Restraint of Twenty Real Properties in California and Florida Owned or Controlled by Fabrice Touil or Richard Touil ( 2019 )


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  •                                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    IN RE RESTRAINT OF TWENTY REAL
    PROPERTIES IN CALIFORNIA AND                                  No. 16-mc-1612 (CKK)
    FLORIDA OWNED OR CONTROLLED BY
    FABRICE TOUIL OR RICHARD TOUIL
    MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
    (February 6, 2019)
    Four entities have filed motions to intervene, vacate restraining orders, and, in one instance,
    dissolve a notice of lis pendens, pertaining to properties in California and Florida. ECF Nos. 27,
    28, 29. Upon consideration of the pleadings, 1 the relevant legal authorities, and the record as a
    1
    The Court’s consideration has focused on the following pleadings:
    •   Mem. in Supp. of Mot. of Ocean 26 Holdings LLC and Mondrian 1026 LLC to Intervene
    and Vacate Restraining Order, ECF No. 27 (“Intervenors’ Mem.”); Mem. in Supp. of Mot.
    of Ocean Five Office 400 LLC to Intervene, Vacate the Restraining Order and Dissolve the
    Notice of Lis Pendens, ECF No. 28; Mem. in Supp. of Real Estate 26 Investments LLC’s
    Mot. to Intervene and Vacate Restraining Order, ECF No. 29;
    •   Resp. of the United States to Mot. to Vacate Restraining Order Re: 1040 Biscayne Blvd
    and 1100 West Avenue - Florida, ECF No. 37 (“U.S. Opp’n”); Resp. of the United States
    to Mot. to Vacate Restraining Order Re: 1150 Kane Concourse, Bay Harbor Florida [sic],
    ECF No. 38; Resp. of the United States to Mot. to Vacate Restraining Order Re: 2666
    Hutton Drive, Beverly Hills, California, ECF No. 36;
    •   Am. Reply in Supp. of Mot. of Ocean 26 Holdings LLC and Mondrian 1026 LLC to
    Intervene and Vacate Restraining Order, ECF No. 44 (“Intervenors’ Reply”); Reply in
    Supp. of Mot. of Ocean Five Office 400 LLC to Intervene and Vacate Restraining Order,
    ECF No. 43; Reply in Supp. of Mot. of Real Estate 26 Investments LLC to Intervene and
    Vacate Restraining Order, ECF No. 41;
    •   United States’ Consolidated Surreply to the Replies of Proposed Intervenors Real Estate
    26 Investments LLC, Ocean 26 Holdings LLC, Mondrian 1026, LLC, and Ocean Five
    Office 400 LLC, ECF No. 48 (“U.S. Surreply”);
    •   Suppl. Reply in Supp. of Mots. of Ocean Five Office 400 LLC, Ocean 26 Holdings LLC
    and Mondrian 1026 LLC to Intervene and Vacate Restraining Order, ECF No. 49
    (“Intervenors’ Suppl. Reply”); and Suppl. Reply in Supp. of Mot. of Real Estate 26
    Investments LLC to Intervene and Vacate Restraining Order, ECF No. 50.
    1
    whole, the Court shall GRANT-IN-PART and DENY-IN-PART WITHOUT PREJUDICE
    each of these motions. These entities shall be permitted to intervene, but the Court shall not vacate
    the restraining orders or dissolve the notice of lis pendens at this time.
    I. BACKGROUND
    On August 2, 2016, the United States moved ex parte for enforcement of French restraining
    orders against twenty real properties, including the four presently at issue: 1040 Biscayne Blvd.,
    #3504, Miami, Florida 33132 (“1040 Biscayne”); 1100 West Avenue, #1026, Miami Beach,
    Florida 33139 (“1100 West Avenue”); 1150 Kane Concourse, #2FL, Bay Harbor, Florida 33154
    (“1150 Kane Concourse, #2FL”); and 2666 Hutton Drive, Beverly Hills, California 90210 (“2666
    Hutton”). A French court had imposed those restraints “to preserve specific property beneficially
    owned by Fabrice Touil or Richard Touil that is subject to confiscation (forfeiture) under French
    law in connection with a criminal investigation into the Touil brothers and others suspected of
    money laundering and other offenses in France.” Order, ECF No. 3, at 1-2.
