To Protect and to Serve II

You are ignoring the clear distinction...in the law...between articulable suspicion, probable cause, and reasonable doubt.

That's probably a contributing factor in your inability to understand why seizure and forfeiture are, again, two completely different things.

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Damn, I figured the Volnation Police thread wouldn’t contain so much hatred. Every one knows how to fight until they get hit in the mouth, or something like that. I’m young and a lot of my friends didn’t trust police, but day by day we have more advanced discussion that helps both sides understand. Being young and still relatively new I can see both sides, although I would say the side critical of police is much less informed than they believe. It’s dirty, it’s difficult, it makes you numb to some things, but you all seem to focus on the very few to dictate your opinion of the majority. I dislike bad cops as much as any of you. Just remember that.
 
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You are ignoring the clear distinction...in the law...between articulable suspicion, probable cause, and reasonable doubt.

That's probably a contributing factor in your inability to understand why seizure and forfeiture are, again, two completely different things.

It's splitting hairs that the courts have done to give LE an end run around people's constitutional rights. I do know that the 5th amendment clearly states that no citizen will be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. So please explain to me where is the due process in this whole civil forfeiture bs? If it is on me to prove that my money was obtained legally in order to keep you from taking it from me, then that violates the letter and the spirit of the US Constitution.
 
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It's splitting hairs that the courts have done to give LE an end run around people's constitutional rights. I do know that the 5th amendment clearly states that no citizen will be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. So please explain to me where is the due process in this whole civil forfeiture bs? If it is on me to prove that my money was obtained legally in order to keep you from taking it from me, then that violates the letter and the spirit of the US Constitution.

I'm with you in principle, but this is more a 4th Amendment issue. That's where the courts have kept it, anyway.

"End run"? If you want to get mad about end runs around the Constitution, you might want to look at how FISA warrants work. There's something you should REALLY be worried about.

Again..."seizure" -vs- "forfeiture". One being a temporary loss, and one permanent. And I already said, if it were me, I'd be beyond pissed. At face value, this was an overreach by CBP and the AUSA.

I'm guessing that Bernie Madoff's victims, and those who have been victims of crime and have been compensated in part thanks to asset / civil forfeiture, are completely okay with it. Works both ways. But it should never work against an innocent party.

This is either a complete and egregious overreach by CBP, or there's more to the story. So let it play out, and let's see what happens.

Plenty of time to throw rocks later.
 
I'm with you in principle, but this is more a 4th Amendment issue. That's where the courts have kept it, anyway.

"End run"? If you want to get mad about end runs around the Constitution, you might want to look at how FISA warrants work. There's something you should REALLY be worried about.

Again..."seizure" -vs- "forfeiture". One being a temporary loss, and one permanent. And I already said, if it were me, I'd be beyond pissed. At face value, this was an overreach by CBP and the AUSA.

I'm guessing that Bernie Madoff's victims, and those who have been victims of crime and have been compensated in part thanks to asset / civil forfeiture, are completely okay with it. Works both ways. But it should never work against an innocent party.

This is either a complete and egregious overreach by CBP, or there's more to the story. So let it play out, and let's see what happens.

Plenty of time to throw rocks later.

Well see... this is a totally different situation you're describing. In the Madoff case, you have clear victims of a crime by theft and deceit.

But in a drug deal where two sides willingly engage in commerce of mutual benefit, who is the victim?
 
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Well see... this is a totally different situation you're describing. In the Madoff case, you have clear victims of a crime by theft and deceit.

But in a drug deal where two sides willingly engage in commerce of mutual benefit, who is the victim?

There's not much mutual benefit in first responders having to administer Narcan to prevent an OD death, or in having to work the burglaries / thefts / robberies that many at the "bottom of the food chain" commit to fuel their addiction.


The victims, in that case, are you and me. We're the ones footing the bill for the manpower and assets to respond to, deal with, and treat the epidemic. And yes, it's a losing battle. I don't know what the answer is, but what we're doing is not working at all.


Yes, broad brush strokes, I know. But a very real, present, and increasing reality.


I already said, I've made a 180-degree turn on weed. It has a valid medical application. I'm not aware of any bona-fide study that confirms it's a "gateway drug". So legalize it, tax it, and sell it...under the same rules we use for alcohol and tobacco, or similar.


Asset forfeiture has it's place. Like any other law or rule of law, it can be twisted and/or manipulated to tip the scales against the common man. I'm in favor of addressing the abuse of it, rather than the existence.


By extension, this is the "get rid of all guns" debate, just wearing a different cloak.
 
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I'm with you in principle, but this is more a 4th Amendment issue. That's where the courts have kept it, anyway.

"End run"? If you want to get mad about end runs around the Constitution, you might want to look at how FISA warrants work. There's something you should REALLY be worried about.

Again..."seizure" -vs- "forfeiture". One being a temporary loss, and one permanent. And I already said, if it were me, I'd be beyond pissed. At face value, this was an overreach by CBP and the AUSA.

I'm guessing that Bernie Madoff's victims, and those who have been victims of crime and have been compensated in part thanks to asset / civil forfeiture, are completely okay with it. Works both ways. But it should never work against an innocent party.

This is either a complete and egregious overreach by CBP, or there's more to the story. So let it play out, and let's see what happens.

Plenty of time to throw rocks later.

It's not this story per se that bothers me, although it highlights to me that it's a national problem. The THP and the DTF are doing this daily on I40 and I65. Phil Williams has done several stories documenting the corruption involved. In many cases the cops knew that the person they pulled over wasn't involved in drugs or any other crime, but took their money anyway simply because they could. There was even one case where it was a cop from another state on vacation. They didn't even bother to extend him the "professional courtesy" that cops usually get. They saw a money grab and took it.

I refuse to carry cash with me if I'm traveling on the interstate because I know what will happen if I get pulled over. When it gets to the point where law abiding citizens are afraid of the police, then you have an image problem.
 
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It's not this story per se that bothers me, although it highlights to me that it's a national problem. The THP and the DTF are doing this daily on I40 and I65. Phil Williams has done several stories documenting the corruption involved. In many cases the cops knew that the person they pulled over wasn't involved in drugs or any other crime, but took their money anyway simply because they could. There was even one case where it was a cop from another state on vacation. They didn't even bother to extend him the "professional courtesy" that cops usually get. They saw a money grab and took it.

I refuse to carry cash with me if I'm traveling on the interstate because I know what will happen if I get pulled over. When it gets to the point where law abiding citizens are afraid of the police, then you have an image problem.



I agree.
 
There's not much mutual benefit in first responders having to administer Narcan to prevent an OD death, or in having to work the burglaries / thefts / robberies that many at the "bottom of the food chain" commit to fuel their addiction.


The victims, in that case, are you and me. We're the ones footing the bill for the manpower and assets to respond to, deal with, and treat the epidemic. And yes, it's a losing battle. I don't know what the answer is, but what we're doing is not working at all.


Yes, broad brush strokes, I know. But a very real, present, and increasing reality.


I already said, I've made a 180-degree turn on weed. It has a valid medical application. I'm not aware of any bona-fide study that confirms it's a "gateway drug". So legalize it, tax it, and sell it...under the same rules we use for alcohol and tobacco, or similar.


Asset forfeiture has it's place. Like any other law or rule of law, it can be twisted and/or manipulated to tip the scales against the common man. I'm in favor of addressing the abuse of it, rather than the existence.


By extension, this is the "get rid of all guns" debate, just wearing a different cloak.




I represent LEO's in civil cases and had to take a moment first to thank you for your last few as they are very accurate on the legal reasoning, of course.


But also the Narcan point. Wanted to recount a conversation I had with a deputy sheriff, one trained to do that. He told me he once had to administer narcan to the same guy, twice, in one day.


Effectively saved his life in the a.m., he was treated and released from the hospital. Same deal that evening.
 
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There's not much mutual benefit in first responders having to administer Narcan to prevent an OD death, or in having to work the burglaries / thefts / robberies that many at the "bottom of the food chain" commit to fuel their addiction.


The victims, in that case, are you and me. We're the ones footing the bill for the manpower and assets to respond to, deal with, and treat the epidemic. And yes, it's a losing battle. I don't know what the answer is, but what we're doing is not working at all.


Yes, broad brush strokes, I know. But a very real, present, and increasing reality.


I already said, I've made a 180-degree turn on weed. It has a valid medical application. I'm not aware of any bona-fide study that confirms it's a "gateway drug". So legalize it, tax it, and sell it...under the same rules we use for alcohol and tobacco, or similar.


Asset forfeiture has it's place. Like any other law or rule of law, it can be twisted and/or manipulated to tip the scales against the common man. I'm in favor of addressing the abuse of it, rather than the existence.


By extension, this is the "get rid of all guns" debate, just wearing a different cloak.

By mutual benefit, you do know I mean that the buyer and seller were satisfied with the transaction, right?

Also, you should have the same concern, if not more concern, for these addicts on prescription drugs.
 
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By mutual benefit, you do know I mean that the buyer and seller were satisfied with the transaction, right?

Also, you should have the same concern, if not more concern, for these addicts on prescription drugs.

Yeah, I'm not onboard with any illegal drug transactions. You obviously understand why. Legalize weed.

And abuse of prescription Rx's is a huge problem. It already had my concern.

Look...you got me to come around on weed. Enjoy the victory. Baby steps.....
 
Agreed, I was trying to ease my way into the conversation.

Coercion..check
propaganda..check
surveillance..check
militirization..check
assassinations..up for debate

IMO, the most obvious example of the police state is that we have so many victimless crimes.
 
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IMO, the most obvious example of the police state is that we have so many victimless crimes.

Thought crimes... enforced by the state and enforced by the private sector (Roseanne cancellation as an example). So we basically have thought crime police (the state) and thought crime vigilantes (private sector).
 
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