MICHAEL F. URBANSKI, District Judge.
Before the court is defendant Anjay Patel's
This case involves a 180-count Indictment (Dkt. #s 3 and 87) against ten defendants, charging numerous violations of the Contraband Cigarette Tax Act, various money laundering violations, and conspiracy to commit the same. The Indictment includes a Notice of Forfeiture, in which the government alleges certain property of defendants to be forfeitable under various civil and criminal forfeiture statutes, including 18 U.S.C. § 981(a)(1)(C), 18 U.S.C. § 982(a)(1), 28 U.S.C. § 2461, and 49 U.S.C. § 80303. The Notice of Forfeiture identifies various assets to be forfeited, including a $20.9 million money judgment, several business entities, bank accounts and identified real and personal property. The Notice of Forfeiture also identifies other assets that are forfeitable as substitute assets. On October 26, 2011, the court issued a protective order to preserve the status quo and prevent defendants and others from alienating, encumbering, or wasting forfeitable property and substitute assets.
In support of his motion to modify the protective order, Patel argues that, pursuant to United States v. Farmer, 274 F.3d 800 (4th Cir.2001), when the pretrial restraint of substitute assets has rendered a defendant, such as Patel, indigent and unable to pay for his counsel of choice, the court may liberate substitute assets to pay for legal fees in order to protect the defendant's Sixth Amendment right to counsel. Furthermore, pursuant to Farmer, Patel argues that when a pretrial protective order restrains such "wholly legitimate" and "untainted" assets, assets not involved in the offense, that could be used to pay counsel, due process requires that the
The government opposes the motion, arguing that Patel does not have a right to the pretrial release of restrained assets because all of the assets covered by the protective order are properly forfeitable either directly or as substitute assets, whether or not they are "tainted" by the instant offenses. Accordingly, the government has the authority to restrain these assets pretrial in order to ensure their availability for post-conviction criminal forfeiture proceedings. While recognizing Patel's Sixth Amendment right to counsel of his choosing, the government asserts that he does not have a constitutional right to use property subject to forfeiture to pay for counsel of his choice. The government asserts that Patel is not entitled to a Farmer hearing because, even if indigent, he cannot demonstrate the absence of probable cause to restrain his substitute assets. Simply put, the position of the government is that because the sum total of Patel's assets is less than the $20.9 million money judgment sought, all of Patel's assets are subject to forfeiture and may not be released. Given the size of the money judgment, the government asserts that all of the assets listed in the protective order are properly subject to forfeiture and pretrial restraint, regardless of whether they are directly forfeitable as "tainted" assets or forfeitable as substitute assets.
The conflicting legal positions asserted by Patel and the government regarding the nature and extent of the pretrial release of restrained assets to pay for legal counsel resemble ships passing in the night, Patel arguing that he has a Sixth Amendment right to use untainted substitute assets to fund his defense, while the government contends that no forfeitable asset, tainted or substitute, may be released to pay Patel's lawyers. Boiled down, Patel argues that his Sixth Amendment right to counsel trumps the government's pretrial forfeiture of untainted, substitute assets. For its part, the government asserts that no asset subject to forfeiture, including tainted assets substantially connected to the offense and untainted substitute assets, may be released to Patel to pay his lawyers.
The government seeks both civil and criminal forfeiture in this case pursuant to § 981(a)(1)(c), § 982(a)(1), and § 2461.
Determining the forfeitability of specific property depends on "whether the government has established the requisite nexus between the property and the offense."
The government's right to the forfeiture of specific property and substitute assets, as well as to the pretrial restraint of this property and these assets, can conflict with a defendant's Sixth Amendment right to counsel.
