Valerio v. Lacey Police Dept.

39 P.3d 332
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 1, 2002
Docket25955-9-II
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 39 P.3d 332 (Valerio v. Lacey Police Dept.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valerio v. Lacey Police Dept., 39 P.3d 332 (Wash. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

39 P.3d 332 (2002)
110 Wash.App. 163

Mark A. VALERIO, Appellant,
v.
LACEY POLICE DEPARTMENT and City of Lacey, Respondents.

No. 25955-9-II.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 2.

February 1, 2002.

*333 Rodney Gene Franzen, Olympia, for Appellant.

William Dale Kamerrer, Olympia, Joseph M. Svoboda, Asst City Attorney, Lacey, for Respondents.

HUNT, J.

Mark A. Valerio appeals the RCW 69.50.505 forfeiture of $58,300 cash that was found in the trunk of his girlfriend's car and turned over to the City of Lacey Police Department. Valerio argues that (1) the forfeiture hearing was untimely; (2) the City failed to prove that he used or intended to use the money for an illegal drug business; and (3) RCW 69.50.505 is unconstitutionally overbroad as applied here. Finding no probable cause for forfeiture of the seized money, we reverse.

FACTS

I. SEIZURE OF UNEXPLAINED CASH

On November 12, 1998, Valerio asked his friend Johnny Morton to "hold onto" a safe containing a large amount of money in plastic bags. Morton declined. That evening, Valerio drove home in his girlfriend's [Victoria Messman] car, where police arrested him for a domestic violence assault against Messman earlier that day.

The next morning, Messman's brother, Roy Benson, helped her move from the residence that she had been sharing with Valerio. Benson found a locked safe in the back of her vehicle. Benson and his mother, Annieta Winston, opened the safe, discovered $58,300 cash, and took the safe and the money to the City of Lacey Police Department. Winston reported that she believed the money belonged to Valerio.

Detective Joe Upton questioned Valerio about the money. Valerio said that he was not the last person to have driven the vehicle, he knew nothing about the safe, and he did not want to incriminate himself. Upton noticed that some of the money had a musty odor.

The City police asked Nisqually Police Department Officer Carl Mealing and drug-detecting dog Zandy for assistance. Zandy has been trained to detect the odor of cocaine, heroin, marijuana, methamphetamines, and hashish; Zandy can also detect controlled substances odor that may have transferred from another item stored in the same evidence locker.[1] Zandy indicates a positive find of a controlled substance by placing her nose on the area where the item is located and sitting down.

Two times in two separate offices, City police hid the plastic-bagged money that Winston had turned in; both times, Zandy *334 indicated a positive find. When the State Crime Laboratory tested the money for controlled substance residue, the result was inconclusive.

City police searched Valerio's home but recovered no evidence of controlled substances, drug paraphernalia, or any other evidence of drug dealing. Valerio had no criminal history involving drugs. Messman said that she had never known Valerio to use, to manufacture, to possess, or to deliver illegal drugs or drug paraphernalia. But she told Officer Chris Ward that Valerio had mentioned starting a drug-related business, that there would be a lot of money, and that it would never be at their residence or around the children.

II. FORFEITURE

Neither the State nor the City of Lacey charged Valerio with a crime related to the money from the safe. The City, however, initiated a hearing under RCW 69.50.505 to forfeit the money as proceeds of, or intended for use in, illegal drug transactions. Although neither Morton nor Valerio had yet claimed ownership of the money, the City sent them forfeiture notices on November 19, 1998. Only Valerio responded, on December 28, 1999.

A. REMOVAL TO SUPERIOR COURT

On January 27, 1999, Valerio filed a Complaint and Petition for Removal of Forfeiture Action in Thurston County Superior Court. The court set a status conference[2] for April 2, 1999, which it continued to April 16, 1999. The forfeiture hearing began on May 7, 1999. Finding that the forfeiture hearing was timely held, the trial court denied Valerio's motions to dismiss.

B. PROBABLE CAUSE HEARING

Valerio testified that he had accumulated the $58,300 over several years. Messman testified that she had given Valerio approximately $5,880. In June 1998, Valerio and Messman had cosigned a note for approximately $6,080, using Messman's 1991 Honda Accord as collateral (Resp't Exhibit No. 7); they had used $1,590 of the loan proceeds to pay off a preexisting loan from O'Bee Credit Union. (Resp't Exhibit No. 19.) For the years 1995 through 1998, Valerio did not report to the IRS an annual income of more than $5,890. (Resp't Exhibit No. 14-16.) Nor did he keep records of his past gambling winnings or losses.[3] (Resp't Exhibits No. 12, 14-17, and 18.)

The superior court ruled that there was probable cause for the City to have seized the money because: (1) the bills appeared to be new and uncirculated; (2) Valerio did not immediately claim ownership; (3) other innocent explanations for the money were not credible; (4) Messman said that Valerio had mentioned the possibility of large amounts of money, possibly from a drug-related business; and (5) a drug-sniffing dog alerted to the money. Clerk's Papers at 9. The trial court later noted that at this point, "[T]he burden shifted to Mr. Valerio to present evidence to satisfy a burden by the preponderance of evidence that he had acquired the property in some manner other than in violation of RCW 69.50.505." Oral Opinion RP at 9.

C. FORFEITURE FINDING: SEIZED MONEY WAS DRUG-DEALING PROCEEDS OR FUTURE CAPITAL

Following the forfeiture hearing, the trial court found that the money had been "accumulated and held in violation of RCW 69.50.505" and ordered its forfeiture. Oral Opinion RP at 4. The trial court also found that Valerio had not met his burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the funds had come from a lawful source.

Before rendering its oral opinion, the court noted that the money had a "musty odor" *335 and only one of the bills had been issued before 1996.

The court then recited the following evidence to support its ruling: (1) Initially no one claimed the money, and Valerio had said he knew nothing about it. (2) Valerio's testimony on direct examination that he had virtually no expenses (to offset money earned or gifted) was not reasonable, especially in light of expenses, such as child-care, that he acknowledged on cross-examination. (3) Although Valerio said that he distrusted banks, he had used banks since he was a teenager. (4) Valerio was experienced in the use of credit cards to pay off debts. (5) Valerio could not have accumulated this large amount of money in the manner he described. (6) Valerio did not have significant gambling winnings. (7) Valerio had earned approximately $121 per week from 1995 to 1998, and these amounts did not explain accumulation of the large sum of money. (8) "The investigation conducted by police officers at the time that the money was discovered tended to exclude other explanations." Oral Opinion RP at 6.

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Bluebook (online)
39 P.3d 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valerio-v-lacey-police-dept-washctapp-2002.