20-1540-cr (L)
United States v. Yalincak
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
August Term, 2021
Argued: October 29, 2021 Decided: March 29, 2022
Docket Nos. 20-1540-cr; 20-1542-cr; 20-2144-cr
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Appellee,
— v. —
HAKAN YALINCAK, AYFER YALINCAK,
Defendants-Appellants.
B e f o r e:
LYNCH, LOHIER, and BIANCO, Circuit Judges.
Defendants-Appellants Hakan Yalincak and Ayfer Yalincak appeal from
an order of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut
(Arterton, J.) denying their motions seeking a declaration that Ayfer Yalincak’s
restitution obligation has been satisfied. The Yalincaks argue that the district
court erred in ruling that its “hybrid” restitution order required Ayfer Yalincak to
continue making payments to a particular victim until either she paid her full
obligation or the victim had been made whole by recovering the full amount of
his loss. We agree with the district court and therefore AFFIRM its order in
appeal No. 20-2144-cr and DISMISS the consolidated appeals in Nos. 20-1540-cr
and 20-1542-cr for lack of standing.
JEREMIAH DONOVAN, Old Saybrook, CT, for Defendant-Appellant
Ayfer Yalincak.
JEFFREY C. KESTENBAND, The Kestenband Law Firm, LLC,
Glastonbury, CT, for Defendant-Appellant Hakan Yalincak.
HEATHER L. CHERRY (Marc H. Silverman, on the brief), Assistant
United States Attorneys, for Leonard C. Boyle, Acting
United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut,
New Haven, CT, for Appellee.
GERARD E. LYNCH, Circuit Judge:
Appellants Ayfer and Hakan Yalincak (“Ayfer” and “Hakan,” respectively,
and collectively, the “Yalincaks”) appeal from an April 24, 2020 order of the
United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Janet Bond Arterton,
J.) denying their motions to declare Ayfer Yalincak’s restitution obligation under
the Mandatory Victim Restitution Act (“MVRA”), 18 U.S.C. § 3663A fully
satisfied.1
1
This opinion addresses three consolidated appeals appealing two related orders
entered by the district court in two separate criminal dockets. Hakan was the sole
defendant in No. 3:05-cr-00111-JBA – adjudicating his bank fraud conviction –
2
Following guilty pleas from both defendants relating to a fraud scheme
spearheaded by Hakan, the district court’s judgments made the Yalincaks liable
for restitution payments to certain victims, and specifically made Ayfer and
Hakan jointly and severally liable to the victim referred to as W.A-M. for
while both Hakan and Ayfer were defendants in No. 3:05-cr-00153-JBA,
adjudicating their wire fraud convictions. On April 24, 2020, the district court
entered an order in No. 3:05-cr-00153-JBA denying Hakan and Ayfer’s motions to
declare Ayfer’s restitution obligation fully satisfied. Both Hakan and Ayfer filed
notices of appeal from that order, in No. 20-1542-cr and No. 20-2144-cr,
respectively. Further, while the government notes that the district court’s
extensions of time to Ayfer to file her notice of appeal exceeded those limits
provided for in Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(b)(4) and that Ayfer’s
notice of appeal was therefore untimely, the government does not seek dismissal
of Ayfer’s appeal based on untimeliness. We therefore may consider Ayfer’s
appeal as if it were timely filed. United States v. Frias, 521 F.3d 229, 234 (2d Cir.
2008).
Hakan also moved to declare Ayfer’s restitution obligation fully satisfied in
his bank fraud criminal docket, No. 3:05-cr-00111-JBA. The district court denied
that motion on April 24, 2020, noting that it had addressed the merits of the
motion in its ruling on Hakan and Ayfer’s motions in the other criminal docket.
Hakan appealed that order in No. 20-1540-cr.
Because all three appeals challenge the district court’s April 24, 2020 orders
ruling that Ayfer Yalincak’s restitution obligation was not fully satisfied, we can
and do resolve all three appeals together in this opinion. The Yalincaks each filed
individual principal briefs, reply briefs, and appendices in this case, even though
the appeal concerns only Ayfer’s restitution obligations, not Hakan’s. As
discussed more fully below, we conclude that because this appeal concerns
Ayfer’s rights and obligations, Hakan lacks standing to pursue his appeals,
which accordingly will be dismissed. Nevertheless, because Ayfer expressly
adopts the arguments in Hakan’s briefs, we have considered all arguments raised
in either appellant’s briefing.
3
$500,000 and Hakan individually liable to W.A-M. for an additional $250,000, for
a total of $750,000. After payments and distributions from certain bankruptcy
proceedings resulted in credits to W.A-M. exceeding $500,000, the Yalincaks
moved the district court to declare that Ayfer’s restitution obligation was fully
satisfied, even though W.A-M. was still owed an additional $139,057.43 and
Ayfer herself had made only minimal restitution payments falling far short of the
amount for which she was liable jointly and severally with Hakan. The district
court denied the motions, holding that under the “hybrid” understanding of the
restitution orders, Ayfer’s restitution obligation to W.A-M. would not be satisfied
until either W.A-M. was made whole or Ayfer paid to W.A-M. the amount for
which she had been held liable.
We hold that the district court did not err in finding that Ayfer has not yet
satisfied her restitution obligation to W.A-M. We also conclude that district
courts may employ the hybrid approach to craft restitution orders that both
apportion liability among multiple defendants according to the loss caused by
each defendant and hold defendants jointly and severally liable for some portion
of the amounts owed to their victim or victims. Such hybrid restitution
obligations are ordinarily not satisfied until either a defendant has paid as much
4
as she has been ordered to pay or the victim has been made whole. Finally, we
conclude that Hakan lacks standing to challenge the district court’s orders as to
Ayfer’s rights and obligations, and that his appeals must be dismissed.
We therefore AFFIRM the April 24, 2020 order of the district court and
DISMISS Hakan’s consolidated appeals (Nos. 20-1540-cr, 20-1542-cr).
BACKGROUND
The underlying crimes in this case involved “a scheme to defraud investors
in a sham hedge fund that [Hakan] purported to manage.” United States v.
Yalincak, 853 F.3d 629, 633 (2d Cir. 2017). The district court would later find that
the scheme caused over $4,000,000 in losses to four victims. In June 2006, Hakan
pled guilty to one count of wire fraud and one count of bank fraud. Shortly
thereafter, Ayfer pled guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud.
