MEMORANDUM OPINION
Civil asset forfeiture laws — which enable law enforcement agencies to seize property they believe has been involved in criminal activity — have generated considerable controversy in recent years. Citing a dramatic rise in the value of seizures, critics assert that police departments are using the laws not to legitimately fight crime, but to generate revenue for dubious expenditures, often at the expense of innocent property owners. Defenders of the laws counter that seizures have crippled drug and other criminal organizations while the proceeds of the forfeitures enhance the ability of financially-strapped police departments to protect the public from other crimes. In either event, evidence has emerged suggesting that at least some police departments have abused the civil'forfeiture process, see, e.g., Michael Sallah, Robert O’Harrow Jr., & Steven Rich, Stop and Seize, Wash. „ Post, (Sept. 6, 2014), http://www.washingtonpost.com/sfi investigative/2014/09/06/stop-and-seize/,, which in turn has led to public debate and legislative reforms in many jurisdictions, including the District of Columbia. The controversy has also generated lawsuits across the country challenging the constitutionality of municipal forfeiture laws. This is one such case.
The twenty-two. Plaintiffs in this case are owners of cars or currency that they allege Were improperly seized and retained by the District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department (“MPD”). The seizures were effected under a prior version of Washington D.C.’s civil forfeiture statute, D.C.Code § 48-905.02 (2012). Plaintiffs contend that various aspects of the former law, and MPD’s implementation of it, violated their constitutional rights under both the Fourth and Fifth Amendments. In sixteen separate counts, they generally allege (1) that they did not receive requisite notice that their property was subject to forfeiture, either at-the time of or after the seizure; (2) that the law denied them' a prompt and meaningful opportunity to be heard to challenge the seizure and continued retention of their property pending the ultimate forfeiture determination; (3) that the law impermissibly conditioned a judicial hearing on posting a bond and that MPD systematically denied waivers, of this bond requirement to eligible claimants; (4) that MPD allowed some claimants, but not others, to challenge forfeiture of their property through informal “secret” procedures; and (5) that. MPD routinely failed to return seized property that was no longer subject to forfeiture. Plaintiffs - bring their claims as a putative class action on behalf of themselves and others whom they, allege have been- harmed in similar ways.
The District moves. to dismiss the amended complaint. Upon consideration
The Court will deny the District’s motion to dismiss in all other respects. It finds — consistent with the reasoning of the Second Circuit, the Seventh Circuit, and this court in Simms v. District of Columbia, 872 F.Supp.2d 90 (2012) — that the government must provide a prompt opportunity for owners of seized automobiles to challenge the reasonableness of the seizure and propose means to protect the government’s interest short of retaining their cars until the conclusion of forfeiture proceedings. The Court further finds that while the MPD notices comport with due process, certain Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged that the District does not issue the notices (or follow up on returned notices) in a manner reasonably calculated to reach claimants. The complaint also alleges plausible due process violations resulting from MPD’s purported “secret” procedures for challenging forfeitures and its retention of property that is not deemed forfeitable or needed as evidence in a criminal case. Finally, although the statute’s bond requirement does not facially violate due process, certain Plaintiffs have sufficiently pled that the District denied them bond waivers and reductions in violation of their due process rights. The Court will therefore deny the District’s motion to dismiss as to these claims. 1
I. Background
A. Civil Forfeiture Procedures in the District of Columbia
In February 2015, the Council of the District of Columbia enacted sweeping changes to the city’s asset forfeiture statute. See Civil Asset Forfeiture Amendment Act of 2014, 62 D.C.Reg. 1,920 (Feb. 13, 2015) (imposing stricter notice and reporting provisions; requiring the MPD to inventory and catalogue seized property; reducing the bond requirement; giving owners an opportunity to request interim release of their property; shifting the burden of proof from the owner to the government; and providing that drug possession is no longer a forfeitable offense). The new legislation addresses many of the infirmities in the prior version of the law alleged by the Plaintiffs in this case. Id. The Court must nevertheless decide the merits of this motion to dismiss, as Plaintiffs claim damages stemming from the District’s past conduct under the pre-amendment asset forfeiture regime.
