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Tuesday, March 10, 2020
Joe Biden: Father Of The Civil Asset Forfeiture Program
You know that 11 Billion dollars a year cops steal take from you, in your car, home, bank for committing no crime other than having the money or wealth? The monster - JOE BIDEN - behind the law, who pushed this breaking of 4 different constitutional amendments. CIVIL ASSET FORFEITURE. ----------
Authored by Chris Calton via The Mises Institute, In 1991, Maui police officers showed up at the home of Frances and Joseph Lopes. One officer showed his badge and said, “Let’s go into the house, and we will explain things to you.” Once he was inside, the explanation was simple: “We’re taking the house.”
One of the most evil men to ever serve in DC
The Lopses were far from wealthy. They worked on a
sugar plantation for nearly fifty years, living in camp housing, to save
up enough money to buy a modest, middle-class home. But in 1987, their
son Thomas was caught with marijuana. He was twenty-eight, and he
suffered from mental health issues. He grew the marijuana in the
backyard of his parents’ home, but every time they tried to cut it
down, Thomas threatened suicide. When he was arrested, he pled
guilty, was given probation since it was his first offense, and he was
ordered to see a psychologist once a week. Frances and Joseph were
elated. Their son got better, he stopped smoking marijuana, and the
episode was behind them.
But when the police showed up and told them that their house
was being seized, they learned that the episode was not behind them.
That statute of limitations for civil asset forfeiture was five years.
It had only been four. Legally, the police could seize any
property connected to the marijuana plant from 1987. They had
resurrected the Lopes case during a department-wide search through old
cases looking for property they could legally confiscate.
Asset forfeiture laws once applied only to goods that could be considered a danger to society - illegal alcohol, weapons, etc. But with the birth of the modern war on drugs, lawmakers pushed for something with more teeth,
which they achieved with the 1970 passage of the Racketeering Influence
and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act. Although many are familiar with
the story of the steady expansion of civil asset forfeiture laws, many
overlook the fact that presidential candidate Joe Biden helped
put these laws on previously apathetic law enforcement agents’ radar
and, worse, played a significant role in broadening their application. Biden has effectively aided and abetted the police state’s sustained assault on American subjects’ property rights.
Expanding Asset Forfeiture, Phase I: The RICO Act of 1970
In 1970, the targets of asset forfeiture were wealthy crime bosses.
It was prosecutor G. Robert Blakey, who had worked under Attorney
General Robert Kennedy and various congressmen, who set about broadening
its scope. He helped draft a bill for a new legal concept, “criminal
forfeiture,” which would allow police to seize the illegally acquired
profits of a convicted criminal. The assets that could be seized would now consist of anything that was funded with money connected to criminal activity. To
appease those who were worried about abuses of power, Blakey assured
them that prosecutors would have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
the criminal was guilty of a crime before the assets could be seized.
There was nothing to worry about; only legitimate bad guys would suffer.
The new policy was passed as part of the Racketeering Influence and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act in 1970. Blakey was a fan of the 1931 movie Little Caesar, and the acronym was crafted to honor Blakey’s favorite character from the movie, the gangster Rico Bandello.
The RICO Act wasn’t designed to be part of the war on drugs; it was
just meant to target criminals. But when Richard Nixon took office, the
RICO Act was one of a number of new tools that the members of his newly
created Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs (precursor to the Drug
Enforcement Administration (DEA)) could use to fight his drug war.
Combined with other legal innovations, such as no-knock raids and
mandatory minimum sentences, Nixon and his administration would cure
America of the drug menace.
Still, the pesky “conviction” requirement stood in the way of law enforcement’s ability to seize criminal assets. In
1978, Jimmy Carter’s director of the Office of Drug Abuse (the title
“drug czar” is often retroactively applied), Peter Bourne, decided that
the law needed to be changed. Bourne learned of an incident at the Miami
International Airport in which a suitcase had been left on the baggage
carousel for three hours before police picked it up and found $3 million
inside. If drug kingpins could afford to abandon so much money, they
must be flush with enough cash to hardly worry about criminal forfeiture
laws. So, at Bourne’s urging, Congress modified the RICO Act to allow the DEA to confiscate assets without a
conviction. The burden of proof wasn’t entirely gone (yet), but the
government only needed an indictment, rather than a full conviction, to
justify asset seizure. After all, the government knew who a lot of these
kingpins were, but the criminals continued to get rich while the DEA
struggled to build cases against them.
Even then, though, real estate was off limits. Asset
forfeiture had evolved from the seizure of dangerous items into
criminal profit following a conviction, and now into criminal profit
(and its “derivative proceeds”) without the conviction requirement. But
real estate—such as the Lopes house—still couldn’t be touched.