    On August 16, 2016, Judge Tanya S. Chutkan granted the United States’ motion in
    pertinent part, enforcing the French restraining orders against these four properties and others.
    Order, ECF No. 3, at 2-3. With respect to 1150 Kane Concourse, #2FL, she excluded an annotation
    of this property as “legally described as condominium no. 3” because that description appeared in
    the United States’ proposed order but not in other materials, including the French restraining order
    itself. 
    Id. at 2-3
    & n.1.
    Judge Chutkan also granted the United States’ request to seal proceedings in this matter
    but required that notice of the Court’s restraining order be given to “the suspects and any affected
    person, including the nominal corporate owners of record of the twenty properties.” Order, ECF
    No. 4. Judge Chutkan lifted the seal on November 22, 2016, upon learning from the United States
    that, inter alia, “[b]oth Fabrice and Richard Touil have actual notice that the French Restraining
    2
    Orders are now in force in the United States.” Ex Parte Mot. to Vacate Sealing Order, ECF No.
    15, at 2; see also Order, ECF No. 17.
    The United States indicates that Fabrice Touil appealed the French court’s restraining
    orders as to 1040 Biscayne and 1100 West Avenue. U.S. Opp’n at 5 n.7. Those orders were
    confirmed by the Paris Court of Appeals. 
    Id. at 5.
    While he evidently also appealed restraining
    orders as to some other properties, the United States is unaware of any appeals covering 1150 Kane
    Concourse, #2FL, or 2666 Hutton. Resp. of the United States to Mot. to Vacate Restraining Order
    Re: 1150 Kane Concourse, Bay Harbor Florida [sic], ECF No. 38, at 7 n.8; Resp. of the United
    States to Mot. to Vacate Restraining Order Re: 2666 Hutton Drive, Beverly Hills, California, ECF
    No. 36, at 5 n.6. At least some of the appeals he did file were abandoned. U.S. Opp’n at 5 & n.7.
    “The United States is unaware of any successful appeal as to any property.” 
    Id. at 5
    n.7. Proposed
    Intervenors say nothing to the contrary.
    On October 4, 2018, Ocean 26 Holdings LLC and Mondrian 1026 LLC together moved to
    intervene and vacate restraining orders as to 1040 Biscayne and 1100 West Avenue, which they
    allege that they respectively own. Proposed Intervenors Ocean 26 Holdings LLC’s and Mondrian
    1026 LLC’s Mot. to Intervene and Vacate Restraining Order, ECF No. 27, at 1. Ocean Five Office
    400 LLC separately filed a similar request with respect to its alleged property, 1150 Kane
    Concourse, #2FL. Proposed Intervenor Ocean Five Office 400 LLC’s Mot. to Intervene, Vacate
    the Restraining Order and Dissolve the Notice of Lis Pendens, ECF No. 28, at 2. Real Estate 26
    Investments LLC likewise moved as to its alleged holding, 2666 Hutton. Proposed Intervenor
    Real Estate 26 Investments LLC’s Mot. to Intervene and Vacate Restraining Order, ECF No. 29,
    at 1. The Court shall refer to these four entities collectively as “Proposed Intervenors” or simply
    “Intervenors.”
    3
    Upon reassignment of the case to this Court, during briefing of the pending motions, the
    Court permitted the United States to file a surreply, which the Proposed Intervenors responded to
    in supplemental replies. Although the Court did not grant Proposed Intervenors permission to
    make these supplemental filings, the Court shall consider the supplemental replies in any case
    because they are helpful to the resolution of the pending motions.
    The United States indicates that Fabrice Touil’s trial concluded on October 4, 2018, the
    date on which the Proposed Intervenors filed their motions, and that a verdict in Mr. Touil’s case
    is expected on February 21, 2019. U.S. Opp’n at 2-3; U.S. Surreply at 2. Proposed Intervenors
    do not challenge either point.
