Pubdate: Fri, Apr 16 1999 Source: Oregonian, The (OR) Copyright: 1999 The Oregonian Contact: 1320 SW Broadway, Portland, OR 97201 Fax: 503-294-4193 Website: http://www.oregonlive.com/ Forum: http://forums.oregonlive.com/ Author: Ashbel S. Green, the Oregonian OREGON HIGH COURT OKS DOUBLE-JEOPARDY REVIEW A Claimant Contends The Civil Forfeiture Of A House And An Indictment Based On The Same Drug Case Were Unconstitutional As Alex Trebek might say, it's double-jeopardy time -- for the Oregon court system. On Thursday, the Oregon Supreme Court agreed to review a double jeopardy claim in a 1994 Portland case involving the civil forfeiture of a house and an indictment based on the same marijuana arrest. Double jeopardy, which means being punished twice for one crime, is prohibited under both the U.S. Constitution and the Oregon Constitution. The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that civil forfeiture is not punishment for purposes of considering a double-jeopardy claim. But the Oregon Supreme Court never has reviewed the state civil forfeiture statutes under the Oregon Constitution, according to lawyers familiar with the issue. Stephen Kanter, a professor at Northwestern School of Law of Lewis & Clark College, said the Oregon Constitution's ban on double jeopardy is broader than the U.S. Constitution's. "There is some cause for thinking that Oregon might take a different look," Kanter said. The decision to review State vs. Selness comes one day after the Oregon Court of Appeals ruled on a double-jeopardy claim involving a Portland ordinance that allows police to exclude drug defendants from certain neighborhoods before prosecution. The court upheld the practice, overturning a lower court ruling that the exclusion notice itself was punishment and that prosecution on top of that would then be double jeopardy. In another case, the Supreme Court on Thursday agreed to review a Court of Appeals ruling that college students with divorced parents can demand financial support for their education. An Oregon law provides that divorced or separated parents may be required to continue to pay support while a child aged 18 to 21 attends school. In 1998, a Multnomah County judge declared the law unconstitutional, saying it imposed a financial burden on unmarried parents that is not imposed on married parents. The judge said there was no rational basis for creating separate classes of parents. The Oregon Court of Appeals reversed the decision in December, saying the state has an interest in looking out for the child when the parents may be blinded by the bitterness of their divorce. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake