King v. State
King v. State
Opinion
Fredrick L. King and Angela Goode appeal the trial court's judgment ordering the forfeiture of $9,333 in United States currency that law-enforcement officers seized during an investigation into King's suspected distribution of cocaine. We reverse.
On March 15, 2005, the State of Alabama filed a complaint seeking the condemnation and forfeiture of $9,333 in United States currency pursuant to §
The only testimony presented by the State was that of Jim England, a member of the Morgan County Sheriffs drug task force. England testified that in early 2005 two informants told agents with the task force that they had purchased cocaine from King in the past. Prior to the informants' bringing King to the agents' attention, the agents had never heard of King. England testified that King did not have a reputation as a drug dealer in the community.
On the morning of February 17, 2005, the agents sent one of the informants into King's house to obtain narcotics. King told the informant that he did not have the drugs at the house; thus, King drove to another location to get the drugs. Upon King's return, he gave the informant four and one-half ounces of crack cocaine. The informant did not pay for the narcotics at that time because it was a transaction in which King "fronted" the drugs in anticipation of the informant's paying King at a later time. The informant gave the drugs to the agents, and the agents obtained a search warrant for King's residence.
Four or five hours after the first transaction, the agents had the same informant return to King's house in order to obtain more narcotics. Unlike the previous transaction, the second controlled buy was not a "front" deal. As such, the agents gave the informant $9,000 in marked United States currency. The informant entered the house and left shortly thereafter; an agent met the informant in the driveway as soon as the informant exited the house. The informant gave the agent two plastic bags containing a total of approximately eight ounces of powdered cocaine. The record is unclear whether King drove to another location in order to obtain the narcotics involved in the second transaction.
At that time, the agents entered the house in order to execute the search warrant. England testified that as they entered *Page 969 the house, the agents saw Goode sitting on a couch with several children. King was running down a hall toward the master bedroom; he had in his hands a paper bag from a fast-food restaurant. The agents followed King into the bedroom, where King stopped running after he threw the bag on the floor. The bag contained the $9,000 in marked United States currency that the agents had given the informant.
The agents detained King and began searching the house. The agents found no illegal drugs, drug paraphernalia, scales, or other indicia of the illegal drug trade in the house. The agents did find a .38 caliber handgun, $833 in United States currency in King's wallet, and $8,500 in $100 bills hidden in a pocket of a large leather jacket in the closet in the master bedroom. At the time of the raid, neither King nor Goode claimed ownership of the $8,500 found in the jacket. The agents confiscated all of the money and the handgun; King and Goode do not challenge the agents' confiscation of the handgun. King was charged with trafficking in cocaine; Goode was not charged with any offenses.
Goode initially testified that, at the time of the raid, she worked as a housekeeper at a local health-care facility. However, Goode later stated that she was working for another company at the time in question. Despite questioning her place of employment, the State did not dispute that she was working at the time of or before the incident. Goode testified that she had been saving the $8,500 for five years for a down payment on a house. She stated that she had attempted to purchase a house but that she could not secure financing. Goode testified that, at the time of the raid, she did not tell the agents that the $8,500 belonged to her because she was nervous; she did, however, at the time of the raid claim ownership of the vehicle in the driveway.
England testified that King told him that he was receiving Social Security disability income. Goode testified that King had been receiving Social Security disability income for approximately four years and that the $833 in King's wallet came from his disability check. England testified that the State did not seek the forfeiture of the house or the vehicle in which King drove to get the drugs during the first controlled buy.
The trial court noted in its judgment that it was "reasonably satisfied" that the $9,333 was "furnished or intended to be furnished . . . in exchange for controlled substances." The trial court based its judgment on the fact that the informant conducted two controlled buys within a short period of time, that the second buy involved a "relatively large quantity of cocaine," that King did not work and was on disability, that the $8,500 was found in a closet in the same room as King, and that the nature of Goode's employment and her "lack of any detailed explanation" for acquiring the money caused her story to "just . . . not add up." The trial court's judgment incorrectly stated, however, that crack cocaine and powdered cocaine had been found in the house as a result of the execution of the search warrant.
In its order denying King and Goode's postjudgment motion, the trial court acknowledged that there was strong circumstantial evidence of the money's relation to the drug trade, but it acknowledged that the State had failed to "trace the [$9,333] to any one or more specific drug transactions." The trial court stated that to require the State to show a direct link between the currency at issue and the drug trade would result in large amounts of currency "rarely" being forfeited in cases such as this one. *Page 970
On appeal, King and Goode argue that the trial court's judgment of forfeiture is due to be reversed. On appellate review of a ruling from a forfeiture proceeding at which the evidence was presented ore tenus, the trial court's judgment is presumed to be correct unless the record shows it to be contrary to the great weight of the evidence. Holloway v. State ex rel.Whetstone,
"[a]ll moneys, negotiable instruments, securities, or other things of value furnished or intended to be furnished by any person in exchange for a controlled substance in violation of any law of this state; all proceeds traceable to such an exchange; and all moneys, negotiable instruments, and securities used or intended to be used to facilitate any violation of any law of this state concerning controlled substances."
"`"Under §
In Gatlin v. State,
Gatlin v. State"The mere proximity of the drugs to the cash in Gatlin's vehicle did not satisfy the State's burden of proof. See Thompson v. State, [
715 So.2d 224 (Ala.Civ.App. 1997)]. Our forfeiture cases have found the following circumstances to be indicative of contemplated or completed drug transactions: a large quantity of drugs, see, e.g., Shepherd v. State,664 So.2d 238 (Ala.Civ.App. 1995) (21 pounds of marijuana); drugs packaged for sale, see, e.g., Pointer v. State,668 So.2d 41 (Ala.Civ.App. 1995); drug paraphernalia or accouterments indicating sale, such as `baggies' or scales, see, e.g., Johnson v. State,667 So.2d 105 ,108 (Ala.Civ.App. 1995). . . ."
King and Goode argue that the State did not present any evidence linking the $9,333 to a transaction involving controlled substances. In support of their argument, King and Goode rely heavily on Ex parte McConathy, supra. InMcConathy, a suspect bought 23 Xanax pills from an informant, and the police detained the suspect shortly after the transaction. The police searched the vehicle that the suspect was driving and found numerous pharmaceutical pills for which the suspect did not have a prescription, $8,000 in United States currency, and a $9,000 cashier's check.
The police sought the forfeiture of the $8,000 pursuant to §
The trial court entered a judgment of forfeiture, and this court affirmed, without *Page 971
an opinion. McConathy v. State (No. 2021203, June 18, 2004),
The State argues that the facts of this case are similar to facts of Harris v. State,
The State presented evidence indicating that all of the money was stacked in bundles of $1,000, with the bundles in turn stacked in $10,000 bundles, a manner commonly used by drug dealers. Further, the State presented evidence that one of the drug dealers had been arrested two years before with approximately $21,000 that was bundled in the same manner.
One of the people arrested claimed that she had received $90,000 of the $122,000 that she claimed as a result of her husband's death 17 years before. However, she was unable to offer any explanation as to how the money increased by more than $30,000 while it sat in shoe boxes under her bed and later in the floor safe. Though the trial court acknowledged that there was no evidence linking the specific bills to a drug transaction, it found that there was "`overwhelming circumstantial evidence'" linking the money to the drug trade.Harris v. State,
Our supreme court affirmed the trial court's judgment of forfeiture as to the $165,501. Harris v. State,
In Agee v. State ex rel. Galanos,
The trial court entered a judgment of forfeiture, and this court affirmed. Agee v. State ex rel. Galanos,
The facts of this case are distinguishable from those ofHarris and Agee.Unlike Harris, no witness described frequently seeing money coming into the house in exchange for drugs. Other than the $9,000 in United States currency provided by the agents, the State presented no evidence linking any of the money in the house to illegal drugs. The informants did not tell the police that they had seen King take money into the bedroom or that they had seen any money at all come into the house. Likewise, the State presented no evidence indicating that the money was stacked in bundles or in some other way frequently used by drug dealers. While the State implied that the jacket belonged to King, it offered no evidence in support of that contention. In Harris, the State presented "`overwhelming circumstantial evidence'" that the money was linked to the drug trade (
Unlike in Agee, the State presented no evidence contradicting Goode's claims. The State failed to offer any evidence as to the amount of King's disability payments or as to Goode's income. In Agee, evidence was presented that was in stark contrast to the defendant's claim that he had saved the money used to purchase the vehicle; here, the State offered no evidence to refute the claims made by King and Goode.
England provided a step by step account of the raid on King's house. His testimony left no doubt that King violated the laws of Alabama when he provided a substantial amount of cocaine to the informant. While England's testimony detailed King's actions over a period of four or five hours, the State provided the trial court no evidence regarding the money at issue. England showed the trial court a photograph of the money after the agents had "fanned [it] out"; however, the State failed to offer any evidence related to the manner in which King or Goode stored the money. No witness testified that King had any prior involvement in the drug trade or that he hid money related to the drug trade in the master bedroom of his house.
In this case, England testified that, before the events on which this appeal focuses, *Page 973 the police were unaware of King's involvement with the drug trade. Goode was charged with no crime in connection with the illegal drug transaction. The State presented no evidence of Goode's involvement in the illegal drug trade, and the State did not offer any evidence suggesting that the $8,500 did not, in fact, belong to Goode. Goode testified that she had been saving money in an effort to buy a house and that the $833 in King's wallet came from his disability income. King and Goode presented undisputed evidence as to the origin of the seized money.
The State in this case has shown no link, either direct or circumstantial, between the seized money and a drug transaction. The agents found no illegal drugs, other than those involved in the underlying transaction. Though they searched the house, the police did not locate any drugs, scales, or other indicia of the illegal drug trade. See Pointer v. State, supra. King had just completed an illegal transaction; however, the money related to that transaction is not at issue in this case.See McConathy,
While we acknowledge the strong presumption of correctness afforded a trial court's findings of fact in cases such as this, the trial court's judgment must be supported by the evidence presented. See Ex parte McConathy, supra. The State presented no evidence indicating that the seized currency was related to a transaction involving illegal drugs. At best, the evidence indicated that the State merely suspected that the money was connected to the drug trade. See Ex parteMcConathy,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
All the judges concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Fredrick L. King and Angela Goode v. State of Alabama.
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- 5 cases
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- Published