Pubdate: Fri, 18 May 2001 Source: The Southeast Missourian (MO) Copyright: 2001 2001 Southeast Missourian Contact: http://www.semissourian.com/opinion/speakout/submit/ Website: http://www.semissourian.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1322 Author: Marc Powers Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) Note: Letters of up to 250 words on topics of current interest are welcomed - - All letters will be edited - Names and hometowns of letter writers will be published. GOVERNOR SIGNS FORFEITURE MEASURE JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- Missouri became a national leader in reigning in the ability of local law enforcement agencies to profit from seizing property by using federal procedures under a bill signed into law Thursday by Gov. Bob Holden. "This truly is a landmark day in Missouri," Holden said. "We are the first state to take this action." Under the state Constitution, cash or property seized by police in connection to a criminal enterprise is supposed to go into a state fund for education. However, many local law enforcement agencies call in federal authorities, usually Drug Enforcement Administration agents, to assist in the seizure. The federal drug agency takes a 20 percent cut of the proceeds and returns the rest to the local agency, leaving education with nothing. The new law modifies the Criminal Activity Forfeitures Act to close that loophole. It clarifies that the seizing agency is the first to exercise control over the property. Some local authorities claimed they merely "held" property until federal agents came to "seize" it. Also, permission of a circuit judge will be required for a local law enforcement agency to transfer cash or property to federal authorities. To provide oversight, local agencies must provide a detailed report of all seizures to their local prosecuting attorney or the state attorney general and to the state auditor. Failure to comply with the reporting requirement would be a misdemeanor punishable by a $1,000 fine. State Sen. Harry Wiggins, D-Kansas City, called passage of the law "a long, three-year struggle." Similar legislation died on the final day of last year's legislative session. Although several law enforcement representatives were on hand at the bill-signing ceremony, some police groups had opposed closing the loophole. Another longtime advocate of the change, House Speaker Jim Kreider, D-Nixa, said his goal "has been to protect the reputation of Missouri's finest law enforcement" officers, adding that using the federal system to circumvent the Missouri Constitution created an appearance of impropriety that besmirched the image of police. Act Is National Model "This is a piece of model legislation that many other states are looking at," Kreider said. "This is a nationwide issue and we are proud in Missouri to have addressed it." A report issued by State Auditor Claire McCaskill in 1999 showed that 85 percent of all forfeitures in the state went through the federal process. Of the $47 million seized by local enforcement, only $7 million was turned over to education. The report was incomplete because a number of agencies, including 12 from Southeast Missouri, failed to respond to McCaskill's inquires. Area non-respondents included the Cape Girardeau and Sikeston police departments and the Bollinger, Cape Girardeau and Mississippi county sheriff's departments. Col. Weldon Wilhoit, the superintendent of the State Highway Patrol, said the law clarifies the power of police and won't hamper drug interdiction and other crime-fighting efforts. - --- MAP posted-by: GD