Pubdate: Mon, 19 Nov 2007 Source: Montgomery Advertiser (AL) Copyright: 2007 The Advertiser Co. Contact: http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/customerservice/letter.htm Website: http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1088 Note: Letters from the newspaper's circulation area receive publishing priority Author: Francis X. Gilpin Cited: Forfeiture Endangers American Rights http://www.fear.org Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) MOTORIST WANTS SEIZED CASH BACK Police narcotics officers grabbed $8,000 in cash from a Montgomery man during a traffic stop last year. Sixteen months later, there are no drug charges -- and no cash. Jacquard R. Merritt wants his money back. City police say they don't have it anymore. The cash was handed over to federal agents, who deposited it into a forfeiture fund. In a filing in Montgomery County Circuit Court, a lawyer for Merritt accused a Montgomery police narcotics squad he said is called the "Jump Street" squad of "random stopping and searching of young black men" as part of the "war on drugs." Montgomery attorney Joe M. Reed claims city police "funneled the seized currency" to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration "to deliberately frustrate" Merritt when they knew they "had no probable cause to seize" the money in the first place. Merritt, who is black, was arrested after the traffic stop July 28, 2006. The 28-year-old Montgomery resident was booked on misdemeanor charges stemming from outstanding domestic violence warrants after police could not find illegal drugs on him or in the automobile, Reed said. Montgomery police referred questions about Merritt's funds to the DEA and the city attorney's office. A woman who refused to identify herself at the DEA's Montgomery office said during a brief telephone conversation that she was familiar with the case and that it was under investigation. Efforts to reach DEA spokespersons in Atlanta and Washington were unsuccessful. City attorney Kimberly O. Fehl also couldn't be contacted. Since federal law enforcement officials now have the money, Merritt's attorney has since filed another lawsuit in federal court asking for the money's return. The circuit court suit that Reed filed contends that police attempted to intimidate Merritt when he returned to police headquarters to ask for his money to be returned. It quotes Merritt as saying an officer named T.D. James threatened to charge him with conspiracy, "if he persisted in his attempt to recover his funds." The suit says James told Merritt not to worry about the money because his attorney was lying to him about not being charged, and that a federal indictment was going to be brought against him on conspiracy charges. As of Friday, no federal charges had been filed against Merritt in Alabama. Eugene W. Reese, a Montgomery County circuit judge, ordered the city to return the money to Merritt last December unless forfeiture proceedings were initiated. Fehl, the city's attorney in the case, said in a court filing that Reed was notified that Merritt's money would be forfeited to the federal government Sept. 29, 2006. U.S. Marshals Service forfeiture specialist Karen A. Chavers said Reed put in a claim for the money, but that the claim was five days too late. DEA attorney John J. Cipriani declared Merritt's money officially forfeited Jan. 30. The federal government planned to engage in what Chavers called "equitable sharing" of the proceeds, court records show. Brenda Grantland, a California lawyer and critic of government forfeiture statutes, said that from her experience in looking into these cases, she believes the DEA probably will keep 20 percent of the money and give the rest back to Montgomery police. Grantland, president of the Forfeiture Endangers American Rights Foundation, said Merritt's case is typical. While cash seizures without drug arrests used to be confined to certain jurisdictions, Grantland said such forfeitures are more commonplace today. "They're flourishing everywhere," said Grantland, whose foundation goes by the acronym FEAR. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake