Pubdate: Sun, 10 Jun 2001 Source: Quad-City Times (IA) Section: Opinion, Pg A6 Copyright: 2001 Quad-City Times Contact: http://www.qctimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/857 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm IOWA FORFEITURE LAW NEEDS FIXING It's perfectly legal in Iowa for police to seize money and property suspected of being used in criminal drug activity. The assets can be kept by police and county attorney's offices for crime-fighting purposes if a forfeiture judgment is awarded in civil court. However, forfeiture rulings don't require a conviction in criminal court. Unfair? Many people think so. And that's troubling, given that our nation's legal system is founded on the basic principle of "innocent until proven guilty." In Scott County, law enforcement agencies handled 412 forfeiture cases from January 1996 to November 2000, seizing and retaining assets worth more than $760,000. One-fourth of those cases involved no criminal charges and accounted for about $135,000 of the forfeiture total, according to a Quad-City Times investigative series that begins with today's edition. Understanding the difference between the civil and criminal justice systems is important to this issue because it involves individual rights to property. In criminal court, cases must be proven "beyond a reasonable doubt" for conviction. In civil court, the standard is lower. Judgments require only "a preponderance of the evidence" -- that is, there simply must be more evidence than not indicating that, in the case of drug deals, property was used in commission of an alleged crime. Scott County prosecutors defend the system, saying it allows them to remove the profits of drug dealing in cases that could be difficult or impossible to prove criminal charges. And they say an "invisible wall" is maintained between prosecutors of criminal drug cases and the attorney who handles civil forfeiture cases. The separate process is designed to prevent assets from being used by suspects to "buy" their way out of criminal charges. Yet authorities can take away the profits of small dealers and cut deals with suspects who can avoid criminal prosecution by agreeing to assist investigation of larger drug cases. We support the ability of police agencies and prosecutors to use drug-case forfeitures for funding additional training and equipment. We expect police to put up a strong fight in the drug war. We also expect suspects to be considered innocent until proven guilty. With that understood, we object to the way the present forfeiture system works because all drug cases, whether forfeiture of assets is involved or not, begin as criminal cases, not as civil matters. Thus, public agencies should be allowed to keep and use seized assets only when the suspects are convicted of criminal activity. In our legal system, expediency and money should not override any citizen's right to due process. The forfeiture process appears to violate the spirit of that principle, and state legislators should draft a referendum that requires criminal conviction before forfeiture is of assets is allowed. Voters in Oregon recently approved by a 2-1 margin a measure mandating that suspects should not have to relinquish property unless prosecutors prove they committed crimes. Voters in Iowa, as well as Illinois and 46 other states where similar forfeiture laws are on the books, deserve the same opportunity to protect individuals' rights and rights to their property. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth