Mohammad, Najah v. United States , 169 F. App'x 475 ( 2006 )


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  •                              UNPUBLISHED ORDER
    Not to be cited per Circuit Rule 53
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    Chicago, Illinois 60604
    Argued January 24, 2006
    Decided February 27, 2006
    Before
    Hon. KENNETH F. RIPPLE, Circuit Judge
    Hon. ILANA DIAMOND ROVNER, Circuit Judge
    Hon. TERENCE T. EVANS, Circuit Judge
    No. 04-4080
    NAJAH MOHAMMAD,                          Appeal from the United States
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                 District Court for the Northern District
    of Illinois, Eastern Division
    v.
    No. 04 C 4403
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Defendant-Appellee.                  Suzanne B. Conlon,
    Judge.
    ORDER
    Najah Mohammad appeals the dismissal of her suit to recover money and
    jewelry that the Drug Enforcement Administration seized before, but did not
    declare administratively forfeited until after, the suit was commenced. The district
    court held that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over Mohammad’s suit because
    she received written notices of the administrative forfeiture proceedings but failed
    to file a claim with the DEA asserting an interest in the property. Mohammad
    argues, however, that the notices were inadequate, in part because an assistant
    United States attorney left her believing that the filing of her lawsuit in district
    court was adequate to challenge the seizures. Because we conclude that
    Mohammad’s suit should not have been dismissed without exploring her factual
    allegations, we vacate the decision and remand for further proceedings.
    No. 04-4080                                                                      Page 2
    I.
    On April 14, 2004, a magistrate judge issued three seizure warrants for,
    respectively, a savings account, checking account, and safety deposit box in
    Mohammad’s name located in a bank in Palos Hills, Illinois. The basis for each
    warrant was a separate affidavit sworn to by a member of a DEA task force who
    detailed various crimes, including drug trafficking, committed by Mohammad’s
    husband, Fadel Mohammad. When the warrants were issued, Fadel Mohammad
    was jailed in Cook County awaiting trial on a state drug charge; he already had
    pleaded guilty to federal drug charges. The affidavits detail information from a
    confidential informant that Fadel Mohammad garnered between $3 and $4 million
    in proceeds from illegal activities and laundered the money through several bank
    accounts, including the accounts at the bank in Palos Hills. The affidavits relate
    that Fadel Mohammad commonly put his accounts in nominee names, including his
    wife’s. On April 15, 2004, task force agents executed the three warrants and,
    pursuant to 
    18 U.S.C. § 881
    , seized $170,450 in cash plus 112 pieces of jewelry
    valued at $143,635.
    In accordance with 
    18 U.S.C. § 981
    (d) and 
    19 U.S.C. § 1607
    (a), the DEA on
    June 3, 2004, mailed Mrs. Mohammad written notice regarding the funds seized
    from the savings account, and on June 14, 2004, two more written notices regarding
    the funds seized from the checking account and the jewelry seized from the safety
    deposit box. The three notices, all using a DEA standard form, informed her that
    procedures to administratively forfeit the money and jewelry had been initiated:
    Pursuant to Title 18, U.S.C., Section 983 and Title 19, U.S.C., Sections
    1602-1619, procedures to administratively forfeit this property are
    underway. You may petition the DEA for return of the property or
    your interest in the property (remission or mitigation), and/or you may
    contest the seizure and forfeiture of the property in Federal court.
    The notices further explained the procedures for requesting remission or mitigation
    of forfeiture and for contesting the forfeiture. To request remission or mitigation,
    Mohammad was to file a petition with DEA Forfeiture Counsel within 30 days of
    receiving notice. If she wanted to contest the forfeiture in district court, she had to
    file a claim of ownership with DEA Forfeiture Counsel by July 8, 2004, with respect
    to the funds from the checking account, and by July 19, 2004, with respect to the
    funds in the savings account and the contents of the safety deposit box. The specific
    language of the notices reads: [Y]ou may contest the forfeiture of the seized
    property in UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT. To do so, you must file a claim
    with the Forfeiture Counsel of the DEA by July 8, 2004 [for the checking account]
    and by July 19, 2004 [for the savings account and safety deposit box]. The notices
    direct that claims be delivered to DEA Forfeiture Counsel at one of two addresses in
    No. 04-4080                                                                    Page 3
    Virginia depending on whether the submission was being sent via private courier or
    regular mail.
    Mohammad, though, did not submit a claim to DEA Forfeiture Counsel in
    Virginia. Instead, on July 1, 2004, she filed in the district court what Charles
    Murphy, her retained lawyer at that time, labeled as “Plaintiff’s Claim for Return of
    Property Under 
    18 U.S.C. § 983
    , et seq., Which Was Seized by the United States
    Government and is Presently Subject to Forfeiture Proceedings.” Section 983, in
    relevant part, provides that “[a]ny person claiming property seized in a nonjudicial
    civil forfeiture proceeding under a civil forfeiture statute may file a claim with the
    appropriate official after the seizure.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 983
    (a)(2)(A). That statute
    further requires that a claim “(i) identify the specific property being claimed;
    (ii) state the claimant’s interest in such property; and (iii) be made under oath,
    subject to penalty of perjury.” 
    Id.
     § 983(a)(2)(C). Although § 983 defines the steps
    to follow in making a claim with the agency that seized and holds the property, it is
    apparent from her submission to the district court that Mohammad thought she
    was complying with that provision. Her “claim” identifies the seized assets—the
    funds from the two accounts and the contents of the safety deposit box—and both
    articulates her alleged interest in those assets and argues that they are not
    proceeds of her husband’s illegal activities. At this point, Mohammad still had
    seven days before the first deadline to submit a claim to DEA Forfeiture Counsel
    would expire.
    Assistant United States Attorney Lisa Noller entered an appearance for the
    government on July 13, and the district court ordered that a response to
    Mohammad’s suit be filed by September 3, 2004. On that date the government,
    through Noller, moved to dismiss the action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction,
    asserting that Mohammad’s failure to file a claim and post bond with DEA
    Forfeiture Counsel prevented the court from considering her claim. The
    government also noted that because Mohammad had not submitted claims to the
    agency by July 8 for the funds in the savings account, and by July 19 for the funds
    in the checking account and the contents of the safety deposit box, the DEA had
    issued Declarations of Forfeiture for all of the seized assets in mid-August.
    Mohammad, still represented by attorney Murphy, responded with three
    arguments. First, she contended that the district court should exercise “equitable
    jurisdiction” over her demand for return of the seized assets because she was misled
    by AUSA Noller, which deprived her of an adequate remedy at law. Specifically,
    Mohammad alleged that attorney Murphy contacted the United States Attorney’s
    Office before her deadlines for submitting claims to the DEA expired and was
    directed to AUSA Noller when he asked to speak with someone about the seizures.
    Over the course of several telephone conversations (Murphy indicated he could not
    recall whether the conversations continued after Mohammad’s “claim” was filed in
    No. 04-4080                                                                     Page 4
    the district court), Murphy and Noller discussed the merits of Mohammad’s
    contention that the DEA had seized assets belonging to her and derived from
    sources untainted by her husband’s criminal activities. At no time, Mohammad
    insisted, did Noller inform Murphy that he should be speaking instead to DEA
    Forfeiture Counsel. The only time Noller told Murphy to speak to someone else was
    when she suggested that he might wish to speak with “an administrative assistant
    in the forfeiture unit” concerning the translation of Arabic-language documents that
    Mohammad said would support her contention that the seized assets were not
    criminally derived. Mohammad explained that “[i]n discussing the merits of
    Plaintiff’s claim—at the very least—AUSA Noller implied that counsel was
    communicating with the appropriate individual in the Department of Justice.”
    Mohammad also found it noteworthy that it was Noller, not someone at DEA, who
    faxed Murphy copies of the DEA seizure notices. Because Noller’s involvement led
    her to believe she was adequately contesting the seizures by filing her “claim” in the
    district court, Mohammad continued, she did not file timely claims with DEA
    Forfeiture Counsel. Mohammad suggested that Noller stalled her until the time for
    submitting her DEA claims lapsed by allowing attorney Murphy to believe that she
    was taking adequate steps to challenge the seizures. Thus, Mohammad reasoned
    (in a bit of hyperbole), she was deprived of an adequate remedy at law “due to the
    scheming of the United States Attorney’s Office.”
    Second, Mohammad argued that, because the DEA and the United States
    Attorney’s Office are components of the Department of Justice, the DEA in effect
    had knowledge of her claim when she made it clear to AUSA Noller that she
    intended to contest the seizures. Mohammad cited Santobello v. New York, 
    404 U.S. 257
    , 262 (1971), for the proposition that prosecutors are responsible for “letting
    the left hand know what the right hand is doing.”
