Posted on 09/21/2016 5:09:41 AM PDT by MichCapCon
A year after the Saginaw County Sheriff seized a classic muscle car from a Shiawassee County couple, it sold the car with another 54,000 miles that had been logged in the interim. Last month, the couple filed a federal lawsuit over the car and other items that had been seized and then sold by the department. The department's actions grew out of a 2008 investigation for possible drug crimes, but the couple was never convicted or even charged with a crime.
Gerald and Royetta Ostipow filed the lawsuit on Aug. 24 with the U.S. District Court in Detroit against Saginaw County Sheriff William L. Federspiel, the department and a number of unnamed sheriff deputies. The lawsuit alleges that Federspiel and members of his department seized, then sold, hundreds of thousands of dollars in property belonging to the couple before the final determination of forfeitability.
1965 Chevy Nova. Photo by Mrchoppers via Wikimedia Commons. In April 2008, the department received search warrants to search a farmhouse in Shiawassee County owned by the Ostipows, who lived a half-mile down the street in their longtime residence.
The search warrants were issued by Saginaw County judges, said Outside Legal Counsel, which is representing the Ostipows. But its unclear why the Saginaw County officers were in a neighboring countys jurisdiction and didnt get search warrants from Shiawassee County judges.
The farmhouse, which was being renovated by Gerald Ostipow, was occupied by his adult son, Steven, and the propertys outbuildings were used for storage.
When the sheriffs deputies searched the farmhouse they found marijuana plants and seeds grown by Steven Ostipow, but his parents have denied knowledge of his illicit activities, their lawyers said.
Thats when the Ostipows property stored in the Shiawassee farmhouse and outbuildings were seized by the Saginaw County officers, despite Gerald and Royetta not being charged with any drug-related crimes.
The deputies seized dozens of animal mounts, tools, deer blinds and farm equipment from the farmhouse property. They also took a 1965 Chevy Nova SS that was being renovated and stored on a trailer.
Outside Legal Counsel claims the seized property lacked any realistic connection to the pot plants and seeds of Steven's grow.
Later that day, Saginaw deputies obtained another search warrant again from a Saginaw judge to search the Ostipows main residence in Shiawassee County, down the street from the farmhouse. The couple's law firm says no drugs were found at the property, yet officers seized cash from Gerald Ostipows wallet, plus other items.
After the initial seizures, Saginaw deputies would then routinely appear and present themselves, in plain clothes and in their personal vehicles while off duty, at the Residence and Farmhouse to continue to seize additional personal property, the federal complaint alleges.
The Michigan Court of Appeals later found that Royetta Ostipows portion of property seized from the farmhouse which included the classic car should be repaid. A later trial court decision ruled most of the personal property seized was improperly taken and was ordered non-forfeitable.
But it was later discovered that Sheriff Federspiel and the department sold off most of the Ostipows seized property before there was a ruling on the forfeitability of the items held by the county.
Documents provided by Outside Legal Counsel show the department seized the Ostipows 1965 Chevy Nova SS on April 24, 2008, when the vehicles mileage was 73,865. Federspiel, who signed the vehicle title transfer form, sold the partially restored muscle car over a year later on June 4, 2009, for $1,500.
The vehicles title certificate filled out by Federspiel around the time it was sold says the mileage was 130,000 54,000 miles more than when the department seized the car.
They went ahead and spent the proceeds, the Ostipows lawyer, Philip Ellison, said. Their intent wasnt to protect my clients rights, it was a pure money grab.
Federspiel and his department did not return requests for comment.
Federspiel competed in and won the Democratic Party primary in August, campaigning on forfeiting drug dealers property and claiming it saved taxpayers money. (He will face no Republican opposition in the November general election.) For two years, Federspiel drove a black Mustang GT as his department vehicle after the car was forfeited, MLive reported. In 2013, Federspiel sold the Mustang, which read Taken From A Local Drug Dealer on the sides, on eBay for $14,800.
Ellison said the biggest obstacle in the Ostipows case has been the department's lack of documentation of the property it seized.
Lee McGrath, the legislative counsel for the Institute for Justice, said this case is an example of policing for profit.
This case illustrates what happens when police and prosecutors benefit financially from confiscatory policies, he said.
McGrath praised reforms the Michigan Legislature made to forfeiture laws last year but noted lawmakers should continue to improve the states laws.
Those changes will improve reporting, but its essential the legislature continues, he said. Legislators in Lansing and city council members must take back their control of funding and setting priorities. Its wrong when sheriffs and police officers control both the sword and the purse, and this case illustrates the bad incentives of policing for profit.