Although both Hakan and Ayfer pled guilty to participating in the same
fraudulent scheme, Ayfer admitted only to a lesser role, and, as reflected in their
sentences, the district court found her responsible for losses to only two of the
four victims of the fraud. Accordingly, on March 19, 2007, the district court
sentenced Ayfer to 24 months’ imprisonment followed by a term of 36 months of
supervised release. The district court also ordered her to pay a total of $2,250,000
5
in restitution, for which she was to be liable jointly and severally with Hakan,
with $1,750,000 owed to the victim F.M. and $500,000 to the victim W.A-M.
A few weeks later, on April 11, 2007, the district court sentenced Hakan to
concurrent terms of 42 months’ imprisonment followed by concurrent terms
totaling 60 months of supervised release. The district court ordered Hakan to pay
a total of $4,182,000 in restitution to his victims. In addition to the $2,250,000
owed to F.M. and W.A-M. for which he was made liable jointly and severally
with Ayfer, Hakan was found individually liable for an additional $1,932,000.
Most of that money was owed to two other victims of the scheme, but the district
court ordered Hakan to pay $250,000 to W.A-M., apparently to compensate W.A-
M. for losses incurred from fraudulent actions of Hakan before Ayfer, according
to her guilty plea, had actively participated in that part of the scheme.
In the years since sentence was imposed, a substantial portion of the more
than $4,000,000 in total restitution for which Hakan was held responsible (and for
a portion of which Ayfer was also made liable) has been paid. As detailed below,
the district court found that Ayfer herself has made only negligible payments.
Although the record is not clear as to the precise manner of payment, in excess of
$3,500,000 has been credited to Hakan, whether from payments made by him or
6
from the recovery of assets from the bankrupt estates of his former investment
funds.2
In March 2018, Hakan moved the district court to amend the restitution
orders in various respects, and to enter an order “declaring the restitution order
entered by this Court . . . against Ayfer Yalincak in the amount of $2,250,000.00 to
be fully satisfied.” App’x. 66. Ayfer successfully moved to adopt Hakan’s motion
as her own, and later moved separately for an order “declaring that her
obligations under the March 21, 2007, restitution order have been satisfied.”
App’x 70.
At a hearing on the motions, the district court found that Ayfer herself had,
by that point, paid only $3,154.61 toward her restitution obligation. The district
court further found that, at the time of its decision on April 24, 2020, after
apportioning the recovered assets and disbursement of funds among the four
2
In particular, the district court credited Hakan, on his unopposed application,
with over $1,000,000 recovered from the investment funds in bankruptcy
proceedings. After concluding sua sponte that this credit had been made in error,
because Hakan had not demonstrated that all of those bankruptcy proceeds
actually reached the victims, the district court vacated the order granting the
credit. On a prior appeal, we reversed the vacatur order, holding that the order
granting the credit had become final before the district court’s order purporting
to vacate it had been entered. See Yalincak, 853 F.3d at 639-41.
7
victims, W.A-M. was still owed $139,057.43 of the $750,000 to which W.A-M. was
entitled.
The district court was thus required to resolve a disagreement between the
Yalincaks and the government concerning who remains responsible for the
remaining restitution owed to W.A-M., or, put differently, how payments made
by or amounts recovered from Hakan or his institutional entities should be
credited. The Yalincaks, purporting to apply “traditional” principles of joint and
several liability, contend that, because W.A-M. has already received payments
(overwhelmingly from Hakan or entities controlled by him) in excess of the
$500,000 for which Hakan and Ayfer were jointly responsible, Ayfer’s obligation
should be declared satisfied, and the remaining restitution due should be
considered part of the $250,000 for which Hakan alone was solely liable.
According to the government, the payments from Hakan should be credited in a
manner that has the maximum potential to fully satisfy the debt owed to W.A-M.,
limited only by the district court’s determination that Ayfer should have to pay
no more than $500,000 in restitution. That would be achieved by, in effect,
crediting Hakan’s payments first against the portion of the restitution award
owed solely by Hakan, and only thereafter against the “joint and several” portion
8
of the total restitution. That would leave Ayfer’s liability in place until either she
herself had paid $500,000, or the full $750,000 owed to W.A-M. had been paid by
Hakan, Ayfer, or a combination of the two.
The district court ruled in favor of the government, concluding that the
restitution portions of the sentences imposed on the Yalincaks had been crafted
using the “hybrid” approach, which combines the MVRA’s authorization of
apportionment of liability to individual defendants with traditional principles of
joint and several liability. United States v. Yalincak, No. 3:05-cr-153-JBA, 2020 WL
1969490, at *2 (D. Conn. Apr. 24, 2020). As described by the district court, the
hybrid approach is “often used ‘where multiple defendants are held liable for
injuries caused by a common scheme.’” Id. at *3, quoting United States v. Sheets,
814 F.3d 256, 261 (5th Cir. 2016). Under that approach, the district court “‘orders
the co-defendants to pay restitution in different amounts for the same loss.’” Id.
(brackets removed), quoting Sheets, 814 F.3d at 261.
The district court noted that “aside from making conclusory statements
that ‘this case did not involve a “hybrid restitution” approach,’ Defendants offer
no authority, argument, or reasoning in support of their position” that the
sentences were not hybrid. Id. In rejecting the Yalincaks’ position, the district
9
court found that the “restitution in this case was plainly imposed using a hybrid
joint and several liability scheme.” Id. Accordingly, the district court found that
“Ayfer’s restitution obligation to W.A-M. is not satisfied until W.A-M. is ‘made
whole,’ or until she has paid ‘as much as the court ordered’” her to pay. Id. at *5,
quoting Sheets, 814 F.3d at 261-62.
The district court also considered the Yalincaks’ argument that the
distributions from the bankruptcy proceedings were “joint credits” that
“produce[d] different outcomes than ‘payments made by a co-defendant,’” and
should therefore have reduced both Ayfer and Hakan’s restitution obligations by
the amount of the credit. Id. at *4. Again, the district court noted that the
Yalincaks “cite no authority in support of that characterization” of the
distributions, and rejected the Yalincaks’ argument that the “corollary to joint
and several liability under the Mandatory Victim Restitution Act, 18 U.S.C.
§ 3664(h), is joint and several credit.” Id.
