Posted on 03/05/2020 11:14:10 AM PST by nickcarraway
Neither Terry Rolin or his daughter were ever charged with a crime, but that didn't stop the DEA from trying to seize more than $82,000 from them through civil asset forfeiture.
The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) will return more than $82,000 that it seized from an elderly Pittsburgh man and his daughter after a federal class-action lawsuit was filed on their behalf last month.
The Institute for Justice, the libertarian-leaning public interest law firm that filed the lawsuit, announced today that the DEA will return $82,373 that it seized from Rebecca Brown six months ago at a Pittsburgh airport. The money was the life savings of her father, Terry Rolin, a 79-year-old retired railroad engineer. She says she intended to deposit the money in a bank but ran out of time before her flight.
According to Brown, a DEA agent met her at her gate and grilled her about the money. Brown told The Washington Post that the agent demanded she put her confused father on the phone, and, when their stories didn't exactly match, the agent seized the cash.
"I'm grateful that my father's life savings will soon be returned, but the money never should have been taken in the first place. I can't believe they're not even offering an apology for the stress and pain they caused for my family," Brown said in a press release today. "Without this money, my father was forced to put off necessary dental workcausing him serious pain for several monthsand could not make critical repairs to his truck."
In cases like Rolin's, the DEA seizes cash using civil asset forfeiture, a practice that allows police to seize cash and property suspected of being connected to criminal activity, even if the owner is not charged with a crime.
After the seizure, the DEA notified Brown that it was seeking to permanently forfeit Rolin's life savings. Neither Rolin or Brown were charged with a crime.
Law enforcement groups say civil asset forfeiture is a vital tool to disrupt organized drug trafficking by targeting its illicit revenues. However civil liberties groups say there are too few protections for innocent owners and too many perverse profit incentives for police. More than half of all U.S. states have passed some form of asset forfeiture reform because of these concerns, but it is less constrained at the federal level.
Although it is legal to fly domestically with large amounts of undeclared cash, the Institute for Justice lawsuit claims the DEA has a practice or policy of seizing currency from travelers at U.S. airports without probable cause simply if the dollar amount is greater than $5,000. This practice, the suit argues, violates travelers' Fourth Amendment rights.
"We are glad that Terry will get his money back, but it is shameful that it takes a lawsuit and an international outcry for the federal government to do the right thing," said Institute for Justice senior attorney Dan Alban. "We know that this routinely happens to other travelers at airports across the United States."
In 2016, a USA Today investigation found the DEA seized more than $209 million from at least 5,200 travelers in 15 major airports over the previous decade.
A 2017 report by the Justice Department Office of Inspector General found that the DEA seized more than $4 billion in cash from people suspected of drug activity over the previous decade, but $3.2 billion of those seizures were never connected to any criminal charges.
The report reviewed 100 cash seizures and found that only 44 of those were connected to or advanced a criminal investigation. The majority of seizures occurred in airports, train stations, and bus terminals, where the DEA regularly snoops on travel records and maintains a network of travel industry employees who act as confidential informants.
"When seizure and administrative forfeitures do not ultimately advance an investigation or prosecution, law enforcement creates the appearance, and risks the reality, that it is more interested in seizing and forfeiting cash than advancing an investigation or prosecution," the Inspector General warned.
That warning has not been heeded, and Brown and the Institute for Justice plan to continue pursuing their lawsuit.
"The government shouldn't be able to take money for no reason, hang on to it for months, and then give it back like nothing happened, which is why the lawsuit we filed will continue," Brown said. "No one should be forced to go through this nightmare."
Why wasn’t it in a bank check?
There’s the rub. I just saw a video about a guy who just got his $400,000 back because they took too long to file charges. That one probably WAS drug money.
And here’s the problem. I’m all for CRIMINAL forfeiture. But not civil. If you want to take a guy’s stuff, you’re gonna have to file charges and get a conviction. The reason is simple. I would rather law enforcement err in the direction of not being able to nab all bad guys rather than err in the direction of nailing innocent people. In fact, that is why I think we adhere to the concept of “innocent until proven guilty”.
This is why the whole civil asset forfeiture thing has completely destroyed my support for our government. Maybe that’s a good thing. I see it for what it is.
On some issues, yes, they agree on crime-busting tactics.
The Clintons and Bidens are too tough on crime for Democrats.
[This guy has filed a Federal lawsuit challenging the entire program.
They are giving him his money back in an effort to make nice and hope he drops it and goes away.
I dont think he will.]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Institute_for_Justice
Found it =>
Cop took just 3 seconds to shoot dog
01/08/2003
The Tennessee policeman who shot and killed a family’s dog during a terrorizing traffic stop took just three seconds to slay the animal after it jumped out its owners’ car, reports the Cookeville Herald-Citizen.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/819436/posts?page=458
I’m sorry but their money was not stolen by criminals, lost, misplaced, left unattended, or made insecure by them. It was taken by legalized theft by the government, with no foundation for suspecting the money had been obtained by criminal means.
Civil Asset Forfeiture has become a mass criminal asset forfeiture by law enforcement at every level.
Nothing that the people did, seemingly dumb or not, is any legitimate cause for what the DEA did.
I have carried thousands of dollars to classic car shows in order to purchase cars I might want. Most sellers will not take a check especially when the transfer of ownership will occur at the time of sale. When I moved to the Philippines I brought close to $20,000 so that we could build a house. I did not have a Philippine bank account at the time and the local rural bank did not have a “dollar” account. I changed the dollars to Philippine Pesos when I needed to buy materials and pay labor.
There are thousands of legitimate reasons to have large sums of cash on you at any time. Unless L/E can make a case that meets warrant criteria they should not be allowed to seize the money.
The criminal government at it again.
JoMa
Im going to wash my hands
And you don’t even know where they’ve been :)
What is comical is that in civil forfeiture cases, do you know who they bring the charges against?
The stuff they seized.
I know. They do it anyways.
While it may be foolish to carry large amounts of cash, that is completely irrelevant to the issue of CAF. If there is no probable cause, then there is a clear violation of someones 4th and 5th Amendment rights.
There are quite a few 'good germans' on FR.
These are the cases that distinguish those who hold Constitutional limited government as a principle, and those who selectively wield it as a tactic.
Thank you!
The agents were only following orders. Make it PLUS JAIL TIME FOR THOSE WHO GAVE THE ORDERS!
What she is only ‘stupid’ because there are predatory thieves in police uniforms hungry to steal money.
In free country, you shouldn’t have your assets seized without due process.
perfect
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