United States v. 657 Acres of Land

978 F. Supp. 999, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15659, 1997 WL 627070
CourtDistrict Court, D. Wyoming
DecidedSeptember 29, 1997
Docket2:96-cv-00160
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 978 F. Supp. 999 (United States v. 657 Acres of Land) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Wyoming primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. 657 Acres of Land, 978 F. Supp. 999, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15659, 1997 WL 627070 (D. Wyo. 1997).

Opinion

ORDER DENYING CLAIMANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS AND ORDER GRANTING PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

ALAN B. JOHNSON, Chief Judge.

The Motion to Dismiss filed by claimant, Stewart Allan Bost, and the Cross Motion for Summary Judgment filed by the United States of America, plaintiff in the above captioned proceeding, the parties’ responses one to the other, came before the Court for consideration. The Court, having considered the motions, the responses, the.pleadings of record, the applicable law, and being fully advised in the premises, FINDS and ORDERS as follows:

Background

The government filed its Verified Complaint for Forfeiture in Rem Pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 881 on July 19,1996. The Affidavit of United States Drug Enforcement Administration Special Agent .David Lytla is attached as Exhibit 3 to the Verified Complaint. With its complaint, the government seeks forfeiture of certain real property in Park County, Wyoming, approximately 657 acres of land located on the Clark’s Fork of the Yellowstone River. The government seeks forfeiture of the real property as property traceable to Bost’s 1986 illegal exchanges of cocaine, and in the alternative, as property used to launder criminal proceeds. Notice of forfeiture was published in two *1001 Wyoming newspapers for four consecutive weeks beginning on August 4, 1996. Claimant Bost was served with direct notice on August 28, 1996. Bost had filed a claim on August 14, 1996 and it is the only claim filed in this case.

The Court entered a stay on August 29, 1996, which expired January 3, 1997. Bost requested, and was granted, an extension to file his answer within 20 days of expiration of. the stay. Without leave of court and without an order lifting the stay, Bost filed his motion to dismiss on October 8, 1996. In his motion, Bost alleges that this action is barfed by the five year statute of limitations in 19 U.S.C. § 1621.

The government’s opposition to the motion was filed October, 25, 1996. It asserts that the motion to dismiss violated the stay and also notes failure to comply with local rules of this Court regarding motion practice and association with local counsel. On June 13, 1997, local counsel for claimant Bost, Richard C. Slater, filed an appearance. A motion for admission pro hac vice for attorney Robert C. Stone was filed July 8, 1997; an order granting the motion for attorney Robert C. Stone to appear pro hac vice on behalf of the claimant was entered July 14; 1997.

Bost argues that the civil forfeiture is barred by the statute of limitations. He asserts that no suit or action pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1621 may be commenced unless it is bought within five years after the time when the alleged offense was discovered. Bost was indicted August 8, 1989 in the Southern District of Florida on various counts of cocaine trafficking crimes committed between August 1985 and July 1986. Bost had, at the time that the charges were filed, purchased the Park County property but this was not known to the United States. Bost was a fugitive from justice until July 9, 1996 when he was arrested, and following an identity hearing in the District of Wyoming on July 12, 1996, was transferred to the Southern District of Florida. Bost pleaded guilty to Counts I and II in the indictment on October 8, 1996. He was sentenced to a six-year term of imprisonment and fined $250,000 on December 19, 1996. Bost now contends that as of August 8, 1989 and thereafter, Bost’s interests in the property had been recorded for all the world to see and that sufficient facts were present to alert the government to Bost’s interest in the property. He argues that waiting to seek civil forfeiture until the summer of 1996 is an unreasonable delay and that this action was brought outside of the statutory time period.

The government responds that even before Bost was indicted, he had gone into hiding and had begun concealing his identity and laundering his drug money. Bost had been declared to be a federal fugitive.September 21,1989.

In January of 1986, Bost acted as a “boat captain” for a Florida cocaine smuggling ring. In six months, from January of 1986 through June 1986, Bost smuggled approximately 3,000 kilograms of cocaine from the Bahamas to Key Largo and was paid at least $1,350,000 in those six months for his crimes. Bost’s involvement in the smuggling activities were described to a government agent in May of 1988 by an individual named William E. Wood, who during debriefing, detailed Bost’s activities in the smuggling ring.

Wood met Bost in 1985 and knew Bost as a boat captain who had previously smuggled marijuana into the United States from the Bahamas. Between January 1986 and June 1986, Bost smuggled five loads of cocaine for Woods. Wood stated that he had paid Bost at least $1,350,000 for five separate cocaine loads: 1) January 1986: 400 kilograms for $250,000; 2) February 1986: 400 kilograms for at least $250,000; 3) March 1986: 1100 kilograms for $350,000; 4) May 1986: 800 kilograms for at least $250,0000; and 5) June 1986: 400 kilograms for $250,000.

Wood was interviewed specifically by an agent of the customs service for the purpose of identifying forfeitable assets held by members of the smuggling ring. Wood provided the agent with details regarding assets of members of the smuggling ring, but as to Bost, he identified only a Key Largo, Florida home that he believed Bost owned. Wood had no information regarding other property owned by Bost.

Before the indictment was issued in 1989, Bost’s last known whereabouts were in Okla *1002 homa City, Oklahoma. The United States had no knowledge of Bost’s whereabouts from the date of indictment until his arrest in July of 1996. In March 1988, Bost surrendered his Florida driver’s license for an Oklahoma license in Oklahoma City. When he did so, he changed his name from Stewart Alen Bost to Alen Bost Stewart and used a fictitious address in applying for the Oklahoma license. In 1991, Bost exchanged his Oklahoma driver’s license for a Colorado driver’s license. The Colorado license was renewed in May 1996 and is in the name of Alen Bost Stewart, also with a fictitious address.

Bost had purchased the defendant property from Carl and Martha Putz on September 17, 1987. He paid the Putzes an undetermined amount of cash, less than $1,300,000. On March 10, 1988, Bost recorded the 1987 warranty deed from the Putzes to Bost. One minute later, a warranty deed conveying the property from Stewart Bost to his alias, Alen Stewart, was recorded. As of this date, Alen Stewart appears as the record owner of the defendant property in the Park County, Wyoming records. Under his alias Alen Stewart, Bost was a part-time Wyoming rancher.

In 1988, under his alias, Alen Stewart submitted an incomplete application for grazing privileges to the Bureau of Land Management. With his application, Bost submitted copies of the warranty deed in the name of Stewart Bost and the warranty deed in the name of Alen Stewart.

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978 F. Supp. 999, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15659, 1997 WL 627070, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-657-acres-of-land-wyd-1997.