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- From: mattair@sun44.synercom.hounix.org (Charles Mattair)
- Newsgroups: comp.org.eff.talk
- Subject: HR 2417 - Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act
- Message-ID: <1993Jun23.223645.25167@sun44.synercom.hounix.org>
- Date: 23 Jun 93 22:36:45 GMT
-
- Representative Henry J. Hyde (R-Illinois, 6) has filed the Civil Asset
- Forfeiture Reform Act (HR 2417). The bill is expected to be taken up
- before Ways and Means (I don't know which subcommittee if any).
-
- Attached is an analysis made by the Hyde's office and a paper mailed out
- which goes into more detail as to the justifications for the changes.
-
- I'll post the actual text of the bill if anybody asks - it's not included
- here for two reasons: (1) the analysis is more understandable and (2) my
- scanner does not like the fonts they use in a bill - I have to type it in :-(.
-
- All material is as prepared by Hyde's office - all typos are mine. If
- something doesn't make sense - send me Email and I'll check against the
- originals.
-
- Contact your congresscritters.
-
- SECTION-BY-SECTION ANALYSIS OF THE CIVIL ASSET FORFEITURE REFORM ACT OF 1993
- AS INTRODUCED BY U.S. REP. HENRY J. HYDE
-
- Section 1. Short Title
-
- Section 2. Limitation of Customs and Tax Exemption under the Tort Claims
- Procedures
-
- The U.S. Code at Title 28, sec. 2680(c), provides that the federal
- government may not be sued for torts arising from "the detention of any
- goods or merchandise by any officer of customs or excise or any other
- law-enforcement officer." The Act modifies this section to ensure that
- claims can be brought if "based on the negligent destruction, injury,
- or loss of goods or merchandise (including real property) while in the
- possession of any officer of customs or excise or any other law-
- enforcement officer." Thus, property owners are given the right to
- sue for property negilgently damaged after being seized in ultimately
- unsuccessful civil forfeiture proceedings.
-
- Section 3. Longer Period for Filing Claims in Certain In Rem Proceedings
-
- Rule C(6) of the Supplemental Rules for Certain Admiralty and Maritime
- Claims states that "[t]he claimant of property that is the subject of
- an action in rem shall file a claim within 10 days after process has
- been executed . . . ." The Act extends this period in which a property
- owner can contest a seizure the customs laws to 60 days.
-
- Section 4. Burden of Proof in Forfeiture Proceedings
-
- The U.S. Code at Title 19, sec. 1615, allocates the burden of proof in
- civil forfeiture proceedings brought pursuant to the customs laws.
- "[T]he burden of proof shall lie upon [the] claimant . . . . [p]rovided,
- that probable cuase shall be first shown for the institution of such
- suit or action [by the government]." The Act provides that the burden
- of proof shall not switch to the claimant, but shall at all times remain
- with the government. The government must "establish, by clear and
- convincing evidence, that the property was subject to forfeiture."
-
- Section 5. Claim after Seizure
-
- The U.S. Code at Title 19, sec. 1608, provides that:
-
- [A person contesting a civil forfeiture under the customs laws
- must] at any time within twenty days from the date of the first
- publication of the notice of seizure file . . . a claim stating
- his interest therein. Upon the filing of such claim, and the
- giving of a bond to the United States in the penal sum of $5,000
- or 10 percent of the value of the claimed property, whichever is
- lower, but not less than $250 . . . such customs officer shall
- transmit such claim and bond . . . to the United States attorney
- for the district in which seizure was made, who shall proceed
- to a condemnation of the merchandise or other property . . . .
-
- The Act modifies section 1608 in three ways:
-
- 1) The Act extends the period under which a claim has to be filed from
- 20 to 60 days, to make it consistent with section 3 of the act.
-
- 2) The Act eliminates the cost bond requirement.
-
- 3) The Act adds a subsection to section 1608 providing that court
- appointed counsel shall be provided to claimants who are "financially
- unable to obtain representation of counsel." Compensation shall be
- equivalent to that provided for court-appointed counsel under
- 18 U.S.C sec. 3006A -- up to $3,500 for representation before a trial
- court and up to $2,500 for representation before an appelate court.
-
- Section 6. Release of Seized Property for Substantial Hardship
-
- The Act specifies that property can be released if continued possession
- by the government would cause the claimant substantial hardship. However,
- conditions may be placed on release as are appropriate to preserve the
- availability of the property or its equivalent for forfeiture should
- the government eventually win.
-
- Section 7. Justice Assets Forfeiture Fund
-
- The Act provides that funds to pay court-appointed counsel under section
- 5 of the Act shall come from the Justice Assets Forfeiture Fund.
-
- Section 8. Clarification Regarding Forfeitures Under the Controlled
- Substances Act
-
- The U.S. Code at Title 21, section 881(a)(7), provides that real
- property used to commit or to facilitate a federal drug crime is
- forfeitable unless the vilation was "committed or omitted without
- the knowledge or consent of [the] owner." This is meant to protect
- innocent owners. However, a number of federal courts have seriously
- eroded the provision's protections by ruling that the owner must have
- both had no knowledge of and provided no consent to the prohibited
- use of the property. The Act would clarify the meaning of this
- provision by changing the applicable language to "either without the
- knowledge of th[e] owner or without the consent of th[e] owner."
-
- Section 9. Applicability
-
- The Act applies with respect to actions filed on or after the date
- of enactment.
-
- Long paper describing abuses with civil forfeiture follows. Hit N if
- you don't want to read it.
-
- INCIDENTS
-
-
- * Willie Jones is the black owner of a landscaping service who paid for an
- airline ticket in cash. This "suspicious" behavior caused the ticket
- agent to alert Nashville police. (1) A search of Jones and his luggage
- yielded no drugs. However, he did have a wallet containing $9,600 in
- cash on which a police dog detected traces of drugs (apparently true of
- 97% of all currency now in circulation). The cash was promptly seized
- despite protestations that it was intended for the purchase of shrubbery
- from growers. No arrest was made. However, the seizure nearly drove
- Jones out of business. He is unable to purchase the $960 bond necessary
- to mount a challenge. (2)
-
- * Jacksonville University professor Craig Klein's new $24,000 sailboat was
- subjected to a fruitless drug search by U.S. Customs Service Agents. In
- their 7-hour search, the boat was damaged beyond repair. The engine was
- chopped up with a fire axe, the fuel tank was ruptured and 30 holes were
- drilled in the hull. Mr. Klein sold the ship for scrap. (3)
-
- * Billy and Karon Munnerlyn owned and operated an air charter service. In
- October 1989, Mr. Munnerlyn was hired to fly Albert Wright from Little
- Rock, Arkansas to Ontario, California. DEA agents seized Mr. Wright's
- luggage and found $2.7 million inside. Both he and Mr. Munnerlyn were
- arrested. Though the charges against Mr. Munnerlyn were quickly dropped
- for lack of evidence, the government refused to release the airplane
- (The charges against Mr. Wright, a convicted cocaine dealer, were
- eventually dropped as well.). Mr. Munnerlyn spent over $85,000 in legal
- fees trying to get his plane back. Though a Los Angeles jury awarded him
- the return of his airplane -- he had no knowledge that he was transporting
- drug money -- a U.S. District Judge reversed the jury's verdict. Munnerlyn
- was forced to declare bankruptcy and is now forced to drive a truck for a
- living. He eventually spent $7,000 to buy his plane back. However, the
- DEA caused about $100,000 of damage. The agency is not liable for the
- damage, and there is no way (4) that Mr. Munnerlyn can raise the money
- to re-start his business.
-
- * A 61-year old California man, Donald Scott, was shot dead in front of his
- wife when 30 local, state, and federal agents attempted to serve him with
- a search warrant enabling them to inspect his 200-acre ranch in Malibu for
- cultivated marijuana. He had brandished a handgun during the confusion of
- the early morning raid. The Ventura County District Attorney's office
- found that:
-
- Upon receiving information from the informant, [Los Angeles County
- Sheriff's Deputy] Spencer originally thought that thousands of marijuana
- plants might be growing at the ranch. Efforts to confirm the presence
- of marijuana were unsuccessful. He was unable to see marijuana from the
- top of the waterfall and the Border Patrol did not see any plants during
- two attempts to do so. [DEA Special] Agent Stowell claimed to see only
- a relatively few plants, based solely on their color, but was unwilling
- to be the basis for a search warrant without corroboration.
-
- It is inherently unlikely that Agent Stowell could see marijuana plants
- suspended under trees in a densely vegetated area through naked-eye
- observations from 1000 feet. His failure to take photographs is
- unexplained,and when the warrant was executed, no evidence of
- cultivation was found. Based on all of the evidence, it is the
- District Attorney's conclusion that there was never marijuana being
- cultivated on the property as reported by Stowell.
-
- Real property used to cultivate marijuana may be forfeited under federal
- law. "It is the District Attorney's opinion that the Los Angeles County
- Sheriff's Department was motivated, at least in part, by a desire to
- seize and forfeit the ranch [adjacent to the Santa Monica Mountains
- National Recreation Area] for the government." (5)
-
- * Police found five hundred marijuana plants growing on a retiree's 37-acre
- farm. Delmar Puryear, who had retired with a disability and could not
- farm, insisted that he knew nothing about the plants. A jury apparently
- believed him, finding him innocent of state criminal charges. Despite
- this acquittal, the federal government refused to drop its efforts to
- seize the farm until Puryear agreed to pay $12,500. (6)
-
- * Michael Sandsness owned two gardening supply stores in Eugene and Portland,
- Oregon. Among the items sold were metal halide grow lights, which are
- used for growing indoor plants. The grow lights can be used to grow
- marijuana, but it is not illegal in itself to sell them. Because some
- marijuana gardens which were raided by the DEA had the lights, the agency
- began setting up a case to seize the business. The DEA began sending
- undercover agents to the stores who tried without success to get employees
- to give advice on growing marijuana. Finally, agents engaged in a
- conversation with an employee, and asked him for advice on the amount of
- heat or noise generated by the lights, making oblique comments suggesting
- they would want to avoid detection and making a comment about High Times
- magazine but never actually mentioning marijuana. The employee then sold
- the agents grow lights. The DEA then raided the stores, seizing inventory
- and bank accounts. Agents approached the landlord of one of the stores
- and told him that if he did not evict the tenant, the building would be
- seized. The landlord reluctantly evicted them. While the forfeiture case
- was pending, the business was destroyed. Sandsness was forced to sell
- the inventory not seized in order to pay off creditors. (7)
-
- WHAT IS CIVIL ASSET FORFEITURE?
-
- Civil forfeiture descends from a medieval English practice whereby an
- object responsible for an accidental death was forfeited to the king,
- who "would provide the [proceeds, the "deodand"] for masses to be said for
- the good of the dead man's soul . . . or [would] insure that the deodand
- was put to charitable uses."(8) The forfeiture is based on the legal fiction
- that inanimate objects can themselves be "guilty" of wrongdoing.
-
- All the government need show to justify a seizure is probable cause that the
- property is subject to forfeiture. Unlike criminal forfeiture, civil
- forfeiture requires no antecedent criminal conviction of the property owner.
- Even the acquittal of, the property's owner does not bar its forfeiture. (9)
- Today, 80% of those who lose property to the government through civil
- forfeitures are never charged with any crime. (10) Since civil forfeiture
- does not threaten deprivation of liberty, the government need not adhere to
- the constitutionally required safeguards of criminal prosecutions. In fact,
- if the erstwhile property owner sues the government to get the property back,
- he or she has the burden of proving that it is not subject to forfeiture.
- In essence, the standard is guilty unless proven innocent!
-
- Rarely used in America until recently, forfeiture has flourished as a weapon
- in the war on drugs. However, there are over 100 different federal
- forfeiture statutes, both criminal and civil. They range from the
- forfeiture of animals seized from animal-fighting impresarios (11) and
- cigarettes seized from smugglers (12) to property gotten from violations
- of RICO (the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act). (13)
-
- The Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970 contains the
- federal anti-drug civil asset forfeiture provisions:
-
- (The Act provides for the forfeiture of] all controlled substances which
- have Open manufactured, distributed, dispensed, or acquired (14) . . . [,]
- all raw materials, products, and equipment . . . which are used, or
- intended for use, in manufacturing . . . delivering, importing, or
- exporting [such] controlled substance[s] (15) . . . [all] property
- which is used, or intended for use, as a container for forfeitable
- controlled substances (16) . . . [, and] all conveyances, including
- aircraft, vehicles, or vessels, which are used, or intended for use,
- to transport, or in any manner to facilitate the transportation, sale,
- receipt, possession or concealment [of such controlled substances.] (17)
-
- In 1978, the Act was amended to provide for civil forfeiture of "[a]ll
- moneys . . . or other things of value furnished or intended to be furnished
- by any person in exchange for a controlled substance . . . [, and] all
- proceeds traceable to such in exchange. (18) In 1984, the Act was amended
- to provide for civil forfeiture of "all real property . . . which is used,
- or intended to be used, in any manner or part, to commit or to facilitate
- the commission of a violation (of the Act)." (19)
-
-
- HOW MUCH MONEY DOES THE GOVERNMENT TAKE IN?
-
- Prior to 1984, the money realized from civil forfeiture was deposited in the
- general fund of the United States Treasury. Now it primarily goes to the
- Department of Justice's Asset Forfeiture Fund (with some going to the
- Department of the Treasury's Forfeiture Fund). (20) The money is then
- used for forfeiture-related expenses and law enforcement purposes.
-
- The amount deposited in the Department of Justice Assets Forfeiture Fund
- has increased from $27 million in fiscal year 1985 to $531 million in
- 1992. (21) Of the amount taken in 1992, $362 million was in cash and $114
- million was in proceeds of forfeitable property; $230 million of the
- total was returned to state and local law enforcement agencies who helped
- in investigations. (22) And $30 million in forfeited property was pressed
- into official use by federal law enforcement agencies or transferred to
- state and local law enforcement agencies. (23) The Department now has
- on hand an inventory in excess of 32,400 properties valued at more than
- $1.8 billion. (24) The U.S. Customs service seized property with a value
- of over $708 million in fiscal year 1992. (25)
-
-
- WHAT DOES THE CIVIL ASSET FORFEITURE REFORM ACT DO?
-
- 1) Switches Burden of Proof
-
- Currently, it is the property owner, not the government, who is assigned the
- burden of proof when he or she sues to try to get property back. All the
- government needs do is make an initial showing of probable cause that the
- property is "guilty;" the property owner must then establish by a preponderance
- of the evidence that the property is "innocent" or otherwise not subject to
- forfeiture. "This probable cause standard for seizure allows the government to
- dispossess property owners based only upon hearsay or innuendo -- 'evidence' of
- insufficient reliability to be admissible in a court of law." (26) While it
- has been argued that civil forfeiture is criminal (punitive) in nature and
- therefore should require the government to prove its case, courts have not
- accepted this argument. (27)
-
- The Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act puts the burden of proof where it belongs.
- The government would have to prove by clear and convincing evidence that the
- property is subject to forfeiture -- that the unlawful act on which the
- forfeiture is based actually occurred and that there is a sufficient nexus
- between the property and the unlawful act. (28) The standard of clear and
- convincing evidence is that standard used by the state of New York in its drug
- forfeiture law. (29) And it is the standard that the Supreme Court of Florida
- ruled was mandated by the Florida Constitution's due process clause:
- In forfeiture proceedings the state impinges on basic constitutional
- rights of individuals who may never have been formally charged with any
- civil or criminal wrongdoing. This Court has consistently held that the
- [Florida] constitution requires substantial burdens of proof where state
- action may deprive individuals of basic rights. (30)
-
-
- 2) Provides for the Appointment of Counsel for Indigents
-
- Currently, there is no constitutional right to appointed counsel in
- civil forfeiture cases. (31) This is one of the reasons why so few
- forfeitures are challenged.
-
- The Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act would provide representation of
- counsel for whomever is financially unable to obtain representation to
- challenge a federal civil forfeiture. Maximum compensation would not
- exceed $3,500 per attorney for representation before a U.S. district court
- and $2,500 per attorney for representation before an appellate court
- (equivalent to the maximums for appointed counsel in federal felony cases)."
- (32) These figures could be waived in cases of "extended or complex"
- representation where "excess payment is necessary to provide fair
- compensation and the payment is approved by the chief judge of the
- circuit." (33) Money will come from the Justice Assets Forfeiture Fund.
-
- 3) Protects Innocent Property owners
-
- Real property used to commit or to facilitate a federal drug crime is
- forfeitable unless the violation was "committed or omitted without the
- knowledge or consent of (the) owner." (34) This is of course meant to
- protect innocent owners. However, a number of federal courts have
- seriously eroded the provision's protections by ruling that the owner must
- have both had no knowledge of and provided no consent to the prohibited
- use of the property. (35) Such an interpretation would mean that property
- owners such as Jesse Bunch would be out of luck. (36) Mr. Bunch owned a
- bar and residential apartments in a highly active drug trafficking area.
- He did know of drug selling activity, but took many steps to prevent it.
- He fired two bartenders after they were arrested at the bar for drug
- violations, evicted two residents following their arrests, restricted use
- of the restrooms, posted signs advising patrons that they were subject to
- search and seizure, restricted the bar's hours of operations and
- periodically called police to report drug activity in the vicinity of
- his property. However, drug activity continued and the government
- seized the property.
-
- Luckily for Mr. Bunch, the court ruled that he was protected by the
- innocent owner defense because of his lack of consent to the illegal
- drug trafficking and his reasonable efforts to put it to an end.
- "Mr. Bunch, who was trying to eke out an income from a business located in
- a drug-infested area that posed great risks to the safety of him and his
- family . . . fulfilled his legal obligation." (37) This is only fair,
- and should be the proper interpretation of the innocent owner defense. The
- Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act would clarify that lack of consent to
- (including reasonable efforts to prevent) illegal activity is a valid
- defense to forfeiture by a property owner.
-
-
- 4) Eliminates the Cost Bond Requirement
-
- Currently, a property owner wanting to contest the seizure of property
- must give the court a bond of the lesser of $5,000 or 10% of the value of
- the property seized (but not less than $250). (38) This money will go to
- cover court and storage costs should the government win. The cost bond
- requirement is unconstitutional as applied to indigent claimants (39) and
- serves little purpose in other cases:
-
- There is no reason why a person whose property is seized by the
- government should have to post a bond to defray some of the government's
- litigation and storage expenses in order to have the right to a day in
- court to contest the forfeiture. Currently, over 80% of federal
- forfeitures are not being contested. One reason why so many forfeitures
- are not contested is the high cost of retaining counsel to defend a
- forfeiture action. The cost bond requirement is simply an additional
- financial burden on the claimant and an added deterrent to contesting
- the forfeiture . . . . (40)
-
- The Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act would abolish the cost bond requirement.
-
-
- 5) Provides a Reasonable Time Period for Challenging a Forfeiture
-
- Currently, if a property owner wants to challenge a forfeiture, he or she
- must "file his claim within 10 days after process has been executed." (41)
- This time period is woefully inadequate:
-
- Even assuming that notice is published the next day after process is
- executed, the reader of the notice will have a mere nine days to file
- a timely claim. Most local rules require that notice be published for
- three successive weeks, on the assumption that interested parties will
- not necessarily see the first published notice. But by the time the
- second notice is published, more than ten days will have elapsed from
- the date process was executed. Thus anyone who misses the first
- published notice will be unable to comply with the exceedingly short
- time limitation for filing a claim. (42)
-
- Even though this time limit is sometimes ignored in the interests of justice,
- failure to file a timely claim can result in judgment in favor of the
- government.
-
- The Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act would lengthen this period to 60 days.
-
-
- 6) Provides a Remedy for Property Damage Caused by Government Negligence
-
- Currently, the federal government is exempted from liability under the
- Federal Tort Claims Act for damage caused by the negligent handling or
- storage of property detained by law enforcement officers. (43) Property
- awaiting forfeiture often devalues in value:
-
- Seized conveyances devalue from aging, lack of care, inadequate storage,
- and other factors while awaiting forfeiture. They often deteriorate --
- engines freeze, batteries die, seals shrink and leak oil, boats sink,
- salt air and water corrode metal surfaces, barnacles accumulate on boat
- hulls, and windows crack from heat. On occasion, vandals steal or
- seriously damage conveyances. (44)
-
- Vacant and boarded-up real property is especially subject to deterioration.
