Anthony Robinson, a federal prisoner, appeals from the district court’s denial of his motion for return of property, in which Robinson sought to recover cash that was administratively forfeited by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
This case concerns whether the FBI, after seizing cash from Anthony Robinson during a narcotics investigation, satisfied the notice requirements of due process before declaring the cash to be administratively forfeiléd. The underlying facts of the seizure and forfeiture are not in dispute. On November 1, 1998, Houston police effected a traffic stop of Robinson at the request of the FBI, who were investigating Robinson as part of a multi-party drug investigation. Inside Robinson’s car, officers discovered large sums of cash in a Crown Royal bag under the driver’s seat, in the glove compartment, and in a small black suitcase. FBI agents seized the money but released Robinson. Robinson provided the agents with a home address of 18062 Forest Cedar, Houston, Texas, which was also on his driver’s license, and a business address of 12719C Bissonnet.
The FBI subsequently initiated administrative forfeiture proceedings for $188,980. 1 Almost eight months after the seizure, the FBI sent a certified letter postmarked June 22, 1999 to Robinson’s home address, informing him of the seizure and the intent to forfeit. The letter provided information about a claimant’s right to contest the seizure by filing a claim of ownership and the right to file a petition for remission or mitigation of the forfeiture. The letter was returned on December 1, 1999, marked “UNCLAIMED.”
The FBI then searched its ChoicePoint database and discovered four additional addresses associated with Robinson’s name and Social Security Number. Within one week of the return of the unclaimed letter, four similar certified letters notifying Robinson of the seizure and forfeiture were *360 sent to the alternate addresses. One of the letters was sent to Robinson’s business address at 12719C Bissonnet and one letter was sent to 18062 Forest Cedars, which is a variation of the home address on Robinson’s driver’s license. Another letter was sent to 7810 Pouter. Each letter was returned marked “UNCLAIMED,” “ATTEMPTED, NOT KNOWN,” or “MOVED, LEFT NO ADDRESS.”
A few months later, the FBI searched its ChoicePoint database once again and discovered two more addresses linked to Robinson. The FBI mailed to these addresses certified letters postmarked March 27, 2000. One of the letters was addressed “12719 Bissonnet St., Apt. C,” which is a variation on the business address that Robinson had given the FBI. The letters were returned marked “UNCLAIMED” and “MOVED, LEFT NO ADDRESS.”
The FBI also published public notice of the seizure and forfeiture for three successive weeks on three different occasions in the New York Times. The notice appeared on July 4, 1999, July 11, 1999, July 18,1999, December 19,1999, December 26, 1999, January 2, 2000, April 9, 2000, April 16, 2000, and April 23, 2000. When no one filed a claim of ownership or a petition for remission or mitigation, the FBI declared the cash to be administratively forfeited on June 15, 2000.
Meanwhile, Robinson was initially indicted along with two codefendants on May 8, 2000 for drug offenses. Robinson was charged in a six-count superseding indictment on September 27, 2000 with drug trafficking and money laundering. A jury found Robinson guilty on four counts, and the district court sentenced him to concurrent terms of 335 months in prison. This Court affirmed the conviction on direct appeal.
United States v. Ingram,
On June 35, 3003, Robinson filed a pro se motion in district court for return of property under Fed. R.Crim. P. 41(e) 2 and 19 U.S.C. §§ 1601-15. Robinson argued that the money was seized during an illegal search and seizure, that he was not given-notice of the forfeiture as required by 19 U.S.C. § 1607, that the delay prior to the government’s initial notice deprived him of due process, and that the criminal judgment did not order any property forfeited.
The government filed a response, asserting that it should be granted summary judgment because its attempts to notify Robinson about the forfeiture satisfied due process. The government attached to its motion an affidavit from an FBI paralegal specialist in the Forfeiture and Seized Property Unit and copies of the certified letters and newspaper publications discussed above.
Robinson filed a reply in which he argued that the government’s first notice was sent almost eight months after the seizure, constituting an unreasonable delay in violation of due process. He also asserted that he had lived at the home address on Forest Cedar for four months after the seizure before moving to 7810 Pouter. He argued that he had spoken to an FBI agent, who advised him that he had to get an attorney and file a claim for the money. His attorney allegedly then called the FBI, learned the amount of money involved, and was told that a notice would be sent to Robinson. Robinson further argued that the FBI did not send a notice to his business address until thirteen months after the seizure, that delivery was unreasonably attempted on Christmas Day, and that the notice pub *361 lished in the Neiv York Times was unreasonable because he lives in Houston.
The district court treated Robinson’s motion as a civil complaint for equitable relief because no criminal charges were pending, and it granted summary judgment to the government. The court held that the government’s efforts to contact Robinson about the forfeiture, evidenced by the seven certified letters that were returned unclaimed, and its publishing of notice in the New York Times, which it found was a newspaper of general distribution within the district, were reasonably calculated to give Robinson notice and satisfied due process. The court noted that letters had been sent to three addresses at which Robinson acknowledged he had lived and done business, ie., the addresses on Forest Cedar, Bissonnet, and Pouter.
With respect to the delay between the seizure on November 1, 1998 and the government’s first letter in June 1999, the court first noted that Robinson supported his argument that the delay was unreasonable by relying on cases involving delays by the government in initiating civil or criminal forfeiture proceedings. Because the forfeiture proceeding in this case was administrative, not judicial, the court opined that it was unclear whether the cases cited by Robinson were applicable.
The court then noted that the cases cited by Robinson used a four-part balancing test for determining an unreasonable delay, analyzing 1) the length of the delay, 2) the reason for the delay, 3) the claimant’s assertion of his rights, and 4) prejudice to the claimant.
See United States v. Eight Thousand Eight Hundred and Fifty Dollars ($8,850) in U.S. Currency,
The court held that the eight-month delay was reasonable because Robinson had not sought the return of his funds or otherwise contested the forfeiture during the criminal proceeding. Robinson also failed to show that the delay caused him any prejudice. In addition, the delay was justified because the seizure was made during the course of a lengthy criminal investigation and the Supreme Court has indicated that pending criminal proceedings may present justification for a delay in instituting civil forfeiture proceedings.
See $8,850,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Although Robinson filed his motion for return of property pursuant to Rule 41(g), the district court properly construed it as a civil complaint and the denial of the motion as a grant of summary judgment.
See Clymore v. United States,
III. DISCUSSION
Robinson raises four arguments on appeal. He argues that 1) the delay of over *362 seven months between the seizure of the cash and the government’s first notice of forfeiture was unjustified and violated due process; 2) the government’s written notice included only one letter to his residence and one letter to his business address without any attempt to resend the notice to those addresses; 3) the publication of notice in the New York Times, rather than the Houston Chronicle, was not reasonably calculated to provide him notice of the forfeiture; and 4) because the government indicted him more than one month before the cash was administratively forfeited, it .knew he would be in custody and easily notified of the forfeiture, but it did not take steps to do so.
A. Forfeiture background
Proceeds of drug trafficking are subject to civil forfeiture under federal law.
Kadonsky v. United States,
A party receiving notice has twenty days to file a claim for the property or a petition for remission or mitigation.
Kadonsky,
Once an administrative forfeiture is complete, a district court may review only “whether the forfeiture comported with constitutional due process guarantees.”
Kadonsky,
B. Delay in notice
Robinson argues that his due process rights were violated because the government waited over seven months before attempting to notify him about the forfeiture. He relies primarily on
$8,850,
In
$8,850,
the Supreme Court addressed whether an eighteen-month delay in the government’s filing a civil forfeiture proceeding violated due process, and held that the proper analysis of the delay required consideration of the four
Barker
factors: 1) length of the delay, 2) the reason for the delay, 3) the defendant’s assertion of her rights, and 4) prejudice to the defendant.
In
$23,407.69,
this Court applied the Supreme Court’s holding in
$8,850
to a case similar, but not identical, to the instant case. There, cash was seized from the defendant during a lawful drug-related arrest, and six months later the government filed an administrative notice of its intent to seek forfeiture.
