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mahatmakanejeeves

(57,283 posts)
Wed Jan 15, 2014, 01:57 PM Jan 2014

How The NYPD's Use Of Civil Forfeiture Robs Innocent New Yorkers

It's not just New York. I don't care for this practice, which smacks of an "if you're not guilty, prove it" attitude.

How The NYPD's Use Of Civil Forfeiture Robs Innocent New Yorkers
http://gothamist.com/2014/01/14/nypd_civil_forfeiture.php

How The NYPD's Use Of Civil Forfeiture Robs Innocent New Yorkers

....
Civil forfeiture, the act by which a municipality can seize money during an arrest, has always been a controversial weapon of law enforcement. The practice became more prevalent in the 1980s, when jurisdictions around the country began pursuing cases involving money in both civil and criminal court in an effort to fight organized crime and deprive criminals of their income, even if they couldn't imprison them.

This summer The New Yorker published a sprawling investigation on how cities use the practice to bolster their cash-strapped coffers by seizing the assets of the poor, often on trumped up charges.

The same is true in New York City, where the civil forfeiture process has long been used by the NYPD to seize money from those least likely to be able to get it back.

"It's very difficult for the victims of civil forfeiture, most of whom are from a lower socio-economic class, to do anything in the court system, much less win a civil forfeiture case," said attorney David B. Smith, the nation's leading expert on forfeiture law.


Contact the editor of this story {at mailto:chris@gothamist.com}

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How The NYPD's Use Of Civil Forfeiture Robs Innocent New Yorkers (Original Post) mahatmakanejeeves Jan 2014 OP
Gothamist on asset forfeiture abuse at NYPD mahatmakanejeeves Jan 2014 #1

mahatmakanejeeves

(57,283 posts)
1. Gothamist on asset forfeiture abuse at NYPD
Fri Jan 17, 2014, 10:00 AM
Jan 2014
Gothamist on asset forfeiture abuse at NYPD
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/opinions/wp/2014/01/15/gawker-on-asset-forfeiture-abuse-at-nypd/

By Radley Balko January 15 at 4:33 pm

It’s been interesting to watch as outlets outside legal and criminal justice circles pick up on the outrage that is civil asset forfeiture. Though it’s been going on for more than 30 years, most people just aren’t aware of it. And they’re pretty astonished when they learn about it.

The latest investigation comes from Gothamist, looking at how NYPD uses the policy.

In the middle of the night in March of 2012, NYPD officers burst into the Bronx home of Gerald Bryan, ransacking his belongings, tearing out light fixtures, punching through walls, and confiscating $4,800 in cash. Bryan, 42, was taken into custody on suspected felony drug distribution, as the police continued their warrantless search. Over a year later, Bryan’s case was dropped. When he went to retrieve his $4,800, he was told it was too late: the money had been deposited into the NYPD’s pension fund. Bryan found himself trapped in the NYPD’s labyrinthine civil forfeiture procedure, a policy based on a 133-year-old law which robs poor New Yorkers of millions of dollars every year; a law that has been ruled unconstitutional twice.

“They do this all the time, to so many people I know,” Bryan, a bartender of 21 years, told us in the office of the Bronx Defenders. Before the raid, he had planned on using the cash to take his girlfriend on a cruise. “A lot of people, when they get arrested, they know that their money is just gone, and they know that the police are taking it to enrich themselves.”

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