Police Cannot Seize Property Indefinitely After an Arrest, Federal Court Rules
Many circuit courts have said that law enforcement can hold your property for as long as they want. D.C.’s high court decided last week that’s unconstitutional.

The Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable searches and seizures extends to the length of a seizure, a federal court ruled last week, significantly restricting how long law enforcement can retain private property after an arrest.
"When the government seizes property incident to a lawful arrest, the Fourth Amendment requires that any continued possession of the property must be reasonable," wrote Judge Gregory Katsas of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia in a unanimous ruling.
Most courts of appeal to pass judgment on the issue—namely, the 1st, 2nd, 6th, 7th, and 11th circuits—have held that, once an item is seized, law enforcement can retain the item indefinitely without violating the Fourth Amendment. These precedents have allowed police to retain personal property without clear legal grounds, effectively stripping people of their property rights merely because they were arrested. The D.C. Court of Appeals' ruling complicates this general consensus.
Though law enforcement does not have to return property "instantaneously," Katsas wrote, the Fourth Amendment requires that any "continuing retention of seized property" be reasonable. So while police can use seized items for "legitimate law-enforcement purposes," such as for evidence at trial, and are permitted some delay for "matching a person with his effects," prolonged seizures serving no important function can implicate the Fourth Amendment, the court ruled.
Given that the D.C. court finds itself in the minority on the question, some say that the case may be primed for the Supreme Court if the District chooses to appeal. "This case has potential to make national precedent," Paul Belonick, a professor at the University of California, San Francisco law school, tells Reason. "The influential D.C. Circuit deliberately intensified a circuit split and put itself in the minority of circuits on the question, teeing it up cleanly for certiorari."
The plaintiffs each had their property seized by D.C.'s Metropolitan Police Department (MPD). Five of the plaintiffs were arrested during a Black Lives Matter protest in the Adams Morgan neighborhood of D.C. on August 13, 2020.
As they were arrested, MPD officers seized their phones and other items. Though the protesters did not face any charges and were, in Katsas' words, "quickly released," MPD retained their phones for around a year. Some of the plaintiffs had to wait over 14 months to get their property back.
In the meantime, the plaintiffs say that they were forced to replace their phones and lost access to the important information on the originals, including personal files, contacts, and passwords. "The plaintiffs have alleged that the seizures at issue, though lawful at their inception, later came to unreasonably interfere with their protected possessory interests in their own property," Katsas explained.
"MPD is aware of the ruling and will continue to work with our partners at the United States Attorney's Office to ensure that our members are trained appropriately to ensure compliance with recent rulings," a spokesperson for MPD tells Reason.
"Practically, this case is important because police have been exploiting a gap in the Fourth Amendment," Andrew Ferguson, a professor at American University's Washington College of Law, tells Reason. "In situations where there is a lawful arrest, but no prosecution, there are no clear rules on retaining personal property. In these cases, police have been confiscating phones to punish protestors."
Michael Perloff, the lead attorney for the plaintiffs, agreed that the D.C. Circuit's decision could set an important precedent going forward. "Nationally, we've seen litigants attempt to challenge similar practices only to fail because the court concluded that the Fourth Amendment does not limit the duration of a seizure," he tells Reason. "Moving forward, we are hopeful that the D.C. Circuit's opinion will lead courts to reconsider those rulings and, instead, enforce the Fourth Amendment as fully as the framers intended."
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This seems suspiciously straightforward ... what's the catch ?
That's a good question. I suspect some powers-that-be are leaning on the MPD to not appeal this and hope the Supreme Court leaves bad enough alone. I suspect the words "Heller" and "McDonald" are being bandied about as we write.
Depends on if Harris is elected and a conservative Justice retires. A more progressive Court will be more likely to support the police.
