Aрpellant Breeding pled guilty to making and using a materially false document before the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001. A presentence investigation report (“PSI”) was preрared and both the United States and appellant filed objections. Nowhere in the body of the PSI was there a recommendation regarding the assessment of costs of imprisonment. However, attaсhed to the PSI was a document entitled ‘Worksheet D” which stated that the cost of imprisonment was $1,734.00 monthly and the cost of supervised release was $180.90 monthly. The district court sentenced appellant to 16 mоnths imprisonment, a fine of $65,500.08, and 3 years supervised release. The fine included $28,-469.28 for costs of imprisonment and $7,030.80 for costs of supervised release.
On appeal, appellant argues that the district сourt erred in assessing a fine to cover the costs of imprisonment and supervised release pursuant to United States Sentencing Guidelines § 5E1.2(i). Appellant contends that § 5E1.2(i) is invalid because the Sentencing Cоmmission exceeded the scope of its authority in directing district courts to assess fines for costs of incarceration.
Discussion
I. Waiver
This precise issue has come before panels of this Court several times. While most of our sister circuits have addressed attacks on the assessment of costs of imprisonment under § 5E1.2(i), this Court has several times refused to reach the issue on the merits because the defendant waived any right to appeal the issue by failing to raise the issue before the district court in the first instance.
United States v. Blandford,
Appellant contends that the present case is different from our earlier decisions finding waiver because in this case appellant was never put on any notice that a fine for the costs of imprisonment would be imposed. Appellant correctly notes that the PSI did not recommend a fine for costs of confinement and also notes that thе government did not object to the absence of such a recommendation. Moreover, appellant contends that she had no opportunity to object at the sentencing:
The very first time there was mention of the potential for an additional fine based on cost of incarceration occurred when the court imposed judgment. It was clear at that time that the time for argument was over. Mrs. Breeding simply could not waive her opportunity to object when she was never given such an opportunity.
(Appellant’s Rep. Br. at 1-2) (citations omitted).
In
United States v. Hickey,
II. The Merits
Appellant contends that the Sentencing Commission exceeded its authority in calling for the imposition of fines covering the costs of imprisonment. In support of her position, appellant relies on
United States v. Spiropoulos,
In
Spiropoulos,
the Third Circuit first argued that Sentencing Guideline 5E1.2(i) is invalid because the Sentencing Reform Act did not
specifically
refer to recouping the costs of imprisоnment as an appropriate goal of sentencing.
Spiropoulos,
“Although section 3553 commands courts, not the Sentencing Commission, to consider the offense’s seriousness and just punishment in issuing sentences, 28 U.S.C. § 991(b)(1)(A) requires the Commission to promulgate guidelines that assure the meeting of the purposes of sentencing as set forth in section 3553(a)(2).”
Zakhor,
The Act also mandates that the members of the Commission create sentencing policies *311 that consider “the deterrent effeсt a particular sentence may have on the commission of the offense by others,” 28 U.S.C.A. § 994(c)(6), and to consider “the need for the sentence imposed to afford adequate deterrence to criminal conduct.” 18 U.S.C.A. § 3553(a)(2)(B); see 28 U.S.C.A. § 991(b)(1)(A). In Turner, the Seventh Circuit explained how a fine for costs of imprisonment provides added deterrence to criminal activity:
The Guidelines call for longer sentences as the harm caused by the offense rises; longer sentences (or sentences in more secure custody) are more costly; thus the costs of confinement rise with the seriousness of the crime, and a fine based on thеse costs therefore reflects the seriousness of the offense. Moreover, higher fines are more potent deterrents to crime. Section 5E1.2(i) increases the fine, and therefore increаses deterrence.
Turner,
This is equivalent to asserting that higher fines do not increase deterrenсe, a proposition that leaves us flabbergasted. The system of penalties under the Guidelines is constructed on the belief that higher fines, and longer sentences of imprisonment, are more effeсtive deterrents.
Turner,
The Third Circuit in
Spiropoulos
was also troubled by the idea that Congress had instructed the Commission to “study the feasibility of requiring prisoners incarceratеd in Federal correctional institutions to pay some or all of the costs incident to the prisoner’s confinement.” Pub.L. No. 100-690, § 7301, 102 Stat. 4463 (1988)(codified at 18 U.S.C.A. § 4007 (West Supp.1996)). Such a command implies, according to the
Spiropoulos
court, that “study” is the only permissible activity for the Commission.
Spiropoulos,
The statute does not create such a restriction. Section 5E1.2(i) was part of thе Guidelines on their promulgation in 1987, before the enactment of § 7301. Section 7301 does not mention or subtract from any of the Commission’s permanent legislation, and we all know the canon that repeals by imрlication are disfavored. The authors of § 7301 likely were unaware of § 5E1.2(i). At all events, what better way to study something than to try it out and see what happens?
Turner,
Appellant argues' that § 5E1.2(i) can only apply to offenses which occurred after Congress explicitly provided for fines based on the costs of imprisonment in 1994. Pub.L. No. 103-322, § 20403(b), 108 Stat. 1796, 1825 (1994)(codified at 28 U.S.C.A. § 994(y)). In
Zakhor,
the defendant made a similar argument, asserting that “because Congress сreated an explicit authorization for section 5E1.2(i) in 1994, there must not have been any such authorization before that date.”
Zakhor,
Congress may amend a statute simply to clarify existing law, to correct a misinterpretation, or to overrule wrongly decided cases. Thus, an amendment to a statute does not necessarily indicate that the unamended statute means the opposite.
Id.
(quoting
Hawkins v. United States,
The Third Circuit was also disturbed by the fact that while the text of § 5E1.2(i) calls for a sentencing fine “at least sufficient to pay the costs [of imprisonment] to the government ...,” the money collected from de
*312
fendants goes into a victim’s cоmpensation fund pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 10601.
Spiropoulos,
Deterrence does not depend on what the government does with the money; it is enough that the offender be deprived of the wealth. From a defendant’s perspective, the effect is the same if the money goes to victims, the Bureau of Prisons, or an incinerator.
Turner,
This Court, therefore, rejеcts the Third Circuit’s decision in Spiropoulos and follows the majority of our sister circuits in holding that the Sentencing Commission did not exceed its authority in enacting § 5E1.2(i).
III. Factual basis for imposition of fine
Appellant also argues that the district court did not have an adequаte factual basis to determine the actual costs of imprisonment. This argument is without merit. As stated above, Worksheet D, which was attached to the PSI, represented that the monthly costs of imprisonment and supervised release were $1,734.00 and $180.90, respectively. Although the district court appears to have imposed a fine slightly in excess of this amount, this Court notes that § 5E1.2(i) calls for the mandatory imposition of an additional fine that at least covers the costs of confinement or supervised release. The district court did impose such a fine and had a factual basis for its determination of the approximate costs of confinement and supervised release.
TV. Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, the imposition of the fine under § 5E1.2(i) is AFFIRMED.
