Supreme Court Rules No Due Process Right to Preliminary Hearings in Civil Asset Forfeiture Cases
The cars of two Alabama women were seized for more than a year before courts found they were innocent owners. The Supreme Court says they had no constitutional right to a preliminary hearing.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Thursday that the due process rights of two Alabama women were not violated when they both had to wait over a year for a court hearing to challenge the police seizure of their cars.
In a 6–3 decision, the Court's conservative majority held in the case Culley v. Marshall, Attorney General of Alabama that property owners in civil asset forfeiture proceedings have no due process right to a preliminary court hearing to determine if police had probable cause to seize their property.
"When police seize and then seek civil forfeiture of a car that was used to commit a drug offense, the Constitution requires a timely forfeiture hearing," Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote in the majority opinion, joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, and Amy Coney Barrett. "The question here is whether the Constitution also requires a separate preliminary hearing to determine whether the police may retain the car pending the forfeiture hearing. This Court's precedents establish that the answer is no: The Constitution requires a timely forfeiture hearing; the Constitution does not also require a separate preliminary hearing."
Under civil asset forfeiture laws, police can seize property suspected of being connected to criminal activity, even if the owner is never charged or convicted of a crime. Law enforcement groups say it is a vital tool to disrupt drug trafficking and other organized crime.
Civil liberties groups across the political spectrum argue that the process creates perverse profit incentives for police and is unfairly tilted against property owners, who bear the burden of challenging the seizures in court.
Those criticisms have been echoed in the past by not just the Supreme Court's liberal justices but also Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch, giving forfeiture critics hope that a skeptical majority on the Court would clamp down on civil forfeiture.
However, despite writing in a concurrence that "this case leaves many larger questions unresolved about whether, and to what extent, contemporary civil forfeiture practices can be squared with the Constitution's promise of due process," Gorsuch, joined by Thomas, both agreed with the majority opinion.
Today's ruling is a disappointment, then, for groups such as the Institute for Justice, a libertarian-leaning public-interest law firm that filed an amicus brief on behalf of the petitioners. Kirby Thomas West, an Institute for Justice attorney, calls the ruling "a big loss for private property rights."
"Today's decision will mean many more property owners will never get their day in court when it could do them some good—shortly after the seizure of their vehicle or other property," says West. "Instead, civil forfeiture cases will languish for months or years before they are resolved. Meanwhile owners of seized vehicles will scramble to find a way to get to work, take their kids to school, run errands, and complete other essential life tasks."
The Supreme Court agreed to hear the case—two consolidated cases both involving Alabama women whose cars were seized by police for offenses they were not involved or charged with—last year.
In the first case, Halima Culley's son was pulled over by police in Satsuma, Alabama, while driving Culley's car. He was arrested and charged with possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia. The City of Satsuma also seized Culley's car. It took 20 months, during all of which Culley was bereft of her vehicle, before a state court ruled that she was entitled to the return of her car under Alabama's innocent-owner defense.
In the second case, a friend of Lena Sutton took her car to run an errand in 2019. He was pulled over by police in Leesburg, Alabama, who found methamphetamine in the car and seized it. Sutton also eventually was granted summary judgment on an innocent-owner defense, but not until more than a year after the initial seizure of her car.
Culley and Sutton both filed lawsuits claiming that the towns violated their Eighth and 14th Amendment rights by depriving them of their cars for months when a pretrial hearing to establish probable cause for the seizures could have quickly determined that they were innocent owners.
Those long waits are not unusual. Last year, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit ruled that Detroit's asset forfeiture scheme violated residents' constitutional rights by making them wait months for court hearings to challenge the validity of seizures. One of the plaintiffs in that lawsuit waited two years for a hearing.
However, the 11th Circuit rejected Culley's claims, finding the state's civil forfeiture process satisfied the requirements for a timely hearing under the speedy trial test, a balancing test created to resolve allegations of Sixth Amendment violations. However, every other circuit that has weighed in on the issue used a different balancing test established in the 1976 Supreme Court case Mathews v. Eldridge to determine due process violations.
The Supreme Court's conservative majority sidestepped the question of which test to use altogether, ruling that the existing requirement for a timely court hearing in forfeiture cases satisfied constitutional requirements.
"A timely forfeiture hearing protects the interests of both the claimant and the government," Kavanaugh wrote. "And an additional preliminary hearing of the kind sought by petitioners would interfere with the government's important law-enforcement activities in the period after the seizure and before the forfeiture hearing."
In a dissent, Justice Sonia Sotomayor, joined by Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson, wrote that the majority opinion's reasoning was "deeply flawed" and, rather than resolve the question of which test lower courts should apply, creates a universal rule that "hamstrings federal courts from conducting a context-specific analysis in civil forfeiture schemes that are less generous than the one here."
