Cdywolfe
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Now that assets seized by federal law enforcement agencies exceed burglaries, bipartisan bill aims to stop the abuse - AEI
This was the first thing that popped up when I googled it. There appeared to be plenty of other articles if you dont like this one for some reason. I also tried to google a counter argument and couldnt find one. Thats not to say it doesnt exist, only that I couldnt find it.
Now that assets seized by federal law enforcement agencies exceed burglaries, bipartisan bill aims to stop the abuse - AEI
This was the first thing that popped up when I googled it. There appeared to be plenty of other articles if you dont like this one for some reason. I also tried to google a counter argument and couldnt find one. Thats not to say it doesnt exist, only that I couldnt find it.
Grey- going to have to disagree with you. Civil asset forfeiture was never a good law. Nobody in this country should subject to having their property seized without being convicted.
Actually I agree with this. Ive got no problem with asset forfeiture tied to a conviction (obviously not the traffic stop crap. Thats just wrong. We have a little town called Lavon near me that got the whole PD busted on corruption over stuff like that. ) But the order should be 1) indictment 2) conviction 3) then forfeiture tied to a conviction.
Grey- going to have to disagree with you. Civil asset forfeiture was never a good law. Nobody in this country should subject to having their property seized without being convicted.
Agreed, although if I take someone to jail whom I've arrested with a lot of dope on them, and thousands of dollars in cash, I wouldn't feel bad in the slightest of seizing their cash.
I've never actually done it, for the record.
I'm fine with that. But...the really smart crooks (cartels, organized crime, major types) are smart enough to know to move or liquidate everything after they're arrested, and hence...nothing to seize or forfeit upon conviction.
Hence the key difference between "seizure" and "forfeiture".
So how do you (a) hold the really nasty guys accountable, and (b) not screw over the little guy, or the innocent one?
And therein lies the rub. Asset forfeiture hinges on...depends upon...and relies upon accurate, detailed, and mature examination of all of the factors. And we all know....not much of that running around in our noble government, right?
In the end, it's always better to let a bad guy walk away rather than to hurt the good guy. Is there a fix, or a middle ground? Probably. But I'm not smart enough to figure it out, so I'll leave that to you sophisticates.
You just tell me what I can and can't do. I stay within the rules.
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Agreed, although if I take someone to jail whom I've arrested with a lot of dope on them, and thousands of dollars in cash, I wouldn't feel bad in the slightest of seizing their cash.
I've never actually done it, for the record.
I'm fine with that. But...the really smart crooks (cartels, organized crime, major types) are smart enough to know to move or liquidate everything after they're arrested, and hence...nothing to seize or forfeit upon conviction.
Hence the key difference between "seizure" and "forfeiture".
So how do you (a) hold the really nasty guys accountable, and (b) not screw over the little guy, or the innocent one?
And therein lies the rub. Asset forfeiture hinges on...depends upon...and relies upon accurate, detailed, and mature examination of all of the factors. And we all know....not much of that running around in our noble government, right?
In the end, it's always better to let a bad guy walk away rather than to hurt the good guy. Is there a fix, or a middle ground? Probably. But I'm not smart enough to figure it out, so I'll leave that to you sophisticates.
You just tell me what I can and can't do. I stay within the rules.
![]()
I'm fine with that. But...the really smart crooks (cartels, organized crime, major types) are smart enough to know to move or liquidate everything after they're arrested, and hence...nothing to seize or forfeit upon conviction.
Hence the key difference between "seizure" and "forfeiture".
So how do you (a) hold the really nasty guys accountable, and (b) not screw over the little guy, or the innocent one?
And therein lies the rub. Asset forfeiture hinges on...depends upon...and relies upon accurate, detailed, and mature examination of all of the factors. And we all know....not much of that running around in our noble government, right?
In the end, it's always better to let a bad guy walk away rather than to hurt the good guy. Is there a fix, or a middle ground? Probably. But I'm not smart enough to figure it out, so I'll leave that to you sophisticates.
You just tell me what I can and can't do. I stay within the rules.
![]()
What proof do you have that the money is related to drug activity? Or even if some of it was, how do you know how much is drug related and how much is from other sources? And more to the point, unless the money was stolen from someone or part of a con/racket. Why do you need to confiscate any of it? The money was made through a mutual exchange, not violence or theft.
Remember, "seizure" and "forfeiture" are two different things. I've seized a lot of cash on stops and warrant service where I found enough drugs to keep Neyland Stadium stoned for a month.
And believe it or not, we ended up giving some...maybe 30%?...of it back because we could not positively connect it to the criminal activity.
Remember, we only catch the dumb ones.
The department that took the money should have to appear before a judge within 24 hours and show proof that the money is linked to criminal activity. If not it should be returned immediately with interest.Im sure it comes as no shock that if it were up to me wed simply do away with and thatd solve the problem. But knowing that isnt gonna happen, I feel like the solution is simple. Hold the departments/officers that abuse it accountable. Tell them they can do it but when they do, they damn well better be able to present a reasonable argument thats backed with evidence that this property is linked to criminal activity. If they cant do that then they better not take it or be prepared to face consequences.
Also Id like to see a rule saying that if charges arent filed within 24 hours the property is immediately returned. Forget a conviction... Far too many of these cases involve situations where charges where never filed and the property was never returned. File charges immediately or give it back with an apology.
Its also a huge conflict of interest how much of it ends up getting funneled to the department that took it. Anybody with an IQ above 70 can see how thats just begging for corruption and abuse.
You've always operated under this narrative that drug dealing is not only legal but ok. I've worked 3 OD's this week alone, you're never going to convince me that anything other than weed should be legal (which I do...legalize it and tax the sh!t out of it). I'm not going down this rabbit hole either, we've had this conversation before and neither of us are going to budge.
And if the person whose money is seized wishes to provide proof that he obtained this money through legal means, it's rightfully theirs and therefore should be returned.
