I still laugh when I think of Back to School with Rodney Dangerfield. My dad, my brother, and I used to quote it all the time growing up. One line stuck with us more than the rest:
“How about Fantasyland?”
It was funny in the movie.
But it’s deadly serious in the federal justice system.
The Fantasy: Restitution Settlements After Prison
A few months ago, a physician who’d recently come home from prison gave me a call. Great guy. Kind. Smart. Well-meaning.
But completely stuck in Fantasyland.
He said, “Justin, I want to write to the FLU and try to settle my restitution. I owe millions, but I was thinking maybe they’d take a few hundred thousand and call it even.”
I told him: Please don’t do that.
You’re about to wake a sleeping giant.
For those who don’t know, FLU stands for Financial Litigation Unit. They’re the part of the U.S. Attorney’s Office that handles collecting restitution and fines after sentencing. They’re not the IRS. They don’t negotiate. They don’t forgive. And they sure don’t forget.
Still, he didn’t listen. He sent the letter.
What Happens When You Wake the FLU
A few weeks later, the physician got a reply.
It wasn’t a warm thank-you note.
It wasn’t, “Thanks for reaching out. Let’s talk.”
It was more like:
“Thanks for the update. Now that we know you have money, we’d like an updated financial affidavit and access to whatever liquid funds you’ve mentioned. No, we’re not settling. And yes, you still owe us every penny.”
That letter triggered a full review of his financials—and put him back under the microscope. Suddenly, he wasn’t off the government’s radar anymore.
He’d just turned the spotlight back on.
The Restitution Myth That Spreads Like a Virus
I’ve heard it a hundred times inside federal prisons:
“Don’t worry, they’ll never collect all of it.”
“They’ll settle for pennies on the dollar once you get out.”
“They just want you to pretend to pay something.”
None of that is true.
None of that helps you prepare.
But people cling to it because it’s easier than facing the truth:
You owe the money.
They expect you to pay it.
And they’ll come after you—hard—if they think you’re hiding or stalling.
Why the Government Won’t Let It Go
Think of it from their side.
You’re convicted. You owe millions.
You serve time. Then you start making payments—$100 a month or whatever your schedule allows.
Now suddenly, post-prison, you show up with a six-figure offer to “settle.”
What does that signal to them?
It tells them you have access to money.
It tells them you’ve probably had it for a while.
It raises a simple question in their mind:
“What else is he hiding?”
Restitution isn’t student debt. It’s not negotiable. It doesn’t disappear after seven years. It follows you until it’s paid or discharged by statute—which is rare and takes decades.
What You Should Do Instead
If you owe money post-prison, here’s what I’d recommend instead of trying to cut a deal with FLU:
1. Stick to Your Payment Plan
Don’t deviate. Don’t try to get clever. If you’re on a payment schedule, meet it—religiously.
2. Don’t Trigger Their Attention
If they’re not knocking, don’t invite them in. Letters, calls, or “offers” can backfire fast. Once they start asking for updated financials, you’re under their scope again.
3. Document Everything
Track your income, expenses, and every restitution payment. If they do request financials, you want a clean, honest record.
4. Be Realistic
You’re not going to outsmart the government. If you have assets and they find out you’ve hidden them or tried to game the system, they’ll seize them—and possibly reopen your case for fraud.
This Isn’t Just About Money
The stakes here are bigger than dollars.
Waking up the FLU doesn’t just lead to collections. It can lead to scrutiny, audits, liens, and worse—violations of supervised release if they think you’ve been dishonest.
Fantasyland Doesn’t Help Anyone
I get why people fall into this trap.
You come home from prison. You want to move on. You want to clean the slate.
But Fantasyland is not a strategy. It’s a liability.
When I say “don’t poke the FLU,” I’m not trying to be funny. I’m trying to save you from inviting problems you don’t need.
Stick to what works: transparency, discipline, and silence when silence is smarter.
Justin Paperny
P. S. If this resonates, join our team this Monday at 1 p.m. Pacific, 4 p.m. Eastern. We host a free webinar to answer questions, share lessons from real cases, and help you avoid the most costly mistakes people make during a government investigation. Bring questions. Come ready to learn.