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The FBI Seized Heirlooms, Coins, and Cash From Hundreds of Safe Deposit Boxes in Beverly Hills, Despite Knowing 'Some' Belonged to 'Honest Citizens'
https://reason.com ^ | ERIC BOEHM | 5.10.2021 10:15 AM

Posted on 05/11/2021 10:53:07 AM PDT by Red Badger

Victims of the FBI's constitutionally dubious raid say they've been told to come forward and identify themselves if they want their stuff back.

Dagny discovered that the FBI had seized the contents of her safe deposit box—about $100,000 in gold and silver coins, some family heirlooms like a diamond necklace inherited from her late grandmother, and an engagement ring she'd promised to pass down to her daughter—almost by accident.

She'd been asked by a friend to recommend a convenient and secure location for keeping some valuables. Dagny searched Yelp to find the phone number for U.S. Private Vaults, a Beverly Hills facility where she'd rented a safe deposit box since 2017. That's when she saw the bad news.

"Permanently closed."

After a brief moment of panic, some phone calls, and several days, Dagny and her husband Howard (pseudonyms used at their request to maintain privacy during ongoing legal proceedings) figured out what happened. On March 22, the FBI had raided U.S. Private Vaults. The federal agents were armed with a warrant allowing them to seize property belonging to the company as part of a criminal investigation—and even though the warrant explicitly exempted the safe deposit boxes in the company's vaults, they were taken too. More than 800 were seized.

Howard tells Reason there was no attempt made by the FBI to contact him, his wife, or their heirs—despite the fact that contact information was taped to the top of their box. Six weeks later, the couple is still waiting for their property to be returned. (Both individuals are supporters of Reason Foundation, the nonprofit that publishes this website.)

The FBI and federal prosecutors have "no authority to continue holding the possessions of some 800 bystanders who are not alleged to have been involved in whatever USPV may have done wrong," Benjamin Gluck, a California attorney who is representing several of the people caught up in the FBI's raid of U.S. Private Vaults, tells Reason.

Legal efforts to force the FBI to return the items seized during the March 22 raid have so far been unsuccessful, but at least five lawsuits are pending in federal court.

A federal grand jury indicted U.S. Private Vaults (USPV) on counts of conspiracy to distribute drugs, launder money, and avoid mandatory deposit reporting requirements.

In legal filings, federal prosecutors have admitted that "some" of the company's customers were "honest citizens," but contend that "the majority of the box-holders are criminals who used USPV's anonymity to hide their ill-gotten wealth."

Whatever the original motivation for the raid, the FBI's seizure of hundreds of safe deposit boxes held by U.S. Private Vaults raises serious Fourth and Fifth Amendment issues. In order to have the contents of their boxes returned, federal authorities are asking owners to come forward, identify themselves, and describe their possessions. Some owners may be unwilling to do that—U.S. Private Vaults allowed anonymous rentals of safe-deposit boxes—while others may rightfully object to being subjected to the scrutiny of federal law enforcement when they have done nothing wrong.

"The constitution does not abide guilt by association," argues Robert Frommer, an attorney with the Institute for Justice, a libertarian law firm, in an op-ed published by The Orange County Register.

"What the government has done here is completely backward," writes Frommer. "The government cannot search every apartment in a building because the landlord is involved in a crime. After all, when somebody rents an apartment, that apartment is theirs."

Indeed, the unsealed warrant authorizing the raid of U.S. Private Vaults granted the FBI permission to seize the business's computers, money counters, security cameras, and "nests" of safe deposit boxes—the large steel frames that effectively act as bookshelves for the boxes themselves.

Importantly, the warrant "does not authorize a criminal search or seizure of the contents of the safe-deposit boxes," according to a copy of the warrant contained in court filings. The warrant also states that it "authorize[s] the seizure of the nests of the boxes themselves, not their contents."

But the FBI's own policies seem to have allowed a roundabout legal rationale for seizing the boxes as well. Agents are required to take into custody any property that could otherwise be stolen or left "in a dangerous manner" after carrying out a warrant. To put it in the context of a simpler situation: If the FBI seized a truck carrying cargo, it would not simply dump the cargo on the side of the road. Instead, there is a specific procedure for law enforcement to follow, which involves identifying and notifying rightful property owners, as well as securing the property.

In court filings, however, Gluck and other attorneys representing anonymous plaintiffs argue that the seizure of the nests "does not appear to be the government's true purpose here."

