S.D.N.Y.: FBI search 4 years earlier, where same records were disclosed in civil discovery, will not be suppressed

A motion to suppress an FBI search over four years into later civil litigation where the same records were produced in civil discovery is academic and denied. In re 650 Fifth Ave. & Related Props., 970 F. Supp. 2d 204 (S.D. N.Y. September 9, 2013):

More than four years after the commencement of this litigation and the execution of a search warrant, two of the claimants to this in rem forfeiture action, the Alavi Foundation and 650 Fifth Ave. Co. (collectively, “Alavi”) have moved to suppress a wide swath of evidence seized from their offices on December 19, 2008. The motion comes on the eve of trial set to begin September 16, 2013. Prior to this motion, Alavi had not raised any concern regarding the search of its offices, apart from concerns that privileged materials had been seized.

In the end, the suppression motion is entirely academic. The motion asks the Court to analyze whether documents obtained voluntarily from Alavi by way of routine civil discovery in the Government’s civil forfeiture action, which were also obtained via execution of a search warrant in a separate criminal investigation, are subject to suppression in the forfeiture action.

Alavi asks the Court to go back in time to a counter-factual world and rule that the criminal investigation and civil forfeiture action were one and the same, that the documents at issue were not separately produced (which they were) in the civil litigation, and that they have not been used without objection for years (they have been). In this counter-factual world, according to Alavi, the material seized by the FBI for the criminal investigation and later voluntarily reproduced by Alavi in the forfeiture and related actions brought by private judgment creditors (“Judgment Creditors”) must be suppressed. The Court declines the invitation to enter into a counter-factual world. It chooses instead to remain in this world — a world in which this civil litigation has proceeded for almost five years and which is ripe for final resolution. The motion to suppress is denied.

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