- And sometimes, government agents utterly destroy property in futile searches
- for contraband.
-
- The Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act would simply allow property owners to
- sue the government for negligence.
-
-
- 7) Allows for the Return of Property Pending Final Disposition of a Case
-
- Currently, customs law does allow for the release of property pending final
- disposition of a case upon payment of a full bond. (45) However, a property
- owner who cannot afford to secure such a bond is out of luck. Especially
- when the property is used in a business, its lack of availability for the
- time necessary to win a victory in court can force an owner into bankruptcy.
- often, the property owner must settle with the government for some sum to
- get property back despite the government having an extremely weak case.
-
- The Civil Asset Forfeiture Act specifies that property can be released if
- continued possession by the government would cause the claimant substantial
- hardship. However, conditions may be placed on release as are appropriate
- to preserve the availability of the property or its equivalent for
- forfeiture should the government eventually prevail.
-
- DOES THE CIVIL ASSET FORFEITURE REFORM ACT AFFECT STATE FORFEITURE LAWS?
-
- At least 45 states have adopted their own forfeiture laws. The Civil Asset
- Forfeiture Reform Act would not directly affect these statutes. However,
- the bill would discourage the practice known as "adoptive forfeiture."
- Under adoptive forfeiture, state law enforcement officers seize property
- under state law and bring it to a federal agency for federal forfeiture
- (provided that a violation of federal law has occurred and the property
- is forfeitable under federal law). The feds then return 85% of the net
- proceeds to the state or local agency that initiated the case. Adoptive
- forfeiture is often relied upon to circumvent state laws allocating
- forfeited assets to non-law enforcement uses. For example, in Missouri,
- all forfeited funds go to the state's general fund. (46) Since the Civil
- Asset Forfeiture Reform Act would make the procedural going rougher for
- the government in federal court, many state official would presumably decide
- to stick with their state courts. The result would be more money going to
- education, drug treatment, and other services funded by forfeiture under
- state laws.
-
- Enactment of the Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act would also take away the
- ability of state law enforcement officials to seize property under federal
- law to get around state procedural safeguards.
-
- = = = = = = = = = Footnotes = = = = = = = = = =
-
- 1 The Drug Enforcement Administration routinely pays out 10% of any money
- seized in reward of tips such as this. In 1990, the Justice Department
- paid out a total of $24 million. See Government Seizures Victimize
- Innocent, Pittsburgh Press, Aug. 11, 1991.
-
- 2 Id.
-
- 3 See Florida Man's Plight Sparks Customs Service Bill, United Press Inter.,
- March 13, 1992; Marston, Customs Destroys Boat and a Dream, St. Petersburg
- Times, Feb. 5, 1993. Mr. Klein was later awarded $8,900 through private
- legislation introduced by Representative Charles Bennett.
-
- 4 Related by Brenda Grantland of Mill Valley, California. Ms. Grantland is
- general counsel to FEAR (Forfeiture Endangers American Rights). See also
- Miniter, Property Seizures on Trial, Insight, Feb. 22, 1993, at 10, 33.
-
- 5 See Office of the District Attorney, County of Ventura, State of
- California, Report on the Death of Donald Scott (1993).
-
- 6 See Police Work or Piracy?, Louisville Courier-journal, Oct. 6, 1991.
-
- 7 Related by Brenda Grantland, supra note 4.
-
- 8 Calero-Toledo v. Pearson Yacht Leasing Co., 416 U.S. 663, 681 n.16 (1974).
-
- 9 In United States v. One Assortment of 89 Firearms, 465 U.S. 354 (1984),
- the Supreme Court ruled that a civil forfeiture action following a
- criminal acquittal does not constitute double jeopardy.
-
- 10 See Government Seizures victimize Innocent, supra note
-
- 11 See 7 U.S.C. sec. 2156.
-
- 12 See 18 U.S.C. sec. 2344.
