IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
RODERICK BROWN, §
§ No. 292, 2018
Petitioner Below, §
Appellant, § Court Below: Superior Court
§ of the State of Delaware
v. §
§ C.A. Nos. S16M-11-001 &
STATE OF DELAWARE, § S16M-12-002
§
Respondent Below, §
Appellee. §
Submitted: April 26, 2019
Decided: July 22, 2019
Before STRINE, Chief Justice; SEITZ and TRAYNOR, Justices.
Upon appeal from the Superior Court. AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part,
and REMANDED.
Roderick Brown, pro se.
Kathryn J. Garrison, Esquire, Department of Justice, Dover, Delaware for Appellee
State of Delaware.
TRAYNOR, Justice:
When police arrested appellant Roderick Brown1 for drug dealing and money
laundering, they also seized several cars and tens of thousands of dollars. Brown
filed petitions for the return of that property, but after an evidentiary hearing, the
Superior Court denied the bulk of Brown’s claims. Brown then filed this appeal.
Because we conclude that the State failed to meet its burden for the seizure of two
of Brown’s cars, we reverse in part. We affirm the remainder of the Superior Court’s
decision.
I. BACKGROUND
A. The seizures
After an investigation, Delaware State Police arrested Brown on August 26,
2016, while he was sitting outside of 206 Houston Circle in Millsboro, Delaware in
a 2003 Honda Accord. The police seized the Honda, which was registered to Brown,
as well as a set of keys from Brown’s person. The police also executed a search
warrant for an apartment at 206 Houston Circle. In the apartment, police found
cocaine, marijuana, heroin, and $1,644 in cash. The police also found a computer
with the name “Brown” on the login screen, a doctor’s appointment card for Brown,
photos of Brown, and unsigned mortgage papers bearing Brown’s name.
1
Brown also uses the name Roderick Mumford, and his criminal case was litigated under that
name. See Mumford v. State, 2018 WL 5096074 (Del. Oct. 17, 2018).
2
The police also searched two garages in the Houston Circle complex and
seized a 2002 Mercedes-Benz, which is not at issue in this appeal, and a 1972
Cadillac, which was registered to Brown. The police searched the garage in which
the Cadillac was stored because the owner of that garage told police that Brown paid
her $50 per month to keep a car in the garage. The police found no drugs or other
contraband in the Cadillac or in the garage. The police seized the Cadillac because
they believed that Brown had purchased it with the proceeds of drug sales.
The police also executed a search warrant for a property on Berry Road in
Frankford and seized a 1968 Oldsmobile registered to Brown parked behind the
property. As with the Cadillac, the police seized the Oldsmobile because they
believed that it had been purchased with drug proceeds. The police found no drugs
or other contraband in the Oldsmobile or at the Berry Road property.
During their investigation, the police learned that Brown stored drugs and
drug proceeds at a property on El Coleman Drive in Millsboro. The police searched
the El Coleman property and found cocaine, heroin, drug packaging materials,
digital scales, guns, ammunition, $3,813 in cash, and two keys.2
The keys from the El Coleman property were for two safe deposit boxes at
PNC Bank branches in Millsboro and Selbyville, but only the contents of the
Millsboro safe deposit box are at issue in this appeal. The police obtained and
2
Police also found Brown’s passport and birth certificate at the property.
3
executed search warrants for the safe deposit boxes. In the Millsboro safe deposit
box (owned by Brown and a woman named Shawanda Knox), the police found
$73,000 separated into $1,000 stacks. Brown and Knox also had two bank accounts
at PNC Bank. One account contained $2,513 and the other account contained
$2,022.52. The police seized the cash in the safe deposit boxes and the funds in the
bank accounts because they believed that the money constituted proceeds from the
sale of drugs. Brown originally denied ownership of the money in the Millsboro
safe deposit box and bank accounts. Police sent the cash to the Delaware National
Guard for forensic testing.
