A California Sheriff Remains Free To Rob Armored Cars Carrying Money From State-Licensed Marijuana Businesses
A federal judge declined to issue a temporary restraining order, saying the evidence of legal violations is insufficient at this point.

A federal judge this week declined to issue a temporary restraining order (TRO) against a California sheriff who used civil forfeiture to rob armored cars carrying money earned by state-licensed marijuana businesses. In his ruling, U.S. District Judge John Holcomb said Empyreal Logistics, a Pennsylvania-based company that transports cash between businesses and banks, "may very well have an excellent case on the merits" but had failed to meet "the high burden" for a TRO.
San Bernardino County sheriff's deputies stopped Empyreal vans three times in November, December, and January. They seized cash during two of the stops, making off with a total of more than $1 million, which was transferred to the FBI so the Justice Department could pursue forfeiture under federal law. If the government prevails in those forfeiture proceedings, the sheriff's department will get to keep up to 80 percent of the money under the Justice Department's "equitable sharing" program. The earnings of state-licensed marijuana suppliers are not subject to forfeiture under California law.
Empyreal, which is represented by the Institute for Justice, argues that San Bernardino County Sheriff Shannon Dicus has no authority to seize money from businesses that are complying with state law, that the van searches violated the Fourth Amendment, and that the financial motive for the stops makes them inconsistent with due process. In addition to Dicus, Empyreal sued the Justice Department, Attorney General Merrick Garland, the FBI, FBI Director Christopher Wray, the head of the FBI's Los Angeles Field Office, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), and DEA Administrator Anne Milgram. The company argues that federal officials, by collaborating with Dicus, are violating a congressional spending rider that bars the Justice Department (which includes the FBI and the DEA) from interfering with the implementation of state medical marijuana laws.
Regarding that last claim, Holcomb said the evidence presented so far was not sufficient to establish that Empyreal and its clients were operating in accordance with California laws allowing medical use of marijuana. The company says three of the four businesses whose money was seized on November 16 had medical marijuana licenses. It says all of the money seized on December 9 came from such businesses.
"Empyreal bears the burden to show by a preponderance of evidence that it has strictly complied with state medical marijuana laws," Holcomb writes. "Empyreal has not come close to meeting that burden. Empyreal's only evidence with respect to the issue of strict compliance is self-serving declarations from its CEO, Deirdra O'Gorman. The value of those declarations is limited."
Dan Alban, one of the Institute for Justice attorneys representing Empyreal, notes that "the appropriations rider requires DOJ to not spend any money interfering with a state's implementation of its medical cannabis laws." While "the rider does not protect every business that Empyreal serves," he says, "it should protect those with medical cannabis licenses that are in strict compliance with state law, and federal agencies should not be able to seize their proceeds."
Holcomb was also unpersuaded by the argument that Dicus had exceeded his authority, since that claim hinges on demonstrating that the businesses whose money his deputies seized were complying with state law. "Empyreal and its clients operate in full compliance with applicable state cannabis laws," the company says in its TRO application. But in Holcomb's view, that assurance is not enough to support a TRO, since "the only evidence that Empyreal presents is self-serving declarations from its CEO."
For similar reasons, Holcomb says, Empyreal has not shown that its constitutional claims against Dicus are likely to succeed. "Put simply, there is not enough evidence at this time to suggest that Empyreal's Constitutional rights were violated," he writes. He emphasizes that his order "does not now address whether Empyreal's rights were violated, nor whether Defendants violated any laws."
Empyreal argues that the traffic stops were pretextual: ostensibly justified by minor traffic violations but actually aimed at generating revenue for the sheriff's department. Sheriff's Deputy Jonathan Franco claimed the November 16 stop, which resulted in the seizure of $712,000, was justified because the Empyreal van was following a tractor-trailer too closely. When the same deputies pulled over the same vehicle, driven by the same employee, on December 9, according to the lawsuit that Empyreal filed on January 14, they claimed the driver "slightly exceeded the speed limit and prematurely activated his turn signal."
In that case, the complaint says, "the driver's operation of the Empyreal vehicle was completely lawful." The company says "the deputies had planned the stop in advance and would have pulled over the driver and the Empyreal vehicle regardless of how carefully or lawfully it was driven."
This time the deputies took about $350,000, which was something of a letdown. Based on an audio recording by the van's security system, Empyreal's lawsuit describes this exchange: "One of the deputies said, 'That's it?' and chuckled. He then said: 'You set the bar too high.' When another deputy remarked that he thought they'd get 'a million or two,' the [first] deputy responded, 'At least we got over a million'"—apparently referring to the combined take from the two seizures.
The sheriff's deputies who pulled over an Empyreal van on January 6 were even more disappointed. They discovered that it was carrying rolled coins that had nothing to do with the marijuana industry, so they did not get to seize anything. As in the other stops, they did not write a ticket either.
