United States v. Funds in Amount of One Hundred Thousand & One Hundred Twenty Dollars

127 F. Supp. 3d 879, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 120816, 2015 WL 5212055
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedFebruary 11, 2015
DocketNo. 03 C 3644
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 127 F. Supp. 3d 879 (United States v. Funds in Amount of One Hundred Thousand & One Hundred Twenty Dollars) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Funds in Amount of One Hundred Thousand & One Hundred Twenty Dollars, 127 F. Supp. 3d 879, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 120816, 2015 WL 5212055 (N.D. Ill. 2015).

Opinion

ORDER

John J. Tharp, Jr., United States District Judge

For the reasons set forth in the Statement below, Claimants’ Motion for a Daubert Hearing [240] is denied as moot; Claimants’ Motion in Limine to Exclude Evidence Pursuant to Rule 403 or Due to Spoliation [242] is denied; Claimants’ Motion to Suppress Statements [244] is granted; the United States’ Motion to Strike Expert Witnesses [246] is granted in part and denied in part; and the United States’ Motion for Production of Tax Returns [248] is denied. A status hearing in this matter is set for February 25, 2015, at 9:30 а.m.

STATEMENT

On October 4, 2011, Judge Bucklo (who was then presiding in this case) granted summary judgment to the United States on its claim for forfeiture of $100,120 in currency seized from Vincent Fallon (one of the claimants in this case) on December б, 2002, at Union Station in Chicago. See Summary Judgment Opinion, Dkt. 219. The currency was seized after, among other events, a drug-detection dog (named “Deny”) alerted to a briefcase containing the currency. The details of the alert, and other facts relating to the seizure and the forfeiture claim, will be discussed below only to the extent necessary to resolve the present disputes.

[881]*881In an opinion issued on September 19, 2013, the Seventh Circuit reversed the grant of summary judgment. United States v. Funds in the Amount of One Hundred Thousand One Hundred & Twenty Dollars (Funds II), 730 F.3d 711 (7th Cir.2013).1 The Seventh Circuit reversed on two grounds. For the first, which is relevant here only to the government’s motion for production of tax returns, the Seventh Circuit held that there is a dispute of material fact as to whether the seized funds had a legitimate source; Nicholas Marrocco (the other claimant in this case) had stated, in his deposition testimony and in an affidavit supporting his opposition to summary judgment, that the funds came from savings he had accumulated over the course of the 10-12 years before the seizure. The second ground for reversal was the Seventh Circuit’s holding that expert evidence submitted by the claimants, if admissible, creates material issues of fact as to whether the seized funds had recently been in contact with illegal drugs at the time of the seizure.2 More specifically, the Funds II panel held that the proffered expert evidence raises material fact issues as to (1) “[whether] drug-dog alerts to currency are in general (and, a fortiori, Deny’s alert in particular) reliable evidence that the currency recently has been in contact with illegal drugs,” 730 F.3d at 721, and (2) “whether Deny’s training was adequate,” id. at 725.

The Seventh Circuit issued its remand mandate on November 12, 2013. Mandate Notice, Dkt. 234. Seven months later, a period during which there was no discern-able activity, this case was reassigned to this Court’s docket on June 13, 2014. At a status hearing on August 5, 2014, the Court set a deadline of November 5, 2014, for the filing of pretrial motions, including Daubert motions and any other substantive motions. The parties filed a series of motions by that deadline. First, the claimants challenge the admissibility of evidence they expect the government to introduce relating to the dog alert on the seized currency (Dkt.240). The claimants have also moved to bar that evidence as unduly prejudicial under Rule 403 or as a spoliation sanction based on the government’s failure to preserve the seized currency, or in the alternative for a spoliation instruction (Dkt.242). In addition, the claimants seek to suppress statements Fallon made to law enforcement agents after they had seized the briefcase containing the funds and taken it to an office in the Amtrak station (Dkt.244). For its part, the United States has moved to strike two experts on issues relating to drug-dog alerts who have only recently been disclosed by the claimants (Dkt.246) and for the production of Marrocco’s federal income tax information for the years 1991 through 1998 (Dkt.248).

I. Claimants’ Challenges to the Dog-Alert Evidence (Dkts. 240 and 242)

The claimants’ motions relating to drug-dog alerts arise from the fact that the government intends to “present evidence, through the testimony of the dog handler, [882]*882and documents, about the dog’s training, certification, history, past performance, reliability, and the alert to the money in this case.” Govt. Resp., Dkt. 251, at 3. The government’s position, in short, is that Deny was adequately trained to alert to the presence of various illegal drugs and that his alert on the briefcase is therefore reliable evidence that the currency was connected to drug trafficking activity.

As discussed in the Seventh Circuit’s Funds II opinion, the claimants challenge the probative value of the dog-alert evidence by invoking the “currency contamination theory.” Funds II, 730 F.3d at 719-22. That theory posits that most paper currency in circulation in the United States is contaminated with trace quantities of illegal drugs, most often, cocaine.3 If drug-contaminated currency is ubiquitous, as the theory posits, then an alert on the currency offers no probative value to establish that the currency was recently connected to drug trafficking. The claimants have offered expert evidence to support the currency contamination theory, evidence which the Seventh Circuit held in its opinion is sufficient to create a fact issue — if the evidence is admissible. Id. at 721 n. 13.

In their current Daubert motion (Dkt.240) and motion in limine (Dkt.242), the claimants continue their attack on the evidence of the drug-dog alert.

A. Claimants’ Daubert Motion

The claimants seek to bar evidence of the so-called “Furton theory” to rebut the currency contamination theory. Dkt. 240, ¶¶ 11, 25, 27-28. In their Daubert motion, they assert that Deny’s handler, Officer Richard King, is not competent to offer opinion testimony as to what the dog was alerting to (ie., the presence of illegal drugs or something else), both because the dog’s training does not provide an adequate basis to support that inference and because King is not “an expert in canine olfaction, scientific statistical analysis, or the chemical composition of any illegal narcotics allegedly contaminating the briefcase.” Id. ¶23. The claimants assert, therefore, that no evidence of the dog’s alert should be admitted at all.

In response, the government first asserts that the claimants’ motion for a Daubert hearing is barred by the “law of the case” doctrine because Judge Bucklo previously denied a substantially similar motion. See Govt. Resp., Dkt. 251, at 3-4. That much is true: on May 27, 2010, Judge Bucklo, relying on the Seventh Circuit’s opinion in United States v. $30,670, 403 F.3d 448 (7th Cir.2005), held that “the government is not obligated to reinvent the wheel by proving ... that the practice of using dogs to ferret out currency recently in contact with drugs is generally accepted.” May 27 Order, Dkt. 166, at 1. Although this language harkens back to the long-discarded Frye

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127 F. Supp. 3d 879, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 120816, 2015 WL 5212055, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-funds-in-amount-of-one-hundred-thousand-one-hundred-ilnd-2015.