B. Legal proceedings
In November and December 2016, Brown filed two petitions for the return of
the seized property. In one petition, Brown sought the return of the Cadillac, the
Oldsmobile, and the Honda. In the other petition, Brown sought the return of
$47,430 in cash from the Millsboro safe deposit box, $4,175.62 from his PNC Bank
accounts, and $1,644 in cash from the Houston Circle apartment. Knox and the co-
owner of the Selbyville safe deposit box also filed petitions for the return of property.
Those proceedings were stayed pending resolution of the criminal matter.
In July 2017, a Superior Court jury found Brown guilty of drug dealing and
money laundering. We affirmed the Superior Court’s judgment of conviction,
concluding, among other things, that the “evidence, in its totality, provided a
4
sufficient basis for the jury to conclude with the required certainty that a substantial
amount of the cash found in the safe deposit boxes was the product of [Brown]’s sale
of illegal drugs.”3
On April 18, 2018, a Superior Court Commissioner held a hearing on all four
petitions (Brown’s and the other petitioners’) for the return of property. Brown
appeared without counsel at the hearing, but neither of the other petitioners appeared.
At the beginning of the hearing, the Commissioner ruled that the validity of the
search warrants that Brown sought to challenge—i.e., those leading to the seizure of
the Cadillac and the Oldsmobile—could not be relitigated because Brown was found
guilty in the criminal proceedings.
In a written order dated May 10, 2018, the Commissioner found that the State
had established probable cause for the seizure of the Honda, Cadillac, Oldsmobile,
and $47,430 in the Millsboro safe deposit box and that Brown had not rebutted the
presumption of forfeitability by a preponderance of the evidence.4 The
Commissioner found that the State had not established probable cause for the seizure
of the Millsboro bank accounts and that therefore the $4,175.62 should be returned
to Brown. The Commissioner recommended that the Superior Court enter an order
deeming the Cadillac, Oldsmobile, Honda, and $47,430 in the Millsboro safe deposit
3
Mumford v. State, 2018 WL 5096074, at *1, 196 A.3d 412 (Del. Oct. 17, 2018) (Table).
4
Commissioner’s Order (“Commissioner’s Report” hereafter), Brown v. State, S16M-11-001 and
S16M-12-002 (consolidated) (Del. Super. May 10, 2018).
5
box forfeited to the State. Neither party objected to the Commissioner’s order. In
an order dated May 29, 2018, the Superior Court adopted the Commissioner’s
findings and conclusions.5 This appeal followed.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We will uphold the Superior Court’s decision that Brown’s property was
subject to forfeiture unless we find that the decision was clearly erroneous.6 The
State has the initial burden of establishing probable cause that the cars and money
were subject to forfeiture under 16 Del. C. § 4784.7 A car is subject to forfeiture if
it was used to transport illegal drugs.8 We also have held that motor vehicles
purchased with the proceeds of illegal drug sales are subject to forfeiture under 16
5
Final Order, Brown v. State, S16M-11-001 and S16M-12-002 (consolidated) (Del. Super. May
29, 2018).
6
Brown v. State, 721 A.2d 1263, 1265 (Del. 1998).
7
Id.
8
16 Del. C. § 4784(a)(4).
6
Del. C. § 4784(a)(7).9 Once the State establishes probable cause, the petitioner must
show by a preponderance of the evidence that he has a “lawful possessory interest
in the seized property” and that “[t]he property was unlawfully seized or not subject
to forfeiture . . . .”10 “A defendant convicted in any criminal proceeding is precluded
from later denying the essential allegations of the criminal offense of which the
9
Jackson v. State, 2012 WL 6707734, at *2, 70 A.3d 206 (Del. 2012) (Table); see also Maldonado
v. State, 2016 WL 5864586, at *2 n.1, 148 A.3d 1173 (Del. 2016) (Table) (recognizing that “profits
from drug sales are subject to forfeiture” under 16 Del. C. § 4784(a)(7). We note that these cases
reach this conclusion without any analysis of § 4784(a)(7)’s text which, in relevant part, provides
that the following items shall be forfeitable to the State:
All moneys, negotiable instruments, securities or any other thing of value furnished,
or intended to be furnished, in exchange for a controlled substance or drug
paraphernalia in violation of this chapter; all profits or proceeds traceable to
securities, assets or interest used, or intended to be used, to facilitate any violation
of this chapter. (emphasis added).
