellate brief:
Given this Court's ruling [in Remillong II], the district court on remand should have addressed expliсitly its consideration of the “ability to pay" factor. Instead, the district court noted merely that Remillong “had physical possession” of the stolen money and then found that restitution was appropriate. The district court’s comment was inadequate. It does not directly indicate that the court considered Rem-illong’s ability to pay restitution. As a result, this Court should remand for further proceedings on this issue.
Appellee's Brief at 10 (citation omitted) (emphasis added).
. “We have the authority to order reassignment of a criminal case to another district judge as part of our supervisory authority over the district courts in this Circuit.”
United States v. Torkington,
. We are cognizant that we have determined that a district court is not obligated to make explicit factual findings concerning financial condition as to ability to pay restitution
if the record provides an adequate basis for review. United States v. Hairston,
