The FBI Seized This Woman's Life Savings—Without Telling Her Why
Linda Martin's lawsuit alleges that the agency violated her right to due process when it took her $40,200 and sent her a notice failing to articulate the reason.

Almost four years ago to the day, the FBI entered U.S. Private Vaults (USPV), a storage business in Beverly Hills, and raided the safe-deposit boxes there, pocketing tens of millions of dollars in cash, valuables, and personal items. Among those owners was Linda Martin, from whom agents took $40,200—her life savings—despite that she had not been charged with a crime.
Those charges would never come. Although USPV itself was ultimately indicted in federal court, the government had no case against unknowing customers like Martin, in a scheme that attorneys have compared to seizing property from individual apartment units because the tenants' landlord was suspected of criminal wrongdoing. At USPV, the agency confiscated over $100 million in valuables from a slew of such people via civil forfeiture, the legal process that allows the government to take people's property without having to prove its owners committed any crime.
The FBI was found to have exceeded the terms of its warrant and to have violated the Fourth Amendment. But it still refused to give back Martin's life savings. She had opted not to store it in a bank account, she says, because she was saving it for a house and did not want to be tempted to spend it. Her bank, meanwhile, did not have a safe-deposit box available, prompting her to turn to USPV.
About two years post-seizure, the bureau returned Martin's money—shortly after she filed a nationwide class-action lawsuit. But while the bureau may have hoped that would persuade her to drop it, she has continued with her suit, which was back in court last week and seeks a ruling that will prevent the FBI from proceeding with others as it did with her.
At the core of her argument is the notice the federal government sent alerting her to the fact that agents had seized her property. The problem: It didn't give her a reason.
Martin's claim, her appellant brief notes, "is that when the FBI attempts to forfeit someone's property, due process requires that it say why, citing specific facts and laws." Instead, the notice she received listed hundreds of possible federal crimes that would justify a seizure, though it didn't provide Martin's supposed connection to those offenses. "By sending notices that initiate and, often, consummate property's forfeiture—all without ever saying what exactly the FBI thinks justifies the forfeiture," her brief says, "the FBI deprives owners of crucial information they need to protect their rights."
Those notices, which Martin alleges violate the Fifth Amendment, are standard practice for the bureau. And they have already drawn the ire of a federal judge, who in 2021 ordered the agency to halt its forfeiture from hundreds of USPV safe-deposit boxes because the "anemic" notices provided "no factual basis for the seizure."
That ruling, however, applied only to those USPV plaintiffs. Martin would like to see it apply nationwide. "Without specific notice, property owners can't understand what this is all about, and therefore can't do any investigation or get meaningful advice from attorneys," says Robert Frommer, an attorney with the Institute for Justice, which is representing Martin. "Owners must decide whether to fight against the federal government, default, or plead for mercy, all without knowing why the FBI is doing this to them. It's therefore little surprise that 93% of federal forfeitures never get to a court, meaning the FBI gets to keep the money without ever telling anyone why they should be allowed to." The hearing last week was on a jurisdictional issue and has yet to be evaluated on the merits.
From the outset, the USPV raid was defined by illegal activity—on the part of federal law enforcement. The warrant, which agents misled a judge to obtain, explicitly forbade them from engaging in a "criminal search or seizure" of the content of the safe-deposit boxes; they violated that condition (and the Constitution) and did it anyway. Agents seized a litany of valuables, from cash to personal items—a baptismal certificate, a marriage certificate, a birth certificate—to gold coins. (In the latter case, the FBI could not find 63 of those coins, belonging to Don Mellein, worth over $100,000. Oops!)
But Martin's suit raises another issue, which strikes at the root: If the government cannot articulate why agents are taking someone's life savings, then perhaps they shouldn't be taking it.
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But the law says the government can do it. There's your 'due process'! Amirite folks?
We'll have to know more about Linda Martin's political tribe(s), and voting and speech habits before we can answer this question...
The Law says TWATEVER I WANT TIT TO SAY, damn-shit-all!!!!
(If'n ye disagree with MEEEE... Ye are a LEFT-TIT!!!)
They clearly violated their warrant. You should try reading.
Only shame is the punishment will be borne by the taxpayers. Not the agents who did it.
Jesus fuck, is Cartman actually defending the FBI stealing shit here?
Jesus fuck, is Dipper-Dapper-Dunked Dimwit actually-REALLY defending enslaving us all to Dear Orange Leader and His Armed, Lawless, Jackbooted Goons?
Fat boy dim can’t read food packaging labels either.
As long as congress fails to reign in the courts, this madness will continue.
The courts? It's the executive branch which is doing this. The worst the courts are doing is failing to stop it; neutering them won't help with that.
Pet peeve alert - What the government is doing here is quite literally reigning (as an unaccountable monarch). What you meant was that congress needs to rein in the executive branch (as a horse).
Don't rain on the parade.
Only leftists think people are due due process. True patriots understand that the government does whatever it wants. Besides, whatabout the J6 patriots? Whatabout them? What-a-fucking-bout them? Democrats did it first, that makes it ok.
We don't DOOOO due process around these that them thar Rethugglican-"Libertarian" parts around here, outta-town stranger! Due processes are for wussies and pussies, especially if we are Ruled and Drooled-Over by THE Moist Righteous AND Tribally Correct Pussy-Grabber in Chief!
A perfect place for Kash to start cleaning house. Fire every agent responsible for this abomination. Then Bondi can go after the US Attorneys involved as well.
LOL, like either of those two would ever step that far out of line.
But he won't.
The why is simple. They are a bunch of thieving cunts.
Until we get a few executions per year https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/242 it will never stop.
*applause*
Man. Can you imagine the howling if the Pam Bondi DoJ filed section 242 charges against folks?
Won't happen. Conservatives are as enamoured of the power of the state as are liberals.
This was back when the unelected Elon Musk was head of the FBI, right?
We need to burn more Teslas.
Unbelievable that this case has been going on for years and the government is mostly getting away with it. Really hope that Kash and Pam get involved.
Still trying to get my FBI Good/FBI Bad oscillation wave detector calibrated.
I have the Sullum/libertarian model from 2017. The orangman bad zone is all green but it doesn't go past January 6 2021 and I'm not paying to upgrade the software.
You've seen oscillations over your lifetime? They seem a pretty continuous negative from Hoover through Ruby Ridge and on through today.
At the core of her argument is the notice the federal government sent alerting her to the fact that agents had seized her property. The problem: It didn't give her a reason.
So, there's two schools of thought on this.
1) It should give her a reason. I mean, that's fair. I don't remember the details, but if I remember correctly I did agree that the notices were in fact, "anemic." Also, and frankly more importantly, what they should have done was take a little bit more care in what they're doing - not just mad-dash scoop it all up into the same bag (which they didn't literally, but they were still pretty careless about the whole thing).
2) But insofar as the advance notice goes, they might not want right then and there to for a good reason. If I remember correctly the raid was based on the belief that this place was a front for money laundering and drug trafficking (which shielded itself by also doing some legitimate business). And because the FBI leaks intel like a screen door on a submarine, because they don't know exactly WHERE in the building they're looking for their evidence (and honestly, how could they ever?), because what they don't want is the day before to have all the bad guys clear out and set up shop elsewhere. And as far as after-the-fact notice goes, they might not be able to provide one until they've had a chance to sort everything out and say, "OK Box 2539 with the marriage certificate and bronzed baby shoes probably isn't related to the drug trafficking. Let's get that back to her after we tap her phone for a week or so, just in case. Go Feebs."
This is another place where, for as much as you people hate CAF, it's actually a pretty good thing. Because, for all those innocent box-holders like Ms. Martin here, and everyone with innocuous items in it, you're going to get your stuff back (absent the aforementioned FBI carelessness, which is 100% indefensible). And the people who are criminals - trust me, they're not going to the FBI and say, "Hey can I have all my drug money back?" That's why it's effective.
And, I don't know about anyone else - but I kinda treat the subject like an insurance claim. I hope I don't have to ever make one - but if I do, I've got an annually updated video I create of everything of value that I own (except my guns, which tragically keep getting lost in boating accidents), complete with an accordion file with all their proof of sale, as well as anything that has sentimental value. That way no pissant claims adjuster (or FBI agent) can say, "I don't believe you had that," without me being able to retort, "Records keeping, punk."
No reason not to do the same with a deposit box. Same principle.
No criminal search or seizure of the boxes was permitted by the warrant.
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/20700649-21-notice-of-motion-and-motion-for-return-of-property-pursuant-to-fed-r-crim-p-41g/#document/p10
So a box filled with rolls of bills and labelled "Drug money" would be inadmissible in a criminal proceeding if the box was searched as a result of the raid.