It is less than crystal-clear that the highlighted language covers the vehicles in this case—or, for
that matter, in any case. Federal law provides for civil forfeiture in drug-related cases under 21
U.S.C. § 881, which is substantially similar—but not identical—to § 4784. (We note that although
§ 4784 organizationally falls under Delaware’s version of the Uniform Controlled Substances Act,
the text of § 4784 is clearly based on the federal § 881 and not on the model uniform act’s § 504,
which enumerates the types of property subject to civil forfeiture.)
In particular, paragraph (a)(6) of the federal § 881 provides that the following is forfeitable:
All moneys, negotiable instruments, securities, or other things of value furnished
or intended to be furnished by any person in exchange for a controlled substance or
listed chemical in violation of this subchapter, 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 this subchapter. (emphasis added).
Relying on the emphasized language, federal courts have held that § 881(a)(6) provides for
forfeiture of property purchased with drug proceeds. United States v. Premises Known as 8584
Old Brownsville Rd., Shelby Cty., Tenn., 736 F.2d 1129, 1130 (6th Cir. 1984) (“[I]n our opinion,
the term ‘all proceeds’ in § 881(a)(6) is unambiguous and includes all types of property, both real
and personal.”). The phrase “all proceeds traceable to such an exchange” is, of course, absent from
§ 4784(a)(7). Nevertheless, in the cases at the beginning of this footnote, this Court has held that
§ 4784(a)(7) provides for forfeitures similar in scope to the federal statute despite the semantically
different language. What is more, Brown has not challenged the State’s assertion that cars bought
with drug-sale proceeds are subject to forfeiture under § 4784(a)(7).
10
16 Del. C. § 4784(j); Super. Ct. Civ. R. 71.3(d)(1).
7
defendant was convicted in any proceeding brought pursuant to this Rule, regardless
of the pendency of an appeal from that conviction.”11
III. ANALYSIS
Brown’s arguments on appeal may be summarized as follows: (1) the Superior
Court erred by barring any challenges to the legality of the search warrants that led
to the seizures on collateral-estoppel grounds; (2) the State failed to show that the
Cadillac and Oldsmobile were purchased with drug proceeds and that the Honda was
used to transport drugs; and (3) the State failed to show that the $47,430 cash in the
Millsboro safe deposit box constituted drug proceeds.
As an initial matter, we reject the State’s argument that Brown waived
consideration of his claims because he failed to file objections to the Commissioner’s
order. First, the applicable rule regarding dismissal is discretionary rather than
mandatory.12 Next, unlike Maniscalco v. State where the appellant ignored this
Court’s express directions to file objections to a Commissioner’s report and
recommendations before filing an appeal in this Court,13 Brown has not ignored
similar directions here. We therefore address Brown’s arguments on the merits.
11
Super. Ct. Civ. R. 71.3(f)(1).
12
Super. Ct. Civ. R. 132(b) (“A party seeking reconsideration of an order of a Commissioner under
subparagraph (3) or appealing the findings of fact and recommendations of a Commissioner under
subparagraph (4) who fails to comply with the provisions of this rule may be subject to dismissal
of said motion for reconsideration or appeal.”) (emphasis added).
13
2017 WL 443725 (Del. Jan. 10, 2017).
8
A. The search warrants and collateral estoppel
Brown first contends that the Superior Court erred when it precluded him on
collateral-estoppel grounds from litigating the legality of the search warrants. In
Delaware, collateral estoppel bars petitioners in forfeiture proceedings from
relitigating the validity of search warrants when that issue has been previously
litigated in a criminal trial where the petitioner was a defendant.14 For collateral
estoppel to apply, an issue must have been fully litigated, determined by a final
judgment, and essential to that judgment.
