     05-6522-cv
     United States v. $293,316

 1                      UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
 2                          FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
 3
 4                            August Term 2006
 5    (Argued: April 18, 2007               Decided: August 10, 2007)
 6                         Docket No. 05-6522-cv
 7   -----------------------------------------------------x
 8   United States,
 9
10             Plaintiff-Appellee,
11
12                        -- v. --
13
14   Mohammad Khan, Akbar Khan, Muhammad Room, Montaz,
15   Humayyum, John Patrick Donohue, as attorney for
16   Khista Bacha, Amir Amaan, Dor Amaan, Bacha Khan, Ali
17   Sher, Liaqat Ali, Sami Ur-Rahman, Said Ur Rahman, Gul
18   Bacha, Bahroz Khan, Rahman Ali, Hanifa, Abdul Samad
19   Khan, Aftab Ahmed, Sultan Zaib, Muhammad Ilyas Khan,
20   Rashid Ahmed, Barakat Khwaja, Haroon Rasheed,
21   Muzzafer Khan, Aftab Ud Din, Aziz Ur Rahman, also
22   known as Azizullah, Imran Mateen, also known as
23   Shakoor, Fazal Bacha, Rashid Iqbal, Muhammad Rahman,
24   Nadar Shah, Muhammad Khan, Rahman Zaib, Ali Haider,
25   Qadar Shab, Khalid Bacha, Amir Hamza, Abdul Kalam,
26   also known as Humayyun, Arsala Khan, Muzaffar Khan,
27   M. Khalid Farooqi, Muhammad Zahir, Ibn E. Amin,
28   Muhammad Zaib, Shaffi Ullah, Ali Sher Khan, Bahadar
29   Sher Khan, Ali Khan, Rafiq Ahmed, Alam Gir, Imran
30   Matin, Samieur Rahman, M.A. Yeem, Mozafar Khan,
31   Habib Ur Rehman, Sher Rahman, Badshah Amin, Rasheed
32   Ahmed, Shams Ur Rahman, Muhammad Arifkhan, Noor
33   Mohammad, Dil Aram Jan, Shafiullah, Mohammed Zeb,
34   Ghulm Rahman, Fazal Rahman, Mohammad Room, Zahir
35   Shah, Mohammad Amin, Sher Khan, Mohammad Shoeb, Qadar
36   Shah, Iqbal Sayed,
37
38             Claimants-Appellants,
39
40   $293,316 in United States Currency, More or Less, and
41   all Proceeds Traceable Thereto Seized From Ali Sher
42   Khan, $187,155 in United States Currency, More or
43   Less, and all Proceeds Traceable thereto Seized from
44   Akbar Ali Khan, $35,112 in United States Currency,
45   More or Less, and all Proceeds Traceable thereto

                                 -1-
 1   Seized from Fazal Subhan,
 2
 3             Defendants,
 4
 5   Fazal Subhan, Haroon Khan, Mohammad Khan, Sami Ullah,
 6   Diaz Ali Shah, Amir Bahadur, Rohmai Khan, Khan
 7   Haroon, Sqbal Syed, Mian Rahim Shah, Fazal Rehman,
 8   Rehmat Ali, Ali Rehman Seth, Tajul Malook, Mohammad
 9   Ishaq, Malik Sardar, Iqbal Ahmed, Mohammad Khan,
10
11             Claimants.
12
13   -----------------------------------------------------x
14
15   B e f o r e :    WALKER, STRAUB and B.D. PARKER, Circuit Judges.

16        Appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court

17   for the Eastern District of New York (Jack B. Weinstein, Judge)

18   denying Appellants’ application for attorney’s fees.

19        AFFIRMED.

20                                          DAVID B. SMITH, English &
21                                          Smith (John P. Donohue,
22                                          Kittredge, Donley, Elson,
23                                          Fullem & Emblick, LLP,
24                                          Philadelphia, PA, on the
25                                          brief), Alexandria, VA, for
26                                          Claimants-Appellants.
27
28                                          LAURA D. MANTELL, Assistant
29                                          United States Attorney for the
30                                          Eastern District of New York
31                                          (Roslynn R. Mauskopf, United
32                                          States Attorney, Steven Kim
33                                          and Kathleen A. Nandan,
34                                          Assistant United States
35                                          Attorneys, on the brief),
36                                          Brooklyn, NY, for Plaintiff-
37                                          Appellee.

38   JOHN M. WALKER, JR., Circuit Judge:

39        The expression “you can take that to the bank” connotes the

40   certainty and reliability of the banking system.     This long-

                                      -2-
1    running dispute arises out of the disposition of several hundred

2    thousand dollars that nearly eighty Pakistanis (the “contributor

3    claimants”)1 wished to transfer from New York to Pakistan.    Their

4    problems arose from their decision not to entrust their funds to

5    the international banking system but rather to three couriers.

6    The couriers, who were also carrying some of their own money,

7    were apprehended by the U.S. Customs Outbound Currency Team

8    (“Customs”) as they were about to board a flight to Pakistan and

9    were subsequently convicted under the bulk cash smuggling

10   provision of the USA PATRIOT Act.     See Uniting and Strengthening

11   America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and

12   Obstruct Terrorism (USA PATRIOT) Act of 2001, Pub. L. No. 107-56,

13   115 Stat. 272.   The United States District Court for the Eastern

14   District of New York (Jack B. Weinstein, Judge) concluded that

15   the government could forfeit 50% of the funds owned by the

16   couriers (the “convicted claimants”) without violating the

17   Excessive Fines Clause of the Eighth Amendment.     United States v.

18   $293,316 in U.S. Currency, 349 F. Supp. 2d 638 (E.D.N.Y. 2004).

19   As for the contributor claimants, it took them roughly three

20   years to recover the money they had dispatched on what they had

21   believed would be an overnight flight.

22        Two attorneys, John P. Donohue and David B. Smith, who


     1
1         The convention in this case has been to refer to these
2    individuals as “contributor claimants,” a convention to which we
3    adhere. In reality, however, they are consignors.

                                     -3-
1    represent many of the contributor claimants -- and, not

2    incidentally, also two of the three convicted claimants -- sought

3    attorney’s fees from the United States.      The district court

4    denied their request, and they now appeal from that decision.

5                                  BACKGROUND

6         In September 2002, the convicted claimants -- Ali Sher Khan,

7    Akbar Ali Khan, and Fazan Subhan -- were arrested while on the

8    jetway trying to board a flight from New York to Pakistan

9    carrying $515,583.00 in U.S. currency, concealed, among other

10   places, in soap and toothpaste boxes.      In December 2002, they

11   were convicted of bulk cash smuggling, see 31 U.S.C. § 5332(a),

12   as well as various offenses relating to their failure to report

13   to government agents the amount of money they were transporting,

14   see 31 U.S.C. § 5316(a)(1)(A), (b).

15        On or about February 10, 2003, the government filed a civil

16   forfeiture action in rem against the funds seized from the

17   convicted claimants.   Because this case turns, in part, on

18   whether the government was dilatory in eventually returning money

19   to the contributor claimants, we must recite the course of

20   proceedings in some detail.

21        On or about March 11, 2003, Ali Sher Khan filed his answer

22   to the complaint in rem as well as responses to the government’s

23   interrogatories.   Cf. Fed. R. Civ. P. C(6)(b) (Supplemental Rules

24   for Certain Admiralty and Maritime Claims) (“Interrogatories may


                                      -4-
1    be served with the complaint in an in rem action without leave of

2    court.   Answers to the interrogatories must be served with the

3    answer to the complaint.”) [hereinafter Supplemental Rules].      He

4    did not submit a verified claim to the seized funds.    In his

5    papers, Ali Sher Khan mentioned the names of approximately forty-

6    five of the eighty contributor claimants, which corroborated a

7    list the government had seized from his person.   Customs then

8    sent copies of the verified complaint, as well as the

9    government’s interrogatories, to these forty-five putative

10   claimants.   Customs also sent the same documents to various other

11   contributor claimants, identified in a letter dated July 9, 2003

12   from Attorney David Udell, who was representing Akbar Ali Khan

13   and Fazal Subhan.2   Thus, by mid-summer 2003, the government had

14   notified nearly all of the contributor claimants that their money

15   had been seized.

16        The contributor claimants, who had violated no law,

17   understandably wanted their money back.   Pursuant to Supplemental

18   Rule C(6)(a)(i)(A), those asserting a right to seized funds must

19   file verified claims promptly.    See also Supplemental Rule

20   C(6)(a)(iv); see generally United States v. Cambio Exacto, S.A.,



     2
1         While Donohue eventually undertook the representation of
2    Akbar Ali Khan and those who had entrusted him with their funds
3    (the “Akbar Ali Khan contributors”), David Udell apparently
4    continues to represent Fazal Subhan and the Fazal Subhan
5    contributors. The rest of their story is irrelevant to this
6    appeal.

                                      -5-
1    166 F.3d 522, 529 (2d Cir. 1999) (citing United States v. Amiel,

2    995 F.2d 367, 371 (2d Cir. 1993)).     This, unfortunately, they did

3    not do, in part because some had gone to Pakistan and others did

4    not quickly retain counsel.

5         The district court, however, has the authority to extend the

6    time period for filing verified claims.     See Supplemental Rule

7    C(6)(a)(i)(B).   And, both Judge Weinstein and Magistrate Judge

8    Cheryl L. Pollack proved accommodating.    Still, by January 30,

9    2004, no claimant had filed a verified claim -- neither the

10   convicted claimants nor a single one of the contributor

11   claimants.3

12        Eventually, the three convicted claimants and those who had

13   contributed money to one of them, Ali Sher Khan, filed verified

14   claims.   On August 2, 2004, the government agreed to return money

15   to forty-one of the forty-five contributors to Ali Sher Khan.

16   However, the aggregate amount claimed by the contributors to Ali

17   Sher Khan exceeded by $28,000 the amount the government had

18   seized from him and his belongings.4    Three of the four

19   contributors whose claims remained in dispute at that point



     3
1         In June 2003, the convicted claimants filed motions seeking
2    leave to file their claims out of time.
     4
1         It appears that Ali Sher Khan was responsible for some of
2    this confusion, as he did not amend his claim downward -- making
3    these four contributors’ claims more plausible -- until October
4    19, 2004, on the eve of a hearing before Magistrate Judge
5    Pollack.

                                     -6-
1    eventually prevailed after a hearing before Magistrate Judge

2    Pollack, although not until July 1, 2005.

3           With respect to those who had given their money to Akbar Ali

4    Khan (the “Akbar Ali Khan contributors”), the process was slower.

5    By August 2, 2004, a number of the Akbar Ali Khan contributors

6    still had failed to respond to the government’s interrogatories,

7    and many had not filed verified claims.5      Some contributors to

8    Akbar Ali Khan were still filing claims as late as May 2005.

9           As verified claims trickled in, the government pressed for

10   the forfeiture of the full amount owned by the convicted

11   claimants.    The convicted claimants argued that forfeiture in

12   that amount was unconstitutional under the Excessive Fines Clause

13   of the Eighth Amendment and in light of United States v.

14   Bajakajian, 524 U.S. 321 (1998).    The district court agreed,

15   concluding that “forfeiture of the entire amount of [convicted]

16   claimants’ currency would be grossly disproportionate to the

17   gravity of claimants’ offenses.”       $293,316, 349 F. Supp. 2d at

18   640.    The district court ultimately ordered the forfeiture of

19   half of the convicted claimants’ own funds, amounting to “$33,500

20   for Ali Sher Khan, $9,650 for Akbar Ali Khan, and $5,000 for



     5
1         Some of the Akbar Ali Khan contributors had filed claims on
2    March 9, 2004; these claims, however, were unverified. And, as
3    one of the contributors already had filed a series of false
4    claims for more than $60,000, the government “declined to
5    recognize or attempt to settle any of the claims . . . that
6    [were] not notarized or verified.”

