Commonwealth v. Freeman ( 2016 )


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  •            IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Commonwealth of Pennsylvania             :
    :
    v.                           :   No. 581 C.D. 2015
    :   Argued: April 13, 2016
    Allen Freeman,                           :
    Appellant       :
    BEFORE: HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
    HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
    HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge
    HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    OPINION BY JUDGE BROBSON                            FILED: June 15, 2016
    Appellant Allen Freeman (Freeman) appeals from an order of the
    Court of Common Pleas of Beaver County (trial court), dated March 11, 2015, in
    which the trial court denied Freeman’s petition for return of $27,690 in cash that
    the Commonwealth seized from him during a traffic stop as derivative contraband
    and ordered the forfeiture of the cash. On appeal, Freeman contends that the
    Commonwealth failed to establish the required nexus between the cash and
    criminal activity to support statutory forfeiture of the cash. Freeman also contends
    that the trial court erred by failing to consider Freeman’s testimony, which he
    contends supports his claim that he lawfully obtained and possessed the cash. For
    the reasons set forth below, we reverse the trial court’s forfeiture decision with
    respect to the $8,000 found in the center console of the vehicle and the $690 found
    on Freeman’s person. We vacate the trial court’s forfeiture decision with respect
    to the approximately $19,000 found in the trunk of Freeman’s vehicle, and remand
    the matter to the trial court with direction that the trial court consider Freeman’s
    “innocent owner” evidence.
    I. BACKGROUND
    According to the trial court’s findings of fact, which Freeman does not
    challenge on appeal, on December 14, 2014, Freeman’s girlfriend, Kyahna Tucker,
    called the Ambridge Police Department and reported that Freeman had assaulted
    her in the home they shared with their child. Ms. Tucker told police that Freeman
    had just left the home in his Dodge Charger and had a firearm with him.
    Ms. Tucker also informed police that a white United States Postal Service (USPS)
    mailer, containing cash that Freeman planned to use to purchase marijuana from a
    contact in California, could be found in the trunk of the vehicle.
    The Ambridge Police Department dispatched Officer Alfred Bialik to
    search for Freeman.      In the meantime, a police officer from a neighboring
    jurisdiction spotted the vehicle and stopped Freeman. Officer Bialik traveled to the
    scene and placed Freeman under arrest. The police officers found $690 and three
    cellular telephones on Freeman’s person. Officer Bialik also searched the area of
    the vehicle within Freeman’s wingspan. This search turned up an envelope in the
    center console containing $8,000 in cash, bundled with rubber bands in $1,000
    increments.
    Officer Bialik and the other officers requested Freeman’s permission
    to search the trunk based on their findings up to that point and the information
    provided by Ms. Tucker. Freeman acquiesced. In the trunk, police officers found
    a firearm, numerous boxes of Ziploc vacuum bags, a Ziploc vacuum bag sealer
    system, latex gloves, and a white USPS parcel matching Ms. Tucker’s description.
    After securing the vehicle at the scene, Officer Bialik requested a K-9 unit. The
    2
    dog alerted the police officers to the front driver’s side and passenger’s side door,
    indicating the odor of narcotics based on the dog’s exterior search of the vehicle.
    The vehicle was towed to the Ambridge Police Station.
    The next day, the police officers secured a warrant to search the
    vehicle, including the USPS parcel. Within the USPS parcel, the police officers
    discovered a safe. Within the safe they found two stacks of vacuum-sealed money,
    with Bounce dryer sheets next to each stack. The parties stipulate that the total
    amount of money seized from Freeman’s person and from within the trunk and
    passenger compartment of the vehicle was $27,690.1
    Officer Bialik also examined the text messages on the three cell
    phones recovered from Freeman’s person. The text messages revealed numerous
    conversations with references to types (i.e., strains), amounts, and prices of
    marijuana. Freeman’s text messages also refer to the use of the USPS to send and
    receive money to and from Sacramento, California. There were USPS tracking
    numbers for shipments between Sacramento, California, and Ambridge,
    Pennsylvania.      The trial court refers to another text message, in which an
    individual with a local area code (presumably the Ambridge, Pennsylvania area),
    instructs Freeman to bring money to him so he can show Freeman “how to pad it.”
    The trial court also references text messages relating to how to bundle money to
    keep it from “smelling.”2
    1
    As an aside, the $690 seized from Freeman’s pocket, the $8,000 seized from the center
    console, and the $18,835 seized from the trunk total $27,525; however, the parties agree that
    $27,690 was seized from Freeman.