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Culley and Sutton both filed lawsuits claiming that the towns violated their Eighth and 14th Amendment rights
Must not be "natural" rights though since the conservatives shat on this argument.
#FuckTheFederalistSociety
Apparently.
the Court's conservative majority held in the case Culley v. Marshall, Attorney General of Alabama that property owners in civil asset forfeiture proceedings have no due process right to a preliminary court hearing
That should pretty much dispose right there of the claim that conservatives are the ones who care about individual rights. They ain't.
And the court thinks that 20 months satisfies the requirement for being "timely"?
EXACTLY
Well 20 months is a “time”….
Remember, they're lawyers — for whom time is mo' money!
“the Constitution requires a timely forfeiture hearing”
I think the point is; two-cases versus one-case isn’t going to speed anything up anyways.
Most commenters here probably wanted these Justices on the Court.
They wouldn’t abide a vaccine fucking mandate. Good enough for me.
Asshole.
Hard to get my blood up about this because we're all going to be civilly forfeiting our cars to
Ron DeSantisGavin Newsom in 2035.Of course, it seems to avoid the question of whether a forfeiture hearing a year to 20 months out can reasonably be called “timely”.
^THIS
Meh… don’t we have more important things to talk about than the government coming in and taking your stuff without due process? Like how the FBI is reading Twitter again. When is Mr. Musk going to do something about this?
Stop getting in the way of Government taking your stuff, they don't like it.
If you have your receipt for the car, you should be able to prove that it was obtained via licit transaction.
What's the matter? Is the government afraid that people might find out the law or resort to reasoning that their rights should therefore apply for any legal manuver that results in implied attainter?
Please understand, if they can't seize your car then the drug cartels win... or something. Please shut up and stop resisting.
In a dissent, Justice Sonia Sotomayor, joined by Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson, wrote that the majority opinion's reasoning was "deeply flawed" and, rather than resolve the question of which test lower courts should apply, creates a universal rule that "hamstrings federal courts from conducting a context-specific analysis in civil forfeiture schemes that are less generous than the one here."
Absolutely right. This is the worst property rights decision since Kelo v. City of New London (2005).
Kelo at least had precedents going back to colonial times. This is just a victory for Statist Conservatives like Trump and most other Republicans.
Somewhere in appellate court judge school, real people must lose all association with reality.
"You got your car back, so no-harm, no-foul."
"Although we won't say what's the maximum reasonable waiting time for a hearing, it's certainly longer then twenty months."
Essentially a click bait headline.
Well I'd have to actually probably read the final judgement to follow the logic here. Thomas and Gorsuch, as noted, have been critical of asset forfeiture in the past so on it's face we could have hoped for better. But the question seems to hinge on whether or not due process requires a preliminary hearing or if the typical slo mo system satisfies the constitutional requirement. As a civil matter the speedy trial requirement is not relevant. While I would like the court to actually solve every injustice it just ain't gonna happen.
Great point about relevance. Additionally, I would like to point out that if we had to rely on courts to solve every injustice, people would have little authority over their own lives.
That's the whole point of the courts. To give relief when the other branches refuse to.
As a civil matter the speedy trial requirement is not relevant.
Interesting. So the cops could claim a crime happened in someone's house, seize it through civil asset forfeiture, and leave the person homeless for at least 20 months without accusing them of a crime? Does the homeowner still have to pay the mortgage?
I'm not happy about this decision. Just pointing out that "due process" means that every citizen is entitled to access the existing legal process. That process sucks but we all get to suffer through it. If we can afford to. The government has defined asset forfeiture as a civil matter. The property has committed the crime. There is no human defendant. A criminal defendant by definition can potentially be deprived of their liberty and the constitution requires that they have access to legal council and a speedy trial. A car cannot be deprived of it's liberty (maybe a self driving car ?). There are multiple constitutional issues with this whole racket. I'm just not sure that a preliminary hearing would solve any of the problems. As much as I might wish otherwise.
Yeah, I suspect the usual answer at the preliminary hearing would be FYTY.
The core problem people have is waiting 20 months to get into a courtroom. They want the preliminary hearing because they think that it will come sooner than 20 months, but the heart of the matter is that if they got their actual day in court faster then the ask for a preliminary hearing would be moot. The court is basically dodging this demand for faster service and saying "as long as the courts are fast enough* they don't need to be faster." It's a remarkable evasion of the actual incredibly obvious problem.
* This intentionally left undefined
It should be that the government cannot deprive you of rights (property) without due process (conviction).