                                      -7-
1    Fazal Subhan.”    Id. at 651.

2         In August 2005, the government began the process of issuing

3    checks to both the contributor claimants and the convicted

4    claimants.   Thereupon, attorneys Donohue and Smith sought fees

5    and expenses in the amount of $157,884.81, a little under a third

6    of the total amount seized from the convicted claimants on the

7    jetway.   The district court denied their application, noting that

8    although “[c]ounsel for all parties . . . acted ethically and

9    properly . . . . [t]he Claimants’ choice of a surreptitious

10   method for sending their money . . . led to this costly

11   litigation.”

12        The district court concluded that attorneys Donohue and

13   Smith could not, pursuant to the Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform

14   Act of 2000, Pub. L. No. 106-185, 117 Stat. 202 (“CAFRA”), obtain

15   fees for their work on behalf of the contributor claimants

16   because there “were ‘competing claims’ [to the same property]

17   within the meaning of section 2465(b)(2)(C)(ii).”    Cf. 28 U.S.C.

18   § 2465(b)(2).    The district court also held that they could not

19   obtain fees for their work on behalf of the convicted claimants

20   because the government had been “substantially justified” in

21   seeking forfeiture of the convicted claimants’ money, or, in the

22   alternative, because CAFRA preempted the Equal Access to Justice

23   Act (“EAJA”), see 28 U.S.C. §§ 2412(b), (d)(1)(A), and because

24   CAFRA does “not apply if the claimant is convicted of a crime for


                                      -8-
1    which the interest of the claimant in the property was subject to

2    forfeiture under a Federal criminal forfeiture law,” 28 U.S.C. §

3    2465(b)(2)(B).   This appeal followed.

4                                 ANALYSIS

5    I. The Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act

6         In passing CAFRA, Congress was reacting to public outcry

7    over the government’s too-zealous pursuit of civil and criminal

8    forfeiture.   Cf. United States v. Funds Held in the Name or for

9    the Benefit of Wetterer, 210 F.3d 96, 110 (2d Cir. 2000) (“[W]e

10   see aggressive but marginal claims asserted on dubious

11   jurisdiction to seize charitable funds raised for the relief of

12   abject orphans in an impoverished country, so that the money can

13   be diverted for expenditure by the Department of Justice.”).    As

14   part and parcel of this effort to deter government overreaching,

15   Congress provided for the payment of “reasonable attorney fees

16   and other litigation costs” to claimants who “substantially

17   prevail[]” in a “civil proceeding to forfeit property.”   28

18   U.S.C. § 2465(b)(1)(A).   However, Congress had no wish to expand

19   government liability respecting legitimate seizures of property

20   plausibly subject to forfeiture; thus, CAFRA also provides that,

21        [i]f there are multiple claims to the same property,
22        the United States shall not be liable for costs and
23        attorneys fees associated with any such claim if the
24        United States--
25             (i) promptly recognizes such claim;
26             (ii) promptly returns the interest of the claimant
27             in the property to the claimant, if the property
28             can be divided without difficulty and there are no

                                     -9-
1              competing claims to that portion of the property;
2              (iii) does not cause the claimant to incur
3              additional, reasonable costs or fees; and
4              (iv) prevails in obtaining forfeiture with respect
5              to one or more of the other claims.
6
7    28 U.S.C. § 2465(b)(2)(C).     It was this “multiple claims

8    exception” that the district court invoked to deny Donohue and

9    Smith’s request for attorney’s fees for their work on behalf of

10   the contributor claimants.6

11        Appellants argue (1) that the bulk cash seized from the

12   convicted claimants is not the “same property” within the meaning

13   of the multiple claims exception (because each dollar bill is a

14   discrete parcel of property) and (2) even if it is, the

15   government did not comply with the four predicates to the

16   exception.7   We disagree.    Addressing Appellants’ arguments


     6
 1        We need not spend much time on Appellants’ argument that
 2   they are entitled, under CAFRA, to fees for their work on behalf
 3   of the convicted claimants. CAFRA simply does “not apply if the
 4   claimant is convicted of a crime for which the interest of the
 5   claimant in the property was subject to forfeiture under a
 6   Federal criminal forfeiture law.” 28 U.S.C. § 2465(b)(2)(B);
 7   see United States v. U.S. Currency in the Sum of Six Hundred
 8   Sixty Thousand, Two Hundred Dollars, More or Less, 429 F. Supp.
 9   2d 577, 580-81 (E.D.N.Y. 2006). The convicted claimants were, in
10   a word, convicted. The argument that 28 U.S.C. § 2465(b)(2)(B)
11   applies only if the government pursues criminal forfeiture,
12   defies common sense. The plain text of CAFRA bars fee awards if
13   the property was subject to forfeiture under federal law, not
14   just if the property was actually forfeited. Cf. Sullivan v.
15   Stroop, 496 U.S. 478, 484 (1990).
     7
1         Were we required to reach the question, we would be inclined
2    to agree with the district court that most, if not all, of the
3    contributor claimants could not recover fees as “prevailing”
4    parties. While we need not firmly decide the question, we think
5    that the Supreme Court’s decision in Buckhannon Board & Care

                                      -10-
1    seriatim, claims need not be “competing,” viz. mutually

2    exclusive, as Appellants apparently believe, in order for the

3    claims to relate “to the same property.”   Indeed, were we to read

4    the statute as Appellants do, we would nullify the second clause

5    of § 2465(b)(2)(C), which affords the government leeway to return

6    property more slowly if there are “competing claims.”     Cf. South

7    Carolina v. Catawba Indian Tribe, Inc., 476 U.S. 498, 510 n.22

8    (1986).

9         In addition, under Appellants’ reading, the multiple claims

10   exception could apply to currency only when the claims exceed the

11   value of the seized money.   We read the statute more broadly; we

12   see situations involving several, mutually exclusive claims to

13   the same currency as just one of the many situations covered by


 1   Home, Inc. v. West Virginia Department of Health & Human
 2   Resources should inform our understanding of the term
 3   “substantially prevails” in CAFRA. In Buckhannon, the Court
 4   clarified that only “enforceable judgments on the merits and
 5   court-ordered consent decrees create the ‘material alteration of
 6   the legal relationship of the parties’ necessary to permit an
 7   award of attorney’s fees.” 532 U.S. 598, 604 (2001) (quoting
 8   Texas State Teachers Ass’n v. Garland Indep. Sch. Dist., 489 U.S.
 9   782, 792-93 (1989)); see also Sole v. Wyner, 127 S. Ct. 2188,
10   2195-97 (2007) (holding that a party who obtained a preliminary
11   injunction but subsequently saw her case dismissed on summary
12   judgment did not attain “prevailing party” status required to
13   obtain fees). Indeed, we are inclined to agree with the Ninth
14   Circuit that the text of CAFRA suggests that Congress meant the
15   fee-shifting provision to apply only in the event a claimant won
16   in court. See Synagogue v. United States, 482 F.3d 1058, 1062
17   (9th Cir. 2007) (interpreting “‘any civil proceeding to forfeit
18   property’ [to] refer [only] to a proceeding in court”); see also
19   28 U.S.C. § 2465(b)(2)(D) (providing for reduction in fees if the
20   court “enters judgment in part for the claimant and in part for
21   the Government”) (emphasis added).

                                    -11-
1    the multiple claims exception.    That exception also applies

2    where, as here, the “same property” is a pool of fungible

3    currency that matches or exceeds the “multiple” but non-exclusive

4    claims lodged against it.

