By Dan Hamamura | Politics | July 19, 2017 |
By Dan Hamamura | Politics | July 19, 2017 |
Back in 2014, John Oliver ran an excellent piece explaining civil asset forfeiture, which is a policy that allows the police to seize assets (money, cars, houses, etc.) that they believe were involved in criminal activity. In theory, this is used to, say, seize the assets of drug dealers or violent criminals when they’re arrested and convicted of a crime.
In practice, however, the policy has often been abused, seizing property from law-abiding citizens solely on suspicion of a crime, often without a conviction or even filing formal charges. And because many of the victims don’t have the time or money to deal with the legal process to try and get their property back, the property is then forfeited, and the proceeds just *happen* to provide additional funding to the police department that seized it. It’s a terrible abuse of power, and the piece is worth a re-watch, if you have the time:
While asset forfeiture hasn’t gone away, it has, in recent years, been reduced somewhat. In 2015 the Department of Justice, under Eric Holder, issued new guidance that restricted the practice at the federal level. In addition, a number of states have passed reforms to fight abuse, such as, you know, crazy ideas like requiring a criminal conviction before the assets can be permanently seized. And both Democrats and Republicans have been pushing for further reform of the practice.
JUST IN: DOJ new asset forfeiture policy - police can seize property from people not charged w/crime even in states where it's been banned. pic.twitter.com/P8K0g80m4E
— Paula Reid (@PaulaReidCBS) July 19, 2017
This new policy (which reverses what Holder did in 2015) not only allows the DOJ to once again expand the use of asset forfeiture as a tool to take money from people for no reason “curtail violent criminals,” it also means that potentially, authorities can seize assets under the more relaxed federal guidelines, which would supersede those reforms passed by the states.
Eric Holder
Another extremist action. This is a reform that was supported by conservatives and progressives, Republicans and Democrats. https://t.co/JnrOciNH58
— Eric Holder (@EricHolder) July 17, 2017
The ACLU
Jeff Sessions just made it easier for cops to take your property without due process. https://t.co/hHSYqAYq35
— ACLU National (@ACLU) July 19, 2017
Rand Paul
Statement from Sen. @RandPaul on Sessions' new asset forfeiture directive: pic.twitter.com/a35EhvnJEn
— CJ Ciaramella (@cjciaramella) July 19, 2017
Mike Lee
DOJ seems determined to lose in court before adopting asset forfeiture policies that protect due process rights: https://t.co/nM0tsTpijM
— Mike Lee (@SenMikeLee) July 19, 2017
Darrell Issa
DOJ’s decision to expand civil forfeiture is troubling. Shows why Congress must act to pass our DUE PROCESS Act https://t.co/dN5hhFQMMo
— Darrell Issa (@DarrellIssa) July 19, 2017
The Koch Brothers
Koch group: DOJ Expansion of Asset Forfeiture Unjust and Unconstitutional pic.twitter.com/a5fU96JjqL
— Zeke Miller (@ZekeJMiller) July 19, 2017
Infowars
(Look, I’m not linking to Infowars, but I watched the video and they hate it, too.)
It takes something really, really special to unite people on all sides of the political spectrum like this (it was the one thing that BOTH major party platforms agreed on last year, and even Clarence Thomas is opposed), but the abuse of civil asset forfeiture really is that disgusting.