Attention

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not represent our advertisers

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Cops In Texas Seize Millions By ‘Policing for Profit’

Texas law enforcement are continuing to enrich themselves using a little-known legal doctrine known as civil forfeiture, according to a new series of investigative reports. Under civil forfeiture, property can be forfeited even if its owner has never been charged with a crime. In these proceedings, accused criminals have more rights than innocent owners and the government sues the property, not its owner. These cases can be so baffling, one Texas Supreme Court Justice recently compared civil forfeiture to Alice in Wonderland and the works of Franz Kafka. But civil forfeiture isn’t just a quirky curiosity—it’s a powerful incentive for law enforcement to take millions.

Last month, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported that the District Attorney’s Office in Tarrant County, Texas seized $3.5 million, plus almost 250 cars and 440 computers in fiscal year 2013, roughly equal to about 10 percent of its budget. Of the property seized, almost $845,000 was spent on salaries for 16 employees at the office. By comparison, only $53,000 went to “six nonprofits that benefit victims or prosecution efforts.” The county’s narcotics unit spent an even greater proportion of forfeiture funds on salaries. Last year, the unit seized $666,427 in cash and used $426,058 to pay salaries.

Even more property was forfeited by participating in a federal program known as “equitable sharing.” By partnering with a federal agency, local and state law enforcement can keep up to 80 percent of the proceeds from a forfeited property. Incredibly, police can collaborate even if doing so would circumvent their own states’ protections for property owners.

Read more

7 comments:

lmclain said...

Keep cheering.
You could be next.
Easily.

Anonymous said...

Legalized theft of private property by the government.....

Anonymous said...

Good, let drug seizure money, vehicles etc be used by the good guys.

Anonymous said...

I don't think many people get it. Under these laws, property is seized, and you have to prove it's yours or that it wasn't used in a crime. Legal proceedings are often more expensive than the seized property, and then people are out of luck. There are plenty of stories about how this system gets abused, with property taken from people without any criminal charges filed against them. How is that fair?

Forfeiture should only happen after a jury trial, with the jury deciding the fate of the property. Otherwise, it's just legally sanctioned corruption.

Anonymous said...

That karma train is a bitch. Keep cheering on the theft of our liberties. Big brother is an incestual beast that will screw the whole Family. Starting with the ones in its own house

Anonymous said...

Excellent, steal from drug deals and criminals. They deserve it since they are too lazy to get a real job.

Anonymous said...

1:46--
Did you not read (or comprehend?)11:40's comments? You don't have to be guilty of anything, they just take your property & you have to prove you didn't do anything! Totally puts the burden of proof on the citizen, not the other way around. Totally agree w/1:12, BTW