Arizona Returns $39,000 Seized From Man at Phoenix Airport Through Civil Asset Forfeiture
Police detectives accused Jerry Johnson of being a drug trafficker and seized cash he says he intended to use to buy a semitruck at auction. He was never charged with a crime.

A North Carolina man will get back more than $39,000 in cash after police seized it from him at the Phoenix airport, despite never charging him with a crime.
Reason previously reported on the civil forfeiture case of Jerry Johnson. Johnson owns a trucking company and says he flew to Phoenix in 2020 to possibly purchase a semitruck at auction. Police detectives approached him at baggage claim, accused him of being a drug trafficker, and seized $39,500 from him.
It's legal to fly domestically with large amounts of cash, but under civil asset forfeiture laws, police can seize property suspected of being connected to criminal activity, whether or not the owner of the property has been charged with a crime.
Johnson tried to challenge the seizure, presenting bank statements and tax returns to establish ownership of his money, but the judge in his case ruled that because of inconsistencies in his story and circumstantial evidence offered by prosecutors—an old criminal record, buying a last-minute ticket with a quick turnaround, his nervous appearance in the airport, having three cellphones, and the alleged odor of marijuana on the cash—Johnson hadn't established a legitimate interest in the cash.
The Institute for Justice, a libertarian-leaning public interest law firm that has challenged asset forfeiture laws in several states, picked up Johnson's case on appeal, and now, after a two-year legal odyssey, the state is returning his money.
Institute for Justice senior attorney Dan Alban said in a press release that Johnson's case "potently illustrates the injustice of civil forfeiture even when someone ultimately gets their property back."
"It took 31 months for Jerry to finally get his savings back even though he was never even charged with a crime," Alban said. "In the middle of the COVID pandemic, Jerry had to find a way to keep operating his small trucking business after its working capital was seized while also scraping together money to hire an attorney (before IJ took his case)."
Law enforcement groups say civil asset forfeiture is an essential tool to disrupt drug trafficking and other organized crime by targeting its illicit proceeds. However, civil liberties groups across the political spectrum argue that the practice lacks due process protections and frequently ensnares innocent property owners, who then bear the burden of going to court and proving their innocence.
More than half of all states have passed some form of asset forfeiture reform over the past decade in response to these concerns. Arizona passed civil asset forfeiture reforms in 2017 to raise the evidentiary threshold for forfeitures from a "preponderance of evidence" to "clear and convincing evidence," and in 2021, it became the 16th state to require a criminal conviction before property can be forfeited
Airports are a particularly lucrative spot for police fishing for cash to seize. A 2016 USA Today investigation found the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) seized more than $209 million from at least 5,200 travelers in 15 major airports over the previous decade. The Institute for Justice is litigating a separate class-action lawsuit on behalf of people whose cash was seized by the DEA at airports. One of the lead plaintiffs in that case, Stacy Jones, had $43,167 in cash seized by the DEA as she was trying to fly home to Tampa, Florida, from Wilmington, North Carolina.
"It's a blessing to finally have my savings back so that I can invest it in my business," Johnson said in the press release. "That the government could take my money, never charge me with a crime but hold onto my savings for so long is outrageous. It created a tremendous financial burden for me and my family, and there were a lot of business opportunities I've missed out on because that money was just sitting in a government account."
However, the Institute for Justice says the case isn't finished; the state of Arizona is refusing to compensate Johnson for attorneys' fees or interest accrued on his money during the years it was seized.
"We're glad that the money has been returned," Alban said, "but Jerry still needs to be made whole."
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
Even in states that have passed laws against asset forfeiture, local police can still work with the feds and get a share of the loot using a program called “Equitable Sharing.”
So when you read about cops teaming up with the feds to make a bust, what that really means is that someone just got robbed blind and the police department got a sudden influx of cash.
You might think that police departments would be starting to realize finally that an increasing number of people in their districts do not support their local police, do not trust their local police and are afraid of their local police. And that they might want to tone down the "protecting and serving" rhetoric - or at least stop the armed robbery stuff for a while. You would be wrong.
We are crossing the threshold between consent of the governed and brute force.
Great article, Mike. I appreciate your work, I’m now creating over $35,000 dollars each month simply by doing a simple job online! I do know you are currently making a lot of greenbacks online from $28,000 dollars, it’s simple online operating jobs.
Just open the link…. http://Www.jobsrevenue.com
You might think they'd tone it down and back off, but for people with the kind of mindset that are attracted to being a cop, that's just more reason to double down. "They don't support us? We'll have to crack down on those troublemakers."
"The beatings will continue until morale improves."
That line was obliterated when the southern states said "no" to Lincoln's tax and got murdered for it.
Prohibition, the War on Drugs, The War on Poverty, The War on Terror are all just the continuances of the "reconstruction" period.
Marx called this period of reconstruction, socialism.
It's hardly murder if they shoot first, and any tax issues were distinctly secondary and mostly a ret-con seized on by southerners after they lost both the war and the struggle for public opinion. At the beginning of the war, Confederate leaders were a lot more honest. Four of the Confederate states published formal Declarations of Secession. Modeled on the Declaration of Independence, they set out the states' grievances against the federal government and explained why they felt it necessary to withdraw from the union. All four prominently and explicitly mentioned the preservation of slavery. The Texas declaration went even further, declaring the righteousness and necessity of spreading slavery into new territories. The fear that slavery wouldn't be allowed to expand was the primary driver of secession.
