Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt Says Civil Asset Forfeiture 'Isn't Fair' and Calls for Reforms
"It's crazy to me that somebody can be pulled over and have their cash and truck taken for an alleged crime, get acquitted of that crime, but they still never get their property back," Stitt said.

Republican Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt called for reforms to the state's civil asset forfeiture laws in his State of the State address Monday.
"We need to address civil asset forfeiture," Stitt said. "It's crazy to me that somebody can be pulled over and have their cash and truck taken for an alleged crime, get acquitted of that crime, but they still never get their property back."
"That isn't fair, and we need to make sure it isn't happening anywhere in Oklahoma," Stitt continued.
The comments are notable because Oklahoma is part of a shrinking group of states that has yet to overhaul their forfeiture statutes in the face of bipartisan criticisms.
Under civil asset forfeiture laws, police can seize property they suspect of being connected to criminal activity, even if the owner is never charged with a crime.
Law enforcement groups say civil forfeiture is a crucial tool to cripple drug trafficking and other organized crime by targeting criminals' cash and assets.
However, civil rights groups say the practice is tilted against property owners and creates perverse profit incentives for police. Investigations have repeatedly uncovered cases across the county where police officers accused innocent people of being drug traffickers for carrying large amounts of cash—which is perfectly legal—and then seized their money. Property owners are then forced to go to court, where they bear the burden of proof to demonstrate their innocence.
For example, in 2021, NBC News reported on the case of two Vietnamese men who had over $130,000 in cash seized after they were pulled over by Oklahoma sheriff's deputies. The men were let free without criminal charges or a receipt for their seized cash.
"Now I have to prove I'm innocent, and they are the ones who illegally took my money and basically stole some of my money, too," one of the men told NBC.
In another high-profile case, a Burmese refugee named Eh Wah was driving across the country in 2016. Eh Wah was the manager of a Christian band that was raising money for a Burmese orphanage. When deputies from the Muskogee County Sheriff's pulled over the band's tour van, they found $53,000 in cash that the band had raised.
Despite not one iota of drugs being found in Eh Wah's van, the deputies seized the money, claiming it was drug proceeds. The sheriff's office released the money back to Eh Wah two months later, the same day that The Washington Post published a story on his case.
Over the last decade, 37 states have passed some form of civil asset forfeiture reform because of stories like these, and four states now only allow forfeiture after a criminal conviction based on proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
The Institute for Justice, a libertarian-leaning public-interest law firm that represented Eh Wah and has challenged forfeiture laws in several states, gave Oklahoma's asset forfeiture laws a "D-" grade in its latest survey, citing the state's low burden of proof to forfeit property, lack of protections for innocent owners, and strong financial incentive for seizures.
"Governor Stitt was right. No Oklahoman should lose their property through forfeiture unless they are convicted of a crime. Forfeiture should only be available as punishment for a crime in criminal court," Institute for Justice senior legislative counsel Lee McGrath said in a press release. "Oklahoma prosecutors should use forfeiture to confiscate the fruit of crime, but their litigation should be done as part of a criminal prosecution—not separate and crazy civil litigation where cars and cash are named as the defendants."
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Asset forfeiture was used as a tool against pirates and smugglers who lived beyond the territorial jurisdiction of the United States. The purpoted owner of the ship and/or goods forfeited could travel to the U.S. to dispute the forfeiture- and be subject to apprehension.
Also, people caught with contraband or the proceeds of illegal activity, often denied even knowing about its existence, let alone merely denying ownership.
Agree. Civil Asset Forfeiture should be returned to its roots - self-evident contraband for which no owner does or ever will come forward. Anything beyond that is just theft.
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Funny how little things like Income taxes give the government license to know how and where you acquired a sum of money in your possession.
"Waaah! Waaah! Consumption taxes are regressive and stuff! WAAAAAH!"
Fuckwit, do you think that the cops check with the IRS before seizing cash they find in a search?
Fatass Donnie LOVES asset seizure.
Also, he says to rough the suspect up a little.
If only there were someone in office who doesn't...
Trump (that's his name, moron) also promotes total immunity for cops. This would be an absolute lack of accountability for a group that has already proven they can't be trusted with power and authority.
Yes, I'll take the "moron" insult because someone else finally acknowledged that Trump is an authoritarian jerk.
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Does everyone in Oklahoma drive a truck, or is this hayseed just speaking to a particular audience?
Where do you live? I know the flyover states mean nothing to you, but most people in middle America have at least one pickup for a family. You might get out a little and look around. That's ok...we'll keep growing your food, since you can't do it for yourself.
Where I live, most of the trucks are driven by slack-jaws who wear cowboy hats (with no cows in sight), listen to country music, are half-educated, and never use their vehicles for more than ferrying groceries on pavement. Many, but not most, display their disaffectedness and worthlessness with Trump stickers.
A comment such as yours reveals much about your stability.
I don't care is the governor is a Democrat, Republican, Green Party or Libertarian.
Advocating that your assents should not be forfeited unless your are convicted of a crime is correct. This is a good position regardless of who is saying it or what their positions are on other subjects.
You appear to have misunderstood.
I tend to dislike civil forfeiture.
Reformed? REFORMED??!
How about eliminated because they are unconstitutional?
Under civil asset forfeiture laws, police can seize property they suspect of being connected to criminal activity, even if the owner is never charged with a crime.
So, even if today's Michigan ruling is overturned, the Crumbleys might still lose their house and cars.
It's called Screw Process.
Civil asset forfeiture as it is written, courts adjudicate and as it operates today is just plain unconstitutional. There can be NO EXCUSE of any judge, justice or politician to allow it in any way.
Until someone is CONVICTED no asset should ever be able to be held by the government in any government account. If it is, then a bond for at least 100% of that amount plus 2 times the expected total court and legal costs must be given to the person whose asset is held, pending CRIMINAL CONVICTION.
If the person is not convicted of a crime the government agency should be liable for all costs, all expenses and all losses pus damages and have to return the assets in good condition as when it was first touched by government. This is only just and fair.
I can see retaining an asset which is evidence in a charged criminal case. Until the trial is over.
This has always been wrong.
"No Oklahoman should lose their property through forfeiture unless they are convicted of a crime," writes IJ's Lee McGrath.
And it's true. But I suspect that many of the law-enforcement agencies that aggressively pursue asset forfeiture focus their efforts on vehicles with out-of-state plates. That makes it less likely that the forfeiture will be contested, by increasing the cost of the process to the property owner—I might have to drive from Tucson to Tyrone for a hearing, only to have the police request and the judge grant a two-week continuance. And it makes it easier to sell the process to state or local voters—"We can get more money for law enforcement to protect your family, and none of it will come out of the Oklahoma taxpayer's pocket."