If a claimant paid the bond, the District did not return the property. Rather, it initiated judicial forfeiture proceedings in the District of Columbia Superior Court. D.C.Code § 48-905.02(d)(3)(E) (2012). If a claimant did not trigger judicial proceedings by paying the bond or obtaining a waiver, the property became subject to administrative forfeiture. The statute required the Mayor to then determine whether the property was forfeitable. Id. § 48 — 905.02(d)(3)(C). The Mayor in turn delegated authority over those administrative forfeiture determinations to the MPD Property Clerk. D.C. Mun. Regs. 6-A § 805. The Property Clerk’s decision was made ex parte; claimants had no formal opportunity to challenge the rationale for the original seizure, assert their rights as innocent owners, or suggest reasons they should be able to recover their property. If the Property Clerk did not deem the property forfeitable or it was not needed as evidence in a criminal case, the statute required the District to return it. D.C.Code § 48-905.02(d)(3)(C) (2012).
B. Factual Allegations
As noted above, the Plaintiffs in this putative class action are owners of either vehicles or cash that was seized by the police incident to traffic stops or other arrests. While the specifics of their allegations differ, all generally claim that the District’s civil forfeiture regime was designed and implemented without regard for their constitutional rights. The following allegations are illustrative of Plaintiffs’ contentions.
Kelly Hughes alleges that her vehicle was seized merely because she had an “air freshener hanging from the rear view window and heavy tint.” Compl. ¶ 165. Hughes says she spent hours calling the police and District agencies to recover her vehicle. Id. ¶ 171. When the police finally directed her to the impound lot, she claims the officer would not show her the copy of the seizure warrant. Id. ¶ 173. According to Hughes, she struggled to get to work and to a truck driving course in Baltimore without her car,.yet still had to make all the loan and insurance payments. Id. ¶¶ 179-80.
Another plaintiff, Takia Jenkins, claims her Mercedes was taken from the parking lot behind her house because someone (whom the police would not identify) had allegedly driven it in an illegal manner.
Id.
¶ 184. She contends the officers told her she would never recover her car, or that it would be prohibitively expensive to do so.
Id.
¶ 187. Jenkins says she repeatedly phoned the police, but was shunted from one department to another without being given any helpful information.
Id.
¶ 188. Jenkins was pregnant at the time and had difficulty getting around without her car.
Id.
¶200. When the police finally released the car to her after
Some members of the purported class contend they never received notice of the seizure of their property. Id. ¶¶ 138, 290, 375, 407. Julius Gordon, for example, claims he gave his correct address to the MPD when he was arrested and booked after a controlled substance stop but the police never sent a notice of any kind. Id. ¶¶ 300, 303. Jarrett Acey says he did not receive his notice until after the statute of limitations for filing a claim had expired. Id. ¶ 324.
Many Plaintiffs describe having to undertake Herculean efforts to retrieve then-property amid police resistance. Ishebek-ka Beckford, for example, claims she asked the police for information about her vehicle and was given a non-working number to call. Id. ¶ 134. Beckford cared for her grandmother and needed the car to take her to medical appointments. Id. ¶ 143. Beckford says she called the police and made several trips to the station before the District of Columbia Public Defender Service convinced the police to release her vehicle. Id. ¶¶ 134-40.
Muslimah Taylor alleges she called MPD for weeks and visited the U.S. Attorney’s office in an effort to locate, her seized Chevy Tahoe. Id. ¶¶ 271-72. A police detective purportedly refused to give her the case number because he did not want her “getting [a] stor[y] together.” Id. ¶ 273. Without her car, Taylor claims she could not take her children to summer camp and struggled to get to work, shop for food, and attend job interviews. Id. ¶¶ 275-76.
. Plaintiffs assert that none of them were given an in-person opportunity to convince the MPD. Property Clerk to return their property. Id. ¶¶ 466-68. They further ah lege the police thwarted their efforts to recover their property. Several Plaintiffs contend that the police discouraged them from applying for waivers of the bond requirement. Dorian Urquart, for example, alleges that after police seized his car from a private parking lot without a warrant, he was told that his bond waiver application would be rejected and he would never recover his vehicle. Id. ¶¶ 248, 259. Urquart claims that the loss of his car for over a year made it significantly moi-e difficult to transport his hemophiliac son to and from the hospital. Id. ¶ 266.
