(Asset) Seizure disorder
by digby
I have never understood why this can possibly be allowed under our constitution, but it is:
EARLIER this year Sarah Stillman wrote a first-rate piece in the New Yorker on the abuses of civil asset forfeiture—a practice wherein police seize and keep the property of people who have not been convicted of a crime. The piece opens with the story of Jennifer Boatright and Ron Henderson, who had their cash taken by authorities in the small town of Tenaha because they “fit the profile of drug couriers”, even though no drugs were found in their car nor were they charged with any crime. Despite this, Ms Stillman writes, “The basic principle behind asset forfeiture is appealing. It enables authorities to confiscate cash or property obtained through illicit means, and, in many states, funnel the proceeds directly into the fight against crime.”
Those two sentences are true only to the extent that the two key qualifiers in them are true. The first is “obtained through illicit means”. That strongly implies not civil, but criminal asset forfeiture, referring to the seizure of property proven in a court of law to have been obtained through illicit means, not to the seizure of whatever property police can concoct a semi-plausible excuse to grab. The standards for civil asset forfeiture are far lower, as Ms Stillman and others have infuriatingly detailed. Police do not have to successfully prosecute someone, or even charge them with a crime, to seize their assets. The second is “funnel the proceeds directly into the fight against crime.” Using a convicted trafficker’s Escalade for stakeouts has a certain poetic justice.
Using forfeiture funds as the district attorney’s (DA) office in Fulton County, which covers most of Atlanta, is alleged to have done, does not. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution has the sordid details: $5,600 on a Christmas party; $1,100 for flowers; $3,200 for “sirloin beef tip roast, roasted turkey breast and mini crab cakes with champagne sauce”; $8,200 on a security system for the home of Paul Howard, Fulton’s DA; $4,800 for a holiday awards gala held at a “historic Midtown mansion”. Mr Howard insists that he has done nothing wrong and that he has wide discretion in how he spends.
This convenient way of financing police agencies’ “finer things” first came to my attention over 20 years ago when I first read about the Donald Scott case right here in Malibu:
Early on the morning of October 2, 1992, 31 officers from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, Drug Enforcement Administration, Border Patrol, National Guard and Park Service entered the Scott’s 200-acre ranch. They planned to arrest Scott for allegedly running a 4,000-plant marijuana plantation. When deputies broke down the door to Scott’s house, Scott’s wife would later tell reporters, she screamed, “Don’t shoot me. Don’t kill me.”That brought Scott staggering out of the bedroom, blurry-eyed from a cataract operation—holding a .38 caliber Colt snub-nosed revolver over his head. When he emerged at the top of the stairs, holding his gun over his head, the officers told him to lower the gun. As he did, they shot him to death. According to the official report, the gun was pointed at the officers when they shot him.
Later, the lead agent in the case, sheriff’s deputy Gary Spencer and his partner John Cater posed for photographs smiling arm-in-arm outside Scott’s cabin.
Despite a subsequent search of Scott’s ranch using helicopters, dogs, searchers on foot, and a high-tech Jet Propulsion Laboratory device for detecting trace amounts of sinsemilla, no marijuana—or any other illegal drug—was found.
Scott’s widow, the former Frances Plante, along with four of Scott’s children from previous marriages, subsequently filed a $100 million wrongful death suit against the county and federal government. For eight years the case dragged on, requiring the services of 15 attorneys and some 30 volume binders to hold all the court documents. In January 2000, attorneys for Los Angeles County and the federal government agreed to settle with Scott’s heirs and estate for $5 million, even though the sheriff’s department still maintained its deputies had done nothing wrong.
Michael D. Bradbury, the District Attorney of Ventura County conducted an investigation into the raid and the aftermath, issuing a report on the events leading up to and on October 2, 1992. He concluded that asset forfeiture was a motive for the raid.
The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department issued their own report in response, clearing everyone involved of wrongdoing while California Attorney General Dan Lungren criticized District Attorney Bradbury. Sheriff Spencer sued D.A. Bradbury for defamation in response to the report. The court ruled in favor of Michael Bradbury and ordered Sheriff Spencer to pay $50,000 in Bradbury’s legal bills.
I frankly don’t care if they are using the money to buy new SWAT uniforms or pay for swanky parties at the Ritz-Carlton. Police agencies should not have the power to confiscate people’s property without due process — and that means the people in question must be convicted of a crime. It should happen under the aegis of the courts and the assets should not go directly to those who did the confiscating. This is a recipe for official thievery.
The incentives for the sort of misconduct in the examples cited above are obvious. And they are yet another symptom of a justice system that is corrupt and unaccountable. Perhaps it has always been this way, in one respect or another but there’s just no excuse for allowing the police to run over the 4th Amendment in a tactical vehicle and then seize the spoils for themselves. Those are the actions of a mercenary army, not police agencies of a democratic republic.
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