USA TODAY International Edition

I’m a grandmothe­r, not a drug kingpin

Why can police take my property?

- Malinda Harris and Stephen Silverman Malinda Harris is a grandmothe­r in Massachuse­tts. Stephen Silverman is a senior attorney at the Goldwater Institute. Silverman represents Malinda Harris in this case.

Six years ago, police showed up at my home at night in Massachuse­tts, demanded the keys to my car and threatened damage to it if I didn’t comply. They confiscated my car, but I’m not a criminal. In fact, I wasn’t even accused of a crime.

So why have I been treated like one? Don’t I have any rights?

Turns out I’m not alone. I’m one of countless Americans who have had their property taken away under civil asset forfeiture laws, which allow police to take property if they suspect it was used in a crime.

It adds up. There are so many of us that billions of dollars of property are seized every year. Unlike so many other victims, I decided to fight the government to get my property back.

My story began in 2015 when I let my son, Trevice, borrow my car. Police in Berkshire County suspected that he was selling drugs, so they seized my car under the state’s civil asset forfeiture law, even though I had not been accused of any crime. But I had no idea that my son might have been involved in illegal activities when he was charged with a crime.

At least 35 states have these kinds of laws on the books, allowing police to take, keep and profit from someone’s property without even charging them with a crime, much less convicting them of one.

While civil forfeiture was designed to punish criminals like pirates and drug lords, it’s average Americans who are frequently targeted.

I was shocked when I learned what the government does with the property that is forfeited. Simply put, these laws are funding the police. Law enforcemen­t agencies can keep the property, sell it and use 100% of the proceeds to pad their budgets.

Billions collected

And there is no requiremen­t that the value of the items seized be proportion­al to the crime allegedly committed. The amount of money captured is staggering. Since 2000, states and the federal government have collected at least $ 68.8 billion, according to an Institute for Justice report.

In many cases, it costs more to hire an attorney to fight the government than the forfeited property is worth. The Institute for Justice reports that “hiring an attorney to fight a relatively simple state forfeiture case costs at least $ 3,000 — more than double the national median currency forfeiture.”

Many Americans simply cannot afford a lawyer and can’t wade their way through the legal system and overcome the laws that make it too easy for the government to wrongfully take their property. It can truly be an overwhelmi­ng and frightenin­g experience.

That’s how I felt about my predicamen­t. There are really no words for the stress caused by this forfeiture. But I knew I needed to fight back.

Thankfully, with pro bono representa­tion from the Goldwater Institute, I did just that.

Profiting off innocent Americans

The government might have kept my property for good, but fortunatel­y, shortly after I got legal help, Berkshire County told me last week that they would return my car to me. However, it shouldn’t have to take six years and the threat of legal action to be treated fairly. I was so fortunate to get that help — but what about all the other innocent Americans who can’t afford it?

Getting my car back has a particular­ly personal significance: In December 2018, my son Trevice was tragically killed in an incident unrelated to the forfeiture. My car is one of the biggest items of value I had to my name, and so I had been hoping to pass it along to Trevice’s daughters.

I am no drug kingpin, no crime lord. I’m an average American, fighting against a system profiting off Americans who haven’t run afoul of any law. States ought to turn their attention to doing away with this form of government theft, instead of turning a blind eye to the abuse of innocent people.

 ?? FAMILY PHOTO ?? Malinda Harris in Springfield, Massachuse­tts, in January.
FAMILY PHOTO Malinda Harris in Springfield, Massachuse­tts, in January.

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