Albany district attorney, sheriff under federal review for use of funds
The Department of Justice is reviewing the offices’ use of federal forfeiture funds after two audits
By Steve Hughes
Updated Jan 12, 2023 7:13 a.m.
Albany County District Attorney David Soares attends a donation ceremony to the Mohawk Hudson Humane Society Monday, April 11, 2022, in Menands N.Y. The Department of Justice is reviewing how Soares’ office, as well as the Albany County Sheriff’s Office, spent federal forfeiture monies.
Albany County District Attorney David Soares attends a donation ceremony to the Mohawk Hudson Humane Society Monday, April 11, 2022, in Menands N.Y. The Department of Justice is reviewing how Soares’ office, as well as the Albany County Sheriff’s Office, spent federal forfeiture monies.
Will Waldron/Times Union
ALBANY — The U.S. Department of Justice is examining two county officials’ use of federal asset forfeiture funds.
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A federal inquiry into the offices of Albany County District Attorney David Soares and Albany County Sheriff Craig Apple has been underway since late November.
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Federal officials from the Money Laundering and Asset Recovery Section, which leads the department’s asset forfeiture and anti-money laundering enforcement efforts, have been in contact with county officials as part of a compliance review.
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The Department of Justice did not return repeated requests for comment.
Albany County Comptroller Susan Rizzo, whose office published audits last year examining both offices’ use of state and federal forfeiture funds, said federal officials had been in contact with her office.
Rizzo said DOJ employees had submitted an “extensive questionnaire” and requested backup data from both county officials.
Apple said his office typically undergoes an annual audit for the program, but with the renewed scrutiny after Rizzo’s audit, DOJ officials told him they would do a more in-depth examination.
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Apple said he was not concerned about the review.
“We have to submit everything to them and account for every dollar and they approve our purchases,” he said. “So, it’s just to me, it’s more of a formality.”
Apple said DOJ may do a site visit to inspect some of the equipment his department has purchased.
Soares’ office said it is cooperating with the review.
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“We’re in the preliminary stages, still gathering the requested documents,” said his spokesman Darrell Camp. Camp said the district attorney’s office has not been told how long the review might take.
The Times Union previously reported on both audits, which found asset forfeiture money had been improperly spent, contrary to state and federal guidelines. Neither of the audits accused Apple or Soares of a crime or of using the money for personal gain. The Department of Justice review is only focused on funds from the federal asset forfeiture program.
Forfeiture funds can come from either state or federal prosecution of crimes. If a local police department, for example, recovers $10,000 in cash from a drug bust, the money is put into escrow until the matter is resolved through the court system. Then law enforcement and district attorneys receive a share of the proceeds from the case, with different rules guiding how the money can be spent depending on whether it comes from a state or federal case.
In general, forfeiture funds are supposed to be used for other criminal investigations, training and prosecutions.
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Under the federal asset forfeiture program, local law enforcement agencies must file a claim for their share, which depends on their involvement in an investigation. State rules require district attorneys to share a certain percentage of funds with the state Office of Addiction Services and Supports, as well as local law enforcement agencies involved in investigations.
One key difference is that the federal government’s program allows for $25,000 to be transferred to community programs that meet specific criteria, something Apple said he has always done. One use of those federal funds that Rizzo questioned included $2,000 to a United Way literacy program.
Apple said his office’s use of federal forfeiture funds has been audited repeatedly with no questions about how the money has been spent.
Rizzo’s audits found that both Apple and Soares used state funds for purposes they were not intended for, according to a state comptroller’s opinion. Both men previously said they disagreed with that guidance on the money’s use. Rizzo’s office has since assumed oversight on how both offices spend the money.
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Rizzo’s audit of Soares’ office was sparked by an incomplete forensic audit conducted in 2021 by an employee in Soares’ office. That audit, published in March, found that Soares’ office withheld hundreds of thousands of dollars in criminal forfeiture funds from the state and misspent other money, according to an Albany County Comptroller’s audit, including federal money for community organizations that might fall outside federal guidelines, such as a Loudonville karate program.
In her letter to Soares, Rizzo recommended that the district attorney’s office also reach out to state and federal agencies to alert them of impermissible expenses and ask about possibly paying that money back.
Soares, in a written response to Rizzo’s audit, disagreed with her interpretation of what a permissible expense was.
Rizzo published an audit of Apple’s use of the funds in November. That audit found fewer problems than those in the audit of the district attorney’s office.
Additional Reading:
Data Centers and the Law: A Comprehensive Overview | Civil asset forfeiture creates perverse incentives that can cost you your property. | The Surprising Truth About ‘Dirty Money’ | Innocent Owner Defense: Protecting Uninvolved Parties from Forfeiture | Police seize property without charges and pocket the proceeds. There’s a bipartisan move to crack down. | Generative AI Demand Fuels Data Center Construction | Defining Roles in Multi-Tenant Data Centers: Clear Boundaries, Less Conflict | Data Privacy in the Cloud: GDPR and Cross-Border Data Transfers for Data Centers | State lawmakers try again to regulate data centers | Trump wants to use a big banking settlement to help build his border wall | Airbnb ‘tenant from hell’ who squatted for 500 days and wouldn’t leave unless owner payed $100,000 moves out | Why civil asset forfeiture simply won’t die | JUSTICE MANUAL 9-115.000 – Use And Disposition Of Seized And Forfeited Property | Guy describes the living nightmare of the US government trying to seize his family’s motel | The Fruits of Forfeiture in Little Compton | Global Trends: Hyperscale Data Centers and Their Future | Dallas Police Seized $100K In Cash From Love Field Traveler Using Civil Asset Forfeiture | <a href="https://ruccilaw.com/newspaper-articles/retirees-home-taken-for-8-41-tax-bill-draws-michiga…
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Police seized $10,000 of a couple’s cash. They couldn’t get it back — until they went public. | Legislation on the move in California to protect innocent property owners from abuse of civil asset forfeiture | Ducey signs bill requiring conviction before assets are seized | Police Can Take Your Money Through Civil Forfeiture | Cash Seizure Attorney California – Rucci Law | Drug Seizure Attorney California – Rucci Law | Professional Lease Agreement Attorney Legal Services | Currency Structuring & Forfeiture: Legal Defense for IRS Seizures | My Voice: Private property at risk in South Dakota | Legislation Introduced to Curb Federal Forfeiture | Cash Seizure Defense – Rucci Law | FBI Seized $86 Million In Raid On Innocent Americans’ Safe Boxes After Duping Judge For Warrant | Civil Asset Forfeiture: Unconstitutional As Applied | Petitions for Remission & Mitigation: Administrative Relief from Forfeiture | How Asset Forfeiture Drives the Police State | Asset Forfeiture Due Process – Rucci Law | Asset Forfeiture Insurance Defense | Sebastian Rucci – American Greed Episode 12 – Season 8 | NPR Articles on Dirty Money Asset Seizures and Forfeitures | Dallas Police Seized $100K In Cash From Love Field Traveler Using Civil Asset Forfeiture | Dallas Police Took $106,000 From a Traveler. They Haven’t Explained Why. | NM End of Civil Asset Forfeiture Didn’t Increase Crime: Study | Asset Forfeiture – Cryptocurrency Seizure Defense | How Much Has the IRS Seized w/Civil Asset Forfeiture?


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