    2
    During the hearing below, the Commonwealth presented testimony of Sergeant Tristan
    Wenzig of the Pennsylvania National Guard, who did an ion scan of the cash seized from
    Freeman and found traces of cocaine, but not marijuana. Noting the problems with an ion scan
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    3
    Ultimately, the trial court concluded that the Commonwealth met its
    burden, albeit through circumstantial evidence, of proving by a preponderance of
    the evidence that the seized cash was derivative contraband and thus forfeitable
    under the act commonly referred to as the Controlled Substances Forfeiture Act
    (Drug Forfeiture Act), 42 Pa. C.S. §§ 6801-6802. Under the Drug Forfeiture Act,
    seized cash can be forfeited if the Commonwealth shows that the cash was
    furnished or intended to be furnished by any person in
    exchange for a controlled substance in violation of The
    Controlled Substance, Drug, Device and Cosmetic Act,[3]
    and all proceeds traceable to such an exchange.
    42 Pa. C.S. § 6801(a)(6)(i)(A) (emphasis added). In reaching this conclusion, the
    trial court found persuasive the testimony of Ms. Tucker, who confirmed her initial
    report to police about Freeman’s intentions for the cash. The trial court found that
    this evidence established “why [Freeman] was travelling with that money and what
    his plans were for it.” (Trial Ct. Opinion at 9.) The trial court also noted that Ms.
    Tucker’s description of the parcel in her initial report to police officers was
    consistent with the parcel that police officers recovered from Freeman’s vehicle,
    apparently bolstering, in the trial court’s view, the weight it gave Ms. Tucker’s
    testimony.
    The trial court also found persuasive the testimony of Officer Bialik
    and Agent Opsatnik from the Pennsylvania Office of Attorney General. Officer
    (continued…)
    discussed by this Court in Commonwealth v. $9,000 U.S. Currency, 
    8 A.3d 379
     (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2010), and that Tucker claimed only that Freeman was going to purchase marijuana, the trial
    court found the ion scan evidence irrelevant.
    3
    Act of April 14, 1972, P.L. 233, as amended, 35 P.S. §§ 780-101 to -144 (Drug Act).
    4
    Bialik testified that the vacuum packaging of money with dryer sheets is a “known
    . . . tactic to try to elude police officers and police K-9s from detection.”
    (Reproduced Record (R.R.) 51.) Freeman stipulated on the record that Agent
    Opsatnik was an “experienced narcotics investigator,” indeed, “a good one.”
    (R.R. 124.) Agent Opsatnik corroborated Officer Bialik’s testimony regarding the
    packaging of money in narcotics transactions. Agent Opsatnik testified that, in his
    experience, money in narcotics transactions is vacuum packed or wrapped,
    commonly with a dryer sheet or something else to mask the odor, out of concern
    that   the   money    may    have   come     into   contact    with    illegal   drugs.
    (R.R. at 125, 128-29.) In his decades of experience, Agent Opsatnik testified that
    he has seen this tactic employed hundreds of times.           (Id.)   Agent Opsatnik
    reviewed photographs taken of the seized cash and testified that the packaging of
    the cash was consistent with the trafficking of money for narcotics purposes. (Id.)
    The trial court also considered the text messages as relevant for
    purposes of establishing the nexus to drug trafficking activities. According to the
    trial court, the text messages reveal a transaction network between Pennsylvania
    and California, of which Freeman was a part. The text messages refer to particular
    strains of marijuana, amounts, and prices, as well as plans for drug transactions
    through the mail. The trial court noted that the text messages corroborated Ms.
    Tucker’s testimony about Freeman’s plans to mail money by USPS parcel to
    California to purchase drugs. The text messages also discuss “padding” the money
    to prevent it from “smelling.” The trial court also noted Freeman’s use of three
    cell phones and used that finding as part of the totality of the circumstances in
    assessing whether the Commonwealth met its burden. In short, the trial court
    credited Ms. Tucker’s testimony as well as the testimony of Officer Bialik and
    5
    Agent Opsatnik, considered the text messages and Freeman’s use of the three cell
    phones, and concluded, based on the totality of the evidence, that the
    Commonwealth met its burden of proving a substantial nexus between the seized
    cash and illegal drug activity. (Trial Ct. Opinion at 11-12).)
    II. ISSUES ON APPEAL
    On appeal,4 Freeman raises only two issues. First, he contends that
    the Commonwealth’s evidence falls short of proving a sufficient and substantial
    nexus between the forfeited cash and illegal drug activity. Instead, relying on
    Commonwealth v. Marshall, 
    698 A.2d 576
     (Pa. 1997) (Marshall), Freeman argues
    that at best, the Commonwealth’s evidence establishes a mere “possibility” or
    “suspicion” that Freeman intended to use the cash to purchase drugs. Second, and
    in the alternative, Freemen contends that he “established that he was lawfully
    entitled to the money seized, and it was not unlawfully used or possessed by him.”
    (Freeman Br. at 6.)
    III.   DISCUSSION
    To make its case for a forfeiture of property, the Commonwealth’s
    evidence must be of a quality that it demonstrates a “sufficient or substantial
    nexus” between the property in question and a violation of the Drug Act.
