Pubdate: Sun, 11 Mar 2001 Source: Kansas City Star (MO) Copyright: 2001 The Kansas City Star Contact: 1729 Grand Blvd., Kansas City, Mo. 64108 Feedback: http://www.kansascity.com/Discussion/ Website: http://www.kcstar.com/ Author: Karen Dillon, The Kansas City Star See: other superb forfeiture related articles at http://www.mapinc.org/author/Karen+Dillon Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) KANSAS LEGISLATORS LOOK AT DRUG FORFEITURE POLICY Police in Colby, Kan., invested a comfortable nest egg last year -- $2.1 million seized in a drug case. That is three times what the 10-officer department normally spends in a year. In fact, a committee has been formed just to help police decide how to spend the $120,000 in interest the money will bring each year. For Kansas law enforcement agencies located along an interstate or busy highway, the war on drugs can be lucrative. Just last week, law enforcement took more than $800,000 in two seizures on Interstate 70. But such windfalls are being challenged by a bill moving through the state Legislature. A hearing is scheduled at 3:30 p.m. today before the House Judiciary Committee. The bill would send forfeited drug money to public education instead of law enforcement. "The money from seizures should not be going to law enforcement agencies," said Paul Davis, legislative counsel for the Kansas Bar Association, which supports the proposed law. The bill also would require a conviction in most cases before property could be forfeited. Kansas law now allows a person's cash and property to be forfeited without the person being charged with a crime. Law enforcement can keep up to 85 percent of the proceeds. The district attorney keeps the rest. In Missouri, a conviction generally is required to forfeit property, and forfeited money goes to education. A reform bill sponsored by Sen. Harry Wiggins, a Kansas City Democrat, would define when property has been seized and will be debated in a few weeks. State law already requires forfeited drug money to go to education. The Kansas bill, sponsored by Rep. Ralph Tanner, a Baldwin City Republican, places the state in a growing movement of more than a dozen other states considering reform of their forfeiture laws. But many in Kansas law enforcement are fighting the bill, saying police need the money to fight the war on drugs. "I really believe it will diminish tremendously the number of drug arrests, and therefore, the number of seizures will tend to bottom out," said Thomas County Sheriff Tom Jones. "(The lawmakers) need to leave us...alone and let us do our job." Some lawmakers and others say, though, that the drug money gives police a financial motive to be overly aggressive, which can result in illegal searches. "We have improperly given incentives to a number of our law enforcement agencies to devote their time to these endeavors," said Sen. Ed Pugh, a Wamego Republican and vice chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. "The asset forfeiture law the way it is now is a bad incentive for law enforcement." As an attorney, Pugh said, he handled a case several years ago in which a man had been arrested for having an ounce of marijuana. Law enforcement asked the state to forfeit his home and 55 acres, but Pugh won the case. Legal experts and criminal defense lawyers point to other cases in which they say police acted too aggressively. For example, a Topeka police officer spotted rolling papers often used in smoking marijuana on the floor of a car during a traffic stop. He asked the driver if he could search the car. The driver refused but the officer searched anyway, finding a small amount of marijuana and $573 in cash. A judge suppressed evidence because the search was illegal, said Michael Kaye, a Washburn University law professor who worked on the case in 1997. Robert Eye, a Topeka defense lawyer who won a case several years ago in which a federal appeals court found that the Highway Patrol conducted an illegal search, worries that huge windfalls force police to walk a tightrope. "Those incentives can sometimes cause even diligent law enforcement officers to cut corners on certain things such as defendants' rights," Eye said. As an example, he cited police who routinely troll for cars with out-of-state license plates. In Hays, law enforcement officers acknowledge they regularly patrol motel parking lots at night with drug-sniffing dogs. That's how the Ellis County Drug Task Force found $1 million in cash in one case last year. The task force turned the money over to the federal Drug Enforcement Administration and could receive up to $800,000 back. The federal government keeps the rest for processing. Law enforcement officials point out that courts have held such searches to be legal. "It is a routine patrol procedure we do," Ellis County Undersheriff Bruce Hertel said. Police in Kansas are careful about the way they deal with drug seizures, said Kyle Smith, director of public and governmental affairs for the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, which opposes the proposed law. "Obviously there are concerns about conflicts of interest," Smith said. "I think the Kansas law has a lot of safeguards." Extra Spending Money Many law enforcement officials say the forfeiture money allows them to spend money on things they could never afford otherwise. At $500,000, the Thomas County sheriff's forfeiture fund exceeds his annual budget of $400,000. A sheriff's deputy seized $400,000 more last week. Jones said he liked the leverage that drug money can give him. He has paid two officers' salaries, and he donated $3,000 to "Hooked on Fishing" a drug education program sponsored by the American Sportsfishing Association. Jones could not remember who contacted him about the program or whether it was an ongoing program in his community. "I was sold on it as being a worthy project, an educational-based project," Jones said. Osage County Sheriff Ken Lippert said he too has spent forfeiture money on salaries but has found a way around state law, which prohibits the money being spent on such recurring expenses as salaries. Lippert uses federal grants to pay a portion of new deputies' salaries, and then identifies forfeiture money as matching funds for the grant. Lippert also spent $868 on 700 coloring books and crayons for drug education, and said he buys key chains and other trinkets to give students when he talks to them about drugs and crime. "It's a lot cheaper crime prevention than $55,000 a year to hire an officer to have police presence," he said. Lippert said that if the Kansas bill passes, he would send seized money to a federal law enforcement agency as a way to circumvent state law and keep most of the drug money. "We will still get the dope off the street, but we are going to file federal cases instead of state cases if they want to give the money to the schools or somebody else," Lippert said. "We are not going to work for it and not get it." The Garden City Police Department has been able to spend thousands of dollars in drug money to equip a Special Enforcement Team -- also known as a SWAT team -- and to buy two dogs and equipment such as a remote control door opening system to release the dogs from a vehicle. Lt. Gibson Auten said the SWAT team was created about six or seven years ago to help in hostage and barricade situations and to serve high-risk warrants when wanted people might be armed with guns. It also is called when someone is attempting suicide. Auten acknowledged that police have been lucky that the team is not often needed. The last hostage situation in Garden City -- a husband-wife domestic situation -- was two years ago. The last time they served a high-risk warrant was November. But he said the specialized guns, riot helmets, uniforms and other equipment keep officers safe. "We may not use them a lot, but when you need them, they are very important to have," Auten said. He added the team has only fired once since its inception. That was to kill a charging dog. Tanner said some of the spending by law enforcement agencies angers him. "That makes me sick," he said. "I don't think they should have had the money in the first place." Police should not be able to seize money for forfeiture from someone who isn't even convicted, Tanner said. "I'm talking about civil rights." But sometimes it's impossible to obtain a conviction in a drug case, said Smith of the KBI. "I don't see why we would let drug dealers keep their money whether they are convicted or not," Smith said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake