MARGARET J. KRAVCHUK, United States Magistrate Judge.
On December 1, 2010, the United States of America applied to the Clerk of the United States District Court requesting that a Writ of Garnishment issue pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 3205 upon a judgment entered against the defendant Kevin Richard Hall, in the above-cited action in the amount of $44,120.65. The United States indicated that the judgment balance, as of December 1, 2010, is $27,145.65.
William Fisher, assistant attorney general, prepared and filed the answer on behalf of the State of Maine. In that answer he indicated that the State of Maine is presently in control of $15,411.00.
Hall does not claim that the $15,411.00 consists of exempt funds. He has four basic objections to the issuance of any order of garnishment by this court. First, he argues that the assessment portion of the original judgment has expired pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3013(c) which provides that special assessments expire after a five-year period. The United States does not dispute this assertion and does not seek to collect the special assessment portion of the original judgment.
Based upon the limitation of the issues following oral argument, I believe it is necessary to address only two of Hall's four objections, that is, whether the order for payment of the costs of prosecution either expired five years after the original judgment or is otherwise unenforceable and whether there is some reason, equitable or otherwise, why this court should limit or deny the garnishment of the $15,411.00 presently under the control of the State of Maine. The other two objections have been rendered moot because of the United States' concessions and the answer filed by the State of Maine. As to any objection filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 3205(c)(5), the party filing an objection "bear[s] the burden of proving such grounds."
Turning first to the portion of both the original judgment and the amended judgment that ordered Hall to pay the cost of prosecution totaling $27,320.65, the statutory authority for that provision arises under 26 U.S.C. § 7201. Willful attempt to evade or defeat any tax, as set forth in the statute, provides that the potential penalty for violation includes the imposition of the costs of prosecution. Counts 165-170 of the indictment upon which Hall stands convicted were based upon violations of 26 U.S.C. § 7201, tax evasion. The imposition of the costs of prosecution, by statute, was part of the authorized sentence as was any period of imprisonment or fine imposed. The five year expiration provision applying to special assessments is quite specific and clearly limited to those special assessments set forth in 18 U.S.C. § 3013. Hall received the full benefit of the five year expiration provision when the United States agreed with him that it could no longer proceed to collect the $16,800.00 in special assessments imposed on this 170 count indictment. Other monetary portions of a criminal judgment, such as fines and restitution, are governed by 18 U.S.C. § 3613 which provides that the enforcement mechanism shall be in accordance with the practices and procedures for the enforcement of a civil judgment. See United States v. Timilty, 148 F.3d 1 (1st Cir.1998) (discussing the logical extension of 18 U.S.C. § 3613 from not only fines to an order for restitution). Liability for such payments extends until the later of twenty-years from the entry of judgment or twenty-years after release from imprisonment pursuant to § 3613(b). Hall's liability for payment of this portion of the criminal judgment has not expired if the collection procedures of § 3613 are applicable to costs of prosecution.
Hall's argument is that, because § 3613 mentions only fines and restitution, an authorized order for the costs of prosecution is necessarily excluded from those provisions. Thus, the United States would be left with no method of enforcement for that portion of the criminal judgment. Clearly § 3013, the special assessment provision, does not provide a method of enforcement for costs of prosecution even during an initial five-year period because all it does in terms of enforcement procedures is reference those procedures found at § 3613 and limits them to the five-year period. See 18 U.S.C. § 3013(b) ("Such amount so assessed shall be collected in the manner that fines are collected in criminal cases.") Neither Hall nor the United States has provided me with a statute or case which discusses the method of enforcement that pertains to a valid criminal judgment imposing as part of the sentence an order that the defendant pay a
Thus, I turn to the plain language of Section 3613(a) which says that a judgment may be enforced in accordance with the practices and procedures for the enforcement of a civil judgment under Federal or State law. It is clear that Federal law contains a provision for the issuance of writ of garnishment against non-exempt property in order to enforce a civil judgment and that this proceeding has been instituted pursuant to that procedure under 28 U.S.C. § 3205. The Timilty case cited above instructs that the United States is not required to obtain a separate civil judgment in order to avail itself of preexisting enforcement procedures. I therefore conclude that the method of enforcement chosen by the United States as to this judgment for the payment of costs of prosecution is an enforcement mechanism available and authorized under federal law and that a writ of garnishment can issue based upon the factual record. The defendant has not sustained his burden of proving otherwise.
Finally, I turn to Hall's contention that this court should exercise its discretion to limit or modify the reach of the garnishment order. For purposes of this order, I accept Hall's argument that under 28 U.S.C. § 3013 this court has discretion to consider Hall's personal circumstances in fashioning some limitation on the reach of the garnishment order. Hall indicated at the hearing that he will be formally released from the Bureau of Prisons' custody to begin his term of supervised release at the end of the month. He is currently on home confinement, subject to electronic monitoring, and living in the Belfast area. He has recently obtained employment in a minimum wage position. Sadly, Hall's circumstances are actually better than those of most prisoners released from state or federal sentences and left to re-establish themselves in the community. He has employment, a place to live, and did not argue that he has serious mental health or substance abuse problems. In these circumstances, and assuming that this court has discretion to employ a standard of "reasonableness" as suggested by Hall, I find it entirely reasonable to order that the $15,411 in control of the State of Maine be subject to the Writ of Garnishment and made payable to the United States of America in partial satisfaction of the amended judgment entered by United States District Court Judge D. Brock Hornby on May 24, 2007.
Based upon the foregoing, entry will be: The debtor's objections to the Writ of Garnishment are overruled. The garnishee, State of Maine, is directed to dispose of the $15,411.00 of nonexempt property in its control by paying such sum to the United States of America fourteen days following the entry of this order on the docket.
Any objections to this order shall be filed in accordance with Fed.R.Crim. P. 59.
So Ordered.