SGS-92-X003 v. United States

74 Fed. Cl. 637, 2006 U.S. Claims LEXIS 412, 2007 WL 162704
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedDecember 4, 2006
DocketNo. 97-579C
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 74 Fed. Cl. 637 (SGS-92-X003 v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SGS-92-X003 v. United States, 74 Fed. Cl. 637, 2006 U.S. Claims LEXIS 412, 2007 WL 162704 (uscfc 2006).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER DENYING CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

WILLIAMS, Judge.

Plaintiff, a confidential informant known as Princess, claims that the Government breached a contract to pay her 25 percent of the value of seizures made by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) as a result of information she provided, up to a limit of $250,000 per seizure.2 Plaintiff seeks [639]*639$33,900,000 in damages. The head of DEA’s Fort Lauderdale, Florida, District Office promised Princess the 25 percent “commission,” and Princess performed as an undercover informant in a high profile, high risk operation for almost four years, yielding the arrests of drug traffickers and seizures of drug proceeds.3 The Government denies that there was a contract, claiming the head of DEA’s Fort Lauderdale office lacked the authority to enter such a contract.

While the head of DEA’s Fort Lauderdale office did not have express authority to promise Princess this commission, there are genuine issues of material fact as to whether this DEA official had implied actual authority to make this promise and whether his promise was ratified by officials who did have such authority. As such, the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment are denied.4

Background 5

Overview of Operation Princess

Plaintiff served as a confidential informant for DEA from December 1991 until August 1995.6 Princess had no arrest record, but her former husband had been arrested for narcotics trafficking. Sal. Dep. II at 13-14, Pl.’s Mot.App. Tab 4. During Plaintiffs tenure with DEA, she was supervised by the agent who promised her the commission, the Assistant Special Agent in Charge (ASAC) of DEA’s Fort Lauderdale, Florida field office, Joseph P. Salvemini, now retired.7 Sal. Dep. I at 3, Pl.’s Mot.App. Tab 3.

Operation Princess was a long-term money laundering operation directed at developing viable cases against major Colombian drug trafficking and money-laundering organizations. Def.’s App. at 7. This investigation was a high profile ease—“[o]ne that headquarters had a continued and regular interest in that would require routine and frequent briefings.” Sal. Dep. II at 59, PL’s Mot.App. Tab 4. According to ASAC Salvem-ini, high profile cases were regularly brought to the attention of the Attorney General. Id. at 61; Wankel Dep. at 55, PL’s Mot.App. Tab 5. ASAC Salvemini traveled to Washington, D.C. as often as twice a month to discuss this operation with high level DEA and Department of Justice (DOJ) officials including representatives of the Attorney General.

ASAC Salvemini and DEA obtained an Attorney General’s exemption to use laundered money to fund this operation to enable DEA and the Princess to “run with the traffickers,” “do what the bad guys do and pursue the investigations.” Sal. Dep. I at 15, PL’s Mot.App. Tab 3.

Toward the end of the operation, Plaintiff was kidnapped and held captive in Columbia, [640]*640and ultimately was released. Sal. Dep. I at 19, 22, Pl.’s Mot.App. Tab 3. In 1995, shortly after Plaintiffs release, her activity as an informant ceased. Id. at 22.

Due to Plaintiffs efforts, DEA received “significant intelligence on activities of several Targeted Kingpin Organizations,” arrested at least 10 individuals, and seized at least $23 million. Def.’s App. at 7-9, 12; Wankel Dep., Ex. 6; PL’s Mot.App. Tab 5. ASAC Salvemini characterized Plaintiff as the best informant he ever encountered in his 31-year tenure with DEA “from the standpoint of value to the Agency ... her abilities to follow direction, to be innovative and to infiltrate the very highest levels of the criminal element.” Sal. Dep. I at 4, PL’s Mot.App. Tab 3. The Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Criminal Division (DAAG), Mary Lee Warren, also considered what Princess did in this operation to have “certainly” been of significant value to DEA. Warren Dep. at 21. In addition, DEA’s Deputy Assistant Administrator for Operations (DO) Douglas Wankel testified that Operation Princess yielded significant seizures for the United States. Wankel Dep. at 84, PL’s Mot.App. Tab 5.

ASAC Salvemini’s Duties8

In his position as head of the Fort Lauder-dale District Office (FLDO), ASAC Salvemini created the “Southeast Florida Regional Task Force,” a group of local police chiefs from different counties in South Florida intended to focus on high echelon cases. Sal. Dep. II. at 11-12, PL’s Mot.App. Tab 4; Lees Dep. at 5. The Task Force worked on Operation Princess under ASAC Salvemini’s direction. Once the local Florida police officers joined the Task Force, they were sworn in as federal agents, told they would have the same status as any federal DEA agent and followed the same guidelines as the federal agents. Morris Dep. at 9. James Hughes and Rick Morris were members of the Task Force and case agents on Operation Princess.9

Agent Morris testified about the Task Force protocol as follows:

[A]ll decisions were made by Joe Salvemi-ni____At that point, he had an assistant who was a Fort Lauderdale sergeant, Tom Tiderington. And Tom Tiderington was probably in charge. His status was in charge of the day-by-day operation of the task force ... But Salvemini was the, you know, head of DEA, the highest ranking DEA official and he made all the decisions.

Morris Dep. at 17-18; see also PL’s Dep. at 39-43.

ASAC Salvemini’s Promise to Plaintiff

Agents Morris and Hughes initially approached Plaintiff at her home “to solicit additional information and/or assistance with potential drug traffickers” based on information given to them by Plaintiffs ex-husband. Hughes Dep. at 9-11. During one of her initial meetings with Agents Morris and Hughes, Agent Morris told Plaintiff that she “would meet the boss Salvemini and ... that they would pay [her] 25 percent of money seized.” PL’s Dep. at 22; Morris Dep. at 20-23 and 39-40. Plaintiff testified that ASAC Salvemini corroborated what Agent Morris had told her—that she “would get 25 percent of the money seized.” PL’s Dep. at 39. Agent Hughes testified that Plaintiff expected to receive a reward or an award, stating “that would have been her reason to provide information to the Government.” Hughes Dep. at 41.

ASAC Salvemini orally promised to pay Plaintiff 25 percent of the value of all confiscated or seized funds or property, limited to $250,000 per seizure10 Sal. Dep. I at 5-8, [641]*641Pl.’s Mot.App. Tab 3; PI. Dep at 40; Morris Dep. at 23; Lees Dep. at 46; Hughes Dep. at 41. ASAC Salvemini testified:

She was promised 25 percent of all seizures with a limit of a quarter of a million dollars per individual seizure.
And if I may explain that. If, let’s say, we made a case on a particular individual and there was a $2 million seizure on that one ease, the limitation would be a quarter of a million dollars. Which would be the same limitation if we made a $1 million seizure.

Sal. Dep. I at 5-6, Pl.’s Mot.App. Tab 3. ASAC Salvemini made these promises based upon his “practices and experiences in conducting investigations for DEA.” Id. at 8.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 Fed. Cl. 637, 2006 U.S. Claims LEXIS 412, 2007 WL 162704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sgs-92-x003-v-united-states-uscfc-2006.