This appeal arises out of a civil forfeiture action pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(6) which provides for the forfeiture of money linked to drug crimes.
BACKGROUND
Deborah Stanford is an American citizen who was born in Surinam, South America, and fives in Miami. She is the owner and president of Mike’s Import & Export U.S.A., Inc. (Mike’s). Mike’s buys electronics, household and automotive goods and exports the items to South America.
In December 1998, Stanford was in New York City. She says that she was there to meet with her lawyer about a lawsuit involving a 1988 car accident. While in New York, she says that she was contacted by her brother and told to pick up some money for Mike’s. The cash money was delivered to her by Surinamese people whom she says she did not know. Upon receipt of the money, Stanford counted it, separated it by denomination, and wrapped it in black plastic and a Christmas bag.
On 14 December, Stanford flew from New York to Miami. Security at John F. Kennedy Airport (JFK) questioned her about the packages. She told them that the packages contained money. Security allowed her to board her flight but notified the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) that a woman carrying a large amount of cash was traveling to Miami.
Believing that Stanford might be a currency courier for a drug organization, six Miami DEA agents, in three teams of two, went to the gate where Stanford’s flight was scheduled to arrive. One team stayed close to the gate, another team stayed near the middle of the concourse, and the third stayed near the exit of the concourse. The agents were in plain clothes.
Agent Kenneth Miles saw Stanford as she walked out of the jet-way. He and Agent John Johnson approached her and identified themselves as DEA agents. Agent Miles testified that he explained to Stanford that part of his job was to ask people for their help in fighting the drug flow at the airport.
At the agent’s request, Stanford gave them her ticket and identification. They verified her name and returned the items. The agents asked her if she was carrying drugs or money, and she said she was carrying about $200,000 cash in her backpack.
Agent Miles, with Stanford’s permission, looked into the backpack and saw a “Christmas bag type package.” He poked' a hole in the bag and could see bundles of cash inside. The cash was bundled by denomination. The bundles were not of uniform size and did not bear the binding of a bank or financial institution. The Agents asked Stanford to accompany them to the DEA office, and she agreed.
At the office, Agent Miles asked Stanford why she was in New York. She said she was there because of her court case, but later said she was there to pick up money. Stanford could not, or would not, identify where she stayed in New York or who gave her the cash other then to say
“Rambo,” a nareotics-detecting dog, was brought into the room. Stanford’s backpack was placed in a hallway with other packages of similar size and shape. Rambo alerted on Stanford’s backpack.
Stanford took the receipt and left the office. The agents packed the money inside an evidence box. On 15 December, the agents took the cash to SunTrust Bank and exchanged it for a cashier’s check. The bank counted the cash, determined that there was a total of $242,484 and issued a check for that amount.
A follow-up investigation revealed that, in Miami, Stanford had purchased a 93 dollar round-trip airline ticket with cash; but did not board the return flight and subsequently changed her return date twice. No evidence in the record indicates that Stanford had a history of involvement in drug crimes, and she was charged with no crimes on account of these events.
DISCUSSION
Stanford argues that the Government has made no showing of a connection between the money and controlled substances that rises above simple suspicion. We will consider all the evidence to determine whether the Government has met its burden of establishing “probable cause for belief that a substantial connection exists between the property to be forfeited and the criminal activity defined by the statute.” United States v. $4,255,625.39,
The district court relied on these circumstances to support its finding of probable cause: (1) “the quantity of cash and its physical condition”; (2) “the route and circumstances surrounding Ms. Stanford’s travel”; (3) “Ms. Stanford’s lack of knowledge concerning the circumstances surrounding her trip to New York and the receipt of this money, including her inability to identify from whom she received it”; (4) “that Ms. Stanford twice was a ‘no show' for her scheduled departure from New York to Miami”; and (5) a narcotics dog alerted on the cash.
Carrying a large amount of cash can indicate criminal activity. But it is not illegal to transport money this way. A large amount of cash does not — alone— satisfy the Government’s burden to show probable cause. $121,100.00,
The manner in which the currency was bundled indicates that it did not come directly from a bank; and we suppose it could indicate some kind of illegal source, but it does not necessarily indicate a connection to drugs. The money, much of which was small bills, was packaged in bundles according to denomination. The currency bundles were wrapped in rubber bands and stowed inside two larger packages, one “Christmas bag type package” and one brown shopping bag inside a black plastic or cellophane wrapping. The evidence presented in support of probable cause need not “point to drugs to the exclusion of all other theories.” $121,100.00,
That the currency was wrapped to conceal its presence counts for little. While we understand that a currency courier for a drug organization would attempt to conceal the money, we accept that anyone
We recognize that travel from New York to Miami is an appropriate element to consider. Miami is a known center for drug smuggling and money laundering. $4,255,625.39,
We should consider that Stanford purchased her ticket with cash. Business travelers often purchase airline tickets with credit cards or checks while drug couriers often do not. And this circumstance is an appropriate consideration when evaluating probable cause in the totality. $121,100.00,
Somewhat troubling is the fact that Stanford could not identify from whom she received the money and could not provide business receipts for the money. These circumstances are suspicious; but under the law, a claimant is under no duty to show that "the property derived from a legitimate source" until the Government first can establish probable cause of a substantial connection to a controlled-substance transaction. $121,100.00,
Also troubling is Stanford's inability or unwillingness to state where she stayed in New York. Evasive answers are suspicious and add to the Government's case for probable cause. See generally $121,100.00,
We agree with the district court that “[t]he narcotics-detection dog’s alert to the currency is also worth noting, although perhaps worth little else.” The probative value of dog alerts to the smell of narcotics on currency has been called into question of late. See United States v. $506,231 in U.S. Currency,
Courts exist largely to draw lines. When Courts are called on to declare the legal consequences of a set of facts, the Courts are called on to draw lines in which cases may be near each other but, still, on opposite sides. In this case, we have an American citizen with no criminal record (traveling under her own name openly, on a public carrier) who has never denied that she was carrying a large amount of cash. In support of probable cause, the Government points to the large amount of currency, the fact that it was wrapped in black plastic and a Christmas bag, the travel between source cities and the dog alert. The elements relied upon by the Government indicate a possible connection to crime, perhaps, even to drug crime. But, it is a weak indication, at best. This weak indication of crime falls short of showing a “substantial connection” between the funds at issue here and a narcotics transaction. More than suspicion is necessary. This record is not enough to justify separating Ms. Stanford from her property.
We are unaware of a case finding probable cause on a record this thin. At trial, when the district court asked for the best Eleventh Circuit case, the Government cited United States v. Carrell,
The claimant in $67,200.00, Robert Easterly, lied to the Government about the money he was carrying. $67,220.00,
This case is not comparable to Carrell either. In Carrell, the Government was able to trace the forfeited property directly to the proceeds of illegal drug sales. Carrell,
[T]he government demonstrated probable cause that the first property titled in Scottie Carrell’s name was purchased with the proceeds of Homer Carrell’s marijuana and cocaine sales because he had no other legitimate source of income. Regarding the second property, the government’s investigation revealed that the sixteen cars that belonged to Homer Carrell’s mother that were exchanged for the property were purchased with Homer Carrell’s drug proceeds.
Id. The court, in Carrell, concluded there was “ample evidence” of a substantial connection between the forfeited property and the marijuana and cocaine sales of Homer Carrell. Id. at 1202. In this case, the Government has offered no evidence that directly connects Stanford’s money to illegal drug transactions. While this lack of direct evidence does not necessarily mean forfeiture is inappropriate, it does mean that Carrell is not instructive.
The closest cases finding probable cause that we know about are $121,100.00, and $1,255,625.39. This case, however, is considerably weaker than either of those cases. $121,100.00 involved a person with a history of narcotics convictions, traveling under a false name, who purchased an expensive airline ticket with cash, was carrying a large sum of money to which a dog alerted, and planned only a single-day trip. $121,100.00,
$1,255,625.39 involved a much greater amount of money, over seven million dollars. $1,255,625.39,
As Justice Holmes noted, “[i]t sometimes is difficult to fix boundary stones between the private right of property and the police power when, as in the case at bar, we know of few decisions that are very much in point.” Hudson County Water Co. v. McCarter,
REVERSED with instructions to enter judgment for Claimant.
Notes
. 21 U.S.C. § 881(a) provides:
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 or listed chemical 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 to facilitate any violation of this subchapter.
. Stanford also argues that the stop conducted at the Miami Airport was an unreasonable seizure in violation of the Fourth Amendment and that the district court erred by saying that Mike’s Import & Export U.S.A., Inc. lacked standing to contest the forfeiture. "A fundamental and longstanding principle of judicial restraint requires that courts avoid reaching constitutional questions in advance of the necessity of deciding them." Lyng v. Northwest Indian Cemetery Protective Ass'n,
. The testimony on this alert is in conflict. Agent Miles testified Rambo was an aggressive alerting dog and that he observed Rambo scratch at the bag. Rambo's handler, Officer Pedro Perez, testified Rambo alerted by sitting in front of the bag and did not scratch it.
. The Government has not questioned the right of Stanford, on appeal, to challenge— that is, to seek reversal on — the district court's probable cause determination even though she, at the close of the Government’s case went on to introduce evidence of her own. We know that, in some arguably similar instances, the appeal of preliminary decisions of sufficiency are barred if the defendant decides to present evidence after the other party rests. See generally, United States Postal Serv. Bd. of Governors v. Aikens,
. The Government also asks us to consider the Narcotics And Dangerous Drug Information System (NADDIS) report (indicating that Mike's might be a front for money laundering) and Stanford’s changing of her story while talking to the police. The district court said that the NADDIS report had slight relevance: but because of credibility issues "its value in the probable cause case is negligible.” We agree that this particular report is worth very little in the probable cause analysis. Stanford’s changing of her story strikes us as potentially more significant. But, while the agents testified to this change, we note that the district court did not mention it in its statement of facts and only slightly alluded to it in the probable cause analysis. Again, while it is appropriate to consider a changing story, it does not carry much weight here. Stanford continually stated that she was in New York for her lawsuit. At one point during the course of an interview lasting between two and three hours, the agents claim she said that she was there to pick up money; this evidence does not compel a finding of intentional deception.
. We believe it somewhat ironic that, the day after the seizure, the DEA exchanged this drug-tainted currency for a cashier's check at SunTrust Bank, where the currency was possibly placed back into circulation for innocent people to possess.
. The $4,255,625.39 elements that are arguably present here are (1) “the money was delivered ... by Colombian couriers, many of whom were unidentified,” (2) "the couriers did not request, ... [or] refused to accept, receipts for the cash” and (3) "the cash consisted of small and medium denomination bills." $4,255,625.39,
