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- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Reprinted by permission from the 'Pittsburgh Press'
-
- PRESUMED GUILTY
-
- Copyright, 1991, The Pittsburgh Press Co.
- By Andrew Schneider and Mary Pat Flaherty
- The Pittsburgh Press
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- THE LAW'S VICTIMS IN THE WAR ON DRUGS
-
- It's a strange twist of justice in the land of freedom. A law designed to
- give cops the right to confiscate and keep the luxurious possessions of major
- drug dealers mostly ensnares the modest homes, cars and cash of ordinary,
- law-abiding people. They step off a plane or answer their front door and
- suddenly lose everything they've worked for. They are not arrested or tried for
- any crime. But there is punishment, and it's severe.
-
- This six-day series chronicles a frightening turn in the war on drugs. Ten
- months of research across the country reveals that seizure and forfeiture, the
- legal weapons meant to eradicate the enemy, have done enormous collateral
- damage to the innocent. The reporters reviewed 25,000 seizures made by the
- Drug Enforcement Administration. They interviewed 1,600 prosecutors, defense
- lawyers, cops, federal agents and victims. They examined court documents from
- 510 cases. What they found defines a new standard of justice in America: You
- are presumed guilty.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- GOVERNMENT SEIZURES VICTIMIZE INNOCENT
- PART ONE: THE OVERVIEW
- February 27, 1991.
-
- Willie Jones, a second-generation nursery man in his family's Nashville
- business, bundles up money from last year's profits and heads off to buy
- flowers and shrubs in Houston. He makes this trip twice a year using cash,
- which the small growers prefer.
-
- But this time, as he waits at the American Airlines gate in Nashville
- Metro Airport, he's flanked by two police officers who escort him into a small
- office, search him and seize the $9,600 he's carrying. A ticket agent had
- alerted the officers that a large black man had paid for his ticket in bills,
- unusual these days. Because of the cash, and the fact that he fit a "profile"
- of what drug dealers supposedly look like, they believed he was buying or
- selling drugs.
-
- He's free to go, he's told. But they keep his money - his livelihood - and
- give him a receipt in its place.
-
- No evidence of wrongdoing was ever produced. No charges were ever filed.
- As far as anyone knows, Willie Jones neither uses drugs nor buys or sells them.
- He is a gardening contractor who bought an airplane ticket. Who lost his
- hard-earned money to the cops. And can't get it back.
-
- That same day, an ocean away in Hawaii, federal drug agents arrive at the
- Maui home of retirees Joseph and Frances Lopes and claim it for the U.S.
- government.
-
- For 49 years, Lopes worked on a sugar plantation, living in its camp
- housing before buying a modest home for himself, his wife, and their adult,
- mentally disturbed son, Thomas.
-
- For a while, Thomas grew marijuana in the back yard - and threatened to
- kill himself every time his parents tried to cut it down. In 1987, the police
- caught Thomas, then 28. He pleaded guilty, got probation for his first offense
- and was ordered to see a psychologist once a week. He has, and never again has
- grown dope or been arrested. The family thought the episode was behind them.
-
- But earlier this year, a detective scouring old arrest records for
- forfeiture opportunities realized the Lopes house could be taken away because
- they had admitted they knew about the marijuana.
-
- The police department stands to make a bundle. If the house is sold, the
- police get the proceeds.
-
- Jones and the Lopes family are among the thousands of Americans each year
- victimized by the federal seizure law - a law meant to curb drugs by causing
- financial hardship to dealers.
-
- A 10-month study by The Pittsburgh Press shows the law has run amok. In
- their zeal to curb drugs and sometimes to fill their coffers with the
- proceeds of what they take, local cops, federal agents and the courts have
- curbed innocent Americans' civil rights. From Maine to Hawaii, people who are
- never charged with a crime have had cars, boats, money and homes taken away.
-
- In fact, 80 percent of the people who lost property to the federal
- government were never charged. And most of the seized items weren't the
- luxurious playthings of drug barons, but modest homes and simple cars and
- hard-earned savings of ordinary people.
-
- But those goods generated $2 billion for the police departments that took
- them.
-
- The owners' only crime in many of these cases: They "looked" like drug
- dealers. They were black, Hispanic or flashily dressed.
-
- Others, like the Lopeses, have been connected to a crime by circumstances
- beyond their control.
-
- Says Eric Sterling, who helped write the law a decade ago as a lawyer on a
- congressional committee:
-
- "The innocent-until-proven guilty concept is gone out the window."
-
- ---
-
- THE LAW: GUILT DOESN'T MATTER
-
- Rooted in English common law, forfeiture has surfaced just twice in the
- United States since Colonial times.
-
- In 1862, Congress permitted the president to seize estates of Confederate
- soldiers. Then, in 1970, it resurrected forfeiture for the civil war on drugs
- with the passage of racketeering laws that targeted the assets of convicted
- criminals.
-
- In 1984, however, the nature of the law was radically changed to allow the
- government to take possessions with- out first charging, let alone convicting,
- the owner. That was done in an effort to make it easier to stake at the heart
- of the major drug dealers. Cops knew that drug dealers consider prison time an
- inevitable cost of doing business. It rarely deters them. Profits and
- playthings, though, are their passions. Losing them hurts.
-
- And there was a bonus in the law. The proceeds would flow back to law
- enforcement to finance more investigations. It was to be the ultimate poetic
- justice, with criminals financing their own undoing.
-
- But eliminating the necessity of charging or proving a crane has moved
- most of the action to civil court, where the government accuses the item - not
- the owner - of being tainted by crime.
-
- This oddity has court dockets looking like purchase orders: United States
- of America vs. 9.6 acres of land and lake; U.S. vs. 667 bottles of wine. But
- it's more than just a labeling change. Because money and property are at stake
- instead of life and liberty, the constitutional safeguards in criminal
- proceedings do not apply.
-
- The result is that "jury trials can be refused; illegal searches condoned;
- rules of evidence ignored," says Louisville, Ky., defense lawyer Donald
- Heavrin. The "frenzied quest for cash," he says, is "destroying the judicial
- system."
-
- Every crime package passed since 1984 has expanded the uses of
- forfeiture, and now there are more than 100 Statutes in place at the state and
- federal level. Not just for drug cases anymore, forfeiture covers the likes
- of money laundering, fraud, gambling, importing tainted meats and carrying
- intoxicants onto Indian land.
-
- The White House, Justice Department and Drug Enforcement Administration
- say they've made the most of the expanded law in getting the big-time
- criminals, and they boast of seizing mansions, planes and millions in cash. But
- The Pittsburgh Press in just 10 months was able to document 510 current cases
- that involved innocent people - or those possessing a very small amount of
- drugs - who lost their possessions.
-
- And DEA's own database contradicts the official line. It showed that
- big-ticket items - valued at more than $50,000 - were only 17 percent of the
- total 25,297 items seized by DEA during the 18 months that ended last
- December.
-
- "If you want to use that 'war on drugs' analogy, then forfeiture is like
- giving the troops permission to loot," says Thomas Lorenzi, president-elect of
- the Louisiana Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
-
- The near-obsession with forfeiture continues without any proof that it
- curbs drug crime - its original target.
-
- "The reality is, it's very difficult to tell what the impact of drug
- seizure and forfeiture is," says Stanley Morris, deputy director of the federal
- drug czar's office.
-
- ---
-
- POLICE FORCES KEEP THE TAKE
-
- The "loot" that's coming back to police forces all over the nation has
- redefined law-enforcement success. It now has a dollar sign in front of it.
-
- For nearly 18 months, undercover Arizona state troopers worked as drug
- couriers driving nearly 13 tons of marijuana from the Mexican border to stash
- houses around Tucson. They hoped to catch the Mexican suppliers and
- distributors on the American side before the dope got on the streets.
-
- But they overestimated their ability to control the distribution. Almost
- every ounce was sold the minute they dropped it at the houses.
-
- Even though the troopers were responsible for tons of drugs getting loose
- in Tucson, the man who supervised the set-up still believes it was worthwhile.
- It was "a success from a cost-benefit standpoint," says former assistant
- attorney general John Davis. His reasoning: It netted 20 arrests and at least
- $3 million for the state forfeiture fund.
-
- "That kind of thinking is what frightens me," says Steve Sherick, a
- Tucson attorney. "The government's thirst for dollars is overcoming any
- long-range view of what it is supposed to be doing, which is fighting crime'
-
- George Terwilliger Ill, associate deputy attorney general in charge of the
- U.S. Justice Department's program, emphasizes that forfeiture does fight crime,
- and "we're not at all apologetic about the fact that we do benefit
- (financially) from it."
-
- In fact, Terwilliger wrote about how the forfeiture program financially
- benefits police departments in the 1991 Police Buyer's Guide of Police Chief
- Magazine.
-
- Between 1986 and 1990, the U.S. Justice Department generated $1.5
- billion from forfeiture and estimates that it will take in $500 million this
- year, five times the amount it collected in 1986.
-
- District attorney's offices throughout Pennsylvania handled $4.5 million
- in forfeitures last year; Allegheny County, $218,000; and the city of
- Pittsburgh, $191,000 - up from $9,000 four years ago.
-
- Forfeiture pads the smallest towns' coffers. In Lenexa, Kan., a Kansas
- City suburb of 29,000, "we've got about $250,000 moving in court right now,"
- says narcotics Detective Don Crohn.
-
- Despite the huge amounts flowing to police departments, there are few
- public accounting procedures. Police who get a cut of the federal forfeiture
- funds must sign a form saying merely they will use it for "law enforcement
- purposes."
-
- To Philadelphia police that meant new air conditioning. In Warren County,
- N.J., it meant use of a forfeited yellow Corvette for the chief assistant
- prosecutor.
-
- ---
-
- 'LOOKING' LIKE A CRIMINAL
-
- Ethel Hylton of New York City has yet to regain her financial
- independence after losing $39,110 in a search nearly three years ago in Hobby
- Airport in Houston.
-
- Shortly after she arrived from New York, a Houston officer and Drug
- Enforcement Administration agent stopped the 46-year-old woman in the baggage
- area and told her she was under arrest because a drug dog had scratched at her
- luggage. The dog wasn't with them, and when Miss Hylton asked to see it, the
- officers refused to bring it out.
-
- The agents searched her bags, and ordered a strip search of Miss Hylton,
- but found no contraband.
-
- In her purse, they found the cash Miss Hylton carried because she planned
- to buy a house to escape the New York winters which exacerbated her diabetes.
- It was the settlement from an insurance claim and her life's savings, gathered
- through more than 20 years of work as a hotel housekeeper and hospital night
- janitor.
-
- The police seized all but $10 of the cash and sent Miss Hylton on her way,
- keeping the money because of its alleged drug connection. But they never
- charged her with a crime.
-
- The Pittsburgh Press verified her jobs, reviewed her bank statements and
- substantiated her claim she had $18,000 from an insurance settlement. It also
- found no criminal record for her in New York City.
-
- With the mix of outrage and resignation voiced by other victims of
- searches, she says: "The money they took was mine. I'm allowed to have it, I
- earned it."
-
- Miss Hylton became a U.S. citizen six years ago. She asks, "Why did they
- stop me? Is it because I'm black or because I'm Jamaican?"
-
- Probably, both - although Houston police haven't said.
-
- Drug teams interviewed in dozens of airports, train stations and bus
- terminals and along major highways repeatedly said they didn't stop travelers
- based on race. But a Pittsburgh Press examination of 121 travelers' cases in
- which police found no dope, made no arrest, but seized money anyway, showed
- that 77 percent of the people stopped were black, Hispanic or Asian.
-
- In April 1989, deputies from Jefferson Davis Parish, Louisiana, seized
- $23,000 from Johnny Sotello, a Mexican-American whose truck overheated on a
- highway.
-
- They offered help, he accepted. They asked to search his truck, he
- agreed. They asked if he was carrying cash. He said he was because he was
- scouting heavy equipment auctions.
-
- They then pulled a door panel from the truck, said the space behind it
- could have hidden drugs, and seized the money and the truck, court records
- show. Police did not arrest Sotello but told him he would have to go to court
- to recover his property.
-
- Sotello sent auctioneers' receipts to police which showed that he was a
- licensed buyer. The sheriff offered to settle the case, and with his legal
- bills mounting after two years, Sotello accepted. In a deal cut last March, he
- got his truck but only half his money. The cops kept $11,500.
-
- "I was more afraid of the banks than anything - that's one reason I carry
- cash," says Sotello. "But a lot of places won't take checks, only cash or
- cashier's cheeks for the exact amount. I never heard of anybody saying you
- couldn't carry cash."
-
- Affidavits show the same deputy who stopped Sotello routinely stopped the
- cars of black and Hispanic drivers, exacting "donations" from some.
-
- After another of the deputy's stops, two black men from Atlanta handed
- over $1,000 for a "drug fund" after being detained for hours, according to a
- handwritten receipt reviewed by The Pittsburgh Press.
-
- The driver got a ticket for "following to (sic) close." Back home, they
- got a lawyer.
-
- Their attorney, in a letter to the sheriff's department, said deputies had
- made the men "fear for their safety, and in direct exploitation of that fear a
- purported donation of $1,000 was extracted . . . "
-
- If they "were kind enough to give the money to the sheriff's office," the
- letter said, "then you can be kind enough to give it back." If they gave the
- money "under other circumstances, then give the money back so we can avoid
- litigation."
-
- Six days later, the sheriff's department mailed the men a $1,000 cheek.
-
- Last year, the 72 deputies of Jefferson Davis Parish led the state in
- forfeitures, gathering $1 million- more than their colleagues in New Orleans, a
- city 17 times larger than the parish.
-
- Like most states, Louisiana returns the money to law enforcement agencies,
- but it has one of the more unusual distributions: 60 percent goes to the police
- bringing a case' 20 percent to the district attorney's office prosecuting it
- and 20 percent to the court fund of the judge signing the forfeiture order.
-
- "The highway stops aren't much different from a smash-and-grab ring,"
- says Lorenzi, of the Louisiana Defense Lawyers Association.
-
- ---
-
- PAYING FOR YOUR INNOCENCE
-
- The Justice Department's Terwilliger says that in some cases "dumb
- judgment" may occasionally create problems, but he believes there is an
- adequate solution. "That's why we have courts."
-
- But the notion that courts are a safeguard for citizens wrongly accused
- "is way off," says Thomas Kemer, a forfeiture lawyer in Boston. "Compared to
- forfeiture, David and Goliath was a fair fight."
-
- Starting from the moment the government serves notice that it intends to
- take an item, until any court challenge is completed, "the government gets all
- the breaks," says Kemer.
-
- The government need only show probable cause for a seizure, a standard no
- greater than what is needed to get a search warrant. The lower standard means
- that the government can take a home without any more evidence than it normally
- needs to take a look inside.
-
- Clients who challenge the government, says attorney Edward Hinson of
- Charlotte, N.C., "have the choice of fighting the full resources of the U.S.
- Treasury or caving in." Barry Kolin caved in.
-
- Kolin watched Portland, Ore., police padlock the doors of Harvey's, his
- bar and restaurant, for bookmaking on March 2.
-
- Earlier that day, eight police officers and Amy Holmes Hehn, the
- Multnomah County deputy district attorney, had swept into the bar, shooed out
- waitresses and customers and arrested Mike Kolin, Barry's brother and
- bartender, on suspicion of bookmaking.
-
- Nothing in the police documents mentioned Barry Kolin, and so the 40-
- year-old was stunned when authorities took his business, saying they believe he
- knew about the betting. He denied it.
-
- Hehn concedes she did not have the evidence to press a criminal case
- against Barry Kolin, "so we seized the business civilly."
-
- During a recess in a hearing on the seizure weeks later, "the deputy DA
- says if I paid them $30,000 I could open up again," Kolin recalls. When the
- deal dropped to $10,000, Kolin took it.
-
- Kolin's lawyer, Jenny Cooke, calls the seizure "extortion." She says:
- "There is no difference between what the police did to Barry Kolin or what Al
- Capone did in Chicago when he walked in and said, 'This is a nice little bar
- and it's mine.' The only difference is today they call this civil forfeiture."
-
- ---
-
- MINOR CRIMES, MAJOR PENALTIES
-
- Forfeiture's tremendous clout helps make it "one of the most effective
- tools that we have," says Terwilliger.
-
- The clout, though, puts property owners at risk of losing more under
- forfeiture than they would in a criminal case in the same circumstances.
-
- Criminal charges in federal and many state courts any maximum sentences.
- But there's no dollar cap on forfeiture, leaving citizens open to punishment
- that far exceeds the crime.
-
- Robert Brewer of Irwin, Idaho, is dying of prostate cancer, and uses
- marijuana to ease the pain and nausea that comes with radiation treatments.
-
- Last Oct. 10, a dozen deputies and Idaho tax agents walked into the
- Brewers' living room with guns drawn and said they had a warrant to search.
-
- The Brewers, Robert, 61, and Bonita, 44, both retired from the postal
- service, moved from Kansas City, Mo., to the tranquil, wooded valley of Irwin
- in 1989. Six months later, he was diagnosed.
-
- According to police reports, an informant told authorities Brewer ran a
- major marijuana operation.
-
- The drug SWAT team found eight plants in the basement under a grow light
- and a half-pound of marijuana. The Brewers were charged with two felony
- narcotics counts and two charges for failing to buy state tax stamps for the
- dope.
-
- "I didn't like the idea of the marijuana, but it was the only thing that
- controlled his pain," Mrs. Brewer says.
-
- The government seized the couple's five-year-old Ford van that allowed
- him to lie down during his twice-a- month taps for cancer treatment at a Salt
- Lake City hospital, 270 miles away. Now they must go by car.
-
- "That's a long painful ride for him. His testicles would sometimes swell
- up to the size of cantaloupes, and he had to lie down because of the pain. He
- needed that van, and the government took it," Mrs. Brewer says.
-
- "It looks like the government can punish people any way it sees fit."
-
- The Brewers know nothing about the informant who turned them in, but
- informants play a big role in forfeiture. Many of them are paid, targeting
- property in return for a cut of anything that is taken.
-
- The Justice Department's asset forfeiture fund paid $24 million to
- informants in 1990 and has $22 million allocated this year.
-
- Private citizens who snitch for a fee are everywhere. Some airline
- counter clerks receive cash awards for alerting drug agents to "suspicious"
- travelers. The practice netted Melissa Funner, a Continental Airlines clerk
- in Denver, at least $5,800 between 1989 and 1990, photocopies of the checks
- show.
-
- Increased surveillance, recruitment of citizen-cops, and expansion of
- forfeiture sweeps are all part of the take- now, litigate-later syndrome that
- builds prosecutors' careers, says a former federal prosecutor.
-
- "Federal law enforcement people are the most ambitious I've ever met, and
- to get ahead they need visible results. Visible results are convictions and,
- now, forfeitures," says Don Lewis of Meadville, Crawford County.
-
- Lewis spent 17 years as a prosecutor, serving as an assistant U.S.
- attorney in Tampa as recently as 1988. He became a defense lawyer - when "I
- found myself tempted to do things I wouldn't have thought about doing years
- ago."
-
- Terwilliger insists U.S. attorneys would never be evaluated on "something
- as unprofessional as dollars."
-
- Which is not to say Justice doesn't watch the bottom line.
-
- Cary Copeland, director of the department's Executive Office for Asset
- Forfeiture, said they tried to "squeeze the pipeline" in 1990 when the amount
- forfeited lagged behind Justice's budget projections.
-
- He said this was done by speeding up the process, not by doing "a whole
- lot of seizures."
-
- ---
-
- ENDING THE ABUSE
-
- While defense lawyers talk of reforming the law, agencies that initiate
- forfeitures scarcely talk at all.
-
- DEA headquarters makes a spectacle of busts like the seizure of
- fraternity houses at the University of Virginia in March. But it refuses to
- supply detailed information on the small cases that account for most of its
- activity.
-
- Local prosecutors are just as tight-lipped.
-
- Thomas Corbett, U.S. Attorney for Western Pennsylvania, seals court
- documents on forfeitures because "there just are some things I don't want to
- publicize. The person whose assets we seize will eventually know, and who else
- has to?"
-
- Although some investigations need to be protected, there is an
- "inappropriate secrecy" spreading through the country, says Jeffrey Weiner,
- president-elect of the 25,000-member National Association of Criminal Defense
- Lawyers.
-
- "The Justice Department boasts over the few big fish they catch. But they
- throw a cloak of secrecy over the information on how many innocent people are
- getting swept up in the same seizure net, so no one can see the enormity of
- this atrocity."
-
- Terwilliger says the net catches the right people: "bad guys" as he calls
- them.
-
- But a 1990 Justice report on drug task forces in 15 states found they
- stayed away from the in-depth financial investigations needed to cripple major
- traffickers. Instead, "they're going for the easy stuff," says James "Chip"
- Coldren Jr., executive director of the Bureau of Justice Assistance, a
- research arm of the federal Justice Department.
-
- Lawyers who say the law needs to be changed start with the basics: The
- government shouldn't be allowed to take property until after it proves the
- owner guilty of a crime.
-
- But they go on to list other improvements, including having police abide
- by their state laws, which often don't give police as much latitude as the
- federal law. Now they can use federal courts to circumvent the state.
-
- Tracy Thomas is caught in that very bind.
-
- A jurisprudence version of the shell game hides roughly $13,000 taken from
- Thomas, a resident of Chester, near Philadelphia.
-
- Thomas was visiting in his godson's home on Memorial Day, 1990, when local
- police entered looking for drugs allegedly sold by the godson. They found none
- and didn't file a criminal charge in the incident. But They seized $13,000 from
- Thomas, who works as a $70,000-a-year engineer, says his attorney, Clinton
- Johnson.
-
- The cash was left over from a sheriff's sale he'd attended a few days
- before, court records show. The sale required cash much like the government's
- own auctions.
-
- During a hearing over the seized money, Thomas presented a withdrawal slip
- showing he'd removed money from his credit union shortly before the trip and a
- receipt showing how much he had paid for the property he'd bought at the sale.
- The balance was $13,000.
-
- On June 22, 1990, a state judge ordered Chester police to return Thomas'
- cash. They haven't.
-
- Just before the court order was issued, the police turned over the cash to
- the DEA for processing as a federal case, forcing Thomas to fight another
- level of government. Thomas now is suing the Chester police, the arresting
- officer and the DEA.
-
- "When DEA took over that money, what they in effect told a local police
- department is that it's OK to break the law," says Clinton Johnson, attorney
- for Thomas.
-
- Police manipulate the courts not only to make it harder on owners to
- recover property, but to make it easier for police to get a hefty share of any
- forfeited goods. In federal court, local police are guaranteed up to 80 percent
- of the take a percentage that may be more than they would receive under state
- law. Pennsylvania's leading police agency the state police and the state's
- lead prosecutor - the Attorney General - bickered for two years over state
- police taking cases to federal court, an arrangement that cut the Attorney
- General out of the sharing.
-
- The two state agencies now have a written agreement on how to divvy the
- take.
-
- The same debate is heard around the nation.
-
- The hallways outside Cleveland courtrooms ring with arguments over who
- will get what, says Jay Milano, a Cleveland criminal defense attorney. "It's
- causing a feeding frenzy."
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- GOVERNMENT SEIZED HOME OF MAN WHO WAS GOING BLIND
-
- James Burton says he loves America and wants to come home.
-
- But he can't. If he does, he'll wind up in prison, go blind, or both.
-
- Burton and his wife, Linda, live in an austere, concrete-slab apartment
- furnished with lawn chairs near Rotterdam in the Netherlands. It is a home much
- different from the large house and 90-acre farm they owned near Bowling Green,
- Ky., before the government seized both.
-
- For Burton, who has glaucoma, home-grown marijuana provided his relief -
- and his undoing.
-
- Since 1972, federal health secretaries have reported to Congress that
- marijuana is beneficial in the treatment of glaucoma and several other medical
- conditions.
-
- Yet while some officials within the Drug Enforcement Administration have
- acknowledged the medical value of marijuana, drug agents continue to seize
- property where chronically ill people grow it.
-
- "Because of the emotional rhetoric connected with the marijuana issue, a
- doctor who can prescribe cocaine, morphine, amphetamines and barbiturates
- cannot prescribe marijuana, which is the safest therapeutically active drug
- known to man," Francis Young, administrative law judge for DEA, was quoted as
- saying in Burton's trial.
-
- In an interview this past July 4, Burton said, "We don't really have any
- choice right now but to stay" in the Netherlands, where they moved after he
- completed a one-year jail term for three counts of marijuana possession. "I
- can buy or grow marijuana here legally, and if I don't have the marijuana, I'll
- go blind.
-
- Burton, a 43-year-old Vietnam War veteran, has a rare form of hereditary,
- low-tension glaucoma. All of the men on his mother's side of the family have
- the disease, and several already are blind. It does not respond to traditional
- medications.
-
- At the time of Burton's arrest, North Carolina ophthalmologist Dr. John
- Merritt was the only physician authorized by the government to test marijuana
- in the treatment of glaucoma patients. Menitt testified at Burton's trial that
- marijuana was "the only medication" that could keep him from going blind.
-
- On July 7, 1987, Kentucky State Police raided Burton's farm and found 138
- marijuana plants and two pounds of raw marijuana. "It was the kickoff of
- Kentucky Drug Awareness Month, and I was their special kickoff feature. It
- was all over television," Burton said.
-
- Burton admitted growing enough marijuana to produce about a pound a month
- for the 10 to 15 cigarettes he uses each day to reduce pressure in his eye.
-
- A jury decided he grew the dope for his own use - not to sell, as the
- government contended - and in March 1988 found him guilty of three counts of
- simple possession.
-
- The presentence report on Burton shows he had no previous arrests. The
- judge sentenced him to a year in a federal maximum security prison, with no
- parole.
-
- On top of that, the government took his farm: 90 rolling, wooded acres in
- Warren County purchased for $34,701 in 1980 and assessed at twice that amount
- when it was taken.
-
- On March 27,1989, U.S. District Judge Ronald Meredith - without hearing
- any witnesses and without allowing Burton to testify in his own behalf -
- ordered the farm forfeited and gave the Burtons 10 days to get off the land.
- When owners of property live at a site while marijuana is growing in their
- presence, "there is no defense to forfeiture," Meredith ruled.
-
- "I never got to say two words in defense of keeping my home, something we
- worked and saved for for 18 years," said Burton, who was a master electrical
- technician. Linda, 41, worked for an insurance company. "On a serious matter
- like taking a person's home, you'd think the government would give you a chance
- to defend it."
-
- Joe Whittle, the U.S. Attorney who prosecuted the Burton case, says he
- didn't know about the glaucoma until Burton's lawyer raised the issue in court.
- His office has "taken a lot of heat on this case and what happened to that poor
- guy," Whittle says. But "we did nothing improper.
-
- "Congress passes these laws, and we have to follow them. If the American
- people wanted to exempt certain marijuana activity - these mom and pop or
- personal use or medical cases - they should speak through their duly elected
- officials and change the laws. Until those laws are changed, we must enforce
- them to the full extent of our resources."
-
- The action was "an unequaled and outrageous example of government abuse,"
- says Louisville lawyer Donald Heavrin who failed to get the U.S. Supreme Court
- to hear the case.
-
- "To send a man trying to save his vision to prison, and steal the home and
- land that he and his wife had worked decades for, should have the authors of
- the Constitution spinning in their graves."
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- DRUG AGENTS MORE LIKELY TO STOP MINORITIES
- PART TWO: THE WAY YOU LOOK
-
- Look around carefully the next time you're at any of the nation's big
- airports, bus stations, train terminals or on a major highway, because there
- may be a government agent watching you. if You're black, Hispanic, Asian or
- look like a "hippie" you can almost count on it.
-
- The men and women doing the spying are drug agents, the frontline troops
- in the government's war on narcotics. They count their victories in the number
- of people they stop because they suspect they're carrying drugs or drug money.
-
- But each year in the hunt for suspects, thousands of guiltless citizens
- are stopped, most often because of their skin color.
-
- A 10-month Pittsburgh Press investigation of drug seizure and forfeiture
- included an examination of court records on 121 "drug courier" stops where
- money was seized and no drugs were discovered. The Pittsburgh Press found that
- black, Hispanic and Asian people accounted for 77 percent of the cases.
-
- In making stops, drug agents use a profile, a set of speculative
- behavioral traits that gauge the suspect's appearance, demeanor and
- willingness to look a police officer in the eye.
-
- For years, the drug courier profile counted race as a principal indicator
- of the likelihood of a person's carrying drugs. But today the word "profile"
- isn't officially mentioned by police. Seeing the word scrawled in a police
- report or hearing it from a witness chair instantly unnerves prosecutors and
- makes defense lawyers giddy. Both sides know the racial implications can raise
- constitutional challenges.
-
- Even so, far away from the courtrooms, the practice persists.
-
- ---
-
- STEREOTYPES TRIGGER STOPS
-
- in Memphis, Tenn., in 1989, drug officers have testified, about 75
- percent of the people they stopped in the airport were black. The latest
- figures available from the Air Transport Association show that for that
- year only percent of the flying public was black.
-
- In Eagle County, Colo., the 60-mile-long strip of Interstate 70 that
- winds and dips past Vail and other ski areas is the setting of a class-action
- suit that charges race was the main element of the profile used in drug stops.
-
- According to court documents in one of the cases that led to the suit, the
- sheriff and two deputies testified that "being black or Hispanic was and is a
- factor" in their drug courier profile.
-
- Lawyer David Lane says that 500 people - primarily Hispanic and black
- motorists - were stopped and searched by Eagle County's High Country Drug Task
- Force during 1989 and 1990. Each time, Lane charged, the task force used an
- unconstitutional profile based on race, ethnicity and out-of-state license
- plates.
-
- Byron Boudreaux was one of those stopped.
-
- Boudreaux was driving from Oklahoma to a new job in Canada when Sgt. James
- Perry and three other task force officers pulled him over.
-
- "Sgt. Perry told me that I was stopped because my car fit the description
- of someone trafficking drugs in the area," Boudreaux says. He let the officers
- search his car.
-
- "Listen, I was a black man traveling alone up in the mountains of Eagle
- County and surrounded by four police off icers. I was going to be as
- cooperative as I could," he recalls.
-
- For almost an hour the officers unloaded and searched the suitcases,
- laundry baskets and boxes that were wedged into Boudreaux's car. Nothing was
- found.
-
- "I was stopped because I was black, and that's not a great testament to
- our law enforcement system," says Boudreaux, who is now an assistant basketball
- coach at Queens College in Charlotte, N.C.
-
- In a federal trial stemming from another stop Penny made on the same road
- a few months later, he testified that because of "astigmatism and color
- blindness" he was unable to distinguish among black, Hispanic and white people.
-
- U.S. District Court Judge Jim Carrigan didn't buy it and called the
- sergeant's testimony "incredible.
-
- "If this nation were to win its war on drugs at the cost of sacrificing
- its citizens' constitutional lights, it would be a Pyrrhic victory indeed,"
- Carrigan wrote in a court opinion. "If the rule of law rather than the rule of
- man is to prevail, there cannot be one set of search and seizure rules
- applicable to some and a different set applicable to others."
-
- ---
-
- LIVELIHOOD IN JEOPARDY
-
- In Nashville, Tenn., Willie Jones has go doubt that police still use a
- profile based on race.
-
- Jones, owner of a landscaping service, thought the ticket agent at the
- American Airlines counter in Nashville Metro Airport reacted strangely when he
- paid cash Feb. 27 for his round-trip ticket to Houston. "She said no one ever
- paid in cash anymore and she'd have to go in the back and check on what to do,"
- Jones says.
-
- What Jones didn't know is that in Nashville - as in other airports many
- airport employees double as paid informers for the police.
-
- The Drug Enforcement Administration usually pays them 10 percent of any
- money seized, says Capt. Judy Bawcum, head of the Nashville police division
- that runs the airport unit.
-
- Jones got his ticket. Ten minutes later, as he waited for his plane, two
- drug team members stopped him.
-
- "They flashed their badges and asked if I was carrying drugs or a large
- amount of money. I told them I didn't have anything to do with drugs, but I had
- money on me to go buy some plants for my business," Jones says.
-
- They searched his overnight bag and found nothing. They patted him down
- and felt a bulge. Jones pulled out a black plastic wallet hidden under his
- shirt. It held $9,600.
-
- "I explained that I was going to Houston to order some shrubbery for my
- nursery. I do it twice a year and pay cash because that's the way the growers
- want it," says the father of three girls. The drug agents took his money.
-
- "They said I was going to buy drugs with it, that their dog sniffed it and
- said it had drugs on it," Jones says. He never saw the dog.
-
- The officers didn't arrest Jones, but they kept the money. They gave him a
- DEA receipt for the cash. But under the heading of amount and description,
- Sgt. Claude Byrum wrote, "Unspecified amount of U.S. currency."
-
- Jones says losing the money almost put him out of business.
-
- "That was to buy my stock. I'm known for having a good selection of
- unusual plants. That's why I go South twice a year to buy them. Now I've got
- to do it piecemeal, run out after I'm paid for a job and buy plants for the
- next one," he says.
-
- Jones has receipts for three years showing that each fall and spring he
- buys plants from nurseries in other states.
-
- "I just don't understand the government. I don't smoke. I don't drink. I
- don't wear gold chains and jewelry, and I don't get into trouble with the
- police," he says. "I didn't know it was against the law for a 42-year-old
- black man to have money in his pocket."
-
- Tennessee police records confirm that the only charge ever filed against
- Jones was for drag racing 15 years ago.
-
- "DEA says I have to pay $900, 10 percent of the money they took from me,
- just to have the right to try to get it back," Jones says.
-
- His lawyer, E. E. "Bo" Edwards filled out government forms documenting
- that his client couldn't afford the $900 bond.
-
- "If I'm going to feed my children, I need my truck, and the only way I can
- get that $900 is to sell it," Jones says.
-
- It's been more than five months, and the only thing Jones has received
- >from DEA are letters saying that his application to proceed without paying the
- $900 bond was deficient. "But they never told us what those deficiencies were,
- says Edwards.
-
- Jones is nearly resigned to losing the money. "I don't think I'll ever
- get it back. But I think the only reason they thought I was a drug dealer was
- because I'm black, and that bothers me."
-
- It also bothers his lawyer.
-
- "Of course he was stopped because he was black. No cop in his right mind
- would try that with a white businessman. These seizure laws give law
- enforcement a license to hunt, and the target of choice for many cops is those
- they believe are least capable of protecting themselves: blacks, Hispanics and
- poor whites," Edwards says.
-
- ---
-
- MONEY STILL HELD
-
- In Buffalo, N.Y., on Oct. 9, Juana Lopez, a dark-skinned Dominican, had
- just gotten off a bus from New York City when she was stopped in the terminal
- by drug agents who wanted to search her luggage.
-
- They found no drugs, but DEA Agent Bruce Johnson found $4,750 in cash
- wrapped with rubber bands in her purse. The money, the 28-year-old woman said,
- was to pay legal fees or bail for her common-law husband. After he began
- questioning her, Johnson realized that he had arrested the husband for drugs
- two months earlier in the same bus station.
-
- Johnson called the office of attorney Mark Mahoney, where Ms. Lopez said
- she was heading, and verified her appointment.
-
- Johnson then told the woman she was free to go, but her money would stay
- with him because a drug dog had reacted to it.
-
- Ms. Lopez has receipts showing the money was obtained legally - a third of
- it was borrowed, another third came from the sale of jewelly that belonged to
- her and her husband, and the rest from her savings as a hair stylist in the
- Bronx.
-
- It has been more than nine months since the money was taken, and Assistant
- U.S. Attorney Richard Kaufman says the investigation is continuing.
-
- Robert Clark, a Mobile, Ala., lawyer who has defended many travelers,
- says profile stops are the new form of racism.
-
- "In the South in the '30s, we used to hang black folks. Now, given any
- excuse at all, even legal money in their pockets, we just seize them to death,"
- he says.
-
- ---
-
- TRIVIAL PURSUIT
-
- "If you took all the racial elements out of profiles," you'd be left with
- nothing, says Nashville lawyer Edwards, who heads a new National Association of
- Criminal Defense Lawyers task force to investigate forfeiture law abuses.
-
- "It would outrage the public to learn the trivial indicators that police
- officers use as the basis for interfering with the rights of the innocent."
-
- Examination of more than 310 affidavits for seizure and profiles used by
- 28 different agencies reveals a conflicting collection of traits that agents
- say they use to hunt down traffickers.
-
- Guidelines for DEA drug task force agents in three adjacent states give
- conflicting advice on when officers are supposed to become suspicious.
-
- Agents in Illinois are told it's suspicious if their subjects are among
- the first people off a plane, because it shows they're in a hurry. In
- Michigan, the DEA says that being the last off the plane is suspicious because
- the suspect is trying to appear unconcerned.
-
- And in Ohio, agents are told suspicion should surface when suspects
- deplane in the middle of a group because they may be trying to lose themselves
- in the crowd.
-
- One of the most often mentioned indicators is that suspects were traveling
- to or from a source city for drugs.
-
- But a list of cities favored by drug couriers gleaned from the DEA
- affidavits amounts to a compendium of every major community in the United
- States.
-
- Seeming to be nervous, looking around, pacing, looking at a watch, making
- a phone call - all things that business travelers routinely do, especially
- those who are late or don't like to fly - sound alarms to waiting drug agents.
-
- Some agents change their mind about what makes them suspicious.
-
- In Tennessee, an agent told a judge he was leery of a man because he
- "walked quickly through the airport." Six weeks later, in another affidavit,
- the same agent said his suspicions were aroused because the suspect "walked
- with intentional slowness after getting off the bus."
-
- In Albuquerque, N.M., people have been stopped because they were standing
- on the train platform watching people.
-
- Whether you look at a police officer can be construed to be a suspicious
- sign. One Maryland state trooper said he was wary because the subject
- "deliberately did not look at me when he drove by my position." Yet, another
- Maryland trooper testified that he stopped a man because the "driver stared at
- me when he passed."
-
- Too much baggage or not enough will draw the attention of the law.
-
- You could be in trouble with drug agents if you're sitting in first ?lass
- and don't look as if you belong there.
-
- DEA Agent Paul Markonni who is considered the "father" of the drug courier
- profile, testified in a Floncia court about why he stopped a man.
-
- "We do see some real slimeballs, you know, some real dirt bags, that
- obviously could not afford, unless they were doing something, to fly first
- class," he told the court.
-
- The newest extension of the drug courier profile are pagers and cellular
- telephones.
-
- Based on the few cases that have reached the courts, the communication
- devices - which are carried by business people, nervous parents and patients
- waiting for a transplant as well as drug couriers - are primarily suspicious
- when they are found on the belts or in the suitcases of minorities or
- long-haired whites.
-
- For police intent on stopping someone., any reason will do.
-
- "If they're black, Hispanic, Asian or look like a hippie, that's a
- stereotype, and the police will find some way to stop them if that's their
- intent," says San Antonio lawyer Gerald Goldstein.
-
- ---
-
- THE PERFECT PROFILE
-
- A DEA agent thought that former New York Giants center Kevin Belcher matched
- his profile. When Belcher got off a flight from Detroit March 2, he was stopped
- by DEA's Dallas/Fort Worth Airport Narcotics Task Force.
-
- The Texas officers had been called a short while earlier by a DEA agent
- at Detroit's Metro Airport. A security screener had spotted a big, black man
- carrying a large amount of money in his jacket pocket, the Detroit agent
- reported to his Southern colleagues.
-
- Belcher was questioned about the purpose of the trip and was asked whether
- he had any money. He gave the agents $18,265.
-
- Belcher explained that he was going to El Paso to buy some classic old
- cars "1968 or '69 Camaros are what I'm looking for." Belcher, whose
- professional football career ended after a near-fatal traffic accident in New
- Jersey, told the agents he owned four Victory Lane Quick Oil Change outlets in
- Michigan. The money came from sales, he said, and cash was what auctioneers
- demanded.
-
- A drug-sniffing dog was called, it reacted, and the money was seized.
-
- Agent Rick Watson told Belcher he was free to go "but that I was going to
- detain the monies to determine the origin of them."
-
- In his seizure affidavit, Watson listed the matches he made between
- Belcher and the profile of "other narcotic currency couriers encountered at
- DFW airport."
-
- Included in Watson's profile was that Belcher had bought a one-way ticket
- on the date of travel; was traveling to a "source" city, El Paso, "where drug
- dealers have long been known to be exporting large amounts of marijuana to
- other parts of the country"; and was carrying $100, $50, $20, $10 and $5 bills,
- "which is consistent with drug asset seizures."
-
- Watson made no mention as to what denomination other than $1 bills was
- left for non-drug traffickers to carry. "The drug courier profile can be
- absolutely anything that the police officer decides it is at that moment," says
- Albuquerque defense lawyer Nancy Hollander, one of the nation's leading
- authorities on profile stops.
-
- ---
-
- WIDE NET CAST
-
- Officials are reluctant to reveal how many innocent people are ensnared
- each day by profile stops. Most police departments say they don't keep that
- information. Those that do are reluctant to discuss it.
-
- "We don't like to talk much about what we seize at the (Nashville) air
- port because it might stir up the public and make the airport officials unhappy
- because we are somehow harassing people. It would be great if we could Keep the
- whole operation secret," says Capt. Bawcum, in charge of the airport's drug
- team.
-
- Capt. Rudy Sandoval, commander of Denver's vice bureau, says he doesn't
- keep the airport numbers but estimated his police searched more than 2,000
- people in 1990, but arrested only 49 and seized money from fewer than 50.
-
- At Pittsburgh's airport, numbers are kept. The team searched 527 people
- last year, and arrested 49.
-
- A federal court judge in Buffalo, N.Y., says police stop too many innocent
- people to catch too few crooks.
-
- Judge George Pratt said he was shocked that police charged only 10 of the
- 600 people stopped in 1989 in the Buffalo airport and decreed encroaching on
- the constitutional rights of the 590 innocent people.
-
- In his opinion in the case, Pratt said that by conducting unreasonable
- searches: "It appears that they have sacrificed the Fourth Amendment by
- detaining 590 innocent people in order to arrest 10 who are not - all in the
- name of the 'war on drugs.' When, pray tell, will it end? Where are we going?"
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- DRUGS CONTAMINATE NEARLY ALL THE MONEY IN AMERICA
-
- Police seize money from thousands of people each year because a dog with a
- badge sniffs, barks or paws to show that bills are tainted with drugs.
-
- If a police officer picks you out as a likely drug courier, the dog is
- used to confirm that your money has the smell of drugs.
-
- But scientists say the test the police rely on is no test at all because
- drugs contaminate virtually all the currency in America.
-
- Over a seven-year period, Dr. Jay Poupko and his colleagues at Toxicology
- Consultants Inc. in Miami have repeatedly tested currency in Austin, Dallas,
- Los Angeles, Memphis, Miami, Milwaukee, New York City, Pittsburgh, Seattle and
- Syracuse. He also tested American bills in London.
-
- "An average of 96 percent of all the bills we analyzed from the 11 cities
- tested positive for cocaine. I don't think any rational thinking person can
- dispute that almost all the currency in this country is tainted with drugs,"
- Poupko says.
-
- Scientists at National Medical Services, in Willow Grove, Pa., who tested
- money from banks and other legal sources more than a dozen times, consistently
- found cocaine on more than 80 percent of the bills.
-
- "Cocaine is very adhesive and easily transferable," says Vincent Cordova,
- director of criminalistics for the private lab. "A police officer, pharmacist,
- toxicologist or anyone else who handles cocaine, including drug traffickers,
- can shake hands with someone, who eventually touches money, and the
- contamination process begins."
-
- Cordova and other scientists use gas chromatography and mass spectroscopy,
- precise alcohol washes and a dozen other sophisticated techniques to identify
- the presence of narcotics down to the nanogram level one billionth of a gram.
- That measure, which is far less than a pin point, is the same level a dog can
- detect with a sniff.
-
- What a drug dog cannot do, which the scientists can, is quantify the
- amount of drugs on the bills.
-
- Half of the money Cordova examined had levels of cocaine at or above 9
- nanograms. This level means the bills were either near a source of cocaine or
- were handled by someone who touched the drug, he says.
-
- Another 30 percent of the bills he examined show levels below 9 nanograms,
- which indicates "the bills were probably in a cash drawer, wallet or some
- place where they came in contact with money previously contaminated."
-
- The lab's research found $20 bills are most highly contaminated, with $10
- and $5 bills next. The $1, $50 and $100 bill usually have the lowest cocaine
- levels.
-
- Cordova urges restraint in linking possession of contaminated money to a
- criminal act.
-
- "Police aid prosecutors have got to use caution in how far they go. The
- presence of cocaine on bills cannot be used as valid proof that the holder of
- the money, or the bills themselves, have ever been in direct contact with
- drugs," says Cordova, who spent II years directing the Philadelphia Police
- crime laboratory.
-
- Nevertheless, more and more drug dogs are being put to work.
-
- Some agencies, like the U.S. Customs Service, are using passive dogs that
- don't rip into an item or person - when the dogs find something during a
- search. These dogs just sit and wag their tails. German shepherds with names
- like Killer and Rambo are being replaced by Labradors named Bruce or Memphis'
- "Chocolate Mousse."
-
- Marijuana presents its own problems for dogs since its very pungent smell
- is long-lasting. Trainers have testified that drug dogs can react to clothing,
- containers or cars months after marijuana has been removed.
-
- A 1989 case in Richmond, Va., addressed the issue of how reliable dogs are
- in marijuana searches.
-
- Jack Adams, a special agent with the Virginia State Police, supervised
- training of drug dogs for the state.
-
- He said the odor from a single suitcase filled with marijuana and placed
- with 100 other bags in a closed Amtrak baggage car in Miami could permeate all
- the other bags in the car by the time the train reached Richmond.
-
- And what happens to the mountain of "drug-contaminated" dollars the
- government seizes each year? The bills aren't burned, cleaned, or stored in a
- well-guarded warehouse.
-
- Twenty-one seizing agencies questioned all said the tainted money was
- deposited in a local bank - which means it's back in circulation.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- POLICE PROFIT BY SEIZING HOMES OF INNOCENT
- PART THREE: INNOCENT OWNERS
-
- The second time police came to the Hawaii home of Joseph and Frances
- Lopes, they came to take it.
-
- "They were in a car and a van. I was in the garage. They said, 'Mrs.
- Lopes, let's go into the house, and we will explain things to you.' They sat in
- the dining room and told me they were taking the house. It made my heart beat
- very fast."
-
- For the rest of the day, 60-year-old Frances Lopes and her 65-year-old
- husband, Joseph, trailed federal agents as they walked through every room of
- the Maui house, the agents recording the position of each piece of furniture
- on a videotape that serves as the government's inventory.
-
- Four years after their mentally unstable adult son pleaded guilty to
- growing marijuana in their back yard for his own use. the Lopeses face the
- loss of their home. A Maui detective trolling for missed forfeiture
- opportunities spotted the old case. He recognized that the law allowed him to
- take away their property because they knew their son had committed a crime on
- it.
-
- A forfeiture law intended to strip drug traffickers of ill-gotten gains
- often is turned on people, like the Lopeses, who have not committed a clime.
- The incentive for the police to do that is financial, since the federal
- government and most states let the police departments keep the proceeds from
- what they take. The law tries to temper money-making temptations with
- protections for innocent owners, including lien holders, landlords whose
- tenants misuse property, or people unaware of their spouse's misdeeds. The
- protection is supposed to cover anyone with an interest in a property who can
- prove he did not know about the alleged illegal activity, did not consent to
- it, or took all reasonable steps to prevent it.
-
- But a Pittsburgh Press investigation found that those supposed safe-guards
- do not come into play until after the government takes an asset, forcing
- innocent owners to hire attorneys to get their property back - if they ever do.
- "As if the law weren't bad enough, they just clobber you financially," says
- Wayne Davis, an attorney from Little Rock, Ark.
-
- ---
-
- FEARED FOR THEIR SON
-
- In 1987, Thomas Lopes, who was then 28 and living in his parents' home,
- pleaded guilty to growing marijuana in their back yard. Officers spotted it
- >from a helicopter.
-
- Because it was his first offense, Thomas received probation and an order
- to see a psychologist. From the time he was young, mental problems tormented
- Thomas, and though he visited a psychologist as a teen, he had refused to
- continue as he grew older, his parents say.
-
- Instead, he cloistered himself in his bedroom, leaving only to tend the
- garden.
-
- His parents concede they knew he grew the marijuana.
-
- "We did ask him to stop, and he would say, 'Don't touch it,' or he would
- do something to himself," says the elder Lopes, who worked for 49 years on a
- sugar plantation and lived in its rented camp housing for 30 years while he
- saved to buy his own home.
-
- Given Thomas' history and a family history of mental problems that caused
- a grandparent and an uncle to be committed to institutions, the threats stymied
- his parents.
-
- The Lopeses, says their attorney Matthew Menzer, "were under duress.
- Everyone who has been diagnosed in this family ended up being taken away. They
- could not conceive of any way to get rid of the dope without getting rid of
- their son or losing him forever."
-
- When police arrived to arrest Thomas, "I was so happy because I knew he
- would get care," says his mother. He did, and he continues weekly doctor's
- visits. His mood is better, Mrs. Lopes says, and he has never again grown
- marijuana or been arrested. But his guilty plea haunts his family.
-
- Because his parents admitted they knew what he was doing, their home was
- vulnerable to forfeiture.
-
- Back when Thomas was arrested, police rarely took homes. But since,
- agencies have learned how to use the law and have seen the financial payoff,
- says Assistant U.S. Attorney Marshall Silverberg of Honolulu.
-
- They also carefully review old cases for overlooked forfeiture
- possibilities, he says. The detective who uncovered the Lopes case started a
- forfeiture action in February - just under the five-year deadline for staking
- such a claim.
-
- "I concede the time lapse on this case is longer than most, but there was
- a violation of the law, and that makes this appropriate, not money-grubbing,"
- says Silverberg. "The other way to took at this, you know, is that the Lopeses
- could be happy we let them live there as long as we did." They don't see it
- that way.
-
- Neither does their attorney, who says his firm now has about eight
- similar forfeiture cases, all of them stemming from small-time crimes that
- occurred years ago but were resurrected. "Digging these cases out now is a
- business proposition, not law enforcement," Menzer says.
-
- "We thought it was all behind us," says Lopes. Now, "there isn't a day I
- don't think about what will happen to us."
-
- They remain in the house, paying taxes and the mortgage, until the
- forfeiture case is resolved. Given court backlogs, that likely won't be until
- the middle of next year, Menzer says.
-
- They've been warned to leave everything as it was when the videotape was
- shot.
-
- "When they were going out the door," Mrs. Lopes says of the police, "they
- told me to take good care of the yard. They said they would be coming back one
- day."
