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- Date: 25 Jun 1993 09:10:50 -0500 (EST)
- From: Patty Neill <PNPJ@db1.cc.rochester.edu>
- To: civ@delfin.com
- Message-Id: <01GZSG9MKSF696W2I6@DBV>
-
- Sorry it took me so long to get this typed up, but I thought we should all have a copy. There are
- glimmers of hope here, but only glimmers so far. Pneill
-
- Wall Street Journal, 2 June 1993
- Cocaine-Tainted Cash Faulted as Evidence
- by Arthur S. Hayes
-
- Chances are pretty good that there are traces of cocaine in your wallet right now.
- And that's bad news for drug prosecutors.
- The problem is that cocaine sticks to cash whenever money is handled by drug dealers and
- users. And studies show that cocaine is in such wide use nationally that a sizable percentage of paper
- money bears traces of it--a finding that courts are starting to cite in ruling against prosecutors.
- Within the past 18 months, two federal appeal courts have strongly questioned the
- government's reliance on cocaine-tainted cash. And in a ruling in April, a federal trial judge said the
- mere presence of such cocaine traces doesn't give officials the necessary "probable cause" to launch
- an extensive search for drugs or to confiscate the cash.
- Nancy Hollander, president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, said,
- "We're going to see more and more lawyers using these rulings in arguments to suppress evidence by
- challenging the validity of dog sniffs [detecting cocaine] and confiscation of cash."
- The court decisions cite the findings of scientific and informal tests conducted in the late
- 1980s. Some of the tests showed that more than 95% of the cash in circulation is cocaine-
- contaminated because residue from the drug remains long after the initial exposure.
- One of the studies that has proved more damaging to prosecutors was done by Sanford A.
- Angelos, a forensic chemist with the federal Drug Enforcement Administration's North Central
- Laboratory in Chicago. The study, which the agency has dismissed as "just one man's unscientific
- assessment," concluded that a third of the samples taken from several Chicago banks and from the
- Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago were contaminated. The tests results were reported in an undated
- internal DEA memo and first surfaced publicly as evidence in a trial in Los Angeles three years ago.
- In the memo, Mr. Angelos said the belts of the bill sorter at the reserve bank was spreading
- the contamination to more and more cash. Mr. Angelos recommended, among other things, that
- "trace analysis of currency for general enforcement or seizure be stopped."
- The Angelos study was recently cited by the attorney for Willie L. Jones, a Nashville
- landscaper who went to court to recover $9,000 that U.S. drug agents seized from his in 1991 under
- the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations law. As in many cash-seizure cases, Mr.
- Jones had been stopped at an airport while he was waiting to catch a flight. The RICO law allows the
- government to seize cash from people suspected of certain crimes, on the theory that the assets are
- related to criminal activity.
- In April, in apparently the first ruling of its kind, Judge Thomas A. Wiseman, Jr. of federal
- court in Nashville ordered the government return the cash to Mr. Jones. The judge said in his ruling
- that "the presence of trace narcotics on currency does not yield any relevant information whatsoever
- about the currency's history."
- Michael L. Roden, an assistant U.S. attorney in Nashville, said no decision had been made
- about appealing Judge Wiseman's ruling.
- The Sixth U.S.Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati also raised questions about the use of
- cocaine-tainted cash as evidence in a decision in January involving the seizure of $53,082. The court
- cited, among other studies, a test conducted four years ago by Lee Hearn, chief toxicologist for the
- Dade County medical examiner's officer in Miami. In a study of currency from banks in cities around
- the country, Mr. Hearn concluded that 97% of the bills tested positive for cocaine.
- The Sixth Circuit panel said that because of such tests, "a court should seriously question the
- value of a dog's alert [indicating cocaine] without other persuasive evidence." The appeals court panel
- threw out the seizure as unconstitutional on other grounds. The U.S.attorney in Detroit yesterday
- asked the entire appeals court to review the panel's decision.
- The U.S.Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia raised similar doubts about the use of
- cocaine-contaminated cash as evidence in a case last year. Citing the studies, the court said the
- government had conducted an improper search and seizure in taking cash and other items from a
- traveler on a train.
- Prosecutors' reliance on such evidence prompted a state appeals court in Miami to go so far
- as to overturn a drug-possession conviction in April. The court ruled that a cocaine-contaminated
- dollar bill wasn't enough evidence to sustain a drug-possession conviction in south Florida where
- "cocaine can be found on much of the currency." Prosecutors in Florida said they wouldn't appeal the
- state appeals court's reversal of the drug conviction.
- Theodore S. Greenberg, chief of the Justice Department's money-laundering section, said the
- recent rulings haven't discouraged the government's use of cocaine-tainted cash as evidence. "Yes,
- we'll continue to use these techniques as is necessary in all the cases," Mr. Greenberg said.
- One reason, prosecutors say, is that other evidence usually backs up seizure of cash in such
- cases. For instance, they argue that in many cases where currency is seized, the suspects have
- previous arrest records or can't explain whey they are traveling with such large amounts of cash.
-
- =============================================================================
-
- From: verdant@ucs.umass.edu (Sol Lightman)
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- Subject: Re: Dectectable Cocaine in money
- Date: 19 Apr 1993 22:19:40 GMT
-
- Reprinted by permission from the 'Pittsburgh Press'
-
- PRESUMED GUILTY
-
- Copyright, 1991, The Pittsburgh Press Co.
- By Andrew Schneider and Mary Pat Flaherty
- The Pittsburgh Press
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- DRUGS CONTAMINATE NEARLY ALL THE MONEY IN AMERICA
-
- Police seize money from thousands of people each year because a dog with a
- badge sniffs, barks or paws to show that bills are tainted with drugs.
-
- If a police officer picks you out as a likely drug courier, the dog is
- used to confirm that your money has the smell of drugs.
-
- But scientists say the test the police rely on is no test at all because
- drugs contaminate virtually all the currency in America.
-
- Over a seven-year period, Dr. Jay Poupko and his colleagues at Toxicology
- Consultants Inc. in Miami have repeatedly tested currency in Austin, Dallas,
- Los Angeles, Memphis, Miami, Milwaukee, New York City, Pittsburgh, Seattle and
- Syracuse. He also tested American bills in London.
-
- "An average of 96 percent of all the bills we analyzed from the 11 cities
- tested positive for cocaine. I don't think any rational thinking person can
- dispute that almost all the currency in this country is tainted with drugs,"
- Poupko says.
-
- Scientists at National Medical Services, in Willow Grove, Pa., who tested
- money from banks and other legal sources more than a dozen times, consistently
- found cocaine on more than 80 percent of the bills.
-
- "Cocaine is very adhesive and easily transferable," says Vincent Cordova,
- director of criminalistics for the private lab. "A police officer, pharmacist,
- toxicologist or anyone else who handles cocaine, including drug traffickers,
- can shake hands with someone, who eventually touches money, and the
- contamination process begins."
-
- Cordova and other scientists use gas chromatography and mass spectroscopy,
- precise alcohol washes and a dozen other sophisticated techniques to identify
- the presence of narcotics down to the nanogram level one billionth of a gram.
- That measure, which is far less than a pin point, is the same level a dog can
- detect with a sniff.
-
- What a drug dog cannot do, which the scientists can, is quantify the
- amount of drugs on the bills.
-
- Half of the money Cordova examined had levels of cocaine at or above 9
- nanograms. This level means the bills were either near a source of cocaine or
- were handled by someone who touched the drug, he says.
-
- Another 30 percent of the bills he examined show levels below 9 nanograms,
- which indicates "the bills were probably in a cash drawer, wallet or some
- place where they came in contact with money previously contaminated."
-
- The lab's research found $20 bills are most highly contaminated, with $10
- and $5 bills next. The $1, $50 and $100 bill usually have the lowest cocaine
- levels.
-
- Cordova urges restraint in linking possession of contaminated money to a
- criminal act.
-
- "Police aid prosecutors have got to use caution in how far they go. The
- presence of cocaine on bills cannot be used as valid proof that the holder of
- the money, or the bills themselves, have ever been in direct contact with
- drugs," says Cordova, who spent II years directing the Philadelphia Police
- crime laboratory.
-
- Nevertheless, more and more drug dogs are being put to work.
-
- Some agencies, like the U.S. Customs Service, are using passive dogs that
- don't rip into an item or person - when the dogs find something during a
- search. These dogs just sit and wag their tails. German shepherds with names
- like Killer and Rambo are being replaced by Labradors named Bruce or Memphis'
- "Chocolate Mousse."
-
- Marijuana presents its own problems for dogs since its very pungent smell
- is long-lasting. Trainers have testified that drug dogs can react to clothing,
- containers or cars months after marijuana has been removed.
-
- A 1989 case in Richmond, Va., addressed the issue of how reliable dogs are
- in marijuana searches.
-
- Jack Adams, a special agent with the Virginia State Police, supervised
- training of drug dogs for the state.
-
- He said the odor from a single suitcase filled with marijuana and placed
- with 100 other bags in a closed Amtrak baggage car in Miami could permeate all
- the other bags in the car by the time the train reached Richmond.
-
- And what happens to the mountain of "drug-contaminated" dollars the
- government seizes each year? The bills aren't burned, cleaned, or stored in a
- well-guarded warehouse.
-
- Twenty-one seizing agencies questioned all said the tainted money was
- deposited in a local bank - which means it's back in circulation.
-
- ---------------------
-
- And they wonder why I drag my feet getting a job....
-
- Brian
-
-
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