The State concedes that the Superior Court erred by invoking collateral
estoppel to bar Brown from challenging the legality of the warrants that led to the
seizure of the Cadillac and Oldsmobile. Because Brown did not file a motion to
suppress in the criminal proceedings,15 the legality of the warrants was not fully
litigated,16 and thus collateral estoppel does not apply. But because we determine
14
Brown v. State, 721 A.2d 1263, 1265 (Del. 1998); Brawley v. State, 1999 WL 1254567, at *2,
741 A.2d 1025 (Del. 1999) (Table).
15
Indeed, it would have been strange for Brown to have filed a suppression motion involving those
particular warrants given that the police found no contraband or other incriminating evidence when
executing those warrants.
16
See, e.g., Brawley, 1999 WL 1254567, at *1 (holding that the petitioner was collaterally estopped
from challenging the legality of a search where the petitioner’s motion to suppress in the criminal
proceedings had been denied and he had pled guilty to Maintaining a Dwelling); Brown, 721 A.2d
at 1265 (holding that the petitioner was collaterally estopped from questioning the legality of the
search and seizure in the civil forfeiture case because the trial court had heard most of the issues
in the course of a suppression hearing in the criminal case).
9
that Brown is entitled to the return of the Cadillac and the Oldsmobile on other
grounds, we do not reach the merits of whether those warrants were legal or not.
Brown also challenges for the first time the legality of the search warrants that
led to the seizure of the Honda and the money in the Millsboro safe deposit box. But
unlike Brown’s challenge to the warrants that led to the seizure of the Cadillac and
Oldsmobile, which was thwarted by the Superior Court’s application of collateral
estoppel, Brown did not raise a challenge below to the warrants leading to the seizure
of the Honda or the money in the Millsboro safe deposit boxes. Accordingly, Brown
has waived his new argument on appeal that those warrants were illegal.17
B. The cars
As mentioned, the police seized a Cadillac, an Oldsmobile, and a Honda on
the basis that they had been purchased with drug-sale proceeds. As for the Honda,
police offered the additional basis that it had been used to transport drugs. The
Superior Court rejected Brown’s petition for return of the cars because it found that
the police had probable cause to support the seizure of the cars and that Brown had
not shown by a preponderance of the evidence that he had a “lawful possessory
interest in the seized property” and that “[t]he property was unlawfully seized or not
subject to forfeiture . . . .”18
17
Supr. Ct. R. 8.
18
Supra note 10 and accompanying text.
10
An initial problem with the Superior Court’s finding of probable cause is that
the cars that the State seized from Brown do not fit well with the State’s own
description of how certain drug dealers use cars to protect their assets. As to the
connection between drug dealing and car purchases, Delaware State Police Detective
Sean Callaway testified that “larger scale drug dealers” tend to “hide their proceeds
in vehicles” by buying and customizing multiple vehicles that are less likely to be
seized.19 Here, however, there was no evidence suggesting that Brown was a “larger
scale drug dealer.” Nor was there evidence that the cars were unusually valuable or
that Brown had undertaken substantial customization of any of the cars seized by the
police such that they would be worthwhile stores of value, 20 especially when
considered in comparison to the amount of cash that police seized. Furthermore,
police found no drugs or drug paraphernalia on Brown when he was arrested or in
any of the cars.
i. The Cadillac and Oldsmobile
The legal ground for the seizure of the Cadillac and the Oldsmobile was that
they were purchased with the proceeds of unlawful drug sales. The bases of the
Superior Court’s finding of probable cause to believe they were so purchased
19
B95.
20
Brown testified that he bought the Cadillac in 2014 for $9,930, the Oldsmobile in 2012 for
$2,500, and the Honda in 2015 for $200. Brown also said that he had put aftermarket wheels on
the Cadillac, $3,000 into fixing the Oldsmobile, and $1,700 into the Honda.
11
consisted of (1) a detective’s testimony that drug dealers often purchase multiple
vehicles and store them in different locations to prevent seizure and (2) Brown’s
convictions for drug dealing and money laundering.
Although those bases are perhaps true, standing alone, they do not adequately
establish probable cause. In particular, here—in addition to the (absence of)
evidence discussed above—Brown purchased the Oldsmobile and Cadillac at
modest prices in 2012 and 2014, respectively, and there was no evidence that Brown
was engaged in unlawful conduct during those years. Stacked against these
deficiencies in the record, the bare testimony that “larger scale” drug dealers use cars
to “hide their proceeds” is a reed far too slender to support a finding that the police
had reasonable grounds to believe that either of these vehicles was subject to
forfeiture. The Cadillac and Oldsmobile should therefore be returned to Brown.
ii. The Honda
As for the Honda, the State contends that its forfeiture is justified because the
police had probable cause to suspect that Brown was using the Honda to transport
drugs.21 Although we think the matter is far closer than the Superior Court allowed,
we agree with the State. Brown was convicted of drug dealing based on the cocaine,
heroin, and cash found at the Houston Circle apartment, Brown was paying rent for
21
On appeal, the State has not pressed, as it did below, its contention that the $200 Honda
constituted a fruit of Brown’s illegal activity.
12
that apartment, and Brown was parked outside that apartment in the Honda when the
police executed the search warrant. Moreover, the evidence showed that the situs of
Brown’s drug dealing activity was not limited to the Houston Circle apartment. As
mentioned, the police found substantial evidence of drug dealing at the El Coleman
property. Under these particular circumstances, we are satisfied with the State’s
showing that the police reasonably believed that Brown used the Honda to transport
controlled substances to and from the apartment and with the Superior Court’s
conclusion that Brown failed to demonstrate that he was entitled to the return of the
Honda.
It is worth noting, however, that we found the direct oral testimony that the
State offered—and the Superior Court accepted—in support of the Honda’s seizure
to be unpersuasive. As Detective Callaway put it, “[t]he Honda was seized due to
the culmination of the investigation. We learned that he used that vehicle to transport
illegal narcotics and drug proceeds.”22 This conclusory statement fails to add
anything to the mix of facts that would allow a court to conclude the police had
reasonable grounds to believe that Brown used the Honda “to facilitate the sale,
22
B70. We note that “[t]he probable cause standard for forfeiture is essentially the same as that
applied in Fourth Amendment search and seizure cases.” In the Matter of One 1987 Toyota, 621
A.2d 796, 799 (Del. Super. May 15, 1992) (citing United States v. One 1974 Porsche 911-S Vehicle
Identification No. 9114102550, 682 F.2d 283, 285 (1st Cir. 1982)). Our law is clear that in the
search warrant context, a magistrate’s probable cause determination will not stand if it is based
solely on conclusory allegations from unidentified sources without indicia of reliability. Valentine
v. State, 207 A.3d 566, 572–77 (Del. 2019); see also Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 233 (1983).
13
transport, or possession with intent to deliver”23 illegal drugs. Likewise, although
Detective Callaway testified that the Houston Circle apartment “was identified
through the investigation as what drug dealers usually call a trap house,”24 he did not
disclose any of the investigative facts, such as statements from reliable informants
or evidence of drug activity derived from surveillance, that supported this
conclusion. But these flaws in the State’s presentation do not cause us to disregard
the common-sense conclusion, dictated by the evidence described above, that Brown
used the Honda to transport and facilitate the sale of drugs.
C. The cash
Finally, we affirm the Superior Court’s denial of Brown’s request to have the
cash returned. Under 16 Del. C. § 4784(a)(7)(b), “[a]ll moneys . . . found to have
trace amounts of controlled substances on them are presumed to be forfeitable . . . .
The burden of proof is upon the claimant of the property to rebut this presumption.”
The money seized from Brown had more than trace amounts of cocaine, and we
agree with the Superior Court that Brown did not rebut the presumption of
forfeitability.
The State established the presence of cocaine through a process called ion-
mobility spectrometry, or ion scanning. In ion scanning, a machine ionizes the
23
16 Del. C. § 4784(a)(4).
24
Id.
14
molecules of the sample, imbuing them with an electric charge. Then, the ionized
molecules feed through an electric field, which separates the molecules based on
size and shape. Finally, a detector at the end of the electric field determines the
concentrations of the molecules that were in the sample. Because all paper currency
has drug residue, the Delaware National Guard obtains money from area banks and
scans a sample of that money to determine the average amount of drug residue on
currency from casual contact. The threshold for an alarm is double the average.
In this case, the sample from the safe deposit boxes,25 which is the only sample
of relevance in this appeal, had six times the casual contact average for cocaine. To
gather the sample, Delaware National Guard Sergeant Christopher Sama26 fanned
out the cash on a table and vacuumed the cash. Sergeant Sama separately gathered
samples for the cash found in the safe deposit boxes, the Houston Circle apartment,
and the El Coleman property. Delaware National Guard Master Sergeant Matthew
Christiano then tested the samples using the ion scan machine and found the above
result.
25
According to the ion scan report admitted as Exhibit 8, the sample bearing ID number 004
contained “$105,700.00 USC,” not $1,700 as Master Sergeant Christiano said in his testimony on
the stand. B138. This discrepancy between the report and Sergeant Christiano’s testimony leads
us to wonder whether he misspoke during his testimony or whether the testimony might have been
mistranscribed.
26
Sergeant Sama was certified in 2003 but has not been certified since them because the sample-
gathering machine, ion scan machine, and operating procedures have not changed since his
certification.
15
Brown has failed to rebut the presumption of forfeitability established by the
ion scan test. First, as the State notes, there was probable cause for forfeiture even
without the ion scanning results: the State offered evidence of cocaine and heroin in
places associated with Brown, testimony that drug dealers regularly store their drug
proceeds in $1,000 stacks as the money was stored in the Millsboro safe deposit box,
and Brown’s convictions for drug dealing and money laundering.
Second, Brown’s argument that the existence of drug residue on all currency
made the ion scan results “worthless”27 is unconvincing. That argument ignores that
the test results showed that the money had six times as much cocaine as the casual
contact average, and Brown fails to explain why we should not consider those results
as probative, even if not dispositive, that the money constituted fruits of Brown’s
drug dealing.
Third, as mentioned earlier, in a forfeiture proceeding under 16 Del. C.
§ 4784, “a defendant convicted in any criminal proceeding is precluded from later
denying the essential allegations of the criminal offense of which the defendant was
convicted . . . .”28 And in Brown’s underlying criminal proceeding, an essential
allegation of the money laundering charge was that that the money found in the safe
27
Opening Br. 3.
28
Supra note 11 and accompanying text.
16
deposit boxes was the product of Brown’s illegal drug activity. Thus, Brown is now
precluded from denying that fact.
Fourth, Brown failed to show independently that the money came from
legitimate sources. Brown submitted his federal and state income returns for 2013,
2014, and 2015, which showed that Brown had $38,508 in total after-tax income for
those three years. Brown testified that these returns showed his income from his
carpet and cleaning business; he said that he earned additional money from detailing
cars and mentoring, but he did not specify the amount of these earnings. Delaware
State Police Detective Dallas Reynolds also testified that Brown had told him that
he had made some money on the side, including $21,000 from the lottery and
$42,000 from construction jobs, but these claims were contradicted by Brown’s tax
returns. In any case, Brown was still paying $1,500 a month for the Houston Circle
and Berry Road properties, he had paid more than $10,000 for cars between 2013
and 2015, and he had saved $4,175.62 to his PNC bank accounts, money which the
Superior Court returned. Accordingly, the Superior Court did not err by holding that
Brown had failed to show that that the $47,430 he is now requesting came from
legitimate sources rather than drug proceeds.
Finally, Brown also argues for the first time on appeal that (1) the State failed
to offer ion scans from area banks to prove the drug residue threshold, (2) the State
improperly commingled the money from the two safe deposit boxes before running
17
the ion scan test,29 (3) the State did not present the control/blank ion scan results,
and (4) the State failed to show that the ion scanning machine was cleaned between
each of the scans. Absent plain error, we will not consider matters that were not
fairly presented to the Superior Court.30 There is no plain error here because, as we
have noted, there was probable cause sufficient for civil forfeiture even without the
ion scanning results.
IV. CONCLUSION
Therefore, the judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed in part, reversed in
part, and remanded for entry of an order consistent with this Opinion.
29
The State conceded, without offering any justification, that Brown was “correct that the money
seized from the two safety deposit boxes was combined and tested as one sample.” Answering Br.
15.
30
Supr. Ct. R. 8.
18