On October 15, 1974, the United States brought an action pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 881 for the forfeiture of a 1974 Cadillac Eldorado Sedan registered in the name of Ivan Santiago. The Government sought forfeiture of the vehicle on the ground that it had been used to facilitate the sale of cocaine within the meaning of 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(4). After a one-day bench trial before the Honorable Edward Weinfeld, United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, the court dismissed the complaint and denied forfeiture by order and judgment entered March 4, 1976. Judge Weinfeld’s opinion, filed on , December 30, 1975, is reported at
The only evidence given below for the Government was the testimony of Joseph P. Salvemini, an undercover agent of the Drug Enforcement Administration, and two exhibits. The claimant Santiago testified on his own behalf. The Government does not contend that any of the findings of fact below are erroneous.
I
At about 1:30 p.m. on June 6, 1974, Salvemini and an informant went to the apartment of Arlene Carlton at 305 East 24th Street in Manhattan. They were there introduced to one “Pete” Montanez and discussed the purchase of cocaine. Montanez stated that he and his cousin Ivan (Santiago) had brought 15 kilos of cocaine from South America and had 3 kilos left. Montanez told Salvemini that he could only sell him an eighth of a kilogram. Salvemini protested that this was not enough and *422 after a heated exchange Montanez left. On the following day, June 7, Salvemini’s informant advised him that another meeting had been scheduled at Carlton’s apartment. Ivan Santiago, accompanied by Montanez, drove the Cadillac from his ladies’ apparel shop on East 167th Street in the Bronx to Carlton’s apartment in Manhattan where they met with Salvemini. Santiago stated that he was there to straighten out the prior disagreement and was willing to sell Salvemini one kilogram of cocaine for $26,-000. They disagreed however as to the method of transferring the drugs. According to Salvemini, Santiago claimed to have been a dealer in cocaine for six years and preferred the exchange to be made indoors in Carlton’s apartment, while Salvemini wished to use two rented cars. Salvemini testified that the price and the amount of cocaine to be sold were agreed upon at this meeting, and that their only difference at that point was the mechanics of the exchange. Santiago testified that at the end of the June 7 meeting, he told Salvemini to forget about it and that no agreement was reached.
Judge Weinfeld did not comment in his opinion on these separate versions of the June 7 meeting but did find that the meeting ended inconclusively and that the participants failed to agree on the mechanics of the transaction. Santiago and Montanez, after leaving the Carlton apartment, drove away in the Cadillac now sought to be forfeited. Three days later on June 10, 1974, Montanez met Salvemini at a New York restaurant where negotiations continued. Salvemini testified that Montanez stated that he and his cousin Ivan (Santiago) were adamant that the sale take place indoors. Salvemini then agreed to purchase an eighth of a kilogram of cocaine. The transaction took place that evening in the Carlton apartment, Salvemini paying Montanez $4,000 for the cocaine. By arrangement Salvemini and Montanez met the following day and agreed to the further sale of a kilogram of cocaine later that day. Before the transaction was consummated, however, Santiago and Montanez were both arrested.
The apartment of Santiago was searched on June 12 pursuant to a search warrant and quantities of cocaine and marihuana were seized, as well as narcotics equipment, plus some $26,629 in currency including $2,500 in $Í00 bills representing official advance funds. Later that day Santiago’s Cadillac was seized. After Santiago’s arrest, he was indicted and then pleaded guilty to conspiring with Montanez and Carlton to distribute cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846. One of the overt acts charged in the indictment was the June 7 conversation in the Carlton apartment. Other overt acts charged were the purchase and sale of the one-eighth kilogram on June 10, 1974 by Montanez. Concededly the only use of the Cadillac Eldorado Sedan sought to be forfeited here was to transport Santiago and “Pete” Montanez to and from the Carlton apartment on June 7, 1974.
II
Section^881(a)(4) provides that the property subject to forfeiture includes “All conveyances, including aircraft, vehicles, or vessels, which are used, or are intended for use, to transport, or in any manner to facilitate the transportation, sale, receipt, possession, or concealment of property described in paragraph (1) or (2).” Paragraph 1 identifies a controlled substance as such property and there is no dispute that cocaine is such a substance.'
