Pubdate: Sun, 21 May 2000 Source: Charlotte Observer (NC) Copyright: 2000 The Charlotte Observer Contact: http://www.charlotte.com/observer/ Author: Karen Dillon, Knight Ridder U.S. RULES LET POLICE KEEP CASH THEY SEIZE Police and highway patrols across the country are evading state laws to improperly keep millions of dollars in cash and property seized in drug busts and traffic stops. Most states don't want law enforcement agencies to profit so easily from such confiscations - they see it as a dangerous conflict of interest. For that reason, they have passed laws blocking seized property from going directly back to police, and many states designate seizures to be used for other purposes, such as education. But a yearlong examination by The Kansas City Star reveals that police agencies in every one of more than two dozen states - including North Carolina - checked by the newspaper have used federal law enforcement to circumvent their own laws and keep most of that money for themselves. It works this way: When police seize money, they call a federal agency instead of going to state court to confiscate it. An agency such as the Drug Enforcement Administration accepts the seizure, making it a federal case. The DEA keeps a cut of the money and returns the rest to police. State courts are bypassed altogether. Law enforcement says that's not illegal and that without the money, police would be handcuffed in fighting crime. But millions of dollars that lawmakers in some states have designated for education, drug treatment programs and other purposes instead end up back in the hands of police. For example: o An N.C. Highway Patrol trooper stopped a driver last year on Interstate 95 for tailgating. A police dog signaled drugs were in the car, where troopers found $105,700 and 2 grams of marijuana, The driver denied owning either the drugs or the money. The Highway Patrol gave it to the DEA, which returned more than $80,000 to the state patrol, even though N.C. law generally requires sending seized money to education. o In June, a Georgia trooper stopped a car for speeding on 1-95. After the driver and passengers gave conflicting stories, the trooper searched the car and found a hidden compartment containing $7,000, which the driver said was from savings. The patrol turned over the money to the DEA, which in January returned $5,440 to the patrol. Under Georgia law, forfeited money should go to the state's general fund. o In 1996, the Missouri Highway Patrol stopped a car for speeding, searched it because the occupants seemed suspicious and found $24,000. No drugs were found and no one claimed the money. The patrol gave it to the DEA to be forfeited, the legal term for confiscation. The case took a bizarre turn last year when a family that bought the car at auction discovered an additional $82,000 in the gas tank. The DEA took that money, too. Missouri law sends forfeited money to a public education fund. Beyond the money diverted from public funds, critics are just as troubled by the weakening of a basic American civil liberty - the Bill of Rights protection against improper search and seizure. Owners who want to recover seized property usually face a much tougher road in federal court than they would under their own state laws. That continues despite a federal law passed last month that will place some limits on forfeiture. It's no accident that many state laws have stronger civil protections than federal law, legislators say. "We have tried to make sure that people who are subject to forfeitures have some basic rights," said Georgia Rep. Jim Martin, a Democrat and chairman of the Judiciary committee. The federal hand-offs, critics say, also create an opportunity for police to profit from their own actions. Indeed, they trace an increasing outcry over aggressive or illegal searches by police nationwide back to the profit motive. "If you think that by conducting an illegal search and seizing people on the highway you can increase the number of times where you can take assets, it is going to become a big motivating force," said Ira Glasser, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union. This maybe one of those rare issues that elicits protests across the political spectrum. Americans don't realize that forfeitures often occur to "ordinary people who happen to find themselves in a situation in which they are simply suspected of having been somehow involved in criminal activity, whether those suspicions ever prove out or not," said Roger Pilon, a vice president at the Cato Institute, a Libertarian thinktank. "The line between a free society and a police state is usually broached in small steps." Not every police department turns seizure money over to federal agencies, but many that do complain that state laws are too restrictive. Sometimes, police explain, they believe money they seize is linked to drugs, but they can't prove it under state standards, and they don't want to give the money back to a suspected drug dealer. Federal law lets them take the money out of the owner's hands. "Everybody uses the federal system," said Lt. Harry Kearley of the Alabama Bureau of Investigations. Federal officials agree police have the proper motives for using federal law. "I don't think police agencies are in the business of profiting," said Jerry McDowell, director of the Justice Department's asset forfeiture and money laundering division. Besides, he said, it's legal for police to send seizures to federal agencies because most state laws do not specifically prohibit that. "We certainly don't want to subvert state law, and we don't want states to subvert our law," McDowell said. But, in fact, most states do prohibit simply handing off seizures - their laws give jurisdiction over seizures to state courts, the Star has found. What that means, say legal experts who have examined the little-known state provisions, is that police cannot simply hand off seizures to federal agents to avoid state requirements. They need a court order first. "This statute is not difficult at all," said David Harris, a University of Toledo law professor and constitutional expert." The state court has jurisdictions." A half-dozen state and federal court decisions have backed that interpretation. "A local police department may not take seized property and just pass it on as it pleases to the FBI in flagrant disregard of state laws," according to a federal circuit court opinion in an Illinois case. Such handoffs began after Congress passed a 1984 law that allowed law enforcement to share forfeitures as a way to foster greater cooperation and shut down drug operations. "The intent was to permit the feds to share with state and local law enforcement when there were truly federal cases," former U.S. Rep. William Hughes, the chief sponsor of the bill and a New Jersey Democrat, said. But the Justice Department wrote guidelines that have twisted the intent of the law, critics say. In addition to addressing joint investigations led by federal agencies, the guidelines created a process called "adoption." Under adoption, state and local police could give their seizures to the federal government - even if a federal agency had not been involved. The Justice Department "turned around and permitted the forfeiture laws to be used basically to circumvent state law," Hughes said. Forfeitures have come to mean a lot of money for police. The Justice Department says that from October 1996 through March 1999 it accepted $208 million in seizures from state and local police. But that figure is still being audited because the Justice Department has not published an annual forfeiture report since 1996, although the law requires the report to be produced each year. Whatever the nationwide total, forfeitures can quickly add up for individual departments. In a single case in Indiana, a state trooper stopped a truck for speeding on Interstate 70. Troopers found $811,470 and turned it over to the DEA, which this year returned almost $500,000 to the state police and $121,000 to a sheriffs department that helped. Police say they need the money if they are to continue the war on drugs. If they lose forfeiture money, they say, local governments are unlikely to replace it. For example, Capt. Ruben Davalos, head of the special investigations unit for Albuquerque, N.M., police, pointed out that his unit costs about $1 million a year, of which the city only funds about $250,000. But critics say police who use forfeits to fund themselves end up on a treadmill. "The real narcotic here is the money," said Glasser of the ACLU. "It becomes a stream of income that they learn not to do without and then they have to generate more of it." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea