Leo MUHAMMED; Antoinette Muhammed, Appellants, v. DRUG ENFORCEMENT AGENCY, ASSET FORFEITURE UNIT, Appellee.
No. 95-3194.
United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.
Decided Aug. 8, 1996.
Submitted Feb. 15, 1996.
92 F.3d 648
Not only were these comments improper and prejudicial to Mack‘s case, but nothing was done by either counsel or the court to minimize their prejudicial effect.3 See Miller v. Lockhart, 65 F.3d 676, 683-684 (8th Cir. 1995) (in determining whether a prosecutor‘s improper closing argument rises to the level of a due-process violation, we must consider whether counsel or the court cured the erroneous arguments). Without any curative measures taken by the court or counsel, I cannot believe that the egregious statements made by the prosecutor did not affect the outcome of the trial.
CONCLUSION
For the above-stated reasons, I dissent from the majority opinion. Mack clearly was abandoned by his post-conviction counsel and, at minimum, I would remand this case to the state courts for appointment of new counsel. Alternatively, I would vacate Mack‘s convictions because the biased jury and the prosecutor‘s improper statements violated Mack‘s constitutional right to a fair trial.
Before BEAM, LOKEN, and MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit Judges.
BEAM, Circuit Judge.
The Muhammeds appeal the district court‘s dismissal of their motion for return of seized property. We reverse.
I. BACKGROUND
This is a cautionary tale, illustrating the mischief to which our eagerness to employ forfeiture as a weapon in the war on drugs can lead. Although, due to the posture of the case, the factual record is sparse, the following can be gleaned from the complaint, affidavits, and the subsequent motion to dismiss. The Muhammeds, a family from the Los Angeles area of California, were in St. Louis, Missouri, with their two-month-old infant son visiting family. According to their affidavits, they purchased tickets to return to the Los Angeles area at a suburban travel agency and paid in cash. On September 1, 1994, when the family arrived at the airport to depart, Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agents approached. The Muhammeds were separated and each was taken to be interviewed. No Miranda warnings were given. Mr. Muhammed told the agents that he worked for the Nation of Islam, collecting cash from chapter activities. He used St. Louis as his midwest base because he had family there. Agents found $70,990 in cash in Mr. Muhammed‘s bags. A drug dog was called and alerted to the cash, which was then seized.
Meanwhile, Mrs. Muhammed was asked if she had any cash. She had $22,000 in her girdle. She was uncertain as to where her husband had obtained the cash. When asked if the money could have come from drug sales, she said she did not know. The drug dog alerted to that cash as well, which was also seized.
The Muhammeds sought counsel who, in turn, filed an action in federal district court on September 21, 1994, for the return of the Muhammeds’ property. DEA receipts of both seizures were attached. On the same day the Muhammeds mailed copies of the motion, the receipts, and their attorney‘s affidavit to the DEA. The motion evidently triggered administrative forfeiture proceedings. On September 26, notice of seizure and intent to forfeit the $70,990 was mailed, individually, to both the Muhammeds. That notice was received by them and explained that to contest the forfeiture they needed to submit personally signed claims and a cost bond to the DEA by a date certain. The notice also explained how to obtain waiver of the cost bond. The Muhammeds and their counsel did not correctly follow these directions. Rather, they amended their complaint to include the notice of seizure and to include personal affidavits by each of them asserting that the money in question was lawfully acquired. On November 3, the Muhammeds sent copies of the amended complaint, affidavits, and receipts to the DEA along with a cover letter listing the seizure number per the instructions on the notice of seizure and requesting release of the property. The letter specifically asked the DEA if the Muhammeds needed to provide additional material to gain release of the property.1 Rather than reply, the DEA chose to categorize the Muhammeds’ actions as petitions for remission or mitigation and declared the $70,990 administratively forfeited on November 14, 1994. We cannot tell from the record what occurred with respect to the $22,000. On February 27, 1995, the DEA filed a motion to dismiss the Muhammeds’ claim for return of their property. The district court dismissed the Muhammeds’ action because it found that they had failed to contest the forfeiture of the $70,990 through the DEA‘s administrative procedure.
The Muhammeds appeal, arguing that: 1) their complaint, viewed in the light most favorable to them, states a claim; 2) the
II. DISCUSSION
While there is some question as to the nature of the action the Muhammeds filed in district court, the district court treated it as a 41(e) motion for the return of property under the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure.2 The Muhammeds have now adopted this characterization in their brief and, upon the court‘s inquiry at oral argument, affirmed that this is indeed the correct characterization of their action. But see supra n. 2. Thus, the ultimate question is whether the district court erred in declining to assert its equitable jurisdiction under Rule 41(e).
