Kairtane wrote:
What type of drugs may or may not be traceable doesn't matter. The percentages are such that almost any combination of bills totaling $12,000 will be tainted, whether the money is involved in drug activity or not.
Uh, yes it actually does matter. Almost any combination of bills totalling $12,000 will be tainted by
cocaine, meaning that evidence of cocaine is not of significant value in tying the money to drug activity. Marijuana has not been shown to transmit as easily as cocaine and so evidence of being tainted with marijuana is of much higher value.
You cannot say that "well, 80% of all currency has traces of cocaine, and cocaine is a drug, therefore any other drug is equally useless in linking money to drug activity." That's silly. That's an Illicit Minor fallacy wherein you are saying, essentially, cocaine is a drug, marijuana is a drug, therefore cocaine is marijuana.
Furthermore, the fact that the money had drug residue is not the sole reason for the seizure. In fact, it's the least important one. The fact that the money was A) in cash, untraceable as far as we know B) contained in a restaurant go-box, a container not normally used for, nor intended to, transport cash and one likely to cause a casual observer to think it contained nothing of significant value and C) given to the waitress by a complete stranger are all far more suspicious than drug residue by itself. Even if it was cocaine residue on the money, there would still be good cause to seize it as evidence to conduct an investigation because of the
other circumstances. In fact, it was ostensibly those circumstances that caused the waitress to be suspicious; her friend claims there was no noticeable odor of marijuana
Focusing on the frequent nature of cocaine residue is just chasing a red herring. Cocaine residue is not relevant to this case, and evidence of drug residue is not the biggest reason to suspect criminal activity here.