5         Appellants’ second argument is that the government has not

6    satisfied the four prerequisites to the multiple claims

7    exception.   It is equally unavailing.   Appellants cannot

8    seriously contest two of the prerequisites.    They concede, as

9    they must, that the government has “prevail[ed] in obtaining

10   forfeiture with respect to one or more of the other claims.”      28

11   U.S.C. § 2465(b)(2)(C)(iv). It is also clear on this record --

12   despite Appellants’ attack on the government’s discovery practice

13   -- that the government did not cause Appellants to incur

14   additional fees.   Cf. id. § 2465(b)(2)(C)(iii).   As the district

15   court noted, “[t]he government . . . [wa]s doing its job in

16   trying to find out whether these are the people or in fact

17   criminals taking money out illegally . . . and therefore . . . it

18   [wa]s perfectly sound for the government to make inquiries.”

19   Appellants principally argue that the government neither promptly

20   recognized their claims nor promptly returned their money.

21   Cf. id. § 2465(b)(2)(C)(i), (ii).

22        The Supreme Court has discussed the meaning of

23   “prompt[ness]” with respect to civil forfeiture.    In United

24   States v. Eight Thousand Eight Hundred and Fifty Dollars ($8,850)


                                      -12-
1    in United States Currency, the Court explained that “the

2    Government and the claimant have an interest in a rule that

3    allows the Government some time to investigate the situation in

4    order to determine whether the facts entitle the Government to

5    forfeiture so that, if not, the Government may return the money

6    without formal proceedings.”     461 U.S. 555, 565 (1983).   In that

7    case, the Court considered reasonable for the purposes of due

8    process an eighteen-month delay between the seizure of property

9    and the institution of forfeiture proceedings, in light of “the

10   Government’s diligent efforts in processing the petition for

11   mitigation or remission and in pursuing related criminal

12   proceedings.”     Id. at 569; see also United States v. Banco

13   Cafetero Panama, 797 F.2d 1154, 1163 (2d Cir. 1986) (discussing

14   $8,850).    While this analysis does not control our interpretation

15   of CAFRA, it does inform it.

16        The government acted more quickly in this case to recognize

17   claims than it did in $8,850 in deciding whether to pursue

18   forfeiture.8    The government, and the district court, gave

19   Appellants every opportunity to file verified claims to the

20   seized currency, as they were required to do by the Supplemental

21   Rules.     Appellants did so only belatedly; moreover, since one



     8
1         With respect to the Ali Sher Khan contributors, for
2    instance, verified claims were filed in January 2004 and the
3    government recognized the vast majority of those claims in August
4    2004, a span of eight months.

                                      -13-
1    contributor claimant filed false claims and one convicted

2    claimant modified the amount he claimed downward on the eve of a

3    hearing, the government’s careful pace was certainly

4    understandable.

5         Appellants also suggest that the government should have

6    returned the claimed funds earlier; for instance, they argue that

7    the government should have returned money to the forty-one

8    contributor claimants the government recognized on August 4,

9    2004.    But Appellants ignore that there were “competing claims to

10   that portion of the property” that were resolved only a few

11   months before the government had begun issuing checks.    28 U.S.C.

12   § 2465(b)(2)(C)(ii).    Indeed, had the government returned money

13   to those forty-one contributor claimants, it might ultimately

14   have lacked sufficient funds to pay the remaining four

15   contributor claimants.    As to the Ali Akbar Khan contributors,

16   the government was still receiving documents in May 2005, again

17   only a few months before it ultimately distributed the seized

18   funds.    All things considered, the government acted with

19   reasonable dispatch under these complicated circumstances.    Thus,

20   we agree with the district court that Appellants are not entitled

21   to attorney’s fees for their work on behalf of the contributor

22   claimants.