    Commonwealth v. $2,523.48 U.S. Currency, 
    649 A.2d 658
    , 660 (Pa. 1994)
    4
    In an appeal from a forfeiture proceeding, this Court reviews whether findings of fact
    made by the trial court are supported by substantial evidence and whether the trial court abused
    its discretion or committed an error of law. Commonwealth v. $11,600.00 Cash, U.S. Currency,
    
    858 A.2d 160
    , 163 n.3 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004). Our scope of review over questions of law is
    plenary. Commonwealth v. 1997 Chevrolet, 
    106 A.3d 836
    , 847 n.9 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014), appeal
    granted sub nom. Commonwealth v. 1997 Chevrolet and Contents Seized from Young,
    
    120 A.3d 993
     (Pa. 2015).
    6
    (quoting Commonwealth v. 502-504 Gordon Street, 
    607 A.2d 839
    , 842 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 1992)).            The Commonwealth carries its burden of proof by a
    preponderance of the evidence, which is a “more likely than not” standard.
    Commonwealth v. $6,425.00 Seized From Esquilin, 
    880 A.2d 523
    , 529 (Pa. 2005)
    (Esquilin). Circumstantial evidence can suffice, but the Commonwealth must do
    more than establish the “suspicion” of a nexus between cash and illegal drug
    trafficking. Marshall, 
    698 A.2d 576
     at 579. Forfeiture cases “are fact sensitive
    cases,” and the court determines whether a sufficient nexus has been proven based
    on the totality of the evidence. Commonwealth v. Three Hundred Ten Thousand
    Twenty Dollars ($310,020.00), 
    894 A.2d 154
    , 161 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006).
    Where the Commonwealth makes a prima facie case for forfeiture, the
    claimant of the seized property can prevent its forfeiture with the innocent owner
    defense—i.e., that he owns the cash; that he lawfully acquired it; and that it was
    not unlawfully used by him. 42 Pa. C.S. § 6802(j);5 Commonwealth v. $16,208.38
    U.S. Currency Seized from Holt, 
    635 A.2d 233
    , 238 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1993).
    5
    Section 6802(j) of the Drug Forfeiture Act provides:
    (j)   Owner’s burden of proof.—At the time of the hearing, if the Commonwealth
    produces evidence that the property in question was unlawfully used,
    possessed or otherwise subject to forfeiture under section 6801(a) or
    6801.1(a), the burden shall be upon the claimant to show:
    (1) That the claimant is the owner of the property or the holder
    of a chattel mortgage or contract of conditional sale thereon.
    (2)   That the claimant lawfully acquired the property.
    (3)   That it was not unlawfully used or possessed by him. In the
    event that it shall appear that the property was unlawfully
    used or possessed by a person other than the claimant, then
    the claimant shall show that the unlawful use or possession
    was without his knowledge or consent. Such absence of
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    7
    A. Sufficient and Substantial Nexus
    In Marshall, the appellant sought return of cash that the court of
    common pleas had forfeited to the Commonwealth under the Drug Forfeiture Act.
    In concluding that a substantial nexus existed between the seized cash and illegal
    drug activity, the common pleas court relied on the following facts:
    1) Appellant had been unemployed for 1-1/2 years prior
    to the arrest; 2) Appellant and the driver of the car gave
    inconsistent stories concerning the ownership of the
    money; 3) the currency was bundled in a manner
    consistent with drug dealing and was found between the
    seat cushions; 4) the drug-sniffing dog alerted on the
    cash; and 5) Appellant’s testimony was not credible.
    Marshall, 698 A.2d at 578-79. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court, however, found
    that these facts, as a matter of law, did not support the Commonwealth’s burden.
    After noting that the Commonwealth is not required, under the law, to directly link
    the seized property to illegal activity, the Supreme Court, nonetheless, held that, at
    most, the Commonwealth established nothing “more than the suspicion of a
    possible nexus between” the seized property and illegal drug activity. Id. at 579.
    The court explained:
    It is undisputed that no drugs or drug paraphernalia were
    discovered in the car in which Appellant was riding, or
    on the persons of Appellant or his two companions.
    Moreover, Appellant gave uncontested testimony that he
    had never been arrested on drug charges and had no prior
    convictions of any kind. And, although the $3,400.00
    was bundled in a way drug dealers have been known to
    (continued…)
    knowledge or consent must be reasonable under the
    circumstances presented.
    8
    arrange their money, such an arrangement is equally
    consistent with an innocent person’s attempt to simplify
    and promote precision in the counting of lawfully
    obtained funds.
