Posted on 11/01/2014 6:21:34 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
John Anderson, an American tourist from San Clemente, California, was driving down a poorly-maintained highway when he saw flashing lights in his rearview mirror.
After a brief exchange with the local police officer, Anderson was shocked when the cop started searching his vehicle.
Anderson had $25,180 in US dollar cash in the car, which by the way was not a crime according to the local laws.
When the cop saw it, he told Anderson that we would take it and threatened him with arrest if he protested.
Anderson couldnt believe it. This is the sort of stuff you always hear about in these third world countriescorrupt cops and state robbery.
Ultimately Anderson gave in; the cop let him go and did not charge him with a crime, but took every last penny in the vehicle.
And for the last two years, Anderson has been trying to unsuccessfully fight it in the countrys Kangaroo court system.
Clearly we should all avoid going to such dangerously corrupt third world countries.
Except in this case, Anderson was in the United States of America. And he is far from being the only victim of this highway robbery known as Civil Asset Forfeiture.
Since 9/11, police forces in the Land of the Free made over 62,000 seizures without charging anyone with any crime, stealing $2.5 billion in cash alone.
The cost of taking legal action against the government is so high, that only about 17% of the victims actually challenged the seizures.
And even then, only 41% of those that challenged have been able to get their money back.
This means that the government has a better than 93% success rate in outright theft.
This is worse than mafiaits blatant theft with impunity from the people that are sworn to protect and serve. Its the kind of thing that is thought to only occur in heinously corrupt countries.
Heres the good news: many people are waking up to the reality that theyre not living in a free country.
They are starting to understand what I call the criminalization of existence.
Every last detail of our lives is regulatedwhat we can/cannot put in our bodies, whether we can collect rainwater or unplug from the grid, how we are allowed to educate our own children, etc.
Driving this point home, a Tennessee woman was actually thrown in jail earlier this month for ignoring a city citation to trim some overgrown bushes in her yard.
This isnt freedom.
The irony is that, even though many people are starting to realize this, theyre looking to the very institution that has enslaved them to solve the problem.
It is their own government that has created this system.
It is the government that passed US Code section 983 (Rules for Civil Forfeiture), allowing the police to commit highway robbery.
It is the government that continues to arrogantly, brazenly spy on every citizen despite overwhelming public outcry.
It is the government that continues to bring forth new regulation at an absolutely astounding rate.
Just today (this is 100% true), the US federal government published an eye-popping 490 pages of new rules, proposals, and regulatory notices.
(http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2014-10-31/pdf/FR-2014-10-31.pdf)
To give you a little taste, todays regulations include:
Theres even a new rule upholding fines for unauthorized playing of digital recordings.
You cant make this stuff upthey are regulating nearly everything.
Its government that does this. They are the problem, not the solution.
Looking to government to solve the problem that they themselves created is completely irrational. They are incapable of righting themselves.
The solution the power is with the individual.
All the tools and all the resources to distance yourself from this system already exist.
On one hand, theres always the possibility of leaving. The American Dream is still alive and well its just no longer in the United States. Not to mention all the financial, business, investment, and lifestyle opportunities for the taking.
But even if you stay, there are dozens of ways to take back your freedom.
For example, why hold 100% of your savings and assets in that jurisdiction when they could easily confiscate everything?
There are so many great, safe jurisdictions in the world to bank, to invest, to own property, and to store assets. And you can set all of this up without leaving town.
The solutions are out there. Its time to consider them before becoming a statistic.
P.S. Heres more proof that the official inflation numbers are completely phony
yet another market that has reached an all time high.
See my latest post
I’ve seen so much abuse of that rhetoric.
This guy might not even be one of them; but they are using him as a news pigeon.
Sovereign citizen groups using the guy as a News pigeon....
BINGO!!
Many thanks for nailing it!
Means nothing. Drug dogs are trained to alert upon cue from their handlers, so as to provide "probable cause."
If somebody cared, the FBI could probably attack such practices. Won’t happen under Obama however. Maybe under a libertarian executive.
"Oops. I have to search your car. I can get a warrant you know. My dog is never wrong ..."
I agree they should be given but we just don’t know do we. As to marked bills its not what one thinks about when getting into the car.
A few dozen thousand, then one might prudently take precautions. Police are not the only people who could steal, after all.
The “progressives” of all parties do not believe in freedom.
there are fewer places offshore that are safe for the little guy.
Sometimes investigators don’t WANT action because that would obviate their purpose.
“There are so many great, safe jurisdictions in the world to bank, to invest, to own property, and to store assets. And you can set all of this up without leaving town.”
OK. So in this case the guy had $25 in cash. Now tell me how he could have got $25k in cash out of the country w/o taking some enormous risks? It is still legal to take out more tan $25k, but it must be declared and this will be reported to every f-—ing Fed Gestapo agency.
Same goes for physical PMs and anything else conspicuous. Send out digital financial instruments and you have the same problem. Is this guy some kind of coyote?
once an unmarked tow truck showed up to two my MG that wasn’t running from the street in front of my house. I called the cops and they said it was a city truck. I then called the state police. The sgt of the precinct was at my house in minutes. they towed the MG but i followed them to the junk yard and quickly called a friend to tow the mg to a guy who eventually restored and customized the car for me.
Last year the Star revisited the issue in 12 states, and found the problem as bad, if not worse than before, in every state.
And until they are found guilty to the exclusion of a reasonable doubt of a crime, they are to be considered innocent.
He doesn’t. It is for the State to prove that he is in possession of it illegally.
He shouldn’t need a “reason” to carry his own money, but he is a dumb-arse for not hiding it better!
Those “drug dogs” are trained to “alert” on cue. I used to believe that crap that they could sniff out drugs. Then again, at one time, I believed that the cops were honest. But I was brought back to reality.
I’m not a dog handler, but I’ve worked with a couple different types of working dogs. I will politely disagree with the inference that all working.g dogs are fakes and only alert on command in order to provide their handlers fake PC.
Not all cops are crooks, despite what some may think. I might agree that for too many are corrupt, but I don’t think I would agree that it’s a majority of them. I still think most cops are good people with positive intentions. This is based on my personal experience and exposure, since I clearly haven’t met or worked with enough cops to say I can speak to the whole of the family race nationwide...
The point of my post was to link a better article on the primary case being discussed. The original article lacked both context and objectivity.
If I were king for the day... It would become the policy of the government that any and all assets seized or frozen would be held in escrow until such time as a criminal or civil judgment was issued. Due process, especially as it relates to asset seizures, has been abused and twisted to the point one sometimes wonders if the 4th and 5th amendments are still on the books.
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