This case involves the federal government’s increasingly widespread use of civil forfeitures to achieve the goals of criminal law enforcement in what used to be called the “war on drugs.” 1 The government sought to forfeit $191,910.00 seized from claimant-appellee Bruce R. Morgan. The district court granted Morgan’s motion for summary judgment on the ground that the government failed to establish probable cause for the institution of forfeiture proceedings, and the government appealed. We affirm.
I.
Morgan’s encounter with the law began on March 14, 1990, in the San Diego airport. As Morgan passed through Flight Terminal Security (FTS), the FTS officer operating the X-ray machine observed what appeared to be stacks of currency in his bags. The FTS supervisor asked Morgan if she could look inside his bags. Morgan consented, and the supervisor then removed several envelopes from the bags, and ran them through the X-ray machine again. When she asked Morgan what was in the envelopes, he claimed that they only contained pamphlets or brochures. However, her electronic search revealed that the envelopes contained currency. 2
The FTS personnel allowed Morgan to proceed to the gate with his bags. They then contacted the San Diego Harbor Police, who sent three officers to the gate to investigate. The first to arrive, Officer Jaime Lugo, questioned Morgan for 10 to 15 minutes without placing him under arrest. Morgan told the officer that he was a gemologist and was going to San Francisco to purchase some jade. He stated that he was carrying approximately $20,000 in cash; he said that it was not uncommon for people in the gem *1055 business to carry large amounts of cash. Officer Lugo allowed Morgan to board his flight to Oakland.
After telling Morgan he was free to leave, Officer Lugo contacted the San Diego Airport Narcotics Task Force. An officer assigned to the San Diego Task Force, John Fung, proceeded to the airport with a drug-sniffing dog. Agent Fung arrived after Morgan’s plane had departed, but he called ahead to the San Francisco International Airport Drug Task Force to inform them that Morgan was suspected of carrying a large amount of U.S. currency and was en route to Oakland. 3 Agent Fung spoke with Brad Buekwalter, a Deputy Sheriff assigned to the task force, and gave him Morgan’s flight number, physical description, and a description of his clothing and luggage.
Agent Buekwalter received the phone call from Agent Fung at 11:30 A.M. At the time he received the call, he and Arnold Ginn were the only two agents present in the Task Force office at the San Francisco Airport. Agent Buekwalter instructed Agent Ginn to contact David Robinson and Kevin O’Mal-ley — two other agents assigned to the San Francisco Airport, who both wore beepers— and tell them to meet Buekwalter and Ginn at the Oakland Airport. Robinson indicated that he would come to Oakland, but O’Malley did not. He was busy practicing with the Task Force’s drug-sniffing dog in a San Ma-teo park. 4
Agents Buekwalter and Ginn left their San Francisco Airport office at approximately 11:45 in separate cars. They and Agent Robinson got to the airport in time to meet Morgan’s flight, which arrived sometime between 12:45 and 1 P.M. The three agents identified Morgan when he got off the plane and followed him as he claimed his baggage and left the terminal. As Morgan headed for a car rental lot across the street, Agents Buekwalter and Ginn approached him, while Agent Robinson remained in the background. Agent Buekwalter showed his credentials, identified himself as a police officer, and asked if Morgan would answer a few questions. Morgan indicated that he would. In response to their questions, Morgan told the agents that he was a gemologist and had an appointment with a gem dealer in Pleasant Hill to purchase gems for some clients in San Diego. He declined to name the clients or the gem dealer, however. Morgan told the agents that he was carrying about $15,000 for his business. The agents asked him if they could take a quick look in his bags, and he consented.
Morgan was carrying three bags: a suitcase, a flat portfolio case, and a hard-sided case apparently resembling a salesperson’s sample case. The agents opened the suitcase, but determined that it only contained pieces of clothing. When they opened the portfolio case, they found two sealed manila envelopes. Morgan stated that these envelopes contained brochures. Finally, the agents opened the hard-sided case. The agents asked Morgan what was in the case, and he told them that it contained his money. He lifted up a sealed manila envelope which was stamped and addressed to an attorney and told them that the envelope contained the $15,000. Morgan then said the true amount of the money might be $20,000. Agent Buekwalter asked Morgan whether the money belonged to him. Morgan initially said that the money belonged to his client from San Diego, but then said that actually some of the money belonged to him and some belonged to the client, although he did not say how much belonged to each person. When asked why the money was sealed in an envelope addressed to an attorney, Morgan replied that he intended to send his attorney whatever money he did not spend in his *1056 meeting in Pleasant Hill. In response to Agent Buckwalter’s questioning, Morgan stated that he had gotten his portion of the money from savings, although he was not sure when he had withdrawn it. 5
Agent Buckwalter asked to open the manila envelopes in the portfolio case, but Morgan withdrew his consent to the search. Believing he had reasonable suspicion to detain the bags, Agent Buckwalter told Morgan that he was going to hold the bags for further investigation, including a sniff by a drug-sniffing dog. At approximately 1:15 P.M., Agent Buckwalter seized the three bags. He gave Morgan a receipt for them and listed two phone numbers Morgan could call to determine their status. Agent Buckwalter told Morgan that he was free to leave or accompany the bags, and Morgan chose to leave.