$23,407.69,
This Court noted that the opposition to the forfeiture arose from “the six months delay in giving notice of forfeiture and the total of thirteen months delay in bringing a forfeiture complaint.”
Id.
at 164. This Court held that the thirteen-month delay was substantially less than the eighteen months in
$8,850,
but “of critical importance” was the fact that “for the first six months period nothing was done by the government.”
Id.
at 165. This Court distinguished
$8,850,
where the claimant was officially notified eight days after the seizure and the notification was followed by administrative proceedings and a criminal prosecution during the delay.
Id.
In contrast, this Court noted that the government delayed for six months with no explanation and no excuse before notifying the defendant about the forfeiture.
Id.
at 165-66. This Court also held that the deprivation of a substantial sum of money for more than one year was “ ‘undoubtedly a significant burden.’ ”
Id.
at 166 (quoting
$8,850,
Robinson contends that there is “no appreciable difference” between his case and $23,407.69. He notes that the nearly eight-month delay in his case is two months greater than the six-month period in $23,407.69. The government argues that $23,407.69 and $8,850 are inapposite because those cases involved judicial forfeitures, whereas this case concerned an administrative forfeiture. This position is without merit.
This Court in
$23,407.69
confronted the government’s six-month delay in giving administrative notice of an intended forfeiture, and the decision was grounded in due process.
The government further argues that this district court, and consequently this Court, lack jurisdiction to collaterally review unreasonable delay issues. The government is correct to the extent that district court review of a final administrative forfeiture is limited. District courts lack jurisdiction to review the merits of such a forfeiture unless the agency failed to follow statutory and constitutional due process standards.
See United States v. Schinnell,
Whether the delay in the government’s first notice to Robinson was unjustified presents a close question in light of this court’s decision in
$23,407.69.
There, this Court was critical of the government for failing to offer an explanation for the six-month delay from the seizure to the first notice.
$23,407.69,
First, “there is no obvious bright line dictating when a post-seizure hearing must occur.”
$8,850,
(2) Reason for delay
In
$23,407.69,
this Court was most troubled by the six-month period during which the government apparently did nothing. However, in
$17,420.00,
No. 94-10711 at 3,
Here, the record shows that the seizure similarly occurred during a large-scale investigation of a drug trafficking operation
*365
that transported marijuana in ton-quantities from Houston, Texas to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Edison, New Jersey; and New York beginning in the first six months of 1998 until the date of the indictment in 2000. The indictment alleged specific instances of marijuana transportation in March, April, and May 1999. In Robinson’s direct appeal, this Court noted that Robinson had been under surveillance since 1998.
United States v. Robinson,
As in
$17,420.00,
the delay from the time of the initial seizure to the first notice does not appear unreasonable in light of the simultaneous criminal investigation.
Cf. $8,850,
Robinson argues that a delay caused by criminal investigation is no justification here because the
$8,850
Court addressed a delay caused by an actual criminal
prosecution,
not a criminal
investigation.
However, the “Government must be allowed some time to decide whether to institute forfeiture proceedings.”
$8,850,
The Second Circuit also addressed this issue and held that .criminal investigation of drug trafficking is a compelling reason for delay in instituting forfeiture proceedings. In
Mercado v. U.S. Customs Serv.,
(3) Assertion of rights
The third balancing factor weighs in Robinson’s favor because, unlike the defendant in
$8,850,
Robinson did attempt to assert his rights by filing a motion for return of his property.
See $8,850,
(4) Prejudice
Robinson has not explained how the government’s delay caused him prejudice. Robinson correctly notes that in
$23,407.69,
Due process requires a “flexible” approach, and the purpose of the four
Barker
factors is “to assess whether the basic due process requirement of fairness has been satisfied in a particular case.”
