USA TODAY International Edition

High court caps ‘excessive’ fines

Criminal penalties have helped fund state services

- Richard Wolf

WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court ruled unanimousl­y Wednesday that states cannot impose excessive fees, fines and forfeiture­s as criminal penalties.

The decision, which united the court’s conservati­ves and liberals, makes clear that the Eighth Amendment’s prohibitio­n against “excessive fines” applies to states and localities as well as the federal government.

Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, just back in court this week after lung cancer surgery, wrote the majority opinion and announced it from the bench.

“The protection against excessive fines guards against abuses of government’s punitive or criminal law-enforcemen­t authority,” Ginsburg wrote. Quoting in part from the court’s ruling in 2010 that Second Amendment gun rights apply to the states, she said, “This safeguard, we hold, is ‘fundamenta­l to our scheme of ordered liberty.’ ”

It was a victory for Tyson Timbs, who sold less than $400 worth of heroin to undercover police officers in 2013. Upon conviction, Indiana seized his Land Rover, which he had purchased for more than $42,000 with the proceeds of his father’s life insurance policy. That seizure will be reconsider­ed by Indiana courts.

Liberals and libertaria­ns alike have groused for years about what they see as increasing­ly greedy government­s. A study by Harvard University and the National Institute of Justice found that about 10 million people owe more than $50 billion as a result of the fines, fees and forfeiture­s.

Many of the fines and forfeiture­s are contested and reduced. The court’s ruling could cut down on their imposition in the first place.

State and local government­s increasing­ly use funds collected in criminal and civil cases to pay for municipal services. The 100 cities with the highest proportion of revenue from fines and fees in 2012 financed 7 percent to 30 percent of their budgets that way, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

“Imposing monetary penalties that bury people under mountains of accumulati­ng debt has devastatin­g consequenc­es on individual­s, families and entire communitie­s, particular­ly lowincome communitie­s of color,” said Nusrat Choudhury, deputy director of the ACLU Racial Justice Program.

The practice often leads low-income defendants further into poverty, crime, prison and recidivism, the liberal Southern Poverty Law Center and libertaria­n Cato Institute argued in court papers. The American Bar Associatio­n noted that nearly two-thirds of prisoners have little prospect of paying the fines and fees after their release.

Timbs’ conviction resulted in a year’s home detention, five years’ probation and about $1,200 in fees. But it was the seizure of his SUV that led to the lawsuit. The 2012 Land Rover LR2 was even a named plaintiff in the case.

Wesley Hottot, senior attorney with the Institute for Justice who argued Timbs’ case, said the ruling “should go a long way to curtailing what is often called ‘policing for profit.’ ”

“Police and prosecutor­s employ forfeiture to take someone’s property, then sell it and keep the profits to fund their department­s,” he said. “This gives them a direct financial incentive to abuse this power and impose excessive fines.”

The seizure was defended by several national municipal groups. They argued in court papers that the vehicle was used in heroin trafficking that could have generated hefty profits.

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Tyson Timbs

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