After Morgan left, Agent Ginn contacted Agent O’Malley to arrange for the dog sniff. Agent O’Malley, who had completed his training session with the dog, was in San Mateo, across the bay from Oakland. The agents agreed to meet at the Task Force office in Belmont, which is also in San Mateo County. They chose this location because the dog was located closer to the Belmont office than to the Oakland or San Francisco Airports.
Agents Buckwalter and Ginn then drove to Belmont from the Oakland Airport, although they stopped briefly at the San Francisco Airport to allow Agent Ginn to drop off his ear. All of the agents arrived at approximately the same time, and, at about 3:20 P.M., the dog sniff occurred. 6 After the dog “alerted” to Morgan’s carry-on bags, the agents sought and received a warrant to search the bags. They searched the bags later that day and found six envelopes containing a total of $191,910.00.
On May 1, 1990, the government filed a complaint seeking forfeiture of the $191,-910.00, claiming that the money represented the proceeds of narcotics transactions.
See
21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(6).
7
Morgan filed a verified claim for the money on May 18, 1990. Following discovery, the district court on August 5, 1991 denied the government’s motion to dismiss for lack of standing.
United States v. $191,910 in U.S. Currency,
Claiming that the government had failed to show probable cause for the institution of *1057 forfeiture proceedings, Morgan then moved for summary judgment. 8 On February 7, 1992, the district court granted Morgan’s motion. The government’s timely appeal followed. On appeal, the government argues that the district court erred by (1) denying the government’s motion to dismiss for lack of standing; (2) suppressing the results of the dog sniff test; (3) suppressing evidence of the large amount of money seized; and (4) failing to consider, in determining whether probable cause existed, evidence the government acquired after it instituted this action. The district court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1345 and 1355. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. 9
II.
To have standing to challenge a forfeiture, a claimant must allege that he has an ownership or other interest in the forfeited property.
United States v. $122,043.00 in United States Currency,
In order to contest a forfeiture, a claimant need only have some type of property interest in the forfeited items. This interest need not be an ownership interest; it can be any type of interest, including a possessory interest.
See $122,043.00, supra,
The government relies on Morgan’s failure to explain his possessory interest in detail in his verified claim, as well as his invocation of the Fifth Amendment when asked to identify the owner of the cash, in asserting that Morgan has merely a “naked and unexplained possessory interest[ ]” insufficient to support standing. But the cases cited by the government do not justify a finding that Morgan did not have standing. These cases simply state that a claimant will not have standing without at some time asserting an interest in the property and describing whether the interest is a possessory interest, an ownership interest, or something else. A claimant need not explain this interest in detail, however, so long as he does something more than conelu-sorily state that he has some undefined “interest.” For example, in
Mercado v. U.S. Customs Service,
Several principles emerge from these eases. As an initial matter, a simple claim of ownership will be sufficient to create standing to challenge a forfeiture. Mere unexplained possession will not be sufficient. However, where a claimant asserts a posses-sory interest and provides some explanation of it (e.g., that he is holding the item for a friend), he will have standing. 12 Here, Morgan clearly described the interest he asserted in the money—he claimed that he owned some of the money and that he was carrying the rest for a client. He did not disclaim knowledge of the money he was carrying, and he did ask for a receipt from the police. His was certainly more than the kind of naked, unexplained claim of possessory interest held insufficient in Mercado. It was a repeated, colorable claim of possessory and ownership interests which, combined with the fact that the money was taken from Morgan’s possession, was more than sufficient to support standing. 13
III.
The government argues that, even if Morgan had standing, the district court erroneously granted his motion for summary judgment. In particular, the government challenges the district court’s decision to suppress three pieces of evidence: (1) evidence that a drug-sniffing dog “alerted” to Morgan’s luggage; (2) the amount of cash inside the luggage; and (3) the declaration of agent Buckwalter. We believe that the district court correctly excluded these pieces of evidence. 14 We address the dog sniff first. 15
*1059
Before submitting Morgan’s bags to a dog sniff test, the government agents detained them without a warrant for two hours. The district court held that the excessive duration of this detention violated the Fourth Amendment standards set out in
United States v. Place,
In
Place, supra,
the Supreme Court set forth standards for assessing the constitutionality of detentions of luggage without probable cause. Applying the principles of
Terry v. Ohio,
Thus, in determining whether a luggage detention violates the Fourth Amendment, our inquiry has both an absolute and a context-specific component. The absolute component prohibits the government from detaining luggage for too long a period of time, regardless of the police officers’ assiduousness in seeking probable cause. This component recognizes that when government action places too great a burden on people’s liberty, the Fourth Amendment will bar that action, even if the government agents acted in an otherwise understandable and proper fashion. The context-specific component, by contrast, focuses not on the absolute length of the detention (and thus the absolute intrusion on liberty) but on whether law enforcement officers unduly ex *1060 tended the detention by their lack of diligence. This component recognizes that even a relatively short detention can be unreasonable if it could have been much shorter had the police acted diligently.
