State of Maine v. Abdullahi
This text of State of Maine v. Abdullahi (State of Maine v. Abdullahi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
STATE OF MAINE UNIFIED CRIMINAL DOCKET CUMBERLAND, ss No. CR-19-3332
STATE OF MAINE
v. ORDER
ABDIRAHMON ABDULLAH!,
Defendant
Count 3 of the Indictment in this case seeks forfeiture of$ 1091.00 pursuant to 15 M.R.S.
§ 5826. It alleges (1) that defendant furnished or intended to furnish the money in question in
exchange for scheduled drugs or (2) that the money constituted proceeds traceable to such an
exchange or (3) that the money was used or intended to be used to facilitate a violation of Title
17-A M.R.S. Chapter 45.
At the beginning of the trial that occurred in July, the parties agreed that the forfeiture count
would be tried to the court. The evidence on the forfeiture count consists of the evidence that was
admitted at the trial.
At the outset, criminal forfeiture requires that the defendant be convicted of a crime in
violation of Title 17-A M.R.S. chapter 45. See 15 M.R.S. §§ 5821(6) and 5826(1). Defendant
Abdirahmon Abdullahi was convicted of Class B unlawful trafficking in cocaine base by the jury,
and the court has denied his post-trial motion for judgment of acquittal.
What remains is whether the State has proven by a preponderance of the evidence that the
. $1091 in question constituted proceeds traceable to a drug transaction or whether it was intended to be used to facilitate a drug transaction. 1 The Law Court has ruled that the language of the
forfeiture statute does not limit forfeiture to money that is traceable to the pmticular transaction
for which a defendant was convicted. State v. Pierce, 2006 ME 75 ,i 23, 899 A.2d 801. In this case,
therefore, the State does not have to prove that the $ 1091 was traceable to the cocaine base that
formed the basis for Mr. Abdullahi' s conviction.
In this case Mr. Abdullahi told the police a false stoty as to how he had obtained the vehicle
he was driving - that it belonged to the mother of someone named Lawrence Chris, who he
described as a neighbor. In fact, it belonged to a Karla Blouin, who was not a neighbor, who did
not know Mr. Abdullahi, and who had never given Mr. Abdullahi permission to use the vehicle. 2
As shown on the video, when Mr. Abdullahi was asked to exit his vehicle, he attempted to
conceal a baggie from the observation of a law enforcement officer standing at the passenger
window by dropping it underneath the vehicle on the driver's side. That baggie in turned contained
46 individual corners of baggies or "ties" - containing a substance that appeared to be cocaine
base. The total weight of the baggie containing the 41 "ties" was 46 grams including the weight of
the packaging. A random selection of the substance- comprising the contents of five of the "ties"
- was found to constitute cocaine base by the State laboratory.
Mr. Abdullahi's lmowledge that the baggie contained scheduled drugs is demonstrated by
his attempt to conceal the baggie under the car and his attempt to reclaim it, when the car was
1 The comt does not find that there is any evidence that Mr. Abdullahi had furnished or had intended to furnish the $1091 in exchange for scheduled drugs.
2 Ms. Blouin testified that she had loaned her car to someone named Jeremy Thompson. As the investigation proceeded, it became evident Mr. Abdullahi knew Jeremy Thompson and had Jeremy Thompson's number on his phone. He also eventually changed his original st01y and said he had borrowed the car from Jeremy Thompson in order to pick up a friend named Lawrence Chris in P01tland.
2 being towed, by attempting to scoot across the ground while seated and handcuffed. He then falsely
claimed that the baggie belonged to the tow truck driver.
Finally, Mr. Abdullahi was found to have $1091 on his person3 - an amount of cash that
is significantly more than people ordinarily carry.
Mr. Abdullahi's false story about who owned the automobile, his attempt to conceal the
cocaine, his transportation of 46 "ties" of cocaine base - apparently packaged for distribution
and his possession of $1091 in bills of vaTious denominations constitute sufficient proof to
persuade the court by a preponderance of the evidence that the $1091 constituted proceeds
traceable to one or more drug transactions or monies intended to be used to facilitate one or more
drug transactions. Accordingly, the$ 1091 shall be forfeited pursuant to 15 M.R.S. §§ 5821(6),
5826(1), and 5826(4)(A).
The court does not find that the State has specifically proven how the$ 1091 constituted
proceeds traceable to drug transactions or how that sum was intended to be used to facilitate drug
transactions. The court concludes that specific proof of this nature is not required. In State v. Fox,
2017 ME 52 ,r 37, 157 A.3d 778, the Law Court found sufficient basis for forfeiture based on a
defendant's apparently drug-induced unconsciousness; the discovery of heroin on the seat of an
automobile driven by the defendant (heroin that defendant attempted to conceal by covering it with
his baseball cap); the defendant's refusal to identify himself or the renter of the vehicle; the 99
packets of heroin found, and the amount of cash ($543) in question. See 2017 ME 52 ,r,r 6, 8, 16.
There is at least as much evidence in the instant case to support forfeiture as in State v. Fox.
The forfeiture of$109I.OO sought in Count 3 of the Indictment is hereby ordered.
3 This consisted of five $100 bills, three $50 bills, 21 $20 bills, and a single dollar bill.
3 Dated: January L, 2022
Thomas D. Warren Justice, Superior Comi
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