In denying the Yalincaks’ motions, the district court noted that “[b]ecause
the remaining total balance owed to W.A-M. is only $139,057.43, Ayfer cannot
personally pay ‘as much as the court ordered as to her,’ i.e., $500,000.00, and thus
her restitution obligation to W.A-M. will cease upon payment by Hakan and/or
10
Ayfer to W.A-M. of the remaining balance owed such that W.A-M. has been
made whole.” Id. at *5. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
We “review an MVRA order of restitution deferentially, and we will
reverse only for abuse of discretion. A district court abuses its discretion when a
challenged ruling rests on an error of law [or] a clearly erroneous finding of fact,
or otherwise cannot be located within the range of permissible decisions.” United
States v. Gushlak, 728 F.3d 184, 190 (2d Cir. 2013) (quotation marks omitted). We
review a district court’s findings of fact for clear error, and we review questions
of law de novo. Id. at 190-91.
II. The Legal Authority for Hybrid Restitution Orders
Ayfer’s appeal of the district court’s order not only challenges the district
court’s interpretation and administration of the particular restitution orders in
this case, but also appears to challenge the underlying legal basis for “hybrid”
restitution orders. Accordingly, before turning to the particular orders at issue
here, we will first survey the law governing restitution orders in order to assess
the nature and propriety of hybrid restitution orders. While we have not
11
previously explicitly addressed such orders, our sister circuits and our own
district courts have approved and employed them, and upon review of the
MVRA’s statutory provisions and the common law principle of joint and several
liability, we conclude that hybrid restitution orders are entirely compatible with
both the MVRA and our traditional understanding of joint and several liability in
restitution obligations.
A. Apportioned and “Joint and Several” Restitution Orders
Because federal courts have no “inherent power to order restitution,” a
“sentencing court’s power to order restitution . . . depends upon, and is
necessarily circumscribed by, statute.” United States v. Zangari, 677 F.3d 86, 91 (2d
Cir. 2012). The MVRA is one such statute. We have said that the “primary and
overarching goal of the MVRA is to make victims of crime whole: to compensate
these victims for their losses and to restore the[m] to their original state of well-
being.” United States v. Thompson, 792 F.3d 273, 277 (2d Cir. 2015), quoting United
States v. Qurashi, 634 F.3d 699, 703 (2d Cir. 2011) (brackets in original; internal
quotation marks omitted). To fulfill that goal, the MVRA empowers – and indeed
requires – a district court to “order . . . that the defendant make restitution to the
victim” of various designated offenses. 18 U.S.C. § 3663A(a)(1). The MVRA
12
further provides that a district court “shall 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.” 18 U.S.C.
§ 3664(f)(1)(A). That principle is easy to apply in the case of a single defendant
who has victimized one or more persons: the defendant must simply be ordered
to pay the full amount of the losses to each victim occasioned by the defendant’s
crimes.
But what to do when, as frequently occurs in complex federal crimes, a
number of different defendants are found to have participated in the commission
of the offenses that caused the victims’ losses? All of the defendants may have
contributed in various ways to the success of the criminal scheme and the losses
inflicted on the victims, and making them all responsible for providing
restitution would maximize the chances that the government will be able to
collect enough funds to make all the victims whole. But the defendants may have
contributed to the offenses in different ways, at different levels of activity and
culpability, or may have joined the scheme at different points in time, such that it
might be unfair to impose responsibility for the entire loss inflicted by a large
criminal organization on its more minor members.
13
Anticipating these problems, Congress has vested the district court with
considerable discretion in fashioning restitution orders. The statute governing the
procedure for issuing and enforcing restitution orders provides that if the district
court “finds that more than 1 defendant has contributed to the loss of a victim,
the court may make each defendant liable for payment of the full amount of
restitution or may apportion liability among the defendants to reflect the level of
contribution to the victim’s loss and economic circumstances of each defendant.”
18 U.S.C. § 3664(h) (made applicable to the MVRA by 18 U.S.C. § 3663A(d)).
Section 3664(h) thus empowers district courts either to require each
defendant to pay “the full amount of restitution,” or to apportion liability among
defendants according to the level of responsibility each defendant has for the
victim or victims’ losses. In a scenario where two offenders caused a victim to
incur a $100,000 loss, the court could require each defendant to pay the full
$100,000 amount of the loss, or, if the defendants’ divergent contributions to the
crime make it reasonable to do so, the court could apportion the restitution
obligation, ordering the defendant who played a lesser role in the offense to pay,
for example, $25,000 in restitution and his more culpable co-defendant to pay
$75,000. See United States v. Washington, 408 F. App’x 458, 460 (2d Cir. 2011)
14
(noting that a district court can choose between apportioning restitution among
co-defendants or making the co-defendants jointly and severally liable for the
entire amount of the loss).
If the court chooses the first alternative and imposes the full restitution
obligation on both offenders, doing so does not entitle the victim to a double
recovery; the goal of the statute is to provide crime victims with full
compensation, but not with a windfall. Drawing from the common law, we have
long recognized that an order imposing full restitution on multiple participants
in a single crime will normally be deemed to impose “joint and several” liability –
although the MVRA does not use that term. See United States v. Nucci, 364 F.3d
419, 422 (2d Cir. 2004); see also United States v. Klein, 476 F.3d 111, 114 (2d Cir.
2007) (“[C]o-defendants may be proportionally or jointly and severally liable for
restitution when they are all culpable.”). In the common law tort context, as we
have acknowledged, the “effect of joint liability . . . is to excuse one defendant
from paying any portion of the judgment if the plaintiff collects the full amount
from the other.” Nucci, 364 F.3d at 423, quoting Smith v. Lightning Bolt Prods. Inc.,
861 F.2d 363, 374 (2d Cir. 1988).
Where two co-defendants in a civil lawsuit are found jointly and severally
15
liable for the full amount of the damages, the plaintiff can collect that entire
amount from one defendant, in full, without collecting anything from the other
defendant, if that is the most expedient way for the plaintiff to enforce the
judgment and be made whole (as, for example, where one defendant is wealthier
than the other, or where the plaintiff can more easily attach the assets of one
defendant than those of the other). See In re Masters Mates & Pilots Pension Plan
and IRAP Litig., 957 F.2d 1020, 1027 (2d Cir. 1992) (“Under the doctrine of joint
and several liability, when two or more persons’ torts together cause an injury,
each tortfeasor is liable to the victim for the total damages.”); Restatement
(Second) of Torts § 879 cmt. b (1979) (“In situations in which all of the tortfeasors
are liable for the entire harm, the injured person is entitled to maintain an action
against one or any number of the tortfeasors and to obtain judgment against any
one or any number for the full amount of the harm, although no more than one
satisfaction can be obtained for the harm.” (citations omitted)).
In such a scenario, if the plaintiff collects the entire amount of the
judgment from one defendant, that defendant can then sue her co-defendant for
contribution. See In re Masters Mates, 957 F.2d at 1028 (“One way of ensuring that
a joint tortfeasor will not be alone among solvent joint tortfeasors in shouldering
16
the burden of a judgment is to allow him to sue joint tortfeasors for
contribution.”); Restatement (Second) of Torts § 886A(1) (1979) (“[W]hen two or
more persons become liable in tort to the same person for the same harm, there is
a right of contribution among them, even though judgment has not been
recovered against all or any of them.”). The principle animating these rules is to
prioritize the injured plaintiff by allowing him to collect from any tortfeasor he
can, while leaving the defendant tortfeasors to fight amongst themselves as to the
fair and proper allocation of the loss and responsibility of payment to the victim.
The same would be true in the typical criminal case that results in a
restitution order in which two co-defendants are each ordered to pay restitution
in the entire amount of the victim’s loss. If in the previous example, the district
court found that both defendants contributed equally to the victim’s $100,000
loss, the district court could hold both defendants jointly and severally liable for
the total $100,000 loss. The government (acting for the benefit of the victim) could
then continue to collect from either defendant until the victim was made whole.
In either the apportioned or the joint and several restitution order, no
defendant will ever have to pay more than what the court ordered as to that
defendant, because a victim cannot receive a “double recovery” and cannot
17
recover restitution payments “beyond the full amount of the loss.” Nucci, 364
F.3d at 423. In the previous example, if one defendant paid (or the government
seized from that defendant) the entire $100,000 restitution amount, the
government could no longer collect from the second defendant, regardless of
whether that second defendant ever paid a single cent to the victim. But while the
second defendant in that situation may escape having his assets seized to pay
restitution, the defendant who paid the entire restitution amount will still have
paid no more than the restitution amount the court imposed on him. Similarly,
where a court apportions the liability for restitution between two perpetrators,
each would be responsible for paying no more than he or she has been ordered to
pay.
B. Hybrid Restitution Orders
Courts have recognized, however, that these stark alternatives are not fully
satisfactory in cases in which (as is not uncommon in federal criminal cases) one
defendant organizes a criminal scheme and enlists numerous others to play
limited roles in a crime that damages one or many victims. The minor
participants in the scheme have contributed to the harm and ought to contribute
to the restitution, but, even though the law gives the court the discretion to make
18
each responsible for the full amount of the loss, their more limited roles may
make it reasonable to apportion only a limited share of liability to them. At the
same time, neither the principle of just punishment nor that of maximizing the
chances for victims to achieve full recompense warrants reducing the size of the
restitution obligation imposed on the principal organizer of the scheme by the
amounts allocated to that person’s minor accomplices.
The hybrid restitution order combines the discretion and apportionment
authority permitted by § 3664(h) with the common law concept of joint and
several liability. It thus accounts for multiple defendants’ varying degrees of
contribution to a victim’s total loss, while also prioritizing the victim’s likelihood
of recovery. In such orders, the most significant offender may be held liable for
the full amount of the loss, while lesser participants are required to contribute
lesser amounts. Some of our sister circuits have confronted challenges to such
orders and have uniformly upheld them in appropriate circumstances, and some
district courts in our own circuit have issued such orders.3
3
See, e.g., Sheets, 814 F.3d at 260; Nucci, 364 F.3d at 424; United States v. Scott, 270
F.3d 30, 52 (1st Cir. 2001); United States v. Diaz, 245 F.3d 294, 312 (3d Cir. 2001);
United States v. Trigg, 119 F.3d 493, 501 (7th Cir. 1997) (“[U]nder § 3663, a district
court may impose joint liability on multiple defendants in different amounts.
Under this approach, a victim still may not recover an amount greater than the
19
The term “hybrid approach” appears to have been coined by the Fifth
Circuit. In United States v. Sheets, on which the district court relied here, the Fifth
Circuit described that approach as the “employ[ment of] a combination of the
apportionment of liability approach while concurrently making all of the
defendants jointly and severally liable.” 814 F.3d at 260 (collecting cases). The
hybrid approach is meant to be used in cases with “restitution payments where
multiple defendants are held liable for injuries caused by a common scheme.” Id.
at 261. As the court noted, “even where liability of each defendant overlaps and
the total amount that they are held liable for exceeds the victim’s total injury, the
MVRA permits the Government to hold any individual defendant liable for as
much as the court ordered as to that defendant.” Id. Of course, as the Fifth Circuit
loss.”) (citations omitted); United States v. Harris, 7 F.3d 1537, 1539-40 (10th Cir.
1993) (finding no error where district court made defendant “potentially liable
for the full amount of restitution while ordering his codefendant to be liable for
only one-half of the total amount”); United States v. Broadbent, 225 F. Supp. 3d 239,
244-45 (S.D.N.Y. 2016) (considering a restitution order that “departs from the
hybrid approach”); United States v. Marsh, No. 10-CR-0480, 2011 WL 5325410, at
*69-74 (E.D.N.Y. Oct. 26, 2011) (holding co-defendants liable jointly and severally
for the total restitution amount but capping certain defendants’ liability at lower
amounts); United States v. Donaghy, 570 F. Supp. 2d 411, 436-37 (E.D.N.Y. 2008)
(apportioning attorney’s fees to defendants subject to an internal investigation as
part of their restitution in a criminal case, holding each defendant solely liable for
certain amounts while holding the defendants liable jointly and severally for
other amounts).
20
also recognized, the hybrid approach comes with the same double recovery
caveat as other, simpler types of restitution orders: the government “may not
collect more from all defendants together than will make the victim whole.” Id.
But the hybrid approach nevertheless serves to ensure that “restitution payments
from all defendants contribute toward the victim’s overall recovery.” Id. at 262.
