Pubdate: Mon, 18 Feb 2008 Source: Rapid City Journal (SD) Copyright: 2008 The Rapid City Journal Contact: http://www.rapidcityjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1029 Author: Kevin Woster Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) STORAGE FACILITY TO BE BUILT TO HOUSE DRUG CARS Attorney General Larry Long will get to build a new, secured building in the Rapid City area to store vehicles confiscated in drug busts and other criminal cases, presuming that Gov. Mike Rounds agrees with a bill passed by the South Dakota Legislature. The state Senate gave final legislative approval on Tuesday to HB1068, which authorizes Long to spend up to $100,000 from a drug-control fund in his office budget to build a structure to store confiscated vehicles - mostly through busts on drug dealers. Long said the new building is needed because thieves have been raiding confiscated vehicles in the storage area now used in Rapid City. "We've had kind of a problem with the vehicles we seize and have to hold for several months," Long said. "All are drug-bust vehicles. We've either taken the vehicle because it was either directly related to a drug seizure or in rare instances it might be a vehicle forfeited because it was an asset a drug dealer owned and we could trace some relationship to the drug transaction." Many of the vehicles have been confiscated through drug busts by South Dakota Highway Patrol officers, he said. Long wouldn't say where the vehicles are now kept in Rapid City, or where the secure building will be built. It will be on property already owned by the state, however. Long said he didn't know how big the building would be. "I don't know how big a pole barn you can build for $100,000. We're not going to build it for two or three vehicles," he said. "It's going to be big enough to store quite a few vehicles." HB1068, which was sent on to the governor last week, had passed the House 65-3. But it was initially rejected by the Senate Appropriations Committee on an 8-1 vote. Committee members wanted to know more about the level of money in the drug-control fund. They also wondered why the confiscated vehicles couldn't be secured somewhere on existing government property. Long and his staff maintained that the new building was the best solution. The Senate Appropriations Committee reconsidered the bill and approved it 7-1, followed by 30-3 approval on the Senate floor. Sen. Ryan Maher, D-Isabel, was the lone vote of opposition in committee and one of three to vote against it on the Senate floor. Maher said Sunday that he believes in the confiscation program but still thinks there must an existing storage option. "You would think between the three forms of government in Rapid City - - state, county and city - there would be something out there they could utilize before they spent the $100,000," Maher said. "I know the money's there in the fund. I know they probably need to spend it. But it seems like the state never quits building." Vehicles seized by law-enforcement officers in drug busts or other illegal activity must go through a court process in which law enforcement proves that the seizure was justified. In some instances, the court determines the vehicles should be returned. In others the state might keep and use the vehicle. Mostly, the vehicles are sold at auction, typically after being stored from a few weeks to a year or some, Long said. Sometimes the previous owners of the vehicle negotiate to buy them back from the state. That has happened with motorcycles seized at the Sturgis rally, Long said. "Those guys want their bicycles back," he said. A new law set to take effect in July would add the option of a jury trial for people trying to recover seized property. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake