She Got Her Car Back 6 Years After Police Seized It
Malinda Harris’ ordeal shows how easily the government can take innocent people’s property under civil forfeiture laws.

After police in Berkshire County, Massachusetts, took her car, Malinda Harris did not get a chance to contest the seizure for five and a half years. After the Phoenix-based Goldwater Institute threatened to file a lawsuit on her behalf last March, the county agreed within a week to return the car, which she finally got back this summer.
The contrast between those two timelines shows how easy it is for the government to seize innocent people's property under civil forfeiture laws, which allow law enforcement agencies to supplement their budgets by confiscating assets they claim are connected to criminal activity. Harris' experience with legalized larceny, which she describes in congressional testimony she will give today, illustrates how that system is rigged against property owners from beginning to end.
The Berkshire County Law Enforcement Task Force seized Harris' 2011 Infiniti G37 on March 4, 2015, because her son, Trevice, was suspected of selling drugs. Although Harris had let Trevice borrow her car, the cops did not allege that he used it for drug dealing or that she knew about his illegal activity.
Harris did not get a receipt, and she heard nothing more about her purloined property until October 2020, when she received a civil forfeiture complaint that had been prepared the previous January. As Goldwater Institute senior attorney Stephen Silverman noted in a February 25 motion, Massachusetts "does not provide any deadline [by] which the Commonwealth is required to initiate forfeiture proceedings."
Like most states, Massachusetts lets police seize property when they have "probable cause" to believe it was used for drug trafficking. But once they have met that minimal threshold, the burden of proof shifts to the owner, who must show that the property is not subject to forfeiture—a rule that helps explain why Massachusetts was the only state to receive an F in the Institute for Justice's 2020 report on civil forfeiture laws.
Massachusetts allows innocent owners to seek the return of their assets unless they "knew or should have known that such conveyance or real property was used in and for the business of unlawfully manufacturing, dispensing, or distributing controlled substances." But like the federal government and most states, it requires owners to prove their innocence, the reverse of the presumption that applies in criminal cases.
Law enforcement agencies get to keep the proceeds from forfeitures—up to 100 percent in Massachusetts and many other states. They therefore have a strong incentive to seize first and ask questions later, which seems to be what happened in Harris' case, given how quickly Berkshire County threw in the towel after it became clear that she was able to put up a fight.
"This is even worse than being victimized by a criminal," Harris says in her testimony to the House Committee on Oversight and Reform. "When it is the police taking your property, who can you call?"
Harris was lucky to have pro bono legal representation. For owners who don't, challenging a forfeiture often costs more than their property is worth.
The Institute for Justice estimates that "hiring an attorney to fight a relatively simple state forfeiture case costs at least $3,000—more than double the national median currency forfeiture." Unlike criminal defendants, owners of seized property generally have no right to court-appointed counsel, so people of modest means are ill-equipped to defend themselves against state-sanctioned theft.
"I was extremely fortunate," says Harris, who recently gave her car to her college-bound granddaughter. "I got my car back. I know that most people lose their property because they do not understand the legal process and they cannot afford a lawyer."
Harris' ordeal was an eye-opening experience. "The police should not be able to take, and keep for themselves, the property of people never convicted of a crime," she says. "How do you teach your children to respect the law, when the people who are sworn to uphold it can take your property on nothing more than naked suspicion?"
© Copyright 2021 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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Would not have thought Matt Walsh was going to spend all day ranting about Asset Forfeiture, but I'll take it.
Remember who helped pass this monstrosity? Oh yeah, Joe Biden! But hey, doesn't matter that he literally hasn't been right on a single major issue in his entire career. No mean tweets, right?
Seriously though, how in the hell is this constitutional? It literally says the exact fucking opposite thing right there in plain english
Because it's an in rem proceeding. The owner is not accused of anything.
However, the US Constitution does seem to require just compensation to the owner, given that this seems to be a taking for public use in cases where the property is not destroyed.
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It is constitutional because the supreme court says it is.
Just like all gun control.
Just like abortion on demand.
Just like an unconstitutional penalty can become a constitutional tax.
etc.
etc.
Do you think Walsh cares?
Massachusetts "does not provide any deadline [by] which the Commonwealth is required to initiate forfeiture proceedings."
When a car is arrested for a crime, it is not entitled to 6th Amendment protections.
Avoid Massachusetts.
Like most states, Massachusetts lets police seize property when they have "probable cause" to believe it was used for drug trafficking.
It's spelled "profitable".
> "How do you teach your children to respect the law, when the people who are sworn to uphold it can take your property on nothing more than naked suspicion?"
That's the lesson about how much respect law enforcement deserves
Fuck civil forfeiture.
And fuck Joe Biden.
The law makers like Joe Biden are not representing the People. They must go. Every senator or House member who does not introduce or sponsor a bill to eliminate asset forfeiture is responsible for denying us our rights. They must be defeated.
Unfortunately, the majority of voters in this country don't vote based on ideology or past performance. Their vote is decided simply by the (D) or (R) behind the name on the ballot.
Well, to be sure, on the other hand, the (R) or (D) is a reliable indicator of ideology.
I am curious what happens if she is making payments on the car, or is leasing it? She can just stop making payments, take the hit on her credit, and give it up. Let them try and repossess it from the police impound yard.
Also - after six years, if the car was sitting still the whole time, how much is it worth? The tires are probably rotten and the car is in neglected condition. The gasoline in the tank would have expired as well.
"How do you teach your children to respect the law, when the people who are sworn to uphold it can take your property on nothing more than naked suspicion?"
I'm sorry but if it's 2021 and you're just now figuring this out, the you're a complete and utter idiot who deserves to lose everything and everyone you care about.
*then
So the victim’s property was returned. Why were the thieves in uniform sued anyhow? Seems like they surely should have been.
So the victim’s property was returned. Why were the thieves in uniform sued anyhow? Seems like they surely should have been.
Your site proclaims that the above is a duplicate comment. I’ve looked at publish3d comments, and see no duplication. What’s up?
My comment now appears.
Just one more reason to put today's cops in with the pig swine. They've become nothing but incompetent fools in thier job. Most of them r overweight and completely undeveloped in thier abilities to think clearly when confronted. They do nothing but react to situations like a bunch of scared ass overwhelmed punks...., with guns. They nolonger PREVENT crime.., as much as they HIDE in the weeds hoping to CATCH crime. But this is what happens when WE dumb down the standards of what a cop needs to be. As it's "more important" that EVERYONE gets to be a cop. From the little ladies to the fat man. Setting US up with mental midgets and overweight fools with a gun. It's all rather gross.
The Phucko Knows
Civil asset forfeiture is theft - plain and simply. No one’s assets should be seized unless the owner has been convicted of a crime.
Nice