Full opinion text
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER AWARDING LOST INCOME AND OTHER RESTITUTION CASSELL, District Judge. TABLE OF CONTENTS FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND. 1288 A. United States v. Bedonie. 1288 B. United States v. Serawop . i 1991 ANALYSIS.1293 1293 I. The Court Must Order Restitution for the Violent Crimes Committed by Defendants Bedonie and Serawop. 1293 A. The Mandatory Victim Restitution Act Applies to Bedonie’s and Serawop’s Crimes of Violence. 1294 B. Even if the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act Does Not Apply to Ms. Bedonie, the Court Would Impose the Same Restitution Under the Victim Witness Protection Act. 1294 1. The Need to Provide Restitution to Victims Is More Pressing than the Risk of Extending Court Proceedings. 2. The Seventh Circuit’s Contrary Analysis in United States v. Fountain is. Not Persuasive. 1296 3. The Court Would Order Full Restitution Under the VWPA 1298 II. Bedonie and Serawop Must Pay Restitution for the Lost Income of their Victims.1299 A. The Deceased — Mr. Johnson and Beyonce Serawop-Are Entitled to Restitution as “Victims” of the Homicide Offenses Against Them.1299 1. Lost Income Is Properly Awardable to Mr. Johnson as the “Victim” of a Homicide.1299 2. The Court Need Not Reach the Issue of Whether Ms. Johnson is Also a Victim of the Offense.1300 3. Lost Income Is Properly Awardable to Beyonce Serawop as the “Victim” of a Homicide.1302 B. The MVRA Requires a Lost Income Award in Homicide Cases.1302 C. The MVRA Requires an Award for Both Past and Future Lost Income.... 1305 D. The MVRA Should be Interpreted Broadly as a Remedial Measure Rather than Narrowly Under the Rule Lenity.1309 III. Defendant Bedonie Should Pay Lost Income Restitution of $446,665 and Defendant Serawop Should Pay Lost Income Restitution of $325,751.1311 A. Expert Testimony on the Amount of Lost Income.1312 1. Dr. Randle’s Expect Testimony is Admissible.1312 2. Lost Income Projections for Mr. Johnson.1313 3. Lost Income Projections for Beyonce Serawop.1314 B. Race and Sex Adjustments.1315 C. Calculating the Lost Income Awards .1320 1. The Lost Income of Mr. Johnson.1320 2. The Lost Income of Beyonce Serawop.1322 D. No Need to Offset for Consumption. 1322 IV. Restitution is also Proper for the Services of a Navajo Medicine Man .. 1327 V. The Defendants’ Restitution is Due Immediately, Payable on a Schedule 1329 CONCLUSION. 1333 The court has before it two tragic homicide cases presenting significant restitution issues. The court concludes that substantial restitution should be ordered in both cases, including restitution for the future income that the victims lost when they were killed by the defendants. In particular, the court orders defendant Bedonie to pay restitution for lost income of her victim — Mr. Brian Johnson — of $446,665 The court also orders defendant Serawop to pay restitution for lost income of his victim — Beyonce Serawop — of $325,751. A brief outline of how the court reaches that conclusion may be useful at the outset. Part I of this opinion explains that the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act (MVRA), which applies to crimes of violence, is applicable to the crimes of involuntary and voluntary manslaughter committed by defendants Bedonie and Serawop respectively. Part II concludes that the MVRA requires a restitution award in homicide cases for lost income of the victims, including income that they would have lost in the future. Part III reviews issues relating to the calculation of the award. The court appointed an expert to calculate lost income in this case, who made reasonable and reliable projections of future lost income. The most appropriate of those projections rely not on the race or sex of the victims, but rather on race- and sex-neutral data. Using these neutral projection, without any discount for possible “consumption” of income by the victims, is the appropriate way to calculate restitution. Each victim lost several hundred thousands of dollars in income, which the defendants should be required to repay. Part IV concludes that defendant Bedonie should also be ordered to pay restitution for the services of Navajo medicine man used by Mr. Johnson’s family as part of the funeral services in this case. Part V determines that the restitution of the defendants is due immediately and to be paid on an appropriate schedule. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The factual and procedural background of the Bedonie and Serawop cases is as follows. A. United States v. Bedonie. On the evening of April 19, 2002, defendant Levangela Bedonie and her boyfriend, Oscar Williams, stopped at the Is-may Trading Post and agreed to give a ride to the victim in this case — Brian Johnson — and two other men. As Ms. Bedonie drove toward Montezuma Creek on the Navajo Reservation, she drank beer offered to her by her boyfriend and frequently turned to face Johnson and the others in the back seat. Each of the three men repeatedly asked her to watch where she was driving. She told them she knew what she was doing. Not too much farther down the road, Ms. Bedonie abruptly turned the steering wheel, causing the car to fishtail. Clearly under the influence of alcohol, she lost control, causing the car to skid off the road and roll about four times before coming to rest on its tires. Mr. Johnson was still in the vehicle, while the two other rear seat passengers got out and summoned help. A short time later, emergency medical technicians arrived at the scene of the accident, which was approximately 11 miles north of Aneth, Utah, on the Navajo Reservation. The technicians were unable to revive Mr. Johnson, whose skin was already cold to the touch when they arrived. An examination by the Utah State Department of Health Medical Examiner determined that Mr. Johnson, died as a result of a blunt force injury to the head. A bitter irony of this tragedy is that just prior to picking up Mr. Johnson and his friends, Ms. Bedonie had picked up Mr. Williams at the conclusion of a 90-day jail sentence for driving under the influence of alcohol. On November 6, 2002, Ms. Bedonie, an enrolled member of the Navajo Indian Tribe, was charged in a one-count indictment with involuntary manslaughter within the Navajo Nation. She was arraigned on July 29, 2003, and pled guilty on October 10, 2003. Pursuant to a plea agreement, the government agreed to recommend credit for accepting responsibility and not to seek an upward departure from the sentencing guidelines. A presentence report was then prepared, which found that the sentencing guideline range was 12 to 18 months. The report also suggested restitution for funeral expenses in the amount of $4,185. This sum had previously been paid by the Utah State Office of Crime Victims Reparations, so the report recommended repayment to the state office. The report also noted that Mr. Johnson’s mother had requested reimbursement for $3,140 for the services of Navajo medicine man in connection with her son’s burial. The defendant, through counsel, agreed to the restitution for direct funeral expenses, but objected to any restitution for the medicine man. On January 21, 2004, Ms. Bedonie appeared before the court for sentencing. The court heard extensive allocution from Ms. Bedonie, Ms. Bedonie’s mother, and Ms. Johnson, the victim’s mother. Ms. Johnson explained why she had sought the services of the medicine man. She also explained how her