HighlightTrending Story

How U.S Customs seized $41,000 from an innocent Nigerian nurse

112
….She saved thousands to open a medical clinic in Nigeria. U.S. Customs took all of it at the airport.

Anthonia Nwaorie spent years saving up thousands of dollars to open a medical clinic in Nigeria, where she was born. Finally, last October, she walked down a jet bridge at Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport to board the plane to get there.

The 59-year-old registered nurse had more than $37,000 in her carry-on bag and $4,000 in her purse. It was all cash, stowed in separate envelopes, some of it earmarked to help ill or aging family members. In her checked luggage she packed medical supplies and over-the-counter medication, which she planned to use to provide free basic care and checkups to anyone who needed it.

But she wouldn’t make it there. Just as she was about to board the flight to Nigeria, agents with U.S. Customs and Border Protection stopped her.

“How many people are you carrying money for?” an agent asked her, she recalled in an interview with The Washington Post. “How many people are you traveling with?”

Before Nwaorie could even open her mouth, she said, the agent asked another question: “How long have you been in the United States?”

The questioning threw her off guard. She explained she had legally earned the money and she was alone. Nwaorie, who lives in Katy, Tex., became a U.S. citizen in 1994. She showed her passport, thinking perhaps they were questioning her legal status. The agents took her to a room to search her and her luggage anyway.

Nwaorie immigrated to the U.S. in 1982 and is a citizen; she told the officer she was carrying the $41,377 she had spent years saving up to open her clinic.

The only problem? She hadn’t gone out of her way to declare that she was leaving the country with more than $10,000—a technical requirement Nwaorie said she was never aware of.

 Then they seized all $41,377 dollars.

“It was like I was a criminal,” she said. “I felt so humiliated, so petrified, too. They were talking among themselves, saying how this is how people smuggle money out of the country. ‘This is how they do it.’”

More than six months later, Customs and Border Protection still has not given back her money.

As a result, CBP officials seized Nwaorie’s money. Now she said the U.S. government is refusing to return it unless she signs a so-called “hold harmless” agreement promising she will not sue CBP over the incident and will reimburse the government for costs it has incurred while enforcing the agreement. If she refuses to sign, Nwaorie said the agency has said it will claim that she “abandoned” her money and keep it without giving her a hearing.

Instead, Nwaorie has decided to take CBP to court, teaming up with the Institute for Justice to file a federal class action lawsuit targeting “the abusive practice of civil forfeiture,” the IJ has said.

The lawsuit points out that Nwaorie was never charged with any crime and yet, the U.S. attorney’s office declined to pursue civil forfeiture of her money and allowed the 90-day deadline to file a forfeiture complaint to pass without any action.

Nwaorie has been traveling to Nigeria to provide free basic medical care to people in her home town, in the state of Imo, on an annual basis since 2014. She sets up a pop-up medical clinic in churches or community centers, where she provides basic care and over-the-counter medication such as ibuprofen and Tylenol for basic ailments. Trained as a midwife, she also examines all the pregnant women and lets them hear their babies’ heartbeats for the first time.

But after a while Nwaorie said she wanted to go bigger. She wanted the patients to have regular access to care with full-time doctors at a small, permanent clinic. This year, she said her father helped secure her a parcel of land. Before she was stopped by CBP, she intended to get a permit from the local government in Nigeria and begin purchasing materials for construction.

“This was my dream, that people cannot be sent away from a clinic or a hospital because they do not have money,” she said. “This is something that I want to do for humanity, myself and my God, so there is nothing I would want to do to go against the law of this land to get it done. If I had known I had to declare the money before traveling, I would have done that.”

Nwaorie ultimately traveled to Nigeria the month after CBP seized her money, paying for her trip on a credit card and setting up another week-long pop-up clinic. And she had to tell some family members that she didn’t have the money set aside for them.

Leave a comment

Related Articles

World Press Freedom Day: Press freedom will not be compromised, Tinubu govt assures 4th estate of the realm 

Mr. Mohammed Idris, the Minister of Information and National Orientation, has asserted...

Lagos-Calabar Costal Highway: Landmark Beach Refunds Customers After Demolition

Landmark Resort Beach’s management has initiated the refund process for customers affected...

Latest Kaduna terrorists’ attack: Vigilantes killed, two village heads, others abducted

Suspected bandits have reportedly attacked Maraban Agyaro, where they abducted the village...

Policeman who fatally shot man during petrol queue melee in Lagos identified, say police

The trigger-happy police officer who shot a young man, Toheeb Eniafe, at...

Gas explosion: Gas Minister visits Ogun as governor tightens truck regulations to improve road safety

The Ogun State Government is to introduce a policy that would enforce...

Security: Real-time aerial surveillance cameras, data-gathering sensors for FCT – Minister

The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Mr. Nyesom Wike, is set...

South-South governors back Lagos-Calabar coastal highway

The south-south governors of Bayelsa, Rivers, Cross River, Edo, and Delta states...

Suspected killer of 14-year-old Nigerian Daniel Anjorin in East London sword attack hauled up in court

Following the killing of 14-year-old Nigerian Daniel Anjorin in an east London...

London sword attack on Anjorin: 36-year-old suspect in police net

The 36-year-old suspect in the fatal London sword attack is currently being...

14-year-old Nigerian-born, Daniel Anjorin named as the victim of a sword attack in London

The 14-year-old boy killed by a sword-wielding man in Hainault, London has...

Lagos Landmark Beach demolition: FG compensates tenants, business owners

In response to mounting tension over the demolition of buildings and businesses...

Lagos gas explosion: One tragedy too many, pregnant woman, eight others seriously injured

A gas explosion in the Ajegunle-Apapa area of Lagos has left at...

FG signs Executive executive order to unlock $10bln investment in oil and gas

President Bola Tinubu has signed an Executive Order to unlock up to...

Port Harcourt-Aba train service inaugurated amid citizens’ excitement

The commercial train service for the Port Harcourt-Aba line began operation on...

Nigeria to produce 4,000 metric tonnes of lithium daily – VP Shettima

In the not-too-distant future, President Bola Tinubu will inaugurate Nigeria`s largest lithium...

Breaking: NFF appoints Finidi George as Head Coach of Super Eagles

The Board of the Nigeria Football Federation has approved the recommendation of...

Just in: Edo Gov. Obaseki announces N70, 000 new minimum wage

Ahead of the announcement of a new minimum wage by the Federal...

Customers Not Enjoying 20 Hours Electricity Will Not Pay New Tariff – Adelabu

The Minister of Power, Dr. Adebayo Adelabu, has said any customer not...

Monarch wants writers to participate in politics as Dr. Omotosho emerges as first SWAF president

A prominent monarch in Ogun State and Olowu of Owu in Abeokuta,...

$1m bribe: Apologise in a week or face legal action, Sports Minister Enoh tells Bash Alli

The Minister of Sports Development, Sen. John Enoh, has said that he...