Boston Herald

Government can seize property – how legit is that?

- By dan grEEnbErg Dan Greenberg is deputy general counsel for the Competitiv­e Enterprise Institute and author of the new report “Five Myths of Civil Forfeiture.” This column was provided by InsideSour­ces.

Every year, federal, state and local government agents take — and permanentl­y keep — billions of dollars of Americans’ property through a practice known as civil forfeiture.

Civil forfeiture allows police officers to seize property based only on probable cause to believe that the property is related to crime.

Later on, prosecutor­s can shift the ownership of the property to the government through litigation in civil court, even if the property owner never faced criminal conviction or even criminal charges.

The danger that poses to people’s property rights and due process raises serious questions about legitimacy and fairness.

It’s a system that creates significan­t benefits for interest groups within government, such as policymake­rs, police officers and prosecutor­s. So those advocates and beneficiar­ies conjure certain myths about civil forfeiture that seem aimed at tranquiliz­ing public concerns.

What are those myths? They claim a typical cash seizure amounts to a lot of money. It doesn’t. In reality, it’s more like several hundred dollars to a little over $1,000.

They claim that when property is seized, the owner can recover it in court. That’s not what happens. For someone deprived of hundreds of dollars, paying a lawyer thousands to try to retrieve it is not cost-effective.

They imply seizure and forfeiture are governed by due process of law. In reality, there is slim likelihood of recovery, a low standard of proof that empowers law enforcemen­t over civilians, and powerful government revenue incentives at work that stack the deck.

They say our justice system requires high standards of proof of wrongdoing for seizures and forfeiture­s to occur. In fact, people’s property is regularly taken without any such evidence.

They say whatever injustices there were have been reformed when states require a conviction in criminal court as a prerequisi­te to forfeiture litigation in civil court. In practice, that’s not true, because there is often no connection between the crime and the property owner. For instance, a mother innocently lends her son her car; but if the son then is suspected of a crime while driving it, then the car can be seized and forfeited.

That’s how the public gets victimized, first by civil forfeiture, then by false narratives spread by forfeiture beneficiar­ies. Property owners remain unprotecte­d and defenseles­s.

It’s certainly possible to fix the system. Policymake­rs could change the legal process so that forfeiture takes place as part of a criminal trial, not a separate civil procedure. That reform would require forfeiture to take place only after a property owner’s criminal conduct has been proven. Such a reform would also make it much more likely that property owners would receive due process in court. That reform would have the added benefit of forcing policymake­rs to fund more of government by openly taxing its citizens, not stealthful­ly taking things from them.

Until legislator­s enact such reforms, law enforcemen­t and government will continue to seize billions of dollars from hapless citizens every year.

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