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- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- From: dl@thumper.galaxy (Daniel Liebster,MRE 2N-275A,4797,,21493)
- Subject: Asset Seizure Story
- Message-ID: <1993Jun23.051227.24531@walter.bellcore.com>
- Date: Wed, 23 Jun 93 05:12:27 GMT
-
- r w AM-AssetSeizure 06-22 0673
- ^AM-Asset Seizure,650<
- ^Asset Seizure Horror Story Recounted At Hearing<
- ^By CAROLYN SKORNECK=
- ^Associated Press Writer=
- WASHINGTON (AP) _ After Hurricane Hugo wrecked Selena
- Washington's South Carolina home in 1990, she headed south with
- $19,000 to hunt for cheap building materials.
- But she was halted halfway down Florida's east coast by a
- sheriff's officer for speeding. On a dark highway, he declared the
- cash drug money, seized it and drove away. No receipt. No ticket.
- No arrest.
- To try to get some official to look at papers showing where she
- got the money and what she was going to buy, Washington followed
- the officer down unlighted, unknown sidestreets to the station.
- She got nowhere. Later, an attorney worked out a deal that let
- the sheriff keep $4,000 because fighting for it all would cost far
- more. She wound up with only $13,800, because the lawyer got
- $1,200.
- ``What happened to you is unconstitutional, un-American,'' Rep.
- Corrine Brown, D-Fla., told Washington after hearing her tale at a
- congressional hearing Tuesday. ``This is not a police state.''
- ``Extortion,'' is what Rep. Al McCandless, R-Calif., called it.
- The House Government Operations' subcommittee on legislation and
- national security is considering a bill by Rep. Henry Hyde, R-Ill.,
- to end some abuses of the nation's asset seizure and forfeiture
- law.
- Law enforcement officials see asset forfeiture as a good way to
- separate law breakers from ill-gotten gains while pumping millions
- into useful purposes such as building prisons, but detractors say
- some departments are wielding it to gain easy access to money.
- One case often cited is last October's slaying of reclusive
- millionaire Donald P. Scott in Malibu, Calif. A prosecutor
- concluded that a desire to seize Scott's $5 million ranch led to
- the drug raid that killed him. Los Angeles Sheriff Sherman Block
- has disputed the conclusion.
- Hyde defended targeting drug traffickers with asset forfeiture
- but said changes must be made because ``our civil asset seizure
- laws are being used in terribly unjust ways, are depriving innocent
- citizens of their property with nothing that can be called due
- process.''
- His bill would, among other things: force the government, not
- the owner, to prove the seizure is appropriate; provide attorneys
- for poor owners; give owners more time to contest forfeitures and
- enable them to sue the government for mishandling property.
- And the conservative Illinois Republican has an infrequent ally,
- the liberal American Civil Liberties Union, which is supporting
- Hyde's bill.
- As for Selena Washington, there is another side to the story of
- April 24, 1990, said Volusia County Sheriff's spokeswoman Cheryl
- Downs.
- Because of a class action lawsuit filed Friday, officials are
- silent about the case now. But previously they said that
- Washington, who denied having a criminal record, in fact was
- convicted in 1982 for illegally transporting liquor and that she
- told officers she was going to Miami to take her passenger to visit
- relatives, mentioning building materials only after the money was
- found. They did not say why she was not ticketed for allegedly
- going 72 mph.
- The five-man team seizing assets from people who drive south on
- Interstate 95, known as Florida's main drug pipeline, has seized $8
- million, 168 pounds of cocaine, 134 pounds of cannibis, 100
- quaaludes and 247 doses of LSD since it started in February 1989,
- Downs said.
- The lawsuit alleges the team discriminated against minority
- motorists. Washington is black.
- The Orlando Sentinel found Sheriff Bob Vogel's squad arrested
- only one of every four people they took money from, and more than
- 90 percent of those who lost money but were not charged with a
- crime were black or Hispanic.
- A panel appointed by Florida Gov. Lawton Chiles to review the
- situation cleared the office, Downs said. The Justice Department's
- civil rights division is reviewing that report, said Cary Copeland,
- who heads the department's asset forfeiture office.
- AP-DS-06-22-93 1859EDT<
-
- ---
-
-
- Belts?Belts??? We don't need no stinkin' belts!
-
- Dan Liebster Bellcore dl@silat.bellcore.com 201.829.4797
-