Although the Fifth Circuit may have been the first to use the term, that
court did not cut the hybrid approach out of whole cloth. Rather, that court
observed what other federal courts had already done in drafting restitution
orders. For instance, in United States v. Scott, 270 F.3d 30 (1st Cir. 2001), a case
cited in Sheets, the First Circuit considered a restitution order for three
defendants, Scott, Morrison, and Stephens, who were engaged in a tax fraud
scheme. The district court ordered Scott to pay the full $37,970.68 deemed lost by
the government as a result of the scheme, but ordered Morrison and Stephens to
pay only $8,253 and $7,479, respectively. Id. at 52. The First Circuit noted that in
cases where “defendants are each made liable for the full amount, but the victim
may recover no more than the total loss, the implication is that each defendant’s
liability ends when the victim is made whole, regardless of the actual
contributions of individual defendants.” Id. Such an approach, the court stated,
21
comports with the “common law concept of joint and several liability.” Id. But,
the court reasoned, a district court can nevertheless exercise the discretion
afforded by § 3664(h) of the MVRA to craft a restitution order that makes some
defendants liable for the full amount of the loss while making other defendants
liable for only a portion. Id. at 52-53. Rather than “true joint and several liability,”
the court acknowledged, “this type of liability is a creature of the restitution
statute” and “such an order is within the district court’s discretion.” Id. at 53.
Moreover, we ourselves have approved a restitution order crafted
according to the hybrid approach, without labeling it as such. In United States v.
Nucci, a case cited as an example of the hybrid approach in Sheets, 814 F.3d at 260,
we considered a robbery conspiracy involving multiple co-defendants. The
district court found Nucci responsible for several individual robberies and
ordered him to pay restitution to the victims in the total amount of $34,476. Nucci,
364 F.3d at 420. But the district court ordered Nucci’s co-conspirators to pay only
portions of that same loss: Bell was ordered to pay $9,000 to one robbery victim
and Favia was ordered to pay $3,876 and $1,900, respectively, to two separate
robbery victims. Id. We determined that it was “within the district court’s
discretion to order that Nucci, who pleaded guilty to a conspiracy to commit
22
multiple robberies, be held jointly and severally liable for the full amount of the
restitution.” Id. at 422. We noted that the “situation presented in this case, where
one defendant was ordered to pay the full loss from five burglaries after his co-
defendants had been ordered to pay restitution for some but not all of the
burglaries, is but a variation on the same general theme of no double recovery
upon orders of joint and several liability.” Id. at 423-24. While we allowed that the
district court could have crafted a restitution order that made it “clearer . . . that a
given victim would not be allowed to receive compensation in excess of his loss,”
we nevertheless affirmed the district court’s “decision not to apportion the
restitution amount and h[e]ld that a district court does not commit error by
failing to state explicitly that a victim’s recovery shall be limited to the amount of
its loss.” Id. at 424.
While we did not explicitly state that the district court in Nucci employed
the hybrid approach, nor have we since specifically approved of its usage by
district courts, we see no reason not to do so now. Nothing in the governing
statutes prohibits such a practice, which utilizes the district court’s discretion in a
manner that prioritizes the goal of achieving full compensation for victims while
honoring the statutory acknowledgment that in some cases the circumstances of
23
particular defendants or the facts of the criminal conduct will warrant
apportioning a lesser share of the restitution responsibility to those who played a
lesser role in the scheme. Accordingly, we now hold explicitly that district courts
may combine apportionment of liability to limit the restitution obligation for
some participants in a crime while concurrently holding other participants liable
for the full amount of the loss. For the reasons stated below, such hybrid
restitution obligations are not satisfied until either a defendant has paid as much
as she has been ordered to pay or the victim has been made whole. The typical
use of the hybrid approach will likely be in cases, such as this one, as well as
Sheets, Nucci, and Scott, where multiple defendants are involved in a common
scheme, but where one lead defendant is responsible for the total loss and the
district court apportions liability to his co-defendants according to their own
contributions to the loss.
III. Ayfer’s Restitution Obligation
Ayfer challenges the district court’s holding that the restitution order in
her case was “plainly imposed using a hybrid joint and several liability scheme.”
Yalincak, 2020 WL 1969490, at *3. We find no merit in that challenge. As discussed
above, the circumstances of the case, and the formulation of the related
24
restitution orders imposed as part of both Ayfer and Hakan’s sentences, fit the
classic pattern of the restitution orders that have been described as hybrid
restitution awards. Moreover, to the extent there is any ambiguity in the wording
of the restitution order – and we do not think there is – a district court’s
interpretation of its own orders is entitled to considerable deference from an
appellate court. See United States v. Spallone, 399 F.3d 415, 423 (2d Cir. 2005)
(“When an issuing judge interprets his own orders, we accord substantial
deference to the draftsman, and we will not reverse the judge’s construction of an
ambiguity in his own words except for abuse of discretion.”).
For the most part, whether formulated as objections to the characterization
of the restitution order imposed in Ayfer’s case or as criticisms of the hybrid
approach, Ayfer’s central claim is that the district court improperly calculated the
effect of the payments credited to Hakan on Ayfer’s remaining restitution
obligation. As Ayfer and Hakan would have it, the fact that an amount exceeding
that which Ayfer was ordered to pay has already been deemed paid to W.A-M. –
from sources other than Ayfer – means that Ayfer’s restitution obligation has
been completely satisfied, regardless of whether she has actually paid W.A-M.
anything even approaching the amount she was ordered to pay.
25
That claim rests on a misunderstanding of the nature of hybrid restitution
orders. Ayfer’s claim that her restitution obligation is satisfied because more than
$500,000 has been deemed paid to W.A-M. misconstrues statements we made
about the effect of joint and several liability in Nucci. In Nucci, we acknowledged
that the “effect of joint liability in a tort context is to excuse one defendant from
paying any portion of the judgment if the plaintiff collects the full amount from
the other.” 364 F.3d at 423, quoting Smith, 861 F.2d at 374. Ayfer argues that
because W.A-M. has received $500,000 in restitution from some source – even if it
was not from Ayfer herself – her liability has been “fully satisfied and she should
be excused ‘from paying any portion of the judgment’ because the government
has collected ‘the full amount [$500,000] from the other.’” Ayfer’s Br. 12
(alteration in original), quoting Nucci, 364 F.3d at 423.
