UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
IN RE: ALL ASSETS HELD IN ACCOUNT JW3083094 IN THE Case No. 25-mc-96-TSC-MJS NAME OF CARINALLI, S.A. AT JEFFERIES, LLC, et al.
REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION
Based on a treaty request from the Oriental Republic of Uruguay, the United States of
America seeks a restraining order to preserve certain U.S.-based assets that may be subject to
forfeiture in criminal proceedings underway in Uruguay. See 28 U.S.C. § 2467(d)(3). Those
Uruguayan proceedings, according to the Government, are premised on allegations that Sara Silvia
Goldring Waisbiot (“Goldring”) engaged in “misappropriation and fraud in her operation of client
accounts and investments through brokerage companies she controlled.” (See ECF No. 1 (“Gov’t
App.”) at 2.) The Government asks the Court to restrain all assets in eleven bank accounts—four
at Morgan Stanley and seven at Jefferies, LLC (“Jefferies”)—in the names of Goldring, her
business partners (and sons), and her businesses. Goldring and others oppose the Government’s
request, at least in part. The matter is before the undersigned on a referral from District Judge
Tanya S. Chutkan. Based on a careful assessment of the governing authorities, the parties’ briefing,
and the arguments of counsel during the recent hearing, the undersigned RECOMMENDS that
the Court GRANT the Government’s application and enter the requested restraining order. 1
1 Because the restraining order requested by the United States would be considered “dispositive” relief, the Court’s ruling takes the form of a report and recommendation to the District Judge. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(b); Local Civil Rule 72.3(a)(2); In re Enf’t of a Restraining Order by the Republic of India (“India”), 2024 WL 5375481, at *1 n.1 (D.D.C. Nov. 18, 2024) (issuing R&R on Section 2467(d)(3) application). FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
According to information provided by Uruguayan authorities, Goldring is the majority
owner and chair of two Uruguayan brokerage firms, United Brokers, S.A. and Custodia de Valores
Mobiliarios, S.A. In 2022, Uruguayan prosecuting authorities initiated an investigation based on
complaints from private investors and the Uruguayan Central Bank alleging that Goldring and
others used those brokerage firms to engage in fraud and related misconduct, resulting in millions
of dollars in alleged losses to her clients.
As part of that investigation, Uruguayan authorities identified several bank accounts at
Morgan Stanley and Jefferies in New York that Goldring beneficially owns and that are under her
control or joint control with her adult sons (Martin Cukier, Daniel Cukier, and Dario Cukier). In
December 2022, a Uruguayan court—Uruguay’s Second Civil Criminal Court of First Instance
Specialized in Organized Crime of Montevideo—acted on applications from the prosecution and
certain victims to issue Decree No. 1368/2022, which found a sufficient basis under Uruguayan
law to order restraint of the accounts and to issue a letter rogatory asking the United States for
assistance. A few days later, the Uruguayan court issued the letter rogatory (Oficio No. 1065/2022)
and formally requested that the United States take appropriate steps to freeze the accounts. These
two “2022 Orders” form the basis for the Government’s application here. 2
The 2022 Orders encompass all assets held in the following accounts (with the named
account holder(s) reflected in parentheses):
1. Jefferies # JW3083094 (Carinalli, S.A.)
2. Jefferies # JW3125077 (Carinalli, S.A).
3. Jefferies # JW3125341 (Comptoir International Corp.)
2 The Court follows the Government’s lead in referring to both Uruguayan court documents collectively. (See Gov’t App. at 3; see also ECF No. 13 (“Hrg. Tr.”) at 64:3–9.) 2 4. Jefferies # JW3070000 (Sara Goldring Waisbiot and Daniel Cukier)
5. Jefferies # JW3078888 (Sara Goldring Waisbiot and Daniel Cukier)
6. Jefferies # JW3078904 (Sara Goldring Waisbiot and Martin Cukier)
7. Jefferies # JW3073491 (United Maritime Capital, LLC)
8. Morgan Stanley # 711-891670 (Sara Goldring Waisbot and Martin Cukier Goldring)
9. Morgan Stanley # 711-891671 (Sara Silvia Cukier Goldring and Dario Cukier Goldring)
10. Morgan Stanley # 741-073746 (United Brokers S.A. c/o M Cukier Goldring, SS Goldring Waisbot, CM)
11. Morgan Stanley # 711-045184 (United Maritime Capital, LLC)
(ECF No. 1-1 at 2, 16–18, 33–34). 3
Uruguay made its mutual legal assistance requests soon after the Uruguayan court issued
the 2022 Orders, but the U.S. Government “determined that it needed additional information” and
“worked closely with Uruguay over the course of an approximately two-year period to obtain the
information needed.” (ECF No. 8-4 ¶ 9, Decl. of Jesse Ormsby, DOJ, Criminal Division, Office
of International Affairs Attorney.) Through that process, Uruguay “provided multiple responses
… supplementing” its requests, and the United States ultimately agreed to furnish assistance. (Id.)
