Pubdate: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 Source: Standard-Examiner (UT) Copyright: 2001 Ogden Publishing Corporation Contact: P.O. Box 951 Ogden, UT 84402 Website: http://www.standard.net/ Forum: http://www1.standard.net/utah_central/forums.asp Author: Ralph Wakley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?165 (Initiative B) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) UTAH LAW OFFICERS FILE SUIT OVER SEIZURE INITIATIVE Lawsuit Seeks To Stop New Law From Taking Effect SALT LAKE CITY -- Law enforcement officers couldn't win before Utah voters so now they hope a federal judge will strike down Initiative B, a Utahns for Property Protection spokesman said Tuesday. "I'm not surprised law enforcement is trying to stop Initiative B in the court. They were frustrated when nearly 70 percent of the voters said they wanted their property rights protected. They couldn't win it on the ballot, so now they want the court to stop it," said attorney Andrew Stavros. Lt. Wayne Tarwater of the Weber- Morgan Narcotics Strike Force joined officers from Garfield, Iron, Salt Lake and Utah counties and from Sandy and West Valley City in filing the lawsuit Tuesday. They asked federal Judge Dee Benson to prevent Initiative B, the Utah Property Protection Act, from becoming effective March 20 while they seek to overturn it. Initiative B would resolve a number of abuses in seizure cases where law enforcement officers sell seized property through forfeiture procedures, according to a legislative audit. It would add more accountability to the process and halt the forfeiture sale of property seized from people who eventually are found to be innocent. Because the new law says all proceeds in state criminal forfeiture cases must help fund public education, officers claim that conflicts with federal laws covering cases when federal and local lawmen cooperate and then share proceeds from forfeited property, primarily in drug investigations. Federal law says forfeiture revenues shared with local agencies must be used for law enforcement purposes. The plaintiffs said that shared money cannot go into the Uniform School Fund, so that would force them to violate the new law. "The scope of this lawsuit is very narrow," Stavros said. "It involves only a tiny, tiny portion of Initiative B that affects federal law. Even if the judge strikes down that portion, 99 percent of it will still be good law. And they could always turn back the federal money." In addition, Stavros said, the Utah Attorney General's office reviewed Initiative B before it was placed on the ballot and found it to be constitutional. "The plaintiffs aren't concerned about people's rights, they just don't want to give up the money they get from selling the property of innocent owners," he said. In 1999, Utah police and Sheriff's deputies shared slightly more than $700,000 in forfeiture cases. - --- MAP posted-by: GD