United States v. House, No. 18-10305 (9th Cir. 2022)
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Madjlessi owned PLV, a Sonoma County real-estate development, with a $30 million IndyMac construction loan. Madjlessi defaulted. IndyMac was in FDIC conservatorship. The FDIC auctioned the loan; its rules prohibited Madjlessi from bidding on his own note. Lonich (Madjlessi’s lawyer) and Madjlessi had a straw buyer (House) bid on the loan. Madjlessi owed House $200,000 for contracting work. Lonich created Houseco as an LLC, owned, on paper, by House but controlled by Lonich. Madjlessi and Lonich conspired with Sonoma Valley Bank (SVB) officers to obtain a fraudulent loan for Houseco to bid at the auction. After Houseco prevailed at the auction, it foreclosed on the Madjlessi note and acquired clear title to PLV. Although convicted on federal criminal charges, Lonich continued to receive monthly payments from PLV revenue, After House pleaded guilty and Lonich and others were convicted of federal crimes, the district court entered a preliminary order forfeiting PLV under Fed.R.Crim.P. 32.2(b). Houseco filed third-party petitions opposing the forfeiture, arguing that neither Lonich nor House owned PLV.
The Ninth Circuit affirmed the dismissal of Houseco’s petitions. A third party in a criminal forfeiture proceeding may not relitigate the antecedent forfeitability question but is restricted to the relief that 21 U.S.C. 853(n)(6) confers. Section 853(n)(6) does not violate Houseco’s procedural due process rights; if Houseco had a valid interest in the property, 853(n)(6) allowed it to vindicate that interest, but because Houseco was created to perpetuate a fraud, section 853(n)(6) provides no relief.