Here Is How Rand Paul's Bill Would Curtail Civil Forfeiture
The FAIR Act gives owners more protection and reduces law enforcement's profit motive.

Today Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and Rep. Tim Walberg (R-Mich.) reintroduced the Fifth Amendment Integrity Restoration (FAIR) Act, which would revise federal civil forfeiture law to give property owners more protection and reduce the profit incentive that encourages law enforcement agencies to seize assets. "The federal government has made it far too easy for government agencies to take and profit from the property of those who have not been convicted of a crime," Paul said. "The FAIR Act will ensure that government agencies no longer profit from taking the property of U.S. citizens without due process, while maintaining the ability of courts to order the surrender of proceeds of crime."
Here are some of the FAIR Act's provisions:
Profit motive. The FAIR Act abolishes the Justice Department's Equitable Sharing Program, which allows police to evade state limits on forfeiture by using federal law to confiscate people's property. That option is appealing because federal law requires less evidence and gives cops a bigger share of the proceeds than many state laws do. While Attorney General Eric Holder's new forfeiture policy deals with a relatively small part of equitable sharing, Paul's bill would eliminate it entirely. The FAIR Act also reduces the Justice Department's incentive to pursue forfeitures by assigning the proceeds to the general fund instead of the department.
Standard of proof. The FAIR Act requires the government to prove by "clear and convincing" evidence that property is subject to forfeiture. The current standard is "preponderance of the evidence," which amounts to any probability greater than 50 percent.
Innocent owner defense. In cases where the government argues that an asset is forfeitable because it was used to facilitate criminal activity, the FAIR Act puts the burden on the government to show, by clear and convincing evidence, that the owner himself used the property for illegal purposes or that he "knowingly consented or was willfully blind to the use of the property." Current law puts the burden on innocent owners to show they did not know about the illegal use or "did all that reasonably could be expected under the circumstances to terminate such use." In other words, property owners are guilty until proven innocent, turning an ancient principle of justice on its head.
Structuring. It is a federal crime to make bank deposits of less than $10,000 "for the purpose of" evading the reporting requirement for amounts above that threshhold. That law has led the IRS to seize money from small-business owners whose only offense was making insufficiently large deposits, a.k.a. "structuring." The FAIR Act would allow forfeiture only when the owner "knowingly" sought to avoid bank reports of "funds not derived from a legitimate source." It requires a hearing within 14 days of the seizure at which the government must show probable cause to believe the money was involved in structuring.
Proportionality. In determining whether a forfeiture is constitutionally excessive, a court is supposed to consider not only "the seriousness of the offense" (as under current law) but also "the extent of the nexus of the property to the offense," "the range of sentences available for the offense," "the fair market value of the property," and "the hardship to the property owner and dependents."
Legal representation. The FAIR act expands the current guarantee of legal representation for property owners who cannot afford it from forfeitures involving primary residences to all forfeitures.
Reporting. In its annal report to Congress on forfeitures, the Justice Department would have to provide separate numbers for criminal forfeitures (which require a conviction) and civil forfeitures (which do not).
"The FAIR Act would provide essential protections for innocent property owners who have for decades lost their cash, cars, homes and other property without being convicted of or even charged with a crime," says Scott Bullock, a senior attorney at the Institute for Justice, which has been fighting forfeiture abuse for years. "This legislation would also go a long way toward stopping the perverse practice of policing for profit."
I discussed the 2014 version of the FAIR Act in a column last year.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
"Civil forfeiture" is already illegal, and it is clearly prohibited by the fifth amendment. Dr. Paul's intentions are good, but a government that's already violating the bill of rights is not going to obey a mere act of congress.
-jcr
The sad thing is that this inadequate bill is likely going to be rejected as too radical and anti-police.
Just coming here to basically say the same thing.
Yep.
The reporting part doesn't matter unless there is some mechanism to force it. Law enforcement is required by law to report all kinds of things to Congress, and routinely tells Congress to fuck off.
Sounds entirely too reasonable to pass.
It still allows civil forfeiture so I don't consider it reasonable.
Given the dependency amny cities and law enforcement agencies have developed on their illegal and unconstitutional flow of ill-gotten gains, the pushback is going to be fast and hard.
"The FAIR Act will ensure that government agencies no longer profit from taking the property of U.S. citizens without due process, while maintaining the ability of courts to order the surrender of proceeds of crime."
I'm skeptical that Rand Paul will succeed where the 14th Amendment failed, but I certainly hope to be wrong about that.
How did they ever get around "nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law" in the first place anyway?
Is depriving people of their property without due process somehow supposed to be protected if the government is trying to regulate interstate "commerce"?
How did they ever get around "nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law" in the first place anyway?
The FYTW clause. It's written on the back. In invisible ink.
To quote Chief Justice Roberts, "It's a tax."
The argument is that taking someone's property is not a punishment.
Which is of course retarded.
By not charging a person with a crime.
They're charging the property with the crime.
The owner is a simply a third party.
Why only FEDERAL law?
They should put hooks in it to deny federal highway funds to states that don't adopt similar legislation.
Especially since so much of this forfeitures happens on highways.
They should put hooks in it to deny federal highway law enforcement funds...
Especially since all forfeitures are conducted by state sponsored highwaymen.
Even better.
No federal money for law enforcement unless you obey these simple civil forfeiture rules.
This seems not only eminently fair, but morally mandatory.
I'd like to see a treble damages provision put into place. Unfortunately, even if it were included and enforced, we all know whose money THAT is.
In a case that was successfully contested make the seizing officer, his superior and the prosecutor PERSONALY liable for all court costs, including lawyers fees.
All these civil forfeiture laws were written to figure out how to punish perpetrators of victimless crimes. If the criminal proceeds were the property of others, forfeiture would be so that it be returned to the rightful owner.
But those rotten drug dealers got away because no one would report the crimes, so they had to figure ways to catch them, like the reporting requirements on cash transactions.
Maybe Rand should be trying to make the feds only pass laws against crimes, where there are actual victims, not try to scale back this double whammy of taking others property and profiting from it at the same time.
I don't believe the founders intended for the federal government to have anywhere near this many laws - they wanted the states to handle them.
How about requiring a conviction for forfeiture? No conviction, no forfeiture. If the person is not charged, or charges are dropped, or the person is tried and acquitted, all property must be returned.