But Ayfer misapprehends the meaning of the phrase “full amount” as used
in Nucci. The quoted statement in Nucci references the classic meaning of joint
and several liability in tort law, and explains that in that context, once the
“plaintiff collects the full amount” of a judgment from one co-defendant, 364 F.3d
at 423 (emphasis added), the other co-defendants are absolved from further
liability. The focus is on whether the injured party has received the total amount
26
that he is due in compensation for his injury. Notably, in tort law there is no
equivalent to a hybrid order: all tortfeasors are jointly and severally liable for the
full amount of the plaintiff’s damages. In the restitution context, the hybrid
approach by its very nature tempers any possible unfairness in making all co-
defendants liable for the full amount of a victim’s injury by limiting the amount
that minor participants in the scheme can be made to pay. Where a principal
wrongdoer such as Hakan has been held liable for the entire amount of the harm
inflicted on the victim, a lesser participant such as Ayfer may benefit (whether
her liability is also for the whole amount or is for a lesser sum) if the principal
offender pays (or the government forcibly collects from him) the entire amount
that the victim is due. Conversely, the principal wrongdoer’s obligation will be
reduced if some portion of the amount due is paid by or collected from the lesser
offender. Those are consequences of the fact that a victim is not entitled to
recover more than he lost simply because two different offenders caused that loss
and are liable to pay restitution.
It does not follow, however, either from the wording of the restitution
order or from the tort analogy, that a lesser offender whose restitution liability
has been limited to a portion of the loss is entitled to have that liability
27
extinguished where the principal offender makes a payment that exceeds the
limited amount due from the lesser offender. In Ayfer’s view, any amount owed
to a victim is essentially fungible: a payment from any source can and should be
credited to every defendant’s restitution obligation. Relatedly, Hakan argues in
his reply brief, which Ayfer requests we consider adopted by her, that the
government’s argument reads a “‘personally’ paid rule into the MVRA when no
such rule exists.” Hakan’s Reply Br. 2. But those arguments are incorrect. Hybrid
restitution orders, including the ones at issue here, do in fact require specific
defendants to make restitution payments to victims. A restitution order creates a
personal liability on the part of the defendant on whom it is imposed. While that
obligation can be satisfied if other defendants have made the victim whole, that is
an artifact of the rule that a victim may not receive more in restitution than the
total amount of his loss. Thus, if Hakan paid a total of $750,000 to W.A-M., W.A-
M. would be made whole and both defendants’ obligations would be deemed
satisfied. But that rule does not absolve any defendant from the obligation to pay
the restitution that she has been sentenced to pay before the victim has been fully
satisfied.
The same would be true in Nucci: if Nucci paid the entire $34,476 in
28
restitution, Bell and Favia’s restitution obligations of $9,000 and $5,776,
respectively, would also be extinguished. But the Nucci example clearly
illustrates the significance of the hybrid approach and the error of the Yalincaks’
argument. If, in Nucci, Bell had paid his entire restitution obligation of $9,000, that
would satisfy his individual obligation, because he had paid all that the court had
ordered him to pay. But it would be absurd to conclude that his payment would
also exonerate Favia from paying anything at all simply because Bell had paid (as
he was required to do) a greater amount than what Favia owed. Similarly, if the
government succeeded in seizing $15,000 from Nucci, leaving the victims still
short by some $20,000, the restitution obtained from Nucci would not extinguish
Bell’s or Favia’s restitution obligations simply because the sum obtained from
Nucci exceeded the total amounts due from his co-defendants. The “full amount”
language from Nucci that Ayfer relies upon simply means the “full amount”
owed to the victims in order to compensate for the victims’ losses, not the full
amount owed by any one individual defendant.
Nor is Ayfer correct that the district court’s understanding of the hybrid
order essentially makes her liable for the full $750,000 owed to W.A-M. rather
than the $500,000 she was ordered to pay. Ayfer asserts that if the district court
29
“had intended for Ayfer to be jointly and severally liable with Hakan as to W.A-
M. for an amount over $500,000, it presumably would have entered such an
order,” but “did not.” Ayfer’s Br. 13. She argues that the district court’s denial of
her motion “has the effect of making Ayfer’s restitution as to W.A-M. identical to
Hakan’s, thereby undermining the court’s adoption of two different restitution
schemes” and making Ayfer “liable for the same $250,000 over $500,000 as
Hakan.” Id.
But the district court’s decision does not make Ayfer liable for any amount
over the $500,000 the district court originally ordered her to pay. She could never
be required to pay more than the $500,000 her sentence makes her liable for, even
if Hakan paid nothing at all, because the $500,000 obligation in her sentence
serves as an upper limit on what she may be required to pay. Ayfer’s restitution
obligation has always been the same: she must continue to make payments to
W.A-M. until she has either paid the $500,000 the district court ordered her to
pay or until W.A-M. is made whole – no less, no more.
Ayfer and Hakan’s remaining arguments contend that, as a matter of
policy, district courts should design restitution orders to create certain incentives
for defendants to make their restitution payments. Ayfer first argues that the
30
hybrid approach “creat[es] a disincentive for defendants to make restitution”
because a defendant like Hakan is “more likely to pay the first $500,000 to W.A-
M. if doing so means that his co-defendant also receives credit for the entire
payment,” at least in a case like this one, in which the co-defendants have a close
family relationship. Ayfer’s Br. 13-14. Under the hybrid approach, Ayfer argues,
there is no such incentive because the “first $250,000 that Hakan pays is credited
to him alone; Ayfer receives her first dollar of credit from Hakan’s joint and
several payments only when Hakan pays $250,001.” Id. at 14.
Ayfer may be correct that in certain limited circumstances – for example,
where co-defendants are family members or have similarly close relationships – a
defendant may indeed have a greater incentive to pay when his payments are
also credited to his co-defendant. But the argument crucially mistakes the nature
and purpose of restitution orders. Restitution payments are not voluntary
donations that are to be induced by the creation of incentives for the donor; they
are legal obligations that a defendant is required to make, in default of which the
government (like a tort plaintiff holding a civil judgment) may use coercive
means to collect the amount due by attaching the defendant’s assets.
Moreover, the primary purpose of criminal restitution is to make the victim
31
of a crime whole, see Thompson, 792 F.3d at 277, not to manage relationships
between co-defendants or craft restitution arrangements for the benefit of
mother-and-son co-defendants like Ayfer and Hakan. If we adopted Ayfer’s
incentive argument, and the first $500,000 credit extinguished Ayfer’s obligation
to W.A-M., the only remaining source for the restitution payments would be
Hakan, even if he lacked or had successfully hidden additional resources while
Ayfer held or obtained significant assets amenable to seizure. But one of the
benefits of the hybrid approach is that it works to ensure multiple sources of
restitution, up until the point at which the victim is made whole or an individual
defendant has satisfied his or her obligation. As the Fifth Circuit noted in Sheets,”
[e]nsuring that restitution payments from all defendants contribute toward the
victim’s overall recovery is a simple and uniform means to have victims receive
full and timely restitution as provided by law and otherwise ensure that
decisions of our district courts align with the purpose of the MVRA.” 814 F.3d at
262.
