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entitled 'Criminal Debt: Court-Ordered Restitution Amounts Far Exceed 
Likely Collections for the Crime Victims in Selected Financial Fraud 
Cases' which was released on March 3, 2005.

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Report to the Honorable Byron L. Dorgan, U.S. Senate: 

January 2005: 

Criminal Debt: 

Court-Ordered Restitution Amounts Far Exceed Likely Collections for the 
Crime Victims in Selected Financial Fraud Cases: 

GAO-05-80: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-05-80, a report to the Honorable Byron L. Dorgan, 
U.S. Senate: 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

In the wake of a recent wave of corporate scandals, Senator Byron L. 
Dorgan noted that the American taxpayers have a right to expect that 
those who have committed corporate fraud and other criminal wrongdoing 
will be punished, and that the federal government will make every 
effort to recover assets held by the offenders. Recognizing that GAO 
previously reported on deficiencies in the Department of Justice’s 
(Justice) criminal debt collection processes (GAO-01-664), Senator 
Dorgan asked GAO to review selected criminal white-collar financial 
fraud cases for which large restitution debts have been established but 
little has been collected. Specifically, GAO was asked to determine (1) 
the status of Justice’s efforts to collect on the outstanding debt, (2) 
the prospects for future collections, and (3) whether specific problems 
have affected Justice’s ability to collect the debt. 

What GAO Found: 

The court-ordered restitution for the five selected white-collar 
financial fraud criminal debt cases GAO reviewed far exceeded amounts 
likely to be collected and paid to the victims. These offenders, who 
had either been high-ranking officials of companies or operated their 
own business, pled guilty to crimes for which the courts ordered 
restitution totaling about $568 million to victims. As of the 
completion of GAO’s fieldwork, which was up to 8 years after the 
offenders’ sentencing, court records showed that amounts collected for 
the victims in these cases totaled only about $40 million, or about 7 
percent of the ordered restitution. 

At some point prior to the judgments establishing the restitution 
debts, each of the five offenders either reported having wealth or 
significant financial resources to the courts or to Justice, or there 
were indicators of such. However, following the judgments, the 
offenders claimed that they were not financially able to pay full 
restitution to their victims. Justice’s Financial Litigation Units 
(FLU) that were responsible for collection performed certain activities 
to collect the debts after the judgments, but the debts had not been 
significantly reduced as a result of the FLUs’ identification and 
liquidation of additional assets of the offenders. 

The FLUs’ prospects are not good for collecting additional restitution 
amounts on these cases. A major problem hindering the FLUs’ ability to 
collect restitution debt in the selected cases was the long time 
intervals between the criminal offense and the judgment. Court records 
show that 5 to 13 years passed between when the offenders began to 
engage in the criminal activity for which they were sentenced and the 
date of their judgments. For each of the selected cases, by the time 
the court rendered the judgment establishing the restitution debt, 
certain of the offenders’ assets had been, among other things, 
transferred to family members or others, involved in forfeiture 
actions, subject to bankruptcy, or moved to a foreign account. In 
addition, one of the selected cases involved an offender who was 
jointly and severally liable for the debt with another offender who had 
been deported. Justice acknowledged that such dispositions or 
circumstances are not uncommon and create major debt collection 
challenges for the FLUs. Moreover, there were minimal, if any, apparent 
negative consequences to these offenders for not paying their 
restitution debts.

Recently, to further implementation of a related recommendation made in 
2001 by GAO, the Congress directed the Attorney General to develop a 
strategic plan with certain other federal agencies to improve criminal 
debt collection. Given the significant upward trend in outstanding 
criminal debt and the difficulty experienced by Justice in collecting 
criminal restitution debt, it is important that Justice include in such 
a plan legislative initiatives, operational initiatives, or both to 
enhance the federal government’s capacity to collect restitution for 
victims of financial crimes. Justice’s comments on a draft of this 
report are consistent with this conclusion.

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that the Attorney General (1) include in the criminal 
debt strategic plan, which is called for by recent congressional 
action, legislative initiatives, operational initiatives, or both that 
are directed toward maximizing opportunities for collection; and (2) 
report annually in Justice’s Accountability Report on the progress 
toward developing and implementing the strategic plan. Justice stated 
it is taking steps to develop a strategic plan to improve criminal debt 
collection.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-80.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Gary T. Engel at (202) 
512-3406 or engelg@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Scope and Methodology: 

Restitution Amounts Far Exceed Likely Collections for the Crime 
Victims: 

Recent Congressional Action: 

Conclusion: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendixes: 

Appendix I: Comments from the Department of Justice: 

GAO's Comments: 

Appendix II: Staff Acknowledgments: 

Letter January 31, 2005: 

The Honorable Byron L. Dorgan: 
United States Senate: 

Dear Senator Dorgan: 

In March 2004, we reported that the Department of Justice's (Justice) 
unaudited records indicated that the total amount of outstanding 
criminal debt had more than quadrupled over a 6-year period, growing 
from about $6 billion as of September 30, 1996, to almost $25 billion 
as of September 30, 2002.[Footnote 1] This significant upward trend 
started with enactment of the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act of 1996 
(MVRA).[Footnote 2] One feature of that law substantially increased the 
restitution amounts the courts were required to order for certain 
offenses.[Footnote 3] Our 2004 report included detailed information on 
the reported amount and growth of criminal debt for fiscal years 2000 
through 2002, including specific amounts related to white-collar 
financial fraud.[Footnote 4] As discussed in that report, Justice's 
unaudited records indicate that for each of these 3 fiscal years, about 
two-thirds or more of criminal debt was related to white-collar 
financial fraud. About 80 percent of the white-collar financial fraud 
debt as of September 30, 2002, was categorized as nonfederal 
restitution, which is criminal debt owed to other than the federal 
government and for which Justice has a significant responsibility to 
collect on behalf of crime victims.

We noted in our earlier July 2001 report,and reaffirmed in our 2004 
report,[Footnote 5] that the collection of outstanding criminal debt is 
inherently difficult due to a number of factors, including the nature 
of the debt, in that it involves criminals who may be incarcerated, may 
have been deported, or may have minimal earning capacity; the MVRA 
requirement that the assessment of restitution be based on actual loss 
and not on an offender's ability to pay; and the significant amount of 
time that may pass between offenders' arrest and sentencing, thus 
affording opportunities for offenders to hide fraudulently obtained 
assets in offshore accounts, shell corporations, family members' names 
and accounts, or other ways. Our 2001 report also noted as contributing 
factors to the growth of reported uncollected criminal debt Justice's 
inadequate policies and procedures for collecting criminal debt, lack 
of adherence to established criminal debt collection procedures in 
certain judicial districts, and Justice's insufficient coordination 
with other entities involved in the collection of criminal debt.

