Man Finds 119 Pounds Of Marijuana In Car He Purchased
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Man Finds 119 Pounds Of Marijuana In Car He Purchased
Man Finds 119 Pounds Of Marijuana In Car He Purchased
POSTED: 10:34 a.m. EDT June 4, 2003
PASADENA, Calif. -- A car purchased at a U.S. marshal's auction four years ago had a hidden surprise for its new owner: 119 pounds of marijuana hidden in the bumpers.
The buyer, Jose Aguado Cervantes, didn't know about the hidden stash until he was stopped at the U.S.-Mexican border three months later and arrested.
Government officials eventually dropped the charges, but not before Cervantes, 67, spent three months in jail awaiting trial.
Cervantes is seeking damages for the government's error, alleging negligence, false imprisonment and false arrest.
While an appeals court in Pasadena said Monday that he cannot recover damages for false arrest and imprisonment, his negligence claim against the federal government "is an entirely different matter."
The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals said the government's argument against Cervantes' negligence claim is "patently without merit" and "so off-the-mark as to be embarrassing."
"Cervantes remained similarly unaware of the contraband until its discovery by U.S. customs agents as he tried to cross the U.S. border on Oct. 22, 1999," the appeals court said. "Although Cervantes denied knowledge of the marijuana and informed agents that he had purchased the vehicle at a U.S. marshal's auction, he was arrested and incarcerated."
POSTED: 10:34 a.m. EDT June 4, 2003
PASADENA, Calif. -- A car purchased at a U.S. marshal's auction four years ago had a hidden surprise for its new owner: 119 pounds of marijuana hidden in the bumpers.
The buyer, Jose Aguado Cervantes, didn't know about the hidden stash until he was stopped at the U.S.-Mexican border three months later and arrested.
Government officials eventually dropped the charges, but not before Cervantes, 67, spent three months in jail awaiting trial.
Cervantes is seeking damages for the government's error, alleging negligence, false imprisonment and false arrest.
While an appeals court in Pasadena said Monday that he cannot recover damages for false arrest and imprisonment, his negligence claim against the federal government "is an entirely different matter."
The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals said the government's argument against Cervantes' negligence claim is "patently without merit" and "so off-the-mark as to be embarrassing."
"Cervantes remained similarly unaware of the contraband until its discovery by U.S. customs agents as he tried to cross the U.S. border on Oct. 22, 1999," the appeals court said. "Although Cervantes denied knowledge of the marijuana and informed agents that he had purchased the vehicle at a U.S. marshal's auction, he was arrested and incarcerated."
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It was obvious the vehicle was confiscated by US Marshal's for similar reasons. 119 pounds of weed is alot of stash to miss during a drug bust. Sounds to me like this guy purchased the vehicle to transport the stuff and had a legit excuse to get out of the charges if caught. Seems it worked didn't it?
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