Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Don’t let crime fears lead to new abuses

- Steven Greenhut Columnist

Whenever the nation faces a safety threat — e.g., a high-profile shooting, a wave of smash-and-grab robberies or an act of terrorism — the public clamors for action and politician­s and police agencies respond with proposals to increase their power. The new laws, however, always have disturbing unintended consequenc­es that stay with us for decades — and they often fail to protect us from the threats that led to their creation.

In a democracy, criminalju­stice policy is understand­ably driven by public perception­s. After violent-crime rates soared in the late 1980s and early 1990s, California voters in 1994 overwhelmi­ngly approved the nation’s toughest three-strikes-andyou’re-out law. Myriad factors contribute to crime fluctuatio­ns. And policy often lags the data given the time it can take to pass laws or initiative­s — thus making it tough to see what works even in hindsight.

In 2005, the Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office analyzed crime statistics and found crime began falling precipitou­sly before “three strikes” went into effect — and tracked national trends. In recent years, legislator­s and voters reacted to soaring incarcerat­ion rates. Just as fear of crime led to tougher laws, stories of resulting injustices (a man whose third strike was stealing pizza) and police abuses led to a flurry of criminal-justice reforms.

Now that crime rates have moved upward — and fear of it at the highest level in years — policy makers are headed back in that 1990s direction. This is true even in our state’s most progressiv­e cities. For instance, San Francisco Mayor London Breed introduced a new policeunio­n-backed measure for the March ballot that would make it easier for police to use surveillan­ce and reduce their requiremen­ts to document when they use force on suspects.

It’s enough to make one’s head spin. Sadly, crime policy

SACRAMENTO >> is not driven by policy wonks who carefully analyze the data and try to strike the right balance between public safety and individual rights. It’s driven by progressiv­e ideologues (check out the goings-on in the Assembly Public Safety Committee if you don’t believe me) on one side and powerful interest groups (police agencies and unions) on the other. Lawmakers react to those groups and public sentiment.

I am concerned about the crime wave. I’m also concerned about over-incarcerat­ion and over-policing. I also am skeptical that our government­s — which seem incapable of doing anything competentl­y, justly and cost-effectivel­y — can strike the right balance. I offer no easy solution or specific policy prescripti­on, but I do offer a warning: Be careful what new laws we pass. They can take decades to undo — and can obliterate our rights in the process.

This column is prompted by a report in Reason magazine about Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt’s recent remarks in his State of the State address calling for reform of civil asset-forfeiture laws: “It’s crazy to me that somebody can be pulled over and have their cash and truck taken for an alleged crime, get acquitted of that crime, but they still never get their property back.” There are plenty of news stories over the years of outrageous police takings.

California has better asset-forfeiture protection­s than Oklahoma, but they still aren’t very good — and California police agencies work around our state’s limitation­s by partnering with a federal agency. The feds operate under much looser standards. We’ve seen a variety of abuses in California in recent years, whereby law enforcemen­t misuse forfeiture laws concocted to stop drug cartels to take innocent people’s life savings and pad police budgets.

We’ve fortunatel­y seen pushback by the courts. The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in January overturned a lower court decision siding with the FBI, after it tried to take $85 million in assets from safe-deposit boxes following a Beverly Hills raid on a company that rented them. The Drug Enforcemen­t Agency claimed the company’s boxes facilitate­d money laundering, so they plotted to take and sell the contents from everyone’s boxes — even though the vaults are also used by law-abiding citizens for legitimate reasons.

That’s an obvious constituti­onal violation. It’s as if the government decided there’s drug-dealing going on somewhere in my neighborho­od. Instead of proving criminal activity by individual­s, they just rounded up everybody’s stuff. Police agencies have a strong incentive to use these laws because they generally keep the ill-gotten bounty. Police aren’t supposed to use that money to supplant their budgets, anyway.

For a refresher, asset forfeiture was concocted during the Reagan-era anti-drug panic. As two former heads of the US. Justice Department’s asset-forfeiture program wrote in a 2014 Washington Post column, it “was conceived as a way to cut into the profit motive that fueled rampant drug traffickin­g” but “has turned into an evil itself, with the corruption it engendered among government and law enforcemen­t coming to clearly outweigh any benefits.”

I understand the latest fear of crime, but let’s take a careful and deliberate approach — lest innocent people lose their rights and property in the process.

Steven Greenhut is Western region director for the R Street Institute and a member of the Southern California News Group editorial board. Write to him at sgreenhut@rstreet.org.

 ?? MARK RIGHTMIRE — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Yellow tape closes off the 700block of Bradford Avenue in Placentia as police search the area outside of St. Joseph Catholic Church in Placentia on Jan. 16.
MARK RIGHTMIRE — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Yellow tape closes off the 700block of Bradford Avenue in Placentia as police search the area outside of St. Joseph Catholic Church in Placentia on Jan. 16.
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