A 2015 study by the Institute for Justice gave Michigan a grade of D- for its civil asset forfeiture laws, noting as much as 100 percent of forfeited property can go into law enforcement coffers even without a conviction.
Despite modest reforms approved in October 2015 that raised the standard of proof required to forfeit property, Michigans laws still earn a D-, largely because the states large profit incentive remains intact, according to the study titled Policing for Profit.
Since 2001, law enforcement in Michigan has forfeited at least $270 million in assets related to drug crimes. It is not known how much has been taken in total because there was no requirement to report the information.
Last year Gov. Rick Snyder signed a package of seven bills reforming civil asset forfeiture laws. These laws required law enforcement to disclose civil asset forfeitures and better document seizures. The laws also increased the burden of proof for civil asset forfeitures from preponderance of evidence to clear and convincing evidence.
Rep. Peter Lucido, R-Shelby Township, said he doesnt think anybody should profit from criminal activity, and until its been proven that criminal activity occurred, no property should be forfeited. Thats just simple due process, he said.
There are better regulations that we have now put through on civil asset forfeiture reform as it relates to accounting for the property seized, he said.
Lucido sponsored House Bill 4505, one of the bills signed into law last year. That law moved the burden of proof. He also sponsored House Bill 4629 in May 2015, which would repeal bond requirements in contesting civil asset forfeitures. The bill has passed the House and a Senate committee and is awaiting a vote in the full Senate.
You want the playing field to be fair, and the only way youre going to make it fair is to stop taking the peoples property, Lucido said. There is no logic and reason that people should be taking peoples property nothing until after theres been a conviction or theres been a lawsuit filed.
Theres too much gamesmanship with the way theyre doing it now, added Lucido, whos also a criminal defense attorney.
When police have a pecuniary interest in the property rights of others there will be overreaching on behalf of the police, he said.
In 10 other states, law enforcement is not able to forfeit (take ownership) of someones property until that person has been convicted of a crime. Two states, New Mexico and Nebraska, have completely eliminated civil forfeiture. In those states, property can only be taken and turned over to the state after a conviction in criminal court and a decision by that court that assets were directly gained from illegal activity.
New Mexico and Nebraska should be the model for every other state to follow on this matter.
We continue to sacrifice our police departments to corruption, our Bill or rights to expediency, our sense of justice to our moral outrage. When will drugs simply be legalized?
Good God!!
Sheriff Knottingham...!
If all as presented these “officers of the law” should be hung along the highways and left to rot.
Sounds like they were using the assets of these people as their own personal pawn shop.
That asset forfeiture is FANTASTIC!
What do you mean by that ?
Here are some pics of a '65 Chevy Nova. They show one in the article, but I don't think it's the actual one seized, but rather one from some "wiki" website.
Horrid. I try to stay away from Saginaw. Democrats.
“When police have a pecuniary interest in the property rights of others there will be overreaching on behalf of the police”
Cops- You don’t have to love ‘em.
The Chevy Nova is a classic muscle car?
My first car was the Pontiac-badged version. It had some nice V8 power, but I would not exactly call it a “muscle car”.
Charge the entire police department under RICO laws. See how they like being on the receiving end.
Back In The 60s a Chevy dealer named Don Yanko shoe horned L-72 Chevy 427 engines into Chevy 2 novas. Others followed. Later he put blown 350s in them.
Muscle Car, fits the description of these particular cars. Don’t know what the complainant’s car had.
The Nova SS is a classic muscle car. The early ones because they’re great examples of the early no-frills performance models, and the later ones because they make great bases for customizing. So far as I know, there are no 4-door SS musclecars, only coupes/convertibles. One of my cousin’s friends had a mid-70s Nova that was built up to the point that he would take people for rides, put a $10 bill on the dash and tell them that once he started accelerating they could keep the money if they could reach it; he never lost the money.
Actually the mainstream Nova’s were granma/granpa cars.
Long time no see. Where have you been?
Civil forfeiture laws need to go.
Just as there should be no assessment of civil liability in ANY instance relating to a crime unless there is an actual conviction for that crime (which, incidentally, utterly eliminates being liable without being responsible).
Moreover, all civil liabilities not relating to the commission of a crime should be limited to monetary damages: no P&S or punitive damages should be permitted.
Cops drove a 1965 Nova 54,000 miles in a year?
Geez, that doesn't leave much time to stop for doughnuts...
Criminal theft with a badge and a gun, AND the blessing of the court.
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