James Hopkins (“Hopkins”), Gloria Lowndes, and Gary Lowndes (Hopkins’ mother and step-father, “the Lowndeses”) appeal a judgment forfeiting real property situated at 22249 Dolorosa Street, Woodland Hills, California, pursuant to 21 U.S.C, § 881(a)(6) (1994). Wе hold that a claimant in a civil forfeiture proceeding who withdraws his claim after an adverse probable cause determination retains standing to appeal, and that in relying on evidence it had suppressed, the district court erred in finding probable cause.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Officers from the Ventura County Sheriffs Department arrested Hopkins, a suspected drug dealer, as he was driving from his residence at 22249 Dolorosa Street to a public storage facility. They searched the car and in the trunk found a cardboard box, which they labeled and later inventoried in the Sheriffs Department Property Records as “Item No. 23 ... cardboard box cont. mise, pictures, trophies, and papers.” The officers then conducted a warrantless and nonconsen-sual search of Hopkins’s residence where they seized various other documents identified in the Sheriff Department’s property records as Item 29 (“Cardboard shoe box cont. mise, paperwork”), Item 30 (“Tax records & mise, paperwork”) and Item 32 (“Tax return statements, mise, real estate paperwork, 24 photographs”).
The government instituted civil forfeiture proceedings against the Dolorosa property. To make the requisite showing of probable cause that Hopkins had bought or improved the property with drug proceeds, see 19 U.S.C. § 1615 (1994), the government sought to introduce documents seized from Hopkins’s rеsidence and ear. Claimants moved to suppress the evidence • seized from the property. The district court ruled that all documents would be suppressed and excluded unless it was clearly shown which documents were not a product of the illegal search of the property. Finding the evidence insufficient to establish which documents had come from the property and which from the car, it suppressed all of the documentary evidencе and ruled that it could not be considered for the purpose of establishing probable cause. The district court, after hearing testimony based on the documentary evidence, then found “there is some evidence that Mr. Hоpkins’ funds that were in banks or in a bank were used, that there was some tracing” and, therefore, “that for probable cause purposes ... the record is sufficient as to all of the property, including the real property.” Hopkins then “orally withdrew his claim to the defendant real property” and the Lowndeses proceeded to trial. The jury returned a verdict forfeiting the property.
Hopkins and the Lowndeses now appeal from the judgment, and the government cross-appeals on the ground that Hopkins lacks standing because he withdrew his claim.
The district court had subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1345 (1994) and 28 U.S.C. § 1355 (1994). We have appellate jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (1994) and reverse.
I. APPELLANTS’STANDING
Standing is a threshold issue which we review de novo. See United States v.
There is no dispute that Hopkins sufficiently alleged an ownership interest (nor does the government question the Lowndeses’ standing). The government contends, however, that Hopkins relinquished his standing to appeal when he withdrew his claim after the district court’s adverse probable cause ruling. The contention is without merit.
In a civil forfеiture proceeding under 21 U.S.C. § 881, a claimant can “defend against forfeiture of [his] property in either or both of two ways: first, [he] may refute the government’s showing of probable cause, and second, [he] may come forward with affirmative evidence and prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the [property] was not used for the illegal purpose as alleged.” United States v. One 56-Foot Motor Yacht Named Tahuna,
II. PROBABLE CAUSE TO FORFEIT THE DOLOROSA STREET PROPERTY
Hopkins and the Lowndeses contend that the district court erred when it found probable cause. That ruling implicates three issues: (1) Did the Lowndeses have Fourth Amеndment standing to suppress evidence seized from the property? (2) Did the district court err in suppressing all the documentary evidence seized by the officers? (3) If the evidence was properly suppressed, did the court err in finding рrobable cause?
A. Did the Lowndeses Have Fourth Amendment Standing to Suppress Evidence Seized from the Property?
The government contends that the Lowndeses lacked an expectation of privacy in the property and, therefore, have no standing to have the seized evidence suppressed. The government argues that, while it did not raise the issue below, Fourth Amendment standing is not a waivable issue and may be raised for the first time on appeal.
While it is true that the government can first raise the issue on appeal when the defendant appeals, see United States v. Taketa,
B. Did the District Court Err in Suppressing All the Documentary Evidence?
The government contends that the court committed clear error when it suppressed the documentary evidence on the ground that the government was unable to prove clearly which documents came from the car, rather than from the property. It is for the district court to determine which items seized were obtained as the result of an illegal search and which were obtained lawfully. See United States v. Van Damme,
At the probable cause hearing, the government offered the box labeled Item No. 23 seized from the car which contained Hopkins’s 1984, 1987, and 1988 income tax returns; back up documents for his 1989,1990, 1991, and 1992 returns; bank statements and checks from Independence Bank and Sanwa Bank; fifty to sixty receipts relating to Reels of Sound (Hopkins’s reсording studio business); escrow papers relating to the real property; and invoices relating to the remodeling of the property. An officer testified that the box had been kept in the locked property room, but nо officer was able to testify from personal knowledge that the records then contained in the box had been in the box when it was taken from the car and did not come from the property. The property records, рrepared on the day the box was seized from the car, state only that Item No. 23 contained “miscellaneous pictures, trophies, and papers.” The box offered at the hearing contained no trophies or рictures. The property records listing documents seized from the residence, on the other hand, list opened and unopened mail, mortgage statements, receipts, an IRS statement, a loan application, tax records, miscellaneous paperwork, and miscellaneous escrow papers. Hopkins denied having placed any of those documents in the car and he and the Lowndeses argued that they were taken from the property. On this record, the district court did not clearly err in finding that it could not separate the documents lawfully taken from the ear from those illegally seized from the residence.
The government argues, citing United States v. Mattar-Ballesteros,
C. If the Evidence Was Properly Suppressed, Did the Court Err in Finding Probable Cause?
We review de novo the district court’s probable cause determination in a forfeiture proceeding. See United States v.1982 Yukon Delta Houseboat,
The district court found probable cause on the ground that “there is some evidence that Mr. Hopkins’ funds that were in banks ... were used, that there was some tracing.” The record shows that the court arrived at its finding after hearing the testimony of an officer, which was based on documents seized from the residence: checking records, mortgage paymеnts, tax records, and records of expenditures for remodeling. Those records, however, were suppressed, and without them there was no substantial evidence that money was funnelled, or traced, from Hopkins’s bank acсounts to the
The government contends that there is nonetheless sufficient evidence of probable cause, independent of the documents, to support the forfeiture judgment. That evidence tends to show that Hopkins wаs a large-scale drug dealer who possessed large amounts of cash and other expensive assets, which he tried to conceal, and that he lacked a legitimate source of income. That evidence, however, is insufficient to establish the requisite connection between Hopkins’s drug activity and the property. See $405,089.23,
The judgment is REVERSED.
Notes
. Because we find no probable cause, we do not reach appellants’ other assignments of error.