The seizure of luggage from a traveller’s possession “intrudes on both the suspect’s possessory interest in his luggage as well as his liberty interest in proceeding with his itinerary.”
Place,
The difficulty arises in attempting to draw the line separating those detentions which violate the Constitution solely because of their length from those which only violate the Constitution when accompanied by lack of law enforcement diligence. In
Place,
the Supreme Court refused to define the outer boundary of permissible seizures,
see
Although we agree with the district court’s conclusion that the detention of Morgan’s baggage violated the Fourth Amendment solely because of its length, we need not rest our conclusion on this ground alone. For the district court was also correct in holding that the law enforcement agents failed to act with diligence in pursuing evidence of probable cause. Although government agents need not pursue the line of investigation that a reviewing court finds, in hindsight, to have been the most expeditious possible, they must not unreasonably fail to recognize or pursue avenues which would lessen the length of the detention.
See United States v. Holzman,
*1061
Here, the government agents failed to pursue avenues which would reasonably have appeared available to reduce the duration of the seizure. Before Morgan left San Diego, the government knew that it suspected him of drug trafficking and had reasonable suspicion to stop him. Agent Buckwalter knew by at least 11:30 A.M., more than an hour before Morgan’s flight arrived and more than an hour and a half before his luggage was seized, that Morgan was coming to Oakland.
That
was the time to summon the dog, not after the agents seized the bags. Rather than seizing the luggage at the Oakland Airport and then driving it back to Belmont for the sniff (with an intervening stop in San Francisco), the agents should have arranged in advance for the dog to meet them at the airport. The failure to do so indicates “a distinct lack of diligence.”
Where drug enforcement agents know that a suspect will be arriving at an airport on a particular flight in a particular time period, they do not act with diligence if they fail to have a drug-sniffing dog at the airport or at the very least to make arrangements for its arrival at the earliest possible time.
See United States v. $124,570 U.S. Currency,
The government argues that there is no legal requirement that the police keep a drug dog stationed at the airport gate. As a general proposition, we agree with this statement — government agents who have no particular reason to believe that any particular drug suspect will be arriving on an incoming flight need not have a dog sitting continuously at the gate, the luggage area, or the nearby location where the search will be conducted. Where, though, government agents are at the airport awaiting a particular individual who they know is coming on a particular flight and whom they suspect of drug trafficking, they should arrange for a dog to be sent to the appropriate location as soon as they decide to meet the plane themselves. In
United States v. West,
We conclude that the district court correctly held the detention of Morgan’s bags to constitute an unreasonable search both because of the length of the detention and because of the government’s lack of diligence in failing to act reasonably to obtain the presence of a police dog at the airport once the agents knew Morgan was coming. Because the dog-sniff and the subsequent search of the bags were the fruit of this unlawful detention, we affirm the district court’s order suppressing the dog’s reaction to Morgan’s bags and the evidence seized during the search. 21
IV.
Because the district court concluded that the government agents illegally detained Morgan’s bags in violation of the Fourth Amendment, the court suppressed the money Morgan was carrying in his bags as a fruit of the unlawful seizure. See
United States v. $191,910 in U.S. Currency,
Although forfeiture proceedings like the present case are nominally “civil” in nature, our legal system has recognized the opportunity we would create for oppressive government behavior if we were to treat these punitive proceedings, instituted in pursuit of law enforcement goals, as civil for all purposes. Accordingly, we have recognized that forfeiture proceedings are, in fact if not form, at least “quasi-criminal” in nature, and that claimants in forfeiture proceedings are entitled to certain of the procedural rights afforded to criminal defendants.
