United States v. Buczkowski, et al., No. 13-2018 (8th Cir. 2014)
Annotate this CaseThe Government filed civil forfeiture actions against five properties alleging that they were used to manufacture illegal drugs or were purchased with proceeds from illegal drug sales. Claimants filed claims to the defendant properties. The district court necessarily had to construe both Supplemental Rules for Admiralty or Maritime Claims and Asset Forfeiture Actions G(4)(b)(i)-(ii) (the direct notice requirements) and Supplemental Rule G4(b)(v) (the actual notice exception) in order to determine what proper notice was required in this case. Therefore, the court reviewed de novo the district court's decision to strike the claims where that decision rested on an interpretation of the civil forfeiture notice provisions. The court concluded that claimants' verified claim was not untimely where the government did not comply with the notice regime laid out in Supplemental Rule G. The court also concluded that to impute actual notice on the basis of a communication to the government by an attorney (an email) who at the time did not represent them would work a serious injustice and raise troubling constitutional concerns. Accordingly, the court vacated the forfeiture judgments, reversed the district court's order striking two of claimants' claims as untimely, and remanded for a merits determination on the claims to the properties.
Court Description: Civil case - Forfeiture. Where the government sought to forfeit properties based on allegations they were used for the manufacture of drugs or had been purchased with drug proceeds, the court's order granting the government's motion to strike their claims would be reviewed de novo because the district court interpreted the applicable civil forfeiture notice provisions of Supplemental Rule G(4) in making its decision; the government knew that the estate of Betty Mariani reasonably appeared to be a potential claimant for the properties and it was required, therefore, to give the estate direct notice of the proceedings; since the government did not comply with the notice requirements, it was error for the district court to find the claims were untimely, and the matter is remanded for further proceedings; with respect to the government's argument that claimants had actual notice, it could not be reasonable inferred from an email that claimants knew not only the existence of the proceedings but also the relevant deadlines, and the court would not impute actual notice based on this communication.
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