C. Plaintiffs ’ Legal Claims
Out of these and similar factual allegations, Plaintiffs fashion a variety of alleged constitutional violations of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments, spanning a total of sixteen separate counts. Some counts are joined by all Plaintiffs; others are asserted by a subset. Counts One and Two challenge the statute’s lack of any requirement that MPD give notice to, property owners — :in the form of a receipt or some other notification — at the time of the seizure. Counts Three and Four challenge the absence of a prompt hearing after the seizure. Counts Five and .Six allege that MPD, following a practice of insufficient notification efforts, failed to notify certain Plaintiffs of the seizure and potential forfeiture of their property. Counts Seven and Eight contend that. MPD, again based on; policy and practice, failed to notify certain. .owners that their property was deemed not forfeitable and could be retrieved. Count Nine challenges the adequacy of the written notices that are sent to property owners. Counts Ten and Eleven allege that MPD allowed some claimants, but not others, to challenge forfeiture of their property through “secret”
II. Legal Standards
The District’s motion to dismiss should be granted if the complaint does not “contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to ‘state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.’ ”
Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
III. Analysis
A Fourth Amendment Claims (Counts 2, I, 6, 8, 11, 13, and 16)
Six of Plaintiffs’ claims — counts Two, Four, Six, Eight, Eleven and Thirteen — allege the District violated Plaintiffs’ due process rights under the Fourth Amendment. A seventh claim — count Sixteen — alleges á violation of “the equal protection requirements of the Fourth Amendment.” Compl. ¶ 524. The factual allegations supporting these claims are du-plicative of identical claims brought under the Fifth Amendment. Plaintiffs nonetheless contend that “[t]he Fourth Amendment is an independent alternative basis for the prompt post seizure hearings” and other relief they seek. Pis.’ Opp’n to Mot. to Dismiss at 26. Not so. The Fourth Amendment prohibits “unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. While this protection extends to seizures conducted for the purposes of civil forfeiture,
United States v. James Daniel Good Real Property,
B. Post-Seizure Hearing (Count 3)
In Count Three, Plaintiffs allege that the statute’s lack of an opportunity for a prompt, post-seizure hearing where own
In
Krimstock v. Kelly,
the Second Circuit applied the
Mathews
test in a constitutional challenge to a New York City law permitting police to seize automobiles following a drunk driving arrest.
[d]ue process of law requires that plaintiffs be afforded a prompt post-seizure, pre-judgment hearing before a neutral judicial or administrative officer to determine whether the City is likely to succeed on the merits of the forfeiture action and whether means short of retention of the vehicle can satisfy the City’s need to preserve it from destruction or sale during the pendency of the proceedings.
Id. at 67.
Six years later, the Seventh Circuit held in
Smith v. City of Chicago,
The District offers several arguments in an effort to avoid the results in
Krimstock, Smith,
and
Simms.
It argues first that due process does not require the District to provide a preliminary hearing because owners have other opportunities to challenge the seizure and retention of their property. One such method, according to .the District, is to make a motion for return of property under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 41(g) or the identical D.C. Superior Court Rule of Criminal Procedure 41(g). A Rule 41(g) motion, however, is available only “in the context of an ongoing criminal proceeding.”
United States v. Price,
The District also suggests that Plaintiffs could have invoked the equitable power of the D.C. Superior Court and requested the return of seized property pending a forfeiture decision. This was not a viable alternative to a preliminary hearing either. Property seized for forfeiture was “deemed to be in the custody of the May- or” and was not “subject to replevin,” so the D.C. Superior Court had limited ability to order its return. D.C.Code § 48-905.02(d)(2) (2012);
accord Dunmore,
The District alternatively contends that the
Mathews
test does not govern the question of what process is due to owners of seized property. It urges the Court instead to apply the four-factor test in
Barker v. Wingo,
The' Court disagrees. As then-judge Sotomayor explained in rejecting the same argument in
Krimstock,
“the Constitution ... distinguishes between the need for prompt review of the propriety of continued government custody, on the one hand, and delays in rendering final judgment, on the other.” 306' F.3d at 68.
$8,850
and
Von Neumann,
like
Barker
itself, address only the latter. Plaintiffs’ claim;'by contrast, is aimed not at excessive delay but at how much process is due between seizure and the ultimate forfeiture decision. The
Mathews
test therefore applies.
See also City of Los Angeles v. David, 538
U.S. 715, 716,
i. Due Process for Seized Vehicles
Balancing the factors outlined in
Mathews,
this Court joins with the courts in
Krimstock, Smith,
and
Simms
in concluding that due process requires the government to provide claimants a prompt hearing to challenge the grounds for seizure óf a vehicle and the “ ‘probable validity1 of continued deprivation of [the] claimant’s property during the pendency of proceedings.”
Krimstock,
Turning to the second factor, the Court agrees with-Judge Sullivan that there is at least some risk of erroneous deprivation when a seizure is based on a traffic stop, which most of the^ seizures here were.
