Pubdate: Tue, 26 Mar 2002 Source: The Monitor (TX) Website: http://www.themonitor.com Feedback: http://www.themonitor.com/letters.shtml Address: 1101 Ash Avenue McAllen, Texas 78501 Contact: 2002 The Monitor Fax: (956) 618-0520 SPOILS OF (DRUG) WAR FORFEITURES PROVE TOO LUCRATIVE FOR POLICE Not since Edward Teach first prowled the high seas in pursuit of merchant ships as a "privateer" for the British crown has a war on commerce been so profitable. What separated him from today's drug warriors, though, is that Teach eventually crossed the line into out-and-out piracy as the notorious outlaw Blackbeard, ultimately to be hunted down and killed. The agencies that prosecute America's war on drugs need fear no reprisal. They seize and benefit from substantial loot - houses, boats, cars, planes, etc., along with wads and wads of cash - with the law's full blessing. And they don't even have to prove the guilt of the alleged drug dealers whose ill-gotten gains have been impounded. Needless to say, no one who hoisted the Jolly Roger over the Spanish Main ever had it so good. In Colorado, two state lawmakers are introducing a measure to rein in this forfeiture power when wielded by law officers in that state. The move follows legislation by Congress a couple of years ago limiting federal agents' ability to seize assets. Forfeiture power, initiated on the hopeful premise it could undermine drug traffickers by depriving them of their lucre, has become a cynical game on the part of government. The ability to take possessions of alleged wrongdoers - it doesn't even have to involve the drug trade; it could be used against anyone presumed to be involved in any felonious activity - has turned into not only an unjustifiable penalty but also a reliable, and relied-upon, source of revenue for law enforcement. One lawmaker says police have seized cars, cell phones, jewelry and guns and then used them in subsequent undercover work - or sold the property and used the proceeds for pizzas, parties and, in the case of one police department, an aquarium. The pending Colorado legislation would redirect the property and proceeds from forfeitures toward services such as treatment programs and to innocent co-owners of the seized property, such as family members. Indeed, there have been cases around the country in which children were deprived of their homes because dad was thought to be a dope peddler. The reason authorities have been able to get away with it is that the assets are disposed of under civil rather than criminal laws, meaning the state has less to prove in court than it does in pressing criminal charges against the suspects themselves. That also means that even if the property's owner is tried and acquitted, he doesn't necessarily recover his belongings because it's a separate legal action. Often, the legal costs in fighting the civil case are prohibitive and sometimes, by the time the criminal case is resolved, the property as been auctioned off - with proceeds going to the local constabulary. Accordingly, the legislation aims to shift the burden of proof for civil forfeitures to the government and to raise the legal standard for seizures prior to a conviction. It would require that, in most cases, a property owner be convicted of a crime before any forfeiture. Texas and other states should follow Colorado's lead and protect property from being seized in cases where no crime has been proved. Law enforcement agencies' resources should not derive from arrests that didn't even result in a conviction. That, in effect, penalizes the innocent. Let's not sully law enforcement's noble mission by reducing it to thinly veiled piracy. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth