notablog
Asset forfeiture |
Monday, May 7, 2001 7:12 PM |
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Think we live in a free country? Ever think to yourself "It could
never happen here?" Here's what I think: you couldn't be more wrong.
The reason I say that is an evil cloud known as "Asset Forfeiture Laws".
In direct and blatant violation of the fourth amendment, these laws allow
police to simply take, and keep, any person's material possessions...
without even the need for a criminal conviction. Below is an article
reprinted without permission from the LP News (official monthly newsletter
of the Libertarian Party). There's a well-known saying that I think
applies very well to the subject, "If you aren't outraged, you aren't
paying attention."
By Jarret B. Wollstein
International Society For Individual Liberty
Police stopped 49-year-old Ethel Hylton at Houston's Hobby Airport and
told her she was under arrest because a drug dog had scratched at her
luggage.
Agents searched her bags and strip-searched her, but they found no drugs.
They did find $39,110 in cash, money she had received from an insurance
settlement and her life savings; accumulated throug over 20 years of work
as a hotel housekeeper and hospital janitor
Ethyl Hylton completely documented where she got the money and was never
charged with a crime. But the police kept her money anyway.
Nearly four years later, she was still trying to get her money back.
Ethyl Hylton is just one of a large and growing list of Americans -- now
numbering in the hundreds of thousands -- who have been victimized by
civil asset forfeiture. Under new civil asset forfeiture, everything you
own can be legally taken away even if you are never convicted of a
crime.
Suspicion of offenses which, if proven in court, might result in a $200
fine or probation, are being used to justify seizure of tens of even
hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of property. Totally innocent
Americans are losing their cars, homes and businesses, based on the claims
of anonymous informants that illegal transactions took place on their
property. Once property is seized, it is virtually impossible to get it
back.
Proprty is now being seized in every state and from every social group.
Seizures include pocket money confiscated from public-housing residents in
Florida; cars taken away from men suspected of soliciting prostitutes in
Oregon; and homes taken away from ordinary, middle class Americans whose
teenage children are accused of selling a few joints of marijuana. No
person and no property is immune from seizure. You could be the next
victim.
Here are some examples:
- In Washington, DC, police stop black men on the streets in poor areas
of the city and "routinely cofiscate small amounts of cash and jewelry."
Most confiscated property is not even recorded by police departments.
"Resident Ben Davis calls it 'robbery with a badge.'" [USA
Today]
- In Iowa, "a woman accused of shoplifting a $25 sweater had her
$18,000 car -- specially equipped for her handicapped daughter -- seized
as the 'get-away vehicle.'" [USA Today]
- Detroit drug police raided a grocery store, but failed to find any
drugs. After drug dogs reacted to three $1.00 bills in the cash register,
the police seized $4,384 from cash registers and the store safe.
According to the Pittsburgh Press, over 92% of all cash in circulation in
the U.S. now shows some drug residue.
- In Monmouth, New Jersey, Dr. David Disbrow was accused of practicing
psychiatry without a license. His crime was providing counseling services
from a spare bedroom in his mother's house. Counseling does not require a
license in New Jersey.
That didn't stop police fro seizing virtually everything of value from his
mother's home, totalling over $60,000. The forfeiture squad confiscated
furniture, carpets, paintings, and even personal photographs.
- Kathy and Mark Schrama were arrested just before Christmas 1990 at
their home in New Jersey. Kathy was charged with taking $500 worth of UPS
packaged from neighbors' porches. Mark was charged with receiving stolen
goods. If found guilty, they might have paid a small fine and received
probation.
The day after their arrest, their house, cars, and furniture were seized.
Based upon mere accusation, $150,000 in property were confiscated, without
trial or indictment. Police even took their clothing, eyeglasses, and
Christmas presents for their son.
The incentive for government agencies to expand forfeiture is enormous.
Agencies can easily seize property and they usually keep what they take.
According to the Pittsburgh Press, 80% of seizure victims are never
even charged with a crime. Law enforcement agencies often keep the best
seized cars, watches, and TVs for their departments, and sell the rest.
How extensive are seizures in America today?
The Washington Post has reported that the U.S. Marshals Service
alone had an inventory of over $1.4 billion in seized assets, including
over 30,000 cars, boats, homes, and businesses.
The FDA
Federal and state agencies seizing property now include the FBI, the DEA,
the U.S. Marshals Service, the Coast Guard, the IRS, local police, state
highway patrols, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the FDA,
and the Bureau of Land Management.
Asset forfeiture is a growth industry. Seizures have increased from $27
million in 1986, to over $644 million in 1991 to over $2 billion today.
Civil asset forfeiture defines a new standard of justice in America; or
more precisely, a new standard of injustice. Under civil seizure,
property, not an individual is charged with an offense. Evne if you are a
totally innocent owner, the government can still confiscate your "guilty"
property.
Proven guilty
If government agents seize your property under civil asset forfeiture, you
can forget about being innocent until proven guilty, due process of law,
the right to an attorney, or even the right to a trial. All of those
rights only exist if you are charged with a criminal offense; that is,
with an offense which could result in your imprisonment.
If you (or your property) are accused of a civil offense (offenses which
could not result in your imprisonment), the Supreme Court has rules that
you have no presumption of innocence, no right to an attorney, and no
protection from double jeapordy.
Seizure occurs when the government takes away your property. Forfeiture
is when the legal title is permanently transferred to the state. To get
seized property returned, you have to fight the full resource of your
state or federal government; someetimes both!
You have to prove your property's "innocence" by documenting how you
earned every cent used to pay for it. You have to prove that neither you
nor any of your family members ever committed an illegal act involving the
property.
To get a trial, you have to post a non-refundable "bond" of 10% of the
value of your property. You have to pay attorney fees -- ranging from
$5,000 to over $100,000 -- out of your own pocket. Money you pay your
attorney is also subject to seizure (either before or after the trial) if
the government alleges that those funds were "tainted." And you may be
forced to go through trial after trial, because under civil seizures the
Constitutional protection against "double jeapordy" doesn't apply.
Impoverished
Once your property is seized, expect to spend years fighting government
agencies and expect to be impoverished by legal fees -- with no guarantee
of winning -- while the government keeps your car, home, and bank
account.
In fact, in a recent Supreme Court decision (Bennis v. Michigan), the
Court said explicitly that innocent owners can be deprived of their
property if it is used to facilitate a crime, even without the owner's
knowledge or consent. That means you can now lose your home or business
because of the action of employees, relatives, or guests, over whom you
have absolutely no control.
Not only do police and prosecutors have the power to seize anything you
own on the slightest pretext, they also have the incentive. The dirty
little secret of the forfeiture racket is that police, prosecutors, and
judges can benefit personally by stealing your property.
Brenda Grantland -- a leasing asset forfeiture defense attorney -- gives
these examples of government greed in her book Your Home Is Under
Arrest.
- Suffolk County, New York. District Attorney James M. Catterton
drives around in a BMW 735I that was seized from an alleged drug dealer.
He spent $3,412 from the forfeiture fund for mechanical and body work,
including $75 for pin-striping.
- Warren County, New Jersey. The assistant chief prosecutor drives a
confiscated yellow Corvette.
- Little Compton, Rhode Island. The seven-member police force received
$3.8 million from the federal forfeiture fun, and spent it on such things
as a new 23-foot boat with trailer and new Pontiac Firebirds.
But that's just the tip of the iceberg. The head of one Los Angeles
police forfeiture squad claims his group personally pockets over $60
million in seized property.
Why do our courts tolerate these outrageous legalized thefts? Because
they get their cut. It's completely legal for confiscated property to be
used by police, proesecutors, and judges, so long as it's for official
business. In 1996, a federal district court even rules that police can
personally receive 25% of the value of any confiscated home, car, or
business.
National park
In Malibu, California, park police tried repeatedly to buy the home and
land of 61-year-old, retired rancher Don Scott, which was next to national
park land. Scott refused.
On the morning of October 2, 1992, a task force of 26 LA county sheriffs,
DEA agents and other cops broke into Scott's living room unannounced.
When he heard his wife, Frances, scream, he came out of his upstairs
bedroom with a gun over his head. Police yelled at him to lower his gun.
He did, and they shot him dead.
Police claimed to be searching for marijuana, which they never found.
Ventura County DA Micahel Bradbury concluded the raid was "motivated at
least in party by a desire to seize and forfeit the ranch for the
government... [The] search warrant became Donald Scott's death
warrant."
Outrageous
As police confiscations become more and more outrageous, opposition has
been mountin. California and several other states defeated draconian
forfeiture laws a few years ago, and the Supreme Court rendered several
hopeful decisions. In 2000, Congress passed what authoer James Bovard
described as a "largely hollow reform measure" that left he playing field
"heavily tilted in the government's favor."
No wonder, then, that federal, state, and local governments are again
expanding confiscation with little concern for justice. The latest
targets: Doctors who resist government-controlled medicine... Businesses
that employ illegal aliens (who sew most clothing and harvest many
crops)... and gun owners.
Anything you own now can be seized at any time. Every week, over 5,000
innocent Americans lose their cars, bank accounts, homes or businesses,
without ever being charged with a crime.
Protect yourself
What can you do to protect yourself? Read books like Brenda Grantland's
Your House Is Under Arrest. Demand of your representatives why
they're voting for these outrageous laws. Speak out on talk radio,
through letters, newspaper editorials, and Internet forums.
Contribute to groups that are fighting police confiscation, like the
Internation Society for Individual Liberty, the Libertarian Party, and
Forfeiture Endangers American Rights (FEAR).
The fight against civil asset forfeiture is a battle for your freedom and
property. If confiscation isn't stopped, liberty and justice will sooon
be fading memories. Help stop the looting of America now, before it's too
late.
About the authoer: Jarret B. Wollstein is a member of the
Internation Society for Individual Liberty's Board of Directors and a
founder of the original Society for Individual Liberty. This essay is
[originally] reprinted with permission, and is available in brochure form
from ISIL. Call: (707) 746-8796. Or visit: www.isil.org
For more information about forfeiture, contact: Forfeiture Endangers
American Rights. Call: (808) FEAR-001 (332-7001). Write: P.O. Box 33985,
Washington, DC 20033-3985. Or visit: www.fear.org
I personally don't want to know anyone who can read the above article
without even a small amount of discomfort. Remember: it can happen to
you. It can happen to anyone... except, of course, the politically
connected, which means that there is no equal protection under the law.
This is not a matter of punishment, it's a platform of corruption and
extortion. Police, prosecutors, and judges are all open to moral erosion
due to the basic draw of human greed. Despite what any court may say on
the subject, the whole concept is undeniably unconstiutional and,
therefore, illegal. Things cannot commit crimes. The idea that a "thing"
can be charged with a crime, and therefore side-stepping a Constitutional
protection, goes beyond the most basic foundation of reasonable and
rational thought.
Permalink Filed under: Law
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Demos... |
Monday, May 7, 2001 10:13 AM |
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Demos...
For some reason, I never seem to try out demos. Even of the games I'm
really really really looking forward to (like Fallout Tactics), I never
seem to get around to going through all the steps of downloading,
installing, and trying out. I'm not sure why that is.
Anyway, I somehow overcame that when Bad Mojo lent me his PC Gamer demo
disk. I guess it was a lazy Sunday afternoon and I was a bit tired of
coing for Night's Edge, so I popped in the demo disk
and installed some demos.
First one I tried was for a real-time strategy game called "Real War".
The idea behind it is that it is a modern-setting that uses contemporary
units (no Obelisks of Light). It makes use of air, sea, and land
vehicles, as well as infantry. I can't really say anything bad about
the game, but then I can't really say much good about it either. It's
likely that there are intricacies and additional command keys I didn't
know about. The truth is, I found it a little unpolished, and
uninspired. Tanks shoot at each other, and moving targets take less
damage than stationary ones. But can you get your tank to move and
shoot at the same time? Nope, even though the M60 main battle tank is
more than capable of doing so and still retaining its accuracy. Planes
circle the sky, launching missiles at each other. Hrm.
Next up was Operation Flashpoint. I'd seen an mpg movie of the game
while searching for M60 machinegun pics one day. It looked interesting
and had some eerie similarities to Night's Edge. The game certainly is
breaking some new ground, though I found the weapon models to be sub-par
and the combat sequences to be mainly an exercise in chaos. Your squad
has a "Leader" that issues orders to the team, though it took me a while
to even figure out what number I was (each team member has a number
designation). The leader's voice is a flat monotone that is strangely
reminiscent of my old university's computerized class registration phone
system. This is no doubt due to the fact that the leader's orders are
simply a stream of concatenated prerecorded words stuck together,
without inflection or accents. I found the game played rather slow on
my system, and attributed this to the wide open landscape on this
mission. The "map" was very Tribes-like, in that it was a large terrain
area with no end in sight. In fact, you do a lot of travel in the one
mission included with the demo, on foot, in a jeep, on the back of a
truck, and in a doomed helicopter. But still, I got piss poor
framerate, a lot worse than I get in Tribes 2 (and I was playing in
640x480, while in Tribes I play at 800x600). I hope they're working on
the game's appearance in modes other than 1024x768, because the demo's
support for them was pretty bad. Overall, an intriguing game and I hope
they work out the kinks.
Due to the last outLAN, I have bad
associations with Giants: Citizen Kabuto. But I wanted to try out the
demo anyway. This was like the 2nd demo, which was a few missions for
the Reaper race (water chicks). Played well, kind of reminded me of
Heretic 2. Graphics were nice. I haven't finished the two missions
included with the demo, so maybe I'll have more to say later on.
The last thing wasn't really a demo, it was the full "They Hunger" mod for
Half-Life. Overall, nicely done. The best feature of the game is
probably its maps. The weapon models were somewhat shoddy, and their
functionality almost totally mirrored games from Half-Life or the
Opposing Forces add on. For example, there was some kind of
submachinegun that looked kind of like a Thompson M1 submachinegun
(military model), but had a strange white handguard and fired and
launched grenades just like the MP5 from Half-Life. I guess the head
programmer had some difficult with the coding. The majority of game's
monsters (zombies) were all very simple, doing straight forward claw
attacks like the head crab scientists from HL. A lot of the other
monsters were taken straight from HL, simply reskinned (zombie cops), or
taken directly and not reskinned at all (head crabs, those barnacle
beasts with long tongues, water leeches, or the giant water monsters).
Still, the team succeeded with what was likely the intended goal: a
scary game. The atmosphere is top-notch, and there's even an intro to
the game which drives the plot (sort of). I haven't finished yet, and
I'm anxious to see what else the mod has in store for me.
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Look out! Pickle! |
Friday, April 13, 2001 12:54 PM |
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If you questioned the sanity of the "McDonald's Hot Cofee Lawsuit" some
years back, you're really going to love this one. A woman sued
McDonald's after claiming "she
was permanently scarred by a hot McDonald's hamburger pickle". Not
only did she sue, saying the the pickle was, uh, "defective", but her
husband also sued, "for losing the services and consortium of his wife."
???
I've also realized that I'd forgotten to mention Sprite's idiotic
commercials the other day when I bitched about stupid ads on TV. Though
I do prefer the taste of Sprite to 7-Up, their ads make me wish I
didn't. Morons standing in front of a camera, rapping incomprehensibly
about meaningless gibberish. Oh yeah, that makes me want to
drink Sprite. What it really does, though, is make me turn the damn
channel.
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Die, television, die |
Monday, April 9, 2001 11:23 AM |
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Worst commercials currently on TV: The Gap's annoying "hallelujah"
campaign, which features girls in jeans who can't dance. Now while
normally I'm not opposed to girls dancing in jeans, the annoying music
combined with their just plain terrible dancing makes this just too
painful to sit through. Even worse, though, is the new Levi's campaign of
karaoke singers who can't sing, and usually aren't attractive either. I
mean, what braindead marketing executive got the idea in his black and
twisted brain that I'd want to listen to some reject of the 70's sing
"Karma Chameleon" so off-key that I had to jam rusty nails into my aural
canals just to retain what shreds of sanity I had left? At least Old Navy
dropped their retch-inducing "Magic the stupid dog" advertising campaign.
Apparently there is a quota of on-air wretchedness that simply needs to be
filled, and Levis and The Gap are simply providing a public service.
Hey, you fucknuts in marketing, why the hell would I buy a product
featured in commercials that make me violently ill? I won't, idiots,
because just getting people to remember your brand name is not enough.
Because when I go to the store, I remember that I HATE your brand.
Now how does that sell jeans?
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