United States v. Riverbend Farms, Inc.,
In
United States v. $277,000.00 U.S. Currency,
Ignoring the force of
$277,000.00,
the government urges us to reason from two assert-edly analogous Supreme Court decisions to conclude that an illegally seized res is
always
admissible for its evidentiary value in a forfeiture proceeding. Neither of these cases supports the government’s argument, however. First, the government invokes
I.N.S. v. Lopez-Mendoza,
On careful examination,
Lopez-Mendoza
merely reaffirms the longstanding rule that a court does not lose jurisdiction over an individual merely because the government secured his presence in the forum through illegal means. The “similar rule” which “applies in forfeiture proceedings” is the rule we recognized in
One 1977 Mercedes-Benz, supra,
*1065
The government also argues that we should reason from
United States v. Crews,
Were we to hold that an illegally-seized res may not be suppressed, we would merely be “reward[ing] the government for carrying out an illegal search or seizure.” David B. Smith, Prosecution and Defense of Forfeiture Cases ¶ 10.05[9] at 10-72.13 (1993). The government’s analogy stretches too far the legal fictions which underlie these proceedings, and ignores the obvious differences between people and things. A res is simply not a person. A criminal trial ordinarily cannot proceed without the defendant, a person, in the courtroom. Because the defendant has the constitutional right to confront his accusers, it may seem only fair to allow witnesses to testify that the person sitting in court is the person whom they observed in a prior, untainted encounter. But there is no equally good reason for requiring the defendant res to be in the courtroom and therefore no comparable argument for allowing such testimony in this context. The res is not entitled to confrontation (if it was, the government would not be allowed to use hearsay to shift the burden of proof), and there are many other respects in which the res is not treated like a criminal defendant. The analogy to the “face” of the defendant is also fraught with difficulties. What is the “face” of a thing? Were we to take the legal fiction that the res is a defendant as seriously as the government urges, we would be choosing, in the “face” of all logic, to treat a thing like a person with no reason other than to allow the government to circumvent the exclusionary rule. This we refuse to do.
Because we find the government’s argument meritless, and because the law of this circuit is set forth in $277,000.00’s holding that an illegally-seized res may not be introduced into evidence in the face of a proper suppression motion, we' are bound to follow that case. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s suppression of the money contained in the three bags that were searched, namely the $191,910.00 sought to be forfeited.
V.
After the district court granted his motion to suppress, Morgan moved for summary judgment on the ground that the government had failed to show probable cause for the institution of the forfeiture proceeding. In deciding the motion for summary judgment, the district court refused to consider a declaration prepared by Agent Buckwalter. This declaration, which was based on information the government acquired after it instituted these proceedings, stated that Morgan was involved in a large-scale marijuana distribution network and that Morgan’s method of. transporting the money on March 14, 1990, was consistent with the standard operating practices of that network. The district court held that 19 U.S.C. § 1615 requires the government to show that probable cause existed at the time it instituted forfeiture proceedings. Because Agent Buckwalter obtained his information nearly a year and a half after the government instituted the suit, the court excluded the declaration.
Congress established the procedures for forfeiture actions in 19 U.S.C. § 1615.
30
This statute provides that the claimant shall bear the burden of proof in all forfeiture actions,
“Provided,
That probable cause shall first be shown for the institution of such suit or action....”
Id.
The government contends that this language says nothing about
when
it must obtain the evidence establishing probable cause. In the government’s view, the statute merely requires the government to establish probable cause at trial before the burden shifts to the claimant. The district court, however, held that the statute required the government to show that it had “probable cause at the time it brought the forfeiture proceeding.”
The plain language of the statute makes clear that the government must have probable cause at the time it institutes the forfeiture proceedings. There is nothing ambiguous about the provision at all. The statute is not cast in abstract or general terms. It requires probable cause “for the institution” of “such suit or action.” Moreover, the statute does not say that the government must have probable cause for the maintenance of the action, or probable cause for the continuation of the action, or even probable cause for the re-institution of the action. Even more critical, the statute does not simply say that the government must have “probable cause for its action.” It says the government must have probable cause for the institution of such action. The clear import of this language is that the government must show that it had probable cause to institute — that is, probable cause at the time it instituted— the suit or action in which it seeks to forfeit the claimant’s property.
The government argues that section 1615 only requires it to show probable cause as of the time of trial. Under the government’s tortured construction of the statute, so long as its showing at trial would be sufficient to allow it to institute proceedings on that date, it has satisfied its burden. 31 This argument would make the words “institution of such” in the statute meaningless, however. If, in fact, the government can only show probable cause as of the time of trial — months after the institution of the forfeiture action that is being adjudicated — it has not shown probable cause for the institution of such suit or ac *1067 tion. Instead, it has only shown that it has probable cause for its action and probable cause for the institution of another action. We cannot imagine that Congress would have worded the statute the way it did if it only intended to require a showing of probable cause as of the time of trial.
The plain meaning of a statute is ordinarily dispositive unless that meaning is contrary to the legislature’s intent or would lead to absurd results.
See I.N.S. v. Cardoza-Fonseca,
First, the government argues that enforcement of section 1615 according to its plain meaning “would discourage prompt filings of forfeiture.” We find no merit in this claim. Requiring the government to show that it had probable cause at the time it brought the action would only discourage filings of forfeiture when probable cause does not exist. Such a result is entirely proper. Without such a rule, government agents might be tempted to bring proceedings (and thereby seize property) on the basis of mere suspicion or even enmity and then engage in a fishing expedition to discover whether probable cause exists. The Second Circuit has recently warned of this possibility.
See United States v. $31,990,
Second, the government argues that requiring it to have probable cause before commencing proceedings would place too heavy a burden on law enforcement. The government contends that such a rule “ “would require the government to segregate its evidence by date of acquisition and prove when such evidence is obtained.’ ” This argument borders on the frivolous. By holding that § 1615 requires the government to show that it had probable cause at the time it instituted forfeiture proceedings, we only require the government to do the same thing it must do in hundreds of suppression hearings every day: show that, before taking some action (be it a search, a seizure, or an institution of forfeiture proceedings) the government had probable cause. It is true that the government must keep records of when it obtained its evidence in order to satisfy this standard, but such a burden is neither unique nor particularly cumbersome. Any adequately-administered law enforcement office already keeps records in far more detail than would be necessary to make such a showing. In any event, the burden imposed on the government by § 1615 is far less onerous than the burdens the government must bear in prosecuting someone following a grant of use immunity,
see Kastigar v. United States,
*1068 Finally, the government argues that our interpretation of section 1615 would “encourage legal gamesmanship and unnecessarily technical efforts to amend pleadings to add newly-acquired evidence.” This argument simply misses the point. Under section 1615, the government must have probable cause at the time it institutes forfeiture proceedings, not merely plead probable cause. Whether probable cause exists to institute proceedings is solely a question of what information is in the government’s possession; even if the government were to amend its pleadings to include new evidence, the amendment could not change the historical fact that the government did not have probable cause at the time it brought the case. 33 While a subsequent amendment might cure a violation of the pleading-with-particularity requirement in Supplemental Rule E(2)(a), 34 it would stretch the concept of “relation back” too far to say that an amendment of pleadings can turn back time and make probable cause exist on a date when it did not. Civil forfeiture proceedings are already rooted in one legal fiction; there is no justification for adding another, more tenuous legal fiction to the mix.
Indeed, consideration of the special pleading requirements applicable in forfeiture cases makes clear that the plain meaning of § 1615 is far from absurd. The Supplemental Rules for Certain Admiralty and Maritime Claims
35
require that complaints for forfeiture be verified and that they state with particularity the facts underlying the claim. Fed.R.Civ.P. C(2), E(2)(a). These rules abandon the concept of notice pleading and instead require allegations of specific facts supporting probable cause.
See United States v. Certain Real Estate Property Located at 4-880 S.E. Dixie Highway,
Because the government has not shown any contrary legislative intent or any absurd results flowing from the enforcement of § 1615 according to its plain meaning, the plain meaning of the statute ends our inquiry. Nevertheless, there is additional support for our conclusion. Even if we found the terms of § 1615 to be ambiguous, we would still have to agree with the district court’s interpretation of § 1615, because forfeiture statutes are strictly construed against the government.
See United States v. One 1936 Model Ford V-8 DeLuxe Coach,
We are particularly wary of civil forfeiture statutes, for they impose “quasi-criminal” penalties without affording property owners all of the procedural protections afforded criminal defendants.
See Riverbend Farms,
Even if some civil forfeiture schemes might, as a matter of statute, provide procedural protections for property owners, section 1615 provides few if any. The government need only show probable cause, and it can make this showing without introducing evidence that meets the ordinary criteria for trustworthiness and admissibility.
See United States v. One 56-Foot Motor Yacht Named the Tahuna,
In view of the plain meaning of the forfeiture statute and the rule of strict construction applicable to such statutes, we must respectfully disagree with the Second and Sixth Circuits, which have held that the government need not have probable cause at the
*1070
time it institutes forfeiture proceedings.
38
Instead, we agree with the Eighth Circuit that the court should only consider “evidence obtained up until the point at which the government institutes forfeiture proceedings.”
United States v.
$91,960.00,
The position of the Second and the Sixth Circuits finds its origin in
United States v. Premises and Real Property at 4492 S. Livonia Rd.,
In making its decision, the
Livonia
court ignored several well-considered district court opinions from its own circuit — including the district court opinion affirmed in
Banco Cafetero. See United States v. $134,752.00 U.S. Currency,
In sum, we hold that 19 U.S.C. § 1615 means exactly what it says: the government must have probable cause at the time it institutes forfeiture proceedings. In seeking to establish that it had probable cause to bring these proceedings, the government may not rely on evidence acquired after the forfeiture complaint was filed. The district court was correct in refusing to consider the Buckwalter declaration.
VI.
Having determined that the district court correctly decided the suppression issues, we have little difficulty in holding that the district court was also correct in concluding that the government failed to establish probable cause. 43 At most, the evidence that the government legally obtained prior to the institution of forfeiture proceedings raises only a suspicion that the money was furnished or intended to be furnished in exchange for drugs.
The standard of probable cause to support a forfeiture is similar to that required for a search warrant.