The Government specifically relies on that part of the statute which provides that if the vehicle is used “in any manner to facilitate the . . . sale” of the controlled substance, it is subject to forfeiture. It is urged that the use of the Cadillac to bring Santiago and Montanez to the June 7 prearranged “business” meeting was a significant event in furtherance of Santiago’s illegal activities which culminated in the illicit sale, thus justifying the forfeiture of the vehicle. Judge Weinfeld’s opinion held that since the contraband was not transported by the vehicle and the car was used as an ordinary means of transportation to convey Santiago to the site of the June 7 meeting, there was no sufficient basis for
*423
forfeiture. The court held that the vehicle must have a substantial connection to, or be instrumental in the commission of, the underlying crime. He found that the Cadillac here involved had no relationship, direct or indirect, to the subsequent narcotic transactions which transpired a few days later. He placed principal reliance on
United States v. One 1972 Datsun,
We cannot agree with the district court that the use of Santiago’s Cadillac had no direct or indirect relationship to the subsequent sales. The June 7 meeting may have terminated inconclusively because of a disagreement as to the mechanics of the exchange, but it was an integral part of the drug selling conspiracy to which Santiago pleaded guilty and was pleaded in the indictment as an overt act. Salvemini did testify that the price and quantity of the drug were fixed at that meeting. It was the second meeting of Montanez and Salvemini and was prearranged as a result of the abortive meeting the day before. Santiago admittedly knew that the purpose of the meeting was to arrange for the sale of cocaine. That sale was consummated a few days later in the manner insisted upon by Santiago — an exchange in the apartment of Carlton. Santiago further admitted in the proceeding below that he had given the cocaine to Montanez which was sold to Salvemini on June 10, again an overt act pleaded in the indictment.
The question is whether there was a sufficient nexus between the use of the Cadillac to bring Salvemini and Santiago to and from the June 7 meeting to amount to a facilitation in any manner of the later sale of the controlled substance within the meaning of section 881(a)(4).
United States v. One 1972 Datsun, supra,
relied upon by the district court, involved the construction of the same subdivision of the statute on facts which appear to be stronger for the Government’s case than those before us. That court nonetheless found them insufficient to justify the forfeiture of the vehicle. In that case Stoudt, the owner of the vehicle in question, on two occasions by prearrangement used his car to lead a special agent of the Drug Enforcement Administration (who followed in his own car) to Stoudt’s apartment where sales of LSD were transacted. The court in its review of the case law found that this forfeiture statute and others similar to it had been limited to cases where a) the contraband, no matter how minute in quantity, was intentionally transported or concealed in the vehicle; b) where the vehicle was used as a place for conducting negotiations for or transacting any portion of a sale; or c) where the vehicle is used as a lookout or decoy vehicle in a convoy. The court noted that, courts, with the exception of
United States v. One 1941 Pontiac,
The
Datsun
court, and Judge Weinfeld here, depend upon
Simpson v. United States,
We also note that the
Datsun
opinion extensively cited and depended upon
United States v. United States Coin & Currency,
The severe attitude of the
Caiero-Toledo
Court is explained by its reference to the legislative history of 49 U.S.C. § 781,
1
which illustrates congressional concern with rising drug trafficking in this country and its conviction that those who profit and thrive upon the misery of drug addicts should be punished financially by forfeiture of the vehicles employed in the trade. The Government is also compensated in part for its enforcement efforts, which are substantial, and obtains security for subsequently imposed penalties and fines. ■ Id. at 687 n.26,
It is interesting to note that 49 U.S.C. § 781(a)(3), the statute construed in the vast majority of the cases reported on this point in conjunction with the general forfeiture provision of the United States Code Chapter on Transportation, 49 U.S.C. § 782, provides for the forfeiture of any vehicle used or intended to be used “to facilitate the transportation . . . [or] sale . of any contraband article.” However, when the Congress enacted section 881 as part of the 1970 Act it provided for the forfeiture of vehicles used or intended to be used “in any manner to facilitate the transportation . . . [or] sale” of a controlled substance. Although we have found no legislative history to explain the addition of the language which we have underscored, 3 its employment in a statute specifically addressed to the problem of drug abuse patently indicates the congressional intent to broaden the applicability of the forfeiture remedy it provided. Hence the rule proclaimed by Datsun, based upon other statutes as well as section 781, is perforce suspect.
