Harris v. State

821 So. 2d 177, 2001 WL 1178676
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 5, 2001
Docket1000824
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 821 So. 2d 177 (Harris v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. State, 821 So. 2d 177, 2001 WL 1178676 (Ala. 2001).

Opinion

Georgia Harris, Calvin Binion, and Gregory Binion appeal from the trial court's judgment forfeiting $165,501 in U.S. currency (against Georgia Harris and Gregory Binion) and one 1991 Lexus automobile, VIN# JT8UF11E5M0094283 (against Calvin Binion). As to the currency, Georgia Harris and Gregory Binion argue, and as to the automobile, Calvin Binion argues, that the State failed to prove that the search of their residence was conducted pursuant to a lawful search warrant; that the State destroyed evidence potentially helpful to Georgia Harris and Gregory Binion, by depositing the seized currency into a bank account where it was commingled with other currency; that the forfeitures of the currency and the vehicle violate the Eighth Amendment's prohibition against excessive fines; and that the State failed to prove that the currency or the vehicle was used or intended to be used in violation of the Alabama Uniform Controlled Substances Act.

The State filed its complaint against Georgia Harris, Gregory Binion, and Calvin Binion seeking forfeiture of the currency and the automobile, pursuant to § 20-2-93, Ala. Code 1975. Following oral proceedings, the trial court entered the following judgment:

"Background. This cause is a civil forfeiture action brought by the State of Alabama on behalf of the West Alabama Narcotics Squad (hereinafter WANS) pursuant to § 20-2-93, Code of Alabama, 1975 (as amended 1990), wherein the State seeks condemnation of currency in the amount of $165,501.00 and a 1991 Lexus, VIN JT8UF11E5M0094283. The action was filed by the State on December 17, 1999, following the seizure by WANS of the currency and vehicle during the execution of a document search warrant on December 1, 1999, at a residence at 3116 38th Avenue in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, in Tuscaloosa County. The residence is owned by Claimant Georgia Binion Harris, who, at the time of execution of the search warrant,

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lived in the house with her husband, Reginald Harris and her son, Gregory Roshard Binion (hereinafter Gregory Binion). In Claimants' Answer, Georgia Harris claimed ownership of $120,000.00 and Gregory Binion claimed ownership of $35,501.00.1 Claimant Calvin Binion, the paternal grandfather to Gregory R. Binion, has claimed ownership of the Lexus and is in fact the registered titleholder to the vehicle.

"Factual Findings. In the State's case-in-chief, numerous witnesses testified, including Claimant Calvin Binion, Christopher Witherspoon, who is an associate of Gregory Binion, numerous agents of WANS, a D.E.A. [Drug Enforcement Agency] Agent, the Chief Clerk of the Tuscaloosa County Probate Court, two cash transaction investigators of the Alabama Bureau of Investigation, Robert Skelton, the locksmith who installed a safe at the Harris/Binion home, and several patrol officers of the Tuscaloosa Police Department.

"Claimants Georgia Harris and Calvin Binion testified on their behalf. Claimant Gregory Binion invoked his rights under the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and did not appear at the trial. Reginald Harris also testified on behalf of Claimants.

"Christopher Witherspoon testified that he had received cocaine `on consignment' from Gregory Binion on several occasions between February and October 1999. He had also observed, while at Gregory Binion's residence at 3116 38th Avenue, several individuals visiting Gregory Binion, namely Aundra Hill, a/k/a `Fat Man,' Tyrone Billups, Willie Brown, a/k/a `Little J,' Alexious Holliday, a/k/a, `A-Dell,' and Jonathan Elliott, a/k/a `J-Rock.' During their visits, he observed them taking illegal drugs out of the residence in Wal-Mart shopping bags, and bringing large amounts of cash into the residence in clear plastic bags. This money would be taken into the spare bedroom of the residence, which is the bedroom in which $120,000.00 of the currency was seized from a floor safe, according to the testimony of Robert Skelton and Agent Clint Davis of WANS. The last occasion on which Witherspoon saw currency enter the residence was in October 1999, just two months before the seizure in this case, when it was brought in by Tyrone Billups in a gallon-sized Ziploc [plastic] bag.

"Witherspoon also testified, based on his experience, that it is common for individuals involved in the sale of drugs to stack and bundle currency in a particular manner. He testified that the money is generally stacked into $1,000.00 bundles, which are in turn stacked into $10,000.00 bundles held together by rubber bands. This is the manner in which all of the currency seized in this case had been stacked. Further, Agents Wayne Robertson and Clint Davis of WANS testified based on their experience to this common practice of drug dealers, as did Special Agent Brian Sullivan of the D.E.A.

"Counsel for the claimants pointed out that this witness had numerous convictions for distribution of controlled substances and the witness testified, both on direct and cross-examination, that the State had agreed to recommend probation on a pending marijuana possession

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case, to dismiss a cocaine possession case, and to lower his bond from $100,000.00 to $2,500.00 in consideration of his testimony. The Court finds the testimony of this witness to be credible, however, based upon his convictions, which corroborate his knowledge of practices in the drug trade, and make it reasonable for Gregory Binion to have trusted this witness so as to place him in a position to have observed these incidents. Finally, while on the stand, this witness recited Gregory Binion's telephone number at that residence. . . .

"This was the telephone number that was used by a cooperating individual to contact Gregory Binion in the presence of Special Agent Sullivan in June 1997. At that time, Special Agent Sullivan monitored a telephone call from the individual to Binion, during which Gregory Binion discussed the purchase of three kilograms of cocaine at a price of $22,500.00 per kilogram. Binion stated during that conversation that he had just purchased two kilograms of cocaine in Birmingham, which he needed to sell before he would purchase more from the cooperating individual. Two weeks later, Binion used the cooperating individual's beeper to contact him from a motel in the Atlanta, Georgia, area. Binion stated that he was ready to purchase one kilogram of cocaine. D.E.A. Agents later seized approximately $21,000.00 and a handgun from Gregory Binion. Calvin Binion claimed ownership of these funds. The currency was later condemned based upon that seizure. The cash seized from Gregory Binion in June 1997 was bundled and packaged in exactly the same manner as all of that seized in this action.

"Christopher Witherspoon's association of Gregory Binion with Willie Brown, Aundra Hill, Alexious Holliday, and Jonathan Elliott in the drug trade was further corroborated by evidence of investigations and convictions of these individuals with respect to crimes involving drugs. In June 1998, Gregory Binion was arrested in a vehicle registered to his stepfather. In April 1999 (eight months prior to this seizure), Willie Brown was arrested in the same vehicle, two houses away from Gregory Binion's residence at 3116 38th Avenue. At the time of his arrest, several bags of crack cocaine and a pistol were recovered from that vehicle. Reginald Harris also recognized the `street names' of three of these individuals as friends of Binion's who had been to their home.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
821 So. 2d 177, 2001 WL 1178676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-state-ala-2001.