23   II. The Equal Access to Justice Act

24        Attorneys Donohue and Smith also seek fees for their work on


                                     -14-
1    behalf of the convicted claimants under the EAJA.     The EAJA

2    provides for the recovery of attorney’s fees under either the

3    common law or “under the terms of a[] statute which specifically

4    provides for such an award” provided that no other statute bars

5    the fee award.   28 U.S.C. § 2412(b); see also id. § 2412(d)(1)(A)

6    (permitting fees “[e]xcept as otherwise specifically provided by

7    statute”).

8         Courts have taken two basic approaches to the construction

9    of § 2412.   Some circuits view that provision as a supplement to

10   existing fee-shifting provisions.      See Gavette v. Office of Pers.

11   Mgmt., 808 F.2d 1456, 1463-65 (Fed. Cir. 1986) (en banc); United

12   States v. 329.73 Acres of Land, 704 F.2d 800, 803-10 (5th Cir.

13   1983) (en banc); United States v. 101.80 Acres of Land, 716 F.2d

14   714, 724 n.16, 726-27 (9th Cir. 1983).     Under this view, the EAJA

15   is only preempted when it is in irreconcilable tension with

16   another fee-shifting statute.   Other circuits, by contrast, have

17   construed the EAJA to apply only in the absence of any other fee-

18   shifting mechanisms. See E.E.O.C. v. O & G Spring & Wire Forms

19   Speciality Co., 38 F.3d 872, 882 (7th Cir. 1994); Natural Res.

20   Def. Council, Inc. v. United States E.P.A., 703 F.2d 700, 704-06

21   (3d Cir. 1983); Envtl. Def. Fund, Inc. v. E.P.A., 716 F.2d 915,

22   919 (D.C. Cir. 1983) (per curiam).

23        We need not decide the question here, for the EAJA and CAFRA




                                     -15-
1    are irreconcilably at odds.9       Section 2465(b)(2)(A) expressly and

2    unequivocally provides that “[t]he United States shall not be

3    required to . . . make any other payments to the claimant not

4    specifically authorized by this subsection.”        (emphasis added).

5    Thus, CAFRA is exclusive of all other remedies.        And, since

6    Appellants are not entitled to fees under CAFRA for their work on

7    behalf of the convicted claimants, see supra Part I, they cannot

8    obtain through the backdoor of the EAJA what Congress has

9    forbidden them to obtain through the front door of CAFRA.

10        We thus agree with the district court that Appellants are

11   not entitled to attorney’s fees for their work on behalf of the

12   convicted claimants.

13                            *     *     *    *   *

14        Whether or not each dollar carried by the convicted

15   claimants could be traced to a different contributor claimant, we

16   will not require the district court to engage in such

17   metaphysical slicing-and-dicing.         Cf. Frazier v. Cupp, 394 U.S.

18   731, 740 (1969).   Rather, we recognize that complications often

19   attend transactions involving scores of persons, across many



     9
1         We note, however, that the latter view better accords with
2    the text of the EAJA and with its legislative history. See H.R.
3    Rep. No. 96-1418, at 18 (1980), as reprinted in 1980 U.S.C.C.A.N.
4    4984, 4997 (explaining that “this section is not intended to
5    replace or supercede any existing fee-shifting statutes . . . or
6    to alter the standards or the case law governing those Acts. It
7    is intended to apply only to cases (other than tort cases) where
8    fee awards against the government are not already authorized”).

                                        -16-
1    miles, and involving several hundreds of thousands of dollars.

2    Untangling the skein of ownership in cases like this one is a

3    difficult and complicated task.   Those complications will often

4    mean that attorney’s fees are properly withheld, even from

5    innocent contributors.   While we understand that many aliens use

6    couriers to deliver money to friends and relatives because the

7    couriers speak their language, charge no fees, and serve areas

8    remote from the nearest Western Union branch, and while we are

9    equally mindful that Donohue and Smith invested considerable time

10   in helping the contributor claimants recover their money, under

11   CAFRA those facts cannot justify the imposition of another burden

12   on the public fisc.

13                               CONCLUSION

14        For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the

15   district court.

16




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