The opinion was written by a Trump appointee who had worked in the Trump White House. A Carter appointee joined in the opinion and a Bush 43 appointee wrote a concuring opinion in which she discusses the rulings of the other circuits, concluding with " I am untroubled that our holding puts us on the minority side of a circuit split."
https://www.cadc.uscourts.gov/internet/opinions.nsf/543BA8AD10156CE685258B7400533CE0/%24file/22-7129-2069152.pdf
"Reasonable."
https://www.cbsnews.com/losangeles/news/san-bernardino-police-officer-uses-baton-to-beat-gas-station-clerk-to-the-ground/
Cop uses baton to break both legs of restrained suspect - but had the wrong guy.
He is white. Nothing else will happen.
Five of the plaintiffs were arrested during a Black Lives Matter protest in the Adams Morgan neighborhood of D.C. on August 13, 2020.
Quite the quandary here. On the one had everyone at every BLM protest was a rioter, and it's not fair that they weren't punished as harshly as the people involved in J6. On the other hand there's principles of justice. I wonder which one the Trump defenders will choose. I bet they choose fairness over justice.
@sarc, could you expand on the two choices for us rubes? what is the fair outcome and what is the justice outcome?
Fair outcome is that the court lets the cops keep these guys’ stuff because the summer rioters weren’t treated as badly by the courts as the J6 yahoos and that was unfair, unfair, unfair. Justice is that they get their stuff back because it’s unjust to keep their stuff indefinitely, regardless of what happened to Trump supporters.
I choose justice.
The named plaintiff was a journalist covering the event.
Baby steps in the right direction. Welcome but long overdue.
Isn't this more of a Fifth Amendment issue than a Fourth Amendment? If the Fourth Amendment allows a seizure, where is the Fourth Amendment language that would require lawfully seized property to be returned?
Gosh, that's genius! Look at everything that reasoning opens up!
* No need to have written laws, oral is good enough.
* No need for judges to write things down either.
* No need to have one-man/one-vote.
Frickin' genius this is.
The Fourth Amendment says “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated…”
The pivotal question, I think, pertains to the meaning of the word “unreasonable.” Is it “unreasonable” that if you are arrested, but not tried nor convicted, you should permanently lose whatever property the police seized at the time of the arrest?
I think it is indeed unreasonable. I think we can support this by noting that if it is “reasonable” that a time-of-arrest seizure of property be permanent even absent a trial and conviction for any crime, then it should likewise be “reasonable” that a time-of-arrest seizure of person be permanent even absent a trial and conviction for any crime.
That’s right, boys and girls! The 4th Amendment groups your right to be secure in your “person” together with your right to be secure in your “house, papers, and effects.” If the police can hold your stuff forever, why can’t they hold you forever?
So, what do you think? Can the 4th Amendment plausibly be read to indicate that the intent at the time of adoption was to allow lifetime imprisonment without any charges being filed, or without a trial, or without conviction? And if not, why is that different from permanent loss of property without any of these things?
The plaintiffs originally brought up the Fifth Amendment.
charliehall: "The plaintiffs originally brought up the Fifth Amendment."
Could be. I only know about the case what I read here. But yeah, the Fifth is also a good reason for them to win.
It reads, in part:
"nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law;"
Well, with no charges filed, no trial held, and certainly no conviction, they've clearly not had "due process of law." And so they must not be deprived of their "life, liberty, or property," and the police must give their stuff back.
So, in my opinion, the plaintiffs should win on either or both of Fourth and Fifth Amendment grounds.
Have to say I was initially puzzled that the DC Circuit suddenly took a look at those dusty constitutions on the shelf. Then I realized it was BLM "protesters" involved. All makes senses now. Carry on.
So you agree with the court's decision but dislike the reason they took the case in the first place?
Watch nothing change.
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized. "
If property is seized, but the person is never charged or never convicted, then the seizure was not warranted.
The seizure was warranted.
They were arrested, it is normal to seize property on an arrestee and reasonable.
When they were released without charges it then became unreasonable to retain personal property. It isn’t evidence (they won’t be charged, so no need to produce it in court), you’re not keeping it stored while they’re in jail, so you give it back immediately.
Either way, keeping it for a year is absolutely unreasonable. Kind of annoyed that this is the one court that has ruled as such.
Would this ruling have any bearing on civil forfeiture?