-
- 13 See 18 U.S.C. sec. 1963.
-
- 14 21 U.S.C. sec. 881(a)(1).
-
- 15 21 U.S.C. sec. 881(a)(2).
-
- 16 21 U.S.C. sec. 881(a)(3).
-
- 17 21 U.S.C. sec. 881(a)(4).
-
- 18 Psychotropic Substances Act of 1978 (found at 21 U.S.C sec 881(a)(6)).
-
- 19 The Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984 (found at 21 U.S.C. sec.
- 881(a)(7)).
-
- 20 See 28 U.S.C. Sec. 524(c)(4).
-
- 21 See U.S. Department of Justice, Asset Forfeiture Fact Sheet (1993).
-
- 22 See U.S. Department of Justice, Assets Forfeiture Fund Statement of
- Income and Expenses (1993).
-
- 23 See id.
-
- 24 See Fact Sheet, supra note 21.
-
- 25 See U.S. Customs Service, U.S. Customs Update: 1992 22.
-
- 26 Reed, American Forfeiture Law: Property Owners Meet the Prosecutor 3
- (CATO Institute Policy Analysis No. 179, 1992).
-
- 27 See Stahl, Asset Forfeiture, Burdens of Proof and the War on Drugs,
- 83 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 274 (1992).
-
- 28 The bill amends 19 U.S.C. sec. 1615. Most federal forfeiture statutes
- rely on this provision of our customs law to set the burden of proof.
-
- 29 See N.Y. CPLR sec. 1311(3).
-
- 30 Department of Law Enforcement v. Real Property, 588 So.2d 957, 967
- (Fla. 1991).
-
- 31 Before Lassiter v. Department of Social Services, 452 Ii. S. 18 (1981),
- a constitutional right to appointed counsel was only recognized in cases
- where a litigant might lose his or her physical liberty. While Lassiter
- set up a balancing test in other situations, the Alaska Supreme Court in
- Resek v. State, 706 P.2d 288 (Alaska 1985), rejected the argument that
- counsel should be appointed in civil forfeiture cases.
-
- 32 See 18 U.S.C. sec. 3006A(d)(2).
-
- 33 18 U.S.C. sec. 3006A(d)(3).
-
- 34 21 U. S. C. sec. 881 (a) (7) .
-
- 35 See, e.g.. United States v. Lot 111-B. Tax Map Key 4-4-03-71(4),
- 902 F.2d 1443 (9th Cir. 1990).
-
- 36 See United States v. All Right, Title & Interest in Property Known as
- 710 Main St., Peekskill, N.Y., 744 F. Supp. 510 (S.D.N.Y. 1990).
-
- 37 United States v. All Right, Title & Interest in Property Known as
- 710 Main St., Peekskill, N.Y., 753 F. Supp. 121, 125 (S.D.N.Y. 1990).
-
- 38 See 19 U.S.C. sec. 1608.
-
- 39 See Wiren v. Eide, 542 F.2d 757, 763-64 (9th Cir. 1976).
-
- 40 Letter from David Smith to Ms. Kathleen Clark, Senate Judiciary Committee
- (Aug. 19, 1992).
-
- 41 Supplemental Rule of Civil Procedure for Certain Admiralty and Maritime
- Claims C(6). This is the date when a U.S. court takes possession of
- the property through "arrest" by a federal marshall. It is not the date
- when it is initially seized by a law enforcement officer.
-
- 42 Smith, Prosecution and Defense of Forfeiture Cases sec. 9.03(1).
-
- 43 See Kosak v. United States, 465 U.S. 848 (1984).
-
- 44 United States General Accounting office, Better Care and Disposal of
- Seized Cars, Boats, and Planes Should Save Money and Benefit Law
- Enforcement ii (GAO/PLRD-83-94, 1983).
-
- 45 See 19 U.S.C. sec. 1614.
-
- 46 See Mo. Ann. Stat. sec. 513.623.
- --
- Charles Mattair (until 16 July - work) mattair@synercom.hounix.org
- <standard.disclaimer>
- In a mature society, "civil servant" is semantically equivalent to
- "civil master." - Robert Heinlein, _The Notebooks of Lazarus Long_
-