-
- ---
-
- "DUMB JUDGMENT"
-
- Protections for innocent owners are a neglected issue in federal and state
- forfeiture law," concluded the Police Executive Research Forum in its March
- bulletin.
-
- But a chief policy maker on forfeiture maintains that the system is
- actively interested in protecting the rights of the innocent.
-
- George J. Terwilliger III, associate deputy attorney general in the
- Justice Department, admits that there may be instances of "dumb judgment." And
- says if there's a "systemic" problem, he'd like to know about it.
-
- But attorneys who battle forfeiture cases say dumb judgment is the
- systemic problem. And they point to some of Terwilliger's own decisions as
- examples.
-
- The forfeiture policy that Terwilliger crafts in the nation's capital he
- puts to use in his other federal job: U.S. attorney for Vermont.
-
- A coalition of Vermont residents, outraged by Terwilliger's forfeitures
- of homes in which small children live, launched a grass-roots movement called
- "Stop Forfeiture of Children's Homes." Three months old, the group has about 70
- members, from school principals to local medical societies.
-
- Forfeitures are a particularly sensitive issue in Vermont where state law
- forbids talking a person's primary home. That restriction appears nowhere in
- federal law, which means Vermont police departments can circumvent the state
- constraint by taking forfeiture cases through federal courts.
-
- The playmaker for that end-run: Terwilliger.
-
- 'It's government-sponsored child abuse that's destroying the future of
- children all over this state in the name of fighting the drug war," says Dr.
- Kathleen DePierro, a family practitioner who works at Vermont State Hospital,
- a psychiatric facility in Waterbury.
-
- The children of Karen and Reggie Lavallee, ages 6,9 and 11, are
- precisely the type of victims over which the Vermonters agonize. Reggie
- Lavallee is serving a 10-year sentence in a federal prison in Minnesota for
- cocaine possession.
-
- Because police said he had been involved with drug trafficking, his
- conviction cost his family their ranch house on 2 acres in a small village 20
- miles east of Burlington. For the first time, the family is on welfare, in a
- rented duplex.
-
- "I don't condone what my husband did, but why victimize my children
- because of his actions? That house wasn't much, but it was ours. It was a home
- for the children, with rabbits, chicken, turkeys and a vegetable garden. Their
- friends were there, and they liked the school, " says Mrs. Lavallee, 29.
-
- After the eviction, "every night for months, Amber cried because she
- couldn't see her friends. I'd like to see the government tell this 9-year-old
- that this isn't cruel and unusual punishment."
-
- Terwilliger's dual role particularly troubles DePierro. "It's horrifying
- to know he is setting policy that could expand this type of terror and abuse to
- kids in every state in the nation."
-
- Terwilliger calls the group's allegations absurd. "If there was someone
- to blame, it would be the parents and not the government."
-
- Lawyers like John MaeFadyen, a defense attorney in Providence, R.I.,
- find it harder to fix blame.
-
- "The flaw with the innocent owner thing is that life doesn't paint itself
- in black and white. It's oftentimes gray, and there is no room for gray in
- these laws," MaeFadyen says. As a consequence, prosecutors presume everyone
- guilty and leave it to them to show otherwise. "That's not good judgment. In
- fact, it defies common sense."
-
- ---
-
- PROVING INNOCENCE
-
- Innocent owners who defend their interests expose themselves to
- questioning that bores deep into their private affairs. Because the forfeiture
- law is civil, they also have no protection against self-incrimination, which
- means that they risk having anything they say used against them later.
-
- The documentation required of innocent owner Loretta Steams illustrates
- how deeply the government plumbs.
-
- The Connecticut woman lent her adult son $40,000 in 1988 to buy a home in
- Tequesta, Fla., court documents show. Unlike many parents who treat such
- transactions informally, she had the foresight to record the loan as a mortgage
- with Palm Beach County. Her action ultimately protected her interest in the
- house after the federal government seized it, claiming her son stored cocaine
- there. He has not been charged criminally.
-
- The seizure occurred in November 1989, and it took until last May before
- Mrs. Steams convinced the government she had a legitimate interest in the
- house.
-
- To prove herself an innocent owner, Mrs. Steams met 14 requests for
- information, including providing "all documents of any kind whatsoever
- pertaining to your mortgage, including but not limited to loan application,
- credit reports, record of mortgages and mortgage payments, title reports,
- appraisal reports, closing documents, records of any liens, attachments on the
- defendant property, records of payments, canceled checks, internal
- correspondence or notes (handwritten or typed) relating to any of the above
- and opinion letter from borrower's or lender's counsel relating to any of the
- above."
-
- And that was just question No. 1.
-
- ---
-
- LANDLORD AS A COP
-
- Innocent owners are supposed to be shielded in forfeitures, but at times
- they've been expected to become virtual cops in order to protect their property
- >from seizure.
-
- T. T. Masonry Inc. owns a 36-unit apartment building in Milwaukee, Wis.,
- that's plagued by dope dealing. Between January 1990, when it bought the
- building, and July 1990, when the city formally warned it about problems, the
- landlord evicted 10 tenants suspected of drug use, gave a master key to local
- beat and vice cops,. forwarded tips to police and hired two security firms -
- including an off -duty city police officer - to patrol the building.
-
- Despite that effort, the city seized the property.
-
- Assistant City Attorney David Stanosz says "once a property develops a
- reputation as a place to buy drugs, the only way to fix that is to leave it
- totally vacant for a number of months. This landlord doesn't want to do that."
-
- Correct, says Jerome Buting, attorney for Tom Torp of Masonry.
-
- "If this building is such a target for dealers, use that fact," says
- Buting. "Let undercover people go in. But when I raised that, the answer was
- they were short of officers and resources."
-
- ---
-
- IT LOOKS LIKE COKE
-
- Grady McClendon, 53, his wife, two of their adult children and two
- grand-children - 7 and 8 -- were in a rented car headed to their Florida home
- in August 1989. They were returning from a family reunion in Dublin, Ga.
-
- In Fitzgerald, Ga., McClendon made a wrong turn on a one-way street.
- Local police stopped him, checked his identification and asked permission to
- search the car. He agreed.
-
- Within minutes, police pulled open suitcases and purses, emptying out
- jewelry and about 10 Florida state lottery tickets. They also found a
- registered handgun.
-
- Then, says McClendon, the police "started waving a little stick they said
- was cocaine. They told me to put on MY glasses and take a good look. I told
- them I'd never seen cocaine for real but that it didn't look like TV." For
- about six hours, police detained the McClendon family at the police station
- where officers seized $2,300 in cash and other items as "instruments of drug
- activity and gambling paraphernalia" a reference to the lottery tickets.
-
- Finally, they gave McClendon a traffic ticket and released them, but kept
- the family's possessions.
-
- For 11 months, McClendon's attorney argued with the state, finally forcing
- it to produce lab test results on the "cocaine."
-
- James E. Turk, the prosecutor who handled the case will say only "it came
- back negative."
-
- "That's because it was bubble gum," says Jerry Froelich, McClendon's
- attorney. A judge returned the McClendons' items.
-
- Turk considers the search "a good stop. They had no proof of where they
- lived beyond drivers' licenses. They had jewelry that could have been
- contraband, but we couldn't prove it was stolen. And they had more cash than I
- would expect them to carry."
-
- McClendon says: "I didn't see anything wrong with them asking me to
- search. That's their job. But the rest of it was wrong, wrong, wrong."
-
- ---
-
- SELLER, BEWARE
-
- Owners who press the government for damages are rare. Those who do are
- often helped by attorneys who forego their usual fees because of their own
- indignation over the law.
-
- For nearly a decade, the lives of Carl and Mary Shelden of Moraga,
- Calif., have been intertwined with the life of a convicted criminal who
- happened to buy their house.
-
- The complex litigation began when the Sheldens sold their home in 1979,
- but took back a deed of trust from the buyer - an arrangement that made the
- Sheldens a mortgage holder on the house.
-
- Four years later, the buyer was arrested and later convicted of running
- an interstate prostitution ring. His property, including the home on which
- the Sheldens held the mortgage, was forfeited. The criminal, pending his
- appeal, went to jail, but the government allowed his family to live in the home
- rent-free.
-
- Panicked when they read about the arrest in the newspaper, the Sheldens
- discovered they couldn't foreclose against the government and couldn't collect
- mortgage payments from the criminal.
-
- After tortuous court appearances, the Sheldens got back the home in 1987,
- but discovered it was so severely damaged while in government control that they
- can now stick their hand between the bricks near the front door.
-
- The home the Sheldens sold in 1979 for $289,000 was valued at $115,500 in
- 1987 and now needs nearly $500,000 in repairs, the Sheldens say, chiefly from
- uncorrected drainage problems that caused a retaining wall to let loose and
- twist apart the main house.
-
- Disgusted, they returned to court, saying their Fifth Amendment rights had
- been violated. The amendment prohibits the taking of private property for
- public use without just compensation. Their attorney, Brenda Grantland of
- Washington, D.C., argues that when the government seized the property but
- failed to sell it promptly and pay off the Sheldens, it violated their rights.
-
- Between 1983 and today, the Sheldens have defended their mortgage through
- every type of court: foreclosures, U.S. District Court, Bankruptcy, U.S.
- Claims.
-
- In January 1990, a federal judge issued an opinion agreeing the Sheldens'
- rights had been violated. The government asked the judge to reconsider, and he
- agreed. A final opinion has not been issued.
-
- "It's been a roller coaster," says Mrs. Shelden, 46. A secretary, she is
- the family's bread-winner. Shelden, 50, was permanently disabled when he broke
- his back in 1976 while repairing the house. Because he was unable to work, the
- couple couldn't afford the house, so they sold it - the act that pitched them
- into their decade-long legal quagmire.
-
- They've tried to rent the damaged home to a family - a real estate agent
- showed it 27 times with no takers- then resorted to renting to college
- students, then room-by-room boarders. Finally, they and their children, ages 21
- and 16, moved back in.
-
- "We owe Brenda (Grantland) thousands at this point, but she's really been
- a doll," says Shelden. "Without people like her, people like us wouldn't stand
- a chance."
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CIVIL FORFEITURES CAN THREATEN A COMPANY'S EXISTENCE
-
- For businesses, civil forfeitures can be a big, big stick. Bad judgment,
- lack of knowledge or outright wrongdoing by one executive can put the company
- itself in jeopardy.
-
- A San Antonio bank faces a $1 million loss and may close because it didn't
- know how to handle a huge cash transaction and got bad advice from government
- banking authorities, the bank says. The government says the bank knowingly
- laundered money for an alleged Mexican drug dealer.
-
- The problems began when Mexican nationals came to Stone Oak National Bank
- about 150 miles north of the border, to buy certificates of deposits with
- $300,000 in cash. The Mexicans planned to start an American business, they
- said. They had drivers' licenses and passports.
-
- Bank officers, who wanted guidance about the cash, called the Internal
- Revenue Service, Secret Service, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the
- Federal Reserve, and the Department of Treasury.
-
- Federal banking regulators require banks to file CTRs - currency
- transaction reports - for cash deposits greater than $10,000.
-
- That paper trail was created to develop leads about suspicious cash. Once
- the government was alerted, the thinking went, it could track the cash, put
- depositors under surveillance or set up a sting.
-
- A tape-recorded phone line that Stone Oak, like many banks, uses for
- sensitive transactions captured a conversation between a Treasury official and
- then-bank president Herbert Pounds. According to transcripts, Pounds said:
-
- "We're a small bank. I've never had a transaction like that.... I talked
- to several of my banking friends. They've never had anybody bring in that much
- cash, and the guys say they've got a lot more where that came from."
-
- Pounds asked for advice and was told to go through with the transaction.
- "That's fine ... as long as you send the CTR," the Treasury official said.
- "That's all you're responsible for. "
-
- The bank took the money and filed
- the form.
-
- Between that first transaction in March 1987 and the government's March
- 1989 seizure of $850,000 in certificates of deposit, bank officials continued
- to file reports, according to photocopies reviewed by The Pittsburgh Press.
-
- "The government had two years to come in and say, 'Hey, something smells
- bad here,' but it never did," says Sam Bavless, the bank's attorney.
-
- But the government now charges that the bank customers were front men for
- Mario Alberto Salinas Trevino, who was indicted for drug trafficking in March
- 1989. Fourteen months later, the bank president and vice president were added
- to the indictment and charged with money laundering.
-
- The bank never was criminally charged, and the officers' indictments were
- dismissed May 29.
-
- The U.S. attorneys office in San Antonio said it would not discuss the
- case.
-
- Because the Mexicans used their certificates as collateral for $1 million
- in loans from Stone Oak, the bank is worried it will lose the money. In
- addition, according to banking regulations, it must keep $1 million in reserve
- to cover that potential loss. For those reasons, it has asked the government
- for a heating and has spent nearly $250,000 for lawyers' fees.
-
- But the bank can't get a hearing because the forfeiture case is on hold
- pending the outcome of the criminal charges. And the criminal case has been
- indefinitely delayed because Salinas escaped six weeks after he was arrested.
-
- Because the bank is so small, the $1 million set-aside puts it below
- capital requirements., meaning "regulatory authorities could well require Stone
- Oak National Bank to close before ever having the opportunity for its case to
- heard," says its court brief.
-
- To brace for a loss, Stone Oak closed one of its branches. "For the life
- of me," says Bayless, "I can't understand why the government would want to sink
- a bank. And, to boot, why would the government want another Texas bank?"
-
- Bayless, who says, "I'm very conservative, I'm a bank lawyer, for heaven's
- sake," derides the federal action as "narco-McCarthyism."
-
- Problems with paperwork also led to the seizure of $227,000 from a
- Colombian computer company.
-
- The saga started in January 1990 when Ricardo Alberto Camacho arrived in
- Miami with about $296,000 in cash to pay for an order of computers.
-
- Camacho is a representative of Tandem Limitada, the authorized dealer in
- Colombia and Venezuela for VeriFone products, says VeriFone spokesman Tod
- Bottari. The cash covered a previously placed order for about 1,600 terminals.
-
- Both the government and Camacho agree that when he arrived in Miami, he
- declared the amount he was carrying with Customs. They also agree that the
- breakdown of the amount- cash vs. other monetary instruments, such as checks -
- was incorrect on his declaration form.
-
- Camacho and the government disagree about whether the incorrect entry was
- intentional - the government's position - or a mistake made by an airport
- employee.
-
- The airport employee, in a deposition, said he had filled out the form and
- handed it to Camacho for him to initial, which he did. "Mr. Camacho assumed the
- agent had correctly written down the information provided to him," says
- Camacho's court. filings over the subsequent seizure of the money. The
- government says Camacho deliberately misstated the facts to hide cash made from
- drug sales.
-
- Camacho brought in the suitcase full of U.S. cash, which he had purchased
- at a Bogota bank, because he thought it would speed delivery of his order, he
- told federal agents.
-
- VeriFone's lawyers directed Camacho to deposit the money in their account
- in Marietta, Ga., says Bottari. The final bill for the computers was $227,000.
-
- VeriFone arranged for an employee to meet Camacho at the bank and told the
- bank he was coming, Bottari says. The bank notified U.S. Customs agents that
- it was expecting a large deposit. When Camacho arrived, federal agents were
- waiting with a drug-sniffing dog.
-
- The agents asked Camacho if he would answer "a few questions about the
- currency." Camacho agreed.
-
- The handier walked the dog past a row of boxes, including one containing
- some of Camacho's money. The dog reacted to that box.
-
- At that point, the agents said they were taking the money to the local
- Customs office, where they retrieved information from the report Camacho had
- filed in Miami.
-
- The reporting discrepancy, and the dog's reaction, prompted the government
- to take the cash.
-
- Although the computer deal went through several weeks later when Tandem
- wired another $227,000, that wasn't enough to convince Albert L. Kemp Jr., the
- assistant U.S. attorney on the case, that the first order was real.
-
- After the seizure, Kemp says, the government checked Camacho's background.
- He is a naturalized American citizen who went to business school in California
- and then returned to help run several family businesses in Colombia.
-
- He travels to the United States "four or five times a year," says Kemp.
- "He has filled out the currency reports correctly in the past, but now he says
- there was a mistake and he didn't know about it.
-
- "C'mon," says Kemp. "In total, his whole story doesn't wash with me.
-
- "We believe the money is traceable to drugs, but we don't have the
- evidence. So instead of taking it for drugs, we're using a currency reporting
- violation to grab it."
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CRIME PAYS BIG FOR INFORMANTS IN FORFEITURE DRUG CASES
- PART FOUR - THE INFORMANTS
-
- They snitch at all levels, from the the Hell's Angel whose testimony
- across the country has made him a millionaire, to the Firksville, Mo.,
- informant who worked for the equivalent of a fast-food joint's hourly wage.
-
- They snitch for all reasons, from criminals who do it in return for
- lighter sentences to private citizens motivated by civic-mindedness.
-
- But it's only with the recent boom in forfeiture that paid informants
- began snitching for a hefty cut of the take.
-
- With the spread of forfeiture actions has come a new, and some say,
- problematic, practice: guaranteeing police informants that if their tips result
- in a forfeiture, the informant will get a percentage of the proceeds. And that
- makes crime pay. Big.