See Tahuna, supra,
Probable cause to believe that the property is involved in
some
illegal activity is not enough — the government must have probable cause to believe that the property is involved in the activity subject to the specific forfeiture statute it invokes. The government brought this proceeding under a statute which renders money subject to forfeiture if it is (1) furnished or intended to be furnished in exchange for a controlled substance; (2) traceable to such an exchange; or (3) used or intended to be used to facilitate a violation of federal drug laws.
See
21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(6). Thus, the government must show that, at the time it brought this action, it had probable cause to believe that the money in Morgan’s bags was used or intended to be used in a drug transaction.
See United States v. $5,644,540.00 in U.S. Currency,
Here, the government cannot show more than a mere suspicion that the money seized from Morgan’s bags was connected with drug activities. Because the district court properly suppressed the money Morgan was carrying and the drug-sniffing dog’s reaction to the bags, the government can only rely on three pieces of evidence to show that it had probable cause at the time it instituted these proceedings: (1) the admission by Morgan that he was carrying $15,000 or $20,000 in cash; (2) the discrepancies in the stories Morgan told the various agents in San Diego and Oakland; and (3) the results of the San *1072 Diego X-Ray. 44 While these facts may raise a suspicion of illegal activity involving cash transactions, none, individually or collectively, is sufficiently probative of criminal wrongdoing and even less so of drug activity.
Fifteen to twenty thousand dollars is hardly enough cash, standing alone, to justify more than a suspicion of illegal activity. Indeed, any amount of money, standing alone, would probably be insufficient to establish probable cause for forfeiture.
See United States v. $67,220.00 in U.S. Currency,
Furthermore, the discrepancies in Morgan’s story were not all that' great: he told the FTS officer that he was not carrying any money, but he then told the drug task force agents in San Diego and Oakland that he was carrying a large amount of cash; on some occasions, he said that he was carrying $20,-000, while on other occasions he said he was carrying $15,000; he told the agents that the money belonged to his client, but then he said , that some belonged to him as well; he told the agents he could not remember when he had taken the money out of his savings. These kinds of inconsistencies may raise a suspicion that Morgan was involved in illegal activities, but not probable cause.
Most important, there is nothing in either the amount of money Morgan admitted to carrying or the partially conflicting explanations he offered which connects the money to drugs.
See United States v. $38,600.00 in U.S. Currency,
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, we conclude that it was not sufficient to establish probable cause to believe the money had a substantial connection with illegal activities of any kind, let alone illegal drug activities. Therefore, the district court was correct in granting summary judgment to Morgan.
*1073 The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. See Paul Feldman & Leslie Berger, Drug Czar Sells New Strategy to L.A. Audiences, Los Angeles Times, Oct. 24, 1993, p. A1 (quoting White House drug czar Lee P. Brown as stating that “The Clinton approach ‘rejects the use of war analogies to discuss our nation’s drug abuse policy.’ ”).
. The deposition testimony of the two FTS officers is astonishingly inconsistent regarding what the X-ray scan of the envelopes revealed. Gregory Koon, the FTS officer who was operating the machine, “couldn’t make out what was on the screen” and saw only "a gray haze of paper.” Koon Deposition at 26. Edith Florentino, the FTS supervisor, testified that she could see the currency in some detail, including the pictures of Washington's and Lincoln's heads on the face of the currency. Florentino Deposition at 19.
. The San Francisco Airport Task Force apparently has jurisdiction over the Oakland and San Jose airports as well, although no permanent Task Force agents are assigned to either of these airports.
. The record is unclear regarding whether Agent Ginn actually contacted Agent O’Malley before leaving for the airport. In his deposition, Agent Ginn testified that he thought he had reached Agent O'Malley but that Agent O'Malley was busy doing some type of training. See Ginn Deposition at 11-12. Agent O'Malley, however, testified that he had his beeper on during the entire training session and that Agent Ginn first contacted him after the bags were detained, after the training session had ended. See O'Malley Deposition at 23-25.
. Agent Buckwalter testified as follows regarding Morgan's answers:
He gave me the answer, I think I spelled out the answer in the report. I don’t recall specific. I don’t want to quote it because I might misquote myself or misquote him.
He started by saying, I got it the other day. Well, maybe it was a couple of days ago. Well, I’m not real sure when I got it out.
Buckwalter Deposition at 58.
. Agent Buckwalter's report, the search warrant affidavit, a statement of Agent O'Malley attached to the search warrant application, and Agent O’Malley’s deposition all state that the sniff occurred at 3:20 P.M. About a month after his testimony, O'Malley sought to "correct" his deposition by stating that the dog sniff actually occurred at 2:15 P.M. The district court found this "correction” not to be credible,
see United States v. $191,910 in U.S. Currency,
.That statute provides:
(a) Property subject
The following shall be subject to forfeiture to the United States, and no property right shall exist in them:
(6) All moneys, negotiable instruments, securities, or other things of value furnished or intended to be furnished by any person in exchange for a controlled substance in violation of this subchapter, all proceeds traceable to such an exchange, and all moneys, negotiable instruments, and securities used or intended to be used in violation of this subchapter [subject to an innocent owner defense].