    Last, Mohammad argued that requiring her to file claims with DEA
    Forfeiture Counsel as a prelude to challenging the seizures in district court served
    no meaningful purpose because the very effect of submitting a claim to the agency is
    to compel the government to proceed with a judicial forfeiture unless the assets are
    returned or a settlement is reached with the agency. See 18 U.S.C. 983(a)(3).
    On September 27, 2004, the district court sided with the government and
    dismissed Mohammad’s lawsuit. The court reasoned that it was divested of
    jurisdiction over the assets even before Mohammad filed her suit because the DEA’s
    administrative forfeiture proceedings were underway. And, the court continued,
    the only way it could have regained jurisdiction was for Mohammad to submit
    timely claims with DEA Forfeiture Counsel, which she did not do. Finally, the
    court held that it could not exercise “equitable jurisdiction” because Mohammad
    bypassed an adequate remedy at law—the DEA administrative procedures.
    No. 04-4080                                                                     Page 5
    Mohammad then moved for reconsideration under Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 59(e), reasserting the arguments she made in her response to the
    government’s motion to dismiss. This motion gave AUSA Noller her first
    opportunity to respond to Mohammad’s allegations about the telephone
    conversations between the two lawyers. Noller did not deny that she was in contact
    with Murphy regarding the merits of the proposed forfeitures or that she faxed
    Murphy documents concerning the seizures. Instead, she argued that she had no
    responsibility to tell Murphy that the seizures could be contested only by filing a
    claim with the DEA. The government, she said, “never misled him or told him not
    to file a claim.” Noller further stated that “she suggested that [Murphy] call a
    forfeiture paralegal,” and that “on one occasion, the government suggested to
    plaintiff’s attorney that he should file an administrative claim.” After receiving
    Noller’s response, the district court refused to set aside its dismissal order. The
    court explained that it already had considered Mohamad’s arguments, adding that
    because Mohammad received notice of the administrative procedures her “attempt
    to blame the United States Attorney’s Office for her failure to follow administrative
    procedures is baseless.”
    II.
    On appeal Mohammad does not brief, and thus abandons, two of the three
    arguments she made in the district court. See, e.g., Ricci v. Arlington Heights, Ill.,
    
    116 F.3d 288
    , 292 (7th Cir. 1997). Through new counsel, she no longer contends
    that she effectively notified DEA Forfeiture Counsel of her intention to challenge
    the seizures when she conveyed that position to AUSA Noller. Nor does she
    contend here that it would have served no purpose to submit claims to DEA
    Forfeiture Counsel after she already had put the matter before the district court by
    filing her “claim.” Mohammad, though, continues to maintain that the district
    court should have exercised “equitable jurisdiction” over the case because, she says,
    the seized assets were not derived from her husband’s drug dealing, the notices
    from the DEA are ambiguous and thus inadequate, and those notices, even if
    literally understandable, were rendered inadequate when AUSA Noller allowed
    attorney Murphy to believe that Mohammad was dealing with someone authorized
    to act in the matter.
    We review the district court’s dismissal of Mohammad’s suit de novo.
    Linarez v. United States Dep’t of Justice, 
    2 F.3d 208
    , 211 (7th Cir. 1993). Section
    881(a)(6) of Title 21 authorizes the civil forfeiture of property derived from the
    proceeds of drug transactions. By initiating administrative forfeiture proceedings
    pursuant to 
    19 U.S.C. § 1607
    (a)—that is, by sending notice of a seizure and
    proposed forfeiture to parties known to be interested in the property and publishing
    notice to all others in a newspaper—an agency holding seized property divests the
    district court of subject matter jurisdiction to review the forfeiture. Linarez, 2 F.3d
    No. 04-4080                                                                      Page 6
    at 211. The district court remains without jurisdiction unless an interested party
    timely submits a claim and posts a bond with the seizing agency. 
    Id. at 211-12
    ;
    see 
    19 U.S.C. § 1608
    . If no claim is filed, the property is forfeited without judicial
    intervention. Lobzun v. United States, 
    422 F.3d 503
    , 506-07 (7th Cir. 2005);
    Linarez, 
    2 F.3d at 211-12
    .
    In Linarez, as in this case, the appellant received notice from the DEA telling
    him that administrative forfeiture proceedings had commenced, and that he must
    submit a claim to the DEA if he wanted to contest the seizure. Linarez, 
    2 F.3d at 210
    . The appellant instead sued in the district court to regain the seized assets, but
    we held that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the case because of
    the administrative forfeiture proceedings. 
