Federal Appeals Court Rules Detroit's Asset Forfeiture Violates Due Process Rights of Drivers
A federal circuit judge writes that Detroit's vehicle seizure scheme "is simply a money-making venture—one most often used to extort money from those who can least afford it."

A panel of federal appellate judges unanimously ruled Thursday that Detroit's practice of seizing people's cars for months at a time before giving them a chance to contest the seizure violates vehicle owners' 14th Amendment right to due process.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit, agreeing with a lower U.S. district court, found that Michigan's Wayne County, which includes Detroit, "violated that Constitution when it seized plaintiffs' personal vehicles—which were vital to their transportation and livelihoods—with no timely process to contest the seizure."
The 6th Circuit ruled that Wayne County must provide car owners a post-seizure court hearing within two weeks. Maria Miller, a spokesperson for the Wayne County Prosecutor's Office (WCPO), said the office is currently determining its next steps in light of the decision.
The ruling is a victory for the rights of car owners, a sharp rebuke of a greedy local government, and a preview of an important issue that will soon be before the Supreme Court. As Reason's Billy Binion reported in July, the Supreme Court has taken up a case to decide if property owners are entitled to a probable cause hearing after a seizure, and how soon if so.
The plaintiffs in the class-action lawsuit—filed in 2020 by the Institute for Justice, a libertarian-leaning public interest law firm—included Robert Reeves. In July of 2019, police seized Reeves' 1991 Chevrolet Camaro, along with more than $2,000 in cash, after stopping him on suspicion of stealing a skid steer from Home Depot. For more than six months, Reeves was not arrested or charged with a crime, and the WCPO didn't file a notice of intent to forfeit his car, leaving him unable to officially challenge the seizure.
"Because of today's ruling, the next person the county targets will have a real opportunity to go to court and challenge the seizure of their car," Reeves said in an Institute for Justice press release. "And they won't have to wait months or years to get it."
Under civil asset forfeiture laws, police can seize property suspected of being connected to criminal activity, even if the owner is not charged with a crime. Law enforcement says civil asset forfeiture is a vital tool for disrupting drug trafficking and other organized crime by targeting illicit revenue.
However, civil liberties groups like the Institute for Justice say police often target innocent owners or petty offenders—not cartel lords—and force them to bear the cost of challenging the seizure in court.
Wayne County had a particularly aggressive vehicle forfeiture program targeting illicit marijuana, prostitution, drag racing, and other public disorder and nuisance offenses. It typically offered to settle cases and return cars for $900, plus towing and storage fees. (An example of such a forfeiture notice can be seen here.) The alternative was waiting months for the WCPO to file a motion for forfeiture in court, without one's car.
The Institute for Justice argued that forcing owners through a monthslong, onerous process to challenge a seizure was an obvious shakedown and violated their Fourth, Eighth, and 14th Amendment rights.
For example, according to the lawsuit, police twice seized the car of Melisa Ingram, another plaintiff, while her boyfriend was borrowing it—once for allegedly picking up a prostitute and another time for leaving a house connected to drug activity. Her boyfriend was never charged with a crime, nor was Ingram, but the WCPO demanded payments from Ingram to get her car back. The first time she paid. The second time she didn't have the money and relinquished her car to the county.
Stephanie Wilson, the third plaintiff in the Institute for Justice suit, alleged that Detroit police seized two of her cars over a six-month period because she gave rides to her daughter's father, whom police suspected of drug activity, although no drugs or guns were found in either instance. In the first case, she lost her car after missing a filing deadline. She only got her second car back after waiting two years for a court hearing.
After reviewing the plaintiffs' cases, the panel of 6th Circuit judges could only agree that a perverse profit incentive, not crime fighting, was driving Wayne County's asset forfeiture program.
"Although Wayne County ostensibly seized the vehicles because of reasons related to health, safety, and/or drugs, the record suggests otherwise—that the county seized the vehicles in order to obtain proceeds from fees," the court wrote. "If Wilson's vehicle had a dangerous connection with drugs, it is unclear why the county promptly released the vehicle after a payment of $1,355. And if Ingram's vehicle was a public nuisance, the county's willingness to release the vehicle for $1,800 suggests it is more interested in the money than in remedying a public nuisance."
And as Reason has previously reported, this was happening at scale. Wayne County seized more than 2,600 vehicles between 2017 and 2019 and raked in more than $1.2 million in asset forfeiture revenues, according to public records obtained by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a free market Michigan think tank.
Of those seizures, 473 were not accompanied by a criminal conviction, and in 438 of those cases, no one was even charged with a crime. In 10 cases, the cars were seized under suspicion of a drug violation, even though the records say police didn't find any drugs.
The Institute for Justice was not alone in challenging the program. In 2018, Stephen Nichols filed a class-action lawsuit after waiting more than three years for a court hearing to challenge the seizure of his car. That same year, Crystal Sisson filed a civil rights lawsuit after Wayne County sheriff's deputies seized her 2015 Kia Soul because she allegedly possessed $10 worth of marijuana.
In a scathing concurring opinion, U.S. Circuit Judge Amul Thapar wrote that Wayne County's scheme "is simply a money-making venture—one most often used to extort money from those who can least afford it."
After summarizing the experiences of Reeves, Ingram, and Wilson, Thapar asked: "Does this sound like a legitimate way of cleaning up Wayne County? Or does it sound like a money-making scheme that preys on those least able to fight it? To ask the question is to answer it."