While this circuit has not written on this point before, our attention has been called to opinions of two other circuits which are seemingly contrary to the result reached here.
Howard v. United States,
As a matter of common sense we cannot accept the concept that while the transportation of apy quantity of drugs however minute is admittedly sufficient to merit the forfeiture of the vehicle, nonetheless the transportation of the trafficker to the site of the drug sale or to a prearranged meeting with a prospective customer where the sale is proposed should save the vehicle from forfeiture. In either event is should be caput lupinum. It is well understood that extremely small amounts of narcotics *426 are worth considerable sums. (Here for example one-eighth of a kilo of cocaine given to Montanez by Santiago, was sold to the Government agent for $4,000). The drug is physically small enough to be carried on the person of the peddler in his pocket or even his hat band. The vehicle is employed not as a moving van to cart bulky contraband, but realistically to facilitate the transportation of the person who deals in it. The nabobs of the drug business normally eschew physical custody of dope, relegating to their minions possession of the brown paper bag (here we note that while Santiago drove a Cadillac, his cousin Montanez drove a Toyota). If the purpose of the statute is, as Congress indicated, to reduce the profits of those who practice this nefarious profession, we are loathe to make the forfeiture depend upon the accident of whether dope is physically present in the vehicle. Its use to transport the peddler or his confederates to the scene of the sale or to a meeting where the sale is proposed is sufficient.
In prior cases decided under the more restrictive section 781, decisions of the Southern District have not hesitated to approve forfeitures where the vehicle was not used to transport or conceal contraband or as a place to negotiate or consummate a sale of drugs, but rather as a conveyance of the trafficker. In
United States v. One 1941 Pontiac Sedan, supra,
If an automobile is used by a drug peddler as a “means” of going to places to negotiate sales of narcotics and as a means of driving therefrom, to later on have the orders filled, and as a means for the joint transportation of himself and a confederate, who makes the delivery of the narcotics for the peddler, the automobile is in my opinion being used to facilitate the sale of narcotics, even though narcotics are not actually carried in the ear. 5
In an earlier case,
United States v. One Dodge Coupe,
Both of these earlier Southern District decisions in substance support the position of the United States on this appeal, particularly since as we have noted we now are dealing with section 881(a)(4) which permits forfeiture if the vehicle
in any manner
facilitates the sale of a controlled drug. In
Dodge
Judge Rifkind observed, and Judge Weinfeld cited the opinion’s language (although only for this statement), that where contraband is not in the vehicle, what constitutes facilitation “is a question of degree, which is in turn a question of fact not readily susceptible to generalization.”
The order and judgment of the district court is reversed and the defendant Cadillac is decreed forfeited to the United States.
Notes
. H.R.Rep. No. 2751, 81st Cong., 2d Sess. (1950) states:
Enforcement officers of the Government have found that one of the best ways to strike at commercialized crime is through the pocketbooks of the criminals who engage in it. Vessels, vehicles, and aircraft may be termed the operating tools of dope peddlers, and often represent major capital investments to criminals whose liquid assets, if any, are frequently not accessible to the Government. Seizure and forfeiture of these means of transportation provide an effective brake on the traffic in narcotic drugs. The proposed legislation is intended to provide additional means of combating this nefarious activity.
1950 U.S.Code Cong.Serv. 2952, 2953-54.
. As
Calero-Toledo
notes,
. We note that this language was employed in the former Narcotic Drugs Import and Export Act, as amended, Act of July 18, 1956, ch. 629, § 105, 70 Stat. 570, which was repealed with the enactment of the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970, Pub.L. No. 91-513, § 1101(a)(2), 84 Stat. 1291.
.
United States v. One 1952 Ford Victoria,
. In
Datsun, supra,
the court noted that the purpose of vehicle forfeiture in enforcement of the narcotics laws was to prevent the flow of narcotics by depriving peddlers of the operating tools of the trade. The court limited the penalty to vehicles used as part of the modus operandi of an ongoing criminal narcotics enterprise or a car specifically adapted for illegal narcotics activities.