    Id. at 213
    . Notwithstanding, we held out
    the possibility that a district court might still retain “equitable jurisdiction” even
    after the commencement of administrative forfeiture proceedings. 
    Id. at 213
    . We
    explained, though, that a plaintiff seeking equitable relief would have to establish
    that she “had an inadequate legal remedy and that irreparable injury will result if
    the court does not act.” 
    Id.
     This notion of “equitable jurisdiction” was
    acknowledged again in Williams v. United States Drug Enforcement
    Administration, 
    51 F.3d 732
     (7th Cir. 1995). In Williams, which came to us as an
    appeal from the denial of relief under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b), the
    appellant sued in the district court to recover forfeited assets on the theory that he
    was denied due process because he did not receive personal notice of the
    administrative forfeiture proceedings. We characterized this claim as “essentially a
    plea for the court to exercise its equitable jurisdiction” and observed that “the
    contours of these sorts of claims are largely undefined.” 
    Id. at 733-35
    .
    After Williams, however, we have moved away from the idea of “equitable
    jurisdiction” in cases like this one. In United States v. Duke, 
    229 F.3d 627
    , 629 (7th
    Cir. 2000), we clarified that jurisdiction to review a claim that notice of an
    administrative seizure and proposed forfeiture was constitutionally deficient arises
    under the general federal-question statute, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1331
    . That point is now
    firmly established. See Lobzun, 
    422 F.3d at 507
    ; Chairez v. United States, 
    355 F.3d 1099
    , 1101 (7th Cir. 2004); United States v. Howell, 
    354 F.3d 693
    , 695 (7th Cir.
    2004); Krecioch v. United States, 
    221 F.3d 976
    , 980 (7th Cir. 2000). Morever, the
    Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act of 2000, see 
    18 U.S.C. § 983
    (e), made explicit that
    an aggrieved party could move to set aside even a completed forfeiture if notice of
    the administrative forfeiture proceedings were not received. Accordingly, it would
    seem that Mohammad’s invocation of the district court’s “equitable jurisdiction” was
    unnecessary. It clouded what is really a straightforward contention: that the
    notices of the property seizures and administrative forfeiture proceedings were
    inadequate. The district court plainly had jurisdiction to decide this narrow
    question.
    No. 04-4080                                                                       Page 7
    Two of the three reasons Mohammad gives for claiming she received
    inadequate notice are not persuasive. Her first argument—that the seized assets
    are hers alone and derived from a source independent of her husband’s drug
    dealing—speaks to the underlying merits of the DEA’s claimed entitlement to the
    assets and has nothing to do with whether the agency gave adequate notice of its
    administrative proceedings. Challenges to the legality of a proposed civil forfeiture
    are made in the district court “after filing a claim of interest and posting a bond
    with the DEA.” Linarez, 
    2 F.3d at 213
     (emphasis in original). The very point of
    submitting a claim to the agency is to compel the government to proceed with a
    judicial forfeiture action in lieu of the administrative route, see United States v.
    Commodity Account No. 549 54930, 
    219 F.3d 595
    , 597 (7th Cir. 2000); Garcia v.
    Meza, 
    235 F.3d 287
    , 292 n.5 (7th Cir. 2000), and to prevail in district court the
    government must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the assets are
    subject to forfeiture.
    Mohammad’s second argument, that the notices were inadequate because
    they are literally confusing, also fails. Due process requires only that notice of a
    seizure and impending administrative forfeiture be “‘reasonably calculated, under
    all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency of the action
    and afford them an opportunity to present their objections.’” Lobzun, 
    422 F.3d at 507
     (quoting Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 
    339 U.S. 306
    , 314 (1950)).
    Mohammad concedes that she received the notices but she argues that they are
    deficient because they are confusing and contradicted by the underlying forfeiture
    statutory scheme. But this is not an argument Mohammad made in the district
    court when opposing the government’s motion to dismiss, and that is reason enough
    to reject it. See, e.g., Belom v. Nat’l Futures Ass’n, 
    284 F.3d 795
    , 799 (7th Cir. 2002).
    In any event, the contention lacks merit. The notices state that to contest the
    seizures in the district court a claimant must start with the agency: “[Y]ou may
    contest the forfeiture of the seized property in the UNITED STATES DISTRICT
    COURT. To do so, you must file a claim with the Forfeiture Counsel of the DEA.”