The final
Mathews
factor — the government’s interest in maintaining the status quo — also weighs in Plaintiffs’ favor. As was the case in
Simms,
the government has not offered any evidence regarding the potential administrative burden of providing prompt hearings with respect to seized automobiles, and, indeed, it is now required to do so under the recently-enacted changes to the District’s forfeiture statute. Civil Asset Forfeiture Amendment Act of 2014, § 106(c)(3), 62 D.C.Reg. 1,920 (Feb. 13.2015). As for the government’s most compelling argument on this prong of the test — protecting its interest in the seized vehicle — some means short of retention, such as a bond or restraining order, might “satisfy the City’s need to preserve it from destruction or sale during the pendency of proceedings.”
Krimstock,
ii. Due Process for Seized Cash
The Court reaches the opposite conclusion with respect to currency. Ten Plaintiffs allege that the police seized cash from them — ranging from $5 to $8,118— following an arrest. Half of the .seizures occurred in connection with alleged drug offenses. Application of the
Mathews
factors leads the Court to conclude that due process does not require a preliminary hearing after currency seizures. First, an individual’s interest in seized cash is less than that' in séized automobiles because' cash is fungible and easier to replace.
City of Los Angeles,
After MPD seized Plaintiffs’ property, the District had to provide written notice of the seizure and information regarding the procedures for claiming the property to any party that it knew, or in the exercise of reasonable diligence should have known, had a claim to the property. D.C.Code § 48-905.02(d)(3)(A) (2012). Plaintiffs challenge several aspects of this notification requirement. They claim that the police were obligated to provide notice at the time of the seizure, rather than later; they assert that the District’s procedures for mailing notices were halfhearted and ineffective; they contend that the content of the notices was insufficiently detailed; and they maintain that the notices did not describe alleged “secret” proceedings that were available to some claimants to challenge their seizures before the Property Clerk, The Court will address each of these contentions below.
i. Notice at Seizure (Count 1) .
Plaintiffs contend that due process required MPD to notify them of the seizure of their property at the time it was seized. They argue in Count One that even “a temporary, nonfinal deprivation of property” requires the provision of notice reasonably calculated to reach the interested parties.
Fuentes v. Shevin,
ii. Notice After Seizure (Count 5)
Plaintiffs next challenge the District’s system of post-seizure notifications. Due process requires a method of notice “reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency of the action and afford them an opportunity to present their objections.”
Dusenbery v. United States,
The District counters that some. Plaintiffs did in fact receive notice through the mail, as contemplated by the statute. D.C.Code § 48-905.02(d)(3)(A) (2012). It also claims that others learned of the seizure through other means such as court-appointed counsel. "While some named Plaintiffs acknowledge having received timely notice in the mail, others have adequately pled that they did not. See Compl. ¶¶300, 303 (allegation of Julius Gordon that he did not receive notice despite giving police his correct address); id. ¶ 324 (allegation of Jarrett Acey that he only received notice after expiration of the statute of limitations). The Court therefore cannot determine at this stage whether the District’s mailing efforts are reasonably calculated to provide actual notice. Moreover, the District cannot rely on the actions of public defenders to satisfy its burden under Dusenbery and Mullane. The Court will, however, grant the District’s motion to dismiss as to Plaintiffs Steven May, Ramona Person, and Chiquata Steele — all of whom pled that they received timely notice. Compl. ¶¶ 213, 237, 396. Otherwise the motion to dismiss Court Five is denied.
iii. Content of the Notice (Count 9)
Plaintiffs move next to the content of the notice. The District provides owners with notice of a potential forfeiture via a Notice of Intent to Administratively Forfeit. That form lists the seized property, the statute permitting forfeiture, and the D.C.Code provisions and related regulations containing the forfeiture procedures. Def.’s Mot to Dismiss, Ex. A. In Count Nine, Plaintiffs allege that due process requires additional information in the notice, including the underlying factual basis for the seizure, the court case or arrest number connected with the seizure, and various details of the forfeiture process.