"A reasonable person could easily conclude that taking and searching the contents of the boxes was the true purpose of the USPV seizure, not just an unintended but unavoidable byproduct as the government seeks to portray and justify it," they write.

Now that the FBI has nearly 1,000 safe deposit boxes in its custody, anyone who comes forward to identify themselves and claim their possessions risks becoming the target of a criminal investigation. The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Central District of California told the Los Angeles Daily Journal, a legal industry publication, last month that "each box is being considered on a case-by-case basis, and we will investigate the boxes, or claims made on them" to determine if "the contents are related to criminal activity."

Attorneys for the plaintiffs argue that this amounts to an admission that prosecutors intend "to use any information gleaned in the claims process in order to conduct criminal investigations." U.S. Private Vaults had assured its customers that their anonymity would be protected, and people could have valid, non-criminal reasons for wanting to keep their identities a secret.

The rights violations are bad enough, but the FBI raid seems to have had serious procedural shortcomings as well. One 80-year-old woman represented by Gluck—and identified in court documents only as "Linda R."—may have lost a significant portion of her life savings due to what legal filings say are shoddy inventories of the safe deposit boxes' contents.

In a lawsuit filed on April 26, Linda R.'s attorneys argue that the FBI "failed to account for or return" 40 gold coins worth an estimated $75,000 that had been stored in a safe deposit box housed at U.S. Private Vaults. Department of Justice documentation detailing the contents of Linda's box makes note of "miscellaneous coins" without any specific amounts or other identification of the coins—Linda's attorneys note that the description could apply to everything from a pair of pennies to a box full of 1933 double eagle gold coins, some of the rarest and most valuable coins ever minted. For now, it remains unclear whether the government even possesses an accurate accounting of what was in her safe deposit box when it was seized.

Despite the broad claims of criminality from prosecutors, Linda has been charged with no crimes but may have lost tens of thousands of dollars of her retirement savings anyway. Even if the FBI's raid of U.S. Private Vaults eventually uncovers criminal activity relating to some of the safe-deposit boxes stored there, that hardly seems to justify the potential losses incurred by innocent bystanders like Linda, who kept her retirement savings there because she distrusted the banking system, according to court filings.

"It was improper that the government seized these possessions in the first place, unconscionable that they are using them as hostages to pressure owners to divulge private information, and outrageous that they apparently treated the possessions so carelessly that they seem to have lost at least some of them," Gluck tells Reason.

Jeffrey B. Isaacs, an attorney for another anonymous customer of U.S. Private Vaults—identified in court records as "James Poe"—tells the Los Angeles Times that the FBI's raid is "as illegal a search and seizure as I've ever seen."

For Dagny and Howard, the situation seems particularly cruel. They'd rented the box at U.S. Private Vaults after having their home burgled several years ago. They have the key and rental agreement for the box—and, Howard notes, they paid for the box with a credit card, hardly the sort of thing you'd do if you were trying to hide your identity from the feds or engage in criminal conduct. None of that has made a difference so far.

Because this time, the burglars wore badges.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Government; News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: andrewbrown; andrewbrownusatty; assetforfeiture; cdcalifornia; dubyajudge; fbi; fbicorrupt; fbiraid; garyklausner; gosbezopasnosti; governmentpirates; kathrynebailey; kathrynebaileyfbi; rgaryklausner; robertgaryklausner; robertgklausner; robertklausner; safedepositboxes; safetydepositboxes; securityoperatives; statesecurity; usprivatevaults
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To: Red Badger
As the FBI morphs into a criminal secret police organization in front of our eyes, why do none of the agents say a single word? The culture inside those walls must be utterly rotten, they all seem to accept fabricating evidence, using technicalities to access material they are not legally entitled to, and lying to courts to get surveillance on people they know committed no crimes. It's all fine with all of them.

Mind boggling that NONE of them seem to mind this.

41 posted on 05/11/2021 11:21:55 AM PDT by pepsi_junkie (Often wrong, but never in doubt!)
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To: Ann Archy

I thought the CDC was a government agency. The CDC Foundation was not.


42 posted on 05/11/2021 11:22:57 AM PDT by Iceclimber58
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To: Reno89519

Seems to me to be a 4th amendment violation any way you look at it. Anything they seized, even illegal drugs, cannot be used as evidence because the warrant stipulated that the contents of customers boxes were exempt............. PLUS I’m sure the company kept records of whose box was whose, else they wouldn’t get their rent money................


