Since 9/11, This Has
Happened over 70,000 Times – And It’s Getting Worse
Here on
Survival Joe, we’ve talked quite a few times about civil asset forfeiture, and law enforcement’s abuse of this
practice.
But here’s an
astounding fact: Since the 9/11 attacks nearly 70,000 cash seizures totaling $2.5
billion have occurred without warrants or indictments.
Civil asset forfeiture differs from criminal forfeiture because the
property, not an individual, is the target of an investigation. Law enforcement
officials, including local police, may seize your stuff based on nothing
more than a suspicion, such as a person possessing large amounts of cash.
Getting the property back can be long, costly, and maybe impossible,
even if no criminal charges are ever filed. Depending on the amount seized and
the person’s situation, the time and cost involved may not justify the effort.
According to a 2014 Washington Post investigation, since the 9/11 attacks nearly 70,000 cash seizures
totaling $2.5 billion have occurred without warrants or indictments. One
sixth of them were challenged, and only 41 percent of those had their money
returned.
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The Institute for Justice claims the Justice Department’s
Assets Forfeiture Fund reported nearly $29 billion worth of seized assets
between 2001 and 2014—$4.5 billion in 2014 alone. And those figures don’t count
all assets taken and kept by the states.
Even more troubling, between 1997 and 2013, 13 percent of those
forfeitures were for criminal activities, while 87 percent were civil.
Keep in mind,
these are civil asset grabs, not criminal.
All the
government needs is a suspicion… you have too much cash, you make too many cash
deposits to your bank account, you make unusual bank deposits…
It’s on
suspicion alone that the government can seize and tie up your assets for years.
Then, at your time and expense you must fight them to get your property back.
It’s the
government assuming you’re guilty and you must prove your innocence. The exact
opposite of how the United States justice system is intended to work.
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