Settlement agreements like the ones in Wayne County are not unusual, however. Before Albuquerque ended its asset forfeiture program, it would force owners, even innocent owners, to pay $850 to recover their cars. In Albuquerque resident Arlene Harjo's case, the city offered to return her car for $4,000 after her son was arrested for drunk driving.
The Institute for Justice's lawsuit will now head back to the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan for further proceedings on its Fourth Amendment claims.
"The Wayne County forfeiture machine takes in over 1,000 cars every year," Institute for Justice attorney Kirby Thomas West said. "Now, Detroit car owners can at least rest assured that they will have a speedy opportunity to challenge a seizure when they find themselves victims of this forfeiture machine."
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One down ... 3,476 more municipalities and counties to go, IJ. Although I support IJ spiritually and financially for their success in fighting uphill against high winds, I'm not particularly optimistic about the ultimate outcome.
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|”Law enforcement says civil asset forfeiture is a vital tool for disrupting drug trafficking and other organized crime by targeting illicit revenue. [Emphasis mine]
In general, the wise guys limit their bite to a little one (la mordita) out of a general sense that too heavy a demand will result in undesirable blowback. There is no limit to the greed of the state or its power over the individual or the special status granted to the state’s minions when they deliver the demand, along with musing “Nice little X you got here – be a shame if it got forfeited or you got locked up.” It brings to mind C. S. Lewis’s comment about the robber baron’s greed at some point being sated, but those who torture us for our own good know no limits on their depredations, for they do it with the blessing of their own conscience.
When you have more to fear about losing your car or your home from your local police than your local La Cosa Nostra chapter – something is very wrong! And police wonder why, more and more, they are afforded the affection and respect that has historically been given to tax collectors.
And voters buy that. Candidates for prosecutor positions who object get blasted as soft on crime by conservatives.
This is one example where the libs are right.
In thinking about the rare court ruling attempting to frustrate the actions of kleptocratic “rulers”, it occurred to me that this may well be a situation where we must be careful of what we wish for.
The kleptocrats were not seizing cars or houses because they wanted a car or house (with the exception possibly of the occasional Ferrari, Porsche, or Mercedes) – they were seizing things to sell to get money for the “laird” to spend on his favorite subjects. I fear when the “forfeiting” of cars and houses is truly blocked (if it ever is), the kleptocrats, still in need of money, will pull a Willie Sutton and go straight for bank accounts – after all, that’s where the money is!
if we take their cars they won't be able to leave.
Or they're trying to force people to ride that stupid waste of money QLine. Have most of the seizures been along Woodward between Grand Blvd and Congress?
“‘… the county seized the vehicles in order to obtain proceeds from fees,’ the court wrote.” “‘…. violated that Constitution when it seized plaintiffs' personal vehicles—which were vital to their transportation and livelihoods….’"
Why is it even relevant why the cops were doing it or how important the vehicles are?
The why seems relevant. "We caught this person doing 150 down main street with a corpse in the trunk" seems like a good reason to seize the car in addition to arresting the driver.
Most of these were not that, however.
"We seized your car because it had flames coming out the engine, had parts falling off it and was a hazard to others" is a good why and would probably be upheld under constitutional scrutiny. "We seized your car to extort money from you" is a bad why and, as here, failed constitutional scrutiny.
"My car is vital to getting to work and the grocery story so I can feed my kids" is a high burden that argues for government expediency. "I'm applying for a refund because the (city-owned) coke machine ate my dollar" is a low burden and nobody's going to force the government to hire extra workers just to process that refund faster.
Those are admittedly extreme examples but they do illustrate the relevance of "why" and "how important".
Even more relevant would be why judges seem so reluctant to punish the official miscreants. Do they lack the authority to cite officials for misconduct and violating the Constitution? After a scathing tongue-lashing for misbehavior when I was a kid, my mother would usually mete out summary sentences in varying degrees; are judges not as bad-assed as mothers?
Judges are often responsible for the administration of their Court including financial matters. Some of the profits from asset forfeitures goes to fund the Courts. Can you say collusion.
Because politicians scream about fighting crime but refuse to raise taxes to fund law enforcement, prosecutors, and courts.
Judges who discipline law enforcement officers lose their re election campaigns.
The 6th Circuit ruled that Wayne County must provide car owners a post-seizure court hearing within two weeks. Maria Miller, a spokesperson for the Wayne County Prosecutor's Office (WCPO), said the office is currently determining its next steps in light of the decision.
I suspect "stop stealing cars" is not one of the steps being considered.
If the judge would fine Maria Miller a thousand dollars a day while xhe is "determining its next steps" plus ten thousand dollars for every car seized without a court hearing within two weeks, xher determination might not take very long - and might even include "stop stealing cars!"
The court is ALREADY wrong. Property owners are entitled to a probable cause hearing BEFORE their property is taken.
Not if the property is evidence in a criminal proceeding. It gets held until trial.
Is a trial in a government court a "public use"? Takings clause, 5th Amendment.
Somebody got around qualified immunity (from tearing down a house looking for a criminal) with that line of reasoning.
Look for this practice to spread and get much worse as the US quickly slides into deep recession in the coming months.
Has any jurisdiction ever forfeited its way to prosperity?
Conservatives used to love asset forfeiture. I remember when Rudy Giuliani seemed to be taking everyone’s car in NYC and accusing Democrats who objected as being soft on crime.
Nice to see some balance.