After receiving one college degree in Pakistan, Syed Sami Ahmad came to the United States to pursue another. He put himself through college with a combination of part-time jobs, aid from his family, and counterfeiting. Instead of passing bogus currency, Ahmad used bogus electronic components. Each cellular phone has a microchip that identifies the subscriber. Ahmad pirated telephone subscribers’ identification numbers, had a friend reprogram three chips with these numbers, and inserted the chips in cellular phones so that calls would be billed to these account holders. Then he placed long distance calls for himself and his friends, charging the friends for his trouble. This scheme violated 18 U.S.C. § 1029(a)(1). Ahmad pleaded guilty and was sentencеd to six months’ imprisonment plus restitution of $39,663, the amount Ameritech and AT & T billed for the calls Ahmad completed. The propriety of restitution is the only issue on appeal.
Ahmad contends that the order is improper because the district judge did not cоmply with 18 U.S.C. § 3664(a), which provides: “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 defendant’s dependents, and such other factors as the court deems appropriate.” According to Ahmad, the district court did not “consider” his “financial resources ... financial needs and earning ability” because the court did not make express findings on the subject. A few courts of appeals require express findings.
United States v. Bailey,
After reading the presentenee report, the district judge required Ahmad to make full restitution. The presentenee report contains details about Ahmad’s financial resources, needs, and earning ability. Ahmad does not deny any of the pertinent details: he has one college degree, is progressing toward another, has worked in the past, and held an offer of another job. Although Ahmad’s bank accоunt may be empty, he has substantial human capital, which he can use to generate income and pay his debts — including his debt for cellular telephone service. Neither the district court’s procedure nor Ahmad’s circumstances supports a conclusion that the court failed to give his financial status the necessary attention. See
United States v. Boula,
Nonetheless, one thing gives us pause. The distinct judge did make an explicit finding about Ahmad’s financial capacity, albeit not in connection with restitution. The court declined to impose a fine, stаting: “Based on the information contained in the PSI, the defendant appears unable to pay and is not likely to become able to pay any fine.” How can Ahmad pay $40,000 in restitution if he is unable to pay any fine, even in installments, and is unlikely to becоme able to do so?
One possible answer would be that the probability of payment required to support an order of restitution might be lower than the probability required to support a fine. Recall that § 3664(a) does not require the district court tо find that the defendant
can
pay; it requires only that the judge consider his ability to pay. Thus a person actually unable to pay may be directed to make restitution, provided there is some likelihood that he will acquire resources in the future.
McClellan,
*248
Yet in this case the district judge did not express doubt. He flatly stated that Ahmad cannot pay a fine, any fine, now or tomorrow or in the foreseeable future. Perhaps the district judge was just trying to ensure that the victims have the first claim on Ahmad’s resources, but the Sentenсing Guidelines do this automatically. “If a defendant is ordered to make restitution and to pay a fine, the court shall order that any money paid by the defendant shall first be applied to satisfy the order of restitution.” U.S.S.G. § 5E1.1(c). Priority for victims does not excusе a fine: “The court shall impose a fine in all cases, except where the defendant establishes that he is unable to pay and is not likely to become able to pay any fine.” U.S.S.G. § 5E 1.2(a). See
United States v. Ferrin,
Ahmad’s offense level was 10, for which the Guidelines specify a fine of $2,000 to $20,000. U.S.S.G. § 5E1.2(c)(3). Application Note 4 authorizes upward departure to twice the loss caused by the offense — in this case, $79,326. To the fine under § 5E1.2(e)(3) the district judge must add the costs of custody under § 5E1.2(i).
United States v. Turner,
We are left with a puzzle. Can Ahmad pay, or not? Before the Guidelines district judges had substantial flexibility to choose a fine. Today that power has been curtailed, for fines as well as for imprisonment, so that when a judge finds that the defendant сannot pay a fine, he is not just using a euphemism for “in the exercise of my discretion, I have decided not to impose a fine.” He is making a genuine finding of fact, with potential consequences for other aspects of the case. And that еxpress finding of present and future inability to pay is inconsistent with the implied finding that Ahmad can make restitution.
An outcome of restitution but no fine might be reconciled by the different time frames: under U.S.S.G. § 5E1.2(g) installments for a fine “generally should not exceed twelve months, and shall not exceed the maximum term of probation authorized for the offense.” Restitution, by contrast, may be awarded as a lump sum or structured in installments over five years. 18 U.S.C. § 3663(f). Thus a belief that a defendant will have some disposable income starting in three years would permit the court both to waive the fine and order restitution. But nothing in the district court’s order in this case suggests that the timing of Ahmad’s future income accounted for the difference. He has the potential to start earning immediately. (At the time of sentencing Ahmad had served four months and had two to go in an intermittent confinement program that allowed him to resume his studies.) In Turner, where the district court simultaneously found that the defendant could not pay any fine determined under § 5E1.2(e)(3) but could pay the аdditional fine under § 5E1.2(i), we remanded for further proceedings to clear up the inconsistency. The same approach is in order here. We suspected in Turner that the district judge did not really mean that the defendant could not pay any fine, even by instаllments, and have the same view here. If Ahmad really cannot pay anything toward a fine or restitution, why has he bothered to pursue this appeal? Still, this subject is one for the district court in the first instance. District judges imposing sentence should be conscious that the Guidelines regulate fines no less than imprisonment and impose a detailed sequence of considerations that we sketched in Turner.
One other aspect of the sentence calls for comment. The district court ordered Ahmad to pay restitution “in installments in such amounts at the discretion of the probation officer.” Section 3663 does not permit a district judge to delegate to the *249 administrative staff the specification of a payment schedule, and in Boula we vacated аn order that was materially identical to the one used here. How much the defendant owes, and the extent to which payment may be deferred, is something the judge must decide.
The kind of order entered in
Boula
and this case, which appears to be increasingly common, may reflect a misapprehension of the court’s options under § 3668. If the order of restitution must permit payment by installments, it is tempting to leave the details to the probation officer who supervises the defendant after release. A judge may know thаt the defendant has the potential to earn money without being able to foresee how much he will earn, or when. The probation officer will learn these things in the course of supervision, making him best suited to fix a payment schedule. Yet § 3663 does nоt require courts to establish schedules of any kind. A judge “may”, but need not, establish a schedule. 18 U.S.C. § 3663(f)(1);
House,
A judgment in civil litigation specifies the amount due without elaboration. If immediate payment proves impossible, accommodation will occur in the course of collection. A judgment creditor will garnish the judgment debtor’s wages and collect incrementally, even though the court has not said a wоrd about installments. Just so with criminal restitution. If the sentence specifies the amount of restitution, without elaboration, and makes payment a condition of probation or supervised release, the probation officer will assess the defеndant’s progress toward satisfaction of his debt, and if the defendant is not paying what he can the probation officer will ask the judge to revoke or alter the terms of release. Then the judge may make the order more specific or, if the defendant has not paid what he could in good faith, may send him back to prison. Everything works nicely without any effort to establish installments on the date of sentencing and without delegating a judicial function to the probation officer.
The portion оf the judgment concerning restitution is vacated, and the case is remanded for resentencing consistent with this opinion. As in Turner, the lack of a cross-appeal means that the court may not resolve the inconsistency by imposing a fine, but may resolve it by findings that would have supported a fine had they been made originally.