    The fact that the drug-sniffing dog alerted on the
    cash is also not dispositive of the issue. A completely
    innocent citizen of this Commonwealth could have in his
    or her possession, at any time, currency that happened to
    be involved in a drug transaction at some unknown time
    in the past. The fact that on August 10, 1993 Appellant
    found himself in the possession of one, or several, such
    bills of currency is insufficient to sustain the
    Commonwealth’s clearly established burden to prove at
    the outset that the money seized has a nexus to some
    unlawful activity on the part of Appellant. Even when
    considered in conjunction with all the other facts relied
    upon by the trial court in this case, the residual presence
    of drugs on some part of the $3,400.00 in question
    establishes only the possibility or the suspicion of a
    nexus between the money and some type of drug activity.
    Id.
    Freeman’s written argument on this first issue comprises barely a page
    of his brief. Freeman contends:
    Appellant’s case mirrors the case in Marshall.
    During the hearings on the Petition to Return Seized
    Property Officer Bialik of the Ambridge Borough Police
    Department was called to testify.               Under
    cross-examination the Officer . . . was asked:
    “Q. Were there any drugs in the
    car?
    A.    No, there was no drugs in the
    car.
    Q.    Did he have any drugs on him?
    A.    No.
    Q.    Was there a weapon violation?
    A.    No.” (R.R. 60.)
    9
    A canine was utilized to perform a search of the
    vehicle for drugs. The canine gave an alert that there
    might have been drugs in the vehicle but no narcotics
    were found. (R.R. 60-61) No drugs were found on
    Appellant. There were no drugs found in Mr. Freemen’s
    (sic) vehicle. The officer did not charge the Appellant
    with a firearm violation. The record is void of any fact or
    circumstance that indicates that . . . Mr. Freemen (sic)
    was involved in drug activity. The Appellant’s case
    mirror’s the same facts that existed in Marshall, where
    the Pennsylvania Supreme Court found that there was no
    nexus between the money and drug activity.
    (Freeman Br. at 8-9.)
    Freeman’s argument as to his first issue, then, is that there can be no
    sufficient and substantial nexus to support forfeiture of cash where law
    enforcement does not find illegal drugs in close proximity to the cash or on
    someone’s person. Freeman also argues that there can be no forfeiture because
    Freeman was not charged with the crime. Both arguments, however, ignore the
    Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision in Esquilin, wherein the court held:
    “Although illegal drugs are often present at the time of seizure, there is no
    requirement that such drugs be present; instead, circumstantial evidence may
    suffice to establish a party’s involvement in drug activity.        Furthermore, for
    property to be deemed forfeitable, neither a criminal prosecution nor a conviction
    is required.” Esquilin, 880 A.2d at 530 (citations omitted).
    Freeman next argues that this case “mirrors the same facts that existed
    in Marshall,” and, therefore, demands that same result. (Appellant’s Br. at 9.)
    Freeman, however, does not recite the numerous facts found by the trial court to
    support its forfeiture decision in this case.     More critically, Freeman fails to
    challenge any of the trial court’s findings of fact for lack of substantial evidentiary
    support in the record. It is not the role of this Court to examine the record below to
    10
    identify and address issues and arguments not raised by the appellant. See Boniella
    v. Commonwealth, 
    958 A.2d 1069
    , 1072 n.8 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2008). Accordingly, for
    purposes of this appeal, the trial court’s factual findings are conclusive.
    At issue are three tranches of forfeited cash—(1) approximately
    $19,000 found in the trunk; (2) $8,000 found in the center console; and (3) $690
    found on Freeman’s person. To begin, we will address the approximately $19,000
    in cash found in the trunk of Freeman’s vehicle. The trial court relied on several
    facts in concluding that the Commonwealth had met its burden of showing a
    substantial nexus between the cash found in the trunk and the illegal drug activity.
    First, the trial court relied on the police report of Ms. Tucker, who informed police
    that Freeman intended to use cash, located in a box in a white USPS package in the
    trunk of his car, to engage in a drug transaction in California. Second, the trial
    court relied on the presence of a white USPS package in the trunk of Freeman’s car
    matching the description provided by Ms. Tucker. Third, the trial court looked at
    the way the cash was packaged, particularly the fact that is was stacked,
    surrounded by Bounce dryer sheets, and sealed in Ziploc vacuum bags. Fourth, the
    trial court relied on Officer Bialik’s and Agent Opsatnik’s testimony that the
    packaging and sealing of cash in this manner, particularly the use of dryer sheets to
    mask from K-9 detection any trace odors of drugs from the cash, was consistent
    with drug trafficking. Fifth, the trial court relied on text messages recovered from
    Freeman’s cell phone, which included California mailing addresses, references to
    business transactions, instructions to “pad” money and package so “they’re not
    smelling,” and references to strains of marijuana—e.g., Ultra Sonja, Tahoe OG,
    Purple Dragon, Orange Kush, Bubba original OG, Skywalker OG.
