Pubdate: Thu, 27 Apr 2000 Source: Ft. Worth Star-Telegram (TX) Copyright: 2000 Star-Telegram, Fort Worth, Texas Contact: http://www.star-telegram.com/ Forum: http://www.star-telegram.com/comm/forums/ Author: Mike Lee and Susan Gill Vardon Star-Telegram staff writers Note: Mike Lee can be reached at (817) 685-3858, Susan Vardon at (817) 685-3805 PROPERTY SEIZURE LAWS CHANGED TO INCREASE THE BURDEN OF PROOF Jim Spurlock is an unlikely activist. The prosperous airplane broker is a private pilot and a lifelong Republican. Since 1976, he has spent much of his time in an office at Fort Worth Meacham Airport putting airplane buyers in touch with owners, sometimes spending months arranging a single purchase. But in 1991 and 1992, the U.S. Customs Service seized two of his customers' jets because of a paperwork error. Spurlock said he spent nine months and thousands of dollars getting them returned. He said he learned that basic legal principles, such as presumption of innocence, could be upended by federal asset forfeiture laws. "The rule of law is disappearing. Something needs to be done to change it back," said Spurlock, 57, of Fort Worth. Eight years later, Congress has acted on his concerns and those of hundreds more people who contend that they are innocent victims of the forfeiture laws. President Clinton has promised to sign the overhaul bill, but a date to do so has not been set. A Clinton spokeswoman said the bill will protect the rights of the accused while helping law enforcement fight drug trafficking and white-collar crime. Will Ferrell, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas, calls the bill a "moral victory" following the "hysteria of the war on drugs." "Here is an example of how when elected officials really sit down and think about the ramifications of their actions they will come into standing with the Constitution," he said. The federal government began confiscating money from drug dealers in the 1970s, and the practice took off in the 1980s when President Reagan declared a war on drugs. In the Northern District of Texas, which covers Tarrant, Dallas and several other counties, it happens about 130 times a year, officials said. As Spurlock learned, money is not the only asset seized. Officials can take anything of value, including houses, vehicles and jewelry. The biggest change in the law is in burden of proof. According to the original law, prosecutors only had to show probable cause that property was involved in a crime or bought with ill-gotten money, and owners had to prove that they were innocent to get back their property. That is the same level of proof needed to get a search warrant. The new law will require more. It calls for the same amount of proof needed to win most civil cases. The law also will allow some defendants to have court- appointed lawyers, and it holds federal agents responsible for damage to seized property. Also, defendants no longer have to put up a bond before they contest a seizure in court. Brock Stevenson, who handles property seizures for the U.S. attorney's office in Dallas, said the changes would have a negligible effect. "It'll just put a higher burden on government," he said. "Most prosecutors, when they take an asset forfeiture case, realize they have to have more than just bare probable cause." The Justice Department asset seizure fund increased from $27 million in 1985 to a peak of $556 million in 1993, according to the House Judiciary Committee. The fund had $449 million in cash and property as of 1998, according to the committee. Seized cash and property usually are liquidated, then returned to the Justice Department or to the agencies that seized them. The agencies have broad discretion about how to spend the money. During the past two years, police agencies in Texas shared $22.6 million in cash forfeited through state court proceedings and about $3 million in liquidated properties, officials said. Police departments in Arlington, Fort Worth and Northeast Tarrant County have funneled that money into anti-drug operations and community awareness programs such as Drug Awareness Resistance Education, into purchases of guns and body armor, and to open and furnish storefront offices. In 10 years, the North Richland Hills Police Department has received about $448,000 in federal forfeiture funds and about $155,000 from state funds, Police Chief Tom Shockley said. The money was used to purchase vehicles, computers and furniture and also as "buy money" for drug stings, he said. "I think it's helped our community," Shockley said. "It's no secret that there have been abuses across the country with some of the seizures," he said. "But the tact we take is, let's not seize what we can seize but see if we can impact the drug problem." Spurlock said he got involved after Customs Service agents seized a $450,000 Learjet and a $550,000 Beechcraft he had sold to two Brazilian businessmen. Customs agents seized the jets because the businessmen mistakenly indicated that they were owned by a U.S. corporation, Spurlock said. When U.S. Sen. Phil Gramm of Texas looked into the case at Spurlock's request, customs officials wrote that they suspected the businessmen and the pilot of drug smuggling and money laundering. Spurlock said he was floored. "One of the sinister parts was they never arrested the people, investigated them or charged them with the crime," he said. "All they wanted was the property." When the House Judiciary Committee had hearings on asset forfeiture, people from across the country shared their stories. The practice always has been unpopular with civil libertarians, who say that returning the proceeds to the police gives them an incentive to seize property. Some, including the ACLU and U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee of Houston, have contended that minorities are disproportionate targets of civil forfeitures. Jackson Lee testified that racial profiling by police has increased the number of minorities involved in traffic stops, airport searches and drug arrests, which often lead to property seizures. The overhaul bill was tied up in a conference committee in December when Customs Service agents evicted Keller resident Misty Burton from a small farm she shared with her husband. Police and customs agents contended that her husband had bought the farm using drug money. Her husband was in prison and she did not find a lawyer early enough to contest the seizure. Burton's attorney, Brantley Pringle, made a last-ditch appeal. He argued that the case violated the constitutional guarantee against unreasonable seizure, and that Burton became part-owner of the farm long after her husband was accused of being involved with illegal drugs. The government won the case. "Their contention is the only way we can make this evil property wholesome ... essentially is to take it ourselves," Pringle said. Spurlock said his experience with forfeiture laws continues to trouble him. His customers "only lost an airplane," he said. "I lost my Constitution." - --- MAP posted-by: Greg