United States v. U.S. Currency Totalling $29,500.00

677 F. Supp. 1181, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 356, 1988 WL 4202
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedJanuary 25, 1988
DocketCiv. No. 1:87-CV-969-ODE
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 677 F. Supp. 1181 (United States v. U.S. Currency Totalling $29,500.00) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. U.S. Currency Totalling $29,500.00, 677 F. Supp. 1181, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 356, 1988 WL 4202 (N.D. Ga. 1988).

Opinion

ORDER

ORINDA D. EVANS, District Judge.

This forfeiture proceeding pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(6) is before the court for findings of fact and conclusions of law following a non jury trial on January 21-22, 1988. The currency in question was seized from Mark Eugene Bowers on August 19,1986, as he was seeking to board a flight to Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. Mr. Bowers, who has not been charged with a drug violation in connection with conduct related to the currency, has filed a claim to the funds. Therefore, the issue before the court is whether the money should be forfeited to the government or returned to Mr. Bowers.

The evidence shows that at about 12:30 a.m. on the morning of August 19, 1986, Mr. Bowers made an airline reservation for a trip from his home in Indianapolis, Indiana to Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. He made the reservation under the name Robert Hall, and gave no telephone number where he could be contacted in Indianapolis. He was taken to the airport later in the day by Ms. Lenny Smoot, with whom he was living. He paid for the ticket with cash on arrival at the airport.

Within a few minutes of time when the airline reservation was made for Robert Hall, a reservation from Indianapolis to Ft. Lauderdale was also made on the same plane for a Mary Lash. Mr. Bowers purchased Ms. Lash’s ticket with cash at the airport also; she flew on the leg of the trip from Indianapolis to Atlanta seated separately from Mr. Bowers, a/k/a Robert Hall. Neither Mr. Bowers nor Ms. Lash checked any luggage.

When Mr. Bowers and Ms. Lash approached the Delta gate at the Atlanta airport to check in for the flight to Ft. Lauderdale, DEA agent Paul Markonni was standing by the check-in counter. He heard Mr. Bowers/Hall inquire whether he and Ms. Lash could sit together on the Atlanta-Ft. Lauderdale flight. He observed there were no baggage claim checks on the tickets. He determined that the tickets had been purchased with cash at the Indianapolis airport. He observed that Mr. Bowers/Hall had a tote bag in his hand.

Agent Markonni then approached Mr. Bowers and after identifying himself as a DEA agent, asked if he would mind showing him his ticket. Once he did, Agent Markonni asked him if he was Robert Hall, and Mr. Bowers said he was. Bowers replied to Markonni’s question whether the trip was for business or pleasure that it was a pleasure trip. Markonni then asked him if he would produce his driver’s license. Bowers said he would; Markonni noticed Bowers’ hands were shaking. When the license was produced, it reflected the name Mark Eugene Bowers. At this point Markonni indicated that he would like to search Bowers’ bag; he read to Bowers from a DEA card explaining the right to refuse the search. Bowers said that this would be all right and in response to Mar-konni’s inquiry, he said he would prefer that the search be done in a more private area.

[1183]*1183After the two had arrived at a separate room beside the concourse, Markonni opened the bag and found a large amount of cash, which later was determined to be $29,500. At that point, Bowers stated in response to Markonni’s inquiry concerning the money that it was going to be used to purchase two trailers for Bowers’ trucking business in Indianapolis. Markonni reminded Bowers he had earlier said this was a pleasure trip and Bowers then stated it was both pleasure and business.

At that point, Markonni placed Bowers under arrest for giving a false name to a law enforcement officer. He handcuffed Bowers and took him to a DEA office off the concourse. At the office, Bowers was asked for the details of his business mission, i.e., exactly where he was going and who he would see regarding the trucks. Bowers stated that he did not have the information with him and could not recall the exact details; he would have to obtain that information from his office. At that point, Markonni suggested that he could make a telephone call to his office to get that information so the bonafides of the business aspect of the trip could be verified. Bowers picked up the phone and dialed a couple of numbers, but there was no answer. Bowers was searched by Mar-konni, who recovered various papers with names, addresses and/or phone numbers. There was no piece of paper identifying a truck dealer or salesman in the Miami area, or any paper with information about two trailers.

A computer check by Markonni then indicated that Bowers had two convictions pertaining to distribution of talwin, a heroin derivative, in 1970 and 1977. The computer further indicated that Bowers currently was under investigation in Indianapolis for suspected cocaine dealing.

Mr. Bowers pled guilty to the charge of giving a false name to a police officer in the Superior Court of Clayton County and received a probated sentence pursuant to a negotiated plea agreement. As previously stated, he has not been charged with any drug violation growing out of or pertaining to the events on or about August 19, 1986, when he was stopped at the Atlanta airport.

At trial a law enforcement officer from Indianapolis testified that he knows of information from a number of reliable informants to the effect that Mr. Bowers currently is dealing in cocaine. He also testified that a reliable informant told him a few days after the airport arrest that Bowers' trip to Ft. Lauderdale had been for the purpose of buying a kilogram of cocaine.

Mr. Bowers appeared and testified at the instant civil proceeding. He called as his only other witness Harold Strange, a former employee, who testified concerning discussions Strange claimed he had had with Fruehauf, a trucking company, concerning the possibility of purchasing some used refrigerated trailers in the Miami area.

Mr. Bowers testified that in 1986, he had several business endeavors which were conducted under the aegis of Superior Holding and Development Corporation, a holding company. This included a trucking business, a construction business, arid a grocery store. The business was conducted out of an office at the rear of the grocery store. Mr. Bowers also draws disability compensation. The court finds Mr. Bowers in fact did have an interest of some type in the trucking and grocery businesses, and that in some respect he was also engaged in construction work.

Mr. Bowers testified that on the day he left Indianapolis en route to Ft. Lauder-dale, he took the currency out of a safe in his office. He stated that the majority of the funds represented profits from a construction job which the customer had paid in cash, plus cash that had been withdrawn over time from the corporation’s bank account and placed in the safe. Mr. Bowers produced copies of the 1985 and 1986 federal income tax returns filed for Superior Holding and Development Corporation. The return states on its face that it was prepared by Milton D. Manual, who was identified by Mr. Bowers as an accountant. The return for calendar year 1986 was filed on December 9, 1987. It reflects that no salaries or wages were paid to anyone by the corporation during 1986. Mr. Bowers [1184]*1184testified he had never received a salary from the corporation. The return reflects no taxable income for 1986, but if the depreciation claimed is added back, the taxable income would be between $23,000 and $24,000.1 For calendar year 1985, the stated taxable income plus claimed depreciation was about $7,500.

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
677 F. Supp. 1181, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 356, 1988 WL 4202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-us-currency-totalling-2950000-gand-1988.