Thursday, September 22, 2016

Restitution Allowed to be Condition of Supervised Release

Restitution can have a punitive effect, but it has a primarily remedial and compensatory effect that does not violate excessive punishment under the Eighth Amendment

United States v. Alvarez, 2016 BL 286186, 9th Cir., No. 14-50506, 8/1/16.

   The Ninth Circuit found that restitution as a condition of a supervised release is not excessive under the Eighth Amendment. The defendant claimed that restitution paid towards to a car rental agency after damaging one of their vehicles, was excessive because the restitution was part of his punishment. The court noted that there may be a “secondary punitive” effect of paying restitution, but its effect is primarily remedial and compensatory. Without being punishment, the judge can set the restitution payments and without the aid of the jury as trier of fact.

http://www.bloomberglaw.com/public/document/United_States_v_Alvarez_No_1450506_2016_BL_286186_9th_Cir_Sept_01.

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