    11
    Based on these findings of fact, unacknowledged and unchallenged by
    Freeman on appeal, the trial court did not err in finding it more likely than not that
    Freeman intended to use the approximately $19,000 in cash found in the trunk of
    his car to purchase a controlled substance, that being marijuana. The factual
    findings supporting a substantial nexus between the cash found in the trunk of
    Freeman’s vehicle and drug activity are much more compelling than those found
    inadequate to support forfeiture in Marshall. Accordingly, we reject Freeman’s
    argument that the trial court erred, as a matter of law, in finding a substantial nexus
    between the cash found in the trunk of his vehicle and illegal drug activity.
    With respect to the other tranches of forfeited cash, however, the
    required substantial nexus is lacking. The trial court’s opinion seems to lump
    together the separate tranches of cash in the analysis. Key to the trial court’s
    substantial nexus mosaic was Ms. Tucker’s testimony, alerting police to the cash in
    the trunk, which she specifically identified as cash that Freeman intended to use to
    purchase drugs. Ms. Tucker, however, did not alert police to the cash found on
    Freeman’s person or the cash found in the passenger compartment of the vehicle.
    The only finding by the trial court relative to these separate tranches
    of cash in support of the trial court’s forfeiture decision is that the cash was
    bundled in a manner consistent with illegal drug activity. This finding, however,
    appears only to apply to the $8,000 (divided and bundled by rubber bands into
    $1,000 increments) and not the $690 found on Freeman’s person. Even if the
    bundling finding applied to both, under Marshall, such a finding alone is
    insufficient to establish a substantial nexus between the forfeited cash and illegal
    drug activity.   Moreover, we do not presume that once the Commonwealth
    establishes a substantial nexus between cash found in the trunk of a vehicle, that
    12
    same nexus attaches to all cash found within the vehicle and on the person of the
    driver. Even if we considered the passenger compartment of the vehicle and
    Freeman’s person to be in “close proximity” to the USPS package found in the
    trunk of the vehicle, there is no presumption that all cash found in close proximity
    of cash intended to be furnished to purchase drugs is also intended to be furnished
    to purchase drugs.        Cf. 42 Pa. C.S. § 6801(a)(6)(ii) (creating rebuttable
    presumption that cash found in close proximity to controlled substances are
    proceeds from illegal sale of controlled substances). See also Commonwealth v.
    Porrino, 
    96 A.3d 1132
    , 1142 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014) (en banc) (rejecting argument
    that cash found within “close proximity” of drug paraphernalia should be presumed
    to be proceeds of illegal drug activity).
    Here, the Commonwealth claims that the cash found on Freeman’s
    person and in the passenger compartment of his vehicle was forfeitable under
    42 Pa. C.S. § 6801(a)(6)(i)(A), because Freeman intended to furnish that particular
    cash in exchange for a controlled substance. There are, however, no findings by
    the trial court adequate to prove such a connection.             Accordingly, the
    Commonwealth failed to prove a substantial nexus supporting forfeiture of the
    $8,000 found in the center console of Freeman’s vehicle and the $690 found on
    Freeman’s person.
    B. Innocent Owner Defense
    Freeman’s second issue on appeal is whether the trial court erred in
    failing to consider Freeman’s “innocent owner” evidence to rebut the
    Commonwealth’s prima facie case.             This evidence consisted primarily of
    Freeman’s testimony about his sources of income and how the cash found in his
    car could be traced to lawful income-producing activities. Freeman denied any
    13
    connection to drug activity and offered an explanation as to why the cash found in
    the trunk of his vehicle was vacuum packed and in a safe. Freeman could not
    explain why he sealed the Bounce dryer sheets with the cash. He also offered no
    testimony to explain the text messages relied on by the trial court.
    In its opinion, the trial court concluded its analysis by holding that the
    Commonwealth established a nexus between the cash found in Freeman’s vehicle
    and illegal drug trafficking.     Under the law cited above, however, such a
    conclusion merely shifted the burden to Freeman to rebut the Commonwealth’s
    case by proving that he was an innocent owner. Here, Freeman attempted to do so
    through his own testimony and through the introduction of an exhibit—
    Defendant’s Exhibit “A”. Yet the trial court’s opinion omits any analysis of
    Freeman’s evidence. We cannot presume from the trial court’s silence that the trial
    court rejected Freeman’s evidence, nor will we independently examine the weight
    and credibility that should be afforded Freeman’s evidence. See Page’s Dep’t
    Store v. Velardi, 
    346 A.2d 556
    , 561 (Pa. 1975) (explaining that appellate review
    “should not infer from the absence of a finding on a given point that the question
    was resolved in favor of the party who prevailed below, for the point may have
    been overlooked.”) Therefore, we are constrained to remand this matter to the trial
    court to consider, discuss, and make findings regarding Freeman’s rebuttal
    evidence and his innocent owner defense.
    IV.   CONCLUSION
    For the reasons set forth above, we reverse the trial court’s forfeiture
    decision with respect to the $8,000 found in the center console of the vehicle and
    the $690 found on Freeman’s person.           We vacate the trial court’s forfeiture
    decision with respect to the approximately $19,000 found in the trunk of
    14
    Freeman’s vehicle and remand the matter to the trial court with direction that the
    trial court consider Freeman’s “innocent owner” evidence.