Under the current statutory scheme, the government may declare the forfeiture of up to $500,000 administratively.
If a citizen files a 41(e) motion in district court before the administrative forfeiture commences, an action frequently taken
The Muhammeds admit that they did not file the cost bond or a request for waiver of the cost bond, or move for a district court stay.5 Rather they relied on their 41(e) motion, its amendment, their personal affidavits and accompanying cover letter to the DEA to forestall the forfeiture. This was an error, but an understandable one brought on by the inadequacies of the DEA‘s notice. Moreover, equity is sometimes tolerant of errors. In re Harper, 835 F.2d at 1274. While the notice of seizure and intent to forfeit instructs parties what they must do to contest the impending forfeiture in district court, it in no way indicates that parties who are already in district court need to start over:
TO CONTEST THE FORFEITURE
In addition to or in lieu of petitioning for remission or mitigation, you may contest the forfeiture of the seized property in UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT. To do so, you must file a claim of ownership and cost bond with the DEA. Submit the bond in the amount shown above in the form of a cashier‘s check or a certified check payable to the U.S. Department of Justice. [sic] or present satisfactory surety. Claims must be signed by the parties making the claim. Unsupported submissions signed by attorneys are insufficient to satisfy the requirement the claims be personally executed.
If you are indigent (needy and poor) you may not have to post the bond. To request a waiver of the bond, you must fully disclose your finances in a signed statement called a “Declaration in Support of Request to Proceed In Forma Pauperis” along with a claim of ownership of the property. Use the format of the pauperis declaration shown as Form 4 in the Appendix of Forms following Rule 48 of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure or obtain a form from a DEA field office. The claim of ownership, with either bond or the “Declaration in Support of Request to Proceed In Forma Pauperis” must be filed within twenty (20) days of the first date of the publication of the notice of seizure in the edition of the USA Today
Given the areas left unaddressed by the notice, reasonable persons could believe that since they were already in court they need not worry. Or, if uncertain, a reasonable person could believe that inquiry of the DEA would reveal whether, indeed, those already in court need to start over. A reasonable person would ordinarily not believe that their government would ignore their inquiry and proceed as if it had never been sent. See Glasgow, 12 F.3d at 798-99 (agency actions that obscure rather than provide information on the applicable procedures and that reflect “an attitude of concealment rather than enlightenment” do not meet the basic demands of due process); see also Ramirez v. United States, 767 F.Supp. 1563, 1570 (M.D.Fla.1991) (where government actually knows citizen is contesting forfeiture, proceeding with administrative forfeiture violates due process). Our conclusion is consistent with our In re Harper decision, where the petitioning citizen simply ignored a subsequent notice of seizure and made no attempt to oppose the forfeiture.6 835 F.2d at 1273. Here, it was the DEA that ignored the Muhammeds, not the contrary.
Criminal charges have never been brought against the Muhammeds. The facts alleged by the government to discredit the Muhammeds are spare indeed. The government points out that Mr. and Mrs. Muhammed had been married only three months but already had a two-month old son. This information may be of prurient interest, perhaps, but is wholly immaterial. The government further refers to the drug dog‘s alert to the cash. However, it is well-established that an extremely high percentage of all cash in circulation in America today is contaminated with drug-residue. See, e.g., United States v. $5,000, 40 F.3d 846, 848-50 (6th Cir.1994). The fact of contamination, alone, is virtually meaningless and gives no hint of when or how the cash became so contaminated. Finally, the government lamely points to events five months after the seizure, when Leo Muhammed was again stopped in the St. Louis airport. He had allegedly “discarded” a ticket not in his name before being stopped, and was found to have 12.7 grams of marijuana on his person. Even more damningly, in the eyes of the government, receipts for the purchase of fast food and clothing were found in his pockets
We are therefore faced with a seemingly baseless government seizure of its citizens’ cash currency. Because of, and with actual notice of, the Muhammeds’ evident confusion, the DEA administratively forfeited at least $70,990 of the cash. We realize that the war on drugs has brought us to the point where the government may seize up to $500,000 of a citizen‘s property, without any initial showing of cause, and put the onus on the citizen to perfectly navigate the bureaucratic labyrinth in order to liberate what is presumptively his or hers in the first place. See
Our finding is reinforced by the basic principle that forfeitures are disfavored and should only be enforced when within both the letter and the spirit of the law. United States v. Premises Known as 3639-2nd St., N.E., 869 F.2d 1093, 1098 (8th Cir. 1989) (R. Arnold, J., concurring). Here, the agency‘s knowing capitalization on the Muhammeds’ confusion to avoid being put to its proof in a court of law runs very much counter to the spirit of forfeiture statutes, which are meant to divest the blameworthy, not the inept, of private property. See id. (forfeiture statutes are not meant to divest citizens of private property without a substantial connection between the property and criminal activity).
