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- Date: 27 May 1993 09:47:47 -0500 (EST)
- From: Patty Neill <PNPJ@db1.cc.rochester.edu>
- To: civ@delfin.com
-
- What follows is the first page of the Drug Agents Guide. Pay
- close attention to the last paragraph--it says that "law
- enforcement has the potential, through forfeiture, of producing
- more income than it spends." This is a very frightening power in
- the hands of government.
-
- Drug Agents' Guide to Forfeiture of Assets (1987 Revision)
-
- I. Introduction
- Forfeiture is an ancient doctrine that has survived for thousands
- of years. It is now an established part of American Law. Yet,
- until recently, it has played a very insignificant role in our
- stuggle with crime. As a result, few schools offer courses on
- forfeiture; and few legal experts exist in the area.
- Only a handful of police, lawyuers and citizens are even aware of
- the concept.
-
- Over the last decade, several events have occurred which are
- changing this picture. In 1970, Congress passed the first
- criminal forfeiture statutes in United States history. 18 U.S.C.
- 1962, 1963; 21 U.S.C. 848. Their purpose is to seize the
- ill-g0otten gains of organized crime figures. In 1978,
- Congress amended the civil forfeituresections of federal law to
- permit the seizure of all monies used in and all proceeds
- acquired from the illegal drug trade. 21 U.S.C. 881 (a) (6). This
- is the first United States statute to permit the civil
- forfeitureof the accumulated profits of criminal activity. And,
- in 1974, the Supremem Court of the United States reviewd the law
- of forfeiture and upheld it against constitutional attack. IN
- 1984, Congress again amended the civil forfeiture provisions to
- allow forfeiture of real property used to facilitate drug
- violations; substantially expanded other civil forfeiture
- provisions, and added a criiminal felony forfeiture provision (21
- U.S.C. 853).
-
- As a result, drug agents now have a very real, a very powerful,
- new weapon to strike at the profits of crime. No longer will
- investigators be restricted to arresting traffickers and seizing
- drugs. The means now exist to seize the third element of every
- criminal organization; namely, the illegally accumulated
- assets of its members.
-
- In addition, forfeitures produce vast amounts of revenue. Law
- enforcement has the potential, through forfeiture, of producing
- more income than it spends. With tax dollars becoming scarce,
- forfeiture holds the promise of improving drug enforcement and
- the method to use the assets of violators to support enforcement
- activities (Public Law 98-473, 10/14/84, 28 U.S.C. 524 (c)). The
- long-range implications are enormous.
- **************************************
-
- I've looked over the guide, and I strongly recommend that
- everyone else try to get a copy too. Civil forfeiture law makes
- cf easy for law enforcement agents. All they need for seizure is
- probable cause. Hearsay is an acceptable part of probable cause.
- Once probable cause is "proven" then the burden of proof shifts
- to the citizen. I'll try to do some extracting and send it to the
- group, but I won't have the time to type the whole thing. Let me
- know if even extracting is worth your time, and mine.
-
- Patricia Neill
-
- ============================================================================
-
- Date: 28 May 1993 13:30:08 -0500 (EST)
- From: Patty Neill <PNPJ@db1.cc.rochester.edu>
- To: civ@delfin.com
- Message-Id: <01GYPL5GVVJM96VPLK@DBV>
-
- The _Drug Agents' Guide to Forfeiture of Assets
- (1987 Revision), from the Department of "Justice", Drug
- Enforcement Administration. The OCLC number is 07507214, written
- by Harry I. Myers and Joseph P. Brzostowski. It includes notes,
- biblio, court cases, history of forfeiture law and enforcement in
- the US, and basically describes (with examples) how drug agents
- should proceed.
-
- Page 2
-
- The immediate challenge, however, is to learn the law of
- forfeiture and teach it to others who have a need to know. This
- will not be easy. It will not happen overnight. The process of
- educating thousands of state and federal agents, prosecutors and
- judged on a previously ignored area of law will be a long one.
- The Drug Enforcement Administration hopes this Guide will
- simplify, and shorten, the educational process.
-
- A. Definition
-
- Forfeiture is the taking by the Government of property illegally
- used or acquired, without compensating the owner. US v Eight
- Rhodesian Statutes, 449 F. Supp. 193 (CD CAL. 1978); Mayo v US,
- 413 F. Supp 160 (ED ILL 1976); Kahn v. Janowski, 60 A.2nd 519 (MD
- 1947)
-
- B. History
-
- The concept of forfeiture can be traced as far back as the Old
- Testament. Chapter 21 of Exodus reveals the religious beginnings
- of modern forfeiture law:
-
- "28. If an ox gore a man or a woman, that they die: then the ox
- shall be surely stoned, and his flesh shall not be eaten; but the
- owner of the ox shall be quit."