-
- The Asset Forfeiture Fund of the U.S. Justice Department last year gave
- $24 million to informants as their share of forfeited items. It has $22 million
- earmarked this year.
-
- While plenty of those payments go to informants who match the stereotype
- of a shady, sinister opportunist, many are average people you could meet on any
- given day in an airport, bus terminal or train station.
-
-
- In fact, if you travel often, you likely have met them whether you knew it
- or not.
-
- Counter clerks notice how people buy tickets. Cash? A one-way trip?
-
- Operators of X-ray machines watch for "suspicious" shadows and not only
- for outlines of weapons, which is what signs at checkpoints say they're
- scanning. They look for money, "suspicious" amounts that can be called to the
- attention of law enforcement and maybe net a reward for the operator.
-
- Police affidavits and court testimony in several cities show clerks for
- large package handlers, including United Parcel Service and Continental
- Airlines' Quik Pak, open "suspicious" packages and alert police to what they
- find. To do the same thing, police would need a search warrant.
-
- ---
-
- UNDERGROUND ECONOMY
-
- At 16 major airports, drug agents, counter and baggage personnel, and
- management reveal an underground economy running off seizures and forfeitures.
-
- All but one of the airports' drug interdiction teams reward private
- employees who pass along reports about suspicious activity. Typically, they get
- 10 percent of the value of whatever is found.
-
- The Greater Pittsburgh International Airport team does not and questions
- the propriety of the practice. Under federal and most states' laws, forfeiture
- proceeds return to the law enforcement agency that builds the case. Those
- agencies also control the rewards of informants.
-
- The arrangement means both police and the informants on whom they rely now
- have a financial incentive to seize a person's goods - a mix that may be too
- intoxicating, says Lt. Norbert Kowalski.
-
- He runs Greater Pitt's joint 11-person Allegheny County
- Police-Pennsylvania State Police interdiction team.
-
- "Obviously, we want all the help we can get in stopping these drug
- traffickers. But having a publicized program that pays airport or airline
- employees to in effect, be whistle-blowers, may be pushing what's proper law
- enforcement to the limit," he says.
-
- He worries that the system might encourage unnecessary random searches.
-
- His team checked passengers arriving from 4,230 flights last year. Yet
- even with its avowed cautious approach, the team stopped 527 people but netted
- only 49 arrests.
-
- At Denver's Stapleton Airport where most of the drug team's cases start
- with informant tips - officers also made 49 arrests last year. But they stopped
- about 2,000 people for questioning, estimates Capt. Rudy Sandoval, commander
- of the city's Vice and Drug Control Bureau.
-
- As Kowalski sees it, the public vests authority in police with the
- expectation they will use it legally and judiciously. The public can't get
- those same assurances with police-designees, like counter clerks, says
- Kowalski.
-
- With money as an inducement, "you run the risk of distorting the system,
- and that can infringe on the rights of innocent travelers. If someone knows
- they can get a good bit of money by turning someone in, then they may imagine
- seeing or hearing things that aren't there. What happens when you get to
- court?"
-
- In Nashville, that's not much of an issue. Juries rarely get to hear from
- informants.
-
- Police who work the airport deliberately delay paying informants until a
- case has been resolved "because we don't want these tipsters to have to
- testify. If we don't pay them until the case is closed they don't have to risk
- going to court," says Capt. Judy Bawcum, commander of the vice division for
- the Nashville Police Department.
-
- That means their motivation can't be questioned.
-
- Bawcum says it may appear that airport informants are working solely for
- the money, but she believes there's more to it. "I admit these (X-ray) guards
- are getting paid less than burger flippers at McDonald's and the promise of 10
- percent of $50,000 or whatever is attractive. But to refuse to help us is not
- a progressive way of thinking," says Bawcum. "This is a public service."
-
- But not all companies share the view that their employees should be public
- servants. Package handling companies and Wackenhut, the X-ray checkpoint
- security firm, refuse to allow Nashville police to use their workers as
- informants.
-
- "They're so fearful a promise of a reward will prompt their people to
- concentrate on looking for drugs and money instead of looking for weapons,"
- says Bawcum.
-
- Far from being uncomfortable with the notion of citizen-cops, Bawcum says
- her department relies on them. "We need airport employees working for us
- because we've only got a very small handful of officers" at the airport, she
- says.
-
- For her, the challenge comes in sustaining enthusiasm, especially when
- federal agencies like the DEA are "way too slow paying out." Civic duty
- carries only so far. "It's hard to keep them watching when they have to wait
- for those rewards. We can't lose that incentive."
-
- ---
-
- THE DEALS
-
- Most drug teams hold tight the details of how their system works and how
- much individual informants earn, preferring to keep their public service
- private.
-
- But in a Denver court case, attorney Alexander DeSalvo obtained
- photocopies of police affidavits about tipsters and copies of three checks
- payable to a Continental airline clerk, Melissa Funner. The cheeks, from the
- U.S. Treasury and Denver County, total $5,834 for the period from September
- 1989 to August 1990.
-
- Ms. Furtner, reached by phone at her home, was flustered by questions
- about the checks.
-
- "What do you want to know about the rewards? I can't talk about any of
- it. It's not something I'm supposed to talk about. I don't feel comfortable
- with this at all." She then hung up.
-
- As hefty as the payments to private citizens can be, they are pin money
- compared to the paychecks drawn by professional informants.
-
- Among the best paid of all: convicted drug dealers and self-confessed
- users.
-
- Anthony Tait, a Hell's Angel and admitted drug user who has been a
- cooperating witness for the FBI since 1985, earned nearly $1 million for
- information he provided between 1985 and 1988, according to a copy of Tait's
- payment schedule and FBI contract obtained by The Pittsburgh Press.
-
- Of his $1 million, $250,000 was his share of the value of assets forfeited
- as a result of his cooperation. His money came from four sources. FBI offices
- in Anchorage and San Francisco; the state of California and the federal
- forfeiture fund.
-
- Likewise, in a November 1990 case in Pittsburgh, the government paid a
- former drug kingpin handsomely.
-
- Testimony shows that Edward Vaughn of suburban San Francisco earned
- $40,000 in salary and expenses between August 1989 and October 1990 working for
- DEA, drew an additional $500 a month from the U.S. Marshal Service and was
- promised a 25 percent cut of any forfeited goods.
-
- Vaughn had run a multimillion-dollar, international drug smuggling ring,
- been a federal fugitive, and twice served prison time before arranging an early
- parole and paid informant deal with the government, he said in court.
-
- As an informant, he said, he preferred arranging deals for drug agents
- that are known as reverse stings: the law enforcement agents pose as sellers
- and the targets bring cash for a buy. Those deals take cash, but not dope,
- directly off the streets. In those stings, he said, the cash would be forfeited
- and Vaughn would get his prearranged quarter-share.
-
- His testimony in Pittsburgh resulted in one man being found guilty of
- conspiracy to distribute marijuana. The jury acquitted the other defendant
- saying they believed Vaughn had entrapped him by pursuing him so aggressively
- to make a dope deal.
-
- ---
-
- TO PAY OR NOT TO PAY
-
- The practice of giving informants a share of forfeited proceeds goes on so
- discreetly that Richard Wintory, an Oklahoma prosecutor and forfeiture
- proponent who until recently headed the National Drug Prosecution Center in
- Alexandria, Va., says, "I'm not aware of any agency that pays commissions on
- forfeited items to informants."
-
- Although the federal forfeiture program funnels millions of dollars to
- informants, it does not set policy at the top about how - or how much - to pay.
-
- "Decisions about how to pursue investigations within the guidelines of
- appropriate and legal behavior are best left to people in the field," says
- George Terwilliger III, the deputy attorney general who heads the Justice
- Department's forfeiture program.
-
- That hands-off approach filters to local offices, such as Pittsburgh,
- where U.S. Attorney Thomas Corbett says the discussion of whether to give
- informants a cut of any take "is a philosophical argument. I won't put myself
- in the middle of it."
-
- The absence of regulations spawns "privateers and junior Gmen," says
- Steven Sherick, a defense attorney in Tucson, Ariz., who recently recovered
- $9,000 for John P. Gray of Rutland, Vt., after a UPS employee found it in a
- package and called police.
-
- Gray, says Sherick, is "an eccentric older guy who doesn't use anything
- but cash." In March 1990, Gray mailed a friend hand-money for a piece of
- Arizona retirement property Gray had scouted during an earlier trip West, say
- court records. The court ordered the money returned because the state couldn't
- prove the cash was gained illegally.
-
- Expanding payments to private citizens, particularly on a sliding scale
- rather than a fixed fee, raises unsavory possibilities, says Eric E. Sterling,
- head of the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation, a think tank in Washington,
- D.C.
-
- Major racketeers and criminal enterprises were the initial targets of
- forfeiture, but its use has steadily expanded until now it catches people who
- never have been accused of a crime but lose their property anyway.
-
- "You can win a forfeiture case without charging someone," says Sterling.
- "You can win even after they've been acquitted. And now, on top of that, you
- can have informants tailoring their tips to the quality of the thing that
- will be seized.
-
- "What paid informant in their right mind is going to tum over a crack
- house - which may be destroying an inner city neighborhood - when he can tum
- over information about a nice, suburban spread that will pay off big when it
- comes time to get his share?" asks Sterling.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- 35 ARRESTED DESPITE BUMBLING WAYS OF INFORMANT
-
- The undercover operation was called BAD. The main informant was named
- Mudd.
-
- And the entire affair was ... a bust.
-
- The prosecutor in Adair County in Missouri's northeast comer chuckles now
- about the "bumbled" investigation.
-
- But Sheri and Matthew Farrell, whose 60-acre farm remains tied up in a
- federal forfeiture action due to the bumbling, can't see the humor.
-
- A paid police informant named Steve R. Mudd, who went undercover for $4.65
- an hour in a marijuana investigation near Kirksville, Mo., accused Farrell of
- selling and cultivating marijuana on his land. Mudd was the only witness in the
- joint city-county drug investigation called Operation BAD - Bust a Dealer.
-
- For a year starting in November 1989, Mudd worked for city and county
- police identifying alleged dealers around Firksville, population 17,000. He
- received "buy money" and would return after his deals - minus the money and
- with what he said were drugs.
-
- Mudd went to supposed traffickers' homes "but didn't wear a wire(tap)
- and didn't take any undercover officer with him. He said he was in a rut and
- didn't want a lot of supervision," says prosecutor Tom Hensley. When he came
- back to the office, Mudd would write reports - but the dates and times often
- didn't match what he would say later in depositions.
-
- Mudd himself had gone through drug rehabilitation, and had drug sales and
- possession on his criminal record, says Hensley. Mudd also had a history of
- passing bad checks and was always near broke, working odd jobs.
-
- Nevertheless, Mudd became the linchpin of Operation BAD.
-
- Based on his word, police arrested 35 people in Adair County, including
- Farrell. As Mudd told it, Farrell had sold him marijuana and confided he used
- tractors outfitted with special night lights to harvest fields of dope.
-
- He "whipped up quite the story. He had us out there at night banging
- around, renting big trucks to carry dope. There's no receipts, nothing to show
- that. And wouldn't someone have seen us?" asks Mrs. Farrell. Hensley confirms
- that Farrell has no criminal record, yet on Mudd's allegation, the county
- sheriff first arrested Farrell then ordered his house and farm seized in
- November.
-
- "They came out and searched everything. They took away tea, birdseed, they
- vacuumed our ashtrays in the truck and didn't find anything. Then they told us
- the house was seized and in governmental control. They told us to keep paying
- the taxes, but not to do anything else to the land," says Mrs. Farrell, 36, a
- U.S. Postal Service worker in Kirksville. Her husband, 38, runs a metal
- working shop out of his home.
-
- Of the 35 cases initiated by Mudd, only Farrell's involved seized land.
-
- Adair County kept the criminal cases in local court.
-
- But to make the most of the seizure, the county turned the Farrell
- forfeiture case over to the federal government. Missouri state law directs
- that forfeiture proceeds go to the general fund where they are earmarked for
- public school support. Under federal regulations, though, the local police who
- bring a forfeiture case get back up to 80 percent of any proceeds.
-
- "The federal sharing plan is what affected how the case was brought,
- sure," says Hensley. "Seizures are kind of like bounties anyway, so why
- shouldn't you take it to the feds so it comes back to the local law enforcement
- effort? "
-
- With the forfeiture case firmly lodged in federal court, the county
- criminal cases began to be heard and promptly fell apart.
-
- All 35 cases "went down the tubes," says Hensley. At the first hearing,
- which included Farrell's case, Mudd failed to appear due to strep throat. It
- took him two months to regain his voice, says Hensley, and then he couldn't
- regain his memory.
-
- "The dates he was saying didn't mesh with what he'd put down on reports.
- And I couldn't go out on the street without someone stopping to tell me a Mudd
- bad-cheek story. I decided my only witness was not worth a great deal,
- especially if he was having trouble with his recall."
-
- The case crumbled into powder when the powder turned out to be Tylenol 3.
- Hensley said lab tests showed Mudd had brought back fake drugs as evidence.
-
- Hensley withdrew the criminal charges against Farrell and the others.
-
- Says Hensley of his star witness, "My honest impression is the guy is just
- dumb and watched too much 'Miami Vice. 'You never see Miami Vice' guys write
- anything down, do you?"
-
- The prosecutor doesn't feel Mudd "scammed us that bad. He took us once to
- a patch of dope growing along a country road across the state line in Iowa. It
- was out of the way, so he had to know something. But he couldn't say for sure
- who was growing it."
-
- Although Mudd was less than an ideal informant, local police relied on him
- "because there is marijuana use here and we had to get somebody. We don't get
- big enough cases to get the state police here to do an investigation up right."
-
- Hensley says he "couldn't say how" Mudd might have come up with Farrell's
- name, but Mrs. Farrell has a theory. Several years ago, Mike Farrell, Matthew's
- brother, received probation for a marijuana possession charge - his only
- arrest. Hensley confirms that.
-
- "I think he figured he could say 'Farrell' and it would stick," says Mrs.
- Farrell.
-
- Though the criminal case has faded, the Farrells forfeiture case rolls
- on.
-
- Philosophically, Hensley agrees with the notion "that if you're not
- guilty or charges are dismissed then you ought to be off the hook on the
- forfeiture since no one could prove the case against you. But that isn't the
- way it works with the federal government."
-
- He is not inclined "to call down to St. Louis and tell the U.S. attorney
- to drop it. I've got other things to do with my time. I don't want to sound
- malicious but this will all work out."
-
- So far, it is merely working its way through federal court.
-
- The prosecutor on the Farrell case verifies that the state case was
- adopted by the federal government which means "the facts of their criminal case
- are the same facts that underlie the forfeiture action," says Daniel Meuleman,
- assistant U.S. attorney. "But that doesn't mean we can't go ahead because
- there are different standards of proof involved."
-
- Different is lower. To get a criminal conviction, prosecutors need proof'
- beyond a reasonable doubt. To pursue a federal forfeiture, they need only
- show probable cause.
-
- Meuleman refuses to say whether he will use Mudd as a witness.
-
- Meanwhile, the Farrells wait.
-
- Their attorney's bills already are $5,600 "and that put a crimp in our
- style. We were in shock for a good two months. Every day we thought something
- else might happen and we were scared in our own home.
-
- "That's gotten a little better," says Mrs. Farrell, "but in a town this
- small there's still a lot of talk, you know."
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- WITH SKETCHY DATA, GOVERNMENT SEIZES HOUSE FROM MAN'S HEIRS
-
- In Fort Lauderdale, Fla., last summer, forfeiture reached beyond the
- grave, seizing the $250,000 home of a dead man.
-
- A confidential informant told police that n 1988 the owner, George
- Gerhardt, took a $10,000 payment from drug dealers who used a dock at the
- house along a canal to unload cocaine.
-
- The informant can't recall the exact date, the boat's name or the dealers
- names, and the government candidly says in its court brief it "does not possess
- the facts necessary to be any more specific."
-
- But its sketchy information convinced a judge to remove the house from
- heirs, who now must prove the police wrong.
-
- "I was flabbergasted. I didn't think something like this could happen in
- this country," said Gerhardt's cousin, Jeanne Horgan of Hartsdale, N.J.
- She, a friend of Gerhardt's from high school, and a home health aide who cared
- for Gerhardt while he was dying of cancer, are his heirs.
-
- Gerhardt, who died at the age of 49, was an only child who inherited
- "substantial amounts" from his parents and lived in a home that had been in his
- family for 20 years, says Mare H. Gold, attorney for the heirs.
-
- Gerhardt ran a marina until he was 38, then retired and lived off the
- estate left him by his parents.
-
- "I've gone back through his tax returns and every penny is accounted for.
- I can't find an indication he ever was arrested or charged with anything in
- his life," says Gold.
-
- The heirs have filed a motion to have the case dismissed.
-
- While that request is pending, the government is renting the house to
- other tenants for roughly $2,200 a month which the government keeps.
-
- Although the government had its tip six months before Gerhardt's death, it
- didn't file a charge against him. It also didn't seize his house until three
- months after he died.
