Clаimant Edward J. Levin appeals from a judgment of forfeiture entered pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(7) on October 4, 1990, in a civil proceeding in the Eastern District of New York (Eugene H. Nickerson, Judge). That judgment deprived Levin of his residence, which is located at 38 Whalers Cove Drive, Babylon, New York. We find that the forfeiture was authorized by the statute and not prohibited by substantive due process. Levin also argues that the forfeiture must be classified as punishment under
United States v. Halper,
BACKGROUND
This case concerns the forfeiture of Lev-in’s personal residence, a condominium located at 38 Whalers Cove Drive, Babylon, New York. The condominium, purchased in 1977, is now worth approximately $145,-000. Levin has an еquity interest in the property valued at approximately $68,000; mortgages outstanding on the property total $77,000.
In July, 1988, Levin twice sold cocaine inside the condominium to a confidential informant for a total sum of $250. The quantity of the sale is disputed but in any event amounts to no more than 2V2 grams. The record indicates, and the government does not dispute, that the confidential informant requested that the first sale take place inside the condominium. The second sale, on July 20, was also made in Levin’s home — it is uncleаr who specified the location. (We are not here concerned with a third small sale which took place outside the condominium.) The confidential informant telephoned Levin frequently after the sales to request that Levin make further sales. Levin declined.
Levin was arrested by the Suffolk County Police on October 6, 1988 on charges of criminal sale of a controlled substance based on the above transactions. The condominium was searched. No drugs, weapons, large amounts of cash, drug paraphernalia, or drug records were discovered.
Subsequent to his arrest, Levin began cooperating with law enforcement authorities, and later pleaded guilty in the Supreme Court of the State of New York for the County of Suffolk to attempted criminal sale of a controlled substance. He received a probationary sentence and a small fine.
On November 10, 1988, the United States government instituted an in rem forfeiture action against Levin’s condominium, pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(7). On November 14, 1988 the govеrnment obtained an ex parte seizure warrant for the premises. Pursuant to the warrant, the United States Marshals Service seized the property, simultaneously searching it extensively. No indication of narcotics activity was found.
After timely filing a claim of ownership to the property, Levin moved to dismiss the complaint. The Government cross-moved for summary judgment of forfeiture.
In a thoughtful, well-written opinion filed September 20, 1990, reported at
Levin then filed this appeal.
DISCUSSION
Levin raises four arguments: (1) the forfeiture is not authorized under the statute, 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(7); (2) the forfeiture violates substantive due process; (3) the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment prohibits the forfeiture; and (4) the Eighth Amendment prohibits the forfeiture.
A. Forfeiture under 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(7)
We turn first to the statutory argument. 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(7) provides for the forfeiture of real property “which is used, or intended to be used, in any manner or part, to commit, or to facilitate the commission of” a violation of the narcotics laws punishable by more than one year’s imprisonment. As we observed in
United States v. 141st Street Corp.,
In
United States v. Premises & Real Property at 4492 S. Livonia Rd.,
B. Substantive Due Process
Levin next argues that the civil forfeiture of his residence violates substantive due process. Substantive due process protects the individual “against arbitrary action[s] of government,”
Daniels v. Williams,
Here, Levin committed a crime inside the condominium. Even if the informant was responsible for suggesting the condominium as the site of the drug transaction, Levin can hardly be said to have done everything possible to prevent the property’s use for illegal purposes. Under Cale *34 ro-Toledo, the forfeiture therefore does not offend substantive due process.
C. Other Constitutional Arguments: Fifth Amendment Double Jeopardy and Eighth Amendment
1. Classifying Civil Sanctions as Punishment
Levin’s arguments that the forfeiture violates the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment and the Eighth Amendment’s bar on Cruel and Unusual Punishment and Excessive Fines are predicated upon his contention that the forfeiture is in reality a criminal penalty and, as such, is subject to constitutional limitations on punishment. See generally Pratt & Petersen, Civil Forfeiture in the Second Circuit, 65 St. John’s L.Rev. 653, 668-70 (1991) (discussing “disturbing implications” of courts’ failure to regard civil forfeiture as punishment). He argues that the forfeiture of his $68,000 interest in the condominium — and the resultant loss of his home — as a cоnsequence of a sale of $250 worth of cocaine must be seen as punishment, since it, or at least some part of it, cannot be said to serve proper civil purposes.
Levin’s point here is not that Section 881(a)(7) is properly read as a penal, rather than civil, enactment,
see generally United States v. Ward,
In
Halper,
an employee of a medical laboratory filed sixty-five false claims for Medicare reimbursement, each of which overstated the amount reimbursable to the lab by $9, resulting ultimately in a fraud on the government of $585. Under the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. §§ 3729-31, the government sought a civil penalty of $2000 plus double damages for each violation of the Act. This subjected Halper to a penalty of over $130,000, “exponentially greater than the amount of the fraud, and ... also many times the amount of the Government’s total loss.”
The Court applied a “rule of reason” to the sanction. Finding it “overwhelmingly disproportionate,” and without “rational rеlation” to the purported goal of compensating the government, the Court presumed the sanction to be punitive.
The Court cautioned, however, that the burden of accounting for a civil sanction would fall on the government only in the “extreme case,” and that leeway was to be given the government’s attempt to achieve “rough remedial justice,” particularly in
*35
view of quantifying the “precise amount of the Government’s damages and costs.”
Halper,
Where an accounting is appropriate, however,
Halper
requires a district court to compare the government’s proven damages and costs against the sanction the government seeks to impose. Following an accounting, a sanction must be classified as рunitive when the size of the sanction can not fairly be attributed to remedial purposes, “but rather can only be explained as
also
serving either retributive or deterrent purposes.”
The classification of a sanction as punitive under
Halper
does not automatically transform the sanction proceeding into a criminal prosecution, with all the attendant procedural safeguards required by the Constitution. For example, the applicability of Sixth Amendment protections to statutory proceedings and the standard of proof used in thosе proceedings are determined not with reference to the particular sanction ultimately imposed, but rather by considering the proceeding’s inherent nature, identified through recourse to “statutory language, structure, and intent.”
Halper,
Nonetheless, certain constitutional protections do attach when an individual is subjected to a “civil” sanction that in effect is punishment. Such an individual is protected against multiple punishments under the Double Jeopardy Clause, because that constitutional protеction is “intrinsically personal,” serving a “humane” interest.
See Halper,
Furthermore, we agree with Levin that Eighth Amendment protections attach when an individual is subjected to a civil sanction classified as punitive under
Hal-per.
Like the Double Jeopardy Clause, the Eighth Amendment is a “personal” and “humane” limitation on the government’s ability to punish an individual. Although the Supreme Court did not explicitly so rule in
Halper,
in
Browning-Ferris Industries, Inc. v. Kelco Disposal, Inc.,
2. Implications of United States v. Halper for Civil Forfeitures
We read
Halper
to apply to civil forfeitures. Forfeitures that are overwhelmingly disproportionate to the value of the offense must be classified as punishment unless the forfeitures are shown to serve articulated, legitimate civil purposes.
See
21 U.S.C. § 881 (forfeiture provisions). Among those purpоses, the government may use
in rem
forfeiture to remove in-strumentalities of crime from general circulation and prevent further illicit use of harmful objects, a goal springing from the historic fiction underlying forfeiture that “an instrument of harm is itself culpable.”
United States v. Certain Real Property
*36
and Premises Known as 38 Whalers Cove Drive, Babylon, New York,
Civil forfeitures do not retain their civil character if they are used in order to achieve deterrence or retribution, however. “Retribution and deterrence ... are not legitimate nonpunitive gоvernmental objectives.”
Bell v. Wolfish,
In evaluating whether a forfeiture undеr § 881(a)(7) serves its ostensible goals, we focus upon the effects on the claimant who has violated the statute, despite the fact that the forfeiture actions are brought
in rem. See Livonia Road,
We therefore hold that a forfeiture under 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(7) will not be presumed punitive where the seized property has been used substantially to accomplish illegal purposes, so that the property itself can be said to be “culpable” or an instrumentality of crime.
See Dobbins’ Distillery v. United States,
*37
The government may then account under
Halper
in order to show that the forfeiture serves legitimate civil goals. The government may present its costs of investigation and detection, as well as other costs and damages attributable to the criminal misconduct of the claimant.
See
21 U.S.C. § 881(e)(3)(A) (relating transfer of forfeited property to state agency to “total law enforcement effort with respect to the [individual] violation of law on which the forfeiture is based”).
See United States v. Hall,
3. Application of United States v. Halper to the Instant Case
With these principles in mind, we turn to the instant case. We consider first whether the forfeiture could be considered a removal of an “instrumentality of crime” from general circulation. The government apparently concedes, however, that forfeiture is not sought on this ground.
See 38 Whalers Cove Drive,
Instead, the government’s sole contention here is that the sanction serves other civil goals such as compensation. Following Halper, we therefore examine whether the forfeiture is disproportionately large, relative to the value of the drug transactions which violated 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(7). The forfeiture of Levin’s interest in the residence was close to three hundred times the total value of cocainе sold inside it. We find as a matter of law that the forefei-ture is overwhelmingly disproportionate compared to the value of the relevant drug transactions, and that therefore a rebuttal presumption that the forfeiture is punitive in nature is created.
If the resulting attachment of constitutional protections under Halper would have any effect on the result of this case, we would be inclined to vacate Judge Nicker-son’s judgment of forfeiture and remand the case to permit the government an opportunity to rebut the presumption by showing through an accounting of its costs that the forfeiture is civil in nature. However, assuming arguendo that following a government accounting the district judge would conclude that the forfeiture, even up to the full amount of Levin’s equity interest in the condominium, amounted to punishment and not a civil sanction, the judgment would still survive scrutiny. For reasons that we now turn to, the forfeiture does not violate the constitutional limits on *38 punishment set by the Double Jeopardy Clause and the Eighth Amendment.
a. Double Jeopardy Clause
Levin maintains that becаuse the forfeiture proceeding followed his prosecution, plea of guilty, and sentencing in state court, the forfeiture violates his Double Jeopardy Clause right to be free from multiple punishments.
We disagree. Even assuming that the forfeiture is a criminal penalty, the Double Jeopardy Clause prohibits two criminal punishments for the same offense only when they are sought by the same sovereign government. The Double Jeopardy Clause is inapplicable when separate governments prosecute the same defendant, for the defendant has offended both sovereigns.
Heath v. Alabama,
Levin argues on appeal that his case falls within an exception to this “dual sovereignty” doctrine. The Double Jeopardy Clause may be violated despite single prosecutions by separate sovereigns when one “prosecuting sovereign can be said to be acting as a ‘tool’ of the other.”
United States v. Aboumoussallem,
b. Eighth Amendment
Levin asserts that the forfeiture violates the Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause of the Eighth Amendment, or its Excessive Fines Clause. 3 We find the arguments without merit. The Eighth Amendment proscribes only extreme punishments. Even assuming that the entire amount of the forfeiture here is punishment, it does not violate the outer confines set by the Eighth Amendment.
The Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause prevents the imposition of a punishmеnt which is “grossly disproportionate” to the crime committed.
Solem v. Helm,
Further, the punishments meted out by the federal government and other jurisdictions for similar crimes indicate that the forfeiture of Levin’s condominium is not aberrational. Federal law authorizes a sentence of twenty years and a fine of $1,000,000 for the distribution of cocaine in an amount less than 500 grams. 21 U.S.C. § 841. The Sentencing Guidelines assign a Base Offense Level of 12 to transactions involving less than 25 grams of cocaine. Depending upon criminal history, a defendant who had distributed the same amount of cocaine as Levin would presumptively be fined $30,000 and receive a sentence of 10 to 37 months. The state courts in this circuit authorize punishments on a similar scale. Under New York law, a defendant who had distributed the same quantity of cocaine as Levin would be exposed to 8 years and 4 months imprisonment and $50,-000 in fines. N.Y.Penal Law §§ 220.41, 70.00, 80.00. Under Vermont law, a defendant distributing 2.5 grams or more of cocaine (but less than one ounce) may receive five years of imprisonment and a fine of $100,000. Vt.Stat.Ann. tit. 18, § 4231. Connecticut law authorizes a sentence of 20 years and a fine of $10,000 for distribution of more than 0.5 grams of cocaine. Conn. GemStat. § 21a-278(b); § 53a-41. We reсognize that these are merely possible sentences and are not conclusive as to what a court might do in an individual case. Nonetheless, we infer from the statutes that the imposition of the equivalent of a $68,000 fine in this case, while large, is not a grossly disproportionate punishment within the meaning of Eighth Amendment jurisprudence.
As to the Excessive Fines Clause, the Supreme Court has provided no guidance, except to observe that fines must be closely scrutinized because they benefit the government. Unlike other forms of punishment that impose costs on government, fines create revenue.
Harmelin v. Michigan,
CONCLUSION
The judgment of forfeiture is affirmed.
Notes
. The
Halper
Court stated that multiple sanctions such as those imposed on Halper would not violate the Double Jeopardy Clause if they were imposed in a single proceeding.
Halper,
. The Court concluded provisionally that the $130,000 — plus sanction was punitive, based on the district court’s estimate of the government's costs and damages at $16,000. The Court then remanded the case, however, giving the government an opportunity to prove that its costs and damages in fact exceeded the district court’s estimate.
. Levin appears to mention, but does not press, the possibility that the Excessive Fines Clause might apply to sanctions purely civil in nature.
See Browning-Ferris Industries, Inc. v. Kelco Disposal, Inc.,
