Appeals Court: FBI's Safe-Deposit Box Seizures Violated Fourth Amendment
Cases like this are exactly why the Fourth Amendment was adopted in the first place, wrote federal Judge Milan D. Smith Jr.

The FBI violated the Fourth Amendment when its agents rifled through the contents of more than 700 safe-deposit boxes in the aftermath of a March 2021 raid, a panel of federal appeals court judges ruled unanimously on Tuesday.
In doing so, the judges at the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals confirmed what innocent victims of the raid and their attorneys have been arguing for years: that the FBI overstepped the bounds of its warrant issued in the case and failed to follow proper protocol when federal agents cracked open safe-deposit boxes, ran the contents past drug-sniffing dogs, and tried to seize some of the money and other valuables found in the boxes.
The 9th Circuit's ruling pivots on a detail of the case that Reason first highlighted more than a year ago: the existence of so-called "supplemental instructions" for the handling of the safe-deposit boxes seized at U.S. Private Vaults in Beverly Hills.
The warrant authorizing the raid expressly forbade federal agents from engaging in a "criminal search or seizure of the contents of the safety [sic] deposit boxes." Under typical FBI procedure, the boxes should have been taken into custody until they could be returned to their rightful owners. But those "supplemental instructions" drawn up by the special agent in charge of the operation told agents to be on the lookout for cash stored inside the safe-deposit boxes and to note "anything which suggests the cash may be criminal proceeds."
It is "particularly troubling," wrote Judge Milan D. Smith Jr. in Tuesday's ruling, that the government was unable to provide any "limiting principle to how far a hypothetical 'inventory search' conducted pursuant to customized instructions can go."
Elsewhere in the ruling, Smith theorized that if a government agency were "given the discretion to create customized inventory policies" for "each car it impounds and each person detained, the ensuing search stops looking like an 'inventory' meant to simply protect property and looks more like a criminal investigation of that particular car or person, i.e, more like a 'ruse.'"
"If there remained any doubt whether the government conducted a 'criminal search or seizure,' that doubt is put to rest by the fact that the government has already used some of the information from inside the boxes to obtain additional warrants to further its investigations and begin new ones," Smith wrote.
"The Ninth Circuit today held that the FBI violated the Fourth Amendment rights of hundreds of people by breaking into their safe deposit boxes to try to forfeit everything worth taking," Robert Frommer, an attorney with the Institute for Justice, a libertarian legal nonprofit that represented some of the plaintiffs in the case, tells Reason. He said the case should bring renewed attention to a congressional proposal to reform federal forfeiture laws in order to "stop federal cops from continuing to act like robbers."
A spokesperson for the FBI declined to comment on the ruling and referred the matter to the U.S. Attorney's Office, which did not respond to Reason's request for comment.
The FBI's ruse in the U.S. Private Vault's case seemed to unravel after the district court in August 2021 made public certain details of the raid's planning stages that the FBI had tried to keep hidden. Those documents, including depositions with agents involved in plotting the raid, revealed that the FBI had planned to use civil forfeiture proceedings against the contents of the safe-deposit boxes but did not provide that information to the magistrate judge who issued the warrant for the raid. (Full disclosure: Reason submitted an amicus brief in the case arguing that the depositions and other documents should be made public.)
District Court Judge R. Gary Klausner later ruled that "there can be no question that the government expected, or even hoped, to find criminal evidence during its inventory." However, Klausner upheld the FBI's conduct as being within the bounds of the Fourth Amendment because the improper conduct was not the sole reason why the FBI opened the safe-deposit boxes and searched through their contents.
The Ninth Circuit said Tuesday that Klausner was wrong to reach that conclusion and remanded the case back to the district court.
In the ruling, Smith wrote that the arrangement called to mind the various "writs of assistance" used by the British authorities to conduct nearly limitless searches of private property prior to the Revolutionary War.
"It was those very abuses of power, after all, that led to the adoption of the Fourth Amendment in the first place," Smith concluded.
And it is cases like this one that should remind all Americans why the Fourth Amendment still matters today.
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I'd sure hate to be the FBI right now.
And Klausner.
Why? A few wrists slapped. No jail, no fines, no firings.
I read his response as sarcastic.
Ah. FoE. Yes, didn't see that.
Terrible time to use your PTO when you're so close to government mandated PTO.
Why would you hate to be the FBI now? I mean, what would be your reticience unless the opinion of your neighbors and non-governmental employed family members matters to you. You would belong to an "elite" organization, empowered (and expected) to take actions to support and warm the hearts of our semi-elected betters. You would be immune from prosecution for assassinations done on their behalf (see Ruby Ridge, see Branch Davidians). You know that merely by flashing your badge/creds you intimidate the average citizen and take advantage of that fear factor to accomplish your assigned "mission". The old collection Aesop's Fables are brought to mind with this addition - once upon a time a couple of very special agents accosted a citizen and the following exchange occurred:
Feeb Bullying Intimidator #1: Citizen, we want to talk to you.
Citizen: Me? What do you want to talk to me about?
F.B.I. #1: Citizen, we don't have to tell you what we want to talk to you about. We ask the questions, and you answer them. That's the way this works.
Citizen: I have nothing to say to you until I have consulted with my lawyer and have him present.
F.B.I. #2: Citizen, that sounds like you have something to hide! You don't mind if I search your _ _ _ _ _ (pick object of choice here)?
Citizen: the fact you are asking to search my _ _ _ _ _ indicates you have no valid probable cause to do a search, or alternatively that you are playing a head game to observe my reaction. Whichever, I do not consent to any searches.
F.B.I. #2: well, if you don't have something to hide, why would you object to my searching.
Citizen: you have cooties that may fall off and infest my _ _ _ _ _.
F.B.I. #1: Your attitude is unwelcome, Citizen. I'm afraid we will then have to detain you until we have a very intelligent and highly trained dog brought on scene so he can alert on command on your _ _ _ _ _. It will be several hours until the canine unit can arrive. (Speaking into microphone - please send backup canine unit to X location.)
F.B.I. #3: we can make him sit and wait a couple of hours. No need to actually bring the dog. We can then advise him that the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has agreed that the act of refusing a polite request to search can now be considered as probable cause to conduct a search. Both of you get your AR-15's out of the trunk and train them on him while we explain what the "law" is now. If he argues that the Ninth Circuit Court judges have never issued such a ruling, put the bracelets on him and place him under arrest for "obstructing". If he resists, shoot him!
Citizen: Good grief, guys! What gives? Did y'all get a confidential tip that someone who looks like me voted for Trump?
F.B.I. #2: Citizen your suggestion that politics is a consideration in FBI investigation is seditious! And while we're at it, where were you on January 6th, 2021 between the 1100 and 1600 hours?
None of them will spend a day in jail or pay one dollar out of their own pocket for this crime.
-jcr
Why? You could get away with anything. Even if someone calls out your misstep the evidence just gets thrown out. There are no actual consequences.
Not criminal if they return it when asked.
Hey JesseBahnFarter-Fuhrer, I want to confiscate ALL of your possessions for the next 5 years, and then finally, meekly give it back to you 5 years later, minus "handling fees" and some rot (to said properties) caused by time, inflation, lack of maintenance, and decay, and then say, "Not criminal if I return it when asked."
Suck Statist ASS very much, ye sick, ass-kissing, greedy motherfucker?
I hope you’re not being serious.
Alas, love em or hate em, our jackboot thugs are here to stay. - at least until the revolution that we will be tricked in to.
Congratulations, Institute for Justice on this major victory! It makes me glad that I have contributed to your successes over the years. The battle against government abuse is never-ending and if we had ten more groups as successful as you have been there might be more reason for optimism.
Government Almighty Bless you and keep you, MWAocdoc!!! I like to help out IJ as well, from time to time... A GREAT cause!!! Yes, they are playing whack-a-mole, which, sad to say, is a never-ending job!!! There are always MORE greedy Government Almighty assholes in line, wanting to "get their 'fair' share"!
Which should be obvious to any judge who graduated from law school. Or high school.
Or anyone who can read basic English, as in the 4th amendment.
What are the odds the missing gold coins from one of the boxes are turned up.
Not only are the FBI lawless thugs, they're also thieves.
The real question is why every agent on that raid wasn't in jail for contempt of court the same day the judge found out about the shenanigans.
Because the judge doesn't want to disappear in the middle of the night.
The same way Jack Smith wasn't held in contempt despite violating a clear court order. Or Lois Lerner. Or Eric Holder.
Everyone of the gangsters that participated is a criminal for violating the 4A and not refusing to obey those illegal orders. The leaders should be sleeping with the fishes.
If they seized the property of Republicans, the evil sub-human bohem would cheer it on
"The Ninth Circuit today held that the FBI violated the Fourth Amendment rights of hundreds of people by breaking into their safe deposit boxes to try to forfeit everything worth taking,"
"And then nothing else happened."
Unfortunately, your prediction will most likely come true.
The Institute for Justice (ij.org) is a national treasure.
Sure hope some FBI agents are prosecuted, and imprisoned,
People in hell want ice water.
-jcr
Meanwhile, in Houston: "Houston City Council has approved another $1.7 million to defend the city and former Police Chief Art Acevedo in a federal lawsuit over a fatal drug raid. The additional funding brings the city’s lawsuit costs to more than $2.9 million.
All council members who were present – with the exception of Council Member Tiffany Thomas – voted in favor of the additional funding."
The FBI is less ethical and law abiding than the mafia.
Which takes real work.
The Fascist Bureau of Incompetence was correct in seizing the contents of the safety deposit boxes.
Who knows what kind of evil they would find...like copies of Adam Smith, Hayek, Churchill, Friedman writings, the US Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the Declaration of Independence, or some other dangerous and ill conceived counter-revolutionary tracts.
We should all be grateful we have an FBI that takes the time and trouble to keep our beloved Stalinist Slave State alive and well.
“ because the improper conduct was not the sole reason why the FBI opened the safe-deposit boxes and searched through their contents.”
Checking for WMDs and terrorists was the other reason?