United States v. $61,200.00 in U.S. Currency, More or Less

805 F. Supp. 2d 682, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 143634, 2010 WL 7360392
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Iowa
DecidedJune 22, 2010
Docket1:09-cv-00029-JAJ-TJS
StatusPublished

This text of 805 F. Supp. 2d 682 (United States v. $61,200.00 in U.S. Currency, More or Less) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. $61,200.00 in U.S. Currency, More or Less, 805 F. Supp. 2d 682, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 143634, 2010 WL 7360392 (S.D. Iowa 2010).

Opinion

ORDER

JOHN A. JARVEY, District Judge.

This matter comes before the Court pursuant to Plaintiff United States of America’s May 17, 2010, motion for summary judgment. [Dkt. No. 17.] The claimant, Brian Szymczak, responded to the government’s motion for summary judgment on June 1, 2010 [Dkt. Nos. 18 & 19] and the government replied on June 8, 2010. [Dkt. No. 20.] The government filed a Verified Complaint for Forfeiture in Rem on August 31, 2009 and the claimant responded by filing a Verified Claim and Answer. [Dkt. Nos. 1, 5, & 6.] The claimant asserts that he is the rightful owner of the defendant money and that it is unrelated to any drug activity. The Court denies the motion for summary judgment.

I. Background

On February 25, 2009, Iowa State Patrol Officer Jerod Clyde made a routine traffic stop of a white van traveling west on Interstate 80 in Pottawattamie County, Iowa. 1 The van was a 2006 GMC Savana 2500 with California license plate # 7V65106. The lone occupant and driver of the vehicle was Brian Lee Szymczak, 61 years old, of Sebastopol, California. Szymczak was also the registered owner of the vehicle. When questioned as to the purpose of his travel, Szymczak told Officer Clyde that he had been in Michigan. He was traveling back to California after visiting friends and relatives. While in Michigan, he had been spending money to winterize his residence, a pole barn.

Officer Clyde smelled marijuana emitting from the vehicle. Officer Clyde ques *684 tioned Szymczak if he had any marijuana in the vehicle, but Szymczak denied it. Szymczak then admitted that he had several joints but that he had a valid California prescription for marijuana. The marijuana prescription had expired one month earlier, in January 2009. Officer Clyde asked Szymczak whether he had large amounts of cash in the car, but Szymczak denied it. After reconsidering Officer Clyde’s question, Szymczak stated that he had approximately $60,000 in the vehicle. To explain the large sum of money, Szymczak told Officer Clyde that he had been planning to install a safe at the pole barn in Michigan and had brought his life savings from California in anticipation of his move. However, because the ground was frozen he decided to return to California until the ground thawed. He also said he had rented a vehicle in Michigan from February 9 through February 23, 2009. He put 3240 miles on the rental vehicle to drive around and visit relatives.

Szymczak then gave Officer Clyde consent to search the vehicle, both for the marijuana and the money. Officer Clyde found a total of $61,200 in U.S. Currency and it was located

... in three separate areas of the van. The first area was a tool bag with some wiring and just miscellaneous small tools inside there, and that was just loose, laying on the inside on the bottom of the bag.
And there was two other packages of money, United States currency located — one of them was hidden inside of a Shredded Wheats box, in the bottom of a Shredded Wheats box. It was heat sealed. The bag was heat sealed, in the bottom, and there was Shredded Wheats placed on top of that, and the box was closed. That was located amongst the tools in the back of the van on the driver’s side. The third bag was vacuum sealed and located on the left side on the floor of the van.

In Officer Clyde’s experience, the only time he came across heat- or vacuum-sealed money was when the individual was involved in narcotics trafficking. Szymczak stated that he routinely heat-sealed multiple things in the same manner as the heat-sealed currency. The money was in the following denominations: 95-$100 bills; 144-$50 bills; 2133-$20 bills; 164-$10 bills; and 40-$5 bills. The police later took the money to an Iowa State Patrol post and a trained narcotics detection dog alerted to the odor of narcotics where the police placed the hidden money.

Szymczak explained to Officer Clyde that the $61,200 comprised his life savings. He said that did not trust banks and had buried the money at an undisclosed location on Bureau of Land Management property in California. Szymczak claimed that he had accumulated this money over the past approximately twenty-five years while working as a cable splicer in the telephone line repair business. He worked for fourteen years at one company, and then found periodic employment thereafter from browsing through a trade journal. In 2001, he worked for two companies, making between $40 and $50 per hour. Szymczak said he saved approximately $200,000 from his employment through 2001. From 2002 through 2005, Szymczak did not work, but lived off his savings. After four months of working in 2006, he reported gross receipts of $45,850, with an adjusted gross income of $4,063 on his tax return. Szymczak then worked again in 2008 from May through August. He earned $30,855 in gross receipts for these four months and reported an adjusted gross income of $9,817 on his tax return. From September 2008 to February 2009, he spent approximately $46,380. Szymczak stated that as of February 2009, the remainder of his life savings was approximately $61,000. In February 2009, Szymczak had three bank accounts in California, Wisconsin, *685 and Michigan. All of these accounts contained amounts between $200 and $3000, and are not included within the $61,200 in dispute here.

The police subsequently found marijuana in a full search of the vehicle. Marijuana was found in multiple places including where the money had been located on the top shelf, left side of the van; in the driver’s compartment, between the seats; in plastic bags; in heat-sealed bags; and in pill bottles. There was also a various assortment of drug paraphernalia found in the van, including rolling papers, lighters, and medicine bottles that contained hashish. Szymezak admitted that some of the marijuana was in bags heat-sealed in the same manner as the money. Based on the vehicle search, Szymezak pled guilty in November 2009 to possession of a controlled substance in the Iowa District Court for Pottawattamie County. 2

Szymezak also told police that he had a rental storage unit in Michigan because he intended to move back to Michigan. When the Michigan State Police executed a search warrant on the storage unit, they found, inter alia, three hand guns; two digital scales; drug paraphernalia; and packaging materials that had marijuana residue on them. Szymezak admitted that these items, among others, were his property.

II. Arguments

The government asserts that there are no genuine issues of material fact and it is entitled to summary judgment because it meets the preponderance of the evidence standard that the defendant currency is proceeds of a drug offense or had been used to facilitate a drug offense in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841 or 846. The government argues that the totality of circumstances test supports a finding that the defendant currency is subject to forfeiture. In support, the government cites to the amount of U.S.

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805 F. Supp. 2d 682, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 143634, 2010 WL 7360392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-6120000-in-us-currency-more-or-less-iasd-2010.