43 posted on 05/11/2021 11:24:36 AM PDT by Red Badger (Jesus said there is no marriage in Heaven. That's why they call it Heaven.....................)
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To: Red Badger

Sum Ting Wong here- not only wrong, but makes no sense- Beverly Hills is probably 95% far, far left.....


44 posted on 05/11/2021 11:25:08 AM PDT by matthew fuller (Biden's illegal presidency is a democrat declaration of war on civilization.)
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To: Red Badger

I think the challenge is more than just having this used as evidence, the problem is having the personal possessions returned. Though, I guess, there is a problem if there are illegal drugs, the government cannot realistically return them to their owners. And for those owners that store legit and non-legit items, it is likely uncomfortable to ask for the return of those legit items.


45 posted on 05/11/2021 11:27:29 AM PDT by Reno89519 (Buy American, Hire American! End All Worker Visa Programs. Replace Visa Workers w/ American Wo)
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To: Red Badger

Worth storing some wealth in a different Int’l legal jurisdiction, so that the US gov can’t simply seize it. They have to follow rules and prove it to a court.


46 posted on 05/11/2021 11:27:49 AM PDT by aMorePerfectUnion (I'd rather be anecdotally alive than scientifically dead...)
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To: Reno89519

Customer: Yes, I had my grandmother’s diamond necklace, seven gold and ruby rings, 5 silver rings and a kilo of cocaine.................


47 posted on 05/11/2021 11:31:15 AM PDT by Red Badger (Jesus said there is no marriage in Heaven. That's why they call it Heaven.....................)
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To: Red Badger

Well we have the Gestapo (the IRS) now we have the SS (the FBI) - who or what is next?


48 posted on 05/11/2021 11:32:00 AM PDT by SkyDancer (If At First You Don't Succeed ~ So Much For Skydiving)
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To: SkyDancer

US Marshal Service...............


49 posted on 05/11/2021 11:34:26 AM PDT by Red Badger (Jesus said there is no marriage in Heaven. That's why they call it Heaven.....................)
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To: Red Badger

There is that too - perhaps the SD?


50 posted on 05/11/2021 11:36:39 AM PDT by SkyDancer (If At First You Don't Succeed ~ So Much For Skydiving)
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To: Red Badger

“Employees of defendant [U.S. Private Vaults] would conduct counter surveillance of the neighborhood and warn customers when they observed law enforcement,” the indictment said. If employees figured out the cops were on to them, “they would attempt to warn the customer, delay law enforcement, or even remove all but a nominal amount of cash from the box for the customer, to prevent law enforcement from discovering and seizing the bulk of the cash.”

vice.com


51 posted on 05/11/2021 11:38:42 AM PDT by TexasGator (Z1z)
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To: Red Badger

There is no government entity more deserving of complete dismantlement than the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

What a nest of total corruption.


52 posted on 05/11/2021 11:39:59 AM PDT by Magnatron
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To: matthew fuller

In 2020 Beverly Hills went hard to the right and supported Trump/Pence over the Potato and the low born gutter slut.

https://bhrentersalliance.org/2020/11/election-2020-beverly-hills-moves-right/


53 posted on 05/11/2021 11:42:00 AM PDT by MercyFlush (Senator Joseph McCarthy was right. )
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To: Red Badger

I just put in a claim for the box containing $1 million in $100 bills!


54 posted on 05/11/2021 11:43:52 AM PDT by TexasGator (Z1z)
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To: SkyDancer

ANd the Secret Service...............


55 posted on 05/11/2021 11:46:11 AM PDT by Red Badger (Jesus said there is no marriage in Heaven. That's why they call it Heaven.....................)
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To: Red Badger

burgled.............


56 posted on 05/11/2021 11:46:24 AM PDT by Osage Orange (DRT)
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To: Osage Orange

The Federal Burglary Institute.....................


57 posted on 05/11/2021 11:48:19 AM PDT by Red Badger (Jesus said there is no marriage in Heaven. That's why they call it Heaven.....................)
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To: Dick Bachert

Which Clinton?


58 posted on 05/11/2021 11:48:48 AM PDT by Osage Orange (DRT)
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To: Red Badger
Before returning the stolen [roperty, every box user must be checked for;

59 posted on 05/11/2021 11:49:29 AM PDT by SuperLuminal (Where is another Sam Adams now that we desperately need him?)
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To: Texas resident

Whole lot of other names you have left out................


60 posted on 05/11/2021 11:50:42 AM PDT by Osage Orange (DRT)
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