United States v. Phaneuf

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1996-08-02
Citations: 91 F.3d 255, 91 F.3d 255, 91 F.3d 255
Copy Citations
32 Citing Cases

                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 95-1389

                        UNITED STATES,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                       JEFFREY PHANEUF,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

       [Hon. Nathaniel M. Gorton, U.S. District Judge]
                                                                 

                                         

                            Before

                     Selya, Circuit Judge,
                                                     

               Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                         

                  and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
                                                      

                                         

Donald R. Furman, Jr., for appellant.
                                 
Sheila W.  Sawyer, Assistant  United  States  Attorney, with  whom
                             
Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, was on brief for appellee.
                       

                                         

                        August 2, 1996
                                         


CAMPBELL, Senior Circuit Judge.  Pursuant to a plea agreement
                                          

with the government, defendant-appellant Jeffrey Phaneuf pled

guilty to three counts of  making a false statement on credit

card applications in  violation of 18 U.S.C.    1014, and two

counts of mail fraud in violation  of 18 U.S.C.   1341.   The

United   States  District   Court   for   the   District   of

Massachusetts sentenced Phaneuf to 24 months in prison on the

first  three counts  to  run  concurrently  with  a  30-month

sentence on  the last  two counts, followed  by 36  months of

supervised release.   In addition, the court  ordered Phaneuf

to  pay  $20,400  to  the  Bank of  New  England  ("BNE")  as

restitution for losses.  Phaneuf appeals from his sentence.

                              I.
                                          I.

          In  April  1989, police  officers  in Massachusetts

discovered  numerous  stolen credit  cards  in  Phaneuf's car

during a routine traffic stop.   Police obtained a warrant to

search  his  residence  in  Hampton,  New  Hampshire.    They

discovered  numerous credit  cards in  his  name, along  with

receipts  and  credit   card  charge  slips.     A  follow-up

investigation  revealed that 31  of the cards  recovered were

ones that Phaneuf had reported as stolen the previous year.

          In June 1989, evidence from the state investigation

-- including credit card applications, receipts, stop payment

order  receipts,  and   correspondence  between  Phaneuf  and

                             -2-


various banks -- was turned  over to the United States Secret

Service  in Boston.    In July,  Phaneuf  complied with  that

office's  request for handwriting  exemplars to  compare with

the documents obtained from his home.

          In  August 1990, Phaneuf called Agent Hoelen of the

Secret Service to  ask about the status of the investigation.

Phaneuf  offered to cooperate  with the  Secret Service.   In

September 1990, Phaneuf and Agent Hoelen met, without counsel

or  a representative from the United States Attorney's Office

present.   After Agent  Hoelen advised Phaneuf  of his  Fifth

Amendment right against self-incrimination, Phaneuf explained

his  scheme:    from  January  1988  through  March  1989, he

obtained numerous  credit cards  from banks  and credit  card

companies by  submitting false  applications, used  the cards

(or authorized  others to  use them),  and then reported  the

cards   as  stolen  or   failed  to  pay   back  the  issuing

institutions.   He  also wrote  checks  against his  personal

checking account at  BNE to pay off credit  card balances and

then issued  stop  payment orders  on  the checks  after  the

credit card  balances had been  reduced by the amount  of the

checks.  In this way, he was able to resume use of the credit

cards and incur more debt.  

          At  the end  of  his  meeting  with  Agent  Hoelen,

Phaneuf signed a two-page typed statement outlining the above

scheme  and initialled an  additional ten or  eleven pages of

                             -3-


"certified  inventory of evidence" forms.  Phaneuf told Agent

Hoelen  that   he  believed   the  total   amount  of   fraud

attributable  to  his  scheme was  about  $176,000.   Phaneuf

apparently made  this comment  in response  to a  higher loss

estimate offered by Agent Hoelen.

          In November 1994, the government filed a five-count

indictment  in the  United  States  District  Court  for  the

District of  Massachusetts charging  Phaneuf with  mail fraud

and making false statements  on credit card applications.   A

plea  hearing was  held on  December  12, at  which time  the

government stated that the total loss attributable to Phaneuf

for  sentencing purposes was approximately $175,000.  Phaneuf

refused to agree to the $175,000 loss amount contained in the

plea  agreement.     Defense   counsel  questioned   how  the

government would  prove this  total amount,  given the  lower

amounts alleged in the various  counts ($64,000 in counts  I-

III and $57,182 in counts IV-V, for a sum of $121,182).  As a

result of this  dispute, the  district court  did not  accept

Phaneuf's  guilty plea  and ended  the  plea proceedings.   A

second plea  hearing was  held on December  20, at  which the

court  accepted Phaneuf's guilty plea but declared the amount

of the loss to be "in dispute."

          On  January   9,  1995,  Assistant   United  States

Attorney Sheila Sawyer filed a notice of appearance replacing

Duane Deskins  who had been  handling Phaneuf's  prosecution.

                             -4-


Shortly   thereafter,  the   probation  department   filed  a

Presentence   Investigation   Report  ("PSR")   that   relied

primarily  upon  Phaneuf's   two-page  signed  statement   of

September   1990  to   characterize   the  offense   conduct.

Phaneuf's base  offense level was  calculated to be  six, and

was  increased by  six  levels  because he  was  found to  be

responsible for a loss amount between $100,001 and $200,000.1

Two more  levels were added because the offense involved more

than minimal planning.  The probation  officer then took into

account  Phaneuf's acceptance  of  responsibility, and  found

that his total adjusted offense level was twelve.  Given that

offense level and a criminal history category of V, Phaneuf's

guideline sentencing range was put at 27 to 33 months.

          The government did not object to the PSR.  Phaneuf

made several objections.  He asserted that neither he nor his

attorney had seen "any information  in the possession of  the

government"  other than his two-page statement given to Agent

Hoelen.    Phaneuf  petitioned  the  probation  department to

confine the  loss calculation  to the figures  listed in  the

mail fraud counts  of the indictment.   The probation officer

considered Phaneuf's objections but refused to alter the loss

calculations.

                    
                                

1.  The  applicable offense level  for fraud claims increases
in proportion to the value of the fraud.  

                             -5-


          Sentencing  was scheduled for  March 27, 1995.   On

March 7,  the government  filed with  the court  a sentencing

memorandum in  support  of the  probation  department's  loss

calculations.   The  government  attached to  its  sentencing

memorandum  an  affidavit from  Agent  Hoelen describing  the

investigation,  the confession signed by Phaneuf in 1990, and

a certified inventory  of evidence prepared by  Agent Hoelen.

On  Thursday,  March  23, Assistant  United  States  Attorney

Sawyer  called  defense  counsel  to  see  whether  he  still

intended to contest  the loss amount and whether  he "had any

interest  in looking  at  the  materials  referenced  in  the

government's sentencing  memorandum prior  to the  sentencing

hearing."  Defense counsel rejected the government's offer to

look at the evidence, stating his intention to  challenge the

government for alleged discovery violations. 

          At  sentencing, the  district court  concluded that

the loss amount  was "somewhere in the range  of" $100,001 to

$200,000, and not less than $166,229.38.   The district court

also found  that  the  government  had  not  failed  to  make

available  to the  defense the  documentation  supporting its

loss calculation.   Phaneuf  was  sentenced to  30 months  in

prison,  to be  followed  by a  36-month  term of  supervised

release.   The court  imposed several  special conditions  of

supervised  release:  it  required  Phaneuf  to obtain  prior

approval of  the probation department  before "incurring  any

                             -6-


extension  of credit, including charge cards, credit cards or

loans" and  before making "any  purchase . . .  exceeding the

cost of  $100."   The court further  ordered Phaneuf  to make

restitution to the BNE in the amount of $20,400 for losses it

sustained in connection with the mail fraud scheme.  

                             II.
                                         II.

          Phaneuf assigns four errors on appeal: (1) that the

government's violation of a local discovery rule deprived him

of a  fair sentencing; (2)  that the district court  erred in

calculating the loss amount for sentencing purposes; (3) that

the  supervised  release condition  requiring  him to  obtain

prior approval  for purchases  over $100  was not  reasonably

related   to  his  offenses  as  required   by  18  U.S.C.   

3583(d)(1);  and (4) that  the court's restitution  order was

improper.

1. Discovery Violation
            1. Discovery Violation

          Phaneuf  contends that  the government's  purported

failure to  provide the defense with documentation supporting

its  loss  estimate   deprived  him  of  a   fair  sentencing

procedure.  He relies on  Local Rule, D.Mass. 116.1(a), which

requires   that,   in   criminal   cases,   the    government

                             -7-


automatically  disclose  certain   written  evidence  in  its

possession to the defense.2

          Phaneuf argues that  the government violated  Local

Rule 116.1 by  not spontaneously handing over  to the defense

various pieces of evidence including the handwriting analyses

produced  by the  Forensic Services  Division  of the  Secret

Service  and evidence  of "numerous  legitimate payments"  on

                    
                                

2.  The Rule provides in relevant part:

          In  all  criminal  cases,  the  following
          material and information  . . . shall  be
          disclosed  to  the opposing  party.  Such
          disclosure . . . shall occur . . . in all
          events  within fourteen  (14) days  after
          arraignment.

          (a)  The government  shall disclose,  and
          allow the defendant  to inspect, copy and
          photograph,  all   written  material   as
          follows:

          . . .

          (3)  All relevant  reports of  results of
          physical or  mental examinations,  and of
          all  scientific  tests,  experiments  and
          comparisons, or  copies thereof,  made in
          connection with a particular case.

          (4) All .  . . documents . .  . which the
          Government intends to use at the trial of
          the case. . . .

          (5) All  exculpatory evidence  within the
          meaning of  Giles v.  Maryland, 386  U.S.
                                                    
          66, 87 S.Ct. 793, 17 L.Ed.2d 737  (1967),
          Brady v. Maryland, 373  U.S. 83, 83 S.Ct.
                                       
          1194, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963) and Giglio v.
                                                            
          United  States, 405  U.S.  150, 92  S.Ct.
                                    
          763, 31 L.Ed.2d 104 (1972).

Local Rule, D.Mass. 116.1(a).

                             -8-


Phaneuf's credit card accounts.  As a result, Phaneuf argues,

he  could  not effectively  challenge  the  government's loss

estimate and  the  corresponding six-level  increase in  base

offense level.  The government replies that Local Rule 116.1,

on  its  face,  applies  only  to  pre-trial  discovery.   At

sentencing, the government  says, a defendant is  entitled to

no  more than  fair notice  of  the evidence  upon which  the

government intends  to rely.3   In any event,  the government

insists  that  Phaneuf was  fully advised  in advance  of the

sentencing  hearing of the government's evidence and that his

counsel had made no request at all for evidence.

          We need not  linger over what  role, if any,  Local

Rule 116.1  should play at  sentencing.  Under  any analysis,

Phaneuf is not entitled to relief here.   He has only himself

to blame for  any gaps in his  knowledge of the basis  of the

government's sentencing proposals.   Counsel for the  defense

conceded at the sentencing  hearing that, during the two  and

one-half month period  leading up to  sentencing, he did  not

request any data from the prosecution, nor did he request the

court to compel the disclosure of any evidence.4  The absence

                    
                                

3.  Neither party  contends that  Phaneuf did  not have  fair
notice of  the evidence upon which the government intended to
rely at sentencing.

4.  Although  defense counsel  requested certain  information
from the government  in the period before the  institution of
formal judicial proceedings, he  conceded at sentencing  that
he  did not  request the  documents  at any  point after  the
hearing at which Phaneuf's plea was taken.  

                             -9-


of any such  requests is especially telling given  that three

weeks before sentencing the government had filed a sentencing

memorandum setting  forth  the government's  position on  the

loss amount.   Moreover,  some four  days before  sentencing,

Assistant  United  States  Attorney  Sawyer  called   defense

counsel and offered  him an opportunity  to inspect and  copy

the  materials  referenced  in  the  government's  sentencing

memorandum  -- an offer which defense counsel refused, citing

a  strategic  choice to  pursue  a  prosecutorial misfeasance

argument.   Even after  this argument  failed at  sentencing,

defense counsel did  not request a continuance  of sentencing

to  permit  him  an opportunity  to  investigate  further the

government's evidence.  

          The district  court, after hearing  argument, found

that the  government did  not fail to  make available  to the

defense the  documentation supporting its  loss calculations.