$8,850,
C. Adequacy of the written notice
Robinson argues that the government’s attempts at written notice were inadequate because of an inordinate delay between the various attempts and because the government never attempted to resend notice to his home or business addresses. He complains that when the first notice in June 1999 was unclaimed, the government waited almost six months to send further written notice in December 1999. He argues that the government then sent notice to different addresses, including his business address, and that delivery was unreasonably attempted on Christmas Day. He notes that the government’s third attempt at written notice occurred three months after the second attempt and that the letters were again sent to different addresses without an attempt to re-deliver to his home or business addresses. These arguments are unavailing.
Due process does not require actual notice or actual receipt of notice.
See Dusenbery v. United States,
The government’s first notice here was sent to Robinson’s home address as listed on his driver’s license. Notice sent to the address provided on a claimant’s driver’s license may be a reasonable means of notification when the government knows no other way of contacting the claimant.
McCray v. United States,
No. 94-30306, slip op. at 4,
Robinson’s complaint about the government’s subsequent efforts at written notice are without merit. According to the record, the FBI learned that the first notice was unclaimed when it was returned on December 1, 1999. The FBI then searched its database for other addresses associated with Robinson and promptly sent four more letters on December 3, 1999. One of the letters was sent to Robinson’s business address. Although Robinson complains that no attempt was made to resend notice to his home address, the record shows that a second letter was sent to the address on Forest Cedar, although the envelope was addressed as “Forest Cedars,” with an “s.” Further, a letter was also sent to the address on Pouter Drive, where Robinson admitted he had moved following his residence on Forest Cedar.
When the four letters were returned, the government sent two more letters to Robinson. One of the letters was resent to Robinson’s business address on Bisson-net.
Robinson’s complaint about attempted delivery of the government’s notice on Christmas Day is also unavailing. Two of the envelopes are marked by the Post Office with a stamp showing “December 25.” The meaning of the stamp is not clear from the record. However, even assuming that delivery was unreasonably attempted on that day, delivery was also attempted on two additional days. Robinson has never explained why the letters went unclaimed. The government should not be faulted for attempting to communicate with Robinson via the mail.
See Mullane,
D. Adequacy of publication notice
Robinson next argues that the government failed to comply with the statutory requirements for notice by publication because it published notice in the New York Times. He asserts that there is no proof that the Times is a newspaper of general circulation in the judicial district. He asserts that although the Times can be purchased in most major cities in the country, the Houston Chronicle is more readily available and the government did not faithfully discharge its duty to notify him by publishing notice in a newspaper whose “target audience resides in a northeastern state that is more than 1,500 miles away.”
As noted above, the government is required to publish notice of a seizure and intent to forfeit “for at least three successive weeks in such manner as the Secretary of the Treasury may direct.” 19 U.S.C. § 1607(a). The regulations require that the notice be published “in a newspaper of general circulation in the judicial district in which the processing for forfeiture is brought.” 21 C.F.R. § 1316.75(a).
The government here published notice for three successive weeks on three different occasions in July 1999, December 1999, and April 2000. The district court held that the New York Times is a newspaper of general circulation in the Southern District of Texas, and the publication was satisfactory.
*368
We affirm the district court’s conclusion.
See New York Times Co. v. City of Lakewood,
No. 84-3675,
E. Government’s inaction
Finally, Robinson argues that because he was indicted on May 8, 2000, just over a month before the cash was forfeited on June 15, 2000, the government knew that he would soon be in custody and would have a lawyer with whom it could communicate and that there would be no ambiguity about how to notify him. Robinson asserts that instead of waiting to communicate with his attorney, the government forfeited the money. He argues that the government was not free to disregard the fact that it would soon be able to provide him with actual notice of the forfeiture once he was in custody.
In
Barrera-Montenegro,
Robinson’s reliance on these cases is not persuasive. The government began its attempts to notify Robinson long before his indictment. When it sent the first notice in June 1999, the government had no reason to believe that the notice could or would not be delivered to the address listed on Robinson’s driver’s license.
Compare Armendariz-Mata,
Because the government’s attempts were unsuccessful, Robinson suggests that the government should have waited an additional length of time until he was in custody to serve him with actual notice. In
Armendariz-Mata,
IV. CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