In the wake of a recent wave of corporate scandals, you noted that the 
American taxpayers have a right to expect that those who have committed 
corporate fraud and other criminal or civil wrongdoing will be 
punished, and that the federal government will make every effort to 
recover assets and the ill-gotten gains held by such offenders. 
Recognizing that we previously reported on specific deficiencies in 
Justice's and other federal agencies' criminal debt collection 
processes and had made recommendations to improve collections, you 
asked us to study several specific criminal restitution debt cases to 
shed additional light on the difficulties involved in attempting to 
collect restitution for victims of crime. Specifically, for selected 
criminal white-collar financial fraud cases for which large restitution 
debts have been established but little has been collected, you asked 
that we determine (1) the status of Justice's efforts to collect on the 
outstanding debt, (2) the prospects for future collections, and (3) 
whether specific problems have affected Justice's ability to collect 
the debt.

Results in Brief: 

The restitution assessed the offenders by the courts for the five 
selected criminal debt cases we reviewed that involved white-collar 
financial fraud far exceeds amounts that have been and are likely to be 
collected and paid to victims of the crimes. Taken together, the five 
offenders were ordered by the courts to pay restitution totaling about 
$568 million to their victims, many of whom were corporate shareholders 
or small investors. The courts also ordered four of the offenders to 
serve prison terms ranging from 1 to 5 years and placed one offender on 
several years of probation. The offenders, who had either been high- 
ranking officials of companies or operated their own business, pled 
guilty to various white-collar crimes. As of June 2004, which was 
several years after the offenders were sentenced, court records showed 
that amounts collected for the victims totaled only about $40 million, 
or about 7 percent of the ordered restitution.[Footnote 6]

These limited collections resulted predominantly from asset forfeiture 
actions[Footnote 7] or from payments made prior to the offenders' 
sentencing. For each of these selected cases, Justice's Financial 
Litigation Units (FLU), which are responsible for criminal debt 
collection, performed certain activities to attempt to collect the 
debts after the judgments. However, the FLUs were not able to identify 
and liquidate additional assets of the offenders to significantly 
reduce the debts.

Based on information available to us, the FLUs' prospects are not good 
for collecting additional restitution amounts on these cases. Each of 
the offenders, at some point prior to the judgments establishing the 
restitution debts, either reported having wealth or significant 
financial resources to the courts or to Justice, or there were 
indicators that this was the case. However, following the judgments, 
the offenders claimed that they were not financially able to pay full 
restitution to their victims. At the time of our debt file reviews, the 
limited payments the offenders had made or were then making will do 
little to significantly reduce the outstanding balance of the 
restitution debts as initially set by the courts.

For the selected cases, we also found that there were minimal, if any, 
apparent negative consequences to the offenders for not paying their 
restitution debts. Court and public records indicated that each of the 
offenders' lifestyles was, at a minimum, comfortable. Moreover, it is 
not a crime to willfully fail to pay restitution debt. A court may 
revoke or modify the terms and conditions of probation or supervised 
release for an offender's failure to pay restitution;[Footnote 8] 
however, these are of little consequence once the offender has 
successfully completed the term of probation or supervised release, 
because at that point, the offender cannot be sent to prison for 
failure to pay a restitution debt.

A major problem hindering the FLUs' ability to collect restitution debt 
in the selected cases was the long time intervals between the criminal 
offense and the judgment, a situation that Justice acknowledged is 
typical. Court records show that 5 to 13 years passed between when the 
offenders selected in our review began to engage in the criminal 
activity for which they were sentenced and the date of their judgments. 
Justice stated that during such intervals, criminals engaged in 
fraudulent enterprises commonly dissipate their criminal gains quickly 
and in a manner that cannot be easily traced, such as expending gains 
on intangible and excess "lifestyle" expenses, including travel, 
entertainment, gambling, and gifts. In addition, other dispositions and 
circumstances involving the offenders' assets or the offenders occur 
that create major debt collection challenges for the FLUs. For example, 
we found that for the selected cases, by the time the court rendered 
the judgment establishing the restitution debt, certain of the 
offenders' assets had been, among other things, transferred through 
legal or potentially fraudulent means to family members or others, 
involved in forfeiture actions, subject to bankruptcy, or moved to a 
foreign account. In addition, one of our selected cases involved an 
offender who was jointly and severally liable for the debt with another 
offender who had been deported. Justice acknowledged that such 
dispositions or circumstances are not uncommon.

Given the significant upward trend in outstanding criminal debt and the 
difficulty experienced by Justice in collecting criminal restitution 
debt, which we have previously reported and which is exemplified by the 
selected cases discussed in this report, it is important that Justice 
determine how to better maximize opportunities for making offenders' 
assets available to pay the offenders' victims. In our view, Justice 
can best accomplish this by addressing our 2001 recommendation that it 
work with other involved federal agencies to develop a strategic plan 
to improve criminal debt collection processes and establish an 
effective coordination mechanism among all such entities. As stated in 
our 2001 report, effective and efficient criminal debt collection 
hinges on the ability of the entities involved to work together in 
assessing and collecting criminal debt, and prompt action is essential 
for maximizing potential collections.[Footnote 9]

Our current review of the five selected white-collar financial fraud 
debts, as supported by our previous work on criminal debt collection, 
strongly supports the need for Justice, as the agency primarily 
responsible for collecting criminal debt, to take the lead in promptly 
addressing and implementing our 2001 recommendation that Justice work 
with the Administrative Office of the United States Courts (AOUSC), the 
Office of Management and Budget (OMB), and the Department of the 
Treasury (Treasury) to develop a strategic plan that would improve 
interagency processes and coordination with regard to criminal debt 
collection activities, as well as address managing, accounting for, and 
reporting criminal debt. Until such a strategic plan is developed and 
effectively implemented, which could involve legislative as well as 
operational initiatives, the effectiveness of criminal restitution as a 
punitive tool may be diminished, and Justice will lack adequate 
assurance that offenders are not benefiting from ill-gotten gains and 
that innocent victims are being compensated for their losses to the 
fullest extent possible.

The conference report accompanying the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 
2005, Public Law No. 108-447, which was signed into law on December 8, 
2004, included language calling for the Attorney General to take the 
lead in such a coordinated effort. In tandem with this call for action, 
we recommend that Justice consider a broad range of legislative and 
operational initiatives for enhancing the federal government's capacity 
to collect restitution for victims of financial crimes for inclusion in 
the strategic plan.

As discussed in the "Agency Comments and Our Evaluation" section at the 
end of this report, Justice's comments on a draft of this report, which 
are reprinted in appendix I, are consistent with our conclusion that 
given such poor prospects for collection of restitution debt for our 
five selected cases, as well as the overall low collection rates for 
criminal debt we have previously reported, it is important that Justice 
determine how to better maximize opportunities to make offenders' 
assets available to pay crime victims. In its comments, Justice stated 
that consistent with our recommendation and the conference report that 
accompanied the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2005, Justice is in 
the process of organizing an interagency joint task force to develop a 
strategic plan for improving criminal debt collection. Justice did not, 
however, specifically comment on our recommendations.

Background: 

Justice is responsible for collecting criminal debt and has delegated 
operating responsibility to its FLUs within all of Justice's U.S. 
Attorneys' Offices (USAO).[Footnote 10] Justice's Executive Office for 
United States Attorneys (EOUSA) provides administrative and operational 
support, including support required for debt collection, to the USAOs. 
According to Justice, the FLUs typically become involved in the 
criminal debt collection process after the judgment, which occurs when 
an offender is convicted and a judge orders the offender to pay a fine 
or restitution. The U.S. Courts and their probation offices may also 
assist in collecting moneys owed. AOUSC provides national standards and 
promulgates administrative and management guidance, including standards 
and guidance required for debt collection, to the various U.S. judicial 
districts.

In July 2001, we reported on the growth of uncollected criminal debt 
through fiscal year 1999. We noted that although some of the key 
factors that contributed to the increasing amount of criminal debt were 
beyond Justice's control, certain of Justice's criminal debt collection 
processes were inadequate.[Footnote 11] Accordingly, in the 2001 
report, we made 14 recommendations to Justice to improve the 
effectiveness and efficiency of its criminal debt collection 
processes.[Footnote 12]

In our March 2004 report, we discussed the extent to which Justice had 
acted on our previous recommendations to it to improve criminal debt 
collection. Our follow-up work on Justice's efforts to implement our 
2001 recommendations showed that it had completed actions on 7 of the 
14 recommendations, most of which were completed about 2 years after we 
made the recommendations, and had efforts under way to address 6 other 
recommendations. We noted that because many of these recommendations 
largely focused on establishing policies and procedures, it is 
important that they be effectively implemented once they are 
established, and it will likely take some time for collection results 
to be realized from full implementation. However, efforts to implement 
the recommendation that we considered the most critical had not 
progressed--namely for Justice to participate in a multiagency effort 
to develop a unified strategy for criminal debt collection. 
Specifically, we reported that Justice had not yet worked with other 
agencies, including AOUSC, OMB, and Treasury, to implement a key 
recommendation to work as a joint task force to develop a strategic 
plan that addresses managing, accounting for, and reporting criminal 
debt. We concluded that the long-standing problems in the collection of 
outstanding criminal debt--including fragmented processes and lack of 
coordination--continued because there is no united strategy among the 
major entities involved with the collection process.[Footnote 13]

Scope and Methodology: 

Our case study review, on which the results described in this report 
are based, focused on a nonrepresentative selection of five criminal 
white-collar financial fraud debts that Justice reported outstanding as 
of September 30, 2002, each with a judgment prior to fiscal year 2001 
that assessed the offender millions of dollars of restitution. We 
selected debts involving offenders who were not currently in prison and 
for which the offenders had paid a relatively small amount of the 
outstanding restitution amounts as of September 30, 2002. Also, our 
review only involved selected cases for which we could clearly identify 
the lead debtor in court and Justice records.

We obtained sufficient information to address our three reporting 
objectives; however, we were not provided all of the details pertaining 
to each of the five selected cases and thus cannot be assured that 
there was not additional relevant information. Because Justice still 
considers these cases to be open law enforcement cases for collection 
purposes, the information Justice provided for each case was limited 
primarily to what was included in its debt collection file minus 
personal identifiers, such as the names of the offenders, their 
addresses, and their Social Security numbers. Therefore, we are not 
providing a comprehensive account of any particular case.

For each selected debt, we reviewed Justice's debt collection file or 
files, minus all personal identifiers. We interviewed appropriate 
officials from Justice's EOUSA and the responsible FLUs concerning 
actions taken to collect the debt, obstacles to collection, and 
prospects for future collections. To supplement or attempt to further 
corroborate the information obtained from Justice for each case, we 
obtained and reviewed pertinent information about the selected debts 
and debtors from certain records made available by the courts and from 
public sources available through the Internet, such as property 
records. Also, for reporting purposes, rather than highlighting 
specific case studies in detail, our discussions focus on specific 
types of debt collection problems identified during this review, many 
of which we were aware of from our previous work. This was done to 
ensure sufficient privacy of those involved in our selected cases, and 
in consideration of Justice's concern that the release of information 
on open cases could hinder the department's efforts to collect the 
debts.

We conducted our review from November 2003 through June 2004 in 
accordance with U.S. generally accepted government auditing standards.

We received written comments signed by the Director, Executive Office 
for United States Attorneys, on a draft of this report. Justice's 
comments are reprinted in appendix I, and technical comments received 
from both Justice and AOUSC have been addressed as appropriate in this 
report.

Restitution Amounts Far Exceed Likely Collections for the Crime 
Victims: 

The court-ordered restitution amounts assessed the offenders for the 
five selected criminal debt cases far exceed likely collections for the 
crime victims. The offenders' restitution amounts totaled about $568 
million. However, according to court records, only about $40 million, 
or about 7 percent of the total, had been collected several years after 
the courts sentenced each of the offenders. The vast majority of these 
collections resulted from asset forfeiture actions and from payments 
that were made before the offenders were sent to prison or placed on 
probation. We found that the FLUs, which typically become involved in 
criminal debt collection after the debt is established at judgment, 
performed certain debt collection activities; however, they were not 
able to reduce the restitution debts significantly by identifying and 
liquidating additional assets of the offenders to pay the victims. 
Moreover, based on information available to us, the FLUs' prospects are 
not good for collecting additional restitution amounts from the 
offenders to compensate their victims to the extent initially ordered 
by the courts. Following the judgments, despite indications of prior 
wealth or possession of significant financial resources, the offenders 
claimed to have limited financial means to pay their restitution debts. 
Further, there were minimal, if any, apparent negative consequences to 
the offenders for not paying such debts.

A major debt collection problem for the FLUs for the selected cases was 
that up to 13 years had passed between the offenders' criminal 
activities and the related judgments. By the time the FLUs became 
involved in trying to collect the restitution debts, the offenders' 
assets had been, among other things, transferred to family members or 
others, forfeited to the government, or involved in bankruptcy. Justice 
acknowledged to us that the long intervals between criminal activity 
and the related judgments, and certain dispositions and circumstances 
involving the offenders' assets or the offenders that take place during 
such intervals, make collection difficult for many criminal restitution 
debt cases.

Most of the Court-Ordered Restitution Has Not Been Collected: 

As previously mentioned, the offenders' restitution amounts for the 
selected cases totaled about $568 million. Restitution amounts for 
individual cases ranged from over $7 million to more than $400 million. 
Court records show that each of the offenders, who pled guilty to 
engaging in criminal activity, had been high-ranking officials of 
companies and lending institutions or operated their own business. The 
crimes in these cases consisted of fraudulently manipulating company 
sales figures and inventories to increase stock values or to obtain 
loans, engaging in schemes to convert business loan proceeds for 
personal use, selling securities to private investors under false 
pretenses, and illegally sharing in loan proceeds from a federally 
insured financial institution. The victims of the crimes involving the 
offenders of our selected cases included corporate shareholders, large 
lending institutions, and small investors--many of whom were elderly 
and had been harmed financially. In addition to the court-ordered 
restitution, prison terms ordered by the courts for four of these 
offenders ranged from 1 to 5 years followed by 3 to 5 years of 
supervised release. One offender received several years of probation 
rather than prison. As of June 2004, all of the offenders were out of 
prison or off probation, but three offenders were still on supervised 
release.

As noted earlier, only about $40 million, or about 7 percent of the 
total restitution for the selected cases had been paid as of June 2004, 
which was from about 4 to 8 years after the courts sentenced each of 
the offenders. Collections for the individual cases ranged from less 
than 1 percent to about 10 percent of the restitution amounts owed. 
About $24 million of these collections resulted from asset forfeiture 
actions, and over $11 million from payments that were made prior to the 
offenders' sentencing. After the judgments were rendered, the FLUs 
performed certain debt collection activities, such as filing liens on 
the offenders' real property; issuing restraining notices forbidding 
the transfer or disposition of assets; performing title searches; and 
requesting, obtaining, and reviewing financial information from the 
offenders.[Footnote 14] Performing such activities did not enable the 
FLUs to further reduce the restitution debts significantly by 
identifying and liquidating additional assets of the offenders.

Prospects Are Not Good for Collecting Additional Restitution to Fully 
Compensate the Crime Victims: 

For the selected cases, based on information available to us, the FLUs 
are not likely to collect sufficient additional restitution amounts 
from the offenders to compensate their victims to the extent initially 
ordered by the courts. At some point prior to the judgments 
establishing the restitution debts, each of the offenders either 
reported having wealth or significant financial resources to the courts 
or to Justice, or there were indicators of such. Specifically, prior to 
sentencing, one or more of the offenders reported earning millions of 
dollars in annual gross income, having millions of dollars in net 
worth, or spending thousands of dollars per month on clothing and 
entertainment. In addition, court records indicate that certain of the 
offenders converted millions of dollars of fraudulently obtained assets 
for personal use, established businesses for their children, or held 
residential properties worth millions that were located in upscale 
communities. In spite of the reported wealth or financial resources or 
indications of such, following their judgments, each of the offenders 
reported to either the courts or Justice a modest income or net worth 
and claimed to have limited financial means to pay restitution debt. 
Further, at the time of our file reviews, three of the offenders were 
on supervised release and making monthly or yearly payments set by the 
courts that will do little to reduce the outstanding balance of their 
restitution debts, one offender had stopped making routine monthly 
payments after supervised release terminated, and one offender had 
negotiated a settlement with the crime victim, which was approved by 
Justice and the court, for far less than the initial court-ordered 
restitution.

There were minimal, if any, apparent negative consequences to the 
offenders for not paying restitution to their victims as initially 
ordered by the courts. First, information obtained from the courts and 
public documents indicated that the offenders were living in reasonable 
comfort. For example, one offender and his immediate family owned and, 
at the time of our review, resided in a property worth millions of 
dollars; another offender owns a home worth over $1 million; and two 
offenders took overseas trips while on supervised release. Second, 
after probation or supervised release has expired, the offenders cannot 
be sent to prison for failure to pay their restitution debts. According 
to Justice, although it does not apply to restitution, the willful 
failure to pay a fine is a crime of criminal default, which can result 
in the offender's receiving an additional fine of not more than twice 
the amount of the unpaid balance of the fine or $10,000, whichever is 
greater; being imprisoned not more than 1 year; or both. However, there 
is no such similar crime for willful failure to pay restitution. A 
court may revoke or modify the terms and conditions of probation or 
supervised release for an offender's failure to pay restitution. 
However, these are of little consequence once the offender has 
successfully completed the term of probation or supervised release.

Long Intervals between the Offenders' Criminal Activities and Their 
Judgments Create Major Debt Collection Challenges for the FLUs: 

For the selected cases, according to records provided by the courts, at 
least 5 to 13 years passed between when the offenders began to engage 
in the criminal activities for which they were sentenced and the date 
of their judgments. We identified and the FLUs acknowledged that by the 
time the courts rendered the judgments establishing the restitution 
debts, certain of the offenders' assets were, among other things, 
transferred through legal or potentially fraudulent means to a family 
member or others, involved in forfeiture actions, subject to 
bankruptcy, or moved to a foreign account. In addition, one of our 
selected cases involved an offender who was jointly and severally 
liable for the debt with another offender who had been deported.

Justice stated that after criminal activity occurs, years may pass 
before the initial investigation of a crime, let alone the arrest, 
trial, and conviction of an offender. Justice also stated that the 
primary focus during the criminal investigation, prior to judgment, is 
on the discovery and prosecution of the offender's criminal acts rather 
than on the potential future debt recovery by the federal government. 
During the intervals between criminal activities and the related 
judgments, Justice acknowledged that dispositions and circumstances 
involving the offenders' assets or the offenders often occur that 
create major debt collection challenges for the FLUs. According to 
Justice, criminals with any degree of sophistication, especially those 
engaged in fraudulent criminal enterprises, commonly dissipate their 
criminal gains quickly and in an untraceable manner. Assets acquired 
illegally are often rapidly depleted on intangible and excess 
"lifestyle" expenses. Specifically, travel, entertainment, gambling, 
clothes, and gifts are high on the list of means to rapidly dispose of 
such assets. Moreover, money stolen from others is rarely invested into 
easily located or exchanged assets, such as readily identifiable bank 
accounts, stocks or bonds, or real property. Justice emphasized that 
the initial efforts by criminal law enforcement investigators, federal 
prosecutors, and the probation office promise the greatest opportunity 
for meaningful recovery of illegally obtained assets. Therefore, in our 
view, coordination among the FLUs and other entities involved in 
criminal debt collection is critical.

Transfer of Assets: 

According to Justice, there is no general statutory authority for 
Justice to obtain pretrial restraint of assets in order to satisfy a 
potential criminal judgment that may result in a restitution debt. 
However, once such a judgment is imposed, Justice can proceed against a 
third party by filing a separate federal action to recover the assets 
or proceeds thereof. Justice emphasized that it must prove by a 
preponderance of the evidence that the offender fraudulently 
transferred assets, which often involves a lengthy and time-consuming 
process. Moreover, even when a valid claim is made against a third 
party for a fraudulent transfer, the third party may have a "good 
faith" defense if the transfer was accepted in exchange for a 
"reasonably equivalent value."

The challenges encountered in collecting restitution debt from 
offenders who may have transferred assets to others through legal or 
potentially fraudulent means were evident in our review of selected 
cases. According to Justice, at least one of the offenders in our 
selected cases has engaged in a shell game for the purpose of shielding 
their assets. In addition, Justice stated that at least one of the 
offenders has not provided full financial disclosure, and that the FLU 
is currently exploring whether the offender fraudulently conveyed 
assets to family members and others. Based on information in Justice 
and court records, certain of the offenders in the selected cases 
engaged in one or more of the following activities.

* Prior to the judgment, the offender and the offender's family 
established trusts, foundations, and corporations for their assets at 
about the same time they closed numerous bank and brokerage accounts.

* Over the course of several years, the offender converted for personal 
use hundreds of millions of dollars obtained through illegal white- 
collar business schemes.

* Several years prior to the judgment, the offender's minor child, who 
is now an adult, was given the offender's company. As of completion of 
our fieldwork, that company employed the offender.

* Prior to the judgment, the offender placed a multimillion-dollar 
residence in a trust.

* Prior to the judgment, the offender established a trust worth 
hundreds of thousands of dollars for the offender's child.

* The offender and the offender's family rent their expensively 
furnished residence, which they previously owned, from a relative.

Forfeited Assets: 

Justice stated that forfeited assets are the property of the federal 
government and do not always go to crime victims. Justice can restore 
forfeited assets to a victim upon the victim's filing of a petition, 
but only in those limited cases when it is the victim's actual property 
that is being restored. According to Justice, the FLUs' coordination 
with Justice's Asset Forfeiture Unit and others at the outset of the 
case is invaluable in securing assets for payment of the victims' 
restitution when such potential exists.

The importance such coordination has to securing forfeited assets for 
the crime victim was evident in one of our selected cases. Court 
records showed that about $175 million of the offender's assets that 
had been identified as related to the case had been forfeited; however, 
the FLU's records showed that only about $50 million of such assets had 
been forfeited. At the time of our file review, the FLU was not certain 
whether any forfeited assets had been, or could be, applied toward the 
offender's restitution debt. Subsequent to our visit to the FLU and our 
inquiries related to this matter, Justice stated that only about $24 
million of the $50 million of forfeited assets in its records may be 
applied toward the offender's restitution debt as a result of a 
petition filed by the victim.

Bankruptcy: 

According to Justice, bankruptcy can impair the FLU's ability to 
collect criminal restitution debt. When a bankruptcy proceeding is 
initiated before the criminal judgment, the bankruptcy estate attaches 
to all of the offender's property and rights to property, which can 
significantly limit assets available for restitution. When a bankruptcy 
proceeding is initiated after the criminal judgment, the United States 
may file a proof of claim in the bankruptcy proceeding and may have 
secured status if its lien was perfected against any of the defendant's 
property. However, there may be other creditors seeking payment from 
the offender's estate, including often the Internal Revenue Service. 
These other creditors may be just as much victims of the offender as 
the victims named in the restitution order and may also have valid 
interests in payment from the estate. Moreover, bankruptcy's automatic 
stay may limit the FLUs' ability to otherwise enforce the 
debt.[Footnote 15]

For one of the selected cases, the offender went into bankruptcy prior 
to the judgment. Shortly after the judgment, which was rendered over 5 
years ago, the FLU issued a restraining notice to the offender, 
forbidding the transfer or disposition of his assets, and filed a lien 
on certain property. However, according to the FLU, the ongoing 
bankruptcy has prevented it from taking additional collection action. 
Recently, Justice stated that it had been advised by the bankruptcy 
trustee that for this case, most of the offender's bankruptcy estate of 
several million dollars would be distributed to the victim.[Footnote 
16] Justice emphasized that generally for cases in which the offender 
goes into bankruptcy prior to the judgment, the criminal restitution 
debt will only be recognized as a general unsecured debt and, 
therefore, most often will not be satisfied.

Foreign Accounts and Deportation: 

Justice stated that money obtained illegally is often moved to offshore 
accounts or to debtor-haven countries. In the absence of a treaty with 
a foreign government or a provision of law to provide for the 
repatriation of money transferred to foreign accounts, acquiring such 
money for the liquidation of an offender's restitution debt is 
difficult at best. Justice also stated that certain offenders are 
deported; however, they continue to be liable for the unpaid portion of 
their restitution debts, as current law requires that the debts stay on 
the books for 20 years after the period of incarceration ends or after 
the judgment if no incarceration is ordered. Justice acknowledged that 
potential collection actions are limited for offenders who have been 
deported. For example, liens filed in counties where the offender 
previously held property have little, if any, effect when offenders 
have moved assets and are living abroad. In addition, FLU officials 
cannot subpoena financial information from offenders who have been 
deported or obtain depositions from such offenders regarding their 
assets.

Debt collection complications due to transfers of assets to foreign 
accounts and the deportation of offenders were evident in our selected 
cases. For one case, according to Justice, the FLU's efforts to 
identify and secure assets of the offender to liquidate the restitution 
debt have been hampered, in part, because the offender had established, 
among other things, a foreign bank account for the purpose of shielding 
his assets. For another case involving two offenders who were jointly 
and severally liable for the restitution debt, one offender had settled 
his liability for the debt, with the approval of Justice and the court, 
by paying the victim far less than the amount initially ordered by the 
court. With regard to this offender, Justice stated that his reported 
assets and net worth were such that the thought that additional 
collection efforts would have positive results was not considered by 
the FLU to be reasonable. The FLU was left with little recourse for 
additional collection action because the other offender in the case, 
who is still liable for the remainder of this debt, was deported after 
serving a prison term.

Recent Congressional Action: 

Our March 2004 report and ongoing discussions with your office have 
kept you apprised of progress in implementing the recommendations 
included in our 2001 report. As discussed more fully in the background 
section of this report, Justice has made progress in establishing 
certain policies and procedures to improve criminal debt collection. 
Unfortunately, the effort we considered key to more substantive 
progress, namely, development of a strategic plan by all of the 
involved entities, had not been started. However, very recently, the 
Congress directed the Attorney General to develop a strategic plan with 
certain other federal agencies to improve criminal debt collection. 
Specifically, the conference report that accompanied the Consolidated 
Appropriations Act, 2005, Public Law No. 108-447, signed into law on 
December 8, 2004, included language to further the implementation of 
our 2001 recommendation regarding the establishment of an interagency 
task force for the purpose of better managing, accounting for, 
reporting, and collecting criminal debt.

In the conference report, the conferees directed the Attorney General 
to establish a task force within 90 days of enactment of the act and to 
include specified federal agencies, such as Treasury, OMB, and AOUSC, 
to participate in the task force. Led by the Department of Justice, the 
task force will be responsible for developing a strategic plan for 
improving criminal debt collection. The strategic plan is to include 
specific approaches for better managing, accounting for, reporting, and 
collecting criminal debt. Specifically, the plan is to include steps 
that can be taken to better and more promptly identify all collectible 
criminal debt so that a meaningful allowance for uncollectible criminal 
debt can be reported and used for measuring debt collection 
performance. Also, the conferees directed the Attorney General to 
report to the Committees on Appropriations within 180 days of enactment 
of this act on the activities of the task force and the development of 
a strategic plan.[Footnote 17]

Conclusion: 

Given such poor prospects for collection for the selected cases, as 
well as the overall low collection rates for criminal debt we have 
previously reported, it is important that Justice determine how to 
better maximize opportunities to make offenders' assets available to 
pay offenders' victims once judgments establish restitution debts. By 
taking advantage of all debt collection opportunities, Justice may be 
able to better achieve the intent of MVRA, which is to compensate crime 
victims to the extent of their financial loss. Justice can best 
accomplish this aim by implementing the recommendation we made in 2001 
to work with AOUSC, OMB, and Treasury to develop a strategic plan as 
now also called for by the conference report accompanying the 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2005, to address managing, accounting 
for, and reporting criminal debt including the collectibility of such 
debt.

Further, our review of the five selected criminal white-collar 
financial fraud debts, in conjunction with the findings on our previous 
criminal debt collection work, strongly supports the need for Justice 
to take the leadership role in promptly addressing this recommendation. 
Effective coordination and cooperation is essential for maximizing 
collections, and as the federal agency primarily responsible for 
criminal debt collection, Justice's leadership in this effort is vital. 
The strategic plan should include a determination of how to best 
maximize opportunities to make offenders' assets available to pay the 
victims once judgments establish restitution debts. Until such a 
strategic plan is developed and effectively implemented, which could 
involve legislative as well as operational initiatives, the 
effectiveness of criminal restitution as a punitive tool may be 
diminished, and Justice will lack adequate assurance that offenders are 
not benefiting from ill-gotten gains and that innocent victims are 
being compensated for their losses to the fullest extent possible.

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To help ensure that the strategic plan called for in the conference 
report effectively addresses all potential opportunities for 
collection, we recommend that the Attorney General include in the 
strategic plan legislative initiatives, operational initiatives, or 
both that are directed toward maximizing opportunities to make 
offenders' assets available to pay victims once restitution debts are 
established by judges.

To monitor progress in leading the development and implementation of 
the strategic plan, we also recommend that the Attorney General report 
annually in Justice's Accountability Report on progress toward 
developing and implementing a strategic plan to improve criminal debt 
collection. This report should include a discussion of any difficulties 
or impediments that significantly hinder such progress.

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Overall, Justice's EOUSA's comments on a draft of this report, which 
are reprinted in appendix I, are consistent with our conclusion that 
given such poor prospects for collection for the selected cases, as 
well as the overall low collection rates for criminal debt we have 
previously reported, it is important that Justice determine how to 
better maximize opportunities to make offenders' assets available to 
pay offenders' victims once judgments establish restitution debts. 
EOUSA stated that consistent with our recommendation and the conference 
report that accompanied the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2005, 
Justice is in the process of organizing an interagency joint task force 
to develop a strategic plan for improving criminal debt collection.

EOUSA did not specifically comment on our recommendations including the 
recommendation that the Attorney General include in the strategic plan 
legislative initiatives, operational initiatives, or both that are 
directed toward maximizing opportunities to make offenders' assets 
available to pay victims once restitution debts are established by 
judges. However, EOUSA did emphasize that current statutes do not 
provide adequate remedies for the collection of criminal debt and cited 
several examples including the lack of general statutory authority for 
the United States to obtain pretrial restraint of assets in order to 
satisfy a potential criminal judgment that may result in a restitution 
debt. Regarding operational initiatives, as stated in this report, 
because many of the recommendations we have previously made to Justice 
to improve criminal debt collection focused on establishing policies 
and procedures, it is important that the policies and procedures be 
effectively implemented once they are established. Moreover, any 
multiagency effort to develop a unified strategy for criminal debt 
collection will need to address operational issues.

Both EOUSA and AOUSC provided technical comments that have been 
addressed as appropriate in this report.

As agreed with your office, unless you announce its contents earlier, 
we plan no further distribution of this report until 30 days after its 
issuance date. At that time, we will send copies to the Chairmen and 
Ranking Minority Members of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security 
and Governmental Affairs; the Subcommittee on Financial Management, the 
Budget and International Security, Senate Committee on Homeland 
Security and Governmental Affairs; and the Subcommittee on Government 
Efficiency and Financial Management, House Committee on Government 
Reform. We will also provide copies to the Attorney General, the 
Director of the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, the Director 
of the Office of Management and Budget, and the Secretary of the 
Treasury. Copies will be made available to others upon request. The 
report will also be available at no charge on GAO's Web site, at 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov].

If you have any questions about this report, please contact me at (202) 
512-3406 or [Hyperlink, engelg@gao.gov] or Kenneth R. Rupar, Assistant 
Director, at (214) 777-5714 or [Hyperlink, rupark@gao.gov]. Staff 
acknowledgments are provided in appendix II.

Sincerely yours,

Signed by: 

Gary T. Engel: 
Director: 
Financial Management and Assurance: 

[End of section]

Appendixes: 

Appendix I: Comments from the Department of Justice: 

U.S. Department of Justice:
Executive Office for United States Attorneys: 
Office of the Director:

RFK Main Justice Building, Room 2261: 
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW:
Washington, DC 20530:

(202) 514-2121

JAN 13 2005:

Mr. Gary T. Engel: 
Director:
Financial Management and Assurance:
United States Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, NW, Room 5970:
Washington, DC 20548:

Dear Mr. Engel:

This letter provides comments from the Executive Office for United 
States Attorneys (EOUSA) on the Government Accountability Office's 
(GAO) most recent report regarding criminal debt collection. [NOTE 1] 
We appreciate the opportunity to provide comments for publication in 
the final report.

We agree with GAO's conclusion that court ordered restitution amounts 
far exceed likely collections. [NOTE 2] According to estimates by the 
United States Attorneys' Offices (USAOs), approximately 75 per cent of 
the outstanding balance is currently not collectible. This figure is 
based, among other things, on a review of each defendant's financial 
circumstances including information contained in pre-sentence reports; 
financial statements; credit bureau reports; asset searches; 
skiptracing reports; tax returns; and/or information gathered as a 
result of subpoenas, interrogatories, or requests for production of 
documents.

As noted in the draft report, there are a number of barriers that exist 
in the collection of criminal debt. By far, the greatest impediment to 
collecting full restitution is the lack of relationship between the 
amount ordered and its corresponding collectibility. Nor is there 
necessarily a relationship between the amount ordered and the benefit 
received by the defendant from the criminal activity. The Mandatory 
Victims Restitution Act of 1996 (MVRA) mandates that restitution 
amounts be based solely on the full amount of the victims' losses, 
regardless of the defendant's ability to pay or the amount of actual 
gain to the defendant. This is especially evident in white-collar 
financial fraud cases. In the five cases selected by GAO for review, 
restitution was ordered totaling approximately $568 million, yet there 
is no evidence to suggest that the defendants currently have, or once 
had, wealth equal to this amount. In one case, although the defendant, 
at some point, had several million dollars, the judgment was in excess 
of $49 million. In another case, while the defendant had substantial 
assets, most of which were subject to forfeiture, those assets did not 
come close to satisfying the more than $400 million ordered in 
restitution.

The draft report also recognizes that current statutes do not provide 
adequate remedies for the collection of criminal debt. For example, 
there is no general statutory authority for the United States to obtain 
pre-trial restraint of assets in order to satisfy a potential criminal 
judgment that may result in a restitution debt. White-collar financial 
fraud activity may take years before being discovered, investigated, 
and successfully prosecuted. Unless statutes are enacted which allow 
for pre judgment restraints on a defendant's assets, these assets will 
continue to be dissipated during a lengthy investigation and/or trial.

Another example is the lack of negative consequences for defendants who 
willfully fail to pay restitution. Title 18 U.S.C. § 3613A provides 
remedies for failure to pay, such as revocation of probation or a term 
of supervised release; modification of the terms or conditions of 
probation or a term of supervised release; holding the defendant in 
contempt of court; or entering a restraining order. In addition, 18 
U.S.C. § 3614 provides, upon revocation of supervised release, for the 
re-sentencing of the defendant to any sentence which might have 
originally been imposed. There is also a separate crime of criminal 
default as set forth in 18 U.S.C. § 3615 for the willful failure to pay 
a fine. These remedies, however, do not provide any real consequence if 
the defendant is no longer on probation or supervised release or if 
there are no assets to be found in the defendant's name. Without 
statutory language that clearly sets forth consequences, defendants 
will continue to resist paying restitution.

A third example in which current statutes fail to provide adequate 
remedies involves foreign bank accounts. Money obtained illegally is 
often moved to offshore accounts or to debtor-haven countries. 
Currently, there is a lack of laws/treaties with foreign governments to 
provide for the repatriation of monies moved out of the country. 
Without such laws/treaties, acquiring the money in these accounts for 
the liquidation of a restitution order is nearly impossible.

Other difficulties encountered in the collection of criminal debt 
identified in the draft report include the transfer of assets, 
bankruptcy, and forfeiture actions. In one case, the court specifically 
ordered that assets transferred to a family member could not be used to 
satisfy the defendant's restitution debt. In another case, the 
defendant filed bankruptcy prior to the criminal judgment, resulting in 
the U.S. only being recognized as a general unsecured creditor, and 
thus, unlikely to recover.

While there are many impediments to the collection of the full amount 
of a restitution order, the USAOs continue to make their best efforts 
to collect criminal debts owed to the U.S. and third party victims. As 
a result of these efforts, over the past five years the USAOs collected 
over $4 billion on behalf of victims of crime (an additional $8 billion 
was recovered on civil debts owed to the U.S.). These impressive 
results occurred in spite of the ever growing caseload and relatively 
unchanged USAO Financial Litigation Unit staffing levels. [NOTE 3]

As discussed in GAO's 2001 and 2004 reports, and confirmed through the 
review of selected cases in GAO's most recent draft report, the 
collection of criminal debts is difficult. The solution for improving 
the collection process is complex and, unfortunately, there are no 
quick fixes that can be put into place that will guarantee success. 
Nevertheless, the Department holds the collection of debts owed to the 
Federal Government and victims of crime as a high priority and is 
firmly committed to continuously improving the process. Consistent with 
GAO's recommendation and the conference report that accompanied the 
Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2005, the Department is in the 
process of organizing an interagency joint task force to develop a 
strategic plan for improving criminal debt collection. We are confident 
that we will meet the statutory deadlines.

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the draft report. If you 
have any questions regarding the above, please contact Laurie Levin, 
Assistant Director, Financial Litigation Staff, Office of Legal 
Programs and Policy, at (202) 616-6444.

Sincerely,

Signed by: 

Mary Beth Buchanan: 
Director:

NOTES: 

[1] The draft report entitled "Criminal Debt: Court-Ordered Restitution 
Amounts Far Exceed Likely Collections for the Victims in Selected 
Financial Fraud Cases" follows up on GAO's 2001 and 2004 reports (see 
GAO-01-664 and GAO-04-338, respectively) by reviewing five criminal 
white-collar financial fraud cases to determine (1) the status of 
Justice's efforts to collect on the outstanding debt; (2) the prospects 
for future collections; and (3) whether specific problems have affected 
Justice's ability to collect the debt.

[2] This conclusion was based on GAO's review of Justice's debt 
collection files; interviews with Justice officials; records made 
available by the courts, including probation; and, independent research 
of public sources available through the Internet, such as property 
records.

[3] The MVRA mandated that the United States Attorneys collect on 
behalf of non-federal victims of crime. While Congress recognized the 
importance of ensuring that these non-federal victims of crime be 
compensated, no additional resources were given to the USAOs to carry 
out this mandate. 

The following are GAO's comments on the Department of Justice's letter 
dated January 13, 2005.

GAO's Comments: 

1. As discussed in this report, only about $40 million, or about 7 
percent, of the $568 million restitution for these five selected cases 
had been paid as of June 2004, and collections for these individual 
cases ranged from less than 1 percent to about 10 percent of the 
restitution amounts owed. Prospects are not good for collecting 
additional restitution to fully compensate the crime victims for the 
selected cases in our study. Regardless of whether these offenders 
currently have, or once had, wealth equal to the restitution amounts, 
the disparity between restitution owed to the crime victims for the 
financial losses they incurred as a result of criminal activity and 
amounts paid to the victims by the offenders makes it necessary for 
Justice to take advantage of all debt collection opportunities to 
better achieve the intent of MVRA, which is to compensate crime victims 
to the extent of their financial loss.

2. EOUSA stated that the USAOs had collected over $4 billion on behalf 
of victims of crime over the last 5 years. However, as stated in this 
report, the low collection rate (about 7 percent of the ordered 
restitution) for the selected cases coincides with overall collection 
rates for criminal debt as we have previously reported. In 2004, we 
reported that according to Justice's unaudited records, collections 
relative to outstanding criminal debt averaged about 4 percent for 
fiscal years 2000, 2001, and 2002 (GAO-04-338). In 2001, we reported 
that criminal debt collection averaged about 7 percent for fiscal years 
1995 through 1999 (GAO-01-664).

[End of section]

Appendix II: Staff Acknowledgments: 

Richard T. Cambosos, Michael D. Hansen, Andrew A. O'Connell, Ramon J. 
Rodriguez, Linda K. Sanders, and Matthew F. Valenta made key 
contributions to this report.

(191037): 

FOOTNOTES

[1] GAO, Criminal Debt: Actions Still Needed to Address Deficiencies in 
Justice's Collection Processes, GAO-04-338 (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 5, 
2004). For this report, the latest reported data from Justice as of the 
completion of our fieldwork in mid-December 2003 were for fiscal year 
2002. Justice was still in the process of compiling and summarizing 
criminal debt information for fiscal year 2003.

[2] Pub. L. No. 104-132, Title II, Subtitle A, 110 Stat. 1214, 1227.

[3] 18 U.S.C. § 3663A (2000) requires the court to order restitution 
for offenders, regardless of the offender's ability to pay, who are 
convicted of (1) a crime of violence as defined by 18 U.S.C. § 16 
(2000); (2) an offense against property under title 18 of the U.S.C., 
including any offense committed by fraud or deceit; or (3) an offense 
related to tampering with consumer products (18 U.S.C. § 1365 (2000)), 
in which an identifiable victim has suffered a physical injury or 
pecuniary loss. See also 18 U.S.C. §§ 2248, 2259, 2264, and 2327 (2000).

[4] White-collar financial fraud is criminal activity involving various 
types of unlawful, nonviolent conduct committed by corporations, 
individuals, or both, including theft or fraud and other violations of 
trust, for example, securities fraud and financial institution fraud.

[5] GAO, Criminal Debt: Oversight and Actions Needed to Address 
Deficiencies in Collection Processes, GAO-01-664 (Washington, D.C.: 
July 16, 2001). GAO-04-338.

[6] This low rate of collection for the selected cases coincides with 
overall collection rates for criminal debt we have previously reported. 
In 2004, we reported that according to Justice's unaudited records, 
collections relative to outstanding criminal debt averaged about 4 
percent for fiscal years 2000, 2001, and 2002 (GAO-04-338). In 2001, we 
reported that criminal debt collection averaged about 7 percent for 
fiscal years 1995 through 1999 (GAO-01-664).

[7] Asset forfeiture is used to seize property associated with criminal 
activity. The property seized may be illegal for someone to own or it 
may be the gains resulting from the criminal activity. It is a means of 
punishing and deterring criminal activity by depriving criminals of 
property, including items such as monetary instruments, real property, 
and tangible personal property, that was used or acquired through 
illegal activities. The federal government seizes such property 
associated with violations of various federal statutes and takes title 
to that property (forfeiture) through either an administrative or 
judicial process. Seized property either can be returned to the owner 
or forfeited to the government. After federal forfeiture, noncash 
property may be sold, put into official use, destroyed, or shared with 
state and local law enforcement agencies participating in the seizure.

[8] Supervised release is a period during which an offender who has 
completed his or her full prison sentence mandated by federal 
sentencing guidelines is under supervision by federal probation 
officers. 

[9] GAO-01-664.

[10] There are 94 districts throughout the country, but USAOs for 2 of 
them are combined, resulting in 93 USAOs.

[11] GAO-01-664. 

[12] In the 2001 report, we also made recommendations to address long- 
standing problems in the collection of outstanding criminal debt to the 
AOUSC, OMB, and Treasury.

[13] GAO-04-338.

[14] Although the FLUs performed certain debt collection actions for 
each of the selected cases, we found that some of the FLUs' efforts, 
such as filing liens, were not always done promptly following the 
judgment. In addition, the asset discovery work performed by the FLUs 
consisted primarily of requesting, obtaining, and reviewing financial 
information provided by the offender. We noted in our 2001 report (GAO- 
01-664) certain problems stemming from a lack of independent 
verification of financial information provided by offenders. We also 
noted that prompt collection action, including the performance of asset 
discovery work, such as researching online property locator services, 
is critical to minimizing the dilution of assets that could be 
available for payment of a restitution debt. Accordingly, we offered 
recommendations to help Justice improve the timeliness and extent of 
its criminal debt collection efforts.

[15] The automatic stay mandated by 11 U.S.C. § 362 (2000) prevents the 
federal government from pursuing collection action against debtors in 
bankruptcy for certain debts that arise prior to the commencement of 
the bankruptcy litigation.

[16] It is important to note that a large outstanding restitution 
balance will remain after the bankruptcy estate is distributed to the 
victim.

[17] H.R. Report No. 108-792, reprinted in 150 Cong. Rec. H10426-H10427 
(daily ed. Nov. 19, 2004).

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