This finding was amply  supported by the facts and  arguments

presented. See Fennell v.  First Step Designs, Ltd.,  83 F.3d
                                                               

526, 532  (1st Cir.  1996) (holding that  district court  has

broad discretion  over matters concerning  discovery); United
                                                                         

States v.  Tajeddini, 996  F.2d  1278, 1287  (1st Cir.  1993)
                                

(noting that rulings on discovery matters are reviewed for an

abuse  of  discretion).     Moreover,  by  not,   even  then,

requesting a continuance during which the  evidence allegedly

withheld  could be  disclosed  and reviewed,  Phaneuf further

                             -10-


weakened  any  claim he  might  conceivably  have  had of  an

alleged discovery violation.   See United States  v. Tardiff,
                                                                        

969 F.2d 1283,  1286 (1st Cir. 1992) ("[E]ven  if a defendant

is faced at sentencing with information that he has not had a

chance  to  rebut .  .  .  we  think  it incumbent  upon  the

defendant to ask  for a continuance then and there."); United
                                                                         

States  v. Diaz-Villafane, 874  F.2d 43,  47 (1st  Cir.) ("We
                                     

find  it  of  decretory significance  that  defense  counsel,

although  seeking  unsuccessfully  to   block  the  testimony

entirely, never  moved  for a  continuance[;]   [i]t  is,  we

think, incumbent upon a party  faced with such a situation to

ask  explicitly that  the  court  grant  the time  needed  to

regroup, or  waive the point."),  cert. denied, 493  U.S. 862
                                                          

(1989).

          Phaneuf's  argument  that he  was  denied discovery

documents  is also weakened  by the fact  that much, although

not  all, of the  government's information that  was directly

related to  the loss  estimate was  information that  Phaneuf

himself knew about or could have obtained.  Phaneuf was aware

of the  financial institutions  which he  had defrauded,  and

could  have contacted  them  himself  to obtain  information.

This  is not  a situation  in which  most of  the information

relevant to sentencing was known only to the government.

          We find  no merit  in Phaneuf's  argument that  the

government's  purported failure  to disclose  evidence denied

                             -11-


him  his "constitutional  right not  to  be sentenced  on the

basis of invalid  information."  Diaz-Villafane, 874  F.2d at
                                                           

47 (quoting United States v. Fogel, 829 F.2d 77, 90 (D.C.Cir.
                                              

1987)).  

2. Amount of Loss
            2. Amount of Loss

          Phaneuf  claims that  the  district  court made  an

unreasonable determination of the amount of loss attributable

to  him  for sentencing  purposes.   A district  court's loss

estimate  is   a   factual  determination,   and   "a   party

dissatisfied with  the sentencing  court's quantification  of

the amount of loss in a particular case must go a long way to

demonstrate that the  finding is clearly erroneous."   United
                                                                         

States v. Rostoff, 53 F.3d 398, 407 (1st Cir. 1995); see also
                                                                         

United States v. Pavao, 948 F.2d 74, 77 (1st Cir. 1991).
                                  

          When determining the amount of  loss for sentencing

purposes, the  district court  "need only  make a  reasonable

estimate  of  the  loss,  given  the  available information."

U.S.S.G.   2F1.1, comment. (n.8);   see also Rostoff, 53 F.3d
                                                                

at 407 (stating  that "[c]ourts can, and  frequently do, deal

with rough estimates"  when calculating the amount  of loss).

The  district court  found  that  the  loss  attributable  to

Phaneuf  was "not less than $166,299.38"  which placed him in

the  $100,001 to $200,000  category necessitating a six-level

increase  in  base  offense  level.    In reaching  its  loss

                             -12-


determination,  the  court  considered:  (1)  Agent  Hoelen's

affidavit  describing  his  investigation  and  the  evidence

recovered from Phaneuf's home; (2) Phaneuf's signed statement

made to  Agent Hoelen in  September of 1990 stating  that the

amount  of loss  was  approximately  $176,000;  and  (3)  the

bankruptcy petition filed by Phaneuf in 1994 which discharged

many of his debts.5

          Phaneuf challenges  the court's  loss determination

as  not being  based on  "available  information" within  the

meaning of  U.S.S.G.    2F1.1 comment (n.8),  because it  was

derived in part  from Agent Hoelen's affidavit  and Phaneuf's

statement rather  than from  the underlying  evidence --  the

credit  cards,  receipts,  sales slips,  and  other documents

collected  during  the  investigation.6    This  argument  is

without merit. A  district court may  rely upon any  relevant

evidence,  including  hearsay, to  prove facts  at sentencing

provided the evidence  is sufficiently reliable.   U.S.S.G.  

6A1.3(a)   (A   sentencing  court   "may   consider  relevant

information without  regard to  its  admissibility under  the

                    
                                

5.  According  to  the  PSR,  Phaneuf  filed  for  Chapter  7
bankruptcy protection on February 8, 1994, and was discharged
from debts totalling $210,702 on May 31, 1994.

6.  In  his  challenge  to  the  loss  determination, Phaneuf
reiterates  his argument that  the government, by  failing to
disclose relevant  documents, prevented  him from  presenting
any evidence  regarding  the specific  loss  amount.   As  we
determined  in Part II.1  supra, this argument  fails because
                                           
Phaneuf was offered  an opportunity to inspect  the documents
in the government's possession.  

                             -13-


rules  of evidence  applicable at  trial,  provided that  the

information has sufficient indicia of  reliability to support

its probable  accuracy."); see also Rostoff, 53  F.3d at 407;
                                                       

Tardiff, 969 F.2d at 1287;  United States v. Figaro, 935 F.2d
                                                               

4, 8 (1st Cir. 1991).  Here, the district court relied on the

sworn  affidavit  of  an officer  who,  having  conducted the

investigation,  had  personal  knowledge  of  the  events  in

question.   This is the  type and  kind of evidence  on which

sentencing courts often  rely.   See e.g.,  United States  v.
                                                                     

Aymelek, 926 F.2d 64, 68 (1st Cir. 1991).  
                   

          Phaneuf  next   argues  that   he  made   "numerous

legitimate  payments" on his  credit card accounts  which may

have been included  in the court's total loss  amount.7  This

argument is equally unavailing.  Phaneuf has not provided any

evidence that  the legitimate payments were  improperly taken

                    
                                

7.  In making  this claim, Phaneuf relies on  an excerpt from
his  1990 statement  to  Agent  Hoelen  which  discusses  his
fraudulent practices:

          During  the  course  of  my  credit  card
          activity,  I  made   numerous  legitimate
                                                               
          payments   on   my   accounts,   however,
                              
          subsequent payments made on the following
          accounts  with  checks from  my  personal
          checking  account . .  . were made solely
          for the  purpose of making  full payments
          on the  accounts to create  either a zero
          balance  or  a  credit   balance  and  to
          increase credit  available to me.   After
          submitting  these checks  for payment,  I
          would place a stop payment on them.

(emphasis added).

                             -14-


into account  in determining  the loss amount.   Absent  such

evidence, we logically  conclude that  the loss  calculations

upon which the court relied were based on the amount owing to

various  institutions, rather  than  the  amount  paid.    In

addition, we note that both Agent Hoelen and  Phaneuf himself

(in his  1990 statement) attributed approximately $176,000 of

loss to Phaneuf's fraudulent activities. 
                                        

          We see  no error,  let alone  clear  error, in  the

district  court's   loss  determination.     The   government

introduced ample evidence upon which the court could conclude

that  Phaneuf was responsible for not less than $166,299.38.8

Moreover, Phaneuf himself admitted to the court at sentencing

that the loss  attributable to him was  within the sentencing

guideline category of  $100,001 to $200,000 requiring  a six-

level increase in his base offense level.9

                    
                                

8.  We also dismiss  Phaneuf's perfunctory argument  that the
district court erred in not holding a hearing on the issue of
loss  amount.   The  denial  of  an  evidentiary  hearing  at
sentencing is reviewable only for an abuse of discretion.  We
cannot find that the district court  abused its discretion in
not  granting   an  evidentiary  hearing   when  neither  the
prosecution  nor  the  defense   requested  such  a  hearing.
Tardiff, 969 F.2d at 1286 ("[T]he failure to ask the district
                   
court  to  convene an  evidentiary hearing  ordinarily spells
defeat  for a contention  that one should  have been held.");
see also United  States v. Mala, 7 F.3d  1058, 1062 (1st Cir.
                                           
1993), cert. denied, 114 S.Ct. 1839 (1994). 
                               

9.  Phaneuf stated at sentencing:

          The amounts of money, at this point, I am
          very confused as  to what it is.  I'm not
          even going to  argue it.  I  guess it has
          to be  somewhere in  the range  of my  --

                             -15-


3. Special Condition of Release
            3. Special Condition of Release

          Phaneuf  argues  that the  district court  erred in

imposing a special condition of supervised  release requiring

prior approval  from the probation  department for  purchases

over  $100.     We  ordinarily  review  a   district  court's

imposition of  a special  release condition  for an abuse  of

discretion. See United States v. Thurlow, 44 F.3d 46, 47 (1st
                                                    

Cir.), cert.  denied, 115  S.Ct. 1987  (1995).   However,  as
                                

Phaneuf   did  not  object   to  the  special   condition  at

sentencing,  our review is for plain error. See United States
                                                                         

v. Peppe, 80 F.3d 19, 22 (1st Cir. 1996).
                    

          The  court, adopting the recommendation in the PSR,

imposed the  following special  conditions on  Phaneuf to  be

observed during his three-year period of supervised release:

          The  defendant  shall  participate  in  a
          mental health counselling  program at the
          direction of the probation department.  
          The  defendant  shall  not  open any  new
          lines of credit without prior approval of
          the probation department.
          The   defendant   shall  not   make   any
          purchases   over   $100   without   prior
          approval of the probation department.
          The defendant shall provide the probation
          department with  any requested  financial
          information and records.

A sentencing  judge has  broad discretion  to impose  special

conditions  of release that  are "reasonably related"  to (1)

the defendant's offense, history and characteristics; (2) the

                    
                                

          within the hundred  thousand and 200,000.
          So I am not really going to argue it.

                             -16-


need for adequate deterrence; and (3) the need to protect the

public from further crimes of  the defendant.10  See U.S.S.G.
                                                                

  5D1.3(b)  and  the corresponding  statutory provisions,  18

U.S.C.    3553(a)(2), 3583(d).  

          Phaneuf challenges  the special  condition limiting

his purchasing power, arguing that "[t]he record is silent on

a  relationship  between  spending  $100.01,  accepting  pre-

                    
                                

10.  See,   e.g.,  Peppe,  80  F.3d  at  23  (condition  that
                                    
defendant   could  not  incur  new  credit  charges  or  open
additional  lines  of   credit  without  prior   approval  of
probation  department  permissible as  an  effort  to monitor
defendant's use of  funds where defendant had  been convicted
of extortionate extension  of credit); Thurlow, 44 F.3d at 47
                                                          
(condition that defendant convicted of theft-related offenses
abstain  from   consuming  alcohol  permissible   because  of
defendant's  history  of  substance abuse  and  use  of crime
proceeds  to purchase  alcohol on several  occasions); United
                                                                         
States  v. Johnson,  998 F.2d  696, 699  (9th Cir.  1993) (no
                              
abuse of discretion to impose, along with other restrictions,
condition  requiring that defendant  abstain from alcohol use
where defendant had  history of substance abuse and  had been
involved  in  alcohol-related  incidents);  United States  v.
                                                                     
Chinske, 978 F.2d  557, 560 (9th Cir.  1992) (conditions that
                   
defendant own no firearms, attend a substance abuse treatment
program, and  submit to searches of his  person, vehicle, and
residence related to  offense of maintaining a  residence for
the  cultivation of marijuana);  United States v.  Sharp, 931
                                                                    
F.2d  1310,  1311  (8th   Cir.  1991)  (condition  subjecting
defendant  to   warrantless  searches  to   determine  if  he
possessed alcohol or drugs permitted when defendant convicted
of narcotics violation);  cf. United States v. Abrar, 58 F.3d
                                                                
43,  46-47 (2d Cir.  1995) (condition requiring  defendant to
pay  back personal loans unrelated to crime constitutes plain
error); United  States v.  Prendergast, 979  F.2d 1289,  1293
                                                  
(8th Cir. 1992) (conditions  requiring defendant convicted of
wire fraud  to abstain from  consuming alcohol and  drugs, to
undergo drug tests, and to be subject to warrantless searches
of his premises, vehicle, or person, impermissible in absence
of  "evidence   indicating  that  [defendant]   suffers  from
alcoholism or that the use  of alcohol in any way contributed
to  the   commission  of  the   offense  for  which   he  was
sentenced").

                             -17-


approved credit cards,  and perpetrating a fraud on  a bank."

While it  would have  been helpful had  the court  stated its

rationale,  we can perceive  a sufficient  connection between

the restriction and Phaneuf's criminal conduct for the former

to pass muster under the plain error standard.  

          As  Phaneuf  concedes,  he has  a  long  history of

mental  health problems11 and,  at times, has  been unable to

control his spending.   The nature of the imposed  conditions

strongly suggests that  the district  court viewed  Phaneuf's

credit card crimes as stemming from a total lack of financial

discipline and  a compulsion to  make excessive expenditures.

The court could  rationally have concluded that  oversight of

expenditures  over  $100   would  help  deter  the   kind  of

overspending and  debt that might  once more lead  Phaneuf to

undertake fraudulent schemes.12

          To  overturn  the condition  under the  plain error

standard, Phaneuf  must show an obvious and clear error under

                    
                                

11.  Phaneuf was  hospitalized as an adolescent  for "conduct
disorder" and "unsocialized aggressive" behavior and has been
treated for  behavioral problems  on and  off throughout  his
life.

12.  Another   justification  of   the  limit   on  Phaneuf's
purchasing  power  stems  from  his  outstanding  restitution
obligation  to  pay  $20,400 to  BNE.    The  court's special
condition will help  to ensure that Phaneuf  satisfies to the
best  of his ability  his restitution obligation  rather than
spending  his   money  on   other  things.     Because   this
justification  is not attributable  to a factor  set forth in
U.S.S.G.    5D1.3(b) or the corresponding statutes, 18 U.S.C.
   3553,  3583, it  does not  deserve conclusive  weight, but
still is a part of the total picture.

                             -18-


current   law   that   affected   his   substantial   rights.

Fed.R.Crim.P.  52(b); United States  v. Olano, 507  U.S. 725,
                                                         

732-35 (1993); United States v. Laboy-Delgado, 84 F.3d 22, 31
                                                         

(1st Cir. 1996).  Even  if plain error exists, Olano suggests
                                                                

that courts should  not exercise their discretion  to correct

the  error  unless  it  "seriously  affect[s]  the  fairness,

integrity  or  public  reputation of  judicial  proceedings."

Olano, 507  U.S. at 736  (quoting United States  v. Atkinson,
                                                                        

297 U.S. 157, 160 (1936)).  In this case, even if we  were to

assume, arguendo, that  the district court went too  far, the
                            

error was not  "obvious and clear" nor does  it implicate the

fairness or integrity of judicial proceedings.  The condition

limiting Phaneuf's  purchasing power is effective only during

his  period   of  supervised   release,  does   not  prohibit

expenditures of over $100 but merely requires pre-approval of

the  probation department,  and bears  at  least an  arguable

relationship to  checking  the  irresponsible  behavior  that

underlay Phaneuf's crimes.

4. Restitution
            4. Restitution

          Phaneuf argues  that the sentencing court  erred in

ordering restitution in  the amount of $20,400 to  be paid to

BNE,  pursuant to  the  Victim  and  Witness  Protection  Act

                             -19-


(VWPA), 18 U.S.C.     3663-3664 (1995).13  Our  review is for

plain  error as  Phaneuf did  not object  to the  restitution

order at sentencing.  See  United States v. Springer, 28 F.3d
                                                                

236, 237, 239 (1st Cir. 1994).

          A  sentencing   court   is   permitted   to   order

restitution  "to any victim."   18 U.S.C.   3663(a) (1995).14

In ordering restitution the court is required to consider:

          the  amount  of  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.

18 U.S.C.   3664(a) (1995).15

          Phaneuf  claims  that   the  restitution  order  is

contrary to law for two  reasons.  First, he asserts that  he

is incapable  of making  restitution, citing  his history  of

mental  disorders,  his lack  of  professional  training, his

virtually non-existent  employment  record, and  his lack  of

assets.  Phaneuf predicts that he will likely be incarcerated

                    
                                

13.  The VWPA,  18 U.S.C.     3663-3664, was  amended by  the
Antiterrorism and Effective  Death Penalty Act of  1996, Pub.
L. No. 104-132,     205, 206, 110 Stat. 1230, 1232  (Apr. 24,
1996).   However,  the  1996  amendments  are  effective  for
sentencing  proceedings  in  cases  in  which   defendant  is
convicted on or after April 24,  1996.  See Pub. L. No.  104-
                                                       
132,   211, 110 Stat. 1232.  Therefore, the pre-1996 version,
cited  throughout this section of the opinion, is controlling
in Phaneuf's case.

