MEMORANDUM OPINION
The Controversy
Fеderico Giovanelli seeks, under Fed. R.Crim.Pro. 41(e), the return of certain moneys, $471,600, that were seized from safe deposit boxes by the United States, contending that there was no proper forfeiture, and that the applicable statute of limitations (five years) bars their forfeiture at the present time. The initial question before us is whether the court that rеndered a criminal judgment against defendant has jurisdiction to entertain that criminal defendant’s motion for return of property seized when that property was seized and forfeited in a default action in another district, where the defendant claims that the default judgment in the other district was accomplished without proper notice to him. This court finds that we have jurisdiction but that even accepting Giovanelli’s contention that the notice to him was inadequate at the time of the forfeiture proceeding, equitable bars prevent him from recovering the funds seized.
I. BACKGROUND
On December 9, 1986, $471,600 was seized from Giovanelli’s safe deposit boxes (Government’s Declaration in Opposition, 114). In 1987, a forfeiture action was filed in the Eastern District of New York before District Court Judge Constantino. Notice to defendant of the forfeiture action was *353 published in the New York Post on February 8, 1988 (Government’s Declaration in Opposition, 118 and Ex. 5). Notice was also sent, on January 28, 1988, according to the Government, “by certified mail, return receipt requested, to the defendаnt Federico Giovanelli, who was the only known interested party to the forfeiture action.... The notice was sent to the defendant who was then incarcerated in a New York City detention facility [Rikers] on 1818 Hazen Street, Elmhurst, New York 11370” (Government’s Declaration in Opposition to Rule 41(e) Motion, ¶ 7). The Government included in its opposition to the motion а copy of the certified mail receipt as Ex. 4 in its Declaration in Opposition. On March 7, 1988, a decree of forfeiture was filed with the clerk of the Eastern District (Government’s Declaration in Opposition, ¶ 10).
Movant contends not only that he never received such notice, but also that the Government should have known that he would not receive it, since at the time the notice was sent he was not incarcerated at Rikers but had been released instead. Movant points to the Government’s own Ex. 4, a photocopy of the certified mail notification, which is marked “Return to Sender: Can’t Locate in System.” This, movant contends, indicates that notice was inadequate.
Movant insists that he was сompletely unaware of the forfeiture action in the Eastern District until the Government’s Declaration of Opposition made reference to it. Attached to movant’s Reply as Ex. A, Giovanelli’s Department of Correction Certificates, and they indicate that Giova-nelli was not at Rikers when notice of the forfeiture action was sent.
II. THIS COURT’S CAPACITY TO HEAR THE CLAIM PRESENTED
A. The Propriety of Using Rule 41(e) to Recover the Funds
It аppears that until the instant motion, the Government was unaware of the alleged failure to reach movant. It therefore raises other possible bars to movant’s recovery. First, it claims that a Rule 41(e) motion is an inappropriate vehicle for the relief sought. This contention is incorrect.
The government, in its Surreply, cites a very recent case,
Onwubiko v. U.S.,
In
Onwubiko,
the court said that “[w]here criminal proceedings against the movant have already been completed, a district court should treat a rule 41(e) motion as a civil complaint.”
B. Jurisdiction of this Issue in the Southern District of New York
The Government declares that even allowing that a Rule 41(e) action is pеrmissible, that this court lacks jurisdiction over the claim. However, case law clearly states that we have equitable jurisdiction over this motion, in addition to the fact that it is styled as a rule 41(e) motion is no bar to recovery.
Not only does
Mora v. United States,
In addition, the Second Circuit decided, in
U.S. v. One 1987 Wrangler Jeep,
Principles of comity between federal courts bar simultaneous litigation of the same matter in more than one federal district court. When thеre are two lawsuits filed concurrently in a matter, the first one filed determines the locus of jurisdiction.
First City Nat. Bank & Trust v. Simmons,
As between federal courts, the “doctrine of comity
permits
a court tо decline jurisdiction over an action when a complaint involving the same parties and issues has already been filed in another district. Hence, courts follow a ‘first to file’ rule that where two courts have concurrent jurisdiction, the first court in which jurisdiction attaches has priority to consider the case.”
Orthmann v. Apple River Campground,
One of the major justifications for the doctrine of the “first to file” rule is the avoidance of concurrent actions that would waste scarce judicial resources. Since there is no ongoing action in the Eastern District that concern is not implicated here. Secondly, since this court heard the criminal complaint against movant it has a familiarity with the facts of the case, a familiarity that would be lost were this case transferred to the Eastern District. This transfer would require the outlay of additional judicial resources, and thus the concerns that motivatе the application of the “first to file” rule in cases of concurrent litigation militate, in the instant controversy, for this court’s retention of jurisdiction over Giovanelli’s Rule 41(e) motion for return of the property seized.
III. THE ADEQUACY OF THE NOTICE PROVIDED
The question Giovanelli presents is whether the notice used was reasonably calculated to inform Giovanelli of the proсeedings.
