Rae Young Chung v. State of Mississippi, ex rel. Brandon Police Department

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedOctober 8, 2024
Docket2023-CA-00362-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Rae Young Chung v. State of Mississippi, ex rel. Brandon Police Department (Rae Young Chung v. State of Mississippi, ex rel. Brandon Police Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rae Young Chung v. State of Mississippi, ex rel. Brandon Police Department, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2023-CA-00362-COA

RAE YOUNG CHUNG APPELLANT

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, EX REL. BRANDON APPELLEE POLICE DEPARTMENT

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/23/2023 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. DEWEY KEY ARTHUR COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: RANKIN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: STEVEN CRAIG PANTER ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: CHRISTOPHER TODD McALPINE MICHAEL SHELTON SMITH II NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - OTHER DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND RENDERED - 10/08/2024 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

BEFORE WESTBROOKS, P.J., McDONALD AND McCARTY, JJ.

WESTBROOKS, P.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Rae Young Chung was driving his commercial tractor and trailer on Interstate 20

when he was pulled over by an officer with the Brandon Police Department. During the stop,

the officer found no drugs (or vestiges of drugs), but he found $225,000 in a bag in his truck.

The money was seized, and the State initiated a forfeiture action in the Rankin County Circuit

Court. After a bench trial, the circuit court determined that the money was forfeitable

pursuant to Mississippi Code Annotated section 41-29-153 (Supp. 2017). Aggrieved, Chung

appeals, arguing that the State did not sufficiently prove that the money seized from him was

subject to forfeiture under the applicable statutes. Finding error, we reverse and render the

circuit court’s judgment. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. On September 23, 2020, Rae Young Chung was traveling westbound on Interstate 20

in his commercial truck and trailer. He was pulled over by Officer Joseph French,1 a

narcotics officer with the Brandon Police Department, for following other vehicles too

closely and for traveling 74 miles per hour (mph) in a 70 mph zone.

¶3. Chung was seventy years old at the time of the stop. He is a native of South Korea,

has an elementary school education, and can speak only limited English. A review of the

dash-camera video of the stop reveals that Chung’s English was underdeveloped, and there

was a clear language barrier between Officer French and Chung. Nevertheless, Officer

French did not contact an interpreter or use a translation device. He first informed Chung

of the reason for the stop. He inquired about the reason for his travels, ownership of the

truck, and his criminal and driving history. Officer French also requested to see Chung’s

driver’s license, bills of lading, and logbooks. Before heading back to his patrol vehicle,

Officer French assured Chung that he would only be receiving a warning citation. He

testified that during this time, he ran Chung’s information through the National Crime

Information Center (NCIC) and the El Paso Intelligence Center (EPIC) databases.2 The

results from both databases came back clear.

1 Officer French is now a Lieutenant; however, we will refer to him as Officer French throughout the opinion since that was his title and rank at the time of the incident. 2 According to testimony, the NCIC database is used to “verify that they’re not wanted, that their license is valid, [and] not suspended.” The EPIC database will reveal “if there’s any intelligence out there as far as drug trafficking.”

2 ¶4. Officer French saw on Chung’s bills of lading that he was hauling car parts. When

he ran Chung’s driver’s license, he saw that he had previously stopped Chung on September

16, 2019. At that time, Chung was using an Electronic Logging Device (ELD), but the GPS

feature was not working. However, during the stop in question, Chung was using paper logs.

When asked why he was operating with paper logs, Chung informed Officer French that his

ELD had stopped working. While looking through Chung’s paper logs, Officer French

claimed there was a discrepancy concerning travel time.3 The purported discrepancy was that

Chung logged a trip from Meridian, Mississippi, to Demopolis, Alabama, as a thirty-minute

trip. According to Officer French, it normally takes forty-five minutes to make that trip.

Officer French later testified that the paper logs and the relatively minor discrepancy were

not unusual and “not anything criminal.” He explained that “in the commercial motor vehicle

world, you see a lot of drivers hiding time because they have a time line; they can only drive

11 hours a day.”

¶5. Officer French also saw that Chung took a three-day break in California. Officer

French found that unusual because the main objective for owner-operators is “[t]o make as

much money as they possibly can, because everything inside the commercial motor vehicle

world is against the driver: repairs, fuel, broker fees, insurance. . . . [T]hey want to be on the

road as much as they can.” However, Chung later testified that the law requires that “if he

spends 70 hours on the road, he has to . . . be off 30 hours,” and Chung said he typically

3 The paper logs were never entered into evidence.

3 chooses to spend those hours in California, where he resides.

¶6. Officer French asked Chung if he was hauling anything illegal such as weapons,

drugs, or money. Chung replied no. Officer French eventually moved Chung to the back of

his patrol car to get him out of the rain. Officer French began using the Google Translate app

to communicate with Chung. Using the app, Officer French asked Chung again if he was in

possession of any weapons, drugs, or large amounts of money. Chung indicated that he did

have money in the truck. Officer French asked if it was over $100,000, and Chung

responded yes. When asked why he was carrying such a large amount of money, Chung

informed him that he needed money for repairs to his truck. Officer French later testified that

“based off all the other factors with the logbooks, the inconsistencies in it, him admitting that

he had money inside of the vehicle, now everything started looking more like he was a drug

money courier at that point in time.”

¶7. Officer French asked if he could search the truck, and Chung consented. Chung

retrieved a bag containing the money, and he handed it over to Officer French. The bag

contained forty-five envelopes with five thousand dollars in each envelope, totaling

$225,000. Chung testified that each time he saved five thousand dollars, he would put it in

an envelope and store it in the bag. This method allowed him to store the money more easily

in the bag, which was relatively small. Nineteen envelopes contained the BBCN Bank logo.4

4 BBCN Bank was Chung’s bank located in Koreatown, Los Angeles, California. After a merger in 2016, BBCN Bank is now known as Bank of Hope.

4 Also, some of the envelopes looked older and more tattered and discolored compared to

others. After examining the envelopes, Officer French decided to contact more law

enforcement and move the traffic stop to the Brandon Amphitheater. While there, Chung

revealed to a Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) agent that the money was his life

savings that he had accumulated from 2010 to the present. He kept the money in his truck

because he lived in his truck, and he did not have a home where he could store the money.

¶8. While at the amphitheater, Officer French searched Chung’s truck again. No drugs,

drug paraphernalia, or weapons were found in the truck, so the officers decided to conduct

a drug detection test on the money. Officer French contacted Deputy Picou5 and requested

the assistance of a narcotics detection canine. Deputy Tony Shack with the Rankin County

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Rae Young Chung v. State of Mississippi, ex rel. Brandon Police Department, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rae-young-chung-v-state-of-mississippi-ex-rel-brandon-police-department-missctapp-2024.