son had provided critical financial support to her family before he was killed. Ms. Johnson testified “maybe I’m going to lose my trailer because of this [or] lose my car.... [L]ast month ... I didn’t have any money to pay for butane. I was without butane for two weeks when it started snowing, and then I ran out of food.” Ms. Johnson also talked about Mr. Johnson’s aspirations to become an artist and presented beautiful examples of the sketches Mr. Johnson had drawn. After hearing all of the evidence, the court ordered from the bench that defendant Bedonie was to serve 18 months in prison. The court also tentatively ordered restitution for all funeral expenses, including expenses for the services of a Navajo medicine man. The court took the restitution issue under advisement to draft an opinion on the restitution issue. The next day, January 22, 2004, the court signed a judgment reflecting the 18-month sentence and the restitution of $7,325 and continued to work on an opinion explaining the restitution award. On January 30, 2004, the court concluded that the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act required restitution not only for funeral expenses but also for income lost by Mr. Johnson. In a written order, the court explained: “The court is legally obligated to impose [this] assessment [for lost income] by 18 U.S.C. § 3663A, the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act.” Accordingly, the court entered an amended judgment awarding $50,000 for lost income restitution. This amount was “based on the factual conclusion that, but for the criminal offense of Ms. Bedonie, Mr. Johnson would have earned well in excess of that amount. In particular, Mr. Johnson was 22 when he was killed by the defendant, and undisputed facts at the sentencing hearing plainly established that he was a promising artist as well as employed in other activities.” To give the defendant an opportunity to contest this amount, the court then ordered the new judgment held in abeyance pending a hearing on the matter. On February 5, 2004, the court entered an order giving notice that it was considering appointing its own expert pursuant to Rule 706 of the Federal Rules of Evidence to help determine the lost income suffered by Mr. Johnson and giving the parties an opportunity to object. One week later, the defendant filed an objection to the court appointing an expert witness, and on February 17, 2004, the government filed its own objection, calling any lost income in the case “too speculative” to award. On February 18, 2004, the court rejected these objections and appointed an expert (Dr. Paul H. Randle) on lost income calculation. That order, published elsewhere, concluded that the court has authority to investigate the lost income issue through an expert by virtue of Rule 706 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, the inherent “general power of calling witnesses in aid of justice,” and the procedural provision of the MVRA authorizing the court to appoint a special master to resolve restitution issues. The court also invited the government to consider withdrawing its objection to the appointment of an expert in light of the government’s obligations under the Victims Bill of Rights to make its “best efforts” to afford crime victims the “right to restitution.” The government later withdrew its objection to the expert and lost income restitution, but reserved its right to object to the amount of restitution. In a separate order, the court also rejected defendant Bedonie’s argument that the investigation of restitution issues was too late, noting that the court has the power to hold open restitution issues for a period of 90 days after sentencing under the MVRA. On March 25, 2004, the court held a hearing at which Dr. Randle testified about lost income suffered by Mr. Johnson. He concluded that Mr. Johnson’s lost income was somewhere between $433,562 and $850,959, depending on what assumptions one made. Dr. Randle also testified that, making the highly conservative assumption that Mr. Johnson would have earned no more than $1500 per year (the amount he had made selling art in high school), then Mr. Johnson’s loss was $40,907. On April 15, 2004, the court held a further hearing at which the lost income issue was capably argued by counsel. Following that hearing, the court directed Dr. Randle to prepare revised calculations of the lost income suffered by Mr. Johnson in which Mr. Johnson’s possible “consumption” was subtracted from the figures. These calculations produced a figure for lost income of between $76,783 and $561,038. B. United States v. Serawop. The other consolidated case pending before the court also involves a homicide. At about 1:30 a.m. on November 3, 2002, defendant Redd Rock Serawop called the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) Police Department and requested that an ambulance come to his residence in Fort Duchesne, Utah. He explained that the ambulance was needed to take his three-month-old daughter, Beyonce Serawop, to the hospital. Defendant Serawop was acting as her primary care-giver since the infant’s mother, Ernestina Moya, had reported to the Duchesne County Jail the previous morning to begin serving a twelve-day jail sentence. (Ms. Moya and defendant Serawop had a co-habitation relationship.) Three-month-old Beyonce, her twenty-two-month-old brother Grant, six-year-old half brother Isaiah, and six-year-old cousin Angel were all in the home and under the defendant’s care. A few minutes later, Ute Tribal emergency medical staff arrived at the Serawop residence and took the baby and the defendant in the ambulance about seven miles to the Uintah Basin Medical Center in Roosevelt, Utah. Emergency medical staff noted that the infant had difficulty breathing. Beyonce arrived at the hospital about ten minutes later, where emergency room physician Dr. Glenn Robertson and on-call pediatrician Dr. Gregory Staker were unable to resuscitate her. Dr. Staker performed a spinal tap which produced blood, suggesting that serious head trauma had been inflicted on the infant. Dr. Staker quickly arranged a life-flight helicopter to Primary Children’s Medical Center in Salt Lake City. Dr. Staker questioned defendant Serawop as to whether he was aware of any trauma suffered by Beyonce which would explain the serious head injury she had suffered. Defendant Serawop said that the victim’s six-year-old half brother had told him that the baby had fallen during the evening. Beyonce Serawop was then flown by life-flight helicopter to Primary Children’s hospital, where she was pronounced dead on arrival. Ms. Moya was released from the Du-chesne County Jail and repeatedly called defendant Serawop to question him about what had happened to Beyonce. Ms. Moya was suspicious that defendant Sera-wop had done something to injure their daughter. During one of the phone calls, defendant Serawop claimed that their two-year-old son had hit Beyonce in the head with his plastic drinking cup. Investigative efforts then focused on ascertaining how Beyonce had been injured. On November 4, 2002, defendant Serawop reported to investigators that although he was not aware of any injuries suffered by his daughter during the evening of November 2nd and early morning of November 3rd, he was concerned that one of the other children in the home may have dropped the baby. On November 14, 2002, during a subsequent interview with FBI Special Agent Ashdown, defendant Serawop acknowledged misleading investigators during his initial interview. Defendant Serawop now suggested that he had tripped over a shoe while carrying Beyonce in the bedroom of his residence around 12:30 a.m. on November 3, 2002, and that he had fallen on her head as he hit the floor. On December 3, 2002, investigators videotaped defendant Serawop as he reenacted for investigators how he tripped and fell in his bedroom while carrying his daughter. Subsequent investigation established Beyonce’s injuries were inconsistent with the fall as reenacted by defendant Serawop. On February 7, 2003, the defendant voluntarily took a polygraph examination conducted by the FBI. The examiner concluded that defendant Serawop had been untruthful regarding his November 14, 2002, account of the fatal injuries suffered by his infant daughter. When told of this conclusion, defendant Serawop again revised his account and claimed that he had accidently dropped his daughter while reaching for her bottle in the bathroom and that her head hit the sink counter as she fell. Defendant Serawop declined to take a further polygraph examination regarding this revised statement. On May 7, 2003, Redd Rock Serawop was charged with second degree murder while within Indian Country. The evidence at the four-day jury trial, including an autopsy report, established that Bey-once Serawop received multiple violent injuries which led to her death. The infant’s skull was fractured in two places, one right rib was clearly fractured, and two left ribs appeared to be fractured as well. Statements from the victim’s six-year-old half brother described an evening of tension and abuse in defendant Serawop’s care. Beyonce’s crying interrupted the defendant Serawop’s television viewing, and he abused the infant on the couch in anger. Following the blow that led to Beyonce’s death, defendant Serawop waited for approximately an hour before summoning medical help. The jury found that Sera-wop was guilty of the lesser included offense of voluntary manslaughter. During the presentence interview, defendant Serawop revised his account yet again and frankly admitted that he was frustrated with Beyonce’s crying around 12:30 a.m. on November 3, 2002, when he “lost it” and threw the child. Although his recollection of the details of what took place were not very clear, he believes the child’s head struck the sink or the toilet in the bathroom, after which she cried briefly and became motionless. Defendant Sera-wop ultimately contacted the BIA police department for an ambulance about an hour after he threw his daughter. A presentence report was prepared in the matter. With regard to victim impact, the report noted Ms. Moya’s tremendous sadness about her daughter’s death. Ms. Moya has participated in some grief counseling but acknowledges she has struggled with drug and alcohol abuse in an attempt to cope with the crime. Moreover, in addition to the obvious abuse to Beyonce, each of the other three children in the home that night witnessed terrible conduct on the defendant’s part, with potentially serious repercussions to their normal childhood development. After receiving the report, the court concluded that an expert would be of assistance in determining whether lost income restitution should be awarded for income that Beyonce would have earned but for her death at the hands of defendant Sera-wop. The court accordingly appointed Dr. Paul Randle to investigate this issue (in parallel with his investigation in the Bedo-nie case). On March 25, 2004, the court held a hearing on sentencing and restitution issues in this case (along with the Bedonie case) and tentatively concluded that defendant Serawop should serve 10 years, the statutory maximum for voluntary manslaughter. The court then heard testimony from Dr. Randle concerning lost income suffered by Beyonce. He concluded that Beyonce lost somewhere between $171,366 and $576,106 as the result of her death, depending on what assumptions were made. On April 15, 2004, the court held a further hearing at which restitution issues were well argued by counsel. Following that hearing, Dr. Randle prepared revised calculations of the loss suffered by Bey-once, in which he removed her possible “consumption” from the figures. These calculations produced a loss of between $30,349 to $765,118. Dr. Randle also conservatively calculated Beyonce’s lost income based solely on the loss of the “stipend” that she was entitled to receive as a tribal member. Using the projected stipend amounts (between $80 and $100 a month), the projected lifetime loss was between $17,118 and $21,397. ANALYSIS I. The Court Must Order Restitution for the Violent Crimes Committed by Defendants Bedonie and Serawop. A. The Mandatoi'y Victim Restitution Act Applies to Bedonie’s and Sera-ivop’s Crimes of Violence. The court must order both defendants Bedonie and Serawop to pay full restitution if their cases are governed by the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act of 1996 rather than its predecessor, the Victim and Witness Protection Act of 1982 (VWPA). The “MVRA’s primary purpose is to force offenders to ‘pay full restitution to the identifiable victims of their crimes.’ ” The Act firmly directs that “[notwithstanding any other provision of law, when sentencing a defendant convicted of [certain offenses] ... the court shall order ... that the defendant make restitution to the victim of the offense or, if the victim is deceased, to the victim’s estate.” Thus, “Congress elected not merely to permit the trial court to order restitution in these cases, it affirmatively mandated restitution.” The MVRA applies to property crimes, consumer product tampering crimes, and (relevant to this case) “crime[s] of violence, as defined in [18 U.S.C. § 16]” in which “an identifiable victim or victims has suffered a physical injury or pecuniary loss.” Defendant Serawop concedes that the MVRA governs restitution in his case. His crime — voluntary manslaughter — is obviously a crime of violence that produced physical injury, i.e., death. There is no doubt that full restitution is mandatory for him. Defendant Bedonie, however, argues that her crime — involuntary manslaughter — is not covered by the MVRA but instead by the discretionary provisions of the VWPA. She concedes the obvious point that her actions produced physical injury (i.e., the death of Mr. Johnson). She argues, however, that involuntary manslaughter is not a “crime of violence” as defined in 18 U.S.C. § 16. That section defines a “crime of violence” as: (a) an offense that has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person or property of another, or (b) any other offense that is a felony and that, by its nature, involves a substantial risk that physical force against the person or property of another may be used in the course of committing the offense. Bedonie pled guilty to involuntary manslaughter in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1112(a), which provides “manslaughter is the unlawful killing of a human being without malice.” The statute further distinguishes between “voluntary” and “involuntary” manslaughter, providing that “involuntary” manslaughter occurs “[i]n the commission of an unlawful act not amounting to a felony, or in the commission in an unlawful manner, or without due caution and circumspection, of a lawful act which might produce death.” Defendant Bedonie argues that because involuntary manslaughter can be committed in various ways that, in her view, do not necessarily involve force, her crime is not one of violence. The court disagrees, finding that involuntary manslaughter is a crime of violence under 18 U.S.C. § 16(a). While the Tenth Circuit recently held in United States v. Lucio-Lucio that a mere conviction under a Texas DUI statute, standing alone, was not a crime of violence, that opinion specifically declined to address the question of whether a DUI causing injury or death was a crime of violence. In an earlier decision, United States v. Lujan, the Circuit held that a California manslaughter conviction was a “violent felony” under the Armed Career Criminal Act, which uses defining language identical to the “crime of violence” definition in 18 U.S.C. § 16(a). California defines manslaughter as “the unlawful killing of a human being without malice.” The Tenth Circuit in Lujan found it unnecessary to consider the three forms of manslaughter in California — voluntary, involuntary, and vehicular. Instead, the Circuit simply stated that a California manslaughter conviction was “clearly” a violent felony. Accordingly, under the controlling Tenth Circuit decision in Lujan, involuntary manslaughter is plainly a crime of violence. B. Even if the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act Does Not Apply to Ms. Bedonie, the Court Would Impose the Same Restitution Under the Victim Witness Protection Act. Even if the court were to conclude that Ms. Bedonie’s homicide was not a crime of violence and therefore not covered by the MVRA, the VWPA would still apply. Proceeding under the VWPA, the court would exercise its discretion to award exactly the same full restitution. 1. The Need to Provide Restitution to Victims Is More Pressing than the Risk of Extending Court Proceedings. The MVRA tracks word for word many of the provisions in the earlier-enacted VWPA, including the lost income and funeral expense provisions that are at issue here. One obvious salient difference between the two statutes is that restitution under the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act is mandatory, while under the . Victim Witness Protection Act it is discretionary. In exercising its discretion under the VWPA, the court must consider both “the amount of the loss sustained by each victim as a result of the offense” and “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.” The court “may decline” to enter any order of restitution “[t]o the extent that the court determines that the complication and prolongation of the sentencing process resulting from the fashioning of an order of restitution ... outweighs the need to provide restitution to any victims.” Considering all of the specified and other relevant factors, the court finds that it should exercise its discretion in favor of awarding restitution, rather than truncate the proceedings by declining to make such award. The first factor the court is directed to consider in determining whether to make a restitution award is “the loss sustained” by the victim. For reasons explained later in this opinion, not only was the breath of life was lost when Mr. Johnson was killed by the defendant, but there were substantial financial losses. The next factor the court must consider is “the financial resources of the defendant, the financial needs and earning ability of the defendant and the defendant’s dependents.” The presentence report in this matter indicates that defendant Bedo-nie lacks significant, debts or assets, has no dependents, and “has the capacity to make minimal monthly payments toward court-ordered fines or restitution.” The ability to make only minimal payments toward restitution is a factor weighing against further extending review of restitution issues. Finally, the court is directed to consider “such other factors as the court deems appropriate.” The court believes that several additional factors are relevant. This is a homicide case, involving the most serious possible harm knowfi to the criminal law- — 'the death of a victim. Because of the loss of life, doubts should be resolved in favor of taking the time to explore restitution issues. Moreover, the indigency of the victim’s mother (the representative of the victim in this matter) combined with defendant Bedonie’s lack of significant assets would make it difficult for her to file a civil suit seeking redress for the defendant’s homicide. If lost income issues are not resolved here, they will apparently never be resolved. A final point is. also relevant to this issue — there is a compelling reason for considering every dollar of restitution that might be awarded to any victim here. Ms. Johnson testified at the January 21, 2004, sentencing hearing about the devastating financial consequences of the defendant’s homicide, which deprived her of financial contributions from Mr. Johnson. As she credibly explained: To this day, I haven’t been able to get caught up on my bills. I have to pay for my trailer and my car. I can’t afford to pay for my propane, electricity and water payments, so I have been turning to the church to help me out. I also can’t afford to buy personal needs, food and even to do my laundry. I also have a daughter who is in high school and she needs school supplies. And at the beginning of the school year, I couldn’t even afford to buy her any clothes or any school supplies. We also have livestock that we can’t afford to buy hay to feed them. Many times I have turned to my family for help, but they can only do so much.... My bi-weekly income is around $200. Right now I only have one job and I work six days a week. In sum, after considering all the relevant factors, the court concludes that any prolongation and complication of sentencing that might result from considering restitution does not outweigh the need to provide restitution to any victims. 2. The Seventh Circuit’s Contrary Analysis in United States v. Fountain is Not Persuasive. In reaching this conclusion, the court is aware of a contrary analysis in the 1985 Seventh Circuit decision — United States v. Fountain — a case cited prominently by defendant Bedonie. The Seventh Circuit’s analysis is not controlling here and appears unpersuasive. In Fountain, the Seventh Circuit held, over the strong dissent of Judge Swygert, that the VWPA did not permit a district court to conduct a hearing to determine whether to award restitution for future lost income for a victim of a homicide. The Circuit had no difficulty with awarding past lost income or, indeed, no conceptual difficulty with awarding future lost income. Instead, the Circuit was concerned solely with the burden to district courts in making such determinations. The Circuit explained the practical problem as follows: Compensation for the loss of future earnings is quintessentially civil. The reason is not merely historical, or conceptual; there is, indeed, no difference of principle between past and future earnings, so far as the purposes of criminal punishment are concerned. To disable a person from working, temporarily or permanently, is to deprive him of his human capital; it is a detail whether the consequence is to deprive him of earnings he would have had in the past or earnings he would have had in the future. The reason for treating past and future earnings differently is practical: the calculation of lost future earnings involves the difficult problem of translating an uncertain future stream of earnings into a present value.... It is not a problem met for solution in a summary proceeding ancillary to sentencing for a criminal offense. In view of this “practical” problem, the Circuit then held that the VWPA never permitted future lost income awards: “Obeying the statutory directive that ‘the imposition of such order ... not unduly complicate or prolong the sentencing process,’ we hold that an order requiring a calculation of lost future earnings unduly complicates the sentencing process and hence is not authorized by the VWPA” unless such order were uncontested. Judge Swygert dissented on this issue. He saw no reason to adopt a per se rule barring restitution for future lost income whenever there was dispute: “Surely there are some victims whose future earnings are easily predictable, and surely district judges have sufficient competence and experience to expeditiously predict future earnings and discount to present value, despite the failure of the parties to agree on the necessary calculations.” Judge Swygert also expressed his concern that the per se rule “will essentially repeal restitution for lost income [under the VWPA] because all calculations of future income can be ‘contested.’ ” Fountain has now been effectively overruled by the MVRA for cases involving crimes of violence. But in other cases subject to the VWPA, it is potentially persuasive authority to consider. The Tenth Circuit does not appear to have discussed the issue presented in Fountain, leaving this court to determine in the first instance whether the Seventh Circuit is correct in holding that the VWPA blocks future lost income awards in all circumstances. Having carefully reviewed the relevant statutes, the court declines to follow the Seventh Circuit’s analysis because it is at odds with the controlling statutory language. The provision of the VWPA that the Seventh Circuit relied upon provides in full: To the extent that the court determines that the complication and prolongation of the sentencing process resulting from the fashioning of an order of restitution under this section outweighs the need to provide restitution to any victims, the court may decline to make such an order. As the italicized word “may” indicates, the statute gives the district courts discretion in entering restitution awards. It would twist that term beyond recognition to read that discretionary statute as barring district courts from ever entering such orders in all cases involving issues of lost income. More important, the Seventh Circuit’s analysis seems incomplete; it apparently considers only the costs of extended restitution hearings, but not the benefits. No doubt, determining lost future income will complicate and prolong some sentencings. Those costs, however, should not be overstated. This case can serve as a convenient illustration. To determine the lost income of two victims in two separate homicide cases, the court held one eviden-tiary hearing of approximately three hours, followed by another hearing of approximately two-and-a-half hours to hear arguments of counsel on the issues involved. These hearings would have been considerably shorter with the benefit of a Tenth Circuit opinion establishing controlling legal principles in the area. The court also was required to spend $1725 to retain the services of an expert for both cases. Weighed against the costs of complicating and prolonging sentencing hearings is the fact that many crime victims and their families will benefit from larger restitution awards. The Seventh Circuit’s sweeping rule applies to a wide range of cases, including cases in which a victim has been disabled or even killed by a violent criminal. As suggested by Ms. Johnson’s situation, at least some (if not most) of these crime victims may be in desperate financial circumstances where literally every dollar could make a real difference to them. It makes little sense to give a wooden reading of the statute that all victims — no matter how badly victimized or how urgently in need of financial recompense — will never obtain lost income restitution. This analysis is supported by the plain language of the statute, which mandates consideration of victims’ individual circumstances. The statute requires the court to “determine! ]” whether the costs of longer hearings “outweigh the need to provide restitution to any victims.” The Seventh Circuit does not explain how its per se rule gives effect to the statutory directive to “determine” crime victims’ needs. Indeed, with the benefit of 20/20 hindsight, it may be that cases like Fountain triggered Congress’ decision to pass the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act precisely to make sure that courts fully considered the victims’ side of the cost-benefit equation. Accordingly, the court finds Fountain unpersuasive and refuses to follow it here. Furthermore, the court concludes that, were it to proceed under the VWPA, it would have discretion to award future lost income restitution and that its discretion should be exercised to determine the amount of such an award. 3. The Court Would Order Full Restitution Under the VWPA. If the court were proceeding under the VWPA rather than the MVRA, there would remain the issue of whether the court would order the same, full restitution that it would order under the MVRA. In several VWPA cases decided more than a decade ago, the Tenth Circuit held that ordering indigent defendants to pay full restitution was improper. For example, in 1991 in United States v. Rogat, the Circuit explained that “[although a defendant’s indigency is not a bar to restitution, ... [t]he possibility of repayment ... cannot be based solely on chance.” In the 1992 in United States v. Mcllvain, the Circuit noted the principle that potential for restitution cannot be based on mere chance and vacated a restitution order because district court failed to take into consideration the defendant’s ability to pay. In a similar decision in 1992, United States v. Grimes, the Circuit vacated a restitution order because of lack of evidence that the “defendant had the capacity to earn sufficient income following release that would permit [restitution] payments.” Under these cases, it might be argued that, were the court to proceed under the VWPA rather than the MVRA, it would need to award a smaller sum for restitution in light of defendant Bedonie’s limited ability to pay. The court finds that those earlier Tenth Circuit decisions are no longer good law. Congress overruled these decisions and others like them in other circuits when it passed the MVRA. The MVRA not only added new mandatory restitution provisions for crimes of violence, but also consolidated the procedures for determining and enforcing restitution awards. The relevant legislative history explains that the MVRA “has the further purposes of establishing one set of procedures for the issuance of restitution orders in Federal criminal cases.... [T]his legislation is needed to replace an existing patchwork of different rules governing orders of restitution under various Federal criminal statutes with one consistent procedure.” The new consolidated procedures apply to both the MVRA and the VWPA. One of these newly consolidated procedures specifically directs that courts must not consider the financial circumstances of a defendant in determining restitution: “In each order of restitution, the court shall order restitution to each victim in the full amount of each victim’s losses as determined by the court and without consideration of the economic circumstances of the defendant.” The procedures then go on to provide that, once full restitution has been ordered, the economic circumstances of the defendant are relevant to determining the subsidiary question of the schedule for paying restitution. In light of the new clear congressional directive, the court would proceed in the same fashion under either the MVRA or the VWPA— first ordering full restitution and then considering the economic circumstances of the defendant in arranging a payment schedule. For all these reasons, the court finds that full restitution must be awarded against both defendants Bedonie and Sera-wop. II. Bedonie and Serawop Must Pay Restitution for the Lost Income of their Victims. A. The Deceased — Mr. Johnson and Beyonce Serawop — Are Entitled to Restitution as “Victims” of the Homicide Offenses Against Them. Having concluded the court must award full restitution, the issue then arises as to who is the “victim” entitled to restitution. It seems almost self-evident that a person who is murdered is the victim of a homicide offense. But because the issue seems to be contested, it may be useful to explore the issue briefly. 1. Lost Income Is Properly Awardahle to Mr. Johnson as the “Victim” of a Homicide. Mr. Johnson is the victim of defendant’s Bedonie’s crime. The MVRA defines “victim” as: [A] person directly and proximately harmed as a result of the commission of an offense for which restitution may be ordered including, in the case of an offense that involves as an element a scheme, conspiracy, or pattern of criminal activity, any person directly harmed by the defendant’s criminal conduct in the course of the scheme, conspiracy, or pattern. In the case of a victim who is under 18 years of age, incompetent, incapacitated, or deceased, the legal guardian of the victim or representative of the victim’s estate, another family member, or any other person appointed as suitable by the court, may assume the victim’s rights under this section Under this provision, the person killed in a homicide case is a victim. Obviously, as provided in the first sentence of the definition, someone who is murdered is “directly and proximately harmed” by the offense. The second sentence of the definition does not alter that conclusion. The second sentence lists certain persons who “may assume the victim’s rights” under the MVRA when a victim is “deceased,” including a “representative of the victim’s estate.” But these persons do not become the victim; they merely represent the victim under the statute. This distinction is important because defendant Bedonie raises several arguments predicated on the assumption that the victim in her case is Mr. Johnson’s estate rather than Mr. Johnson himself. To be sure, there may be a close connection between the estate and the victim. But to treat the estate as the victim would contravene the plain language of the statute which, as just noted, merely allows a “representative of the estate” to “assume” the victim’s rights, not to actually become the victim. Moreover, Bedonie’s reading of the statute assumes that in homicide cases the victim will always be the estate. Such a reading would give no effect to another provision, which allows the court to appoint “any other person” found to be “suitable” to assume the victim’s rights. In this case, the court will appoint Ms. Johnson — the victim’s mother who allocated eloquently at the sentencing hearing — as the suitable person to represent Mr. Johnson. That appointment is not conditioned on any connection between Ms. Johnson and the victim’s estate. Indeed, the court could make such an appointment under the statute if Mr. Johnson had been only incapacitated rather than killed. Ms. Bedonie points to one other provision in the statute as suggesting that the victim in her case is Mr. Johnson’s estate, not Mr. Johnson himself. The opening paragraph of the MVRA directs where payment of restitution is to be made: Notwithstanding any other provision of law, when sentencing a defendant convicted of an offense described in subsection (c), the court shall order, in addition to, or in the case of a misdemeanor, in addition to or in lieu of, any other penalty authorized by law, that the defendant make restitution to the victim of the offense or, if the victim is deceased, to the victim’s estate. This payment provision does not define who is “the victim,” a subject addressed in the definitional paragraph discussed above. Instead, this provision simply explains to whom the defendant is to pay or “make” the restitution — to the estate in eases where the victim is deceased, as otherwise the payments might go nowhere. For all these reasons, Mr. Johnson is the victim in Ms. Bedonie’s case. 2. The Court Need Not Reach the Issue of Whether Ms. Johnson is Also a Victim of the Offense. Mr. Johnson’s mother, Ms. Johnson, may also be a “victim” of defendant Bedo-nie’s crime in her own right. As just discussed, the salient provision of the MVRA defines “victim” as a person “directly and proximately harmed as a result of the commission of an offense.” In this case, Mr. Johnson was obviously directly and proximately harmed when he was killed. But nothing in the MVRA requires that restitution be limited to a single victim, and Ms. Johnson may well have been directly harmed also. Ms. Johnson directly lost financial support from her son. As she credibly explained in a letter provided to the court: I am a single parent. My son Brian started work right after his graduation to help me out with our financial commitments. With Brian’s help, our family financial status was fine. Brian was also a talented artist. With the sale of his arts, it really helps with the bills. After Brian’s death, my bills started to accumulate. Even when I got a second job, it’s still not enough.... I’m getting behind on my bills of 2 to 3 months. These are my necessities, my trailer, our water and light bills, food, etc. With the stra[in] of my daily survival, I’m developing health problems. I am in need of help. If only I can get my bills up to date and extra cash, then I can start off again. The Tenth Circuit has held that a financial loss stemming from a homicide can create “victim” status under the MVRA. In United States, v. Checora, the Tenth Circuit cited the MVRA’s direct-and-proximate-harm definition of “victim” and held a homicide victim’s sons qualified as victims under the statute. The court explained that the sons had “been directly and proximately harmed as a result of their father’s death because they have lost, among other things, a source of financial support.” Likewise in this case, Ms. Johnson would appear to have directly lost a vital source of financial support and therefore might qualify as a “victim” under the statute for that reason alone. The court, however, does not rest any determination that Ms. Johnson is a victim solely on this monetary ground. As was apparent during Ms. Johnson’s allocution, the financial loss from the defendant’s crime was only a small part of the harm. Much more significant was the emotional trauma inflicted on Ms. Johnson from the loss of her son. Ms. Johnson undertook the difficult task of explaining to the court what it was like to lose her son: People may think and say that this happened 21 months ago. I should be over it by now. But to me it seems like yesterday. The pain and loss is still in my heart. As I am sitting here today, my heart is filled with tears for the loss of my son.... People will tell you to hang on, or