Richard J. Scianna appeals from a judgment of forfeiture after a jury trial before Judge Eginton. He brings three claims on appeal. Scianna argues first that the allocation of burdens of proof in civil forfeiture cases under 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(7) violates due process by imposing on claimants the burden of proving an innocent owner defense. He argues second that counsel for the government engaged in prejudicial misconduct by improperly vouching for the credibility of a witness and bolstering a witness’s credibility through the invocation of God and Jesus Christ. Finally, Scianna contends that the district court erred in not granting a mistrial based on the conduct of a witness’s private attorney.
We hold that it does not violate due process to place the burden of proving an innocent owner affirmative defense on the claimant. We hold that the question of whether it violates due process to limit the government’s burden in securing a forfeiture to a showing of probable cause has been waived. We reject the claims of trial error and affirm.
BACKGROUND
On August 15,1991, the government filed a complaint pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(7), alleging that real property located at 194 Quaker Farms Road, Oxford, Connecticut, was used or intended to be used to commit or to facilitate a violation of the Controlled Substances Act, 21 U.S.C. §§ 801 et seq. Scianna was record owner of the property. On September 3,1991, the district court issued a Notice of Probable Cause Hearing. On the day before the hearing was to commence, Scianna’s attorney notified the district court that Scianna would waive the probable cause hearing. On October 11, 1991, Magistrate Judge Latimer found probable cause for the seizure and issued a Warrant of Arrest In Rem for the property. On October 15,1991, Scianna filed a claim to the property. After discovery and entry of a new attorney representing Scianna, a jury was selected, and the case proceeded to trial before Judge Eginton.
The probable cause hearing having been waived, the trial began with Scianna’s seeking to prove an “innocent owner” defense— that is, that the property should not be forfeited because Scianna either did not know that the property was being used for illegal drug activity or, if he did know, he had not consented to such use. See United States v. One Parcel of Property Located at 121 Allen Place, Hartford, Connecticut,
In the course of seeking to undermine the credibility of Dwayne Thomas, another witness who testified that he participated in drug activity with Seianna, Scianna’s counsel focused on the length of time that Thomas and his attorney had spent with government lawyers preparing to testify, presumably to suggest that three hours could not have been spent solely on trial preparation but must also have involved the negotiation of a leniency-for-testimony bargain. Counsel for the government responded with a series of questions as follows:
Q: Mr. Thomas, how did I instruct you to answer the questions? What did I tell you the only thing I wanted you to do was?
A: Tell the truth.
Q: May I approach the witness for a moment. When we’ve met before you have had this New Testament in your hands?
Mr. Pattis: Objection. Religion can’t be used.
Mr. Sullivan: He wants to know what we talked about.
Mr. Pattis: I’m going to object on relevance.
Mr. Sullivan: He opened the door.
The Court: Go ahead.
Q: Did we talk about Jesus Christ?
A: Yup.
Q: Did we talk about God?
A: Yup.
Q: Did we talk about doing things the right way?
A: Yes.
Q: Taking responsibility for our lives?
A: Yes.
Q: We didn’t talk about the substance of the case, did we?
A: No.
Q: We talked about the philosophies, life, God, family, isn’t that correct?
A: Yes.
After the jury was excused, Scianna’s counsel again requested a mistrial. This request was also denied.