-
- The notice the government was taking the home came with a sharp rap on the
- door and a piece of paper handed to Brad Marema, the heir who had cared for
- Gerhardt and moved into the house. The notice gave Marema a few days to pack
- up before the government changed the locks.
-
- The point of trying to take the house, "is not so much to punish at this
- stage. The motivation really is to use the proceeds from the sale of the
- property to prevent other drug offenses," says Robyn Herrnann, assistant
- chief of the civil section for the U.S. attorneys office in the Southern
- District of Florida.
-
- The government's case depends on the informant's tip, says Ms. Hermann.
- "Even if I knew more about him (Gerhardt) I wouldn't say, but I don't think
- we do."
-
- The answer to how heirs counter allegations against a dead man "is real
- easy," she says. "Answers are acquired through discovery," a procedure in which
- both sides respond to questions from the other. "We'll take depositions,
- they'll take depositions. That's when they get their answers."
-
- But that isn't how the law is supposed to work counters Gold.
-
- "Who am I suppose to subpoena? Where do I send an investigator? The
- government is supposed to have a case, a reason for kicking someone out of
- their home. It's not supposed to remove them, then build a case."
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CRIMES ARE SMALL BUT JUSTICE TAKES ALL
- PART FIVE: CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
-
- A Vermont man was found guilty of growing six marijuana plants. He
- received a suspended sentence and was ordered to do 50 hours of community work.
- But there was an added penalty: He and his family nearly lost their 49- acre
- farm.
-
- In Washington, where the maximum criminal penalty could have been a
- $10,000 fine, an elderly couple served 60 days for growing 35 marijuana plants
- - and lost their $100,000 house.
-
- In Bismarck, N.D., a young couple received suspended sentences after
- pleading guilty to growing marijuana. The judge who ordered them to forfeit
- the three-bedroom house where they lived with their three children worried from
- the bench that he might be throwing them onto the welfare rolls. But he says
- he had no choice.
-
- All three families are the victims of a federal law that allows the
- government to take homes, lands, vehicles and other possessions from Americans
- convicted of possessing drugs or violating a host of other statutes.
-
- The law was intended to penalize major drug dealers and organized crime
- figures by taking their property, selling it and returning the proceeds to the
- cops for other investigations. But the dollar return to the cops has been so
- great that it's now being used for scores of crimes, some no more than
- misdemeanors by first-time law- breakers.
-
- Because of the law, more and more people are losing their property. For
- many, the punishment no longer fits the enme.
-
- ---
-
- TOWN: BACK OFF
-
- Community outrage helped Robert Machin and Joann Lidell keep their farm
- in South Washington, Vt., after the federal government tried to seize it in
- 1989.
-
- Signs decrying "Cruel and unusual punishment - remember the Eighth
- Amendment" were posted along local roads. Lawmakers and politicians got
- involved. Nearly all their neighbors signed petitions.
-
- Machin and Lidell, advocates of the back-to-nature movement, support
- themselves and their three children off their 49 acres. They boil maple sap
- into syrup, press apples into cider and educate their children in the rustic,
- gas-lit rooms of their eight-sided wooden house.
-
- Their trouble began in September 1988, when a teenager busted for a
- traffic violation traded his way out of a ticket by telling state police he
- could show them 200 marijuana plants growing on Machin's farm.
-
- Police raided the property and found only six plants, which Machin
- admitted to growing.
-
- He received a suspended sentence and spent 50 hours doing community
- service. Tranquility returned to the Machin farm, but the government wasn't
- through.
-
- On Aug. 12, 1989, U.S. Attorney George Terwilliger III filed action to
- seize the Machin house and property. Vermont state law does not permit the
- seizure of a home, so the case was pursued through federal courts.
-
- But the political pressure and the outpouring of concern from the
- community forced Terwilliger, who also runs the Justice Department's
- forfeiture fund, to back off.
-
- "The Machin case is one where public scrutiny forced the government to do
- it right. What about all the others where no one is watching?" Machin's
- lawyer, Richard Rubin, asks.
-
- ---
-
- LET THE FEDS DO IT
-
- There was little public scrutiny in November 1989 after Robert and Brenda
- Schmalz pleaded guilty to marijuana charges in Bismarck, N.D., and got
- probation.
-
- North Dakota state law does not allow the forfeiture of real estate
- involved in crimes. So, in order to seize the house, prosecutors took the
- Schmalz case to federal court, says federal Judge Patrick Conmy, who got the
- case.
-
- Conmy said at the hearing that the couple had grown marijuana in their
- basement for their own use. Even so, because they used their house in the
- crime, Conmy says, he had no choice but to order them to forfeit their home.
-
- "I don't really care if somebody loses their Cadillac, or their coin
- collection, the cash that's with the drugs. That's fine. It's looked on as a
- hazard of doing business," the federal judge says.
-
- "But you get a husband, wife and several children in a three-bedroom home
- and the husband raises marijuana in the basement with some grow lights, and you
- take their house for that. That, to me, is different."
-
- ---
-
- HEADACHES
-
- The marijuana Jack Blahnik grew in his yard controlled severe pain from
- his cluster headaches, he says.
-
- Blahnik completed 68 years of his life without a single brush with the
- police. But in his 69th year, he and his 61-year-old wife, Patricia, were
- arrested, convicted and jailed for 60 days for growing 35 marijuana plants. On
- March 6, 1990, the state of Washington also seized the couple's three-bedroom
- home and the five acres it sat on.
-
- Blahnik admits he was growing the dope.
-
- "I showed it to the police, I took them out to the shed in the back yard
- and told them that I was growing the stuff for my own use, to try to control
- the pain from these cluster headaches that I have," Blahnik says.
-
- Blahnik heard that marijuana helps such headaches, and his doctor
- confirmed its value.
-
- "My wife was against my growing the stuff, but she went to jail because
- she copied some growing instructions for me," Blahnik says.
-
- The statute under which the Blahnik's house was seized requires the
- state to provide "evidence which demonstrates the offender's intent to engage
- in commercial activity." The police never made that link, affidavits show.
-
- The Blahnik's $100,000 property in Woodland, about 130 miles south of
- Seattle, was their nest egg.
-
- "It was our life savings," Blahnik says. "Everything we had went into
- that house and land."
-
- Police charged that drug sales financed the house.
-
- "They knew that wasn't true," Mrs. Blahnik says. "Our bank statements
- and tax forms show that everything we ever put into buying that house, and
- everything else we have, came from money that we worked hard 40 years to
- save."
-
- The Blahniks,' lawyer, Michael Mclean, calls the seizure unconstitutional
- and punitive.
-
- "The maximum fine for this crime in the state of Washington is $10,000.
- The Blahnik's property was worth 10 times that amount."
-
- Blahnik does not question that he should be punished for breaking the
- law. However, he questions the manner in which it was done.
-
- "The prosecuting attorney went on television, putting our mug shots on and
- claiming they had made the biggest seizure ever made in either Washington or
- Oregon and we could possibly be connected to a nationwide drug ring," Blahnik
- says.
-
- "They failed to mention that their big seizure was our retirement money,"
- Blahnik says.
-
- ---
-
- A COSTLY CATCH
-
- Sometimes the government's push to seize property drives it to spend far
- more than it makes. For example, it's estimated that the state of Iowa spent
- more than $100,000 defending the seizure of a $6,000 fishing boat.
-
- It has been three years since the Iowa Department of Natural Resources
- agents charged Dickey Kaster with having three illegally caught fish.
-
- The officers stopped Kaster, a 63- year-old retired gas company foreman,
- leaving Clear Lake. In the back of his truck the fish cops found a silver bass,
- a northern pike and a muskie, and said they had "net marks" on them. Kaster
- was charged with gillnetting, a misdemeanor in Iowa punishable at the time by
- up to 30 days in jail and a $100 fine for each fish. Altogether, he paid about
- $500 in fines.
-
- But the officers also seized Kaster's 16-foot boat, 40-hp motor and
- trailer worth about $6,000.
-
- "No doubt they had net marks on them, but so do 75 percent of the fish in
- the lake, I caught them with a rod and night crawlers," Kaster says.
-
- District Court Judge Stephen Carroll said the seizure was unconstitutional
- and ordered the boat, motor and trailer returned.
-
- But Cerro Gordo County Attorney Paul Martin appealed to the Iowa Supreme
- Court, which ruled the property could be seized.
-
- Kaster's saga of the three fish has been on local court dockets four
- times and before the Iowa Supreme Court twice.
-
- A court clerk in Mason City estimated that "probably a lot more than
- $100,000" was spent in pursuit of justice for those fish.
-
- Kaster says he knows exactly what the ordeal cost him.
-
- "Just about everything I own. I auctioned off the inventory of my bait
- and tackle shop at about a dime on the dollar and sold my house to pay the
- legal bills and keep the bank happy," he says.
-
- "I didn't get my boat back, but I'm still trying," he says. "You can't let
- the government ignore the Constitution. I'm fighting this over a boat that
- shouldn't have been taken, but it really deals with how fair our government is
- supposed to be."
-
- ---
-
- MIXED CROP
-
- And fairness is what is worrying Don and Ruth Churchill, who are fighting
- to keep their family farm in Indiana.
-
- "Salt of the earth" and "good, God-fearing people" are how some neighbors
- in the southern Indiana farming community describe the 54-year-old couple.
-
- In 1987, Churchill had found some marijuana plants mixed in with his corn
- and immediately notified state police.
-
- Farmers in the area were aware that a group called "the Cornbread Mafia"
- was planting marijuana in other people's cornfields throughout nine Midwestern
- states.
-
- The cops destroyed the crop, and the Churchills thought they were done
- with marijuana.
-
- But two years later, while They were watching a TV newscast about
- thousands of marijuana plants being found on farmland, they recognized the land
- as theirs.
-
- The next morning, the Churchills went to the sheriff to say it was their
- land. Ten days later, state police arrived at their door to arrest Churchill
- and his 34-year-old son, David, charging them with numerous felony counts,
- including possession of and cultivating marijuana.
-
- An informant had reported that he saw Churchill, his son and a third,
- unidentified man tending marijuana crops on land they own in Harrison County.
- The informant later reported that dope was also growing on other Churchill land
- in Crawford County, court affidavits show.
-
- In February, four months before their first criminal trial, the federal
- government - prodded by state police who would get the bulk of any forfeiture
- proceeds - seized the 149 acres the Churchills own in both counties.
-
- They are awaiting the outcome of the cases.
-
- While the Churchills anguish over the possible loss of their property,
- they don't dispute that police found thousands of marijuana plants growing on
- their two tracts.
-
- What Churchill disputes is that he or anyone else in his family grew it.
-
- "I farm part time. We plant in the spring and harvest in the fall and
- don't mess with the corn in between." Before the large cache of marijuana was
- discovered, "we hadn't been out there for weeks," says Churchill, who leaves
- for work at 4 a.m. to get to the Ford truck plant 43 miles away in Louisville,
- where he has worked for 27 years.
-
- Planting of "no-till" crops is very common in the area as a way to make
- extra money.
-
- The farmland, especially valuable because it contains the largest natural
- spring in Indiana, has been in Mrs. Churchill's family for generations.
-
- Standing on the steps of a wood-frame chapel in the midst of some of the
- land the government is trying to take, Mrs. Churchill expressed her
- disillusionment.
-
- "This church is built on my family's land. I was baptized here, and Don
- and I were married here. This used to be a place of peace and happiness," Mrs.
- Churchill says. "Now, this place, our community, our lives, our faith in
- government, everything has changed.
-
- "If they take our land, I'm going to lose faith in everything," she says.
-
- Ron Simpson, the state's primary prosecutor of the criminal charges,
- questions the fairness of the federal government's seizure of the Churchills'
- land when most of it was inherited from the wife's family.
-
- "Under our system, if someone is punished, they should have been charged
- with something, and we've brought no charges against Mrs. Churchill. We have no
- evidence that she knew anything about the marajuana that was growing,"
- Simpson says. "You just have to wonder about how fair this seizure is."
- Churchill says:
-
- "We assumed the legal system was fair, that if we were innocent, we had
- nothing to worry about. Now I'm in one court defending myself and MY son
- against drug charges, and in another court, they're trying to take MY land
- away. I'm worrying about a lot of things now."
-
- ---
-
- A HANDFUL OF TROUBLE
-
- The issues of proportionality and fairness pose challenges for even
- strong supporters of forfeiture laws, including Gwen Holden, a director of the
- National Criminal Justice Association in Washington, D.C., a group that
- represents state law enforcement interests.
-
- "If an individual is clearly a major trafficker and everything he ever
- bought is dirty, no one has major heartbum. If someone owns 200 acres of land
- and there's drugs on a comer and the guy never knew it was there, then the rule
- of reason should kick in," Ms. Holden says. "You shouldn't be taking the whole
- farm if he didn't know it was there."
-
- Taking Bradshaw Bowman's whole farm is exactly what the government is
- trying to do.
-
- The 80-year-old man was arrested for growing marijuana, and the local
- sheriff has seized his 160-acre ranch in the breathtaking high desert area of
- Southern Utah.
-
- A convicted drug dealer-turned-sheriff's informant blew the whistle on a
- handful of marijuana plants growing on Bowman's property.
-
- Bowman's "Calf Creek Ranch" is 300 miles south of Salt Lake City, at the
- entrance to a National Scenic Vista area of stunning canyons.
-
- The marijuana was found on a hiking trail far from Bowman's house.
-
- "I've had this property for almost 2G years, and it's absolute heaven. I
- love this place. My wife's buried here," Bowman says. "I can't believe they're
- trying to take it away from me, and I didn't even know the stuff was growing
- there.
-
- "I used to serve on jury duty, but at 70 they make you stop. In all my
- time sitting in the jury box, I never heard of the Constitution treated this
- way."
-
- Garfield County Attorney Wallace Lee, who is prosecuting both the criminal
- charges and the civil effort to seize Bowman's house, says, "He's getting his
- day in court."
-
- "The fact that he's 80 years old has no bearing on the case at all and
- certainly not with me," Lee says. "I'm out to prosecute a criminal case here,
- and it doesn't matter whose house it is."
-
- Bowman's lawyer, Marcus Taylor, says:
-
- "This is the classic example of the absurdity, injustice and almost
- immoral nature of forfeiture.
-
- "You could hold that entire bundle of 67 plants in one hand."
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- JET SEIZED, TRASHED, OFFERED BACK FOR $66,000
-
- With more than 9,000 flights under his belt, Billy Munnerlyn has survived
- lots of choppy air. But it took only one flight into a government forfeiture
- action to send his small air charter service crashing to the ground.
-
- Munnerlyn and his wife, Karon, both 53, worked for years building their
- Las Vegas business. Their four planes - a jet and three props - flew
- businessmen, air freight, air ambulance runs and Grand Canyon tours.
-
- "It wasn't a big operation, but it was ours," Mrs. Munnerlyn says.
-
- Today, Munnerlyn is malting 22 cents a mile trucking watermelons and
- frozen car-rots across the country in an 18-wheeler.
-
- He has filed for bankruptcy. He sold off his three smaller planes and
- office equipment to pay $80,000 in legal fees. His 1969 Lear Jet - his pride
- and joy - is being held by the federal government at a storage hangar in Texas.
-
- Munnerlyn's life went into a tailspin the afternoon of Oct. 2, 1989,
- when he flew an old man and four padlocked, blue plastic boxes to the Ontario
- International Airport, outside Los Angeles.
-
- His passenger was 74-year-old Albert Wright, a convicted cocaine
- trafficker. The plastic boxes contained $2,795,685 in cash.
-
- But Munnerlyn says he didn't know that until three hours after they
- landed and Drug Enforcement Administration agents handcuffed him and took him
- to the Cucamonga County Jail. Munnerlyn was charged with drug trafficking
- and ordered to pay $1 million bail. Seventy-one hours later, he was released
- without being charged.
-
- When he went to get his plane, a drug agent told him "it belongs to the
- government now" - a simple statement that launched a devastating legal battle
- that continues today. An informant had told Ontario Airport police that
- Wright would arrive Oct. 2 with a large amount of currency to purchase
- narcotics.
-
- Police were waiting when the Lear landed. They watched Wright get off the
- plane. For the next three hours, agents followed him as he met two other
- people, picked up a rented van, returned to the airport and unloaded the
- plastic containers from Munnerlyn's jet.
-
- Police followed the van to a residence about 20 miles away. They
- surrounded the van and four people nearby. All were identified as being major
- cocaine traffickers.
-
- A search of the plastic boxes found $2,795,685.
-
- At the airport, agents told Munnerlyn he was in trouble. They searched
- the jet. No drugs were found, but they seized $8,500 in cash that he had been
- paid for the charter.
-
- "I guessed they would figure out I had nothing to do with that guy and his
- drug money, and give me my plane and $8,500 back," Munnerlyn says. He was
- wrong.
-
- Two weeks later, drug agents showed up at Munnerlyn's Las Vegas home and
- office and carried off seven boxes of documents and flight logs.
-
- It was just the beginning of the government's efforts to prove he was a
- drug trafficker and had flown for Wright for years. Munnerlyn says he didn't
- even know Wright was the man's name.
-
- Several days before the seizure, Munnerlyn was contacted by a man
- identifying himself as "Randy Sullivan," a banker, who was willing to discuss
- financing a new aircraft that Munnerlyn had been telling business contacts he
- wanted to buy.
-
- Munnerlyn agreed to meet him Oct. 2 at Little Rock Airport. "We were
- going to fly back to Las Vegas, where I was going to show him my operation and
- talk about him financing my purchase of a larger plane." Munnerlyn picked up
- "Sullivan" and four boxes of "financial records."
-
- "He was a distinguished-looking, very old man dressed in a dark suit. He
- looked like a banker is supposed to look," Munnerlyn says.
-
- They stopped in Oklahoma City to refuel. When they took off 45 minutes
- later headed to Las Vegas, "Sullivan" told Munnerlyn he had made a telephone
- call and had to go to the Ontario airport instead. They would discuss the loan
- at a later date, he told the pilot.
-
- While en route, he paid Munnerlyn $8,300, the normal tariff for a jet
- charter, and gave him a $200 tip.
-
- "I told the DEA that I never saw that man before in my life, and I've
- never had anything to do with drugs," Munnerlyn says. "All I want is my plane
- back."
-
- Assistant U.S. Attorney Alejandro Mayorkas is still fighting to prevent
- that from happening.
-
- In court documents Mayorkas filed, he acknowledged the government "will
- rely in part on circumstantial evidence and otherwise inadmissible hearsay" to
- try to justify the forfeiture.
-
- The government "need not establish a substantial connection to illegal
- activity, but need only establish probable cause," the prosecutor wrote.
-
- Mayorkas says the fact the aircraft flew into Los Angeles, "an area known
- as a center of illegal drug activity," is probable cause.
-
- The prosecutor faulted Munnerlyn for not knowing what was in the boxes,
- but government regulations do not require charter pilots to question or examine
- baggage.
-
- Munnerlyn wanted Wright to testify, but the government said he couldn't.
-
- "He was the only guy other than me who could tell the court that we didn't
- know each other. But Mayorkas said they couldn't find him," Munnerlyn says.
-
- At a three-day trial that began last Oct. 30, Mayorkas sprang a surprise
- witness. A ramp worker from Detroit's Willow Run Airport testified that he had
- seen Munnerlyn and Wright at his airport "in the fall of 1988." The witness,
- Steven Antuna, described Munnerlyn to a T, right down to the full reddish,
- gray-streaked "Hemingway-like" beard he had when he was arrested.
-
- The only problem was that Munnerlyn didn't have a beard until the summer
- of 1989.
-
- Mrs. Munnerlyn and her 31-year-old son took the stand and refuted the
- statements about the beard.
-
- The six-member jury ruled that the plane should be returned to the pilot
- and his wife.
-
- In December, Mayorkas asked for another trial - and held on to the plane.
- He said Munnerlyn's family members had lied.
-
- But Munnerlyn submitted 51 affidavits from FAA and Las Vegas officials,
- U.S. marshals, bank officers, customers and business contacts sweating he did
- not have a beard in the fall of 1988.
-
- Photos and a TV news tape of Munnerlyn being interviewed after rescuing
- a couple from Mexico after a hurricane, both taken that fall, showed him
- beardless. But the government kept the plane.
-
- Munnerlyn and his wife shuttled between Las Vegas and Los Angeles more
- than 20 times.
-
- "Each time we went we thought this nightmare would be over, but each time
- there was some new game that the government wanted to play," Mrs. Munnerlyn
- says.
-
- First, Mayorkas demanded the pilot pay the government $66,000 for his
- plane.
-
- "We didn't have any money left and we couldn't figure out why we should
- have to pay the government anything, when a jury said we were innocent,"
- Munnerlyn says.
-
- Mayorkas lowered the "settlement" to $30,000, still far more then the
- Munnerlyns could raise.
-
- In April, Munnerlyn went to the U.S. Marshal Service's aircraft storage
- site in Midland, Texas. He climbed over, under and through his plane, which had
- been torn apart during the DEA search for drugs.
-
- "The whole thing was a mess," he says. "That plane's going to need about
- $50,000 worth of work to bring it up to FAA standards again, to make it legal
- to fly."
-
- In mid-June, Mayorkas made what he called a "final offer."
-
- "We have to pay the government $6,500 to get back my plane, that a jury
- says shouldn't have been taken in the first place, and they want to keep the
- $8,500 that I was paid for the flight," Munnerlyn says.
-
- Last month, when asked if the settlement request was fair, Mayorkas said:
-
- "If he was innocent, he would have taken reasonable steps to avoid any
- involvement in illicit drug activity," Mayorkas says.
-
- But he wouldn't detail what preventive measures Munnerlyn should have
- taken. The Munnerlyns are trying to borrow the money to get their plane back.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- FORFEITURE THREATENS CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS
- LAST PART: REFORMS
-
- The bottom line in forfeiture ... is the bottom line.
-
- And that, say critics, is the crucial problem.
-
- The billions of dollars that forfeiture brings in to law enforcement
- agencies is so blinding that it obscures the devastation it causes the
- innocent.
-
- A 10-month study by The Pittsburgh Press found numerous examples of
- innocent travelers being detained, searched and stripped of cash. Of small-time
- offenders who grew a little marijuana for their own use and lost their homes
- because of it. Of people who had to hire attorneys and fight the government for
- years to get back what was rightfully theirs.
-
- Attorney Harvey Silverglate of Boston says: "There is a game being played
- with forfeiture. They go after the drug kingpins first, then when everyone
- stops looking, they tum the law and its infringement of constitutional
- protections against the average person."
-
- Many people who have watched seizures and forfeitures burgeon as s
- law-enforcement tool say change must be made quickly if the traditional
- American system of justice, based on the constitutional rights of its
- citizenry, is to remain intact.
-
- ---
-
- NO. CRIME, NO PENALTY
-
- When Nashville defense attorney E. E. "Bo" Edwards cites remedies, he
- lists first the need to make forfeiture possible only after a criminal
- conviction. Edwards heads a newly created forfeiture task force for the
- National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
-
- As the forfeiture law now stands, property owners who never were charged
- with a crime or were charged and cleared still can lose their assets in a
- forfeiture proceeding.
-
- Under forfeiture, the government must only show that an item was used in a
- crime or bought with crime generated money. The government doesn't have to
- prove the property owner is the criminal.
-
- Changing the law to allow forfeiture only after a property owner's
- criminal conviction would ensure the government proves its cases beyond a
- reasonable doubt, Edwards says.
-
- The legal fiction "of property violating the law, that 'property' can do
- wrong, is ludicrous and offensive to the American scheme of government," says
- Edwards. "Arresting a plane, for instance, when there is no proof the pilot
- broke any laws is not only an abuse of our judicial system but a moronic
- game."
-
- The narrow legal view holds that because forfeiture usually is a civil
- case, it involves monetary penalties and not punishment, like jail, that takes
- away personal freedoms.
-
- Taking that narrow view, it seems unnecessary to include the due process
- protections of criminal court such as the presumption of innocence I - because
- the potential penalties never would be as severe as those in a criminal case.
-
- But prosecutors and appeals courts who say forfeiture is not a punishment
- are "denying reality," says Thomas Smith, head of the American Bar
- Association's criminal justice section. "The law was enacted to punish, and
- if you ask anyone who has lost a house or a bank account to it, they will tell
- you it is punishment."
-
- Allowing forfeiture only in the event of a conviction also would eliminate
- the risks owners are exposed to when they face a criminal charge against them
- in one courtroom and the civil forfeiture case in another.
-
- Under criminal and civil proceedings, the defendant has a constitutional
- guarantee that he needn't testify to anything that may incriminate him.
-
- But because a person may face two trials on the same issues, it raises the
- possibility that a civil forfeiture case could be brought in the hope that
- information divulged there could later shore up an otherwise weak criminal
- case.
-
- ---
-
- ILL-DEFINED PROCEDURES
-
- The gusto for seizure is weakening the traditional protections that
- surround police work. The definition of "reasonable search and seizure," for
- example, has been stretched to include tactics that some believe aren't
- reasonable at all.
-
- The U.S. Supreme Court this June said it is legal for police - wearing
- full drug-raid gear and with guns showing to board buses about to depart a
- station and ask random passengers if they will consent to a search.
-
- In his dissent, Justice Thurgood Marshall branded the tactic coercive and
- in violation of the Fourth Amendment. "It is exactly because this choice' is
- no 'choice' at all that police engage in this technique," he wrote.
-
- Training films for state police or drug agents in Arizona, Michigan,
- Massachusetts, Texas, Louisiana, New Mexico and Indiana show that drug searches
- involve much more than a visual scan or quick hand search.
-
- Officers in the films obtained by The Pittsburgh Press didn't just look.
- They opened suitcases in car trunks and pulled out back seats, side door panels
- and roof linings. In several of the films, they went so far as to remove the
- gas tank. When they're done, they may or may not put the car back together. The
- owner's ability to collect damages will depend on the protections offered by
- state law.
-
- Grady McClendon had to fight in court for nearly a year to get back about
- $2,300 taken by police in Georgia following a highway search. His money was
- seized after police said they'd found cocaine in the car. Lab tests later
- showed it was bubble gum, but for 11 months police held McClendon's money
- without charging him with a crime.
-
- During the search, McClendon says, "they made us stand four car lengths
- away. If I'd have known that, I wouldn't have said yes, because I couldn't see
- what they were doing in the dark. That isn't what I expected in a search."
-
- ---
-
- NO ACCOUNTING FOR MONEY
-
- The public is often left in the dark about how the proceeds of forfeiture
- are spent.
-
- A Georgia legislator who this year drafted a law that added real estate to
- the items that can be taken in his state, also inserted a "windfall" provision
- for funds.
-
- Under the provision, once forfeiture proceeds equal one-third of a police
- department's regular budget, any additional forfeiture money will spill over to
- the general treasury.
-
- State Rep. Ralph Twiggs says he worried that once police began seizing
- rea) estate it would bloat their budgets, especially in Georgia's many small
- towns. '41 was looking at all the money going into the federal program and I
- was thinking ahead. I don't want gold-plated revolvers showing up."
-
- Gold-plated revolvers may be an extreme worry. But as it now stands, it is
- very hard to determine how police spend their money.
-
- The money or goods returned to local police departments through the
- federal forfeiture system do not have to be publicly reported. Congress, in its
- zeal to pass this feel-good (drug) law," says Philadelphia City Council member
- Joan Specter, "apparently forgot to require an accounting of the money.
-
- "The happy result for the police is that every year they get what can only
- be called drug slush funds," says Specter.
-
- A department that receives forfeiture funds from cases it pursued through
- federal court or with the help of a federal agency is merely required to assure
- the U.S. attorney in writing that it will use the money for "law enforcement
- purposes." And even that minimal requirement wasn't met in Philadelphia.
-
- The Philadelphia police didn't file the forms last year, says Specter,
- and used the money to cover the costs of air conditioning, car washes,
- emergency postage, office supplies and fringe benefits.
-
- "That would be fine," she says, "except that the intent of the federal law
- was for the money to go back into the war on drugs."
-
- It also meant Philadelphia city council "made budgetary decisions in the
- absence of complete information." At a time when $4 million in forfeiture
- funds was on hand or in the pipeline for Philadelphia, the city's chemical lab,
- where drugs are analyzed, had a backlog of more than 3,000 cases, she says. The
- lab bottleneck caused court delays and prolonged jailing of suspects before
- their trials began, Specter says.
-
- The Philadelphia Police Department had estimated $1.2 million would
- double the lab's capacity, but the forfeiture funds were spent elsewhere. "Who
- should be setting the priorities?" she asks.
-
- Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania echoed his wife's view in an address
- to colleagues in the U.S. Senate. The absence of public accounting by the
- police who received federal shared funds, he says, "is a glaring oversight in
- the law, which ought to be corrected."
-
- What legislators have done, says Chicago defense attorney Stephen Komie,
- "is emboldened prosecutors and police to create this slush fund of
- inappropriated money for which nobody votes a budget."
-
- The federal forfeiture fund itself, which has taken in $1.5 billion in
- hte last four years and expects to get another $500 million this year, had
- its first standard audit only last year.
-
- ---
-
- CIRCUMVENTING STATE LAW
-
- The relationship between state and federal forfeiture systems is thorny in
- other respects. Washington, D.C., helps local law enforcement do end runs
- around state law.
-
- The process is formally known as "adoption" - and U.S. Rep. William
- Hughes of New Jersey, who devised it, now says he made a mistake that he would
- like to undo.
-
- In adoption, a U.S. attorney's office will take over prosecution of a case
- developed entirely by local police. Theoretically, local law enforcement
- officials go to federal prosecutors because the federal government has more
- resources available to dissect complicated criminal enterprises and its
- jurisdiction reaches beyond state lines.
-
- But more often, The Pittsburgh Press review of forfeiture found, the cases
- are passed along because local police find state laws too restrictive in what
- can be seized and how much money police can make.
-
- If local departments choose to use the federal system, "then it seems to
- me it's entirely appropriate for us so long as the resources are there and what
- not - to help in that process," says Associate Deputy Attorney General George
- Terwilliger 111, the head of forfeiture for the Justice Department.
-
- "But I don't know that we'd encourage it."
-
- But his department clearly does. The Justice Department's "Quick
- Reference to Federal Forfeiture Procedures" says on Page 203 that "adoptive
- seizures are encouraged." Hughes says including "adoption" in his
- legislation "was a mistake," because it has become a way for police to game the
- forfeiture system.
-
- When he introduced legislation that would have ended federal adoption,"it
- went nowhere, because law enforcement rallied and convinced everyone they
- needed those cuts of the pie."
-
- Local police have started using the federal courts to do end-runs around
- state laws that earmark forfeiture money for the likes of schools instead of
- cops, or else guarantee police less money than they would get in federal court.
- There, the cut for local law enforcement can be as much as 80 percent of the
- value of forfeited items. But it's not always money that propels police into
- federal court. It can also be differences over prosecution.
-
- In Allegheny County, for instance, District Attorney Robert Colville will
- not pursue a forfeiture unless he first wins a criminal conviction against the
- property owner on a drug charge. Local police know that and avoid Colville's
- office and go to federal court - when they aim to seize items from owners who
- aren't even charged with a crime, Colville says.
-
- The departments argue their approach is legal, "but for me, legal isn't
- necessarily fair," Colville says.
-
- "It was never intended states would be able to use the federal process to
- avoid state policy. (Former Attorney General Dick) Thornburgh in particular"
- has supported adoption. "We want to clean that up," Hughes says, adding that
- "for the chief law enforcement office of the country to permit that process" of
- end-runs is "absolutely wrong."
-
- ---
-
- SHORT-SIGHTED SOLUTIONS
-
- Colville also believes the law's requirement that the money go for
- enforcement purposes restricts other, equally beneficial, uses. He would like
- to use more money for drug prevention and rehabilitation programs uses that are
- strictly limited under federal sharing rules.
-
- For example, federal guidelines permit forfeiture funds to be used to
- underwrite classroom drug education programs but only if they're presented by
- police in uniform, Colville says. He'd like to send in health officials
- as well, to "get a different, equally important message across.
-
- "I've come to the belief as a prosecutor that aggressive prosecution alone
- won't solve the problem. Guys I arrested 25 years ago when I was a policeman
- I still see coming back into the system. We need to address under lying social
- and economic problems He has advocated using forfeiture money for the likes of
- summer jobs programs in drug-plagued neighborhoods, an idea rejected by the
- federal government.
-
- Hughes, the New Jersey congressman, says he regrets earmarking all the
- federal forfeiture funds for law enforcement purposes, but cannot find support
- for changing the stipulation.
-
- He originally thought police would need every dime they took in to pay for
- complicated investigations and assumed the forfeited goods would just cover the
- cost. Once the kitty grew, he figured, then money could be set aside for areas
- such as drug treatment.
-
- But the coffers grew much faster than expected and now it is proving hard
- to get police to give up the money "we never dreamed we would be seizing $1
- billion. Now the coffers are overflowing, but using the money in different ways
- is a touchy point at Justice."
-
- Not even appeals from Louis Sullivan, secretary of Health and Human
- Services, compel a change. During an inter-view in Pittsburgh last week,
- Sullivan said he has asked that forfeiture funds go partially toward drug
- rehab but Justice turned him down repeatedly.
-
- Justice recently turned down a proposal from Jackson Memorial Hospital, a
- cash-poor public hospital in Miami, to use $6 million seized during a south
- Florida money-laundering case to build a new trauma center.
-
- The hospital is known in the industry as a "knife-and-gun-club" because of
- the volume of shootings and stabbings it handles. Police investigate nearly 85
- percent of the hospital's cases.
-
- In its proposal, Jackson suggested training medical staff to spot injuries
- that are the result of a crime, adding on-call photographers who would
- specialize in taking pictures of victims for use during trials and improving
- preservation of damaged clothing, bullets and other pieces of evidence.
-
- The idea had bipartisan support from Miami's congressional delegation,
- Metro-Dade police and the U.S. attorney's office in Miami.