In its order of dismissal, the district court also held that the Muhammeds’ complaint was limited to the return of the $70,990, and did not encompass the $22,000. The court based this ruling on the notice of seizure attached to the amended complaint which lists $70,990, and the amended complaint‘s citation of that notice‘s seizure number. However, the original complaint included a DEA field receipt for the $22,000 seized from Mrs. Muhammed, and an affidavit complaining of that seizure. The Muhammeds’ resistance to the government‘s motion for dismissal raised the issue of the $22,000. The government confirmed in its motion to dismiss that $22,000 was seized from Mrs. Muhammed, but does not further address that seizure. Thus, we do not know whether that money has been forfeited, or, if so, what sort of notice was given. (The record, as far as we can discern, contains only copies of the notice relating to the $70,990. The $22,000 has apparently disappeared into thin air.) Because the complaint, the attached receipts, and the Muhammeds’ resistance to the motion to dismiss (with both seizure receipts attached) clearly put the seizure of Mrs. Muhammed‘s $22,000 in issue, and because the government has in no way accounted for that money, the district court erred in construing the Muhammeds’ action to refer to only the seizure of the $70,990.
III. CONCLUSION
We reverse the district court‘s dismissal of the Muhammeds’ claim for the return of seized property as it relates to the $70,990 and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We also direct the district court to consider that part of the complaint which refers to the $22,000 seized
MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit Judge, dissenting and concurring.
I concur in the court‘s disposition of this case insofar as it deals with the matter of Mrs. Muhammed‘s $22,000. But, with respect, I disagree with the court that the notice to the Muhammeds concerning the manner in which they could contest the forfeiture proceeding was constitutionally infirm. It was about as plain as it could have been and the Muhammeds simply failed to follow it. Indeed, the Muhammeds never argued that the notice was in any way deficient. Under these circumstances, the district court was quite correct in dismissing the Rule 41(e) proceeding. See In re Harper, 835 F.2d 1273 (8th Cir.1988).
The court sees fit to discuss the question of whether the money was in fact forfeitable, though that question is irrelevant to a resolution of the legal issue that the case presents. The merits of the government‘s forfeiture case are not before us, and, in fact, we do not know what evidence the government would have produced had it been called on to present a case on the merits. The court evidently finds nothing suspicious about a woman having $22,000 stuffed in her girdle. In any event, the court rehearses only part of the government‘s justification for seizing the currency, an account produced, evidently, by selecting certain allegations from the motion to dismiss that the government made in the district court. The court does not mention that in that motion the government had maintained that Mr. Muhammed told DEA agents that he had only two thousand dollars on his person when he was interviewed (he had over $70,000), and that he did not even know the last name of his friends with whom he had recently driven from Chicago to St. Louis. Mrs. Muhammed, the government also alleged, had said that the money that she and her husband were carrying did not belong to the Nation of Islam, and, indeed, admitted that it could have come from drug sales. The court also omits to notice the government‘s allegation that when it interviewed Mr. Muhammed on a later occasion it was discovered that his ticket and boarding pass were in different names, neither of them Mr. Muhammed‘s. But the most remarkable omission from the court‘s account of the government‘s story is Mr. Muhammed‘s evidently straight-faced assertion that the money had been made selling fish products and bean pies on behalf of the Nation of Islam. While this explanation does not involve, I suppose, a physical impossibility, I offer the respectful observation that only the most extraordinarily gullible person would be inclined to accept it without at least a considerable amount of reflection. All of this, as I have already said, is irrelevant in the present posture of the case. My point is simply that if the merits were relevant, as the court evidently believes them to be, it is not manifest that a miscarriage of justice has occurred here.
I would therefore affirm the district court‘s judgment with respect to the plaintiffs’ claim to the $70,000 in currency.
BEAM
Circuit Judge.
Notes
Rule 41(e) provides:
A person aggrieved by an unlawful search and seizure or by the deprivation of property may move the district court for the district in which the property was seized for the return of the property on the ground that such person is entitled to lawful possession of the property. The court shall receive evidence on any issue of fact necessary to the decision of the motion.
