OPINION ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
In deciding this appeal, we held that the seizure of Serafine’s property, under the facts and circumstances of this case, was unconstitutional because the seizure was not preceded by notice and hearing. 889 F.2d 1258, 1262-66. We also held that the forfeiture of the property was not tainted by the unlawfulness of the seizure, and we affirmed the judgment of forfeiture. Id. at 1266-71. The government petitioned for rehearing, urging us (1) to reconsider our ruling that the seizure was unconstitutional for lack of notice and a prior adversarial hearing, and (2) in the event that we adhered to that ruling, to clarify the nature of the adversarial hearing. We invited supplemental papers and heard additional oral argument.
On the first point, we adhere to our prior ruling. On the second point, we decline to provide clarification, for the following reasons. In ruling that the seizure provision was unconstitutional as applied, we had no occasion to consider whether the constitutional defect could be remedied by construing the seizure provision to require pre-sei-zure notice and hearing or whether only legislative modification could cure the defect. In its supplemental papers in support of rehearing, the government has now taken the position that, if pre-seizure notice and hearing are required in cases like Ser-afine’s (which it continues to dispute), such procedures cannot be ordered by a court but may be authorized only by an amendment of the statute or the rules. Letter of Sara Criscitelli, Esq., Attorney, Appellate Section, Criminal Division, Department of Justice, to the Clerk of this Court, January 19, 1990, at 8. Appellant Serafine, though supporting our ruling as to the unconstitutionality of the seizure, agrees with the government that we lack the authority to remedy the defect in the seizure provision by statutory construction. Letter from Nancy S. Scherer, Esq., to the Clerk of this Court, February 9, 1990, at 10.
Since we are not resolving the issue of whether we have authority to order a pre-seizure hearing, it would be entirely inappropriate to go further and consider the nature of such a hearing, as the government initially requested in its petition.
The petition for rehearing is denied.1
1.
To the extent that Serafine’s papers in opposition to the government’s petition contain a cross-petition for rehearing, the cross-petition is denied.