Ayfer’s incentive argument also ignores the practicalities of restitution in
many cases, and mistakes the true incentive of most defendants – to avoid paying
restitution by hiding, transferring, or otherwise protecting their assets. Neither
32
incentives nor compulsion are necessary where a criminal (or tort) defendant is
willing and able to comply with the judgment of the court and writes a check to
satisfy his obligations and make the victim whole. In far too many cases,
however, one or more defendants will lack either the ability or the desire to pay
restitution voluntarily. In such situations, Ayfer’s proposed method of crediting
payments reduces the number of potential sources of restitution, to the detriment
of crime victims. As the government argues, if Hakan “were unable to make such
payments for some reason (e.g., death, disability, or destitution), victim W.A-M.
would be left shouldering the loss.” Appellee’s Br. 15. The same would be true if
Hakan simply refused to pay more than he already has, and attempted to put
what assets he has beyond the reach of the government or the victim. The hybrid
approach instead requires both Hakan and Ayfer to continue making payments to
W.A-M. until he is fully compensated or until Ayfer has paid all the restitution
for which the court held her liable.4
4
Ayfer also argues that the district court’s ruling removes any incentive for her to
pay anything towards her $500,000 restitution obligation, because even if she
paid the $500,000, she would “still . . . be liable for up to an additional $250,000
because the first $500,000 would be deducted from the total loss of $750,000
rather than extinguishing her liability under a ‘bottom-up’ approach that starts at
$0.” Ayfer’s Br. 14. But as noted above, this misconstrues the district court’s
ruling. If Ayfer did pay the $500,000 she was ordered to pay, her liability would
33
A district court can, of course, craft a restitution order of the sort Ayfer
would prefer. For example, a district court could include a provision that a given
defendant’s restitution obligation ends once the aggregate paid by that defendant
and his co-defendants reaches a certain amount, even if the defendant himself
did not pay anything and the victim was not yet made whole. That is what the
district court did in United States v. Broadbent, 225 F. Supp. 3d 239 (S.D.N.Y. 2016).
In Broadbent, four co-defendants were sentenced by four different judges to pay
different restitution amounts. Id. at 241. After Broadbent was sentenced, the
judge sentencing one of his co-defendants ordered that co-defendant to forfeit
more than $300,000 to the government, and then ordered the government to
credit that amount towards his restitution obligation. Id. But while Broadbent’s
own judgment made his restitution obligation joint and several with his co-
defendants, it also specifically provided that his “‘obligation to make restitution
shall cease once the aggregate of the restitution paid’ by him and the other three
defendants ‘reaches $120,000.’” Id.
then be extinguished. Of course, unscrupulous defendants will always have an
incentive not to pay anything, in the hope that the government will find it easier
to collect the entire loss from a co-defendant with whom she is jointly liable, or
will simply be unable to locate and attach her own assets. Nothing about the
hybrid approach increases that incentive.
34
Such a provision alters the hybrid approach. As the district court noted in
Broadbent, that provision meant that, like “rungs on a ladder” and starting “at the
moment judgment is entered,” the government “may collect from any of the four
defendants until the total amount that [the victim] receives from all sources
reaches $120,000.” Id. at 243. At that point, Broadbent’s restitution obligation is
extinguished. While noting that that outcome is “not how courts have enforced
restitution collection under the hybrid approach,” the district court nevertheless
determined that such a provision explicitly “reliev[ed] [the defendant] of
restitution obligations when the aggregate amount paid by his co-defendants
reached $120,000.” Id. at 245.
The provision in Broadbent demonstrates how specific language in
restitution orders can excuse individual defendants from future payments once
an aggregate amount is paid from all sources. If Ayfer’s restitution order had a
provision like the one in Broadbent, such as an instruction that her “obligation to
make restitution shall cease once the aggregate of the restitution paid from any
source to W.A-M. reaches $500,000,” then Ayfer’s restitution obligation would
clearly be satisfied. But the district court’s restitution order here had no such
limitation on Ayfer’s liability, and there is no reason to read in such a limitation.
35
Instead, the restitution order here was, as the district court concluded, a textbook
example of the hybrid approach.
Ayfer next argues that the district court’s approach “creates less
predictability and more guesswork as to what the ultimate restitution figure will
be years after judgment.” Ayfer’s Br. 15. According to Ayfer, the “final figure
[owed by a defendant] will depend less on the amount clearly listed in the
judgment and more on the manner in which restitution is made over the ensuing
years.” Id. But the hybrid approach does not create any such ambiguity or
necessitate any such guesswork. Ayfer has known all along that if she pays
$500,000 or if W.A-M. is made whole through other sources, her own restitution
obligation will be satisfied. If Ayfer elects to make only minimal payments and
wait until W.A-M. recovers the $750,000 from Hakan (and if the government fails
to identify assets belonging to Ayfer that it can attach in order to help satisfy the
amount owing to W.A-M.), the amount Ayfer owes will, naturally, change over
time. But that is not the fault of the hybrid approach; rather, it is simply the
nature of an arrangement in which multiple defendants are making restitution
payments, in that the balance remaining to make the victim whole will
necessarily decrease as payments are made.
36
Moreover, while we recognized in our earlier decision in this case that
“persons subject to restitution orders are entitled to know, as they lead their lives
and make economic decisions over the long duration of restitution orders, the
extent of their remaining restitution obligations,” Yalincak, 853 F.3d at 639, we
also note that the MVRA’s main priority is securing recoveries for victims, not
ensuring the most predictable restitution arrangement for defendants. See Dolan
v. United States, 560 U.S. 605, 613 (2010) (noting that the MVRA’s “efforts to
secure speedy determination of restitution is primarily designed to help victims
of crime secure prompt restitution rather than to provide defendants with
certainty as to the amount of their liability”) (emphasis removed).5
Ayfer’s final argument is that the money disbursed from the various
bankruptcies should be considered “joint credits” paid by both Ayfer and Hakan
5
While we find the Yalincaks’ policy arguments unpersuasive, and believe that
the hybrid approach will often be appropriate in cases of this sort, we note that
district courts are granted considerable discretion by the MVRA to order full
restitution by all participants in a crime, to apportion the liability among
defendants, to use the hybrid approach as described in this opinion, or to create
variant hybrid approaches in order to effectuate the goals of the MVRA in
particular cases. The orders entered by district courts will be reviewed
“deferentially,” and, absent errors of law or clearly erroneous fact findings, will
be “revers[ed] only if in our view the trial court abused its discretion.” United
States v. Amato, 540 F.3d 153, 158-59 (2d Cir. 2008), abrogated on other grounds by
Lagos v. United States, 138 S. Ct. 1684 (2018).
