This is a suit by a federal prisoner, Ralphael Okoro, against federal and state officers, seeking the return of gems and cash that he claims the defendants seized in the course of a search of his home. The district court dismissed the suit, but we reversed and remanded.
Okoro v. Boh-man,
Okoro had been arrested in his home by several of the defendants on suspicion of being a heroin dealer, and it was during a search incident to the arrest that the defendants are alleged to have stolen the gems and cash. The Supreme C.ourt held in
Heck v. Humphrey,
On remand, however, the defendants pleaded
Heck.
Without suggesting that they had done so too late (nor had they, for they were not obligated to defend the district court’s judgment in their favor on every possible ground,
Schering Corp. v. Illinois Antibiotics Co.,
The government also objects to the judge’s allowing Okoro’s suit for the return of the gems and the cash to be converted to a suit for damages. Damages suits complaining about unconstitutional actions by federal law enforcement officers are governed by
Bivens
if the suit is against the officers and by the Federal Tort Claims Act if it is against the United States. Okoro’s
Bivens
claims were dismissed (and he has not appealed that dismissal), and he has not exhausted administrative remedies, as the Tort Claims Act requires. But we do not interpret the proceedings on remand as a trial for damages. Okoro (if he were believed) did not know whether the defendants had the gems or whether they had sold them. His suit is best understood as seeking the return either of the gems or of the proceeds of their sale. Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 41(g) (formerly, and at the time of our first opinion, 41(e)) entitles a person to the return of his property that has been unlawfully seized by a federal law enforcement officer. The position of this court is that a claim under Rule 41(g) may be brought after the defendant’s conviction, as well as before, as an ancillary proceeding to the criminal case.
United States v. Solis,
Rule 41(g) creates a remedy analogous to the common law writ of replevin. And if the defendant in a suit for replevin has sold the property that the plaintiff is seeking to replevy, the plaintiff is entitled to the proceeds in an action for restitution. 1 Dan B. Dobbs,
Law of Remedies
§ 5.18(1), p. 923 (2d ed.1993). For generally the law does not distinguish between a claim to the ownership of a thing and a claim to the proceeds if the thing is
*491
sold or otherwise transferred, transmuted, or substituted for. E.g.,
Mattson v. Commercial Credit Business Loans, Inc.,
But what if relief under Rule 41(g) is sought against individual officers rather than against the United States, because the government has disposed of the property to them (or maybe they never turned it over to the government)? Then the issue of sovereign immunity falls away and the question becomes whether
Bivens
offers the exclusive route to a suit against the officers or whether Rule 41(g) is available since the relief sought is in the nature of restitution. Although
Bivens
is conventionally described as providing a
damages
remedy, e.g.,
Sinclair v. Hawke,
Since in the usual case the only relief sought by the Rule 41(g) motion is return of the property
by the government,
the fact that the government doesn’t have it is ordinarily a conclusive ground for denial of the motion. See, e.g.,
United States v. Solis, supra,
We need not penetrate further into this thicket. The suit should have been dismissed on the basis of the Heck decision; and in any event the plaintiffs challenge to the district judge’s credibility finding is doomed and independently requires that the judgment in favor of the defendants be
AFFIRMED.