What it actually appears to be is a case of Because FYTW.
The government should not be allowed to keep collected fines. It’s a perverse incentive and sets things up so that municipalities end up shaking down motorists to shore up their own bloated budgets.
The only alternative I can think of is that maybe the seized assets can go into the Powerball jackpot. After a conviction and exhaustion of all appeals. They really shouldn’t get to do "civil" asset forfeiture AT ALL, but if you give government scum a micrometer, they’ll take a light-year and stomp you into submission.
Also it should not be "civil" asset forfeiture. That is not a civil matter. That is a CRIME. Deprivation of (property) rights under color of law.
Does the homeowner still have to pay the mortgage?
Yes. Or the car payment.
I’m confused as to why you think this is okay. I think it’s a cut and dried issue, yes, local courts should hear these cases expeditiously, the Supreme Court saying it’s not a Federal issue should not excuse municipal courts from understanding the importance and following State Constitutional laws on this matter
A lot of folks think this is okay because the six conservatives okayed it and the three liberals opposed it.
If Trump gets elected he might put three more of these Statist Conservatives on the Court. He basically thinks that Government should not be accountable to anyone. Especially when he is in the WH.
Lol. You’re such a bitter little guy.
Everything Is So Terrible And Unfair!!!!
A lot of folks think this is okay because the six conservatives okayed it and the three liberals opposed it.
How many of those people post here, nitwit?
Anyone have any idea of the cost to repair/maintenance costs of a car that has been sitting unused for a year or more?
Doesn’t the volatile fuel evaporate, oil go solid, moving parts bind up etc?
Or can you just start it up and drive away, no problems?
Woody Allen made a movie called Sleeper that answers all of those questions.
Here ya go.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ctin21yrfcA&ab_channel=BackYardSounds
No. I've left cars sitting idle for long periods several times while my friends scolded that I was ruining them. They were fine when I needed them again. Just make sure you keep the battery charged.
Bought an Austin Mini many years ago not running. Towed it home and found the engine was seized up. Took the head off and tapped on the pistons with a hammer while cranking on the drive shaft nut with a breaker bar. Engine broke loose and turned fine. Torqued the head back on with the same gasket. Turned the key and it started right up. Probably couldn't do that with anything built after 1980 but only because you can't get to anything in the engine compartment. But internal combustion engines are very resilient.
I would suggest a different angle - make civil forfeiture criminal, so they'll seize your property if you're convicted of a crime, and not otherwise.
Good idea. Seizing th property of people not convicted of a crime should be a crime itself.
Well the government ought to be able to seize your house for unpaid property taxes.
Additionally, the property in question must have been used in the commission of the crime the person was convicted of and the proceeds should go to the victims or next of kin.
My brother has been carjacked twice in Minneapolis. In the second offense the carjackers used the car to commit several armed robberies. He never got the car back, his dream car he’d just bought a few weeks before. The insurance company finally totaled it after several months. How is that justice? This was not any question, he was not involved in anything other than a carjacking. Cops can’t do their investigation in less than seven months?
The solution to this is to pass laws that require the agencies that seize property without due cause and hold it for long periods of time are required to compensate the owners of said property for their loss. The owners who are eventually acquitted of charges should be reimbursed for the cost of a substitute vehicle to get to work or take kids to school, etc. while the vehicle was impounded, and also for the depreciation in value of the vehicle during the time it sat in the impound lot.
Sometimes property is needed for a criminal prosecution and a chain of control needs to be maintained. And defense attorneys often try to delay and delay and delay proceedings. Judges who are too sympathetic to defendants let them get away with this. We see this with the Trump trials.
Lol. It’s gonna be a rough year or 4 for you, chuck.
I agree with the ruling in it's technical sense. The remedy for this entire thing is to modify and/or do away with asset forfeiture in it's entirety and for legislatures to pass laws requiring a hearing within a certain time period, say 30 days, if an asset is seized. Much like Kelo which everyone disagreed with, the Court ruled that the proper remedy is with the legislature. Vote for better people and we would not be required to depend on the Court's to save us.
This.
No need for a preliminary hearing. But the government should have to justify the seizure quickly, in real person terms. Even two months is too long. 'Speedy' shouldn't take years.
"The Supreme Court ... sidestepped the question ... altogether ..."
This should be the phrase engraved on the Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C. instead of the current motto, "Equal Justice Under the Law."
I am far from a conservative and completely against asset forfeiture, but I don’t have a problem with this ruling.
The process sucks (on purpose), but adding another component won’t make it better. Eliminate Asset Forfeiture and this problem goes away.
p.s. ignore the partisan dicks who are trying to use this as some sort of wedge - pretty weak IYAM.