Civil Forfeiture Defendants Have the Right to a Jury Trial, Says the Indiana Supreme Court
That prosecutors in the Hoosier State successfully denied people this due process is a reflection of how abusive civil forfeiture can be.

Civil forfeiture defendants in Indiana have the right to a jury trial, the state's Supreme Court unanimously ruled last week, bolstering basic due process protections for those who have assets seized by law enforcement.
Before the court was the case of Alucious Kizer, from whom police seized $2,435 in cash after a traffic stop where they found drugs in his vehicle. Civil forfeiture allows law enforcement to take people's assets if the government suspects them of criminal activity. Kizer moved to challenge his forfeiture at trial, which the Indiana Court of Appeals rejected, ruling that such defendants "are not entitled to trial by jury."
"The State insists that Kizer has no right to a jury trial because civil forfeitures pursuant to Indiana's drug forfeiture laws are a special statutory procedure intended exclusively for trial by the court," Justice Christopher M. Goff of the Indiana Supreme Court summarized in an opinion published October 31. "Kizer disagrees, arguing that the State's theory would effectively deprive Hoosiers of a jury trial when filing suit under any modern statutory scheme."
The state's highest court ruled in favor of Kizer. "The historical record—consisting of statutes and judicial decisions reflecting contemporary practice—strongly suggests that Indiana continued the common-law tradition of trial by jury in actions for the forfeiture of property," wrote Goff. The seizure of assets suspected to be used in the commission of a crime, he added, is "an essentially legal action that triggers the right" to a jury trial.
That prosecutors in Indiana have successfully denied civil forfeiture defendants this due process, and were close to making it official in the courts, is a reflection of how abusive the practice can be. It's also unsurprising and shows how governments across the U.S. can deter defendants from challenging such seizures, even when those people haven't been charged with a crime.
On October 30, the day before the Indiana Supreme Court released its decision pertaining to Kizer's appeal, the U.S. Supreme Court convened to consider a similar issue. Before the justices was Culley v. Marshall, a case surrounding two women whose cars were seized by police in Alabama. Law enforcement took possession of Halima Culley's vehicle after pulling over her son and arresting him for possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia; police seized Lena Sutton's car after her friend, who had borrowed her vehicle, was pulled over and taken into custody for possession of methamphetamine.
Neither woman was in their car at the time, and neither was suspected of a crime. That didn't matter. Much time would pass before things would look up for them: Though both Culley and Sutton ultimately got their vehicles back, it took 20 months and 14 months, respectively, before the courts ruled in their favor—a delay that came because neither received a prompt post-seizure hearing. The dearth of due process is a feature, not a bug, of civil forfeiture, as it discourages many defendants from continuing to fight for their property. The Supreme Court will soon decide if depriving defendants of a hearing in a timely manner violates the Constitution.
As for Kizer, he will finally get a jury trial to determine if the $2,435 in cash recovered during his arrest should be forfeited or returned to him.
"The right to a trial by jury of our peers is core to our system of justice," said Sam Gedge, a senior attorney at the Institute for Justice, in a statement after the Indiana Supreme Court's decision was published. "For centuries, courts across the nation have confirmed the obvious: when the government sues to forfeit your property, you're entitled to make your case to a jury."
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Unfortunately the lawyer fees would most likely exceed the value of what the cops took.
"Liberty and justice for all", my sweet ass! WHY do we need lawyers for this kind of shit, anyway? Why can't I just show up with the facts, and get a fair deal?
Q: "I would like some justice!"
A: "How much money, fame, and power do you have?"
Somebody has been listening to Clarence Darrow's "Industrial Conspiracies" talk on Librivox. Mr. Dooley sez: "I'd give thim th' vote... but I'd do th' countin'." The Kleptocracy sez, "Let Congress pass any laws it wants... just so our life-tenured judges do the interpreting."
I'd like the trial by combat option against the mf(s) that robbed me, but with equal, rudimentary weapons and no backup. If cops had to worry about having a spear stuck through their belly and their guts spilling out, getting beheaded by sword or even bludgeoned with a Hello Kitty baseball bat, they probably wouldn't rob citizens. ...or we'd get the red-blooded 'Murican satisfaction of brutally murdering our criminally sanctioned criminal oppressors.
Not really. An hour to fill out paperwork and a couple hours in court at a couple hundred bucks an hour doesn’t add up to thousands of dollars.
Jury trials are expensive for the government too, so they like to avoid them. That means the government will likely give up the goods when threatened with a jury trial unless they have a really good case.
Yes, jury trials are expensive for the government too, but they don't care, because the money is coming out of our pockets, not theirs.
Actually they do care because they're only budgeted limited funds.
Sadly, the observed evidence disputes your claim.
As we see when states spend tens of thousands on court hearings resisting a DNA test that might cost $500, when it's their privilege they're defending, no amount of money is too great/
The process is the punishment.
Oh yes it certainly is. The the culprit is the police department and federal policing agencies getting the money itself. it gives them INCENTIVE to violate the law under color of authority.
One of the worst cases was in L.A. when a man purchased something like a 25M house for cash. The police decided it had to be illicit money. They obtained a warrant based on a cash purchase and entered the home at 3AM. The owner came to his balcony with gun and the police MURDERED him for the $$$.
It turned out that the man was some kind of royalty and this as generational money. IT was just murder for cash and this is what police do all the time in my opinion hen seizing anything. No ex-parte order should ever allow any seizure of anything EVER under the US Constitution.
There are multiple points in which the court didn't go nearly far enough.
1, The STATE should be considered the defendant in such cases.
2. Attorneys fees should be awarded as part of the damages awarded to the VICTIMS.
3. The 6th or 7th amendment PROTECT the right to trial by jury, depending on if the case is considered criminal or civil.
So Republican Georgie Waffen Bush gets the court to hand him an election, then passes faith-based laws urging cops to rob hippies, blacks, latinos and the unsuspecting, and Prohibitionist courts lap it up. Now--a major asset-forfeiture Crash and lengthy Depression later--plus a decade of looting, folks manage to ACT SURPRISED when people gun down "cops" approaching their vehicle. This confirms Mencken's pithy observation regarding the intelligence of the American voter.
Your entire premise is idiotic, the part that could be translated from your usual jibberish
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InsaneTrollLogic.
Actually, that is your PRIMARY language.
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The Institute for Justice does great work on the civil asset forfeiture issue.
https://ij.org/press-release/indiana-supreme-court-rules-property-owners-in-civil-forfeiture-cases-are-entitled-to-a-jury-trial/
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I can't wait to get called for jury duty in an asset forfeiture case. I would love to hear the prosecutor trying to justify armed robbery by the state.
Cash is considered an ASSET just as any property under the constitution. Seizure of property under the Constitution under the 5th amendment (the takings clause) is very clear that "just compensation" must be provided. Under those terms courts regularly hear cases and determine the "value" of the property.
In the case of civil forfeiture, a COURT OF LAW needs to determine IF in fact the asset is profit of the crime. If it is not related to the crime then no asset can ever be seized.
Remember, if you ever have more than $10,000 in cash for any reason at any time the police WILL SEIZE it and will keep it, no matter if you have no crime involved. This is a criminal act by the government at all times and violates every tenant of the Constitution. It would make our founding fathers believe that the British were right all along!
Good. The jackbooted, armed thugs with badges will lose every case they are foolish enough to advance.
I often find it difficult to defend my native state, but at least we seem to be making some actual progress on civil forfeiture thievery.