Meanwhile, the Uruguayan court issued a 2023 Order of Formalization “initiating the
formal phase of the criminal proceedings against Goldring and naming her as the ‘alleged author’
of a ‘continuous crime of … [misappropriation].’” (Gov’t App. at 8; see also ECF No. 8-2 at 16.) 4
3 The 2022 Orders identified additional accounts beyond this list, but the Government reports that the Uruguayan authorities no longer seek restraint of those accounts. The Court does not address them further. 4 According to the Government, an Order of Formalization under Uruguayan law “is a judicial decision finding that there are sufficient objective elements of a crime and that the defendant is responsible for the offense.” (Gov’t App. at 8.) Respondents’ description is relatively consistent; they characterize the Order of Formalization as “the Uruguayan equivalent of an indictment[.]” (ECF No. 5 (“Opp’n”) at 15.).
3 According to the Government’s translation, the criminal offense of “misappropriation” is defined
as follows in Article 351 of the Uruguayan Penal Code: “Whoever appropriates, converting it to
their benefit or that of a third party, money or other movable thing, which had been entrusted to
them or delivered by any title that implies an obligation to return it or to make a specific use of it,
will be punished with three months in arrest to four years in prison.” Among other underlying
findings, the statement of facts supporting the Order of Formalization specified that:
• “[T]he defendant appropriated, for the benefit of a third party, assets that had been entrusted to her and delivered to her by many of her clients, and which she had an obligation to return or use for a specific purpose.”
• “The losses suffered were so great that the defendant acknowledged before this Prosecutor’s Office that, in order to prevent a run on the company when customers found out what was happening, she concealed information from them.”
• “[T]he account statements sent by the company to its clients did not reflect the losses or the economic reality of each client, which meant that, as [the clients] were unaware of the serious losses suffered, they were unable to make decisions or give instructions to the broker to prevent the continued flight of their capital in defense of their own interests.”
• “[T]he defendant falsified the account statements she sent to her clients so that they would not notice the considerable losses they were suffering, which also benefitted Ms. GOLDRING and her company because, in this artificial way, the defendant prevented clients from leaving and, in many cases, from withdrawing or attempting to withdraw the balance of the capital they still had with CVM.”
• “Keeping these clients in her portfolio allowed the defendant to continue carrying out investment transactions and, as is logical, in the event of profits, to collect the commissions for her own benefit.”
(ECF No. 8-2 at 3.)
At some point during that process, the Central Bank of Uruguay sent a letter to Jefferies in
New York, to advise about the ongoing criminal investigation. (ECF No. 5-19.) Possibly in
response, Jefferies saw fit to freeze Goldring’s accounts in or about August 2022. (See ECF Nos.
5-17, 5-18.) This development prompted Goldring—years later, in April 2025—to sue Jefferies in
the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, alleging that Jefferies “has frozen
4 [her] accounts for more than two and a half years without any lawful basis” and seeking injunctive
relief directing Jefferies to unfreeze the accounts. (See Goldring Waisbiot v. Jefferies, LLC, No.
25-cv-3606-JSR, Compl. at 1 (S.D.N.Y., filed Apr. 30, 2025).) That case continues, but the
Southern District of New York recently stayed its proceedings pending this Court’s resolution of
the Government’s application to restrain the same contested assets under 28 U.S.C. § 2467(d)(3).
In this Court, the Government filed its application on June 7, 2025. (See Gov’t App.)
Although proceedings of this sort under Section 2467(d)(3) frequently play out on an ex parte
basis (and properly so), the Government here provided notice of its application to Goldring. And
in response, Goldring and others—Martin Cukier Goldring, Daniel Cukier Goldring, Carinalli
Corp., Comptoir International Corp., and United Maritime Capital, LLC (together with Goldring,
“Respondents”)—appeared to oppose the Government’s application in part. (ECF No. 5
(“Opp’n”).) After the Government filed its reply (ECF No. 8 (“Reply”)), the Court convened a
hearing on September 12, 2025 (see ECF No. 13 (“Hrg. Tr.”)). This ruling now follows.
STATUTORY AND LEGAL FRAMEWORK
The United States seeks relief pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2467(d)(3), which empowers federal
courts to issue restraining orders “to preserve the availability of property subject to civil or criminal
forfeiture under foreign law … at any time before or after the initiation of forfeiture proceedings
by a foreign nation.” Id. § 2467(d)(3)(A)(i). Any restraining order must be issued “consistent with
subparagraphs (A), (C), and (E) of subparagraph [(d)](1) and the procedural due process
protections for a restraining order under [18 U.S.C. § 983(j)].” Id. § 2467(d)(3)(A)(ii)(I). For these
purposes, courts: (i) “may rely on information set forth in an affidavit describing the nature of the
proceeding or investigation underway in the foreign country, and setting forth a reasonable basis
to believe that the property to be restrained will be named in a judgment of forfeiture at the
5 conclusion of such proceeding”; or (ii) “may 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 pursuant to subsection (b)(2).” Id. § 2467(d)(3)(B); see id. § 2467(b)(2).
Broken out in elemental terms, then, the controlling statute requires the Government to
demonstrate that five criteria are satisfied to secure a restraining order:
(1) the foreign nation and the United States must be parties to a “treaty or other formal international agreement in effect providing for mutual forfeiture assistance,” 28 U.S.C. § 2467(a)(1) (defining “foreign nation”);
(2) the request must be supported by either (i) a satisfactory evidentiary affidavit or (ii) an appropriate certification from the Attorney General, id. § 2467(d)(3)(B);
(3) the foreign order must have been issued in a manner “consistent with the requirements of due process,” id. § 2467(d)(1)(A) & (d)(3)(A)(ii)(I);
(4) the foreign court must have had “subject-matter jurisdiction,” id. § 2467(d)(1)(C) & (d)(3)(A)(ii)(I); and
(5) the foreign order must not have been obtained “by fraud,” id. § 2467(d)(1)(E) & (d)(3)(A)(ii)(I).
