Nebraska takes lead in eliminating civil asset forfeiture,
Feds reinstate it,
by Robert Romano, 4/27/16
Can you imagine winning $50,000 at a
casino and driving away, happy about your winnings, only to be pulled over and
having the large sum of cash seized all the while not being charged with any
crime?
That’s
what happened to Tan Nguyen in Nevada in a case of civil asset forfeiture that was ultimately contested and overturned in 2014
as an unconstitutional search and seizure.
But most victims of civil asset
forfeiture are not so lucky. Usually, the cost of fighting the seizure costs
more than the asset is even worth and so the theft goes uncontested.
Under both federal and state law,
civil asset forfeiture creates an incentive for law enforcement officials to
engage in searches in the hopes of finding something valuable to seize, knowing
that that it most likely will not be challenged and recovered.
Now some states are starting to
bring an end to the practice.
Governor Pete Ricketts (R-Neb.) for
example has just signed LB
1106, legislation that only allows asset
forfeiture for certain eligible crimes upon conviction in Nebraska. Meaning,
you have to actually be charged with a crime first and convicted before any assets
can be seized. And even then, the government has to prove that those assets
were connected to the crime that was committed.
Which is a reasonable
standard. If the state can prove the money or other asset was linked to
crime for which the individual was duly convicted of, then that should be fine.
But no more asset seizures without criminal charges.
Some of the crimes that can have an
additional penalty of asset forfeiture include collecting gambling debts, drug
dealing and human trafficking, among others.
Americans for Limited Government
President Rick Manning praised Nebraska for its new approach, saying, “The
state of Nebraska has taken a major stand for liberty by eliminating most of
their civil asset forfeiture laws. Civil asset forfeiture has become nothing
more or less than government-sanctioned theft of private property without due
process.”
Perhaps the only question is why the
practice has gone on as long as it has. So far besides Nebraska, the
Institute for Justice rates that Maine, North Dakota and Vermont — which requires that the forfeiture be connected to a
crime — have laws better than most.
Generally state laws could be made
better by setting the standard of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, and only in
cases where a criminal conviction has occurred.
Most states have not yet acted. Some
require criminal convictions, like North
Carolina, but then were engaged with
“equitable sharing” with federal law enforcement. This is the practice where
local officials seize property, give it to the feds under the program, and then
receive a substantial amount in return — all to avert state law.
Former
Attorney General Eric Holder reportedly ended the “equitable sharing”
forfeiture program in Jan. 2015, because, he said
at the time, “This new policy will ensure that these authorities can continue
to be used to take the profit out of crime and return assets to victims, while
safeguarding civil liberties.”
But the new policy was not as
far-reaching as advertised. The “equitable sharing” program did not end. According
to data compiled by the Institute for Justice,
“Only about a quarter — 25.6 percent — of properties seized under equitable
sharing were adoptions. The rest resulted from joint task forces or joint
investigations exempt from the new rules.”
Guess administrative prohibitions
are only as good as the current administrator.
The
new Attorney General Loretta Lynch called asset forfeiture “a wonderful tool” in her confirmation hearings and
continued the “equitable sharing” program after being confirmed. Then, after
appropriations bills were passed later that year, the
new Attorney General Loretta Lynch said the program was being suspended in Dec.
2015 due to insufficient funding.
Well, which was it? A violation of
civil liberties or a budget shortfall? Not that it matters. The “equitable
sharing” program has once again been renewed
in March by Lynch with new-found funds to
engage. And like most states, the forfeitures do not require a conviction in a
court of law.
Is it so much to ask that a crime
have been committed before individuals lose their personal property? This
should be a no-brainer for state legislatures — and for Congress.
Robert
Romano is the senior editor of Americans for Limited Government.
http://netrightdaily.com/2016/04/nebraska-takes-lead-in-eliminating-civil-asset-forfeiture-feds-reinstate-it/
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