A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, June 2, 2018
Rustem Kazazi. left, at home with wife Lejla and son Erald in Parma Heights, Ohio. (Institute for Justice)
A 64-year-old Cleveland man is suing U.S. Customs and Border Protection
after agents strip-searched him at an airport in October and took more
than $58,000 in cash from him without charging him with any crime,
according to a federal lawsuit filed this week in Ohio.
Customs agents seized the money through a process known as civil asset forfeiture,
a law enforcement technique that allows authorities to take cash and
property from people who are never convicted or even charged with a
crime. The practice is widespread at the federal level. In 2017, federal
authorities seized more than $2 billion in assets from people, a net
loss similar in size to annual losses from residential burglaries in the United States.
Customs says it suspects that the petitioner in the case, Rustem Kazazi,
was involved in smuggling, drug trafficking or money laundering. Kazazi
denies those allegations and says that the agency is violating federal
law by keeping his money without filing any formal complaint against
him.
Kazazi is a retired officer with the Albanian police
who relocated with his family to the United States in 2005 after
receiving visas through the State Department's lottery program. They
became U.S. citizens in 2010. After several years away, Kazazi planned a
trip to Albania last fall to visit relatives, make repairs on a family
property and potentially purchase a vacation home.
He took $58,100 in U.S. currency with him, the product of 12 years of
savings by Kazazi, his wife, Lejla, and his son Erald, who is finishing a
chemical engineering degree at Cleveland State University, according to
the lawsuit. The family lives in Parma Heights, a suburb of Cleveland.
In an interview translated by his son, Kazazi said safety concerns
prompted him to take cash on his trip, rather than wire the funds to a
local bank.
“The crime [in Albania] is much worse than it is here,” he said. “Other
people that have made large withdrawals [from Albanian banks] have had
people intercept them and take their money. The exchange rates and fees
are [also] excessive.”
Albanian contractors often prefer dollars and euros over the local
currency, Kazazi said. For those reasons, he said, many expatriates who
return to visit Albania bring large amounts of cash with them.
On Oct. 24, Kazazi arrived at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport to
begin the first leg of his journey, which would take him to Newark to
connect with an international flight. He carried the cash in three
counted and labeled bundles in his carry-on bag, he said, along with
receipts from recent bank withdrawals and documentation pertaining to
his family's property in Tirana, the Albanian capital.
According to a translated declaration that Kazazi provided to the court
as part of the lawsuit, Transportation Security Administration employees
discovered the cash in his bag during a routine security check and
alerted Customs and Border Protection.
“They asked me some questions, which I could not understand as they
spoke too quickly,” according to Kazazi's declaration. “I asked them for
an interpreter and asked to call my family, but they denied my
request.”
The CBP agents led Kazazi to a small, windowless room and conducted
multiple searches of him and his belongings, he said. According to
Kazazi's declaration, the agents asked him to remove all of his clothing
and gave him a blanket to cover the lower portion of his body. Kazazi
said that a man wearing rubber gloves then “started searching different
areas of my body.”
Kazazi characterized the search as a “strip search” in an interview translated by his son. “I felt my rights violated,” he said.
The searches turned up nothing — no drugs, no contraband, no evidence of
any illegal activity, according to the lawsuit. But the agents took
Kazazi's money. Even more alarming to Kazazi was that the receipt the
agents handed to him did not list the dollar value of his cash.
“I began to worry that they were trying to steal the money for themselves,” he said in his court declaration.
After being released, Kazazi called his wife and explained what had
happened. None of it made sense to either of them, but Lejla Kazazi
told her husband that it had to be some sort of misunderstanding and
that he should continue on his trip and let her and Erald sort it out at
home.
Seven months later, Customs still has the money.
Guilty until proven innocent
The Kazazis have been caught up in a broader struggle over civil asset forfeiture. Defenders of the practice, such as Attorney General Jeff Sessions,
say it is a valuable tool for fighting drug cartels and other criminal
enterprises in cases in which a criminal conviction is difficult to
obtain. But media outlets such as The Washington Post and civil liberties groups such as the American Civil Liberties Union have found that the process is ripe for abuse.
“The government can just take everything from you,” said Wesley Hottot, the Kazazi family's attorney. Hottot is with the Institute for Justice, a civil-liberties law firm working to overturn civil forfeiture.
People wishing to challenge a civil forfeiture must essentially
demonstrate their innocence in court, Hottot said, turning the dictum of
“innocent until proven guilty” on its head.
“You have to affirmatively show you're not a criminal to get your own
money back,” Hottot said. “You have to effectively prove a negative.”
Federal authorities haul in billions in cash and property from
forfeiture every year, a tally that does not include additional billions
seized in state and local forfeiture actions.
The Kazazi family did not hear anything about their cash or why it was
taken until more than a month after it was seized, when Customs finally
sent a seizure notice to their home.
“This is to notify you that Homeland Security Investigations (HSI)
seized the property described below at Cleveland, OH on October 24,
2017: $57,330 in U.S. Currency,” the notice states.
“Enforcement activity indicates that the currency was involved in a smuggling/drug trafficking/money laundering operation.”
The first thing the Kazazis noticed was that the dollar amount listed
was $770 less than the amount that Kazazi said he took with him.
The family said that the cash was all in $100 bills, making it
impossible for it to add up to $57,330.
Hottot said that these types of “errors” are common in forfeiture cases
and that it is “always in the same direction” — government receipts
coming up a few hundred or a few thousand dollars short of what
defendants say they had.
The Kazazis said they were also flabbergasted by the allegation of
“smuggling/drug trafficking/money laundering.” There was no indication
of how the officers arrived at that conclusion.
“This was the most offensive thing I've ever seen,” Erald Kazazi said.
“They provide no evidence. They list three different things without even
saying which one it is.”
In a statement, CBP said that “pursuant to an administrative search of
Mr. Kazazi and his bags, TSA agents discovered artfully concealed U.S.
currency. Mr. Kazazi provided inconsistent statements regarding the
currency, had no verifiable source of income and possessed evidence of
structuring activity,” that is, making cash withdrawals of less than
$10,000 to avoid reporting requirements.
Hottot denies that Rustem Kazazi was trying to conceal the cash — he had
wrapped it in paper, labeled it and sent it through the scanner in his
carry-on bag. The “inconsistent statements” were a result of Kazazi's
poor English language comprehension, Hottot said.
Hottot also noted that the structuring allegation was not included in
the seizure notice. “They've never mentioned structuring before,” he
said. “I think what were really seeing here is some creative
Monday-morning quarterbacking by CBP, trying to justify the
unjustified.”
CBP also noted that there are disclosure requirements for traveling
internationally with sums of cash greater than $10,000. “Failure to
declare monetary instruments in amounts more than $10,000 can result in
fines or forfeiture and could result in civil and or criminal
penalties,” the statement said.
Hottot said Kazazi was well aware of those requirements and planned file
his disclosure form during his four-hour layover in Newark. The form instructs travelers to
file the paperwork “at the time of departure from the United States
with the Customs officer in charge at any Customs port of entry or
departure.”
“If he's going to follow the law on this he's going to have to do it in Newark on the way out of the country,” Hottot said.
The CBP seizure notice gave the Kazazis a number of options for
proceeding with the case. They could abandon the cash completely, or
they could make an “offer in compromise” — letting CBP keep a certain
percentage of the seized cash if it returned the rest. There were also
options for challenging the seizure administratively through internal
CBP channels or letting the case proceed in federal court. The Kazazis
opted for federal court.
Erald Kazazi said they are pursuing a court case because they do not
trust the internal CBP process. “They were the ones that seized our
money,” he said. “We wanted another party like the attorney's office to
deal with this case. Based on my father's experience it didn't seem like
CBP really wanted to help us out.”
Under federal forfeiture law, the government was required to initiate a
forfeiture case within 90 days after the Kazazis responded to the
seizure notice. If they failed to initiate a forfeiture case within that
window, they would be required to promptly return the money to the
claimants.
That deadline passed over a month ago, on April 17. CBP has not filed a
forfeiture complaint; nor has it returned the money. Erald Kazazi said
he has called CBP several times was told that the case was now with the
U.S. attorney's office in Ohio and that CBP had no additional
information on it. So this week the Kazazis filed their lawsuit,
demanding the immediate return of their property.
The U.S. attorney's office for the Northern District of Ohio declined to comment on the record.
Erald Kazazi said the ordeal has affected his father's health and turned
their lives upside down. But, he said, his father's high opinion of the
United States has not changed.
“He's not going to let the actions of some employees that made a mistake
in their duties change his opinion of the country,” he said.