In United States v. Monsanto, 491 U.S. 600, 109 S.Ct. 2657, 105 L.Ed.2d 512 (1989), decided on the same day as Caplin & Drysdale, the government sought to forfeit specific property — a home, an apartment, and $35,000 in cash — as proceeds of drug-law violations, and the court issued a restraining order to freeze these assets pending trial. Id. at 602-04, 109 S.Ct. 2657. The defendant moved to vacate the restraining order in order to use the frozen assets to retain an attorney, id. at 604, 109 S.Ct. 2657, but the Supreme Court held that the criminal forfeiture and pretrial restraining order provisions under
The Fourth Circuit addressed this due process issue in Farmer. In that case, the defendant was indicted on charges of conspiracy to traffic in clothing bearing counterfeit trademarks, conspiracy to engage in unlawful financial transactions, trafficking in counterfeit clothing, and money laundering. Farmer, 274 F.3d at 801. The indictment sought to forfeit, as instruments or proceeds of the offenses, specific property that had been seized during the execution of a search warrant at the defendant's residence and warehouses pursuant to civil forfeiture statutes two years before the indictment. Id. at 801-02. The defendant filed a motion for a pretrial, adversary hearing "to determine if a portion of the seized funds should be released so that he could pay defense costs," arguing that he had a "Sixth Amendment right to use his legitimate property to hire the attorney of his choice and that he had been deprived of that right without a meaningful opportunity to be heard in violation of the Due Process Clause." Id. at 802. The district court denied the defendant's request for a hearing, and the defendant appealed. Id. The Fourth Circuit referenced the holdings of Caplin & Drysdale and Monsanto but noted that those cases "expressly left open the issue of whether a defendant has a Fifth Amendment right to a pretrial hearing to determine whether some or all of the seized assets may properly be used to fund his criminal defense." Id. at 803. The Fourth Circuit held that because the defendant could make a "threshold showing of need to use wrongly seized assets to pay his attorneys," id. at 804, due process requires a hearing, at which the defendant will have the opportunity "to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the government seized untainted assets without probable cause and that he needs those same assets to hire counsel." Id. at 805. The Fourth Circuit also held that, at the hearing, the government "may present evidence that [the defendant] has other substantial assets with which to hire attorneys and/or evidence of probable cause to believe that the seized assets are tainted and forfeitable." Id.
District courts within the Fourth Circuit have applied the standard announced in Farmer when determining whether to grant defendants' requests for a pretrial hearing for the release of restrained assets to pay for legal fees. In United States v. Varner, No. 5:05cr00025, 2005 WL 2206083 (W.D.Va. Sept. 9, 2008), a grand jury charged the defendant with money laundering, conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine, untaxed liquor violations, and firearms violations, and the indictment included a forfeiture count setting forth specific assets involved in the alleged offenses. Id. at *1. Following the indictment, the court ordered the pretrial restraint of these particular assets, and the defendant moved for a pretrial hearing to determine whether the government had "restrained non-forfeitable assets" that the defendant could use to retain counsel of his choice. Id. In support of his motion, defendant "filed an affidavit and tax records to establish his inability to retain counsel." Id. Citing Farmer, the court held that "[i]f a criminal defendant challenges the pre-trial, post-indictment restraint of assets and requests
The Varner court cited to an opinion issued earlier the same year concerning the pretrial restraint of substitute assets and a defendant's request for a Farmer hearing for the release of those assets. In United States v. Wingerter, 369 F.Supp.2d 799 (E.D.Va.2005), the defendant was charged with immigration fraud and conspiracy to commit the same, and the indictment included a forfeiture count, reflecting the jury's probable cause finding that, upon the defendant's conviction for the offenses, at least $4.5 million would be "subject to forfeiture as proceeds of those offenses." Id. at 803. The indictment further provided "for forfeiture of any substitute property up to the value of the amount described, $4.5 million, in the event the tainted property subject to forfeiture cannot be located because of any act or omission of the defendants." Id. The court subsequently issued a pretrial restraining order to restrain property subject to forfeiture and substitute assets, and the defendant requested the release of his substitute assets to pay for counsel. Id. at 804. In particular, the defendant requested the release of substitute assets in the amount of $102,000, which represented funds he had received as an inheritance from his great aunt that were being held in a bank account owned by him. Id. The government did not dispute the source of the funds but instead argued "that because it ha[d] not been able to locate and restrain the entire $4.5 million sum forfeitable on conviction, the $102,000 [was] subject to pretrial restraint as substitute property." Id. (internal quotations omitted). In response, the defendant argued that "his inherited funds are not directly traceable to the alleged immigration fraud and thus should not be restrained because they are not `tainted assets.'" Id. Relying in part on a prior opinion in the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act ("RICO") context,
While noting the government's authority to seize forfeitable assets pretrial, the Wingerter court also recognized a defendant's right under Farmer to request a hearing to challenge such a seizure, holding that if a defendant can make a threshold showing that he is "without funds to hire the attorney of his choice[,] ... then he may request a hearing at which he will be required to prove `by a preponderance of the evidence that the government seized [nonforfeitable] assets without probable cause.'" Id. at 808 (quoting Farmer, 274 F.3d at 804-05).
In In re Restraint of Bowman Gaskins Financial Group, 345 F.Supp.2d 613 (E.D.Va.2004), the district court again addressed a defendant's right to a Farmer hearing to contest the pretrial, and pre-indictment, restraint of substitute assets. In that case, the government was conducting an "ongoing visa fraud, money laundering, and tax evasion investigation" of an individual and his company and sought to restrain funds that the company had paid to the individual's daughters "for the purpose of preserving these funds for future forfeiture." Bowman Gaskins, 345 F.Supp.2d at 614. The individual and the company wanted to use the funds to "finance their defense in connection with the ongoing grand jury investigation," id. at 617, but the court held that there was probable cause to believe that the funds were the proceeds of the individual and
District courts within the Fourth Circuit have also addressed the pretrial restraint of substitute assets within the RICO context. In United States v. Najjar, 57 F.Supp.2d 205 (D.Md.1999), the grand jury indictment found that there was probable cause to believe that the defendant's real property ("the Brinkley Road property") was forfeitable pursuant to RICO, most likely as proceeds traceable to the defendant's alleged racketeering activities. Id. at 207. The government sought, and the court issued, a pretrial restraining order, and the defendant moved to modify the restraining order in order to pay his legal and living expenses with restrained assets. Id. at 206-07. The court held an adversarial hearing after the defendant met his initial burden, through an affidavit "stating that all of his assets are currently frozen," of demonstrating need for the restrained assets. Id. The court found that the grand jury was mistaken and that the Brinkley Road property was "untainted" by the defendant's alleged crimes and "only forfeitable as a substitute asset." Id. at 208. This distinction between tainted and substitute assets was important to the court. Id.
Id. (internal citation omitted). The court also noted that the Fourth Circuit, through Billman, has held that RICO "should be construed to authorize pretrial restraint" of traceable and substitute assets "that can be forfeited after conviction," meaning that the restraint of substitute assets is not required. Id. (emphasis in original). The court then distinguished Billman and held that it was inappropriate to restrain the defendant's untainted interest in the Brinkley Road property. Id. at 209. "In Billman, the [g]overnment sought to restrain the defendant's substitute assets because the defendant there had absconded overseas with the traceable assets." Id. Thus, when a defendant "affirmatively acts
Regardless of whether the government's authority to restrain assets pretrial without violating the Sixth Amendment right to counsel is based on the tainted or untainted nature of the asset, or simply whether the asset is forfeitable or not under any theory, it is clear from the relevant Fourth Circuit case law that if Patel can make the requisite threshold showing of necessity, then due process requires that the court grant his request for a Farmer hearing, at which Patel will have the opportunity to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the government has restrained his assets without probable cause and that he needs those same assets to hire counsel. At this hearing the government can also present evidence that Patel has substantial assets with which to pay counsel and that the pretrial restraint of Patel's assets is supported by the requisite probable cause. In each of the cases cited above, regardless of whether the court determined the validity of the pretrial restraint of assets based on their tainted nature or their likely forfeitability in general, the courts recognized the due process right to a Farmer hearing if the defendant could make an initial showing of necessity as to the disputed assets to pay for counsel of his choice.
In this case, the court finds that Patel has met his burden of establishing the requisite threshold of necessity in order to necessitate a Farmer hearing in accordance with due process principles. Patel has submitted numerous affidavits, documents, bills, and checks, detailing his current financial situation and need for the restrained substitute assets in order to pay his counsel. See Dkt. #367, Ex. 1-13. Patel also has submitted his fee agreement with counsel under seal. See Dkt. # 374. The documentation details Patel's monthly living expenses, the amount of money he has had to borrow from family and friends to cover his expenses and pay his legal fees, the delinquent bills he has outstanding that need to be paid, and the extent of his unrestrained property that could be used to cover his living expenses and pay his legal fees. This documentation goes beyond that submitted by the defendants in Varner and Wingerter and provides the court with formal proof of the details of Patel's assets and liabilities, which allows the court to make a meaningful, independent assessment of Patel's current inability to retain counsel without the use of restrained assets. Because the court finds that Patel has met his initial burden of establishing a need for the restrained assets in order to retain counsel of his choice under the Sixth Amendment, due process requires that he be given the opportunity to contest the government's pretrial restraint of those assets in a Farmer hearing. The parties are directed to contact the Clerk to schedule such a hearing.
Accordingly,
The Clerk is directed to send a copy of this Memorandum Opinion and accompanying Order to defendants and all counsel of record.