FBI Misled Judge in Obtaining Warrant To Seize Hundreds of Safe Deposit Boxes

excalibur

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Mar 19, 2015
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But don't talk against the FBI! They're mostly good guys. Ha!

None get fired. Trump took part of McCabe's pension away from him only to have Merrick 'The Rat' Garland give it back to McCabe.

See how the deep state protects its own?



The FBI told a federal magistrate judge that it intended to open hundreds of safe deposit boxes seized during a March 2021 raid in order to inventory the items inside—but new evidence shows that federal agents were plotting all along to use the operation as an opportunity to forfeit cash and other valuables.

Federal agents failed to disclose those plans to the federal magistrate judge who issued the warrant for the high-profile raid of U.S. Private Vaults, a private business in Beverly Hills, California, that had been the subject of an FBI investigation since at least 2019. When the raid took place, the FBI also seems to have ignored limitations imposed by the warrant, including an explicit prohibition against using the safe deposit boxes as the basis for further criminal investigations.

Those details regarding the planning and execution of the FBI's raid of U.S. Private Vaults are now out in the open after a different federal judge ruled this week that the government could not keep those details out of the public record. As Reason has extensively reported, the raid on U.S. Private Vaults resulted in federal agents seizing and attempting to forfeit more than $86 million in cash as well as gold, jewelry, and other valuables from property owners who were suspected of no crimes. Attorneys representing some plaintiffs who are trying to recover their possessions interviewed the FBI agents who planned the raid, but federal prosecutors tried to keep some details of those depositions redacted.

The unredacted legal documents, filed in federal court on Thursday, show why the government was eager to keep those details under wraps. (Reason submitted an amicus brief in the case arguing that the redacted documents should be made public.)

In the affidavit submitted as part of the effort to obtain a warrant for the search, Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrew Brown wrote that federal agents intended to merely inventory the contents of the seized safe deposit boxes. But the newly unredacted documents show that the FBI had drawn up plans months earlier to forfeit property from the boxes, and failed to inform the magistrate judge about those plans.

"We had already determined that there was probable cause to move forward" with civil forfeiture proceedings against the contents of the safe deposit boxes before the search occurred, FBI Special Agent Jessie Murray said in a deposition, according to court documents.

Those crucial details were omitted from the affidavit submitted to the magistrate judge who granted the warrant that allowed the FBI to search U.S. Private Vaults. As Reason has previously detailed, that same warrant expressly forbade federal agents from engaging in a "criminal search or seizure of the contents of the safety [sic] deposit boxes."

The newly unredacted documents suggest the FBI never intended to abide by that limitation. In a deposition, Special Agent Lynne Zellhart said she drew up "supplemental instructions" for the agents who would be conducting the raid of U.S. Private Vaults. They were instructed 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." Agents arranged to have drug-sniffing dogs present for the supposed inventory of the contents of the safe deposit boxes—which doesn't do anything to help inventory items, of course, but makes more sense if the actual goal is to initiate forfeiture proceedings.

...


 
But don't talk against the FBI! They're mostly good guys. Ha!

None get fired. Trump took part of McCabe's pension away from him only to have Merrick 'The Rat' Garland give it back to McCabe.

See how the deep state protects its own?


The FBI told a federal magistrate judge that it intended to open hundreds of safe deposit boxes seized during a March 2021 raid in order to inventory the items inside—but new evidence shows that federal agents were plotting all along to use the operation as an opportunity to forfeit cash and other valuables.
Federal agents failed to disclose those plans to the federal magistrate judge who issued the warrant for the high-profile raid of U.S. Private Vaults, a private business in Beverly Hills, California, that had been the subject of an FBI investigation since at least 2019. When the raid took place, the FBI also seems to have ignored limitations imposed by the warrant, including an explicit prohibition against using the safe deposit boxes as the basis for further criminal investigations.
Those details regarding the planning and execution of the FBI's raid of U.S. Private Vaults are now out in the open after a different federal judge ruled this week that the government could not keep those details out of the public record. As Reason has extensively reported, the raid on U.S. Private Vaults resulted in federal agents seizing and attempting to forfeit more than $86 million in cash as well as gold, jewelry, and other valuables from property owners who were suspected of no crimes. Attorneys representing some plaintiffs who are trying to recover their possessions interviewed the FBI agents who planned the raid, but federal prosecutors tried to keep some details of those depositions redacted.
The unredacted legal documents, filed in federal court on Thursday, show why the government was eager to keep those details under wraps. (Reason submitted an amicus brief in the case arguing that the redacted documents should be made public.)
In the affidavit submitted as part of the effort to obtain a warrant for the search, Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrew Brown wrote that federal agents intended to merely inventory the contents of the seized safe deposit boxes. But the newly unredacted documents show that the FBI had drawn up plans months earlier to forfeit property from the boxes, and failed to inform the magistrate judge about those plans.
"We had already determined that there was probable cause to move forward" with civil forfeiture proceedings against the contents of the safe deposit boxes before the search occurred, FBI Special Agent Jessie Murray said in a deposition, according to court documents.
Those crucial details were omitted from the affidavit submitted to the magistrate judge who granted the warrant that allowed the FBI to search U.S. Private Vaults. As Reason has previously detailed, that same warrant expressly forbade federal agents from engaging in a "criminal search or seizure of the contents of the safety [sic] deposit boxes."
The newly unredacted documents suggest the FBI never intended to abide by that limitation. In a deposition, Special Agent Lynne Zellhart said she drew up "supplemental instructions" for the agents who would be conducting the raid of U.S. Private Vaults. They were instructed 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." Agents arranged to have drug-sniffing dogs present for the supposed inventory of the contents of the safe deposit boxes—which doesn't do anything to help inventory items, of course, but makes more sense if the actual goal is to initiate forfeiture proceedings.
...


Garland didn't give McCabe his pension back. McCabe sued & won, handing Trump his ass back to him, just like in the election. Not only did McCabe get his pension back but it was retroactive to when Agent Orange fired him, plus interest.

WINNING!
 
Just a general rule, don't ever, ever use a safety deposit box. Even for average Americans.

Even 40 years ago my grandma and grandpa had a shared safety deposit box at the bank. When my grandpa died they wouldn't let me grandma get into it after he died unless a tax man was there to observe Incase their was money in it she needed to pay taxes on. After that she closed it out and never had another one.

Plus a safety deposit box is inside a bank. You can't get in it unless the bank is open anyway.

Only thing I could see one being of value is if you have no one else and you want to keep like copies of your deed to your home, a flash drive with pictures of your home for insurance claim purposes like if you have a fire, copy of a birth certificate or other documents you want copies of off site. Me I keep that stuff at my grandma's house so I don't need one.

But you don't own the box and you don't really have control over it.
 
But don't talk against the FBI! They're mostly good guys. Ha!

None get fired. Trump took part of McCabe's pension away from him only to have Merrick 'The Rat' Garland give it back to McCabe.

See how the deep state protects its own?


The FBI told a federal magistrate judge that it intended to open hundreds of safe deposit boxes seized during a March 2021 raid in order to inventory the items inside—but new evidence shows that federal agents were plotting all along to use the operation as an opportunity to forfeit cash and other valuables.
Federal agents failed to disclose those plans to the federal magistrate judge who issued the warrant for the high-profile raid of U.S. Private Vaults, a private business in Beverly Hills, California, that had been the subject of an FBI investigation since at least 2019. When the raid took place, the FBI also seems to have ignored limitations imposed by the warrant, including an explicit prohibition against using the safe deposit boxes as the basis for further criminal investigations.
Those details regarding the planning and execution of the FBI's raid of U.S. Private Vaults are now out in the open after a different federal judge ruled this week that the government could not keep those details out of the public record. As Reason has extensively reported, the raid on U.S. Private Vaults resulted in federal agents seizing and attempting to forfeit more than $86 million in cash as well as gold, jewelry, and other valuables from property owners who were suspected of no crimes. Attorneys representing some plaintiffs who are trying to recover their possessions interviewed the FBI agents who planned the raid, but federal prosecutors tried to keep some details of those depositions redacted.
The unredacted legal documents, filed in federal court on Thursday, show why the government was eager to keep those details under wraps. (Reason submitted an amicus brief in the case arguing that the redacted documents should be made public.)
In the affidavit submitted as part of the effort to obtain a warrant for the search, Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrew Brown wrote that federal agents intended to merely inventory the contents of the seized safe deposit boxes. But the newly unredacted documents show that the FBI had drawn up plans months earlier to forfeit property from the boxes, and failed to inform the magistrate judge about those plans.
"We had already determined that there was probable cause to move forward" with civil forfeiture proceedings against the contents of the safe deposit boxes before the search occurred, FBI Special Agent Jessie Murray said in a deposition, according to court documents.
Those crucial details were omitted from the affidavit submitted to the magistrate judge who granted the warrant that allowed the FBI to search U.S. Private Vaults. As Reason has previously detailed, that same warrant expressly forbade federal agents from engaging in a "criminal search or seizure of the contents of the safety [sic] deposit boxes."
The newly unredacted documents suggest the FBI never intended to abide by that limitation. In a deposition, Special Agent Lynne Zellhart said she drew up "supplemental instructions" for the agents who would be conducting the raid of U.S. Private Vaults. They were instructed 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." Agents arranged to have drug-sniffing dogs present for the supposed inventory of the contents of the safe deposit boxes—which doesn't do anything to help inventory items, of course, but makes more sense if the actual goal is to initiate forfeiture proceedings.
...


This isn't something new. The FBI has always been corrupt. Hoover was almost as sexual perverted as Joe working as restroom monitor in a grammar school..
 
No this isn't about Trump..................

I'm sure many will be upset here because it's the FBI but the fact is, wrong is wrong no matter what level of law enforcement is being discussed.

While I hope the courts rule this raid unconstitutional, I have zero beliefs even then anyone will be held accountable and I don't believe the judge is innocent here either. Far too many are simply willing to sign off on most anything.

"That's why the warrant application did not even attempt to argue there was probable cause to seize and forfeit box renters' property."

FBI misled judge who signed warrant for Beverly Hills seizure of $86 million in cash
 
They have a long history of doing this. They did it to get the warrant on Carter Page.

Dems, raise your hands if you believe that a single FBI lawyers altered the document about Carter Page’s patriotic service as a U.S. intelligence source without anyone of his colleagues or bosses knowing about it. Raise both hands if you believe that the reason he altered the email was to make it say what he thought they meant to say?
 
No this isn't about Trump..................

I'm sure many will be upset here because it's the FBI but the fact is, wrong is wrong no matter what level of law enforcement is being discussed.

While I hope the courts rule this raid unconstitutional, I have zero beliefs even then anyone will be held accountable and I don't believe the judge is innocent here either. Far too many are simply willing to sign off on most anything.

"That's why the warrant application did not even attempt to argue there was probable cause to seize and forfeit box renters' property."

FBI misled judge who signed warrant for Beverly Hills seizure of $86 million in cash

Keep clinging, snowflake cultist!

LOL
 
well, seeing as tho the FBI has had the propensity to be corrupt since its inception; the only thing surprising here is that the target wasn't those of us with the least amount of power.....


"After a two-year investigation that opened in 2019, leaders of the FBI’s Los Angeles office believed U.S. Private Vaults was a magnet for criminals hiding illicit proceeds in their boxes."


If only the Trump admin was strong enough to put a stop to the FBI's diabolical plans.....
 
It’s in politics because the FBI is a political arm of the White House.

Literally. They robbed a bank.

I mean, actually, really, no kidding, robbed a bank.

It’s being covered as a process story.

This is the Left Angeles Times:

FBI misled judge who signed warrant for Beverly Hills seizure of $86 million in cash​

The privacy invasion was vast when FBI agents drilled and pried their way into 1,400 safe-deposit boxes at the U.S. Private Vaults store in Beverly Hills.

They rummaged through personal belongings of a jazz saxophone player, an interior designer, a retired doctor, a flooring contractor, two Century City lawyers and hundreds of others.
 
Thugs with badges hiding their crimes under the color of law.
It's sad how far & fast our once great institutions have fallen.

Obama took the Patriot Act & weaponized the fed to use as a bludgeon against political opponents.
Everything they do is on a partisan basis now.

Good luck to the poor victims here, they may never get their property back
 
The FBI and DOJ (as well as Federal courts) should be abolished and we should try to look for free-market solutions to law enforcement and the courts......


I believe a court that was run by successful venture capitalists would do a far better job than our corrupt justice system...a for profit justice system would eliminate the incentive for federal officials to find ways to scheme taxpayers out of money...
 
It’s in politics because the FBI is a political arm of the White House.

Literally. They robbed a bank.

I mean, actually, really, no kidding, robbed a bank.

It’s being covered as a process story.

This is the Left Angeles Times:

FBI misled judge who signed warrant for Beverly Hills seizure of $86 million in cash​

The privacy invasion was vast when FBI agents drilled and pried their way into 1,400 safe-deposit boxes at the U.S. Private Vaults store in Beverly Hills.

They rummaged through personal belongings of a jazz saxophone player, an interior designer, a retired doctor, a flooring contractor, two Century City lawyers and hundreds of others.
From your link.

Until the FBI shut it down, U.S. Private Vaults was an easy-to-miss store in an Olympic Boulevard strip mall with a Supercuts hair salon and kosher vegan Thai restaurant.

I don't think that classifies as a bank, do you?

Through surveillance, informants and undercover work, they surmised that U.S. Private Vaults and a precious-metals store next door were helping drug dealers launder cash by converting it into gold and silver they stashed in their boxes.

Doesn't seem all that innocent.


Seem they plead guilty

When the FBI vacated U.S. Private Vaults, it posted a notice in the store window inviting customers to claim their property.

Doesn't seem like they "stole" anything either


So my question is. Why all of a sudden does law enforcement need to justify searches even when there is clear proof of criminal activity?
 
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The FBI is now a criminal enterprise trampling the rule of law and constitutional rights of American citizens, namely the fourth amendment. Trump needs to dissolve the institution when he wins his third term.

 
Un-Checked, Un-Restrained - FBI continues to prove it has no respect for Constitution and Rule of Law & that it is a threat to this country and citizens by defrauding another Judge, another court





 

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