I am making ????150 every hour by working on the web at home. A month ago I have gotten $19723 from this activity. This activity is exceptionally astounding and its normal income for me is superior to anything my past office work. This activity is for all and everyone can without much of a stretch join this correct now by utilize this link.
🙂 AND GOOD LUCK.:)
HERE====)> https://salarycash710.blogspot.com/
They could help the guy out by rendering the highwaymen who stole his money into biodiesel to drive the truck home with.
They could help the guy out by rendering the highwaymen who stole his money into biodiesel to drive the truck home with.
Recycling. Cool. Sometimes, "Green" has an upside.
And the latest nonsense in the nonsensical War Against Drugs (and the war against doctors): https://deadiversion.usdoj.gov/pubs/docs/MATE_Training_Letter_Final.pdf
Why, you might ask, did Congress put training requirements for doctors in an appropriations bill? Great question! Next question?
I just started 3 weeks ago and I've gotten 2 check for a total of $15,000...this is the best decision I made in a long time! "Thank you for giving me this extraordinary opportunity to make extra money from home.
Go to this site for more details...................>>> http://www.jobsrevenue.com
Charge them interest.
A North Carolina black man will get back more than $39,000 in cash after police seized it from him at the Phoenix airport... Sure he will.
I mean duh they're Arizona cops ... one look at Jerry how can they not think he's a criminal?
I want to support the police, I really do, but when they behave like your average highwayman, they should never question why they are both disliked and mistrusted.
You come away with the sense they're not here to maintain law & order, they're just here to grab and run. In that sense, more closely associated with Alex's 3 little droogies turned cops, with a license to rob, steal, and kill.
I have to agree. There was a time when my default position was to believe the police unless there was a compelling reason not to. But in recent years I have come to assume that they are in the wrong. This wasn't a position that comes natural to me, but it came after hundreds of news stories and, more compelling, multiple first-hand observations. And no, I have never been arrested. But when my 40-year friend who lived with a police officer tells me a story about am local cop party where officers I know were taking turns with a 14 year old girl on a pool table, how am I supposed to defend them?
How are they supposed to know it’s wrong if there’s no policy against it?
Mere policy isn't good enough. They need court decisions based on identical circumstances. That's the only way they can know it's wrong.
I was a fly on the wall when some local cops took over the bar at this restaurant where I worked. They drove out all the customers, but what are you going to do, call the cops? They traded a lot of stories about choking people. They really enjoyed feeling the person go limp like they were dead. That moved into one drunk cop almost sobbing about never having the opportunity to kill somebody. That’s when I feared for my safety and left. I’ve never initiated contact with a cop since. To them I’m just a potential opportunity to get violent. That’s all anyone is to them.
Police aren't American style law enforcement.
Your local Sheriff is how law enforcement is supposed to work.
Your Sheriff vows to uphold the Constitution.
Police vow to uphold the law of whatever regime is in power. Police are a progressive construct, counter to our Constitution. Police consolidate government power. Our Constitution separates government power.
Police work for government. The Sheriff works for us. This is why you are seeing the left try to remake police.
End the police and we remove one of the left's most dangerous weapons.
There's nothing like another story of thieves with badges to raise my blood pressure an unwanted 10 points.
I just started 3 weeks ago and I've gotten 2 check for a total of $15,000...this is the best decision I made in a long time! "Thank you for giving me this extraordinary opportunity to make extra money from home.
Go to this site for more details...................>>> http://www.jobsrevenue.com
There may be limited circumstances where civil forfeiture is necessary. But the perverse incentives created by the way it is managed could easily be done away with. Make all CF proceeds go ONLY into the state's victim restitution fund rather than state's general coffers or LEO funding.
The US Constitution guarantees citizens that government cannot take private property without a conviction in court. Title 18 sections 241 and 242 make such takings "under the color of any law" a federal felony.
Remove the immunities from ALL government employees and impose the law.
Efforts to reform civil forfeiture have proven a near-complete failure. It needs to be killed with fire. No forfeiture should become final until someone has been convicted of a crime related to the seized property. If you're acquitted at trial, you should get your stuff back, no delays and no more questions asked. Charges dismissed? The same. No charges brought within a reasonable time? The same. Oh, and what constitutes "reasonable" should be codified by statute, with no wiggle room for cops, prosecutors or judges. Even this wouldn't be perfect, but it would be a huge improvement.
SCOTUS has supported civil asset forfeiture since the county was founded, noting its continuing use since colonial days. It was primarily applied at the border, to seize smuggled goods. Still, they should try reading the Constitution to see how to apply it following ratification of the bill of rights. If contraband goods are seized and destroyed, that's civil forfeiture. But if the government keeps the goods (or cash) that's a taking - requiring just compensation.
Not since the nation was founded.
SCOTUS has supported CAF since the Union was founded.
This happened after Lincoln altered the structure of the courts to support his war effort.