    P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    15
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Commonwealth of Pennsylvania             :
    :
    v.                           :   No. 581 C.D. 2015
    :
    Allen Freeman,                           :
    Appellant       :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 15th day of June, 2016, the order of the Court of
    Common Pleas of Beaver County, dated March 11, 2015, denying Appellant Allen
    Freeman’s Petition for Return of Property and forfeiting $27,690 to the
    Commonwealth of Pennsylvania is REVERSED, in part, and VACATED, in part.
    The trial court order is REVERSED with respect to the $8,690 found on
    Appellants’ person and within the passenger compartment of his vehicle. With
    respect to the remaining approximately $19,000 found in the trunk of the vehicle,
    the order is VACATED and the matter REMANDED to the trial court for further
    proceedings consistent with the accompanying opinion.
    Jurisdiction relinquished.
    P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Commonwealth of Pennsylvania                 :
    :
    v.                          :    No. 581 C.D. 2015
    :    Argued: April 13, 2016
    Allen Freeman,                               :
    Appellant            :
    BEFORE:          HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
    HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
    HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge
    HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    DISSENTING OPINION
    BY PRESIDENT JUDGE LEAVITT                                            FILED: June 15, 2016
    The majority’s holding that the $19,000 found in Allen Freeman’s
    vehicle was earmarked for marijuana hangs by a slender thread: a single phone
    call made by Freeman’s angry girlfriend, Kyahna Tucker, to police on the evening
    he left her, taking most of his belongings. Even setting aside the troublesome
    circumstances of Ms. Tucker’s accusation, her statement is so devoid of content
    and so lacking in corroboration that it cannot support the conclusion that the cash
    was “intended to be furnished … in exchange for a controlled substance in
    violation of the Controlled Substance, Drug, Device and Cosmetic Act.”1 42 Pa.
    C.S. §680(a)(6)(i)(A). Most critical is the absence of a shred of evidence to
    1
    Act of April 14, 1972, P.L. 233, as amended, 35 P.S. §§780-101 – 780-144.
    connect Freeman’s supposed marijuana purchase in California back to
    Pennsylvania.2 Accordingly, I must respectfully dissent.
    The act commonly referred to as the Controlled Substances Forfeiture
    Act (Forfeiture Act) authorizes the forfeiture of cash that is
    furnished or intended to be furnished by any person in
    exchange for a controlled substance in violation of The
    Controlled Substance, Drug, Device and Cosmetic Act, and all
    proceeds traceable to such an exchange.
    42 Pa. C.S. §6801(a)(6)(i)(A) (emphasis added).3 The Commonwealth asserted
    that Freeman “intended” the $19,000 “to be furnished” in exchange for marijuana.
    2
    I agree with the majority’s reversal of the trial court’s decision to forfeit the $8,000 in cash
    found in the center console of Allen Freeman’s vehicle and the $690 in cash found in his wallet.
    About this cash, the Commonwealth presented no evidence whatsoever. I also agree with the
    majority that the trial court erred by not considering, or ruling upon, Freeman’s innocent owner
    defense.
    3
    The Forfeiture Act states in relevant part:
    (a) Forfeitures generally.--- The following shall be subject to forfeiture to the
    Commonwealth and no property right shall exist in them:
    ***
    (6)(i) All of the following:
    (A) Money, negotiable instruments, securities or
    other things of value furnished or intended to
    be furnished by any person in exchange for a
    controlled substance in violation of The
    Controlled Substance, Drug, Device and
    Cosmetic Act, and all proceeds traceable to
    such an exchange.
    (B) Money, negotiable instruments, securities or
    other things of value used or intended to be
    used to facilitate any violation of The
    Controlled Substance, Drug, Device and
    Cosmetic Act.
    42 Pa. C.S. §6801(a)(6)(i)(A), (B).
    MHL-2
    Id. Freeman responded that Ms. Tucker’s accusation was false and that, in any
    case, the Commonwealth did not establish a substantial nexus between the $19,000
    seized from his car and a future purchase of marijuana. At best, it raised a
    suspicion. As our Supreme Court instructed in Commonwealth v. Marshall, 
    698 A.2d 576
    , 579 (Pa. 1997), a suspicion will not support the forfeiture of a citizen’s
    property.
    No one witnessed an illegal drug transaction; no drugs or drug
    paraphernalia were found on Freeman or in his car; and Freeman has no criminal
    history of any sort, let alone one involving drugs. Ms. Tucker called the police the
    evening of December 14, 2014, to report her quarrel with Freeman and that in the
    trunk of his car there was a white United States Postal Service (USPS) box
    containing cash. At the forfeiture hearing, she testified as follows:
    Q.     Did you tell the police what that money was for?
    A.     Yes.
    Q.     And what did you tell them?
    A.     He used it to sell weed from California.
    Q.     And did you tell them anything else about what the plans
    were for that money?
