click to enlarge Courtesy of Institute for Justice

Rustem Kazazi, left, sits at home with wife, Lejla, and son Erald in Parma Heights, Ohio.

Last week we shared the story of Rustem Kazazi , a retired Albanian police officer and U.S. citizen living in Parma Heights who had over $58,000 seized at Hopkins airport by U.S. Customs agents without being charged with a crime.The money was seized through civil asset forfeiture, a widespread practice that allows law enforcement to take cash and property from people who have not been convicted or charged of a crime. Officers claimed the amount of cash he was carrying was "suspicious."Kazazi filed suit, which drew national headlines. The government, it seems, is eager to make this go away.As first reported by Cleveland.com , minutes from a hearing with U.S. District Judge Dan Polster and the two sides showed Customs was "beginning the process of tendering a check to Petitioner Kazazi in the amount of $57,330 plus interest."But that's not how much they took, Kazazi maintains. They're short $770, and so he indicated that he will wait for his trial — scheduled for Dec. 10, 2018 as of now — to seek the total sum.