to give it time, and things will get better. But those are just words. As you go on with your livelihood,. you try to encourage yourself to continue as before, but it doesn’t work that way. Every day you expect your child to walk through the door and tell you about his day, who he met, and who he talked to, what he ate, and what new things he has learned from somebody he has met along the way.... How do you deal with the pain of losing your child. It’s not easy.... To this day and forever I know that losing someone you love a lot is hard to accept and it comes with a pain that is hard to bear at times. But life goes on. I’ll always miss him and wish I could see him again, but as we all know that isn’t possible. So now all I have is just memories of him. This clear psychological harm to Ms. Johnson would seem to qualify her as a victim under the statute. As two leading experts on restitution have written, “in cases of murder or manslaughter, direct injury is experienced by the victim’s family through loss of a member.” Moreover, the MVRA only requires that a person be “directly and proximately harmed” by an offense. Nothing in the statute requires that the “harm” be a financial and physical injury. To the contrary, the term “harm” is conventionally defined as embracing both “physical and mental damage.” Consistent with that understanding, the MVRA recognizes that restitution may be appropriately ordered for, among other things, “psyehiatric[ ] and psychological care.” To be sure, the statute is limited in that it does not authorize some open-ended award of restitution for pain and suffering or emotional distress. But the only issue at this juncture is whether Ms. Johnson qualifies as a “victim,” not the full dimensions of what kind of restitution should be paid. Based on the credible statement given by Ms. Johnson in open court, it would appear that she has been directly and proximately harmed — indeed, grievously harmed — by the. defendant’s homicide that deprived her of her firstborn son. Nonetheless, the court finds it unnecessary to finally determine whether Ms. Johnson is a victim under the MVRA. So far as the court can tell, such a determination would not change the amount of restitution to be awarded. Ms. Johnson had not alleged any categories of restitution above and beyond those that would be awarded to her son. At most, a determination about her status might have changed the distribution of restitution to be awarded. If she is a victim, she might have suffered some lost income by losing a source of financial support. But the court is already going to make a full award for lost income to Mr. Johnson, so any award to Ms. Johnson would have to be subtracted to avoid double counting. Since Ms. Johnson will apparently administer Mr, Johnson’s estate, any change in distribution from Mr. Johnson to Ms. Johnson would be little more than a bookkeeping change. Accordingly, the court concludes that it need not determine whether Ms. Johnson is a victim in this matter. 3. Lost Income Is Properly Awardable to Beyonce Serawop as the ‘Victim” of a Homicide. Defendant Serawop has also objected to defining Beyonce as a “victim.” On this issue, his arguments largely parallel those of defendant Bedonie and are rejected for the same reasons. Beyonce Serawop was “directly and proximately” harmed when her father smashed her head in a fit of rage. Beyonce obviously qualifies as a victim in her own right. To assume her rights during the proceedings, the court finds Beyonce’s mother — Ms. Moya — is a suitable representative. Ms. Moya testified at trial and at sentencing spoke eloquently about the pain of losing her daughter. She is the logical representative of her daughter. B. The MVRA Requires a Lost Income Award in Homicide Cases. Having concluded that the MVRA requires the court to order the defendants to pay full restitution and that Mr. Johnson and Beyonce Serawop are the victims of the defendants’ offenses, the court must next determine what is embraced by the concept of “full” restitution. The court concludes that it is required to enter an order of restitution covering the lost income of the Mr. Johnson and Beyonce Serawop. Indeed, the MVRA requires such an award in all cases in which the violent death of a victim has lead to lost income. The relevant provisions of the MVRA read: The order of restitution shall require that such defendant— (2) in the case of an offense resulting in bodily injury to a victim— (A) pay an amount equal to the cost of necessary medical and related professional services and devices relating to physical, psychiatric, and psychological care, including non-medical care and treatment rendered in accordance with a method of healing recognized by the law of the place of treatment; (B) pay an amount equal to the cost of necessary physical and occupational therapy and rehabilitation; and (C) reimburse the victim for income lost by such victim as a result of such offense; (3) in the case of an offense resulting in bodily injury that results in the death of the victim, pay an amount equal to the cost of necessary funeral and related services; and (4) in any case, reimburse the victim for lost income and necessary child care, transportation, and other expenses incurred during participation in the investigation or prosecution of the offense or attendance at proceedings related to the offense. Defendant Serawop argues that these provisions do not envision lost income awards in homicide cases. His reading starts with subsection (b)(2)(C), which provides that “in the case of an offense resulting in bodily injury to a victim ” the court shall order restitution to “reimburse the victim for income lost by such victim as a result of such offense.” On the other hand, subsection (b)(3) provides that “in the case of an offense resulting in bodily injury that results in the death of the victim ” the court shall order restitution in “an amount equal to the cost of necessary funeral and related services.” Because subsection (b)(3) explicitly requires the court to order restitution to cover the cost of necessary funeral and related services in criminal cases involving a death, defendant Serawop concludes that the more general lost income provisions of subsection (b)(2) are not applicable in homicide cases. Defendant Serawop’s position contradicts logic, the purposes of the MVRA, and the plain language of the statute. To find the MVRA’s lost income provisions inapplicable in homicide cases would defy logic and would lead to the perverse result that murderers would usually pay markedly less restitution than criminals who only assault and injure their victims. Under such a reading, the murderer would pay only funeral expenses, while the assaulter would pay for lost income, a potentially much larger sum. Such a result would contradict a core purpose of restitution, which is to “ensure that the offender realizes the damage caused by the offense and pays the debt owed to the victim as well as to society.” Moreover, reading the statute to block lost income awards in homicide cases would conflict with the clear intention of the MVRA: to force offenders to “‘pay full restitution to the identifiable victims of their crimes.’ ” Income is plainly one of the things lost by victims when they are murdered. Indeed, the legislative history reveals clear congressional concern about the failure of federal courts to order restitution in homicide cases. In opening the hearings on the bill that became the MVRA, Senator Hatch critically observed that judges ordered restitution in “only 20.2% of federal criminal cases during fiscal year 1994 ... [including only] 27.9% of all murders.” Such a conclusion would also flout the plain language of the MVRA. The statute expressly directs judges to require a convicted defendant to pay restitution for income lost “in the case of an offense resulting in bodily injury to a victim.” An offense that results in death would plainly be an offense resulting in bodily injury. Death is simply the most serious form of bodily injury and in no way eliminates the appropriateness of a restitution award. Confirming this reading of the statute is the Tenth Circuit’s decision in United States v. Checora. In that case, the defendants murdered a man who had two sons. This district court ordered the defendants to pay $5,000 in restitution to the Utah State Division of Child and Family Services, who had custody of the children. The court agreed that the sons were “victims” under the MVRA because they had “lost, among other things, a source of financial support.” The only way that “a source of financial support” can be the basis for a restitution award in a homicide case is through the lost income provision. To be sure, the Tenth Circuit ultimately reversed and remanded that restitution award for further consideration, but solely on the ground that there was insufficient evidence in the record to conclude that the state agency was actually the proper guardian of the child. On remand, this court appointed a guardian to collect and spend the $5,000 for the two boys whose father had been murdered. Thus, Che-cora holds that lost income is recoverable in a homicide case. The Fifth Circuit has also rejected defendant Serawop’s position. In United States v. Razo-Leora, the Circuit upheld a lost income award of $100,000 to a widow whose husband was murdered. Apparently proceeding under the “income lost” language in the VWPA which is essentially identical to the MVRA, the Circuit noted that the victim was in his twenties when he was murdered and might well have earned considerably more than that over his life. The Circuit approved the lost income award, explaining: The $100,000 award to his widow is therefore relatively conservative and assumes legitimate income by Garcia of only $5000 per year with a work life expectancy of only twenty years. Razo-Leora points to no countervailing evidence in the record. We conclude that the award has adequate support. The Fifth Circuit also approved a lost income award in United States v. Jackson, although the court remanded for further evidentiary findings. Jackson involved defendants who kidnaped then murdered a victim. The district court ordered restitution to the victim’s estate in the amount of $1,250,000 because of concern that the defendants might someday profit from a book about the highly publicized case. The Fifth Circuit stated that “the district court has the authority to order the defendants to pay the victims’ estate an amount equal to victims’ lost income.” Nevertheless, the court remanded for further proceedings, because the district court had not made any factual findings concerning the amount of the victim’s losses; rather than focus on the victim, the district court based its calculations on the defendants’ prospective income. A final supporting decision on lost income comes from the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York. In an arson case, United States v. Ferranti the court awarded total restitution exceeding $1.4 million, including more than $900,000 based on the future lost earnings of a firefighter killed putting out the blaze. In sum, in light of the structure of the MYRA and the supporting case law, the lost income provisions of subsection (b)(2) should be read as applying to cases involving not only injury but also death, in addition to which the funeral expense provisions of subsection (b)(8) apply in cases involving death. Under this interpretation of the MVRA, therefore, this court is not only permitted but required to order the defendants here to pay restitution to the victim for “income lost by such victim as a result of such offense.” C. The MVRA Requires an Award for Both Past and Future Lost Income. Defendant Bedonie does not seriously contest that lost income awards are proper in cases involving crimes of violence. Instead, her main contention is that the court cannot order restitution for future lost income of a crime victim. Her argument rests on the MVRA’s language allowing a court to order a defendant to “reimburse the victim for income lost by such victim as a result of such offense.” She contends that the “income lost” does “not logically apply to income which the victim may lose in the future, especially in light of the use of the word ‘reimburse,’ which implies payment only for expenses already incurred.” While creative, defendant Bedonie’s argument is unsound. She seems to draw a distinction between past and future income. Yet, at the conceptual level, there is “no difference of principle between past and future earnings, so far as the purposes of criminal punishment are concerned.” Moreover, “lost income” is a phrase frequently used in court opinions around the country in tort cases. Plaintiffs frequently recover “lost income” damages, which include future lost income. Congress presumably was aware of this background when it legislated and, accordingly, the words it chose should be construed in this light. Nor does the selection of the word “reimburse” necessarily imply a backward focus. To be sure, one can be “reimbursed” for losses already suffered. But in addition, one can be “reimbursed” by being restored or made whole. Thus, Black’s Law Dictionary defines the verb “reimburse” as “[t]o pay back, to make restoration, to repay that expended; to indemnify, or to make whole.” A victim of a crime is obviously not “restored” or “made whole” unless she is put back to the same position she was in before the crime. A victim of a violent crime who losses her ability to work because of criminal violence suffers losses well into the future. If any doubt remained on the issue, Congress has resolved it by using a phrase that is very much forward looking: Congress has directed mandatory restitution for “income lost by such victim as a result of such offense.” Income losses that “result” from an offense are necessarily losses that occur at some future time. It could hardly be otherwise, as crimes do not harm victims retroactively but instead from that time forward. Defendant Bedonie apparently concedes that Congress has directed courts to award lost income from the time of the crime through sentencing. Any other position would be nonsensical, as it would effectively read the lost income restitution provision out of the statute. But the net result of this concession is that Bedonie must awkwardly interpret the MVRA as permitting lost income awards only from the crime through sentencing, but not thereafter. This curious interpretation would produce significant variance in restitution awards in otherwise identical cases based on such happenstance as the length of time to investigate the case, the diligence with which it is prosecuted, and rapidity with which the court holds the restitution hearing. The possibility of variance would be particularly pronounced in homicide cases, where there is no statute of limitation and where investigation and prosecution can take considerable time. In t