Ninth Circuit Strikes a Blow Against Civil
Forfeiture Abuse, by Evan Bernick , Assistant Director at the Institute
for Justice, 10/9/15
There's nothing
civil about civil asset forfeiture, nor about the federal government's
treatment of Robert Moser. During a search of Moser's house for evidence of
marijuana cultivation, federal agents seized $28,000. The search was conducted
without a warrant or Moser's consent, and Moser was not informed of his Miranda
rights when the agents entered his house. A federal district court found that
police had committed "serial constitutional violations... that were
purposeful and flagrant," and ordered the government to return Moser's
money. By prevailing against the federal government, Moser became entitled to
an award of attorney's fees under the Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act
(CAFRA).
But the district
court didn't give Moser the award he sought. Why? Because among other things,
his lawyer, Richard Barnett, supposedly gave the government's specious,
unsupported arguments "more respect than they deserved." This
Tuesday, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals roundly rejected
the district court's reasoning, making plain that attorneys who take on
forfeiture cases should not be penalized for zealous advocacy--or the
government's intransigence.
Civil asset
forfeiture allows law enforcement to take property from citizens, regardless of
whether the property owner is guilty or innocent--and without even charging the
owner with a crime. CAFRA provides that when a property owner
"substantially prevails" in a federal civil forfeiture case, "the
United States shall be liable for reasonable attorney fees." Moser asked
for a fee award of $50,775, based on his lawyer's hourly rate of $500 and
101.55 hours of work. Instead, the trial court judge awarded a mere $14,000.
The judge reasoned that forfeiture resembles criminal defense litigation and
relied on the (seriously outdated) statutory rate of $125 per hour under the
Criminal Justice Act (CJA). The judge then reduced the hours for which Moser's
lawyer would be compensated by over forty percent, claiming that Barnett spent
more time on the case than was necessary to defeat the government's often
baseless arguments.
The district
court's treatment of the fee request reads like a comedy of errors.
Fortunately, a Ninth Circuit panel corrected them.
What did the district
court get wrong? Writing for the Ninth Circuit panel, Judge Andrew Hurwitz
found that the district court had "ignored" sworn declarations in
support of Moser's fee request from several attorneys who were both
knowledgeable about legal fees in the San Diego market and who specialized in
forfeiture litigation themselves. Second, the district court elided crucial
distinctions between CJA fees and those received under CAFRA, the most
important being that CJA lawyers are always paid whereas attorneys who litigate
forfeiture cases on a contingency basis receive no fee at all if their clients
do not prevail. Thus, Judge Hurwitz reasoned, drawing upon CAFRA's legislative
history, the district court's analogy to criminal defense work under the CJA
"conflicts with CAFRA's purpose of facilitating adequate legal
representation for forfeiture claimants," as it denies "economic
reality"--i.e., that forfeiture specialists' hourly rates should be higher
than rates for lawyers who are certain to be paid.
Finally, the Ninth
Circuit emphatically rejected the notion that Moser's attorney should, in
effect, be penalized for giving the government's litigation work "more
respect than it deserved." In the first place, the district court failed
to identify any particularly "over-respected" work that Moser's
lawyer should not have wasted his time responding to. More fundamentally, Judge
Hurwitz stressed, "When the government takes unsupported positions, an
applicant is not unreasonable in responding forcefully." In a separate concurrence,
Judge Stephen Reinhardt elaborated upon this latter point, noting that the
government evidently thought that
its arguments were entitled to respect and lawyers cannot afford to assume that
judges will not
respect the government's arguments. As Judge Reinhardt put it, "Frequently
an argument that one judge thinks is a clear loser, another may believe to be
dispositive in the other direction. Properly advocating for one's client means
being prepared to encounter either kind of judge."
The Ninth Circuit's
probing, fact-sensitive judicial
engagement in this area is most welcome. Contesting forfeitures
frequently involves fighting the government for years and can often cost
property owners more than the total value of the property taken. As a
consequence, many seizures aren't even contested. The promise of recovering
attorney's fees in winning cases encourages lawyers to represent poor clients
who would otherwise lack any realistic opportunity of getting their property
back and might not even bother trying. CAFRA's fee provisions serve as an
incentive for skilled counsel to take on frequently complex cases that the
government litigates aggressively, sometimes stretching
the evidence to fit implausible narratives. Denying attorneys who
prevail in forfeiture cases the full compensation they have earned not only
does those attorneys an injustice but risks chilling their advocacy and even
discouraging them from taking on forfeiture cases to case to begin with, to the
detriment of future forfeiture victims.
At this point, it
seems that the only Americans who are not outraged by the abuse of civil
forfeiture are those who are unaware of it and those who stand to gain from it.
Ultimately, protecting innocent property owners from overreaching law
enforcement requires the abolition of civil forfeiture altogether. Until that
occurs, judicial engagement is essential to ensuring innocent property owners
get the legal assistance they need to force the government to play by the rules
and give back what is rightfully theirs.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/evan-bernick/ninth-circuit-strikes-a-b_b_8268984.html
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