India, 2024 WL 5375481, at *2 (D.D.C. Nov. 18, 2024); see also In re Bank of Am. Account No.
XXXXXX, 2020 WL 11036329, at *2 (D.D.C. Dec. 1, 2020) (enumerating these same five factors).
DISCUSSION
The Court begins in Section I by evaluating the Government’s application against the five
core criteria for relief under the statute. All are straightforwardly met here. Respondents concede
as much. Instead, Respondents contest the Government’s application for a restraining order on
other grounds, which the Court addresses in Section II below.
I. The Core Statutory Criteria Under Section 2467(d)(3) Are Satisfied
First, the United States and Uruguay are parties to a Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty. See
Treaty Between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the
6 Oriental Republic of Uruguay on Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters, U.S.-Uru., May
6, 1991, S. TREATY DOC. NO. 102-19 (1991). The treaty obligates the United States to assist
Uruguay in forfeiture-related matters, among others. See id. at Art. 2 and Art. 22 § 2. 5 Following
the lead of prior rulings from this District, “[t]he Court defers to the Executive’s reasonable
conclusion that the treat[y] ha[s] been properly invoked in this instance.” Bank of Am., 2020 WL
11036329, at *3 (citing In re Restraint of All Assets Contained or Formerly Contained in Certain
Inv. Accts. at UBS Fin. Servs., Inc., 860 F. Supp. 2d 32, 41 (D.D.C. 2012)).
Second, the U.S. Attorney General—acting through her appropriate designee, the Chief of
the Money Laundering and Asset Recovery Section of the U.S. Department of Justice—has
certified that enforcement of the underlying restraining orders from Uruguay is “in the interest of
justice.” (See ECF No. 1-1.) Under the statute, that determination is “final” and “not subject to …
judicial review.” 28 U.S.C. § 2467(b)(2); see also UBS Fin. Servs., 860 F. Supp. 2d at 40
(“Congress left it to the Attorney General to determine whether a request should be certified and
presented to the district court, and that determination is not subject to judicial review.”).
Third, the Government has shown that the 2022 Orders were issued in keeping with
appropriate due-process safeguards. On this point, the Court starts from “the premise that the
foreign proceedings or procedures are in fact compatible with due process.” UBS Fin. Servs., 860
F. Supp. 2d at 42. After all, a “district court should not lightly sit in judgment of the legal system
of a foreign sovereign,” as doing so “would run the risk of entangling the federal courts in matters
of foreign affairs.” Id. And against that presumptive backdrop, the Government explains that, in
5 As stated in Article 2 of the treaty, the U.S. and Uruguay have to mutually assist on matters concerning “[f]orfeiture, transfer of forfeited assets, as well as matters involving restitution and the collection of fines imposed as sentences in criminal prosecutions[.]” Relatedly, Section 2 of Article 22 reads: “The Parties shall assist each other as permitted by their respective laws in proceedings relating to forfeiture, restitution to the victims of crime, or the collection of fines imposed as a sentence in criminal prosecutions.” 7 keeping with the Criminal Penal Procedure of Uruguay: (1) the 2022 Orders were issued by a
neutral judicial officer who found a sufficient basis to order “precautionary measures” in the form
of a restraint on Goldring’s assets; (2) Goldring received notice of the 2022 Orders; (3) Goldring
had the right to appeal the Uruguayan orders imposing the restraint(s); and (4) the Uruguayan court
held a hearing to formalize the criminal proceedings against Goldring, in connection with which
it considered Goldring’s opposition. (See Gov’t App. at 12–15.) In short, as part of the underlying
Uruguayan proceedings, Goldring received notice and an opportunity to be heard on the proposed
restraints. (Id. at 8 (“According to Uruguayan authorities, Goldring … has been informed of the
allegations against her and has participated in the criminal proceedings” and her “rights include
the right to challenge the Uruguayan Court’s orders to restrain accounts in the United States.”).)
These procedures are consistent with traditional American notions of due process. Gang Luan v.
United States, 722 F.3d 388, 399 (D.C. Cir. 2013) (finding due process satisfied where the
defendant had an opportunity to challenge the restraint at a hearing in Hong Kong, among other
considerations); see also India, 2024 WL 5375481, at *3 (similar); Bank of Am., 2020 WL
11036329, at *4 (finding sufficient due process protections based on procedures arguably less
robust than here—i.e., where French order was issued ex parte, without notice and an opportunity
to appear, but allowed for later appeal); UBS Fin. Servs., 860 F. Supp. 2d at 42–43 (similar).
Fourth, as to subject-matter jurisdiction, “[i]t is generally presumed that foreign courts
have subject matter jurisdiction over the disputes they adjudicate.” Bank of Am., 2020 WL
11036329, at *4 (citing G. Geerlings Exp. B.V. v. Van Hoekelen Greenhouses, Inc., 2016 WL
6834033, at *9 (M.D. Pa. Nov. 21, 2016)). The Court sees no basis to depart from that sensible
proposition here. The 2022 Orders were issued by the Court of First Instance in Criminal Matters,
Specialized in Organized Crime of 2nd Term of the City of Montevideo, Oriental Republic of
8 Uruguay. (ECF No. 1-1 at 2, 15, 32.) As the Government notes, the Uruguayan court explains in
its orders—which the Attorney General’s designee certified—that it was the proper issuing
authority. (Id. at 37–38, 51–52; Gov’t App. at 15.)
And fifth, the Court does not see any basis to suspect that the 2022 Orders were obtained
through any sort of fraud on the part of the Uruguayan authorities. To the contrary, the Court’s
review of the Uruguayan order and the accompanying letter rogatory amply reinforces that the
Uruguayan proceedings were consistent with due process and regularity for the reasons explained.
There is no indication of anything approaching fraud. See Bank of Am., 2020 WL 11036329, at *4
(observing that “fraudulent judicial actions are incompatible with due process”).
* * *
As indicated, Respondents do not contest any of these criteria, certainly not in their written
briefing. Respondents’ counsel confirmed as much during the hearing. (Hrg. Tr. 28:7–29:10.) At
most, counsel raised for the first time at the hearing a new argument bearing indirectly on the first,
treaty-focused factor: although Respondents recognize that the U.S. and Uruguay are parties to a
treaty providing for mutual legal assistance, Respondents suggest the 2022 Orders fall beyond the
reach of that treaty because they are functionally equivalent to a restitution order rather than a
forfeiture order. (Id. 29:16–38:32.) For several reasons, the Court rejects this argument.
For starters, Respondents failed to raise it in their written brief. Absent exceptional
circumstances, “arguments raised for the first time at oral argument are forfeited.” U.S. ex rel.
Davis v. Dist. of Columbia, 793 F.3d 120, 127 (D.C. Cir. 2015); see Cent. Am. Bank for Econ.
Integration v. Mossi, 2025 WL 2732731, at *12 (D.D.C. Sept. 25, 2025) (refusing to consider
argument on this basis); Silver v. Internal Rev. Serv., 531 F. Supp. 3d 346, 360 n.5 (D.D.C. 2021)
(same). Respondents point to no exceptional circumstances here. During the hearing, counsel tried
9 to explain the briefing omission by claiming that the argument only became apparent after counsel
reviewed an English translation of one of the Uruguayan court documents that was filed with the
Government’s reply. But even taken at face value, that explanation comes up short. The factual
background of Respondents’ brief includes several sections editorializing the DOJ’s back and forth
with Uruguay on the 2022 Orders in the lead-up to this action; and at one point, Respondents cite
an email message from the DOJ to the Uruguayan authorities—an email message Respondents
include as an exhibit to their brief, no less—stating that “U.S. law does not allow assistance for
‘restraint orders related to restitution/compensation’ of victims, only for criminal forfeiture.”
(Opp’n at 23 (citing ECF No. 5-12 at 4).) 6 In other words, the factual predicate for this point—
whether the underlying foreign orders were aimed at restitution or forfeiture—was plainly apparent
to Respondents when they filed their brief, but they chose not to press any legal argument based
on it. The Court therefore deems the argument forfeited and declines to consider it.
But even on its merits, Respondents’ newfound argument would miss the mark. After all,
the 2022 Orders were certified by the Attorney General’s designee pursuant to Section 2467(b)(2),
and that certification “shall be final and not subject to … judicial review.” 28 U.S.C. § 2467(b)(2).
Nothing in the statute “authorizes or requires this Court to pierce the veil of authority behind a
request for legal assistance.” UBS Fin. Servs, 860 F. Supp. 2d at 40. “Instead, consistent with the
general preference to leave matters of foreign affairs in the hands of the Executive, Congress left
it to the Attorney General to determine whether a request should be certified and presented to the
district court[.]” Id. As the Second Circuit recently recognized, “Section 2467 is unique in its role
as a discretionary policy tool of international relations that courts apply within the otherwise
routinized realm of asset forfeiture.” In re Enf’t Of Philippine Forfeiture Judgment Against All
6 Briefing citations are to the page numbers assigned by the Court’s electronic case-filing system. 10 Assets Of Arelma, S.A. (“Arelma”), --- F.4th ----, 2025 WL 2383067, at *4, 8 (2d Cir. Aug. 18,
2025) (emphasis added). The Court believes these “unique” policy implications fortify the reasons
it cannot second-guess the Attorney General’s determination that the underlying Uruguayan orders
are the sort of foreign orders that are enforceable under Section 2467, assuming the other statutory
criteria are met. This takeaway seems particularly appropriate against Respondents’ specific
theory, considering that their own exhibits reflect that DOJ was keenly focused on whether the
underlying Uruguayan orders constituted forfeiture orders (as opposed to restitution orders) for
purposes of coverage under the treaty and statutory scheme. (See ECF No. 5-12 (email from DOJ
to Uruguayan authorities asking whether the restraint aimed “to secure forfeiture resulting from a
future criminal conviction” or “restitution or compensation to the victims”).)
Accordingly, Respondents’ restitution-versus-forfeiture argument does not provide a basis
to deny the Government’s requested restraining order.
II. Respondents’ Other Arguments Against Enforcement Are Unavailing
Concluding that the five “core criteria” under Section 2467 are satisfied as to the 2022
Orders, the Court next takes up Respondents’ various arguments against relief. Specifically, they
argue that: (1) the Government cannot establish “dual forfeitability”; (2) the Government cannot
establish what Respondents call “dual restrainability”; and (3) the Court should reject any
restraining order on constitutional grounds on the theory that the Government improperly directed
Jefferies to freeze the accounts prior to seeking judicial relief, which Respondents insist was a
violation of their Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights. None of these arguments prevails.
Before explaining why, the Court pauses to emphasize the limited scope of Respondents’
opposition. In their briefing, Respondents “take no position” on the accounts at Morgan Stanley,
and during the hearing, Respondents’ counsel directly confirmed that they oppose the
11 Government’s application only as to certain accounts at Jefferies (the same group of accounts at
issue in the S.D.N.Y. lawsuit): Accounts 1, 2, 3, 6, and 7 in the list above. Accordingly, even if
the Court were to agree with Respondents on any of their arguments against relief—and it does
not—the Court would still deem it appropriate to issue a restraining order as to the remaining,
unchallenged accounts: Accounts 4, 5, 8, 9, 10, and 11 in the list above. See supra pp. 2–3.
With that context, the Court turns to Respondents’ tripartite arguments against relief as to
the contested accounts at Jefferies: Accounts 1, 2, 3, 6, and 7.
A. Dual Forfeitability
First up, Respondents argue that to preserve assets through a restraining order under
Section 2467(d)(3), the Government must establish “dual forfeitability”—meaning the underlying
violation(s) of foreign law not only gives rise to forfeiture under Uruguayan law, but also could
qualify for forfeiture under U.S. law if the offense(s) were committed in the United States. 7
Respondents insist that the Government fails to make that showing. For its part, the Government
disputes that dual forfeitability is a necessary element at this stage, but it says that it meets that
showing regardless. The Government has the better of these arguments.
1. Dual Forfeitability Under Section 2467(d)(3) Generally
As a starting point, the Court considers whether a finding of dual forfeitability is even
required for purposes of issuing an interim restraining order to preserve property under Section
2467(d)(3). At least two judges in this District have ruled that it is not. See Bank of Am., 2020 WL
11036329, at *2 (Faruqui, M.J.); In re Enf’t of Restraining Order from Honduras (“Honduras”),
No. 21-mc-40-CJN, ECF No. 24, Order at 4–5 (D.D.C. June 1, 2023) (Nichols, J.) (“Dual
forfeitability applies when the Government seeks to enforce a final order of forfeiture, not when
7 Respondents do not dispute there is a basis for forfeiture here under Uruguayan law. (Hrg. Tr. 46:2–11.) 12 (as here) the Government seeks to enforce a restraining order pending final forfeiture
proceedings.”) (emphasis in original). And the undersigned previously recognized that possibility
but ultimately found it unnecessary to adopt a firm view. See India, 2024 WL 5375481, at *4 n.4
(Sharbaugh, M.J.). On further reflection, the undersigned finds persuasive the straightforward
textual analysis outlined by Magistrate Judge Faruqui and Judge Nichols in the above-cited cases.
As they explain, the concept of dual forfeitability derives from the statute’s definition of “forfeiture
or confiscation judgment” in subsection (a)(2)(A). See 28 U.S.C. § 2467(a)(2)(A) (emphasis
added). So dual forfeitability applies to the enforcement of a judgment based on the statutory
requirements found in subsection (d)(1). By contrast, the requirements for issuance of a restraining
order to preserve property (as here) are found in subsection (d)(3), which makes no mention of the
term “judgment.” On that basis, those rulings explained that while the Government would certainly
“have to prove dual forfeitability when it subsequently applies to enforce a foreign final judgment,”
the issue “has no bearing at [the] initial stage” of a restraining order. Bank of Am., 2020 WL
11036329, at *2 & n.3 (citing Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain, 542 U.S. 692, 711 n.9 (2004) for the
proposition that “when the legislature uses certain language in one part of the statute and different
language in another, the court assumes different meanings were intended”); Honduras, 21-mc-40,
ECF No. 24 at 4–5 (similar); see also UBS Fin. Servs., 860 F. Supp. 2d at 41 (observing that §
2467(d)(3) “does not expressly incorporate the dual forfeiture requirement that applies to final
orders of forfeiture,” but proceeding to find it satisfied regardless).
Against these cases, Respondents invoke the D.C. Circuit’s decision in Luan, 722 F.3d 388.
In Luan, the Circuit affirmed the entry of a restraining order under Section 2467(d)(3) after
considering and rejecting several arguments as to why the underlying foreign forfeiture order was
allegedly issued without due process. See id. at 393–400. The issue of “dual forfeitability” at the
13 restraining order stage, however, was not squarely presented to—much less analyzed in any way
by—the Circuit. In the course of summarizing the statutory scheme, however, the Circuit did state
that a court’s “authorization” to issue a restraining order to preserve property under Section
2467(d)(3) “applies” when “the property to be restrained represents the suspected proceeds of a
‘violation of foreign law that would constitute a violation or an offense for which property could
be forfeited under Federal law if the offense were committed in the United States.’” Id. at 392
(quoting 28 U.S.C. § 2467(a)(2)(A)). In other words, the Circuit’s ruling can reasonably be read
to suggest—at least in passing—that dual forfeitability was a relevant consideration under Section
2467 even at the restraining order stage. But beyond that reference, the Circuit only concluded
there was “no dispute” that such a showing was satisfied in that case. Id. at 392 & n.3. The Circuit
simply followed the parties’ lead and treated the criterion as a given. Given that full context, the
undersigned is dubious that the Circuit’s passing mention of this point was meant to solidify dual
forfeitability as a necessary and indispensable requirement under subsection (d)(3). And if writing
on a blank slate, the undersigned would follow the lead of Magistrate Judge Faruqui and Judge
Nichols and hold that no dual forfeitability showing is required here. But the Court must apply the
law as stated by the D.C. Circuit—certainly in a published opinion, as is true here. 8
The Court therefore proceeds to assess the Government’s alternative argument that, even
if dual forfeitability is a required showing at this stage, it is satisfied here.
2. Dual Forfeitability On These Facts
The Government posits that if the offense conduct underlying the Uruguayan criminal
proceedings were committed in the United States, it would support criminal charges under U.S.
federal law pursuant to various statutes giving rise to forfeiture, including 18 U.S.C. § 1343 (wire
8 The Court hopes that the D.C. Circuit will clarify this issue one way or another in a future case. 14 fraud), 18 U.S.C. § 1348 (securities fraud), and 18 U.S.C. § 2314 (interstate transportation of stolen
property). (Gov’t App. at 17–18; Reply at 6–10.) Respondents take a different tack. They say the
Court’s inquiry should focus on the specific U.S. analog to the specific foreign offense(s) officially
charged, rather than the substance of the underlying offense conduct. (Opp’n at 25–27.) And
through that lens, Respondents insist that because Goldring was only charged with
“misappropriation” in the Order of Formalization issued in Uruguayan court—“and never with
fraud of any kind” (id. at 26)—the Government cannot rely on fraud-based U.S. criminal analogs
for purposes of a dual forfeitability showing. Beyond that conceptual defense, though,
Respondents do not contest that the underlying conduct charged in Uruguay could support a charge
for wire fraud or securities fraud under U.S. law, though they do contest the Government’s
invocation of a potential U.S. charge for interstate transportation of stolen property on a factual
basis—emphasizing that the Order of Formalization does not even allege that any funds crossed
state (or international) borders after they were allegedly misappropriated.
Respondents get the relevant legal focus wrong. The Court’s inquiry is not limited to some
sort of mechanistic comparison of the actual criminal offense charged in the foreign jurisdiction
to the closest-fit analog of the foreign offense under U.S. federal criminal law (assuming one even
exists). For purposes of this analysis, the Court looks to the underlying acts—i.e., the substance of
the offense conduct giving rise to the foreign criminal proceedings, and not merely the formal
offense(s) the foreign jurisdiction opted to charge. See Bank of Am., 2020 WL 11036329, at *2 n.2
(“Dual forfeitability requires that the foreign criminal conduct supporting the forfeiture request
also give rise to forfeiture had it been committed in the United States.”) (emphasis added); see also
In re Any & all funds or other assets in Brown Bros. Harriman & Co. Acct. No. 8870792 in name
of Tiger Eye Invs., Ltd., 601 F. Supp. 2d 252, 255 (D.D.C. 2009) (describing dual forfeitability as
15 focused on “the acts forming the basis for the foreign judgment”) (emphasis added), aff’d, 613
F.3d 1122 (D.C. Cir. 2010). And for good reason. After all, criminal laws can vary widely from
country to country, and there are surely criminal offenses that exist outside the United States that
do not have a direct mirror offense under U.S. criminal law, even though the underlying offense
conduct—charged differently—might. More, as the Government rightly notes (see Reply at 6; Hrg.
Tr. at 14:10–22), the Uruguayan proceedings remain ongoing, so the Uruguayan prosecuting
authorities may still be permitted to formally charge other offenses prior to final judgment. This
practical consideration further supports a focus on the underlying acts underpinning the foreign
proceedings, rather than considering only the formal charge(s) alone. And more still, the Court
returns to the Second Circuit’s apt characterization of Section 2467 as a “discretionary policy tool
of international relations[,]” Arelma, 2025 WL 2383067, at *4, and that understanding counsels
for a more flexible and practical approach to this issue than the rigid proposal urged by
Respondents.
Thus, in evaluating dual forfeitability, the Court asks whether the alleged offense
conduct—the underlying acts and omissions themselves—giving rise to the criminal charges in
Uruguay would support any criminal charge(s) under U.S. federal law that would trigger forfeiture,
without strictly focusing on the limited contours of the “Misappropriation” offense under
Uruguayan law that is formally charged in the Order of Formalization. And framed accordingly,
the straightforward answer to that question is an affirmative one.
