When the government seizes your money, they have to provide you with what's called a Notice of Seizure. This gives you or the attorney that's representing you an opportunity to contest the seizure of the money in a probable cause hearing and later on, if the case goes on, to present evidence showing where you got the money from, bank accounts, employment, so that we can convince the government that they were wrong in seizing it. Oftentimes we can get a substantial part of the money back for you or all of it depending. Usually you'll have to pay out of that money that you get back some type of attorney's fee to the attorney that helped you get it back, but I wouldn't just let it go.