    The briefing having concluded, the pending motions are now ripe for resolution. The
    differences in briefing between the three separate motions generally do not affect the disposition
    of these motions. Accordingly, except where otherwise indicated, the Court shall cite the parties’
    briefing of the motion filed by Ocean 26 Holdings LLC and Mondrian 1026 LLC.
    II. LEGAL STANDARDS
    A. Motion to Intervene
    Rule 24(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure governs intervention as a matter of right.
    That provision provides, in relevant part, that “[o]n timely motion, the court must permit anyone
    to intervene who . . . claims an interest relating to the property or transaction that is the subject of
    the action, and is so situated that disposing of the action may as a practical matter impair or impede
    the movant’s ability to protect its interest, unless existing parties adequately represent that
    interest.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 24(a)(2). Consistent with this language, the United States Court of
    Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (the “D.C. Circuit”) has recognized four criteria for
    intervention under Rule 24(a): “(1) the application to intervene must be timely; (2) the applicant
    must demonstrate a legally protected interest in the action; (3) the action must threaten to impair
    4
    that interest; and (4) no party to the action can be an adequate representative of the applicant’s
    interests.” Karsner v. Lothian, 
    532 F.3d 876
    , 885 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (quoting SEC v. Prudential
    Sec. Inc., 
    136 F.3d 153
    , 156 (D.C. Cir. 1998)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    In addition to these four requirements, which emanate from the text of Rule 24(a) itself,
    the Court understands that a putative intervenor must generally establish constitutional standing.
    Fund for Animals, Inc. v. Norton, 
    322 F.3d 728
    , 731-32 (D.C. Cir. 2003). 2 “To establish standing
    under Article III, a prospective intervenor — like any party — must show: (1) injury-in-fact, (2)
    causation, and (3) redressability.” 
    Id. at 732-33
    (citing Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560-61 (1992); Sierra Club v. EPA, 
    292 F.3d 895
    , 898 (D.C. Cir. 2002)). With respect to the
    first prong of the Article III standing inquiry, the putative intervenor must show “an invasion of a
    legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized, and (b) actual or imminent, not
    conjectural or hypothetical.” Deutsche Bank Nat’l Trust Co. v. FDIC, 
    717 F.3d 189
    , 193 (D.C.
    Cir. 2013) (citing 
    Lujan, 504 U.S. at 560
    ). Consideration of prudential standing issues may also
    be necessary to complete the Rule 24 inquiry. See 
    id. at 194-95.
    B. Motion to Vacate Restraining Order
    Under 28 U.S.C. § 2467, “the Government may apply for, and the court may issue, a
    restraining order at any time before or after the initiation of forfeiture proceedings by a foreign
    2
    In the interest of streamlining this uncontested inquiry—indeed in the absence of any briefing
    regarding standing—the Court sidesteps some nuanced precedent about whether every putative
    intervenor must demonstrate Article III standing, as well as prudential standing or its equivalent,
    and how the applicable criteria should be characterized. See, e.g., Crossroads Grassroots Policy
    Strategies v. Fed. Election Comm’n, 
    788 F.3d 312
    , 316, 319-20 (D.C. Cir. 2015); cf. Lexmark Int’l,
    Inc. v. Static Control Components, Inc., 
    572 U.S. 118
    , 125-28 (2014) (finding that “prudential
    standing” is not appropriate label for such considerations, and reframing “zone of interests” test).
    The Court need not go further down that road because the Court shall assume, arguendo, that it is
    necessary to establish both types of standing, or erstwhile standing, and shall find sufficient
    indicators that applicable criteria are satisfied.
    5
    nation.” 28 U.S.C. § 2467(d)(3)(A)(i). For evidence, the U.S. court may consider, and ultimately
    “register and enforce a restraining order that has been issued by a court of competent jurisdiction
    in the foreign country and certified by the Attorney General.” 
    Id. § 2467(d)(3)(B)(ii).
    The court
    must ensure that its enforcement is “consistent with,” among other things, the procedural
    protections in domestic civil forfeiture cases. 
    Id. § 2467(d)(3)(A)(ii)(I)
    (citing 18 U.S.C. § 983(j)).
    The parties do not identify any standards for vacating a restraining order once it has been
    issued pursuant to Section 2467(d)(3). 3 Rather, they focus on case law construing whether the
    applicable standards were met at the time the restraining order was issued in 2016. See Gang Luan
    v. United States, 
    722 F.3d 388
    (D.C. Cir. 2013).
    III. DISCUSSION
    A. Motion to Intervene
    The Court must begin with the jurisdictional issue of Proposed Intervenors’ Article III
    standing. The parties do not brief standing at all. But, for purposes of reaching the merits, the
    Court shall surmise the relevant arguments. As the alleged owners of the properties at issue, the
    Proposed Intervenors are injured by the inability to sell or do certain other things with their
    property. See, e.g., Order, ECF No. 3, at 3-4 (listing prohibitions on, e.g., alienation of property
    interests absent court approval). They do not expressly say that they plan to sell the properties,
    but the Court does not see any other reason that they would request vacatur of the restraining orders
    on the relative eve of a verdict in Fabrice Touil’s case. Proposed Intervenors’ injury is imminent
    because the French verdict could include, or result in, a forfeiture order against Mr. Touil that
    would strip Proposed Intervenors of their properties. Vacatur of the restraining order would
    3
    Section 2467(d) simply establishes what is not a proper grounds for challenging a restraining
    order issued under this statute. See 28 U.S.C. § 2467(d)(3)(C) (“No person may object to a
    restraining order under subparagraph (A) on any ground that is the subject of parallel litigation
    involving the same property that is pending in a foreign court.”).
    6
    effectively permit the Proposed Intervenors to sell the properties now, in anticipation of an adverse
    French verdict. See, e.g., Mot. to Seal Ex Parte Appl. to Register and Enforce Foreign Restraining
    Orders, ECF No. 1, at 1 (noting that “[s]ome assets previously acquired by the suspects have
    already been sold.”). To be clear, the Court does not endorse such behavior, but the Court finds
    an injury-in-fact caused by Judge Chutkan’s enforcement of the French restraining orders that
    could be redressed by vacatur of her order.
    Because Proposed Intervenors have an interest in the disposition of properties that they
    allegedly own, but are currently restrained, the Court finds that they have also satisfied prudential
    standing considerations or their equivalent. See Deutsche Bank Nat’l Trust 
    Co., 717 F.3d at 194
    (analogizing such considerations “to the concept embodied in Rule 24 that a proposed intervenor
    must have an interest ‘relating to’ the property or transaction at issue in the litigation”); cf. Lexmark
    Int’l, 
    Inc., 572 U.S. at 127-28
    (reframing certain former considerations of prudential standing as
    whether plaintiff “falls within the class of plaintiffs whom Congress has authorized to sue under”
    the relevant statute). The Court shall not delve here into an analysis of whether Congress intended
    for Proposed Intervenors to be able to sue under Section 2467. It suffices for these purposes to
    say that if anyone at all could challenge a restraining order enforced against Proposed Intervenors,
    it would be Proposed Intervenors, at the least.
    Now that standing is established, the Court turns to the D.C. Circuit’s standards for
    intervention as of right under Rule 24(a), which are easily satisfied. For these purposes, Proposed
    Intervenors’ motion is timely, as the United States obtained enforcement ex parte and the offending
    restraints remain in place. The Court shall consider the tardiness of their substantive request
    further below. Proposed Intervenors furthermore assert interests in property they allegedly own.
    Maintenance of the restraining orders surely impairs these interests, insofar as Proposed
    7
    Intervenors are currently unable, for example, to alienate their real property. See Intervenors’
    Mem. at 6 (citing Connecticut v. Doehr, 
    501 U.S. 1
    , 12 (1991) (recognizing “attachments, liens,
    and similar encumbrances” as “impairments to property rights” for due process purposes)). And
    finally, the United States, the only party currently participating in the proceedings, does not
    represent Proposed Intervenors’ interest in lifting the restraining orders. Nevertheless, deferring
    to Proposed Intervenors’ assertion of ownership, the United States does not oppose their
    intervention. U.S. Opp’n at 1 n.1.