As set forth in the Order of Formalization, the Uruguayan criminal proceedings against
Goldring are premised on factual findings that she “concealed information” from her customers,
including through “falsified … account statements … so that they would not notice the
considerable losses they were suffering,” which benefited Goldring and her brokerages, both
16 financially and otherwise. (ECF No. 8-2 at 3; id. at 5 (finding that Goldring personally “instructed
the employees to … send clients account statements that did not reflect the actual losses they had
suffered, thus concealing the information from them”).) Insofar as those “falsified” statements
were sent electronically, Goldring’s alleged actions could support a charge for wire fraud under
U.S. law. See 18 U.S.C. § 1343. Similarly, Goldring’s alleged falsification of customer accounts
statements in connection with the purchase or sale of regulated securities could likewise support a
charge of securities fraud under U.S. law. See 18 U.S.C. § 1348. (See Gov’t App. at 17–18; Reply
at 6–9.) And both wire fraud and securities fraud give rise to forfeiture under U.S. law. See 18
U.S.C. § 981(a)(1)(C). Again, Respondents do not contest these takeaways. The simply argue that
the Court cannot consider them because Goldring is not formally charged with any fraud offense
under Uruguayan law. But that argument rests on a flawed premise for the reasons explained.
In sum, assuming the Government needs to demonstrate dual forfeitability for purposes of
obtaining a restraining order under Section 2467(d)(3), the Court concludes it has done so here. 9
B. Dual “Restrainability”
Next, Respondents argue that the Government’s requested restraining order cannot issue
because it fails to show that “the assets it seeks to restrain pursuant to the foreign court order are
traceable proceeds of that offense.” (Opp’n at 27–28 (emphasis in original).) In other words,
Respondents insist the Government must show that the proceeds of the Uruguayan criminal offense
with which Goldring is charged are traceable to the accounts the Government seeks to restrain.
They ground this argument in the general principle embodied in U.S. forfeiture law that, at
least in many circumstances “the government may only restrain assets it can demonstrate have a
9 Because the Court agrees that the underlying offense conduct could support charges for wire fraud and securities fraud under U.S. law, it does not reach the Government’s separate theory that the alleged acts could give rise to a U.S. charge for interstate transportation of stolen property under 18 U.S.C. § 2314. 17 nexus to the alleged or suspected offenses.” (Id. at 28 (“While other countries may have forfeiture
regimes that permit their governments to restrain assets that belong to a person charged with … a
crime, regardless of whether or not those assets have any connection to that crime, the United
States holds the presumption of innocence in greater regard.”) (citing Kaley v. United States, 571
U.S. 320, 323–24 (2014); Fed. R. Crim. P. 32.2(b)(1)(A)).) But as the Government correctly
responds (see Reply at 12–13), Section 2467(d)(3) contemplates that any property to be preserved
through a restraining order be “subject to civil or criminal forfeiture under foreign law.” So the
salient question, if any, would be whether Uruguayan law permits forfeiture absent tracing, and
Respondents present no argument—let alone authority—to suggest that it does not. And frankly,
the Court does not even need to probe that question because the Government’s application is
accompanied by an Attorney General certification. See 28 U.S.C. § 2467(d)(3)(B) (providing that
courts can rely on either (i) an affidavit “setting forth a reasonable basis to believe that the property
to be restrained will be named in a judgment of forfeiture at the conclusion of [the foreign]
proceeding” or (ii) a restraining order issued by the foreign country “certified by the Attorney
General pursuant to subsection (b)(2)”). But even still, the Government’s briefing explains that
Uruguayan law does, indeed, authorize the pretrial restraint of “any assets belonging to the
accused, including untainted substitute assets,” i.e., without specific tracing. (Reply at 13.) 10
Incidentally, another court in this District recently rejected a similar traceability argument
in denying a motion to dissolve a Section 2467(d)(3) restraining order. See In re Enf’t of a
10 Even if the Court were required to assess traceability under U.S. law, the Government notes that Congress can expressly authorize the pretrial restraint of property that lacks a nexus to the underlying criminal offense. (Reply at 12 (citing United States v. Chamberlain, 688 F.3d 290, 297 (4th Cir. 2017), for the point that Congress can “permit the government to restrain both tainted and untainted assets before trial,” where it “clearly provided for such authority”).) And since Section 2467(d)(3) authorizes the pretrial restraint of property subject to forfeiture “under foreign law,” and since some foreign laws authorize pretrial restraint of untainted assets, the Government says that Section 2467(d)(3) is such an authorization. (See id.) That strikes the Court as a sensible proposition, but given the analysis above, the Court need not adopt it here.
18 Restraining Order Against Five Parcels of Real Property, No. 24-mc-83, ECF No. 18, Mem. Op.
& Order at 26–27 (D.D.C. Sept. 26, 2025). In that case, Judge Sullivan considered an argument—
framed through a due-process lens—that courts cannot rely on Section 2467(d)(3) to impose
“restraints of property that are not directly tied or traced to the alleged unlawful activity.” Id. at
26. Recognizing that such restraints can be “impermissible under the American system,” Judge
Sullivan identified no authority for the proposition that “U.S. courts cannot enforce restraining
orders from other countries that permit such restraints.” See id. at 26–27. So, too, here.
In sum, Respondents’ “dual restrainability” argument is unavailing. 11
C. Respondents’ Constitutional And Exclusionary Arguments
As a final line of defense, Respondents implore the Court to deny the requested restraining
order on the attenuated theory that the Government violated Goldring’s constitutional rights under
the Fourth and Fifth Amendments. As Respondents tell it, they have evidence that “conclusively
establishes” that the Government “coerc[ed] Jefferies into serving as an arm of the Government
for the purpose of unlawfully freezing the Goldring Accounts ... without any judicial, statutory, or
other authority[.]” (Opp’n at 30–31.) On that premise, Respondents suggests the Court should
apply something akin to the exclusionary doctrine to bar the Government from restraining the
subject assets as the “fruit of the poisonous tree.” In response, the Government strongly contests
11 Finally, Respondents’ reliance on Luan here is misplaced. They hook onto a sentence fragment from the D.C. Circuit’s decision to suggest that U.S. courts can only restrain “the suspected proceeds” of a foreign criminal offense. (Opp’n at 27 (citing Luan, 722 F.3d at 392)). Whatever the Circuit may have meant by that passing reference, Respondents’ effort to treat it as an additional “traceability” requirement premised on U.S. forfeiture law simply reaches too far. After all, and as the Government points out, (see Reply at 11–12), Luan went on to affirm the district court’s issuance of an in personam order restraining all property up to a specific value, without regard to its nexus to the criminal offenses. Luan, 722 F.3d at 390 (“[T]he district court restrained all assets owned or controlled by Luan (and his Hong Kong co-defendants) located in the United States up to $23.7 million, until the conclusion of the Hong Kong proceedings.”). In other words, the Circuit certainly did not limit the permissible scope of a restraining order under Section 2467(d)(3) based on traceability to specific assets. 19 Respondents’ accusation and contends, in any case, that their request to “immunize the subject
assets from restraint” on this theory is without basis. The Court agrees with the Government.
For starters, consider the so-called “conclusive[]” evidence behind Respondents’ theory.
They point to a January 2025 email from Jefferies’ counsel to Respondents’ counsel, ostensibly
relating to the possibility of unfreezing Goldring’s accounts at Jefferies, which states that Jefferies
was “waiting for clearance from the DOJ and SEC” to do so. (Opp’n at 23, 31 (citing ECF No. 5-
9).) From this, Respondents extrapolate that Jefferies froze the accounts in the first place—or at
least kept them frozen for some period—at the direction of the United States government. But as
the Government highlights in response, Jefferies’ counsel subsequently sent an email to
Respondents’ counsel disclaiming that theory—correcting any misunderstanding that “the United
States government requested that Jefferies freeze Ms. Goldring’s accounts” and confirming that
this “is not what occurred.” (Reply at 15–16 (citing Goldring Waisbiot v. Jefferies, LLC, No. 25-
cv-3606-JSR (S.D.N.Y.), ECF No. 21-1).) In short, the evidence that Respondents proffer to show
the Government’s supposed directive falls far afield from the sort of smoking-gun-evidence that
they portrayed it to be. Thus, whatever rationale might have motivated Jefferies to freeze
Goldring’s accounts—and that issue is decidedly not before this Court, especially since Jefferies
is not a party to these proceedings and is actively defending against Goldring’s lawsuit in the
Southern District of New York challenging those actions—Respondents have failed to show that
the Government was behind that decision, whether directly, indirectly, or otherwise. And because
Respondents must demonstrate governmental action to support their claimed constitutional
violations, their final defensive theory falters at the starting line.
Moreover, even assuming arguendo that Goldring could establish a constitutional violation
in connection with Jefferies’ actions in freezing her accounts, the Court disagrees that such a
20 finding would not necessarily preclude the restraining order that the Government seeks. For one
thing, the improper seizure of property does not automatically bar forfeiture of that the property.
See, e.g., United States v. Six Hundred Thirty-Nine Thousand Five Hundred & Fifty-Eight Dollars
($639,558) In U.S. Currency, 955 F.2d 712, 715 n.5 (D.C. Cir. 1992) (“[T]he fact that the
defendant property had been seized after an illegal search does not ‘immunize’ it from forfeiture,
any more than a defendant illegally arrested is immunized from prosecution.”); see also United
States v. Cosme, 796 F.3d 226, 236 (2d Cir. 2015) (“It is settled law that even when the initial
seizure is found to be illegal, the seized property can still be forfeited.”) (cleaned up). For another
thing, the exclusionary rule is a remedy available “in a criminal proceeding against the victim of
the illegal search and seizure,” and thus “confined to situations where the Government seeks to
use such evidence at trial to incriminate the victim of the unlawful search.” United States v. Patel,
2024 WL 1932871, at *4 (D.D.C. May 1, 2024) (emphasis in original) (citations and quotations
omitted). This is not such a circumstance. And Respondents certainly do not cite to any caselaw
that has imposed—or even considered—taking such a step in this sort of posture.
Simply put, Respondents’ insistence that the Court should decline to enforce the
Uruguayan restraining orders on this basis fails.
21 CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATION
Because the Government has satisfied all the core criteria for relief under 28 U.S.C.
§ 2467(d)(3)(A), and because Respondents’ other arguments against the issuance of the requested
restraining order are without basis, the undersigned RECOMMENDS that the Court GRANT the
United States’ application and enter the requested restraining order.
Dated: October 6, 2025 _____________________________ MATTHEW J. SHARBAUGH United States Magistrate Judge
22 * * *
The Court hereby advises that, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(C) and LCvR 72.3(b),
any party who objects to a report and recommendation must file a written objection within fourteen
(14) days of the party’s receipt of the report and recommendation. The written objections must
specifically identify the portion of the report or recommendation to which objection is made and
the basis for such objections. Failure to file timely objections to the findings and recommendations
set forth in this report may waive that party’s right of appeal from an order of the District Court
that adopts such findings and recommendation. See Thomas v. Arn, 474 U.S. 140 (1985).