Sheriff's Employee Embezzled Funds in Keeping with the Spirit of Civil Asset Forfeiture
One guy with gambling debts is a news story, but a formal policy of legalized theft is a national scandal.

Critics of civil asset forfeiture quite rightly refer to the practice of swiping cash and property from people accused (but not convicted) of crimes as "legalized theft." That enrages law enforcement types who insist they're just abiding by the law, never mind that the law is contemptible. But there are times when forfeiture clearly crosses over into outright robbery, such as when John Cox, an Albany County, New York, sheriff's department employee, used seized proceeds to cover his lousy luck with cards or horses. It's simultaneously awful and thoroughly in keeping with the policy of civil asset forfeiture.
"The head of the Albany County Sheriff's Office business office was charged with grand larceny and five counts of forgery after he allegedly siphoned more than $68,000 from the department's federal forfeiture funds account and forged Sheriff Craig Apple's name to cover it up," Albany's Times-Union reported last week. "Apple said he believes Cox was using the money to pay off gambling debts."
The case was highlighted by the Institute for Justice (I.J.), which works to end asset forfeiture.
"The misuse of forfeiture funds is shockingly common because civil forfeiture is inherently abusive and non-transparent," said I.J. Senior Legislative Counsel Lee McGrath. "In just the past few years, we've seen a Pennsylvania deputy steal $200,000 from a safe, a Michigan prosecutor embezzle $600,000 in funds, and widespread problems with forfeiture reports in states like Kansas and Oklahoma."
Notably, Cox's personal redirection of forfeited assets was discovered in the course of a U.S. Justice Department audit of money acquired through civil asset forfeiture by the Albany County Sheriff's Department and the Albany County District Attorney. That is, the feds suspected that the departments as a whole were misusing seized property and cash and accidentally discovered the business office manager's personal pilfering in the process.
The Justice Department got involved only after county Comptroller Susan Rizzo issued an earlier audit finding the office of District Attorney David Soares was "not compliant with regulations that govern the expenditure of" both state and federal forfeiture funds. Soares's office was found to have withheld roughly $365,000 in seized assets it was supposed to turn over to New York's Office of Addiction Services and Supports.
A few months later, another audit by Rizzo found a similar "failure to comply with legal requirements in the processing of forfeited funds by the office of Sheriff Craig Apple. In addition, she said, "several expenses processed with forfeited funds were impermissible" under the law.
One guy paying off his gambling debts was just the cherry on top.
Unfortunately, as I.J.'s Lee McGrath points out, this is all too common. Many law-enforcement agencies seize assets from unfortunate people, allegedly on suspicion that it's the proceeds of crime or about to be used in criminal activity. That even the cops don't believe this is apparent from the fact that many of those whose funds are taken are never charged—they're just stuck with the thankless task and expense of suing to regain what was (legally) stolen from them.
"Civil forfeitures often occur without any judicial proof aside from vague assertions that assets are 'likely' connected to criminal activity. In many states, prosecutors don't even need to file criminal charges to seize cash, cars or homes," David Safavian pointed out in a 2021 piece for Governing. "But the most perverse issue with civil forfeiture is that it turns the presumption of innocence on its head by requiring owners to somehow prove their property was not related to criminal activity. Because proving a negative is nearly impossible, most give up."
Sometimes the threat of criminal charges is used to coerce people into surrendering their property.
"They could face felony charges for 'money laundering' and 'child endangerment,' in which case they would go to jail and their children would be handed over to foster care," Sarah Stillman wrote in a 2013 piece for The New Yorker of the options offered by authorities to a family passing through Tenaha, Texas. "Or they could sign over their cash to the city of Tenaha, and get back on the road."
Tenaha officials so often crossed the line into overt highway robbery that they were eventually forced by litigation to rein in their excesses. But prosecutors around the country still extort money from people by threatening criminal charges if they don't sign away assets.
With property and cash lifted from the public and flowing through so many law-enforcement agencies, the opportunities for embezzlement are many. That results in cases like that of Cox and also of the Pennsylvania narcotics detective and the Michigan prosecutor cited by I.J.'s McGrath who both make the Albany County gambler look like a piker.
But the audits in Albany County reveal that the problem goes beyond freelance pilferage. Officials in charge are also prone to misusing assets they nab from unfortunates who fall into their grasp. That includes diverting funds to pet projects, like Apple and Soares. Or it might involve the purchase of expensive cars, as Reason's C.J. Ciaramella reported in 2018 of then-Gwinnett County, Georgia, Sheriff Butch Conway. That's pretty much inevitable when billions of dollars are available to cops and prosecutors in return for a little arm-twisting. Yes, billions.
"Since 2000, states and the federal government forfeited a combined total of at least $68.8 billion," I.J. revealed in a 2020 report. "And because not all states provided full data, this figure drastically underestimates forfeiture's true scope."
To their credit, some officials concede that civil asset forfeiture is inherently unjust. In 2021, Arizona began requiring criminal convictions prior to forfeiture in most cases. More jurisdictions, including the federal government, should follow suit. As it is, the feds too often help local police bypass reforms by "adopting" forfeiture cases and then "sharing" funds back to the originating agency.