. 19 U.S.C. § 1615, which applies in this action pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 881(d), states that the claimant must bear the burden of proof in a forfeiture action, "Provided, That probable cause shall first be shown for the institution of such suit or action....”
. Morgan argues that we lack jurisdiction to review the district court’s rulings on the suppression motions, because the government did not take an interlocutory appeal from these rulings. However, it is well settled that, in reviewing a final order in a civil case, we have jurisdiction to review interlocutory rulings that may have affected the outcome below.
See U.S. Dominator, Inc. v. Factory Ship Robert E. Resoff,
.The district court’s determination that Morgan had standing is a question of law which we review de novo.
See Ellis v. City of La Mesa,
.
United States v. $321,470.00, United States Currency,
. Because Morgan asserts merely
his own
ownership and possessory interests in the money and not as a bailee asserting the ownership interests of a bailor, we need not consider the rules which apply where a claimant raises only the interests of another.
Cf. United States v. $260,242.00 U.S. Currency,
. Although Morgan asserted his Fifth Amendment privilege at his deposition, he clearly asserted an ownership and a possessory interest at the airport. Thus, this case is not like
Baker v. United States,
Similarly, in
United States v. $15,500.00 United States Currency,
In any event, both of these cases seem to require that the claimant assert an
ownership
interest, a requirement that is inconsistent with the Supreme Court's subsequent decision in
Jacobsen, supra. See 1982 Sanger, supra,
. Motions to suppress are reviewed de novo.
See United States v. Thomas,
. Because we may affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment on any ground which appears in the record, we have considered Morgan's argument, made in the district court, that nearly all of the evidence adduced in this case should have been suppressed as the fruit of an unconstitutionally overbroad administrative search by Flight Terminal Security (FTS) at the San Diego Airport. We have consistently held that, because of the pervasive governmental role in the airport search program, any search pursuant to that program is considered to be governmental action subject to the Fourth Amendment.
See United States v. Vigil,
*1059 ling administrative objective — searching for guns and explosives. Where an airport search goes beyond this narrow function in order to serve the broader objectives of law enforcement, it can no longer fall within the narrowly-crafted “administrative search” exception to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement. Although in $124,570 we found particularly troubling the fact that FTS officers had a continuing relationship with law enforcement authorities, see id. at 1245, nothing in that case limits its holding to cases where such a continuing relationship exists. The rationale of $124,570 applies in any case where airport security searches are employed to serve general law enforcement objectives.
Certain elements in the record cause us concern that the FTS officers exceeded their narrow commission here. It appears that the FTS officers only discovered the currency because they continued their investigation after they determined that Morgan was not carrying weapons or explosives. The district court rightly noted certain ambiguities in the record relating to this issue. See $191,910,772 F.Supp. at 476 . However, the fact that ambiguities exist does not aid the government's argument, because it is the government's burden to show that a warrantless search does not violate the Fourth Amendment. See United States v. Delgadillo-Velasquez,856 F.2d 1292 , 1295 (9th Cir.1988). Because we affirm the district court’s decision on other grounds, we need not reach these questions. Were we required to reach them, however, we seriously doubt that we would permit the introduction of evidence obtained as a result of the airport search.
. Similarly, if a police officer had sufficient reasonable suspicion to detain a person, he could not hold that person for 24 hours before obtaining probable cause, even if the government was working as quickly as it could to gather evidence establishing probable cause. See Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure § 9.2(f) at 387 (2d ed. 1987).
. Although the Court in
Place
stated that it "decline[d] to adopt any outside time limitation” of an investigatory detention,
. The record is ambiguous regarding whether Agent Ginn actually contacted agent O’Malley, the dog’s trainer, before leaving for Oakland. See supra note 4. But this makes no difference. Either Agent Ginn was at fault for failing to call Agent O'Malley, or Agent O’Malley was at fault for continuing to train with his dog in the park instead of coming to the airport. Either way, the agents’ actions evidence a lack of diligence.
. The agents in West also acted with a good deal more diligence and dispatch than did the agents here. They had a dog present at the airport when the suspect arrived, and they could have reached the dog within 20 minutes had the suspect so desired. In any event, the detention in West took only 45-60 minutes, substantially less than the detention here.
. The government insists that
United States v. Montoya de Hernandez,
. We are also troubled by Morgan's contention that evidence of a drug-sniffing dog's alert to cash ought not to be given weight in a court's probable cause determination. Morgan argues that, because of the general contamination of America's paper money supply, the fact that a dog alerts to a particular batch of cash does not indicate that the money has been involved in drug trafficking or drug use. In recent years, courts have increasingly questioned the reliability of dog alerts for precisely this reason.
See United States v. $53,082.00 in United States Currency,
.The court did consider evidence that Morgan was carrying $15,000, because Morgan told the agents before the unlawful detention that he was carrying that amount.
See
. See also
Austin v. United
States, - U.S. -, -,
. The government argues that the res is never “evidence" in a forfeiture proceeding and thus that our holding in $277,000.00 only bars the introduction of illegally-seized materials that are not the res. However, this argument ignores the facts of $277,000.00. In that case, the claimant’s sole argument was that the $277,000 res should have been suppressed because it was obtained through a constitutional violation. In holding that the district court should have suppressed the money, we treated the res just like any other evidence. We cannot now avoid that fact simply because we used the word "evidence” and not “res” in the sentences crystallizing our holding.
.The Court cited three cases which stated that a person could be convicted even if his presence in court resulted from an unlawful arrest:
Gerstein v. Pugh,
.
United States v. An Article of Device "Theramatic”,
. We note that the majority of circuits to consider the issue have agreed with the rule we adopted in
$277,000.00
which requires the suppression of an illegally-obtained res.
See United States v. $149,442.43 in U.S. Currency,
. The district court's interpretation of § 1615 is a question of law which we review de novo.
See Anderson v. United States,
. Because we agree with the district court that after-acquired evidence is inadmissible to prove probable cause, we need not reach the issue regarding the sufficiency of the Buckwalter declaration.
. Section 1615 applies in this action pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 881(d).
. The case the appellant cites for this proposition,
United States v. One 56-Foot Motor Yacht Named the Tahuna,
. See, for example, the detailed and elaborate inquiry the D.C. Circuit required in the Oliver North case.
United States v. North,
. By the same token, even if the government pled probable cause with particularity at the time it instituted the proceedings, this fact alone would not protect the government against dismissal where the government did not actually have probable cause.
. It is not clear, incidentally, that such an amendment would cure a violation of Supplemental Rule E(2)(a). Given that the Supplemental Rules abandon notice pleading in forfeiture cases, see infra p. 1069, there may well be good reason to apply the amendment provisions in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure less liberally than in ordinary civil actions. We do not decide this issue here, however.
.The Supplemental Rules For Certain Admiralty and Maritime Cases (Federal Rules of Civil Procedure A-F) apply in this case pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 881(b).
. See Mary M. Cheh, Constitutional Limits on Using Civil Remedies to Achieve Criminal Law Objectives, 42 Hast.L.J. 1325, 1329 (1991) ("Police and prosecutors have embraced civil strategies not only because they expand the arsenal of weapons available to reach antisocial behavior, but also because officials believe that civil remedies offer speedy solutions that are unencumbered by the rigorous constitutional protections associated with criminal trials, such as proof beyond a reasonable doubt, trial by jury, and appointment of counsel.").
. As the Supreme Court recently noted, forfeitures have also been used as a source of revenue for the government. The government's "direct pecuniary interest in the outcome of the proceeding” makes us especially wary of official overreaching in this context.
United States
v.
James Daniel Good Real Property,
- U.S. -, -,
The extent of the Government’s financial stake in drug forfeiture is apparent from a 1990 memo, in which the Attorney General urged United States Attorneys to increase the volume of forfeitures in order to meet the Department of Justice's annual budget target:
"We must significantly increase production to reach our budget target.
"... Failure to achieve the $470 million projection would expose the Department’s forfeiture program to criticism and undermine confidence in our budget projections. Every effort must be made to increase forfeiture income during the remaining three months of [fiscal year] 1990.”
Id.
at - n. 2,
. The government also cites the Eleventh Circuit's ambiguous, unexplained dictum contained in a footnote in
United States v. Four Parcels of Real Property,
. The Sixth Circuit case cited by the government,
United States v. $67,220.00 in United States Currency,
. Banco Cafetero rejected the claimant's argument that he was entitled to a prompt post-seizure hearing to determine probable cause. The court held that the claimant would have to wait until trial (or summary judgment, if appropriate) for adjudication of the issue of probable cause.
. In
$134,752.00,
the district court stated that ‘‘[plrobable cause must be shown to have existed at the time the forfeiture proceeding was instituted."
. Because judicial seizure of the res is a jurisdictional prerequisite to a forfeiture action which accompanies the institution of the action, allowing the government to institute forfeiture proceedings without probable cause would foster circumvention of 21 U.S.C. § 881(b)(4), which allows the Attorney General to seize property without judicial process only if the government has probable cause at the time of seizure.
See United States v. All Funds Presently on Deposit, etc.,
. We review a district court’s probable cause determination de novo.
See United States v. Dickerson,
. As we noted above, even these three pieces of evidence are inadmissible if the San Diego Airport search violated the Fourth Amendment. See supra note 15.