-
- The memorandum from Justice rejecting the idea came from Terwilliger,
- who wrote that seized money must go to official use which "typically, has
- included activities such as the purchase of vehicles and equipment," including
- guns and radios.
-
- But, says Hughes, "if the purpose is to deal with the drug problem
- effectively, Justice's reluctance to consider new ideas - particularly when it
- comes to treatment programs seems to me to undercut their ultimate goal."
-
- The Justice Department, which champions forfeiture as the law enforcement
- tool of the '90s, declines to talk about where the law is headed.
-
- "I don't think it's appropriate in the context of a press interview to
- discuss potential policy and legislative issues," says Terwilliger.
-
- But in not talking, the government 'masks the details of the total
- emasculation of the Bill of Rights," says John Rion, a Columbus, Ohio, lawyer.
-
- "The taxpayer thinks this forfeiture stuff is wonderful, until he's the
- one who loses something. Then, he realizes that it's not just the criminal's
- rights that have been taken away, it's everybody's."
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- DRUG FIGHTING SHERIFF PUTS COMPASSION BEFORE FORFEITURES
-
- In Detroit, Wayne County Sheriff Robert Ficano is an unabashed supporter
- of grabbing the spoils of the war on drugs, but he tempers his fervor for
- forfeiture with controls.
-
- Ficano appears to be running precisely the type of drug interdiction
- program authors of forfeiture and seizure legislation envisioned.
-
- It aggressively pursues drug criminals, it has procedures that protect
- innocent citizens, and it shows compassion - right down to the teddy bears
- narcotics agents carry to drug raids on homes where children live.
-
- In addition, it tums forfeited money right back into more drug
- investigations. It can do that, because the confiscated money has allowed it to
- create a new interdiction team devoted to stopping narcotics.
-
- "We started with two off icers out of the Wayne County Jail and we wanted
- to see if they would be able to seize enough in their raids, for them to pay
- for their own salaries," he says.
-
- That first year, in 1984, they seized $250,000. "Last year we seized over
- $4 million. And we've been able to complete Iy fund the narcotic unit out of
- these forfeited funds," Ficano says.
-
- Today he has 35 officers, 3 drug dogs and all the weapons, surveillance
- and communication gear needed to equip a modem drug team, with a $2.2 million
- budget.
-
- "There isn't a dime of it from tax-payers' money that's used. So, in
- essence, you have the crooks paying for their own busts," he says.
-
- The public's fear of drugs helps win support for forfeiture. "However, we
- in law enforcement have to ensure that a balance is always kept. You can't
- violate people's rights.
-
- "Whenever you push a law, a tool, as far as you can go and get up toward
- the edge, it becomes a difficult balance. There's a responsibility that goes
- with it.
-
- "In the area of forfeiture and seizure, I think we've probably gone as
- far as we can and still be accepted by the public and by the courts. I think
- we're near that edge," the sheriff says.
-
- To maintain balance, Ficano instituted a series of steps that had some of
- his 900 deputies grumbling at first that he was going soft.
-
- One of his major targets, he says, is closing crack houses, shooting
- galleries and other residential drug operations.
-
- "We want these properties cleaned up and under the law we can seize them,
- but a surprising number of owners of drug houses have no idea of the activity,
- so we make sure they know what's going on," the sheriff says.
-
- Ficano sends owners two written warnings that illegal activities are
- occurring on their property and that repeated arrests have been made.
-
- "The first time we do it, we tell them what we found on their property and
- some of the things they can legally do to get these drug traffickers out,"
- Ficano says. "We'll warn them a second time. The third time, we move to seize
- the house."
-
- He admits he could make more money if he grabbed the property at the first
- violation, as many other departments do.
-
- "But the motivation shouldn't be just seizing property. If we can get the
- public, the owners, to stop the trafficking, then we've accomplished an
- important goal," he says. "The warnings are needed because you just shouldn't
- wipe someone out, someone who may be innocent, without giving them a chance."
- He also gives warning to drug buyers driving into the county.
-
- In some crack areas, he says, neighborhood streets that in the middle of
- the afternoon should be peaceful and tranquil look like the parking lots at the
- University of Michigan stadium on a football Saturday.
-
- In conjunction with local police apartments, Ficano took out newspaper ads
- cautioning: "Buyers of Illegal Drugs, Take Notice." The ads listed descriptions
- of some of the 210 cars that have been seized from recreational drug users and
- the neighborhoods of their owners - and warned drug buyers to stay out of Wayne
- County or risk losing their vehicles.
-
- Similarly, he gives a couple of chances to innocent owners of cars used by
- someone else in drug trafficking. After the first warning, they can claim
- innocence, that they didn't know that someone else was using the car to buy
- drugs. The second time the car is stopped, it costs owners $750 to get it back.
- If there's a third time, it's a seizure.
-
- "A lot of these people need the cars to go to work or school, so we give
- them every chance we can, but it's got to stop."
-
- He bristles when asked if he's soft on drug traffickers.
-
- "Look at our arrest records - over 300 raids and 1,000 arrests last year-
- we're not soft at all," Ficano says. "We can enforce the law and be aggressive
- about it, but we can also do it with some compassion and the common sense that
- is supposed to come with the badge."
-
- Safeguards and tight controls are a must, he insists.
-
- "We do not want cowboys. We do not want officers who follow the typical
- stereotype drug cop from 'Miami Vice' and other TV shows. Seizure is an
- important tool, but we'll lose it unless we keep a heavy emphasis on respecting
- individual fights."
-
- Sitting atop the TV set in his office is a very un-"Miami Vice" prop: an
- 18-inch, black-and-white speckled teddy bear.
-
- "The biggest deputies we have can be distressed watching a child react to
- a parent or both parents being arrested after a drug raid. It eats away at
- you," the sheriff says.
-
- The bears are kept in the trunk of the unit's cars and vans, he says.
-
- "If there is a raid or property is being seized and there are children
- involved, our deputies can pull the bears out to, hopefully, calm down the
- children," Ficano says.
-
- It's difficult to envision a brawny SWAT officer, decked out in a helmet
- and bullet proof vest, carrying a gun in one hand and a teddy bear in the
- other. But the narcotic unit's weekly search warrant and arrest report has a
- column headed "Number of Bears."
-
- The reports for the first two weeks of May show that two of nine bears
- given out were given as officers seized property.
-
- "If there's something that can be done to reduce the pain that accompanies
- some of the things we have to do, why not do it?" Ficano asks. The one area
- Ficano was hesitant to discuss in detail was the activity of his men as part of
- the Drug Enforcement, administration's joint task force at Detroit's Metro
- airport.
-
- Some lawyers, including the American Civil Liberties Union, have
- criticized the DEA team for being overzealous in seizing cash from suspected
- drug dealers.
-
- The sheriff did say safeguards exist to prevent improper stops, but added
- that DEA directed him not to discuss his airport work.
-
- While his drug unit is among the biggest moneymakers in the country, and
- the forfeited funds are key to financing that unit, he says there is a 'very
- clear limit" on how far he will go.
-
- "These new laws open all sorts of new areas for seizing the assets of drug
- traffickers. We'll use accountants, people with business and banking
- expertise - all sorts of nontraditional police skills to try to track and
- forfeit every dollar these dealers are making.
-
- "But there's a line that we won't cross," Ficano says.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- UNREASONABLE SEIZURES
- Editorial/ Aug. 11, 1991
-
- The "right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers,
- and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures" is enshrined in the
- Fourth Amendment to the Constitution.
-
- For the most part, this bedrock right is so firmly entrenched, so
- thoroughly borne out by experience, that Americans take it for granted.
- When we read of an honest family deprived of its savings or its home or farm
- at the whim of the police, we assume an isolated abuse or think smugly of
- faraway tyrannies unblessed by our cherished Bill of Rights.
-
- At least we used to. The remarkable series "Presumed Guilty," by
- Pulitzer Prize-winning reporters Andrew Schneider and Mary Pat Flaherty,
- now running in this newspaper, paints a startlingly different picture. It
- documents a rash of unreasonable seizures unintentionally spawned by the
- war on drugs.
-
- The opening for this corrosion of civil rights was the amendment of the
- racketeering laws, starting in 1984, to permit authorities to confiscate
- possessions of suspects never charged with crimes, much less convicted. This
- radical departure from traditions of law was justified in terms of seizing the
- assets of drug criminals," as the White House National Drug Strategy put it,
- and helping "dismantle larger criminal organizations."
-
- So much for intentions. Mr. Schneider and Ms. Flaherty's 10-month
- investigation documents more than 400 cases of innocent people forced to
- forfeit money or property to federal authorities. These victims are farmers and
- factory workers, small-business owners and retirees. Often, their only offense
- was exhibiting behavior or personal traits considered typical of drug
- couriers.
-
- But even among people convicted of crimes, some penalties were wildly
- disproportionate. Should a family be permanently robbed of the farm that is
- its home and livelihood because six marijuana plants were found growing in
- a field?
-
- "Presumed Guilty" is a withering indictment of the forfeiture laws. This
- page will explore its implications in the coming days.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- WHAT PRICE THIS WAR?
- Editorial / Aug. 14, 1991
-
- In its zealous prosecution of the "war on drugs," the government
- undeniably and intolerably has trampled the rights of countless innocent
- people.
-
- Using hundreds of wide-open federal and state seizure laws, police and
- prosecutors have taken homes, cash and other personal possessions of people
- whose only offense was being in the wrong place at the wrong time or fitting
- some officer's or informant's preconceived, and likely racist, notion of what
- a criminal looks like.
-
- In some localities, government seizures take on the trappings of a
- criminal enterprise, with prosecutors, police departments, judges and
- tipsters conspiring to grab someone's property and divvy it up, all without
- regard to due process of law.
-
- Those on the receiving end of such injustices are to be excused if they
- come to regard the government itself as a corrupt organization.
-
- The abuses are documented in a continuing series, "Presumed Guilty," by
- reporters Mary Pat Flaherty and Andrew Schneider of The Pittsburgh Press.
-
- The series examines the effect of a 1984 change in the federal
- racketeering law that allows police to seize the property of those even
- marginally involved with illegal drug activity. No conviction is required, only
- a showing of "probable cause." The idea was to deprive drug traders of their
- trinkets and baubles: the jewelry, cars, boats and real estate bought with
- illegal proceeds.
-
- The Ideker was that the assets would revert to the law enforcement agency
- that seized them, with proceeds going to finance the fight against drugs. Some
- $2 billion has been generated for police departments, much of which no doubt
- has been put to good use.
-
- But there are instances - far too many of them - in which financial
- incentive and lack of safeguards have pushed the "good guys" over the line. in
- Hawaii, federal prosecutors combed through records of old cases looking for
- opportunities to seize property. They took the home of Joseph and Frances
- Lopes, a couple of modest means whose son had pleaded guilty four years earlier
- to growing marijuana in the backyard for his personal use. "The Lopeses could
- be happy we let them live there as long as we did," an arrogant G-man snorted.
-
- At some airports, counter clerks spy on customers, looking for those
- carrying large amounts of cash. They tip off the cops and collect a cut of the
- loot if there is a seizure.
-
- Police, using dubious "profile" criteria that disproportionately target
- minorities, stop people like Willie Jones, a landscaper from Nashville. Mr.
- Jones' "crime" was to be carrying cash on a trip to Houston to buy shrubbery.
- He was relieved of $9,600 by Drug Enforcement Administration agents.
-
- Like 80 percent of those whose property has been taken, Mr. Jones was not
- charged with a crime. He's still fighting the government to get his money back.
-
- The reporters' 10-month investigation revealed more than 400 cases from
- Maine to Hawaii in which the rights of innocent people were steamrollered.
- Their findings should send a chill up the backs of all citizens - most
- particularly those in the law enforcement community who must act to salvage the
- credibility and legitimacy of the war on drugs.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- SEIZURE: OUT OF CONTROL
- Editorial / Aug. 18, 1991
-
- Less than four months from now, on Dec. 15, to be exact, the 10 original
- amendments to the U. S. Constitution - the precious Bill of Rights - will be
- 200 years old.
-
- For two centuries, these superbly crafted safe-guards have served to
- protect the individual rights of the American people, withstanding attempt
- after attempt to erode the liberty guaranteed by the Constitution.
-
- But seven years ago, Congress, in a well-intentioned but poorly executed
- attempt to step up the war on drugs, twisted some of the guarantees until a
- crack developed. Since then, money-hungry law enforcement agencies across the
- country have slammed wedges into the breach, creating a gap of frightening
- dimensions.
-
- Compromised, indeed, even seriously endangered by the Congressional fervor
- of the Orwellian year of 1984, are three basic rights.
-
- No longer is an American assured by the Fourth Amendment that he or she
- will not be subjected to "unreasonable searches and seizures." No longer does
- the Fifth Amendment assure that private property will not be taken "for public
- use without just compensation." And no longer does the Eighth Amendment protect
- anyone from "cruel and unusual punishment."
-
- Blame Congress. By changing the federal forfeiture law, aimed at curbing
- drugs by causing hardships to dealers, Congress in 1984 gave law enforcement
- agencies the power - and even an incentive - to abridge these rights.
-
- How the law has run rampant over the rights of individuals since then was
- startlingly documented during the past week in The Pittsburgh Press. Reporters
- Andrew Schneider and Mary Pat Flaherty, in six chilling installments,
- documented more than 400 cases of innocent people falling victim to government
- out of control.
-
- They found that police, using hundreds of federal and state seizure laws,
- have confiscated $1.5 billion in assets and expect to take in $500,000 more
- this year. But, it tums out, for every drug lord and dealer who loses his
- ill-gotten treasures to the government, there are four innocent people who are
- being victimized - fully 80 percent of the people who lose property to the
- federal government are never charged with a crime.
-
- They are searched, unreasonably in most cases, and after fitting a profile
- that is likely racist. Their property is taken with not even a thought of
- compensation. Their homes, their farms, their very life savings are
- confiscated in as cruel and as unusual a punishment as one can imagine.
-
- Why? Because the forfeiture law calls for funds derived from seizures to
- be turned back to law enforcement agencies, to be used to continue the war on
- drugs.
-
- That's a cunningly attractive concept - crime paying for its own
- investigation and prosecution. In practice, though, the theory falls
- distressingly flat, the victim of human greed.
-
- Law enforcement agencies, on the hunt for dollars, are on a seizure binge,
- taking property indiscriminantly and without compassion. People only
- marginally involved with a drug investigation, people who never were charged
- with a crime, have lost their homes, money and belongings. So have those who
- were charged and cleared.
-
- Some were even the victims of bounty hunters - those who, for a piece of
- the seizure pie, become informants. As it stands now, anybody with a finger to
- point can share in money seized from a person they tab as "suspicious."
-
- But because it doesn't matter whether their target is guilty or innocent
- -just whether there is a seizure of property in which they will share - the
- system is wide open to abuse. And it has been abused, to the point where
- innocent travelers have been detained, searched and stripped of their money.
-
- Even some police shudder at what is happening. Wayne County (Detroit)
- Sheriff Robert Ficano, who, while agressive in leading his drug war, is
- careful not to wage it at the expense of the rights of individuals. "Seizure is
- an important tool," he said, "but we'll lose it unless we keep a heavy emphasis
- on respecting individual fights."
-
- He's right, of course. Seizure has been, is, and should continue to be a
- big gun in the war on drugs. But it can't be a shotgun, blasting away at
- innocent people who happen into its path.
-
- The legal massacre uncovered by Mr. Schneider and Ms. Flaherty must stop
- and only Congress has the necessary remedial power.
-
- The forfeiture law must be overhauled once again, due process restored,
- the bounty hunters disenfranchised and seizure of property permitted only after
- an individual has been convicted of a crime.
-
- All we are demanding, after all, is that Congress pay attention to a
- 200-year-old list of guarantees that was ignored in 1984.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- About the authors:
-
- Pat Flaherty, 36, is a graduate of Northwestern University who has worked
- for 14 years at The Pittsburgh Press where she currently is a special
- editor/news and a Sunday columnist.
-
- In 1986, she won a Pulitzer Prize for specialized reporting for a series
- she wrote with Andrew Schneider on the international market in human kidneys.
- She was the first recipient of the Distinguished Writing Award given by the
- Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association; twice has won writer of the year
- awards from Scripps Howard and has received numerous state and regional
- reporting awards.
-
- Her assignments at The Press have included coverage of the 1988 Olympics
- in Seoul and a 5-week trip through refugee camps in Africa.
-
- ---
-
- Andrew Schneider, 48, began reporting for The Pittsburgh Press in 1984.
- Since that time, he has won two consecutive Pulitzer Prizes; in 1985 for the
- series he co-wrote with Mary Pat Flaherty on abuses in the organ transplant
- system, and in 1986, for a series, with Matthew Brelis, on airline safety,
- which also won the Roy W. Howard public service award.
-
- His other work includes a series with reporters Lee Bowman and Thomas
- Buell on safety problems of the nation's railroads and a series with Bowman,
- exposing deficiencies in Red Cross disaster services.
-
- Before joining, The Press. he worked for UPI, the Associated Press and
- Newsweek. He is the founder of the National Institute of Advanced Reporting at
- Indiana University.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-