    Accordingly, the Court recognizes the Proposed Intervenors’ intervention as of right.
    B. Motion to Vacate Restraining Order
    Turning to Intervenors’ substantive request, the Court finds insufficient basis to disturb the
    restraint on their properties.
    Judge Chutkan appeared to abide by the applicable standards for enforcing the French
    court’s restraining orders. Of note, her Order expressly observes the necessity to abide by the
    procedural protections in Section 983(j), as incorporated into Section 2467. Order, ECF No. 3, at
    2. Moreover, it appears that she carefully considered the United States’ request, rather than rubber-
    stamping it. For example, she denied the United States’ motion in part without prejudice as to
    certain other properties that were inadequately described in the French restraining orders. Order,
    ECF No. 3, at 5.
    Nowhere in the pleadings do Intervenors explain why they are moving now to vacate
    restraining orders enforced in August 2016. Nor do they claim that they, or Fabrice Touil, only
    recently received the notice required by Judge Chutkan’s sealing order, and recognized by her
    unsealing order. Nor do Intervenors explain the curious fact that, of the seventeen properties
    restrained by the Court’s August 2016 order, they move only as to the four properties allegedly
    owned beneficially by Fabrice Touil, not as to any of the properties that Richard Touil allegedly
    8
    beneficially owns. See United States’ Ex Parte Appl. to Register and Enforce Thirteen Foreign
    Restraining Orders Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2467(d)(3) and 18 U.S.C. § 983(j), ECF No. 2, at 3;
    see also Resp. of the United States to Mot. to Vacate Restraining Order Re: 2666 Hutton Drive,
    Beverly Hills, California, ECF No. 36, at 5 (rebutting argument that Fabrice Touil is not the
    beneficial owner of 2666 Hutton). The timing and scope of their request raise concerns because
    the trial against Fabrice Touil evidently concluded on October 4, 2018, the same date that
    Intervenors filed the pending motions in this case.
    On February 21, 2019, scarcely two weeks from today’s date, the parties will learn whether
    Fabrice Touil is convicted in French court, which will almost certainly affect the proper disposition
    of the presently restrained assets. The Court has reason to believe that vacatur of Judge Chutkan’s
    order before the verdict could facilitate the disappearance of these assets for purposes of any
    forfeiture obligations imposed on Fabrice Touil. See, e.g., Mot. to Seal Ex Parte Appl. to Register
    and Enforce Foreign Restraining Orders, ECF No. 1, at 1 (observing prior sale of certain of
    suspects’ assets, and opportunistic changes in nominal ownership of other assets).
    The Intervenors’ due process objections to waiting for the French verdict are unavailing.
    They do not cite any applicable authority for the notion that waiting until the French court delivers
    a verdict violates any constitutional rights that they or Fabrice Touil may have. Some of their
    authority suggests that an asset owner has a constitutional right to access at least certain types of
    assets to pay for counsel in a criminal proceeding. Intervenors’ Reply at 8 (citing Luis v. United
    States, 
    136 S. Ct. 1083
    , 1088 (2016)). But Intervenors do not claim that they or Mr. Touil need
    the money from these assets to vindicate a Sixth Amendment right. Moreover, Intervenors do not
    contest the United States’ representation that Mr. Touil appealed to a French court the French
    restraining orders as to at least some properties, and those orders were confirmed as to 1040
    9
    Biscayne and 1100 West Avenue. U.S. Opp’n at 5 & n.7; U.S. Surreply at 8. And the United
    States aptly notes that
    [T]he occupants of the restrained properties have not been evicted[,] and the major
    limitation on the titleholders is a prohibition on sale or encumbrance. The U.S.
    restraining order has only those features necessary to accomplish its ends of
    ensuring that the properties could be forfeited upon conviction and a final forfeiture
    judgment.
    U.S. Surreply at 6 n.5. Accordingly, any lingering legitimate concerns should be assuaged by the
    limited scope of the present restraint.