No. In this case, the police aren't trying to claim it as illicit goods. (and take ownership of it) The cops fully admit the property is owned by the people who were arrested. They just aren't giving it back.
Yeah that's the problem. These people were lawfully arrested and the cops took their cellphones. If the cops claim your property and don't lawfully arrest you the rule doesn't apply? Again. This is the DC circuit and these are BLM protesters who had their cellphones, not cash, not their cars, not their bank accounts, not their houses seized. I can't argue with the ruling but I have to wonder how this court would have reacted if they were part of an anti lockdown trucker's caravan. The leftists somehow always walk away scot free.
Cops say "Oh yeah? You want me to give you your stuff back? Fuck you. Make me."
And until now the courts have gone along.
It is pretty sickening.
That's actually the bigger issue.
Whoa! The Kleptocracy is doing some SERIOUS drawers-dirtying now that Kamala has thrown the election by teaming with a climate-sharknado communist Bernie bro. Walz is the best argument yet for abandoning the looters and voting Chase Oliver--letting the spoiler vote chips fall where they may, as in 2016.
Nobody who has ever passed a political science course would call Walz a communist. His voting record in Congress was pretty conservative.
Five of the plaintiffs were arrested during a Black Lives Matter protest in the Adams Morgan neighborhood of D.C. on August 13, 2020.
Point of order: that was an outright riot.
Though the protesters did not face any charges and were, in Katsas' words, "quickly released," MPD retained their phones for around a year. ... In these cases, police have been confiscating phones to punish protestors."
I can appreciate their frustration. If that's the only measure of "justice" one can get for arsonists, vandals, and violent thugs - knowing with absolute certainty that their mayhem will be immediately absolved by the State and its media lackeys - I can see why it would be appealing.
Especially when the phones, in particular, are a key instrument in orchestrating these flashmob riots. In that sense, I could envision an argument that doesn't offend 4A.
Like, instead of a rioting thug, imagine it were a car thief or a burglar or a bomber. The cops arrest him, the State decides not to prosecute, and they're forced to release him. I mean, it's a little silly to think: "OK sir, here's your slimjim and your duffel bag full of burglary tools and your box full of bomb-making equipment back."
Might be a little hard to extend that to a phone, given that's not its primary purpose - but if the thugs coordinated criminal activity exclusively (or even primarily) with it... it's kinda reasonable not to give their tools of the trade back.
it’s kinda reasonable not to give their tools of the trade back.
But the issue is that the arrestee was not prosecuted and so should be presumed innocent of the charges - a point you ignore.
Well, it's kind of in the same vein as CAF. If there's reason to believe that they're instruments of intended criminal activity, it makes sense to deprive the would-be criminals of them.
You seriously think that the cops are just going to return all the bomb-making stuff to a would-be terrorist who was arrested but then released without prosecution? No, trust me, they're going to keep the bomb-making stuff.
And it makes sense that they would, and should.
If they want to keep the stuff they need to have at least a civil trial if not a criminal trial. And the named plaintiff was a journalist covering the event.
I guess thst you think that the Bill of Rights doesn't apply to protesters you disagree with.
Rioters, not protestors. These were people engaged in violent, destructive mayhem. And it was clear as day that they'd keep at it.
But no, I believe fully that it should apply to the accused - them above all else.
I'm just saying, I completely understand the desire to deprive bad folks of the misused tools of their trade.
This entire story misses the biggest problem with asset forfeiture. In the majority of cases where property is seized, usually money, no one is arrested or any crime alleged such as what is going in at FedEx in Indianapolis. Charge a crime in a reasonable amount of time or give the items back or how about if their is no crime being committed don't seize the items in the first place?
Completely reasonable to seize property when someone is arrested. The Court's opinion was very clear about that.
What seems to be missing from the story is the seizure of property *without* an arrest.
"Unreasonable Search and Seizure." Any 5th grader should be able to understand the meaning of those words. The problem is that attorneys, judges, police and all the other special interests that see asset forfeiture as a revenue source don't have the capacity of a 5th grader.