14.  See supra, note 13.
                          

15.  See supra, note 13.
                          

                             -20-


again as a result of  being unable to satisfy the restitution

order.    We  find  Phaneuf's  argument  unpersuasive.    The

district court  was not  required to  make explicit  findings

regarding   Phaneuf's   ability   to  pay   before   ordering

restitution,  so long as it considered  the factors set forth

in   3664(a).   See United  States v. Newman,  49 F.3d 1,  10
                                                        

(1st Cir. 1995); Springer, 28 F.3d at 239.  Moreover, Phaneuf
                                     

need not  be able to  pay the restitution  award immediately.

See  United States  v. Lombardi,  5 F.3d  568, 573  (1st Cir.
                                           

1993).   Restitution awards may  be imposed in order  to make

victims whole should the defendant  become able to pay in the

future.  See Newman,  49 F.3d  at  10-11.   Here, given  that
                               

Phaneuf  is a  26-year-old high  school graduate,  it is  not

unforeseeable that he may earn some income when released from

prison.   Moreover, Phaneuf can  later seek a modification of

the restitution order in the  sentencing court if he can show

that it is too onerous.  See Springer, 28 F.3d at 239 n.2.
                                                 

          Second,  Phaneuf  argues  that  the district  court

erred in ordering  restitution to be paid to  BNE because, at

the  time  of sentencing,  BNE  had  failed and  the  Federal

Deposit Insurance Corporation ("FDIC") had been appointed its

receiver.   Phaneuf  further  argues  that  the  FDIC,  which

succeeded to the assets and liabilities of the failed bank by

operation of  law, see  12 U.S.C.    1821(d)(2)(A), is  not a
                                  

                             -21-


proper  "victim" entitled  to restitution  under the  VWPA.16

Phaneuf argues that the letter he received from the probation

department  instructing him to  make his restitution payments

to  the  FDIC  was  improper.   He  contends  that  an  order

instructing him to  pay an entity other than BNE  had to come

from  the  court  rather   than  the  probation   department.

According to Phaneuf, restitution can only be paid to someone

other  than the  victim, in  this case  BNE, pursuant  to the

following provision of the VWPA:

          the  court   may,  in  the   interest  of
          justice, order restitution  to any person
          who has  compensated the victim  for such
          loss to the extent  that such person paid
          the compensation.

18 U.S.C.    3663(e)(1)  (1995).17  Since  the court  did not

award restitution  to the  FDIC pursuant  to this  provision,

Phaneuf argues that the restitution order was improper.

          We  find no  plain  error  either  in  the  court's

restitution  order   or   in   the   probation   department's

instructions to make restitution  payments to the FDIC.   BNE

was in fact a victim of  Phaneuf's fraud when committed.  The

failure  of  BNE and  the  appointment  of  the FDIC  as  its

receiver had  not been brought to the  court's attention when

                    
                                

16.  Defendant  also contends  that his  Mastercard debts  of
$20,400 have subsequently been sold to Citibank by  the FDIC.
However, there  is no evidence  of this in the  record before
us.

17.  See supra, note 13.
                          

                             -22-


it  entered its order,  hence the court  order understandably

named BNE.  Given that the  FDIC "steps into the shoes" of  a

failed bank, O'Melveny & Myers  v. FDIC, 114 S.Ct. 2048, 2054
                                                   

(1994), we see no reason  why the probation department should

not substitute the  FDIC for the failed bank  as the "victim"

of  Phaneuf's fraud.  See   United States v. Haddock, 50 F.3d
                                                                

835, 841 (10th Cir. 1995) (holding that restitution was due a

bank that  purchased one  of the banks  involved in  the loan

transactions  for  which  defendant  was  convicted);  United
                                                                         

States v.  Smith,  944  F.2d  618,  621-22  (9th  Cir.  1991)
                            

(holding that the VWPA "is  intended to encompass both direct

and indirect victims of criminal acts" and therefore allowing

the FSLIC to receive restitution), cert. denied, 503 U.S. 951
                                                           

(1992); United  States v. Rochester,  898 F.2d  971, 980  n.7
                                               

(5th Cir. 1990)  (holding that the  district court may  award

the FSLIC  restitution  under the  VWPA  when the  FSLIC  has

acquired the claims of an insolvent savings and loan that was

the victim  of defendant's  crime).    Needless to  say, such

matters remain  subject to  the  district court's  continuing

oversight  and  control,  but  we see  no  error  subject  to

appellate correction at this juncture.

                             III.
                                         III.

          For the foregoing reasons, the judgment and

sentence of the district court is affirmed.
                                              affirmed.
                                                       

                             -23-

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