The Supreme Court has spoken directly to the issue. In
City of West Covina v. Perkins,
the Court held that the Constitution does not require the government “to give detailed and specific instructions or advice to owners who seek return of property lawfully seized.”
iv. Notice of “Secret” Proceedings (Count 10)
If there was probable 'cause to support forfeiture of Plaintiffs’ property,, the MPD Property Clerk was required to issue the Notice of Intent to Administratively Forfeit discussed above. ■ D.C.Code § 48-905.02(d)(3)(A) (2012). If no claim was filed, the city began ex parte administrative proceedings in which the .Property Clerk decided whether the property was subject to forfeiture. Id. § 48-905.02(d)(3)(C). In Count Ten, Plaintiffs allege that the District’s forfeiture notice violated due process by failing to inform them of a “secret” proceeding where some property owners are given an opportunity to contest the "forfeiture before the Property Clerk, notwithstanding the ex parte nature of the proceedings. Compl. ¶¶ 466-69. The District counters that because Plaintiffs had no right to participate in the administrative proceedings, any lack of information about an opportunity to participate could not have violated 'due process. It also argues there were no such “secret” hearings. According to the District, any interaction between owners and’the Property Clerk would occur only through investigatory interviews conducted by the Property Clerk as part of the ex parte forfeiture determination.
Plaintiffs root this claim in
Memphis Light, Gas & Water Div. v. Craft,
D. Due Process in Forfeiture Determinations
Plaintiffs next challenge various aspects of the process by which the District makes its final forfeiture determinations. They allege that the District routinely discourages and rejects bond waivers, conducts ex parte administrative forfeitures, and retains property that is not subject to forfeiture or needed as' evidence. The Court addresses' these claims below.
i. Bond Requirement (Count W
In Count Fourteen, Plaintiffs take issue with the statutory requirement that property owners must post a bond, or obtain a bond waiver, in order to initiate judicial forfeiture proceedings. D.C. Mun. Regs, tit.- 6-A, § 806.1. The proffered .legal basis for this claim is somewhat -muddled.
Conditioning access to the courts on posting a bond or paying á filing fee implicates multiple constitutional protections. Due process '“ ‘prohibits] a State from denying, solely because of inability to pay, access to its courts’ ” when a judicial proceeding is necessary to vindicate a fundamental right.
M.L.B. v. S.L.J.,
Regardless of whether a due process or equal protection rubric is. used to analyze the bond requirement here, the standard of review is the same.. Indigency is not a suspect constitutional classification,
Tucker v. Branker,
Certain Plaintiffs also allege, however, that the MPD has unconstitutionally applied the bond requirement by actively discouraging claimants from seeking waivers and arbitrarily denying applications when they are submitted. Takiá Jenkins, Steven May, and Ramona Person all claim that they were told by officers that they would never recover their' property. Compl. ¶¶ 187, 209, 236. And Dorian Urq-uart alleges that an officer at the Property Clerk’s office told him that he should not even apply for a bond waiver because he will lose. Id. ¶ 259. As noted above, bond waivers for indigent individuals are a necessary element of a constitutionally valid forfeiture system. It follows that MPD’s alleged practice of impeding bond waivers and reductions, if true, would make the District’s forfeiture system unconstitutional as applied to those claimants because it denies them an Opportunity to exercise their fundamental right to contest the seizure of their property.
The District responds that no constitutional violation occurred because, if the Property Clerk rejects a waiver application, a claimant may challenge the denial in a suit under the District of Columbia Administrative Procedure Act, D.C.Code § 2-510(a) (“DCAPA”).
Cf. Tourus Records,
ii. Adequacy of Administrative Forfeiture Procedures (Count 12)
In Count Twelve, Plaintiffs allege that the District’s administrative forfeiture procedures for claimants who cannot or do not post a bond “violate due process because claimants do not get notice and an opportunity to present evidence of their innocent owner status and defenses to rebut presumptions or otherwise ‘claim’ their property before a neutral decision maker.” Pis.’ Opp’n to Mot. to Dismiss at 46. In essence, Plaintiffs object to the ex parte nature of the final administrative forfeiture decision.
As the District points out, however, its bifurcated forfeiture scheme — in
Moreover, Judge Collyer of this Court rejected a due process challenge to similar administrative forfeiture procedures contained in a statute authorizing the Drug Enforcement Agency (“DEA”) to seize controlled substances that are handled in violation of DEA regulations.
Malladi Drugs & Pharm., Ltd. v. Tandy,
iii. Retention of Property not Subject to Forfeiture (Count 7)
If it determines the seized property is not subject to forfeiture, the District is required, under both the current and prior version of the statute, promptly to return it to its rightful owner. D.C.Code § 48-905.02(d)(3)(C) (2012); Civil Asset Forfeiture Amendment Act of 2014, § 105(c)(3), 62 D.C.Reg. 1,920 (Feb. 13.2015). Plaintiffs claim in Count Seven that the District has shirked this obligation by placing the onus on owners to track down their property and secure its return. This practice, according to Plaintiffs, violates not only the statute but due process as well.
See Walters v. Wolf,
The District responds that Plaintiffs have not stated a valid claim because most of them admit they eventually recovered their property. What the District overlooks, however, is that an “arbitrary taking” may have already occurred by the time Plaintiffs managed to retrieve their property.
Fuentes,
E. Remaining. Claims
' i. Aggregate Fifth Amendment Violations (Count 15)
The District moves to dismiss Count Fifteen — alleging that “[t]he aggregate effect of forfeiture proceedings as, implemented by the MPD ... violates the equal protection clause of the Fifth Amendment,” Compl. ¶520 — on the grounds that it is duplicative and vague. The Court agrees that this count does not add any new factual allegations or legal theories to the Plaintiffs’ other claims. Because, as noted above, the Court will dismiss various claims that are subsumed within Count Fifteen, it will dismiss this aggregate claim as well.
ii.Claims of Shanita Washington and Tanisha Williams
The District contends that the claims of ■ Shanita-Washington" and Tanisha Williams must be dismissed because they have failed to plead any factual- allegations. The Court agrees. Because the.Complaint lacks any facts whatsoever regarding these named .Plaintiffs, the Complaint will be dismissed without prejudice as to them,
iii.Claims of David Littlepage
Plaintiff David Littlepage has pled that his son, Terrence Thomas, owned the cash the police seized. Compl. ¶ 342. As a result, the District argues that Littlepage has not alleged an injury to himself and therefore lacks Article III standing. Plaintiffs’ response-that the Property Clerk refuses to entertain inquiries from Thomas about the seized cash-does not remedy Littlepage’s failure to allege an injury stemming from the seized currency. In any event, Thomas is a named plaintiff in his own right. The Court will dismiss Littlepage’s claims without prejudice,
iv.Claims of Kimberly Katora Brown
Kimberly Katora Brown, the first named Plaintiff, appears to be the only plaintiff
The District finds support for the first prong of its argument in
Bazuaye v. United States,
The government attempts to marry
Bazuaye
with cases establishing that plaintiffs ordinarily lack standing to challenge seizures of property in which they did not have an ownership interest at the time of the seizure. In
United States v. Eight Million Four Hundred Forty Thousand One Hundred & Ninety Dollars ($8,440,190) in U.S. Currency,
The government’s standing argument also runs contrary to the core purposes of the Due Process Clause. Due process protects against “arbitrary encroachment” and seeks to minimize “substantively unfair or mistaken deprivations.”
Fuentes,
For the foregoing reasons, the Court will grant Defendant’s motion to dismiss Counts One, Two, Four, Six, Eight, Nine, Eleven, Twelve, Thirteen, Fifteen, and Sixteen. It will grant in part Defendant’s motion to dismiss Counts Three and Fourteen, and dismiss all claims of Plaintiffs Shanita Washington, Tanisha Williams and David Littlepage without prejudice. The Court will deny the Defendant’s motion in all remaining respects. An appropriate order will accompany this memorandum.
Appendix A: Surviving Claims
[[Image here]]
Notes
. Because each claim is brought by a subset of Plaintiffs and the circumstances of each Plaintiff differ — some, for example, received timely notice while others did not-the Court has included an appendix specifying which claims remain for which Plaintiffs.
. In its pleadings in Simms, the District conceded: “A Rule 41(g) motion is not directly relevant to the civil forfeiture proceedings. Under District of Columbia law, a Rule 41(g) motion may be used to seek release of property that was unlawfully seized and thus not admissible as evidence in the criminal case, but it may not be used to adjudicate forfeiture issues, which may only be addressed in civil forfeiture proceedings.” Defs,’ Suppl. Filing, No. 12-cv-00701, at *2 (June 22, 2012).
. As noted previously, the recently-enacted version of the law removes this presumption with respect to controlled substance offenses. See Civil Asset Forfeiture Amendment Act of , 2014, § 201(b), 62 D.C.Reg. 1,920 (Feb. 13.2015).
. Plaintiffs also attempt to bootstrap concerns about the contents and efficacy of the notice onto their argument that at-seizure notice is constitutionally required. Such concerns are more appropriately addressed infra in the discussion of Counts Five and Nine.
. Having pursued judicial forfeiture proceedings, Ms. Brown may well be collaterally es-