"Because the sale of cannabis and the transport of cannabis proceeds (including
in localities where dispensaries are prohibited) are lawful under California law," Empyreal says in its TRO application, "the Fourth Amendment prohibits the Sheriff from stopping, searching, or seizing Empyreal's personnel or property (namely, vehicles, safes, and cash) without reasonable suspicion or probable cause to believe that the property is associated with or is the proceeds of cannabis sales that violate state law….The Sheriff is using pretextual traffic stops to search and seize Empyreal's property without probable cause. Indeed, the Sheriff is not even issuing traffic citations during these stops—just taking Empyreal's cash."
Even if the stops were justified by traffic violations, Empyreal says, the ensuing searches were unconstitutional. A "traffic-violation stop does not give officers the right to search the vehicle," it notes. "Any warrantless search pursuant to the automobile exception requires probable cause to believe that the place searched contains contraband. Contra the Sheriff's wishes, a traffic-violation stop is not carte blanche to search a vehicle, let alone a locked safe inside it."
During the December 9 stop, the deputies claimed a drug-sniffing dog alerted to the van, which Empyreal says is not true: "Video footage from the vehicle does not show the dog alert on the vehicle. Instead, it shows the dog is barely interested in the vehicle."
The deputies obtained a search warrant prior to the November 16 seizure, but Empyreal says the application included several false or misleading statements. It says the deputy who applied for the warrant mistakenly claimed that Empyreal converts money from marijuana businesses into cryptocurrency and falsely asserted that some of the company's clients were not licensed by the state. The deputy also said Empyreal did not have a marijuana business license, which is not required to transport money from dispensaries to banks. Furthermore, a 2020 law says a company that provides such services to state-licensed marijuana businesses "does not commit a crime under any California law."
When he weighed the TRO application, Holcomb declined to consider the information about the search warrant, which he said had been introduced too late, without giving the defendants a chance to respond. Alban says that information, which Empyreal included in its reply briefs, was based on "new evidence that we had only just obtained and did not possess when we filed our TRO application."
The new evidence included an unredacted copy of the November 16 search warrant. "We had tried to get those documents from the defendants for months," Alban says, "but only received them last week." Although Holcomb declined to consider the new evidence at this stage, Alban says, "we can now use these documents to support a motion for a preliminary injunction."
Litigation of these claims will continue, but in the meantime Empyreal, which reimbursed its clients for the seized money, is out the $1 million or so that Dicus' deputies stole, plus another $165,000 that Kansas sheriff's deputies took during a traffic stop in Dickinson County last May. Empyreal says all of the money seized in Kansas came from state-licensed medical marijuana dispensaries in Missouri. As in California, the cops were working with the DEA and the Justice Department, which is pursuing forfeiture under federal law.
Empyreal says it is trying to avoid further trouble by routing money from marijuana businesses around Kansas and San Bernardino County, which leads to needless extra travel. Empyreal has suspended plans for a "vault and currency processing facility" in Dicus' jurisdiction. It says it had already invested $100,000 in that project and continues to pay $21,000 a month in rent and utilities for the building. Empyreal says the threat of continued harassment and seizures has cost it clients and endangered the expansion of its business, especially in California.
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So these are all of the conservatives going after Marijuana still stopping its legalization. Good follow up to yesterday's article.
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Just for the record; an 80 - 20 split is not 'equitable'.
For doing absolutely nothing?
Dicus head
Holy shit. This all sounds like a plot from a modern day Western.
Cite?
This is grotesque. Article doesn't state whose money it is, I assume the van is transporting from dispensary in /to other towns? Somebody should really step on this sheriff. They wonder why people distrust LE; there's a million reasons.
The article said the "in the meantime Empyreal, which reimbursed its clients for the seized money," Apparently there is a legal arrangement between Empyreal and its clients. Once in Empyreal's hands, these fungable assets are Empyreal's and the client's accounts are credited.
Next, they will helicopter the cash out....
Drones.
It’s an armored car. They should just refuse to stop and escape the jurisdiction of the maurading cops.
I would also augment the security detail with trained personnel and superior armament.
A federal judge this week declined to issue a temporary restraining order
and instead ordered the sheriff be arrested on the spot for felony theft. (I can dream that we still have justice in this country).
These businesses should form a PAC and focus on destroying this Sheriff’s life. I would be going dye this guy using any means available.
It’s “legal”, but we are taking your money.
It isn’t legal under federal law.
In denying the TRO, did the judge really suggest they had to proove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that everything they did was 100% legal?
What standard of proof is required?
Doesn't their have to be at least an allegation that some crime had been committed?
Sounds like time to appeal the ruling.
The state/local cops are alleging that the armored truck company is in violation of federal law.
They can't do anything about federal law, but their friends in federal law enforcement can, so they make a phone call.
The feds ask them to seize it on their behalf.
The feds are prevented from doing this, if the company is complying with state law. But the fed cops figure this only applies if the business is 100% in compliance with all state statutes, which is impossible to prove.
Apparently this judge agrees.
But local coppes can NOT help Fed agents wiht immigratioin law, BECAUSE that set of laws is Federal. I'd say go figure, but they think they don't need to. The only figure tha tmatters th=o them is the figure indicating the size of their haul.
Did not this sheriff swar a solemn oath to uphold and defend the COnstitutions of tboth the US and California?
This guy is out of line. Reel him in.
Not true. The local cops certainly can help fed agents with immigration law, so long as (1) state or local law doesn't forbid it, and (2) the feds request it.
Biggus Dicus
He’s really been Nautius to the Maximus!
Maybe he could star in the next Peleton commercial.
They should transpo some of that 'Fort Knox gold'... aka tungsten.
How long could it take Empyreal to gather the receipts to show they obtained the money legally?
There HAS to be a form of paper receipt indicationt the transporters were given the cash at the shop, the amount, date, etc. It would also indicate that the moneys taken are no longer the property of the stofe, but those of the carrier.
The STate better step up and cut this one off at the pass, else their eentire industry will be on the rocks. They (state) are strugging enough because of their mismanagement of the legal industry. Stores losing six figures of their proceeds will not last long. The carrier will be filing lawsuits agsint the State for theft.
Time for a redisgn of those vans.
How about an YUUUGE meal safe inside, asoundingly well secured to the floor and frame of the vehicle, four number dial combination that no ne aboard knows. Then the dirty coppers would have to up and seize the van. Run mitlipe trips per day to each store, some give them cash to carry, but not all of it. Other vans will only be carrying a week old Big Mac inside the safe. Seizing the whole van would be a different kettle of fish, they'd have to prove the VAN was violating some obscure law. Since all this one had in it was a maggotty Big Mac, it would make them out to be real jerks when its all over.
Sheriff, feds, judge, "protect us" from ourselves, for fun & profit.
Is this any different, morally, from taxation, i.e., legalized theft?
Who will protect us from our protectors? Perhaps that is the wrong question, e.g., When will "we the people" start protecting ourselves? When will we self-govern by boycotting the vote and politicians? If the power of govt. comes from us, we can withdraw it, after 200+ years of extortion, rule by initiation of violence, threats, fraud. We can choose to be free from politicians, bureaucrats, LEOs. Why?
Submission to tyranny is not life enhancing or protection of rights. It is the opposite. Is it time to take our lives back?
Why stop with armored cars carrying cash from grass shops? Why not rob all armored cars? Aren't we all "guilty until proven innocent"? This is what a federal judge implied when he refused to stop the thefts by the sheriff, feds. The CEO "didn't meet the high burden of proof" to get a TRO to stop property right's violations by those who "protect & serve". Proof of what? Not being guilty of what? There was no charge. No evidence was presented, just a victim who must prove innocence of what? Doesn't the judge benefit from the robbery? Is the judge innocent of prejudice? Is this justice?
Because under federal law, grass shops are illegal; other businesses are not.
It’s up to the company to prove by a preponderance of evidence? What the hell! That sounds like guilty until proven innocent. Why does the company have to prove they didn’t break the law. Isn’t it the job of the State to prove by a preponderance that they did? This is so fucked up.
Do we need anymore proof that America is a fascist country?
Do we need anymore proof that you don't understand English?
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/fascism
Do we need anymore proof that YOU can't understand English?
"2: a tendency toward or actual exercise of strong autocratic or dictatorial control"
Literally right there on the page you linked bozo.
Where's the dictator that's running America?
Who has absolute power in this country?
Go back to class.
It’s illegal proceeds under federal law, and the sheriff is helping a federal agency.
That’s what happens if empower the federal government to do things it shouldn’t do.
"Because that's where the money is.”
Once again: there is no constitutional authority for any federal statute against marijuana or any other drug. It took an amendment to ban alcohol, and that amendment was repealed by a later amendment.
Any act of congress purporting to authorize this looting is not a law, but an act of usurpation.
-jcr
This.
The same sort of thing happened when Beelzebub's Beer was the Assassin of Youth and Gateway to Perdition. Americans met force with unequal yet apposite reprisal. In 1929 the score was 135 civilians to 78 agents. By 1930 the steeper number of narcs, snoops, snitches, entrappers and agents at all levels killed or missing caused the Hoover Administration to quit publishing statistics. Two years later the only Republicans in office were wets.
Sounds like some highwaymen need shooting in San Bernardino County.
Kind of sad sight that the American government/legal system has gone so downhill that that a police department
A: Has to steal to fund itself
B: Is willing to blatantly steal off citizens for fund itself or for profit
C: A judge refused a Temp restraining order on an obviously illegal act
Just go back to illegal sales. Save the taxes and harassment. Besides with some of it legal it will be harder for law enforcement to determine what is legal vs illegal sales.
I do not see any parables for buying a legal product with cbd, so in my opinion the actions described in the article are illegal and the court should deal with this issue. For example, I recently ordered a wonderful e-liquid with cbd and delta 8 from this online store https://mjcbdd.com/products/mj-delta-8-vape-juice. Is it possible to ban it if it does not violate the law?
hello https://reason.com