It's natural to marvel when you read about somebody like John Cox, an employee of a law enforcement agency, acting like any other crook and embezzling funds. But don't forget that he was caught only because the offices of the sheriff and the D.A. were already under investigation for their own shenanigans, and that's part of the much larger problem with civil asset forfeiture.
One guy with gambling debts is a news story, but a formal policy of legalized theft is a national scandal.
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"A few months later, another audit by Rizzo found a similar "failure to comply with legal requirements in the processing of forfeited funds by the office of Sheriff Craig Apple."
So what's the good of the audits, if no one acts on them until it reaches the Federal level?
The appearance of doing something is more important than doing something.
Nice self-goal!
Even in New York, it's 10% for the big guy, or audit city.
But it's not thought of that way. The presumption in people's minds is that public policy is generally good, because it's not the product of just one person but of many, and because to think otherwise is too horrifying for most to contemplate.
That, and the average American has eagerly off-loaded as much moral responsibility as possible. They let officials act with impunity in exchange for promises of security and convenience.
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Lots of people subject to asset forfeiture claim they are innocent, but are they really? Aren't we all guilty of something? Sure, it may not be drug trafficking, it may be excessive pride or sloth or cheating on our diets, but all have sinned in the eyes of the Lord and all must be punished. To the extent that law enforcement inflicts that punishment, they're doing the Lord's work and they should be applauded for their karmic re-balancing of the universe.
Don't worry, folks. Our legislators will correct the outrageous injustice of asset forfeiture just as soon as they finish fixing the tax code.
Our legislators will correct the outrageous injustice of asset forfeiture just as soon as they finish campaigning.
FIFY
A Historic Practice Gone Awry
Excerpt from the semi-fictional novel, Retribution Fever:
In criminal law, misguided Radical Maternalists had twisted outrage towards criminals guilty of cruel and violent crimes into sympathy for them as “victims” of a cruel and uncaring culture or, at the least, as victims of self-proclaimed, unhappy childhoods. Meanwhile, these same Radical Maternalists were castigating, trying, and imprisoning police who represent the proverbial, thin, blue line dividing civil order from uncivil mayhem. We even reached the ludicrous point of characterizing a convicted murderer as too sick to be executed.
The obverse had been a practice known as “civil forfeiture”. Innocent until proven guilty was a bedrock principle of U.S. justice. In most states, if a police officer merely suspected that property was connected to a crime, he could seize it without any actual evidence of wrongdoing. Through a federal program called “Equitable Sharing”, police could confiscate eighty percent of seized value. To recover that which was rightfully theirs, Americans must have proven that the property had no connection to a crime.
[Optional Note for Readers: The practice had begun with the British several hundred years ago in order to deal with pirates beyond the reach of maritime law, judging the goods guilty of the crime, if not the accused. During the War Between the States, the Union adopted the practice to confiscate Northern property owned by Southerners. In 1921, the U.S. Supreme Court in J. W. Goldsmith, Jr.-Grant Co. v. United States endorsed the practice. Early on, however, it dealt more with payment of customs-duties and rarely applied to ordinary citizens until 1984 when Congress created the “Assets Forfeiture Fund” within the Department of Justice supposedly to impede drug-trafficking. The program generalized from there, as do such programs fostering theft by government.]
Having a bit of an issue following the non-sequiturs.
1. Asset forfeiture is contemptible.
2. Corrupt people are attracted to, and/or take advantage of a system.
3. Police lack transparency and accountability.
Personally, I don't think you go far enough of #1. There is no Constitutional reading, literal, originalist meaning, or interpretive, that supports the idea of seizing assets without a trial or presumption of innocence. As far as I am concerned, any judge who rules in favor in support of asset forfeiture laws is a partisan hack who has abandoned law favor of religion and should be defrocked.
#2; however, is less convincing. Sure it is true, but anytime you have a lot of money moving about freely with little or no oversite, you are going to attract those who will do dirty. You could easily say the same about a ton of things... the drug war, non-profits, religions, Wall Street, etc. History has shown time and time again that when some people get desperate or greedy, they will dip into whatever funds they have at their disposal. Should we shut down all non-profits just because some misuse or embezzle funds? Of course not. Asset forfeiture is evil on its own, and that should be good enough.
#3 seems true enough, but that is an overall condemnation of the police overall. That a few folks are misusing the assets which are seized and nobody is doing anything about it seems like a fairly small issue compared to the overall transparency & accountability issues caused by police unions, politicians currying favor, the pervasive "blue line" mentality, deference given by many of the courts, and overall lack of impartial oversite. If the police what us to respect them more, maybe they should get rid of their worst and quit trying to sweep all their dirt under the rug.
The original concept of asset forfeiture is defensible enough. It comes from the days where seafaring vessels carrying contraband would toss it overboard as the navy closed in on them. The contraband cargo is forfeited and the state can lawfully become the owner of it without having to prove that it was originally under the control of a ship captain who now wants nothing to do with it.
That it's now used for seizing people's houses because drugs were sold inside of it (regardless of whether the owner did or even knew about the selling) requires so many leaps and bounds of legal bat logic that any connection to the original purpose of the law has been lost.
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Any and all police personnel, judges, politicians that agree and act to civil asset forfeiture laws should be hunted down by the people, organized into units, tortured for a minimum of three days each with needle nose pliers and a blow torch; on the 4th day--Fed Alive To Hogs. Do it now!!!
Well, those pockets aren't going line themselves.