Pubdate: Mon, 10 Jul 2000 Source: U.S. News and World Report (US) Copyright: 2000 U.S. News & World Report Contact: 1050 Thomas Jefferson Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20007-3871 Fax: (202) 955-2685 Feedback: http://www.usnews.com/usnews/usinfo/infomain.htm Website: http://www.usnews.com/ Forum: http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/forum.htm Author: David E. Kaplan A CASE STUDY IN POLICING FOR PROFIT A 'Model' Drug Task Force Comes Under Fire Clay Waterman was dumbfounded. Authorities in Miami had seized his company's checking account, bank officials told him last June, for reasons unknown. Waterman was the manager of Penn Industries, a family-run supplier of auto accessories in Oklahoma City, and neither he nor the company had ever had trouble with the law before. Behind the seizure, Waterman soon learned, was a police task force known as South Florida Impact. The task force, it turned out, had grown suspicious when Penn's only Colombian client had used a money exchanger to make cash deposits of $2,500 into Penn's Florida account. Impact claimed the deposits were profits from illegal drug deals. So it seized Penn's entire accountsome $78,000, including its payroll and operating accounts. Facing bankruptcy, Penn's owner cashed in his retirement funds and took out a mortgage on his home. It was only after two months of negotiationand $13,000 in legal feesthat Impact released all but $3,000 of the money. "There was no due process," says Waterman. "Whatever happened to innocent until proven guilty?" You might say it fell victim to America's drug wars. To help break the back of the nation's $50 billion narcotics trade, law enforcement has increasingly turned to asset forfeiture, a process allowing the government to seize cash, cars, homes, and other property it claims is the result of criminal activity. Forfeiture abuse has grown so common in recent years that Congress passed a law in April raising the burden of proof required before federal agents can take action. Significantly, though, the new law affects only federal seizures. And as Clay Waterman can attest, many of the worst abuses occur at the local level. Operating under a patchwork of state laws, local police departments have turned forfeiture into a cash cow that pays for new buildings, squad cars, and equipment. Police along interstates in the South are notorious for stopping drivers and relieving them of "suspect" cash. And cops in Missouri last year outraged citizens by circumventing a state law directing forfeited funds to education: The cops simply turned over their seizures to federal agents, who kicked back up to 80 percent to local police. "The focus is on short-term, easy money, not detective work," laments Bill Gately, a former U.S. customs money-laundering expert. "When I went to police chiefs on big cases, I had to show what the [financial] return was." Policing for profit may have reached its highest form in Floridawhere billions in drug money wash through the state each yearand, in particular, with Impact. A force of some 50 officers backed by nearly a dozen police agencies, Impact funds itself entirely through asset seizures, and it doles out millions more dollars to area police departments. It has helped seize no less than $140 million in suspected drug money since 1994, while confiscating over 30 tons of cocaine and nearly 7 tons of marijuana. And its work has resulted in 532 arrests and 71 deportations. Barry McCaffrey, the nation's drug czar, has cited Impact as a model of effective law enforcement. But to others, Impact is a case study in what has gone wrong with the headlong pursuit of criminal money: a record, they say, of unwarranted seizures, poor accountability, and cops more intent on grabbing cash than crooks. A good deal. Impact was the brainchild of two retired federal agents, Woody Kirk of the U.S. Customs Service and Mike Wald of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Wald gained national attention posing as a Saudi sheik's assistant in the 1970s Abscam sting. In 1993, the two men pitched a novel idea to Miami-area police chiefs: a self-sustaining task force on money laundering that would split all seized assets among participating police departments. Unlike Wald, who joined Impact as a Coral Gables police commander, Kirk became a full-time consultant to the group. Along with his expertise in money laundering, he brought a gold mine of informants from whom he hoped to profit. And profit he did. In a move that angered many in law-enforcement circles, Kirk fashioned an unusual deal in which Impact paid him 25 percent of all assets he helped seize. In just the first year, according to a state audit, Kirk earned $625,000. "It was," Kirk said, "a very good deal." Too good, perhaps. On learning of Kirk's commissions, the U.S. Justice Department threatened to cut off all cooperation unless the commissions stopped. Impact complied, putting Kirk on a retainer that pays him $10,666 each month. But Kirk's deals with informants continued. In an interview, Kirk confirmed that, as the commissions ended, he asked two of his informants to sign contracts pledging him a share of the 15 percent they received as a reward from asset seizures. One agreement, obtained by U.S. News, reveals that Kirk lent the man $50,000 and, in return, was to receive 60 percent of the informant's reward money. Kirk admits lending another informant $115,000, also an advance on reward money. Kirk says these contracts were meant only as "an insurance policy" in case he left Impact, and he insists he personally never made money from them. But veteran law-enforcement officials say such deals, even if not illegal, undermine the integrity of police work and create conflicts of interest. Former customs agent Bill Gately calls the commissions "abhorrent. . . . It just grates on the nerves of a lot of cops who did the work Kirk has done." Says John Moynihan, a former DEA specialist in dirty cash: "In money-laundering investigations, there can be no room for personal interest in any transaction." Impact officials also expressed surprise at Kirk's side deals and said that the matter is now under review. Small comfort. Of broader concern is Impact's dependence on forfeitures for its entire budget, which has fueled charges that it is overaggressive in seizing property. Wald says that 95 percent of Impact's seizures go uncontested, but that's small comfort to Hernon Manufacturing. In 1998, the Orlando-based epoxy maker found its main bank account frozen after Impact traced a deposit back to its lone Colombian client. Agents seized over $30,000, including Hernon's payroll; months later, most of the money was released. (Officials kept $6,000 for "legal fees.") Another 1998 case nearly bankrupted Omega Medical Electronics, a three-person supplier of medical instruments in Wilmington, N.C. Impact seized its entire account after tracing cash deposits from a Colombian client to a Miami branch of Omega's bank. Almost two years later, officials agreed to return nearly all of the funds. Critics also say Impact is overreaching as it runs far-flung cases overseas and engages in money laundering on a scale virtually unheard of for a local operation. The task force performs undercover "stings" to catch real money launderers, but the practice is controversial. To create a convincing front, Impact itself has washed more than $120 million since 1994, and that money has largely recycled back to drug dealers. These funds should be offset by the $140 million Impact has helped seize, but that is not enough of a return for some laundering experts. "You want to seize at least twice what you launder," argues ex-DEA analyst Moynihan. "If not, you're creating as much crime as you're solving." Accountability is also a concern. When the DEA and FBI run undercover laundering cases, they must prepare inch-thick plans that are approved by the attorney general herself, with frequent reviews by special auditors. By contrast, Impact's oversight comes from a steering committee of state and local officials, with audits by the city of Coral Gables. "We've never missed a nickel," says director James Butler. Butler attributes all the flack against Impact largely to turf battles among rival agencies. "Nearly all the criticism is professional jealousy," he says. Still, concerns have mounted to the point where the DEA and Customs Service in Miami will no longer work with Impact, and the Justice Department is conducting a review. Depending on the outcome, the inquiry could halt federal participation with the group entirely. Such a move, critics say, could send an overdue message to hundreds of local police agencies now hooked on money from asset seizures. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D