-
- Note how Verse 28 subjected the ox to forfeiture (to God by being
- stoned), without regard to the guilt or innocence of the owner.
- Forfeiture under Verse 28 did not depend of criminally convicting
- anyone. If an ox gored someone to death, the owner lost his
- rights to the ox.
-
- Forfeitures similar to Verse 28 appeared in Roman law as early as
- 451 BC: "if a quadruped causes injury to anyone, let the owner
- tender him the estimated amount of the damage; and if he is
- unwilling to accept it, the owner shall . . . surrender the
- animal that caused the injury." 7 Twelve Tables 1, translated in
- 1 Scott, _The Civil Law_, 69 (1932).
-
- The ancient Greeks also forfeited things involved in certain
- wrongs. Aeschines the Greek (389-314 BC) noted: "(W)e banish
- beyond our borders sticks and stones and steal, voiceless and
- mindless things, if they chance to kill a man; and if a man
- commits suicide, bury the hand that struck the blow afar from the
- body." See Holmes, _The Common Law_ (1881).
-
- [page 3]
-
- Even the early Brittons recognized the concept of civil
- forfeiture: "where a man killeth another with the sword of John
- at Stile, the sword shall be forfeit as deodand, and yet no
- default is in the owner." (from a book written in 1530 on he
- reign of Edward the First of England), cited in _The common Law_,
- above at 24-26.
-
- Readers interested in tracing the history between these ancient
- laws and our modern forfeiture statutes should refer to
- Finklestein, _The Goring Ox: Some Historical Perspectives on
- Deodands, forfeitures, Wrongful Death and the Western Notion of
- Sovereignty_, 46 Temple Law Quarterly 169 (1973).
-
- C. Purpose
-
- Our ancestors created the concept of forfeiture out of a need for
- revenge--revenge against the offending thing, if not against its
- owner. Holmes, _The Common Law_ 34 (1881). Over the centuries,
- the concept of revenge has gradually faded from our laws, but he
- traditional doctrine of forfeiture remains. Today, forfeiture is
- used to protect the public from harmful objects, such as
- adulterated foods and sawed-off shotguns, and it is used to deter
- crime.
-
- The first seven chapters of this Guide are devoted to "civil"
- forfeiture law. The eighth discusses "criminal" forfeiture. And,
- the ninth probes the practical problems facing agents
- investigating cases involving substantial drug-related assets.
-
- II. EVIDENCE & DEFENSES
-
- The forfeitability of property depends upon: (1) The scope of the
- forfeiture statute involved; (2) the kinds of evidence usable to
- prove forfeiture; and (3) the existence of any defenses. These
- questions are so interrelated that it is difficult to discuss
- one, without discussing the others. Nevertheless, we must start
- somewhere.
-
- Because a knowledge of the evidentiary rules and defenses is
- fundamental to an understanding of forfeiture, they are discussed
- first. This provides an overview of the law and facilitates the
- later use of examples to explain the forfeiture statutes.
-
- A. FORFEITURES ARE CIVIL ACTIONS AGAINST PROPERTY
-
- Unless a forfeiture statute expressly requires a conviction, it
- is considered a civil action against property, [page 4] totally
- independent of any criminal action against anyone.
-
- [list of court cases, I will list only a few]
-
- Authorities
- S.Ct. Calero-Toledo v. Pearson Yacht Leasing Co., 94 S.Ct.
- 2080 (1974).
-
- 10 Cir. US v One 1975 Thunderbird, 576 F.2d 834 (1978); Bramble
- v Richardson, 498 F.2d 968 (1974).
-
- [rest of list deleted]
-
- [page 5]
-
- DISCUSSION
-
- To understand this principle it is helpful to distinguish between
- legal proceedings _in personam_ and legal proceedings _in rem_.
- It is also helpful to distinguish between criminal proceedings
- and civil proceedings.
-
- 1. _In Personam v. In Rem_
-
- In personam refers to any legal proceeding directed _against an
- individual_, that will determine his _personal obligations_,
- rights, duties or liabilities.
-
- _In rem_ refers to any legal proceeding directed _solely against
- property_, that will determine to _ownership_ of that property.
-
- [page 6]
-
- The differences between these two types of proceedings are very
- significant:
- a. The defendant in an in personam proceeding is a person; the
- defendant in an in rem proceeding is an object, or property.
