Igor v. Aslan v. United States

494 F. App'x 649
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 22, 2012
Docket12-1783
StatusUnpublished

This text of 494 F. App'x 649 (Igor v. Aslan v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Igor v. Aslan v. United States, 494 F. App'x 649 (7th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

ORDER

In 2006, Igor Aslan was arrested and charged with three counts of wire fraud in connection with a large-scale internet fraud scheme. He eventually pled guilty to one count of wire fraud pursuant to a plea agreement. The district court sentenced him to sixty-three months’ imprisonment and three years of supervised release. The court also ordered him to pay restitution in the amount of $187,982.48. We affirmed his sentence. United States v. Aslan, 644 F.3d 526 (7th Cir.2011).

The government agents who effected Aslan’s arrest seized from him a number of items which they listed on an official inventory form SD-302. Included on the list were items of little to no monetary value: a baseball hat; a neck scarf; two windbreaker jackets; a brown belt; shoelaces; a bag of tobacco with rolling papers; several identification cards; a checkbook; a notebook; $34.55 in U.S. currency; two Illinois driver’s licenses; a Social Security card; two Western Union cards; a bank check card; a credit card; a black fanny pack containing scraps of paper, receipts, a pen, a jar of LockHeat, a lighter, a ChapStick and two sets of keys; and a cell phone. R. 46, Ex. 2, at 6-7.

In 2007, Aslan began sending letters to public officials and filing motions in his criminal case in efforts to recover his property. Eventually, he also filed a Bivens action against the federal agents. See Aslan v. DHS Agent a/k/a “Maggie” and Unknown FBI Agent, John Doe, No. 10 C 3964 (N.D. Ill. June 25, 2010). Although the government agreed to return the items listed on the FBI inventory, Aslan refused to accept the government’s offer. Aslan’s own inventory of the items seized was vastly different from the list maintained by the FBI, and Aslan would accept only the items that he claims were stolen from him by various government agents. Unlike the FBI’s inventory, Aslan’s list was ever-changing; over time, the list included more items and some of the items purportedly increased in value.

In a January 26, 2007 letter to the U.S. Attorney, Aslan claimed that the two arresting officers 2 had seized from him $1830.75 in cash, a gold Doxa brand watch which Aslan described as “very old,” a cell phone, and an eighteen carat gold ring with a one carat diamond, in addition to many of the items listed in the FBI’s inventory. R. 12, at 9-11. In a May 22, 2008 “Motion for Return of Personal Property” that Aslan filed in his criminal case, he sought the return of $1730 in cash, a gold ring with a one carat diamond, a *651 “very old, very expensive” Swiss watch which was now listed as Zenith brand, a computer and a video camera, again in addition to some of the items listed on the FBI’s inventory. R. 12, Ex. 1, at 2-5. At the bottom of the list was an item labeled “1 leader Jack,” the meaning of which becomes more apparent later.

In February and March 2010, Aslan filed additional motions related to the property, this time in the court of appeals during the pendency of his direct appeal from his criminal conviction. United States v. Aslan, Case No. 08-1486, Dkt. 114,116. The 1 “leader Jack” had become “2 Jack leder.” The gold ring still held a one carat diamond, and the gold watch no longer had a brand but was still described as “very expensive.” There were now two computers missing as a well as a Nikon camera. For the first time, Aslan also claimed that the agents seized from him “1 car, Ford Grand Victoria — $15000.” 3 This time, Aslan helpfully listed the value of the more expensive items. In addition to the $1,730 cash, he assigned a value of $7,000 to the gold ring, $200,000 to the gold watch, $15,000 to the Ford, $3,000 to the two computers, $2,000 to the Nikon camera, and $200 to the “2 leder Jak,” for a grand total he calculated to be $228, 730. 4

By April 30, 2010, the list had grown again. R. 12, Ex. 1, at 7-15. The gold ring now sported four diamonds, as did the gold watch. The computers were now described as laptops. The camera was simply “large.” The Ford “Grand Victoria” remained on the list. The newest items were five gold coins, described as eighteen carat gold and dating from the time of Maria Theresa. 5 Also included were two “Leder jacket new.” The government interpreted this as two leather jackets, an explanation supported by Aslan’s next inventory in the June 25, 2010 Bivens suit Aslan filed against the agents. In that case, Aslan listed the items taken from him on arrest as $1730 in cash, a gold ring with a one carat stone, a gold Zenith watch with a four carat diamond, a car, a large camera, five gold coins, two “recently purchased” laptop computers, and two leather jackets.

None of these actions, motions or letters bore fruit for Aslan and that brings us to the present case. On August 31, 2010, Aslan filed a Rule 41(g) motion under the number of his original criminal case, seeking the return of his property. The court construed the motion as a new civil case. See United States v. Shaaban, 602 F.3d 877, 879 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, — U.S. -, 131 S.Ct. 542, 178 L.Ed.2d 398 (2010) (once a defendant has been convicted, a motion under 41(g) is deemed to initiate a civil equitable proceeding). Attached to Aslan’s complaint as exhibits were various documents he had filed over the years, some containing his ever-growing lists of seized property. No single list was consistent with any other list, but it seemed that Aslan now wanted to recover every item he had ever listed.

*652 The district court ultimately decided to hold an evidentiary hearing to resolve the factual disputes between Aslan and the government agents who arrested him. See Transcript, R. 82. At the hearing, the government presented the testimony of two FBI agents (one arresting agent and the case agent) and the ICE agent who had participated in Aslan’s arrest. All testified consistently that Aslan did not have any jewelry or watches, computers, cameras or gold coins when he was arrested. Nor did the agents seize a car from Aslan at any time. Instead, all of the items taken from Aslan were placed in a brown bag and were inventoried on the form SD-802. The two FBI agents involved in processing Aslan’s property both testified that the SD-302 inventory accurately reflected the contents of the bag. The bag was stored by the FBI and still contained all of the original items listed in the inventory. The ICE agent testified that, for several of her prior meetings with Aslan, she met him at a homeless shelter on the north side of Chicago, a fact that the government argued was inconsistent with ownership of such valuable items.

When confronted at the evidentiary hearing with three versions of property lists that Aslan had submitted in different court proceedings, Aslan conceded that he wrote all of the various lists. In response to a question from the court, he also testified that a list he had submitted to the court in the instant proceeding on November 2, 2011 6 accurately reflected all of the property seized.from him.

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Related

United States v. Shaaban
602 F.3d 877 (Seventh Circuit, 2010)
United States v. Aslan
644 F.3d 526 (Seventh Circuit, 2011)
United States v. Freeman
650 F.3d 673 (Seventh Circuit, 2011)
Sambrano v. Mabus
663 F.3d 879 (Seventh Circuit, 2011)
Stevens v. United States
530 F.3d 502 (Seventh Circuit, 2008)
United States v. Stewart
536 F.3d 714 (Seventh Circuit, 2008)

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494 F. App'x 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/igor-v-aslan-v-united-states-ca7-2012.