Policing for Profit
Civil forfeiture laws represent one of the most serious assaults
on private property rights in the nation today. With civil
forfeiture, police and prosecutors can seize your property and use
it to fund their budgets-all without charging you with a crime.
Americans are supposed to be innocent until proven guilty, but with
civil forfeiture, your property is guilty until you prove it
innocent-and law enforcement has a huge incentive to police for
profit, not justice.
If police suspect that you committed a crime, they can arrest you
and put you on trial. At that trial, prosecutors must prove you are
guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
But if police suspect your car was involved in a crime, they can
take it, sell it and, in most places, pocket the proceeds to pad
their budgets. They need not prove you committed any crime-or even
arrest you-to take your property away.
Welcome to the upside-down world of civil asset forfeiture.
With civil forfeiture, your property is guilty until you prove it
innocent to get it back.
And because most state and federal laws allow police and
prosecutors to pocket the proceeds, they have a big incentive to
pursue profits, not justice.
How big? In 1986, the Justice Departments forfeiture fund took in
94 million dollars. Now it has more than a billion. State and local
agencies receive forfeiture funds, too-but we dont know how much
because most states dont publicly report on forfeiture.
No surprise-abuse is rampant. One New York police department spent
forfeiture funds on food, gifts and entertainment. In Georgia,
forfeiture funds paid for football tickets for a DAs office. In
Louisiana, cops used funds to pay for ski trips to Aspen. And a DA
in Texas used forfeiture dollars to buy TV ads for his re-election
campaign.
Meanwhile, citizens are seeing cash, cars and other property taken
away for the flimsiest of reasons. Carrying too much cash? Police
can accuse you of selling drugs or laundering money and seize it,
no conviction or even arrest required.
An Institute for Justice study grades state laws on how well they
protect people from wrongful forfeitures. Only three states receive
a B or better. The rest range from mediocre to awful-and so does
federal law.
Worse, a federal legal loophole allows police and prosecutors to
bypass state protections and keep pocketing forfeiture money. IJs
research shows that the easier and more profitable these laws make
forfeiture, the more it is used and abused.
Its time to end civil forfeiture. People shouldnt have their
property taken away without being convicted of a crime. And law
enforcement shouldnt be policing for profit
Learn more at http://www.ij.org/PolicingForProfit
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