Clаimant Carlton Lee Baxter challenges the grant of summary judgment entered by the district court permitting the forfeiture of $95,945.18 to the United States.
I.
On April 27, 1988, the Charlotte, North Carolina, police department received a tip from a confidential informant that Andre King was going to meet with Andrea Jackson to exchange six kilograms of cocaine for $100,000. The police staked out the parking lot where the meeting was to take placе and saw King drive into the lot and pull up next to another car. The police observed King talk briefly with the occupants of the other vehicle (who turned out to be Jackson and claimant Baxter), and then drive away. Thinking that the parked car was waiting for the drugs, undercover agent Kearney approached the vehicle and decided to initiate a drug transaction. According to Kearney, after arranging a deal for six kilograms of cocaine, Baxter gave Jackson a bowling bag containing the $95,-945.18, and Jackson handed that bag to Kearney. The Charlotte police then arrested Jackson and Baxter.
The state never prosecuted either Jackson or Baxtеr. Instead, the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) instituted administrative forfeiture proceedings for the currency and served Jackson, from whom the cash was seized, and not Baxter, who had not admitted ownership during the seizure. Baxter filed a collateral attack on the forfeiture action, at which point the government filed (by mutual stipulation) a complaint for forfeiture in rem in the district court.
Although not denying any of the government’s factual allegations, Baxter maintained that the money “was not used, or attempted to be used to facilitate any illegal activities.” After discovery by both sides, the government filed a motion for summary judgment with supporting affidavits from Officer Kearney. Baxter replied only with a request for a jury trial and а generalized denial of any wrongdoing. The district court found that Baxter had not met his Rule 56(e) obligations to come forward with specific factual disputes, and so concluded that “no genuine issue of material fact exists regarding whether the Defendant currency was used in violation of the law or was intended to be used unlawfully.” Because no stay of execution was obtained and Baxter did not file a superse-deas bond, the government has deposited the money into the United States Marshals Service Asset Forfeiture Fund.
II.
Before addressing the merits of the district court’s order granting summary judgment, we must first consider the government’s threshold legal argument regarding this court’s jurisdiction. To borrow from Judge Friendly, “[n]ot only doеs logic compel initial consideration of the issue of jurisdiction over the defendant — a court without such jurisdiction lacks power to dismiss a complaint for failure to state a claim— but the functional difference that flows from the ground selected for dismissal likewise compels considering the jurisdiction ... questions first.”
Arrowsmith v. United Press Int’l,
The government maintains that we have lost jurisdiction over the money (and thus the appeal) because the cash has been transferred to the United States Marshals Service Asset Fоrfeiture Fund and the claimant failed to obtain a stay of execution. The government’s action here is in rem, so jurisdiction derives from the court’s control over the res, the cash. Because Baxter did not obtain a stay of execution or file a supersedeas bond under Fed.R.Civ.P. 62(d), 1 and because the money is now with the Asset Forfeiture Fund, the *1108 government argues that we have lost control over the res and jurisdiction over the forfeiture proceedings.
At least two circuits have found that argument persuasive.
United States v. One Lear Jet Aircraft,
A more thorough discussion of the jurisdictional issue was provided by the full Eleventh Circuit in
One Lear Jet.
There, the district court granted forfeiture of an airplane under 8 U.S.C. § 1324(b), and the claimant did not obtain a stay of judgment. On the claimant’s appeal from the forfeiture determination, a sharply divided 6-5 court of appeals found no jurisdiction because the plane had been moved to another state. Writing for the majority, Judge Johnson found that the losing claimant to the
res
is obligated to “seek a stay of execution of the district court’s judgment pending appeal, to file a supersedeas bond, or to take other action to preserve the
res.”
We find the dissent in
One Lear Jet
persuasive. It is true, as a general, historical matter, that in
in rem
actions, removal of the
res
ends the jurisdiction of the court, unless the removal was “accidental or fraudulent or improper.”
The Rio Grande,
Relying in part on
Continental Grain,
several courts have departed from the traditional rule requiring the
res
to be in the jurisdiction.
See, e.g., United States v. An Article of Drug Consisting of 4,680 Pails,
We conclude that invocation of the
in rem
rule is particularly inapposite to defeat jurisdiction in a government-initiated civil forfeiture action.
2
As noted by Judge Vance in
One Lear Jet,
“[fjorfeiture actions are unique in that they are the only proceedings where the government may confisсate private property on a mere showing of probable cause.... to [then] eliminate the right of appeal, the most important safeguard against abuse, is indeed a drastic step.”
We also agree with the dissenters in
One Lear Jet
that by initiating the forfeiture proceeding in the district court, the government has subjected itself to this court’s
in personam
jurisdiction. Having submitted itself to the jurisdiction of the district court, the govеrnment should not be allowed to escape “through its subsequent jurisdictional exceptions” to the claimant’s appeal.
Savas v. Maria Trading Corp.,
III.
Turning to the claimant’s attack on the summary judgment order, we conclude that such a challenge must fail. The forfeiture provision of the Controlled Substances Act, 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(6), provides fоr the forfeiture of “[a]ll moneys ... furnished or intended to be furnished by any person in exchange for a controlled substance ....”
5
In actions brought under this section, the government must show probable cause for the belief that a substantial connection exists between the property forfeited and the criminal activity defined by the statute.
Boas v. Smith,
Applying the judicially developed probable cause and substantial connection tests to the facts at hand, there is little doubt that the government properly met its initial burden regarding probable cause. With the help of Agent Kearney’s affidavit, the government demonstrated the following in support of its motion: that undеrcover officer Kearney arranged a sale of six kilo
*1111
grams of cocaine; that Baxter produced an exceptional amount of cash in small bills,
7
which was represented to be the consideration for the drugs, to his companion, who had arranged the sale; and that this companion gave the bills (contained in a bowling bag) to Kearney, a total stranger. Given that Baxter had little income and no bank account, and advanced no reason for why he would be carrying such a large amount of money in a bowling bag, the government has shown far more than just a probability that the cash was being used to finance a cocaine transaction.
Cf. United States v. $215,300 In U.S. Currency,
With the government having met its burden, the burden now shifts to Baxter to show that he owned the cash, and that the money was not used in violation of the law or was not intended to be used unlawfully.
Boas,
Baxter has not set forth any facts to rebut the showing of probable cause. He has not explained adequately how someone with his income came to have almost $100,-000, much less why he had it in cash. He has not suggested a reason why he would have allowed Jackson to hand it to Kear-ney, a stranger. Had the claimant attacked the government’s version of what happened on April 27, then he might have created a genuine issue to take to the jury. 8 But by advancing general denials of his knowledge or involvement with persons who even he admits were known drug dealers, Baxter has failed to rebut the government’s case and show innocent оwnership.
Accordingly, the judgment of forfeiture
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Rule 62(d) provides that "[w]hen an appeal is taken the appellant by giving a supersedeas bond may obtain a stay_” Rule 62(a) provides for a 10-day automatic stay of execution from the entry of judgment.
. In so holding, we indicate no disapproval of the rule’s applicability in other contexts, especially in admiralty and in situations whеre one court seeks
in rem
jurisdiction over a
res
that is already under the
in rem
jurisdiction of another court.
See United States v. One 1985 Cadillac Seville,
. In One Lear Jet, the claimant maintained that he did not have the financial resources to file a supersedeas bond. The record is silent on whether Baxter possessed the resources to protect the almost $100,000 seized by the government.
.In
U.S. v. $57,480.05 U.S. Currency And Other Coins,
We are not persuaded that a judgment for the claimant would require the creation of a constructive trust against the government. “If, for example, an agent of the United States had scooped up the cash in dispute and, without waiting for a judicial order, had run to the nearest outpost of the Treasury and deposited the money ... it would be absurd to say that only an act of Congress could restore the purloined cash to the court."
United States v. Ten Thousand Dollars In United States Currency,
. The statute also subjects to forfeiture money "traceable to such an exchange ... [or] used to facilitate any violation of this subchapter.” 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(6). The government argues in the alternative that the mоney seized must have come from past illegal drug dealings and is therefore subject to forfeiture whether or not it was being offered to purchase cocaine on the night of April 27. We decline to reach that issue, however, because the money clearly was being used in an attempt to purchase cocaine.
. We review
de novo
the district cоurt’s determination of the existence of probable cause.
See United States v. Padilla,
. According to Kearney’s affidavit, there were 4,304 $20 bills, 977 $10 bills, 19 $5 bills, and 5 coins.
. Baxter did provide some evidence that others had loaned him some money, but he never explained why all this money was converted to cash, put in a bowling bag, and delivered to a stranger. Moreover, Baxter never provided affidavits from the "lenders.”
