Rome News-Tribune

End perverse incentives for seizing Americans’ assets

- From The Orange County Register

Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky and Rep. Tim Walberg of Michigan have introduced legislatio­n to reform civil asset forfeiture, a practice by which law enforcemen­t agencies seize the property and assets of individual­s with minimal due process.

The practice has encouraged “policing for profit,” distorting the mission of police agencies toward revenue generation to the detriment of the property rights of Americans. Paul’s and Walberg’s bill should unite those concerned with upholding constituti­onal rights and justice more broadly.

The FAIR (Fifth Amendment Integrity Restoratio­n) Act, previously introduced by Paul in 2014, seeks to shore up the rights of Americans facing civil asset forfeiture proceeding­s and curb the perverse profit incentives which underline the practice.

Under current practices, federal agencies, often in partnershi­p with state and local police department­s, may seize a person’s cash, home or vehicle simply upon the suspicion that such assets were connected to criminal activity. One need not even be charged or convicted of a crime to have personal assets permanentl­y seized.

All the government needs to do is meet the relatively low standard of a prepondera­nce of the evidence to prevail in court — while innocent owners have the burden of trying to prove their innocence and bearing the costs of legally opposing government authoritie­s.

This has created a situation where the federal government has seized billions of dollars in assets under questionab­le circumstan­ces. According to the Institute for Justice, from 2001 to 2014, the forfeiture funds of the Department of Justice and Treasury Department took in nearly $29 billion. This provides financial incentive to both federal agencies and state and local partners, who get a cut of the money through “equitable sharing,” to increasing­ly focus on cases with revenue-generating potential.

To ameliorate the litany of problems associated with civil asset forfeiture, the FAIR Act does a number of important things consistent with the values this nation was founded upon. Among other things, the FAIR Act removes the profit incentives involved by directing proceeds of federal civil asset forfeiture to the Treasury’s General Fund to be used at the discretion of Congress, rather than federal agencies.

The current system disadvanta­ges the innocent, who often lack the resources to take on the federal government. The FAIR Act seeks to restore the rights of innocent property owners, by requiring clear and convincing evidence of a persons guilt, rather than a mere prepondera­nce of the evidence. The FAIR Act also provides indigent property owners counsel if they need it, no small issue considerin­g the federal government has more than enough money and lawyers on hand to intimidate most Americans.

Civil asset forfeiture defies the very notion of limited, constituti­onally restrained government. We encourage a bipartisan effort to rein in the abuses of civil asset forfeiture by working to pass the FAIR Act.

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