    Nor shall the Court revisit Judge Chutkan’s decision to enforce the French restraining
    orders after consulting the standards under Sections 2467 and 983(j). Disposition of the pending
    motions does not require the Court to decide which of the parties’ competing interpretations of
    Gang Luan, 
    722 F.3d 388
    , and other authorities appropriately construes procedural due process
    requirements under the applicable statutes, or to apply that interpretation to these facts. The Court
    simply notes that the allegations contained in the French court’s restraining orders, upon which
    Judge Chutkan relied, were detailed. Soon enough, the United States and the Intervenors will learn
    whether the French verdict dictates continued U.S. enforcement of the French restraining orders,
    some of which were already confirmed by a French court of appeals.
    C. Motion to Dissolve the Notice of Lis Pendens
    In addition to its motions to intervene and vacate the applicable restraining order, Ocean
    Five Office 400 LLC seeks dissolution of the notice of lis pendens applicable to 1150 Kane
    Concourse, #2FL. The basis for this further request is that Judge Chutkan struck the reference to
    “condominium no. 3” in the United States’ proposed order restraining this property, but the United
    States nevertheless proceeded to file a notice of lis pendens as to that specific condominium at
    1150 Kane Concourse, #2FL. See Mem. in Supp. of Mot. of Ocean Five Office 400 LLC to
    10
    Intervene, Vacate the Restraining Order and Dissolve the Notice of Lis Pendens, ECF No. 28, at
    7-8.
    But it is not true that the “action [supporting the lis pendens] no longer affects the subject
    property,” as the owner contends. 
    Id. at 8
    (citing Fla. Stat. § 48.23(d)(3)). Judge Chutkan simply
    broadened the language in the United States’ proposed restraining order, consistent with the
    majority of the materials that were in front of her. That does not mean that the notice of lis pendens
    as to a potentially narrower portion of 1150 Kane Concourse, #2FL, should now be dissolved.
    Only if Ocean Five Office 400 LLC were to say that it did not, and does not, own condominium
    number three, but instead owns only another part of the second floor, would the Court be inclined
    to dissolve the notice of lis pendens as to that specific condominium. Instead, the United States
    represents that “Condominium #3 comprises the second floor of 1150 Kane Concourse.” Resp. of
    the United States to Mot. to Vacate Restraining Order Re: 1150 Kane Concourse, Bay Harbor
    Florida [sic], ECF No. 38, at 2 (“It is not a different property; it is simply a more descriptive
    address, which this Court deleted simply because it did not appear in the French seizure order.”).
    Ocean Five Office 400 LLC does not disagree, suggesting that this motion to dissolve is frivolous.
    Regardless, because of the concern that Ocean Five Office 400 LLC might proceed to sell
    1150 Kane Concourse, #2FL, before the verdict, the Court shall not dissolve the notice of lis
    pendens as to that property at this time. Ocean Five Office 400 LLC has not cited any authority
    that requires dissolving the notice of lis pendens sooner, even if dissolution were justified, which
    the Court does not believe is the case.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the Court hereby GRANTS-IN-PART and DENIES-IN-
    PART WITHOUT PREJUDICE Ocean 26 Holdings LLC’s and Mondrian 1026 LLC’s [27]
    Motion to Intervene and Vacate Restraining Order; Ocean Five Office 400 LLC’s [28] Motion to
    11
    Intervene, Vacate the Restraining Order and Dissolve the Notice of Lis Pendens; and Real Estate
    26 Investments LLC’s [29] Motion to Intervene and Vacate Restraining Order.
    Ocean 26 Holdings LLC, Mondrian 1026 LLC, Ocean Five Office 400 LLC, and Real
    Estate 26 Investments LLC shall be permitted to intervene. At this time, the Court shall not vacate
    the restraining orders as to any of the four properties, or dissolve the notice of lis pendens as to
    1150 Kane Concourse, #2FL.
    If Fabrice Touil is acquitted, or if a French court vacates or alters the restraining orders
    enforced by this Court, then Intervenors may renew their motion(s) to vacate the restraints upheld
    today.
    SO ORDERED.
    Dated: February 6, 2019
    /s/
    COLLEEN KOLLAR-KOTELLY
    United States District Judge
    12