By Rick Manning
Question: When is an American guilty until proven innocent?
Answer: When law enforcement confiscates property that is allegedly
involved in or acquired through illegal means without benefit of ever
having convicted the owner of a crime.
The fruits of this process known as civil asset forfeiture often show
up at auctions where promises are made that you can buy
government-confiscated cars, houses, boats, or jewelry for pennies on
the dollar.
Seems simple and logical: the Feds take the drug dealers’ stuff and sell it to you at a low, low auction price.
But what if the alleged drug dealer is not actually guilty of
anything and, in fact, never even accused of a crime? What if the Feds
just swooped in and decided that, based upon a cursory review of bank
records, your stuff needed to be confiscated?
Think it can’t happen? Think again.
The Wall Street Journal
in November, 2014 told the story of a small candy and snack food
distributor which had more than $440,000 in cash confiscated without
charges, or even an allegation of wrongdoing, coming from the federal
government.
Their money had been confiscated by a federal prosecutor and the
burden of proof was on them to get it back — a burden of proof requiring
that they show that their cash was not illicitly attained, rather than
one that requires the government to show that it was.
Yet, while their business was in danger due to the loss of the cash
flow needed to sustain it, they could not even go to court to seek the
return of their money because the federal prosecutor failed to even file
legal notice of the seizure. That’s right, the Feds had their money,
but their appeal process was denied because, as far as the Court was
concerned, the seizure never occurred.
Who was this federal prosecutor? It was Loretta Lynch, the current
Attorney General of the United States who oversaw the U.S. Attorney’s
Office for the Eastern District of New York.
It gets worse. The government is actually incentivized to engage in
these confiscations and deny attempts to return wrongly taken items,
because state and local governments share in the federal government’s
cash haul. In fact, according to a Government Accountability Office
report, the state and local government take from 2011 was $450 million, a
startling incentive for assets to be targeted and seized.
Before he left office, former Attorney General Eric Holder told the nation the federal government would no longer engage in civil asset forfeiture.
But Congress still needs to make it official by reforming the Civil
Asset Forfeiture Act to protect law-abiding citizens from this gross
abuse of power. And by barring funds to assist a state or local law
enforcement agency in seizing property pursuant to state law, or to take
the seized asset and forfeit it under federal law.
Former House Judiciary Committee Chairman James Sensenbrenner
(R-Wis.) along with current Chairman Robert Goodlatte (R-Va.) are
leading the way in pushing for reform with Sensenbrenner expressing
disbelief that “this can happen in America.”
But it does, and it is time to rip this program out by the roots and restore the presumption of innocence to the system.
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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