So, I'd respectfully suggest you're misunderstanding what you're reading, and/or ignoring a key element of 4A.
Your section there plainly illustrates that they were allowed to go into the boxes and inventory the contents. You seem to want to argue that the buck stops there, but here's what you're forgetting: if the box contains something reasonably believed to part and parcel to criminal activity (and I will readily admit that too many cops, and especially Feebs, play fast and loose with the term "reasonably"), they don't need the warrant at that point.
For illustrative purposes, let's suppose they found a pipe bomb in one of the boxes. Do you really think they're going to look at that and say, "Well, write it down and see if you can find its owner." No, they're going to seize it right then and there. Which they're allowed to - not just because it's potentially dangerous, but because by its very nature its evidence of criminal activity. Because it's a friggin' bomb. Or maybe a bloodied knife. Or a severed head. Or a box marked "snuff films." Or a HDD next to an envelope full of pics of kiddies in their underwear. At that point they know they have something that has all indication of being real crimey, and at that point the word "unreasonable" in 4A no longer applies and supersedes any limitations on the warrant.
Is the same true for large stacks of cash? YMMV. Given why they were onto this front in the first place, maybe not. But the point is, you are 100% factually wrong if you think seized goods of the sort I mentioned - or your clearly marked "Drug Money" as you put it - would be inadmissible.
4A would allow it, because the seizure was reasonable given the nature of what was seized after lawfully inspecting the box's contents under the warrant.
So, I'd respectfully suggest you're misunderstanding what you're reading, and/or ignoring a key element of 4A.
Tell it to the 9th Circuit Court, who unanimously seem to think you're the one mistaken.
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/24372830-uspv-9th-cir-opinion/
Tell it to the 9th Circuit Court
OK, side note: Nobody cares what the Clown World Court says. That's the same court that just publicly excoriated one of their own via a collective concurrence because he had the audacity to step off the reservation and literally ILLUSTRATE just how wrong they were in their asinine decision. That's also the same court that's had more of its decisions overturned by SCOTUS than any other.
I know you think you probably had a solid ad verecundiam there, but you picked the worst "authority" possible. Even lawyers in 9th Circuit states I know will be like, "Um... are there any other parallel decisions outside the 9th Circuit I can use" when they have to take it up to Supreme.
Leftist laymen (and bent hack media), however, love to rely on the 9th Circuit. Because they have no other place TO rely to make their idiotic social/political agenda make even a little bit of sense. It lets them pretend they're "being Constitutional." LOL.
Anyway, back on point: You are ignoring the Plain Sight Doctrine. Simple as that. The search and inventory were lawful under the terms of the warrant. Period. Seizures made based Plain Sight discovery of contraband were lawful (again, YMMV on whether large stacks of money count as that, but for our purposes it did at the time). Anything wrongfully seized was returned. And they got even further equitable relief after that. So, what's the issue.
I know. You've got an axe to grind over CAF. Get over it.
And, for the record, you have misread yet another legal authority trying to force your square peg into a round hole. Go back and re-read it (all the way this time, don't outsource your argument to a case summary or ChatGPT). See if you can figure out what specifically was at issue there.
(I'll give you a hint. The plaintiffs already had their property back at this point. I'll give you an even more obvious hint - you flat out quoted it, apparently without realizing it or what it meant.)
Chip, I say this with as much respect as I can - because you tend to debate in earnest and (mostly) without being a prick. But you need to stop swimming in waters in which you are out of your depth. Maybe the whole Leftist Keyboard Warrior is a thing that you think gives your life value, but A) it doesn't; and B) sorry, but you're not very good at it. ConLaw is just not a subject you seem to understand even slightly.
Sorry to have to be the one to tell you.
Anyway, back on point: You are ignoring the Plain Sight Doctrine. Simple as that.
You think the Plain Sight Doctrine allows law enforcement to open a locked opaque box?
You didn't even bother to go back and reread it before shooting from the hip, did you.
All right, I'm done. Go on back to your balloon animals.
I'll take that as a 'yes' then. Hilarious! How long have you been practicing Constitutional Law again, counselor?
...
"What's behind that door?"
"A closet."
"Well that closet is in plain sight, which means I can open the door and search it now, ha ha!"
...
"Look, Your Honor, the house was clearly visible from the street. Therefore, the Plain Sight Doctrine permitted a search of it, yup yup yup!"
...
"Where's your cell phone?"
"In a bag inside the glovebox of my car, which is in my garage."
"AHA! Plain Sight Doctrine trap sprung! Your garage is in plain sight, so when I go in there your car will be in plain sight, then when I go into your car the glovebox will be in plain sight, then when I open the glovebox the bag your phone is in will be in plain sight, and then when I open the bag finally your phone will be in plain sight. I'll need all of your passwords now."
Even if there was a good reason to do the search like they did, anyone who didn't end up charged with a crime needs to get their stuff back. This should happen whether or not they ask. People are allowed to have cash and valuables. The burden of proof needs to be on the government to show that the property was proceeds of criminal activity. And warrants are supposed to be specific about what is to be seized.
no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
Even if there was a good reason to do the search like they did, anyone who didn't end up charged with a crime needs to get their stuff back.
If they ask for it. It's a very simple process.
If they don't ask for it, well that's kinda weird don't you think?
Except it wasn't. It required lawsuits to get the FBI to give anything back.
And they weren't entitled to search any of the boxes in the first place. The warrant specifically excluded them. None of the box holders were targeted by the warrant, only the company.
Except it wasn't. It required lawsuits to get the FBI to give anything back.
Well, again, I'm inclined to think that's because they were busy sorting out what they found, trying to discern the crimey stuff from the not-crimey stuff - but again, there was a lot of valid criticism about the way that whole incident was handled in the first place.
But I mean, it's not like they could have run off with her money or took it and bought a pinball machine for the breakroom. These hysterical babies around here always acts like that's what happens with CAF monies. No. That's stupid, and anyone who thinks otherwise is stupid for thinking it. There's (supposed to be) a chain of custody (but Feebs gon' Feeb and I'm not defending that). It's evidence for pete's sake, or at least reasonably believed to be so. And if nobody disputes that and comes to lay claim to it within a reasonable amount of time, then what else CAN you consider it but forfeited?
Maybe a helpful way of thinking about it is like the lost and found. Say you're at a library studying, and you've got your little travel mug with some coffee in it at the table. You step up for a moment, take your purse, and go on off to the bathroom. In the meantime, a librarian or a janitor stops by, notices the abandoned workspace, reshelves the book and takes - seizes - your travel mug. Your rightful property.
If you go up to the front desk and inquire about your travel mug, they'll happily return it - likely with an apology. If you don't, it's going to sit in the lost and found box for awhile and then they're finally going to get rid of it. Maybe even give it away, or keep it for themselves and enjoy many coffees on the go in the future.
It's like that, only now imagine that your travel mug is a bunch of crimey stuff, and the librarian is a cop. Same thing. If you want your mug bag, go get it. If you don't, for whatever reason, you forfeit it.
That's a good reason why drugs should be legalized, in addition to drug prohibition being a violation of individual rights. It requires excessive government powers which are not rightful, will be abused and are detrimental to freedom. The dealers are not moral criminals. No one was forced to do drugs. The addictive nature is universal knowledge, known by the user before taking the first dose.
The dealers are not moral criminals.
I disagree with that completely, but I'm curious why you say so. If anything, I'd posit that their most common relation in an industry is "politician." Especially of the marxist/socialist variety. One of the most immoral ways of life there is.
Think about it - they trade in creating dependency. They want you completely and inescapably dependent on them, because it becomes a POWERFUL means of total control over you. This is why human traffickers, incidentally - the first thing they do is get their victims strung out and addicted to drugs. It makes them compliant and obedient.
It's funny that in the same thought, you declare it an "individual right" - when that very control via dependency slowly erodes that as your independence as an individual is intentionally diminished. I'm sure you think that "informed consent" (unforced and known by the user) somehow justifies its legality - it doesn't, by the way - but how does that make it moral?
You are literally profiting off of intentionally poisoning someone, essentially brainwashing them by literally altering their brain chemistry in a way that eventually creates a power dynamic against them in your favor, exploiting said addictions to enrich yourself with no regard whatsoever for your victim. What's moral about that?
The dealers, in terms of crime and moral turpitude, are right around the same level as serial rapists and child molesters.
Again, a good reason to legalize drugs. Raid wouldn't have happened if drugs were legal.
Money laundering is still a crime.
The why, of course, was "Fuck you, that's why."
Congress, do your job. Civil forfeiture needs to be reined in. This is part of the corruption of the FBI that needs to be redressed, both by better leadership and by better legal guardrails.