    A.     I just know he was going to send it off to California.
    Reproduced Record at 36 (R.R. ___). There are numerous problems with Ms.
    Tucker’s testimony.
    First, at the hearing, Ms. Tucker merely confirmed what she said to
    police on the evening in question. She did not confirm that what she said in her
    phone call was, in fact, true.
    MHL-3
    Second, Ms. Tucker offered no corroboration of her accusation. She
    did not say how she learned about Freeman’s alleged plans for the cash in his
    trunk. She stated that he “was going to send it off to California,” R.R. 36, and that
    she told police he was going “to sell weed from California.” 
    Id.
     But she did not
    offer a name or address in California or where or to whom Freeman planned to sell
    this “weed.” She did not testify that she ever saw Freeman sell marijuana in
    Pennsylvania, or anywhere.
    Third, Ms. Tucker’s statement did not establish, as argued by the
    Commonwealth, that Freeman was on the verge of initiating the supposed purchase
    because he was on his way to the post office. It is the rare post office that has
    evening hours. Further, the USPS box, which contained a small safe in which the
    cash was secreted, was not addressed and lacked postage. It was not ready to be
    mailed.    Freeman had plenty of time, in other words, to change his mind.4
    Crediting Ms. Tucker’s testimony established, at most, an inchoate plan to
    exchange the cash for marijuana somewhere in the State of California.
    Fourth, Ms. Tucker did not testify that her boyfriend’s California
    vendor was going to send marijuana to Pennsylvania. For all we know, it was
    Freeman’s “intention” to have the vendor send the marijuana to Colorado, where it
    is lawful to “sell weed.” Ms. Tucker did not specify whether Freeman was a
    wholesaler or retailer, and she did not identify his market territory.
    In principle, circumstantial evidence can support the findings
    necessary for a forfeiture.      In its case in chief, however, the Commonwealth
    4
    Ms. Tucker did not say how Freeman was going to send the cash “off to California,” whether
    by USPS, UPS or by driving it himself. Under any of these scenarios, there was time for
    Freeman to decide to do something else with the cash, assuming that when he left Ms. Tucker he
    had an intention to purchase marijuana in California.
    MHL-4
    offered a thin slice of swiss cheese consisting of more holes than dairy product. It
    is not the job of the courts to fill in the holes of the Commonwealth’s case with
    inferences that favor the Commonwealth. Commonwealth v. Porrino, 
    96 A.3d 1132
    , 1141 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014) (holding that where circumstantial evidence can
    support an inference of innocent activity, there must be other evidence to rule out
    the innocent explanation).     Here, the Commonwealth needed to rule out the
    possibility that the marijuana to be purchased in California was then going to be
    delivered to a state where marijuana can be lawfully enjoyed. Our Supreme Court
    has refused to allow circumstantial evidence to make the Commonwealth’s case
    when that evidence is “equally consistent with [the action of] an innocent person[
    ].” Marshall, 698 A.2d at 579.
    The terms of the Forfeiture Act are to be strictly construed because
    forfeiture is not favored in the law. See United States v. One 1936 Model Ford V-8
    De Luxe Coach, 
    307 U.S. 219
    , 226 (1939) (explaining that “[f]orfeitures are not
    favored; they should be enforced only when within both [the] letter and spirit of
    the law.”); Commonwealth v. $2,523.48 U.S. Currency, 
    649 A.2d 658
    , 660-61 (Pa.
    1994) (“The authorization of forfeiture by statute is to be strictly construed.”). The
    Forfeiture Act does not define what is meant by “intended to be furnished.”
    However, intent is more than a subjective desire or hope. As the Pennsylvania
    Superior Court has observed:
    [A] person’s mind cannot be opened so that his or her intent can
    be observed. In the absence of a declaration disclosing a
    person’s intent, therefore, one “can only look to the conduct and
    the circumstances surrounding it to determine the mental state
    which occasioned it.”
    MHL-5
    Commonwealth v. Wright, 
    433 A.2d 511
    , 513 (Pa. Super. 1981) (quoting
    Commonwealth v. O’Searo, 
    352 A.2d 30
    , 37 (Pa. 1976)). To forfeit cash “intended
    to be furnished” for a controlled substance, the evidence must offer specifics about
    that intent, such as the place, day and hour of the putative exchange. 42 Pa. C.S.
    §6801(a)(6)(i)(A).     There must be temporal imminence with little chance of
    backing out of the deal. Ms. Tucker said nothing to indicate that Freeman’s
    supposed purchase was imminent.
    In a forfeiture proceeding, the evidence must be of a quality that it
    establishes a “substantial nexus” between the property and illegal drug trafficking.
    Although $19,000 is a large amount of cash, “[i]t is not against the law to carry
    cash.” Commonwealth v. $9,000 U.S. Currency, 
    8 A.3d 379
    , 388 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2010). Likewise, it is not unlawful to put cash in a safe and then hide the safe in a
    USPS box to protect against theft as Freeman explained.                  R.R. 149.      The
    Commonwealth has a more difficult forfeiture case to make whenever, as here, the
    police have not “witnessed any suspicious activity.” Commonwealth v. Fontanez,
    
    739 A.2d 152
    , 155 n.4 (Pa. 1999) (emphasis added).5 The evidentiary burden is
    even higher where, as here, the alleged violation of the Controlled Substance,
    Drug, Device and Cosmetic Act lies at an unknown time in the future.
    The Commonwealth’s evidence did not meet the “substantial nexus”
    quality standard. Ms. Tucker’s accusation provided zero information about how,
    5
    The majority correctly cites Commonwealth v. $6,425.00 Seized From Richard Esquilin, 
    880 A.2d 523
    , 529 (Pa. 2005), for the proposition that the Commonwealth can satisfy its burden of
    proof with circumstantial evidence. However, Esquilin involved a drug transaction that had
    already been completed, not one that was scheduled for some unknown point in the future.
    MHL-6
    where, when and with whom the alleged future exchange would occur.6 At the
    conclusion of the Commonwealth’s case, the trial court observed that “[t]here may
    be some suspicion [of a drug connection] and maybe a further investigation is
    necessary.” R.R. 157. Inexplicably, the trial court later reversed itself, finding
    Tucker’s testimony sufficient to show that Freeman “intended to furnish” his cash
    to a California contact “in furtherance of a plot to traffic marijuana.” Trial Court
    op. at 14. The trial court got it right the first time.
    Simply, the Commonwealth did not make a prima facie case. At best,
    it established a suspicion that Freeman’s cash was intended to be furnished to
    someone in California in exchange for marijuana. Without evidence of where the
    marijuana was to be sent, the Commonwealth did not show that Freeman’s
    supposed purchase would even violate the Pennsylvania Controlled Substance,
    Drug, Device and Cosmetic Act, a statute that does not have an extra-territorial
    reach. In short, it is not necessary to rule on Freeman’s defense.7 I would reverse
    the trial court and order all of the $27,690 returned to Allen Freeman.
    ______________________________________
    MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
    Judge McCullough and Judge Wojcik join in this dissent.
    6
    I join Judge Wojcik’s well-reasoned dissent, which astutely observes that Ms. Tucker’s
    expressed belief about Freeman’s future intent was not “corroborated” simply because her
    factual statement that there was cash in the trunk of Freeman’s vehicle turned out to be true.
    7
    Under oath, Freeman denied selling, using or possessing marijuana. He also explained how he
    came to accumulate the cash and was candid about the fact that he did not report his income from
    his high end sneaker business to taxing authorities. Unlike Ms. Tucker, Freeman provided
    substantive information and supporting documents, none of which was refuted by the
    Commonwealth.
    MHL-7
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Commonwealth of Pennsylvania             :
    : No. 581 C.D. 2015
    v.                    : Argued: April 13, 2016
    :
    Allen Freeman,                           :
    :
    Appellant      :
    BEFORE:      HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
    HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
    HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge
    HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    DISSENTING OPINION
    BY JUDGE WOJCIK                                           FILED: June 15, 2016
    I respectfully join in President Judge Leavitt’s thoughtful dissenting
    opinion. I write separately to emphasize that Kyahna Tucker’s testimony does not
    constitute evidence tending to establish any uncontested fact because it lacks
    foundation and is speculative. With respect to Allen Freeman’s plans, Tucker did
    not explain, nor was she asked to explain, how she “just knew” or why she
    believed that Freeman intended to use the cash to purchase marijuana from
    California and then sell it…somewhere. Mere speculation cannot tip the scales to
    render the evidence that is legally insufficient on its own sufficient to establish a
    prima facie case. Commonwealth v. Marshall, 
    698 A.2d 576
     (Pa. 1997).
    The fact that Tucker’s statements that an unspecified sum of money
    and a USPS box were in the trunk of Freeman’s car proved true in no way offsets
    the utter lack of corroboration, and the speculative nature, of her remaining
    testimony.    To the extent the trial court relied on such reverse-engineered
    corroboration to lend credibility to the entirety of her brief testimony is of no
    moment, because a mere expression of belief is not proof of any fact.
    I fear that the majority’s holding will lead to unintended consequences
    and mischief, as now speculation and uncorroborated testimony in furtherance
    thereof will hereafter establish the required nexus between property and illegal
    drug activity.   According to the majority’s logic, anyone possessing property
    would have that property subject to forfeiture upon another identifying the property
    generally, providing the situs of the property, and opining that the property is
    somehow involved in the drug trade.
    MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    President Judge Leavitt joins in this dissent.
    MHW - 2