37
and that these “joint credits” should correspondingly reduce both of the
Yalincaks’ remaining restitution obligations. Ayfer points to 18 U.S.C. § 3664(j)(2),
which provides: “Any amount paid to a victim under an order of restitution shall
be reduced by any amount later recovered as compensatory damages for the
same loss by the victim in [any federal or state civil proceeding].” Ayfer admits
that the “situation envisioned by § 3664(j)(2) is not precisely the situation here,”
but argues that the provision “suggests that amounts that Ayfer is required to
pay to the victim should be reduced by the amounts that the victim has received
as compensatory damages.” Ayfer’s Br. 16-17.
Section 3664(j)(2) says nothing, however, about how credits apply to
individual defendants’ separate restitution obligations. That provision, like the
rule against double recoveries, operates to reduce the total amount that the
victim can collect. Thus, to the extent that W.A-M. has obtained some
recompense from the proceeds of the bankruptcy of Hakan’s investment funds,
W.A-M. may not collect from the defendants’ other assets the entire $750,000 loss
for which Hakan and Ayfer, to their different degrees, are liable. Notably, those
payments are significantly responsible for reducing the outstanding balance
owed to W.A-M. by both Yalincaks to less than $140,000. The credit for those
38
payments thus benefitted Ayfer by reducing her restitution obligation by
$274,181.02 (the amount of the credit that exceeded the now-satisfied $250,000
portion of W.A-M.’s loss owed solely by Hakan).
But nothing in § 3664(j)(2) supports Ayfer’s argument that the distributions
from the bankruptcy proceedings should be credited to Ayfer so as to clear her
restitution obligation to W.A-M. Like payments made directly by Hakan,
payments from collateral sources benefit Ayfer by bringing the defendants
collectively closer to the point at which the victim is fully compensated, and the
defendants’ restitution obligations therefore end; they do not absolve a defendant
who continues to be liable up to the amount ordered by the court, until either she
has paid that amount or the victim has been fully compensated from other
sources. Accordingly, we reject Ayfer’s “joint credits” argument, as did the
district court. Yalincak, 2020 WL 1969490, at *4-5.
IV. Hakan’s Appeals
As we noted above, this opinion addresses three separate but consolidated
appeals, two of which, No. 20-1540-cr and No. 20-1542-cr, were filed by Hakan.
Because Hakan lacks any concrete stake in the issues raised, he lacks standing to
challenge the district court’s orders as to Ayfer’s rights and obligations, and his
39
appeals must be dismissed.
“The Article III standing requirement ‘must be met by persons seeking
appellate review, just as it must be met by persons appearing in courts of first
instance.’” Tachiona v. United States, 386 F.3d 205, 211 (2d Cir. 2004), quoting
Arizonans for Official English v. Arizona, 520 U.S. 43, 64 (1997). And to have
“standing at the appellate stage . . . a litigant must demonstrate injury caused by
the judgment.” Id. (quotation marks omitted); see also Diamond v. Charles, 476 U.S.
54, 62 (1986) (“[T]he decision to seek review must be placed in the hands of those
who have a direct stake in the outcome. It is not to be placed in the hands of
concerned bystanders.”) (quotation marks omitted).
Hakan makes no argument as to why he has standing to challenge an order
of the district court that solely affects Ayfer’s rights and obligations. While
Hakan, as Ayfer’s son, may subjectively care about what happens to Ayfer and
her restitution obligations, neither his status as Ayfer’s son nor as her co-
defendant suffices to establish standing absent some demonstrated injury to
Hakan caused by the district court’s judgment. Here, whether we affirm or
reverse the district court’s order has no effect on Hakan’s own restitution
obligations. The district court ordered Hakan to pay $750,000 to W.A-M. in
40
restitution, and the fact that Hakan is liable jointly and severally with Ayfer for a
portion of that amount does not change his own obligations. If we agreed with
the Yalincaks and found that Ayfer had satisfied her restitution obligations
because of the more than $500,000 credited to Hakan, he would receive no
tangible benefit, because he would still be liable for the remaining balance of
$139,057.43 owed to W.A-M. And our conclusion that Ayfer’s restitution
obligation is not yet satisfied inflicts no injury on Hakan, because it does not
increase his liability at all.6 Either way, Hakan’s obligations remain the same and
he has suffered no cognizable injury as a result of the district court’s order.
In any event, because Hakan’s appeals address the same issues as Ayfer’s
appeal, and their arguments entirely overlap, the dismissal of his appeals has no
effect on the substantive outcome of this case, and the merits of Ayfer’s rights
and obligations are fully resolved by our resolution of Ayfer’s appeal.
CONCLUSION
The goal of restitution is to make victims whole and to compensate them
for the loss they suffered at the hands of defendants. The hybrid approach allows
6
Indeed, affirmance of the district court’s order potentially benefits Hakan, since
any amount collected from Ayfer would reduce the remaining balance owed by
him, which could never happen if Ayfer’s obligation were declared satisfied.
41
a district court to apportion the appropriate responsibility for the victim’s loss to
each defendant while still holding the defendants jointly and severally liable. It
ensures that each defendant’s remaining payments continue to contribute to the
victim’s total recovery while limiting each defendant’s liability to the harm they
actually caused. Such hybrid orders are within the discretion afforded by the
MVRA to district courts to fashion appropriate restitution orders.
In accordance with that approach, because Ayfer has not yet made
restitution payments satisfying the $500,000 she was ordered to pay to W.A-M.,
and because W.A-M. has not yet been made whole by the payments or credits of
both Yalincaks, we affirm the district court’s order denying the Yalincaks’
motions for a declaration that Ayfer’s restitution obligation has been fully
satisfied. At the time of the district court’s decision, the remaining balance owed
to W.A-M. was $139,057.43. Once that amount has been paid by or collected from
either Hakan or Ayfer, Ayfer will have satisfied her restitution obligation. Until
then, Ayfer remains subject to the district court’s restitution order.
Therefore, in appeal No. 20-2144-cr, we AFFIRM the April 24, 2020 order
of the district court. Appeals Nos. 20-1540-cr and 20-1542-cr are DISMISSED.
42