Steven Kadonsky appeals from a magistrate judge’s grant of summary judgment on his claim for the return of three sums of money which were administratively forfeited to the defendants (collectively “the government”) in 1991. A panel of this court dismissed Kadonsky’s appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
See Kadonsky v. United States,
I.
In 1991, after an acquaintance informed him that a substantial sum of marijuana was being offered for sale in Dallas, Steven Kadonsky flew to Dallas and attempted to purchase the drugs. When he arrived, Kadonsky tendered $125,000 to a seller but was told that an additional $50,000 was needed to complete the transaction. Kadonsky agreed to have an associate bring the $50,000 to Dallas that night and arranged the meeting. Shortly thereafter, Kadonsky was arrested. His associate, found to have $50,893 on his person, was arrested at the Dallas airport that evening. After a full investigation, Kadon-sky pled guilty to conspiracy to distribute and to possess with the intent to distribute marijuana in 1992. His associate, apparently an unknowing carrier, was released.
In November 1991, shortly thereafter Kadonsky’s arrest, the federal government initiated administrative forfeiture proceedings against three distinct sums of money: (1) $178,020 of the funds tendered for .the drug transaction, $125,000 of which had been provided by Kadonsky (the “drug funds”), (2) the $50,893 found on the person of Kadonsky’s associate when he was arrested at the Dallas airport (the “associate funds”), and (3) the $1,822 found on Kadonsky’s person upon his arrest (the “personal funds”). Later, in 1994, the government seized $51,400 from a storage locker which DEA agents learned about from Kadonsky (the “locker funds”) and initiated administrative forfeiture proceedings against this sum. Kadonsky received no notice of the forfeiture proceedings on the drug funds, associate funds, or locker funds. When no claims to the sums of money were filed, the sums were immediately forfeited to the government.
On October 29,1996, Kadonsky filed suit in the district court seeking the return of all four sums of money seized in connection with his arrest: the drug funds, associate funds, personal funds, and locker funds. He claimed to be the owner of all four sums and to have been denied due process by the government’s failure to notify him of the administrative forfeiture proceedings. A magistrate judge held that the government’s failure to provide adequate notice to Kadonsky violated his due process rights and, accordingly, vacated the forfeitures of the drug funds, the associate funds, and the personal funds. The judge held, however, that Kadonsky lacked standing to challenge the seizure of the locker funds because he had not sufficiently demonstrated an ownership interest in this sum. After the judge directed the parties to submit briefs “identifying any remaining issues,” the government timely filed a compulsory counterclaim for re-coupment, asserting that Kadonsky had no right to receive the funds because they had been used or intended for drug transactions.
In his brief to the court, Kadonsky argued that, because the earlier forfeiture order had been declared void and the statute of limitations had run on beginning a new forfeiture proceeding, the court lacked jurisdiction to address the merits of the
*502
government’s forfeiture arguments. Accordingly, Kadonsky argued, the only proper end to the case was to return the money to him immediately. The court held, however, that although the statute of limitations barred the government from reinstituting administrative forfeiture procedures, the court had jurisdiction to consider the merits of the forfeiture — in essence, that this was not a new forfeiture proceeding which would be barred by limitations but rather a continuation of the earlier proceeding.
See Kadonsky v. United States,
No. CA-3:96-CV-2969-BC,
After cross-motions for summary judgment, the magistrate determined that the government had made the requisite showing that the drug funds and the associate funds had been used to facilitate a drug transaction. However, the court held that the government had not shown sufficient proof that the personal funds were so used. Accordingly, the court granted summary judgment in part to the government (on the drug and associate funds) and in part to Kadonsky (on the personal funds). Kadonsky appeals. 1
II.
Initially, a panel of this court dismissed this appeal for want of jurisdiction.
See Kadonsky v. United States,
Shortly after our opinion was issued, Kadonsky filed a motion for rehearing pursuant to Fed. RApp. P. 40. Kadonsky asserted that he had orally consented to have a magistrate judge decide the matter in a conversation with the United States Attorney before the magistrate began the proceedings, and that he had also consented in writing by his agreement to a “joint status report” before the magistrate judge ruled on the motions for summary judgment. We granted rehearing.
After further consideration, we agree with both parties that Kadonsky sufficiently consented to magistrate jurisdiction. Kadonsky did not sign the form consent commonly used and officially recognized by Fed.R.Civ.P. 73, but he did sign a document evincing his willingness to proceed before a magistrate judge. Rule 73, while conveniently providing a form to show consent, does not mandate that any particular form be used; rather, it merely requires that the parties “execute and file a joint form of consent or separate forms of consent.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 73(a). The “joint status report,” therefore, sufficiently “safeguard[ed] the voluntariness of the consent required under § 636(c).”
United States v. Muhammad,
III.
Federal law authorizes the civil forfeiture of funds which aré the proceeds of drug transactions.
See
21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(6). The government must begin forfeiture proceedings within five years after it learns of the alleged offense.