DISCUSSION
Seianna argues first that the allocation of burdens of proof directed by Section 881(a)(7) violates due process. In proceedings under Section 881(a)(7), the government must first demonstrate probable cause that the property is subject to forfeiture. See 21 U.S.C. § 881(d); 19 U.S.C. § 1615. See also United States v. $37,780 in United States Currency,
The process generally proceeds as follows. Absent exigent circumstances, a hearing, with notice to record owners, is held before seizure. United States v. James Daniel Good Real Property,
Scianna bases his due process challenge on the Supreme Court’s decisions in Good,
Prior to Austin, we had held that the forfeiture statute’s shift of the burden of proof of the innocent owner defense to the claimant did not violate due process. See United States v. $2,500 in United States Currency,
Scianna maintains that because Austin established that seizures of real property are punitive in character, we must reexamine the constitutionality of the statute’s requirement that the claimant bear the burden of proving an innocent owner defense. We do not agree. Generally, Congress may alter the traditional allocation of the burden of proof without infringing upon the litigant’s due process rights unless the statute is criminal in nature. United States v. $250,000 in United States Currency,
Moreover, those who assert the innocent owner defense have unique access to evidence regarding such claims. They know precisely what information was brought to their attention and why facts of which owners are generally aware were unknown to them. If knowledge of drug transactions on the premises is conceded, they also know precisely what steps they took to prevent use of the premises for drug trafficking. See 121 Allen Place,
We do note that while Congress may shift the burden of proof of an affirmative defense to a civil forfeiture claimant, Good and Austin reopen the question of whether the quantum of evidence the government needs to show in order to obtain a warrant in rem allowing seizure — probable cause — suffices to meet the requirements of due process.
We turn next to Seianna’s attorney misconduct claims.
Seianna’s second claim of misconduct concerns the government’s invocation of God and Jesus Christ during the questioning of Dwayne Thomas. Here, too, Scianna’s counsel invited the government’s line of questioning. By hammering home the length of time that Thomas and his attorney spent with prosecutors in an attempt to suggest that they were in fact negotiating a deal for immunity, Scianna’s counsel opened the door to questions eliciting the actual discussions and events transpiring during that time.
Finally, we turn to the actions of the attorney for the younger Doyle in offering before the jury to testify concerning any conversation between his client and the state’s attorney. Scianna’s suggestion that this behavior warranted a mistrial is without merit. Although this interruption was certainly a bizarre event, we perceive no prejudice to Scianna that would alter the outcome. The only prejudice claimed at trial was that the jury might draw a negative inference from the fact that the attorney would not be called by the defense-. Refusing a mistrial on this claim is not an abuse of discretion.
We therefore affirm.
Notes
. In making the determination in $2,500 in U.S. Currency that the forfeiture statute's shift of the burden of proof to the claimant did not violate due process of law, this court looked to a number of the factors suggested by the Supreme Court in Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez,
Austin's holding that drug forfeiture is punitive in intent, its historical analysis, and its rejection of the government’s proffered reasons why the drug forfeiture statute is remedial all directly contradict some of the holdings made by this court when it made its Ward/Mendoza-Martinez analysis of § 881(a)(6) (the § 881(a)(7) analogue applicable to drug money) in $2,500. Thus, although the Austin Court did not go on to engage in the full Ward/Mendoza-Martinez analysis of the drug forfeiture statute — it did not need to for purposes of its Excessive Fines Clause inquiry,
. Only one case in this circuit explicitly discusses the adequacy of the evidentiary burdens of the civil drug forfeiture statute. It states:
[Appellant] also suggests in passing that the burden-shifting procedure of the statutory forfeiture scheme is unconstitutional when applied to the proceeds of drug activity rather than to property that is itself contraband. His argument seems to be that real property is "somewhat sacred”, and so when real property constitutes the "proceeds" to be forfeited, a higher standard than that of probable cause should be applied. We find nothing unconstitutional in congress’s allocation of the burdens of proof in forfeiture cases, and therefore also reject this argument.
United States v. 228 Acres of Land and Dwelling Located on Whites Hill Road,
The government points out that we have continued to apply the statutory forfeiture framework in post-Austin/Good cases, see, e.g., Milbrand,
. Only one Court of Appeals opinion, a dissent, conducted a full Mathews v. Eldridge,
. We note that this proceeding is at least nominally a civil case, calling into question the extent to which we should apply the standards governing prosecutorial conduct. However, the government appears to concede that "[standards of conduct for government attorneys at trial should be applied uniformly in both civil and criminal cases,” although it suggests that we keep in mind "obvious distinctions between civil in rem asset forfeitures [sic] proceedings and criminal in personam actions.” Our resolution of this issue makes it unnecessary to discuss what differences, if any, might apply to our treatment of government misconduct in criminal cases, on the one hand, and civil forfeiture proceedings, on the other.
