Source: San Antonio News-Express Contact: Website: http://www.expressnews.com/ Pubdate: 18 Aug 1998 Author: Gloria Padilla and Jacque Crouse Express-News Staff Writers SEIZED PROPERTY AIDS POLICE COFFERS DA Says Practice Will Continue Despite Ethical Objections Raised By Some From sheets and pillowcases to partial interest in an off-Broadway play to the $4 million in cash found by a San Antonio police officer last week, law enforcement agencies are taking some of the profit from crime and suspected criminal activity. Over the past several years, millions of seized dollars have been handed over to local law officers to help bankroll their fight against criminals. People suspected of criminal wrongdoing often have walked away from seized goods and let court forfeiture proceedings go unchallenged -- even though they face no criminal charges. District Attorney Steve Hilbig said that while some people may argue it's wrong to go after cash and property when there is only a suspicion of illegal activity, his office will continue to do it. "In many cases there may never be sufficient evidence to charge somebody (with criminal wrongdoing)," Hilbig said. "There is no such crime as illegal possession of money. But if our common sense tells us it is illegal money, we will go after it." A prime example, Hilbig said, is the $4 million in cash San Antonio Police Officer David Sczepanik came upon during a routine truck inspection last week. Police seized the money, but the driver, apparently unaware of his cargo, was not charged with a crime. The $4 million has not been claimed. "Last time I checked, Frost Bank did not use 18-wheelers to transport money, they use armored trucks," Hilbig said. U.S. Attorney Bill Blagg said asset forfeiture laws give law enforcement another tool to "take the profit out of otherwise profitable crime." During the first six months of 1998, Hilbig's staff obtained $289,363 in forfeitures. The U.S. attorney's office here had forfeitures of $5,219,793 throughout the district from January through July. Assistant U.S. Attorney David Rosado, in charge of asset forfeitures in El Paso, said his office routinely sees cars, trucks and airplanes -- including a Lear Jet worth $1 million that once was the property of Mexican drug kingpin Amado Carillo Fuentes. Forfeiture cases are filed against cash and personal property believed to be derived from illegal activity -- usually drug trafficking -- and are separate from criminal actions taken against the property owner. Most federal forfeitures are civil. While most have involved drug cases, Rosado noted new federal laws have prompted forfeitures in cases involving health care fraud, counterfeiting and immigration. "The theory is that no matter what the crime, people should not be allowed to profit from it," he said. "Some people contest forfeiture, some do not." Rosado said most forfeiture actions are not contested, though some civil cases are. "We have had people come in and say they were renting the house to their nephew, for instance, and that they had no idea he was growing marijuana in there," Rosado said. "If they can show that is the case, we don't seize the property." While the majority of the forfeiture cases involve cash and vehicles, other items occasionally surface. A few years ago, the state of Texas became the owner of eight pairs of brand new shorts, still in their wrappers, after the owner failed to claim them in court. The shorts -- size and color unspecified -- were kept by the state along with $775 in cash, sheets, pillowcases and other items because no one answered the lawsuit. The items had been confiscated by police during a drug raid and were later sold at auction. Federal prosecutors in the Western District of Texas do both criminal and civil forfeitures, and over the years have seized homes, ranches, race horses, vehicles, boats, airplanes and jewelry. "When I was in the Eastern District of Texas, the most unusual thing we ever had forfeited was a part interest in an off-Broadway play," said Darryl Fields, a U.S. attorney's office spokesman. A marijuana trafficker had used drug proceeds to buy a stake in the play, making it a seizable asset. "We got royalty checks for about two years, as long as the play was running," Fields said. Assistant District Attorney Leslie Sachanowicz, who handles many forfeiture cases in state court, could recall only one case in which the owner of the money demanded a jury trial. A Rio Grande Valley man claimed the money stashed in a hollowed-out phone book was a personal loan from his friend "Gordo" in Florida. The man's attorney, Arturo Cantu of McAllen, argued his client, who had no criminal record, had done nothing wrong. The jury awarded the $7,900 in question to the state. Cantu said most people do not challenge forfeiture proceedings because it is "too expensive to fight." The legal fees will run from $10,000 to $20,000 for a jury trial on a forfeiture case, he said. The forfeiture statute does not allow those fighting the action to recover attorney's fees from the state if they prevail in court. Cantu said he lowered his fee in the phone book case because he felt what was done to his client was unjust. Cantu added, "It's very hard to bring evidence you're not a drug dealer." In cases where there is a possibility that criminal activity may have been involved, Cantu said, people may have the money to launch a legal battle but hesitate for different reasons. "They don't want to waive their Fifth Amendment right (against self-incrimination)," he said. Hilbig's office has a contract with most local law enforcement agencies that gives his office a percentage of the forfeiture. After the seized assets become state or federal property, the law requires the forfeited funds be spent on law enforcement. "We share our funds with the smaller suburban cities like Leon Valley and Live Oak," Hilbig said. Forfeiture money has been used to buy cameras for DWI patrols and computers. In the federal system, Fields said, 80 percent of the cash from federal forfeitures must go back to local law enforcement, and 20 percent goes into Justice Department coffers. Saturday, Aug 15, 1998 - --- Checked-by: willtoo