See
19
*503
U.S.C. § 1621. If the government seizes certain property valued at $500,000 or less or, as in this case, “any monetary instrument,” the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) can use an administrative forfeiture procedure identified in the customs laws.
See
19 U.S.C. § 1607(a). That procedure, conducted wholly outside the judicial system, requires the DEA merely to publish notice of the administrative forfeiture and send notice to “each party who appears to have an interest in the seized article.”
Id.; see also Barrera-Montenegro v. United States and Drug Enforcement Admin.,
Those who receive the required notice of forfeiture have twenty days to file a claim to the property.
See
19 U.S.C. § 1608. If no such claim is filed, the property is forfeited to the government.
See
19 U.S.C. § 1609;
Barrera-Montenegro,
In this case, with respect to each set of funds, the government filed the requisite notice in the Federal Register and informed those it believed had an interest in the seized funds; when there was no response within twenty days, the funds were forfeited to the government by default. However, Kadonsky received no notice of the forfeiture of the drug funds, the associate funds, the locker- funds, or the personal funds. Accordingly, the district court held that since Kadonsky was a “party who appears to have an interest in the seized article,” 19 U.S.C. 1607(a), he was deprived of due process by the' government’s failure to notify him in advance of the forfeiture. 2
We have previously held that when those with an interest in forfeited funds failed to receive constitutionally adequate notice, the administrative forfeiture is void and must be vacated.
See Barrera-Montenegro,
Though we have not addressed this particular question, four of our sister circuits have, and they have split evenly. In deciding to review the merits of the government’s forfeiture claim notwithstanding the limitations problem, the magistrate followed the reasoning of
Boero v. Drug Enforcement Admin.,
Like the Second Circuit, we think that inadequate notices should be treated as voidable, not void, and that the proper remedy is simply to restore the right ... to judicially contest the forfeiture and to put the Government to its proofs under a probable cause standard. Thus, the Government is not required to institute “new” forfeiture proceedings, and the applicable statute of limitations, § 1621, therefore has no bearing.
United States v. Dusenbery,
The Ninth and Tenth Circuits have disagreed.
5
In
Clymore v. United States,
As described above, the precedent of this circuit, like that which the
Clymore
court found dispositive, also holds that a forfeiture accomplished without adequate notice is void and must be vacated.
See Barrera-Montenegro,
However, we also agree that the rule identified by the Second and Sixth Circuits is far more sensible as a policy matter. The case at bar' accurately describes the consequences of the contrary rule. In 1991, the government published notice of its institution of forfeiture proceedings on the various funds; it also specifically notified those individuals it believed to have a genuine interest in the funds, but did not notify Kadonsky because it did believe he had such an 'interest. 7 Assuming (as it argues) that the government made this decision erroneously but in good faith, the consequences of this error are enormous. Because Kadonsky waited (for whatever reason) until the statute of limitations on the government’s reinstituting forfeiture proceedings had virtually lapsed before filing his suit, the government is effectively foreclosed from pursuing forfeiture regardless of the merits of - Kadonsky’s claims. In effect, even though Kadonsky admits the funds were used in drug trans *506 actions and that he has no legal right to them, the government will be unable to achieve forfeiture because Kadonsky waited until the limitations period was nearly over before filing suit claiming improper notice. Accordingly, under the rule adopted by the Tenth and Ninth Circuits, Kadonsky would be able to keep the funds used in the drug transactions for which he was imprisoned because the notice provided him was insufficient.
The inequitable nature of this remedy becomes even more apparent when considering the fact that though Kadonsky did not receive constitutionally sufficient notice of the forfeiture of the drug, associate, and locker funds, he had to have been aware they had been seized and forfeited. They had been removed from his or his associate’s possession. The government argues that Kadonsky’s failure to file his suit until two days before the five-year limitations period ended was calculated to avoid the fact that his legal claims completely lacked merit. We need not determine the reason for Kadonsky’s long delay. It may have been strategic. Nonetheless, we recognize that should this strategy be vindicated, it is likely to be repeated by the many others who have no legal right to the funds seized from their criminal endeavors but received less than perfect notice of the forfeiture proceedings.
However, while the equities substantially favor the government’s argument in this case, the law does not. Our cases unequivocally establish that constitutionally ineffective notice renders forfeiture orders void because the court lacked jurisdiction to enter them.
See Barrera-Montenegro,
In this case, however, the government makes a saving argument. It claims that, since after the five-year statute of limitations had passed but during the pendency of Kadonsky’s suit it raised a compulsory counterclaim for recoupment, it preserved its right to seek a review of the forfeiture on the merits.
9
Recoupment “allows a defendant to reduce the amount of a plaintiffs claim by asserting a claim against the plaintiff which arose out of the same transaction to arrive at a just and proper liability on the plaintiffs claim.”
In the Matter of Kosadnar,
We believe that Kadonsky’s claim that the government provided improper notice of forfeiture arises from the same transaction as the government’s claim that the various funds are subject to forfeiture. In the recoupment context, considering that it is an equitable claim, we have previously construed the term “transaction” broadly.
See, e.g., Coxson,
There is no general standard governing whether events are part of the same or different transactions. Given the equitable nature of the recoupment doctrine, courts have refrained from precisely defining the same-transaction standard, focusing instead on the facts and the equities of each case.
Kosadnar,
As for the facts of this particular case, the transaction at issue is the government’s seizure and institution of forfeiture proceedings against the various sums of money. Admittedly, Kadonsky’s claim involves the forfeiture’s procedural components, while the government’s counterclaim involves the substance of the for *508 feiture. In light of the particular facts and equities of this case, however, we decline to limit the definition of “transaction” to include only the forfeiture’s procedural components; rather, we hold that the government’s arguments were not so extrinsic to Kadonsky’s claim as to constitute a claim for setoff rather than re-coupment.
As we hold that the government’s counterclaim for recoupment was not barred by limitations, and the district court’s evaluation on the merits (which Kadonsky does not dispute) responded directly to that claim, we affirm the lower court’s judgment allowing the forfeiture of the drug and associate funds.
IV.
Finally, Kadonsky argues that the lower court erred in determining that he lacked standing to challenge the government’s forfeiture of the locker funds. As we have previously held,
[T]he burden of establishing standing to contest forfeiture is on the claimant seeking to come before the court. A claimant need not prove the merit of his underlying claim. He must, however, be able to show at least a facially colorable interest in the proceedings sufficient to satisfy the case-or-controversy requirement and the prudential considerations defining and limiting the role of the court.
United States v. $9,041,598.68,
We have previously construed the relevant statutory language to mean that only “owners” have standing to contest a forfeiture proceeding, broadly interpreting the term “owner” to “include any person with a recognizable legal or equitable interest in the property seized.”
United States v. $38,570 U.S. Currency,
Kadonsky’s unsupported assertion of ownership is insufficient to establish standing. See id. The only other evidence to which he points, the affidavit of an FBI agent who informed the DEA that Kadon-sky might have been involved in the placement of the currency in the storage locker, is similarly insufficient. Accordingly, we hold that the lower court correctly determined that Kadonsky lacked standing to challenge the forfeiture of the locker funds.
V.
Accordingly, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The government does not appeal the magistrate's determination that the personal funds were not proven to be used in a criminal act and, accordingly, needed to be returned to Kadonsky.
. On appeal, the government concedes that Kadonsky fulfills the statutory requirements to receive notice.
See
Appellee’s Br. at 15 ("The trial court properly determined that Kadonsky established an ownership interest in the [drug funds], the [associate funds], and the [personal funds].”). Accordingly, we must assume that Kadonsky satisfied the § 1607(a) standard and was entitled to notice. We note, however, that on the record before us, it is not clear whether Kadonsky was merely a carrier of drug money owned by others or a middle man. While we have recognized in the standing context that "ownership” of seized property "should be broadly interpreted to include any person with a recognizable legal or equitable interest in the property seized,”
United States v. $38,570 U.S. Currency,
. Both
Armendariz-Mata
and
Barrera-Montenegro
involved situations where the government knew the individual had an interest in the property yet failed through gross negligence or deliberate obfuscation to notify them of the forfeiture proceedings.
See Armendariz-Mata,
. Kadonsky does not contest the district court's evaluation of his claim to the drug funds or associate funds on the merits, nor does it appear that such an argument would be viable.
.Two other circuits have (in dicta) addressed the issue in a slightly different context and have both suggested that the government would be able to cure its void forfeiture orders only if the statute of limitations had not yet run.
See United States v. 2751 Peyton Woods Trail,
. The government argues that we should not follow
Clymore
because,
inter alia,
it is in conflict with an unpublished, non-precedential opinion from the same court.
See Juda v. Nerney,
. The government did attempt to notify Ka-donsky of its seizure and administrative proceedings against the personal funds, which it (for good reason) believed Kadonsky had an interest in. However, the magistrate judge below held that because the notice did not reach Kadonsky and the government's attempts were constitutionally inadequate, that forfeiture was also void. On appeal, the government does not challenge this determination.
. The government may have had a strong argument for equitable tolling. First, as described above, our past cases declaring that constitutionally inadequate notice rendered forfeiture orders void involved Situations where the government deliberately misled or intentionally neglected to give notice; here, by contrast, it appears that the failure to give notice was in good faith and proper relative to the information the government had at the lime the property was seized.
See infra
note 3. Second, as described above, it would clearly be inequitable to allow a strict application of the statute of limitations when such application would forbid the government from achieving forfeiture of funds that were clearly the product of drug transactions.
Cf. Davis v. Johnson,
. Counterclaims in the nature of recoupment filed after the statute of limitations has run are nonetheless timely if the suit prompting the counterclaim were timely.
See Reiter v. Cooper,
