NOT WEARING SEAT BELT PROMPTS COPS TO SEIZE $92,000, Wyoming
takes action to torpedo 'bizarre' law, by Bob Unfuh, 3/19/18, WND
The issue of rules that allow law-enforcement agencies to confiscate cash or other property during an investigation has drawn attention recently.
http://www.wnd.com/2018/03/no-seat-belt-prompts-cops-to-seize-92000/
The issue of rules that allow law-enforcement agencies to confiscate cash or other property during an investigation has drawn attention recently.
http://www.wnd.com/2018/03/no-seat-belt-prompts-cops-to-seize-92000/
Such confiscations are often allowed
even if no criminal charges are ever filed, and those losing the
property must go to court to get their property.
For lawmakers in one state, however,
those laws have gone too far. The Institute for Justice is reporting lawmakers in Wyoming have
banned the practice by officers of “badgering” drivers stopped on traffic infractions
to sign pre-written waivers transferring title to property, including cash.
The bill, “Roadside waiver of property
rights prohibited,” was signed recently by Wyoming Gov. Matt Mead.
It states plainly, “A law enforcement
officer may not request, require, or in any manner induce any person to execute
a document purporting to waive, for purpose of forfeiture under this section,
the person’s interest in or rights to property seized.”
It also states any such document “is
null and void.”
And finally, it allows confiscation
“after a hearing and a finding of probable cause as required” by the law.
IJ said that previously, “during traffic
stops, officers have badgered drivers into signing pre-written waivers that not
only waive their rights to their property, but also waive their right to the
limited protections offered by the state’s civil forfeiture laws.”
Wyoming’s bill, sponsored by Rep.
Charles Pelkey, puts the state in the company of just two others, Texas and
Virginia, that have similar bans.
“Due process doesn’t happen on the side
of a road and we’re pleased to see Wyoming ban this abusive tactic,” said
Institute for Justice Attorney Dan Alban. “But the state’s civil forfeiture
laws remained unchanged, and still need major reform. No one should lose their
property without being convicted of a crime.”
IJ reported the law was in response to a
case in which Wisconsin musician Phil Parhamovich had his “entire life savings”
of $91,800 seized by highway patrol officers.
He was stopped for not wearing a seat
belt. The officers searched his vehicle and found his savings, which he intended to use as down payment on a recording studio, hidden in a
speaker.
“After aggressively interrogating Phil,
and while still on the side of the interstate, officers pressured him to sign a
waiver form ‘giving’ them his money,” IJ reported.
The organization described that
waiver as “bizarre.”
It stated: “I … the owner of the
property or currency described below, desire to give this property or currency,
along with any and all interests and ownership that I may have in it, to the
State of Wyoming, Division of Criminal Investigation, to be used for narcotics
law enforcement purposes.”
Aside from a $25 ticket for not wearing
his seatbelt, Parhamovich was never charged with any crime.
He spent months trying to recover his
funds then worked with IJ on the case.
“Just hours after his case went public,
a Wyoming judge ordered the state to return all of Phil’s money,” IJ reported.
“It’s a great relief to know that no one
will have to go through what I went through,” Parhamovich said. “Obviously our
police system is in need of many reforms but this is a step in the right direction.”
WND has reported on the move against the state
allowances for forfeiture before a conviction.
A year ago, Ohio adopted a law that
requires criminal charges be filed before police can take an individual’s
assets.
The Heartland Institute, a free-market think tank, said there are 17
states that have taken similar actions.
“Reducing perverse economic incentives,
the new law prohibits local governments from using the U.S. Department of
Justice’s ‘equitable sharing’ program as a loophole to bypass constitutional
protections on property rights in most cases, while still allowing government
law enforcement agents to perform their duties and protect people,” said Jesse
Hathaway, a research fellow and budget-tax expert at the institute.
“Government law enforcement should not
be financially motivated, but motivated by a desire to protect and serve
taxpayers. Civil asset forfeiture creates an economic incentive to engage in
the forfeiture process, perverting the law. This measure reduces that incentive
to do wrong and will help protect against the possibility of abuse,” Hathaway
said.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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