Police keep taking more and more stuff from people without charging them for crimes
Over the past several years, law enforcement officials have seized and kept more and more of people’s property — without ever needing to prove that these people were involved in any crime.
Those were the findings of a new report by the Institute for Justice, which found that police have made greater use of federal “civil forfeiture” laws since 2000, with the US Department of Justice paying out law enforcement agencies more than three times as much for forfeitures in 2013 as they did in 2000:
Under civil forfeiture laws, police can take someone’s property without proving the person was guilty of a crime; cops just need probable cause to believe the assets are being used as part of criminal activity, typically drug trafficking. The law then allows police to absorb the value of this property — be it cash, cars, guns, or something else — as profit, either through state programs or under a federal program known as equitable sharing that lets local and state police get up to 80 percent of the value of what they seize as money for their departments. And to get this property back, a person has to go through a lengthy, complicated, and often expensive legal process — and may not succeed at all.
The law essentially creates a financial incentive for police to take people’s property — by letting police departments keep most the proceeds they produce. And the report from the Institute for Justice, which opposes civil forfeiture, shows that there are almost no protections in most states to stop police from doing just that.
The limits on civil forfeiture vary from state to state — but federal law leaves a loophole
States’ civil forfeiture laws.
A minority of states limit forfeiture in different ways. For example, in New Mexico and North Carolina, a court must convict the suspect of a crime before the same judge or jury can consider whether seized property can be absorbed by the state. In Minnesota and Montana, meanwhile, a suspect must be convicted of a crime in court before the seized property can be absorbed by the state through separate litigation in civil court. And in California, the state requires a conviction for forfeiture — but only for financial seizures worth up to $25,000; a boat, airplane, or vehicle; and any real estate.
These limitations don’t entirely stop police from seizing someone’s property — cops can still do that with probable cause alone, and hold the property as evidence for trial. But the state limits make it so police won’t be able to absorb the property and its proceeds without convicting the suspect of a crime. This limits police seizures in two ways: It forces cops to show the suspect was actually involved in a crime after the property is seized, and it can deter future unfounded seizures for profit since police know they’ll need to prove a crime.
But Lee McGrath, legislative counsel for the Institute for Justice, said that police in most states with restrictions on civil forfeiture can still work with federal law enforcement officials to take people’s property without charging them with a crime. Only New Mexico limits local and state police departments’ ability to work with the federal government in forfeiture cases — by requiring the value of seized property to be more than $50,000 before federal forfeiture can be used.
There are other limitations in some states, too. Some state laws don’t let law enforcement agencies absorb proceeds from forfeitures into their own budgets, instead directing the funds to the general budget or other programs. Advocates say this helps remove the personal financial incentive police have to take and keep someone’s property. But there’s another loophole through the federal law: If local and state law enforcement can work with their federal counterparts, they can still conduct forfeitures, and their agencies can keep as much as 80 percent of the proceeds — regardless of what state law says.
Civil forfeiture: How much of the property law enforcement seize goes back to them?
Despite the loopholes made available through the federal law, groups like the Institute for Justice have praised states for taking steps to limit civil forfeiture — a policy that has long been mired by criticisms and horror stories of police abuse.
Police regularly abuse civil forfeiture laws
Critics have long argued that civil forfeiture allows law enforcement to essentially police for profit, since many of the proceeds from seizures can go back to police departments or prosecutors’ offices. People can get their property back through court challenges, but these cases are often very expensive and take months or years.
The Washington Post’s Michael Sallah, Robert O’Harrow Jr., and Steven Rich uncovered several stories in which people were pulled over while driving with cash and had their money taken despite no proof of a crime. The suspects in these cases were only able to get their property back after lengthy, costly court battles in which they showed they weren’t guilty of anything.
I’ve also covered the story of college student Charles Clarke, who was at the airport when police took his life savings of $11,000 in 2014. Police said they smelled marijuana on Clarke’s bags — but they never proved the money was linked to crime, and Clarke provided documents that showed at least some of the money came from past jobs and government benefits. The Institute for Justice, which is involved in Clarke’s case, estimates that 13 different police agencies are now seeking a cut of Clarke’s money.
An investigation by the Washington Post’s O’Harrow and Shelly Tan found proceeds from the seized property are used by agencies for all kinds of expenditures, including guns, armored cars, surveillance gear, luxury vehicles, travel, and even a clown named Sparkles in one case.
It’s stories like Clarke’s that have driven some states to enact reforms. But the federal government and 45 states still fully allow civil forfeiture.
“It’s ridiculous. I think it needs to change,” Clarke told me in June. “I don’t think the cops should be allowed to take somebody’s money if they haven’t committed any crime. We’re treating innocent people like criminals.”
You might be interested in:
Data Center Decommissioning: Contracts, Security, and Environmental Stewardship | Data Center Robotics Automation | The Role of Advocacy in Civil Rights | Emergency Power Innovations in Data Centers | Middle District Of Florida U.S. Attorney’s Office Collects More Than $168 Million In Civil And Criminal Actions In Fiscal Year 2022 | Data Center Boom | Understanding the Impact of Asset Forfeiture | Asset Forfeiture: Sierra Vista Police Department | Proactive Contract Enforcement: Avoiding Disputes in Data Center Deals | DOJ Announces New Rules for Civil Asset Forfeiture | The Difference Between Administrative and Judicial Forfeiture | The Connection Between Civil Forfeiture and Due Process | After Having His Motel Seized by the Government, Victim of Civil Asset Forfeiture Reflects on His Fight | Civil Forfeiture: Part One | District Attorneys and Civil Asset Forfeiture | Vendor Management: Navigating Third-Party Legal Risks | FBI Used Misleading Affidavit to Seize Beverly Hills Boxes | Data Center Digital Twins: Contractual Obligations & IP Ownership | Trump Talked Into Supporting Asset Forfeiture, AKA Robbery By Cops | JLF’s Jon Guze Discusses N.C. Civil Asset Forfeiture and Equitable Sharing | <a href="https://seba…
You might be interested in:
The Heat: US Civil Asset Forfeiture Controversy Part 2 | Civil Asset Forfeiture: Where Due Process Goes to Die | Countering Civil Forfeiture Myths with Facts | Two Celebrities Charged With Unlawfully Touting Coin Offerings | Russian oligarch ordered to forfeit $5.4 mln to U.S., Ukraine may get funds | Christie on Civil Asset Forfeiture | Will a tech giant’s huge appetite transform a vibrant slice of Manhattan? | Asset Forfeitures:The Free Market and Property Rights | After the Cops Seized Her Car, the Government Waited Five Years Before Giving Her a Chance To Get It Back | Responding to the Complaint for Forfeiture In Rem | Meet the Texas Lawmaker Fighting Trump on Civil Asset Forfeiture | These states let police take and keep your stuff even if you haven’t committed a crime | In Landmark Civil Asset Forfeiture Case, U.S. Supreme Court Holds Excessive Fines Clause of Eighth Amendment Applicable to States | Executive Branch Overreach — Civil Forfeiture Abuse | What Happens If the Government Sells Seized Assets? | When Innocence Does Not Help: How to Communicate about Civil Asset Forfeiture | Drug Money Seizure Los Angeles – Rucci Law | 21 U.S.C. § 881 FORFEITURES | Federal Asset Forfeiture Abuse – Rucci Law | Key Legal Protections for Business Owners | Rep. Travis Grantham Explains HB2810 to Reform Civil Asset Forfeiture (2-17-21) | What Assets Can Be Seized in California? | Civil Asset Forfeiture Victim Gets His Money Back! | Final Administrative Action by Customs and Border Protection