-
- b. In personam proceedings may impose personal obligations or
- liabilities upon the parties to the action; in rem proceedings
- are limited to determining ownership of property and cannot
- impose personal obligations on anyone. Freedman v. Alderson, 7
- S.Ct. 165 (1886).
-
- c. In personam decisions affect only the parties to the
- proceedings; in rem decisions affect "the whole world"--including
- unknown claimants. Van Oster v. Kansas, 47 S. Ct. 144 (1926);
- Gelston v. Hoyt, 3 Wheat. 247 (1818).
-
- c. The power of a court to issue in personam decisions depends
- upon its ability to get personal jurisdiction over the parties;
- the power of a court in in rem decisions does not depend upon
- having jurisdiction over anyone. Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 US 714, 24
- L.Ed. 565 (1878).
-
- In short, in personam and in rem proceedings are distinct legal
- actions, totally independent of one another. Readers interested
- in a more detailed analysis of in rem actions should see Fraser,
- Actions in Rem, 34 Cornell Law Quarterly 29-49 (1948). And see
- Shaffer v. Heitner, 97 S. Ct. 2569 (1977).
-
- 2. Civil v. Criminal
-
- Law is broadly divided into two categories: civil and criminal.
- The rules of evidence, the rules of procedure, the standards of
- proof, and the available defenses differ with each category.
-
- Generally, the purposes of civil law are to determine private
- rights, and to compensate for harm. The purpose of criminal law,
- on the other, is to punish wrongdoers. But this division,
- although useful, has never been perfect. Punishment can be, and
- often has been, imposed in civil proceedings. For example, if you
- deliberately harm someone, he can sue you in a civil action for
- his losses (compensation). He can also demand "punitive damages"
- or "smart money." Punitive damages are a civil "fine" [page 7]
- intended to punish deliberately harmful conduct. Prossner, Law of
- Torts, 4th ed. (1971).
-
- Many statutes are "penal" in nature even though they are civil in
- form. The federal Controlled Substances Act, for example,
- contains a $25,000 civil penalty for violations of the law by
- doctors, pharmacies, drug companies and other drug registrants
- (21 USC 842). For an excellent discussion of so-called "civil"
- punishment, see Clark, Civil and Criminal Penalties and
- Forfeiture: A Framework for Constitutional Analysis, 60 Minnesota
- Law Review 279-500 (1976).
-
- Forfeiture of otherwise legitimate property is a punishment that
- can be imposed in either civil or criminal actions.
-
- [sect. deleted]
-
- 4. Civil Forfeiture
-
- There was a second form of forfeiture recognized in old England.
- It as an in rem proceeding against property [page 8] which had
- been involved in some wrong. The proceedings were totally
- independent of any criminal action taken against the owner. The
- Palmyra, 12 Wheat. 1, 6 L.Ed. 531 (1827).
-
- All forfeiture statutes were presumed to be civil, in rem
- proceedings, unless they expressly required a criminal conviction
- as a condition to forfeiture. In Re Various Items of Personal
- Property, 51 SCt 282 (1931).
-
- The American Colonies adopted these civil, in rem forfeitures and
- began applying them to contraband imports and to ships
- transporting contraband. CJ Henry Co v. Moore, 63 S Ct 499, 503
- (1943) [some cases deleted]
-
- The first Congress of the United States passed civil, in rem
- forfeitures on pirate ships, ships violating the customs laws,
- and slave ships. See Calero-Toledo v. Pearson Yacht Leasing Co.
-
- For more than 200 years, Congress has continued to pass civil, in
- rem, forfeiture statutes on a wide range of property: [cases
- listed in guide deleted here--you all can let me know if you want
- me to list them.]
-
- [page 9]
-
- Because these forfeitures have the effect, if not the purpose, of
- punishing owners, they have been referred to as "quasi-criminal"
- in character. [deleted] As we shall see, this characterization is
- relevant only to the application of the "Exclusionary Rule" to
- forfeitures.
-
- For all other purposes, civil, in rem forfeitures are considered
- independent civil proceedings.
-
- B. PROBABLE CAUSE IS ENOUGH TO BEGIN A CIVIL FORFEITURE
-
- A preliminary showing of "probable cause" to believe property was
- used illegally is all that is needed to start a forfeiture
- action. Proof beyond a reasonable doubt is not required. A prima
- facie case is not required. The same probable cause standard used
- to arrest, search or seize is enough to begin a forfeiture.
-