Weigner v. New York,
The court holds, therefore, that the notice given by the Government was inadequate. The analysis set out in
Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co.,
In
Robinson v. Hanrahan,
In
Jaekel v. U.S.,
IV. EQUITABLE BARS TO GIOVANEL-LI’S RECOVERY
A. Laches
The Government argues that even if the notice sent to Rikers did not reach movant, that there was actual notice provided within the five year limitation period, and that Giovanelli purposefully sat on his rights and thus is barred by the doсtrine of laches from asserting his claim now. A veritable avalanche of evidence proves that Giovanelli was more than aware of the seizure, and that he did not challenge the forfeiture because he did not want to be connected to funds whose existence he could not explain without criminally implicating himself.
Giovanelli’s attоrney contended at oral argument of this motion that Giovanelli was never aware of the seizure of these funds. However, not only was movant so aware, movant had attempted to bar the introduction of the moneys seized as evidence at the trial, a request denied by this court in
U.S. v. Giovanelli,
*356 Giovanelli was aware, at the least, that the government thought that there had been a forfeiture order. At trial, the Federal Bureau of Investigations Agent who actually seized the moneys, Agent Beau-boin, testified that the moneys were forfeited to the Government, testimony that mov-ant, in his initial Notice of Motion of April 1, 1992, admits hearing. Notice of Motion for Return of Seized Property, ¶ 3.
The testimony of Agent Beauboin was short, and consisted of testimony about the search of Giovanelli’s home, the items found there, and the $471,600 in cash found in safe deposit boxes opened by keys found in the search of Giovanelli’s home. Mov-ant’s attorney, Mr. Hocheiser, opened the cross-examination of the witness as follows:
Q: That $371,000 plus approximately $100,000, is that still in existence in the form of currency?
A: I don’t know what form it is in at this moment. It was forfeited to the United States Government. I do know that.
Q: So you don’t know whether it was deposited in a bank account and now exists as a balance or an account as opposed to a pile of cash; is that right?
A: At this time I don’t know. I know it has been forfeited.
(Transcript of the criminal trial, 1364-1365). That was not the only mention that the moneys were forfeited. Several minutes later, on redirect, the funds were discussed, and the fact that they were forfeited was mentioned four times:
Q: (by Mr. Hoffinger, AUSA) Now, the $471,000 that you found in safe deposit boxes 560, 561, and 701, you said that money was forfeited?
A: Yes, it was.
Q: And was that forfeited pursuant to law?
A: Yes. I don’t know the specifics-
Q: But it was forfeited pursuant to law?
A: Yes.
Q: And it went back into the United States Treasury, essentially; is that right?
A: Essentially that’s what happens.
(Tr. 1377, lines 9-18).
Giovanelli cannot now feign surprise at the fact that there was a forfeiture order entered in the Eastern District, given the fact that for three years movant has had actual notice that the Government believes the money to have been forfeited.
An equitable claim is barred by the doctrine of laches where there is “(1) proof of delay in asserting a claim despite opportunity to do so; (2) lack of knowledge on defendant’s part that a claim would be asserted; and (3) prejudice to the defendant by the allowing of the claim.”
Rapf v. Suffolk County,
Giovanelli cannot claim justifiable ignorance. While laches is no bar when the movant’s delay is excusable because of justifiable ignorance of the facts comprising the cause of action, here Giovanelli is barred because his own lack of diligence in asserting his claim cannot be justified.
Southside Fair Housing Com. v. New York,
B. Dirty Hands
Giovanelli is also prevented by the doctrine of in pari delicto, unclean hands, from recovering the funds seized. At his sentencing, Giovanelli was subject to fines totalling $1,250,000. However, because there was no evidence at time of sentencing that defendant had a lot of cash, the *357 court imposed a rather small monetary penalty of only $25,000, believing, as Giovanelli and the presentence report indicated, that he possessed very little money.
Giovanelli was more thаn eager to stay silent on his claim to the moneys in controversy when it looked as if a judicial fine would deprive him of them. Indeed, his attorney at the original sentencing of November 16, 1989 argued for a small fine, noting that the government seized the funds that Giovanelli had secreted in the safe deposit boxes (Transcript of the Sentencing from November 16, 1989, at 21). The court specifically noted the seizure and forfeiture of the funds in controversy as a reason for assessing a particularly picayune fine of $25,000 (November 16, 1989 Transcript at 32).
In preparation for his original sentencing of November, 1989, Giovanelli submitted a net worth statement indicating that at best he had around $17,600 worth of assets, assets that he claimed were offset by debts owed. Presentence Report of October 23, 1989, at 8.
Now, after the levying of the fine, movant’s unclean hands bar the recovery he seeks. The doctrine of unclean hands serves “to withhold an equitable remedy that would encourage, or reward (and thereby encourage), illegal activity, as where an injunction would aid in cоnsummating a crime.”
Shondel v. McDermott,