    The notices further stipulate that all submissions must be made to DEA Forfeiture
    Counsel, and provide the appropriate addresses. Mohammad cannot seriously
    contend that, standing alone, the notices are unclear. Moreover, we are not
    persuaded by her suggestion that the forfeiture statutory scheme is confusing and
    contradictory. The notices set out the steps she had to follow, and until now she has
    never contended that a misunderstanding about the underlying forfeiture statutes
    is what caused her and her former lawyer to fail to act.
    That leaves Mohammad’s final argument, the one she developed most
    thoroughly in responding to the government’s motion to dismiss. Mohammad
    contends that the DEA notices, even if otherwise sufficient, were rendered
    inadequate by the misleading conduct of AUSA Noller. Mohammad argues (and at
    No. 04-4080                                                                   Page 8
    this juncture we accept her factual allegations as true) that Noller, by discussing
    the merits of the forfeiture matter with attorney Murphy and not telling him that
    he should be talking to DEA Forfeiture Counsel until it was too late, “held herself
    out as the appropriate government representative for the resolution of the matter
    and potential release of the property.” As a consequence, Mohammad argues, she
    was misled into believing that she did not have to file a claim with the DEA.
    On the one hand, Mohammad does not allege that AUSA Noller specifically
    told Murphy not to contact the DEA, and the government makes a forceful
    argument that it should not be blamed for Murphy’s misunderstanding. Moreover,
    any discussions Murphy had with Noller spoke to the underlying merits of the
    forfeiture, which would be relevant only after she filed her administrative claim
    with the DEA. See Linarez, 
    2 F.3d at 213
    . Further, Noller maintains that the
    government “suggested to plaintiff’s attorney that he should file an administrative
    claim.” If that assertion is true, then depending on how and when the message was
    delivered, Mohammad has no legitimate cause for complaint.
    On the other hand, if AUSA Noller did not tell attorney Murphy that
    Mohammad must file an administrative claim with DEA Forfeiture Counsel and
    that her district-court “claim” was not a substitute, this conduct could be viewed as
    misleading, even without intending to have that effect. Judicial forfeitures are
    initiated by the government, not by the party making a claim to seized property, see
    Commodity Account No. 549 54930, 
    219 F.3d at 597
    ; Garcia, 
    235 F.3d at
    292 n.5, so
    Mohammad’s filing was easily recognized as a nullity. But Noller (at least
    according to Mohammad’s version of events) remained silent until it was too late
    rather than informing Mohammad’s lawyer that their conversations did not relieve
    him of the imperative of contacting DEA Forfeiture Counsel.
    We find support for Mohammad’s position in Muhammad v. DEA, 
    92 F.3d 648
     (8th Cir. 1996). In that case the Eighth Circuit declared an administrative
    forfeiture void for lack of proper notice where the claimants filed a civil action
    seeking return of seized assets even before the agency commenced administrative
    forfeiture proceedings, since the claimants believed that the pendency of their court
    action excused them from filing a claim and posting bond with the DEA. 
    Id. at 650, 653
    . Although, just as in this case, notices were sent by the DEA advising the
    claimants that administrative forfeiture proceedings were underway, the
    Muhammad court found it significant that the claimants afterwards wrote to the
    DEA requesting clarification of the appropriate procedures but were met with
    silence from the agency. In thus concluding that the notices from the DEA were
    inadequate under the particular circumstances, the court reasoned that “[a]
    reasonable person would ordinarily not believe that their government would ignore
    their inquiry and proceed as if it had never been sent.” 
    Id. at 653
    .
    No. 04-4080                                                                  Page 9
    Much the same could be said on these facts if they are as Mohammad
    represents. Although she did not file suit in district court before administrative
    proceedings were initiated, she did sue before her deadlines to submit claims with
    the DEA had expired. And taking her allegations as true, she believed that by filing
    a “claim” in the district court she was doing what was required to contest the
    administrative forfeiture of the assets, and it seems that a reasonable person could
    believe, as Mohammad says she did, that AUSA Noller would have told her attorney
    that he was talking to the wrong person and filing in the wrong place. Of course,
    the facts may not be as Mohammad and her former counsel allege, but we conclude
    that Mohammad, in fairness to her, should have a chance to prove her allegations.
    III.
    The judgment of the district court is VACATED and the case REMANDED
    for further proceedings.