Pubdate: Sun, 21 Oct 2007
Source: Times Union (Albany, NY)
Copyright: 2007 Capital Newspapers Division of The Hearst Corporation
Contact: http://www.timesunion.com/forms/emaileditor.asp
Website: http://www.timesunion.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/452
Author: Brendan Lyons

DEA CASE OF $352,680 CASH SEIZURE DRAGS ON

A Drug Enforcement Administration investigation is  entering its second 
year without answers about why the  husband of a former Albany County 
prosecutor was  driving a rented car across the country with a 
backpack  with $352,680 in cash.

Federal authorities in Illinois, where a state trooper  discovered the 
money during a routine traffic stop in  November 2005, have filed a civil 
complaint in U.S.  District Court seeking to seize the cash on the 
grounds  it came from the proceeds of drug dealing.

Robert L. Schultz, 47, of Altamont "is the target of of  a criminal 
investigation," according to a motion filed  by federal prosecutors. But 
the seizure case has  languished for months and been adjourned several 
times  as authorities have requested more time to complete their criminal 
probe.

The scope of the ongoing investigation remains secret.  A federal judge 
earlier this year allowed the  government to file under seal a DEA agent's 
affidavit  that outlined the investigation.

Schultz, who married former Assistant District Attorney  Kimberly A. 
Mariani, has challenged the government's  assertion that the money came 
from drug dealing. He  filed court papers in Illinois arguing that 
troopers  illegally searched his car and cannot keep the money simply 
because he gave varying accounts of where it  came from.

Police claim Schultz told troopers the money was from  his parents, whom he 
described as millionaires, and  that it was a down payment for a $500,000 
home in  Aruba. He also stated it was from his father, who is 
a  professional gambler; that it was an inheritance; that  it was a wedding 
gift for him and his wife; and that it  was to pay his in-laws back for a 
$200,000 loan,  according to a federal complaint.

"There has not been a criminal indictment filed against  Robert Schultz but 
the matter is in the investigative  stages," prosecutors wrote in a motion.

Law enforcement authorities said the money was sealed  in shrink-wrap and 
lined with scented fabric-softener  sheets. A trooper who stopped Schultz 
for speeding on  Interstate 80 in Atkinson, Ill., on Nov. 20, 
2005,  claimed he smelled an odor of marijuana coming from  inside the car 
and from Schultz's body. Authorities  impounded the car but found no trace 
of drugs, which  had been their reason for the search.

Mariani was subsequently fired from her job by Albany  County District 
Attorney David Soares in December 2005  after indicating she would invoke 
her Fifth Amendment  right against self-incrimination. E. Stewart 
Jones,  Mariani's attorney, said he advised his client not to testify 
before a federal grand jury in Illinois that  was investigating Schultz.

Schultz was alone in the car when he was stopped and  has not been charged 
with any crime.
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