But through the 1970s, the RICO Act was still largely ignored by
prosecutors. Blakey was holding seminars out of Cornell University,
which were attended by federal law enforcement agents and prosecutors,
urging them to take advantage of the RICO Act in the war on drugs. He
made few inroads. The law was unwieldy, and prosecutors were overworked.
More often than not, it wasn’t worth their time. While Blakey was
proselytizing the virtues of his law to little effect, he was
unwittingly gaining an ally in Congress: Senator Joe Biden.
Expanding Asset Seizure, Phase 2: Biden and the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984
Biden, a young Senator from Delaware, had to do something to
show that despite his “liberal” reputation, he could be just as tough on
crime as his Republican colleagues. He took notice of the RICO
Act, and he realized that law enforcement agencies were not taking
advantage of it, particularly in waging the drug war. He turned to the
General Accounting Office and asked them to produce a study on the
potential uses of RICO for drug enforcement.
The report showed that the RICO Act granted enormous powers to police
to confiscate drug-related assets but that these powers were not being
taken advantage of: “The government has simply not exercised
the kind of leadership and management necessary to make asset
forfeiture a widely used law enforcement technique,” the
report stated. By the time the report came in, Ronald Reagan was
settling into office and getting ready to renew the war on drugs.
Reagan brought the FBI into the drug war, and he gave the director,
William Webster, a mission. His agents would use the powers of the RICO
Act to find drug rings and take away their assets. Drug cartels must be
rendered unprofitable. As the 1980s progressed, the war on drugs would
be the country’s biggest political issue. Politicians from both parties
would work to show that they could out–drug warrior their opponents. One
Democratic representative from Florida, Earl Hutto, said, “In the war on narcotics, we have met the enemy, and he is the U.S. Code.”
Biden brought the RICO law to the attention of the federal
government, Reagan enlisted the FBI to use it against drug traffickers,
and both parties would now work to dismantle any
The drug war became a contest of political one-upmanship. Reagan’s
Justice Department fought for all kinds of new powers. Attorney General
Edwin Meese and Assistant Attorney General William Weld (yes, that Bill
Weld) railed against the limitations on their legal prerogative. Weld
went so far as to argue in favor of the legality of using the Air Force
to shoot suspected drug-smuggling planes out of the sky, a policy that even his boss was unwilling to endorse.
But Meese, Weld, and everyone else seemed to agree that forfeiture
laws didn’t go nearly far enough. By requiring an indictment, the
government still had to meet some standard of reasonable guilt before
seizing property, which allowed far too many criminals that law
enforcement knew to be guilty (but couldn’t build a case
against) to keep their ill-gotten gains. To take things further, the
Justice Department argued that law enforcement should be allowed to take
“substitute” property: they knew that they wouldn’t be able to take
everything that had been paid for with drug money, so it stood to reason
that they should be able to take legally acquired assets of equal value
(however that might be determined). And finally, with real estate off
limits, the government was unable to seize marijuana farms, drug
warehouses, and criminal homes.
The Comprehensive Forfeiture Act fixed
all of these problems. Biden introduced the new bill in 1983, and its
provisions became law the next year. Under this law federal agents had
nearly unlimited powers to seize assets from private citizens. Now the
government only needed to find a way to let local and state police join
the party.
Biden’s bill was passed as part of the 1984 Comprehensive Crime Control Act . In addition to a slew of new powers for prosecutors, the burden of proof for asset seizure was lowered once again (agents had to onlybelievethat what they were seizing was equal in value to money believed to
have been purchased from drug sales). More significantly, the bill
started the “equitable sharing” program that allowed local and state law
enforcement to retain up to 80 percent of the spoils.
The law took effect in 1986, the year before Thomas Lopes pled guilty
to charges of growing a marijuana plant in his parents’ backyard. In
1987, when Thomas faced the judge, the government had just made it so
that his local police had an enormous incentive and unchecked authority
to seize property from private citizens, so long as they could show any
flimsy connection to drugs. By 1991, the Maui police were running out of
easily seized property, so they started combing through case files
within the five-year limit to find new sources of enrichment for their
precinct using the expanded RICO powers. One such file brought the Lopes
home to their attention.
But the Lopeses are only one example out of millions. In the year
their home was confiscated by police for a minor, four-year-old drug
charge, $644 million in assets were seized. In 2018 alone, the Treasury Department’s Forfeiture Fund saw nearly $1.4 billion in deposits .
The Lopes story merely illustrates that criminals (regardless of how
one might feel about drug laws) are hardly the only people falling
victim to this policy.
The decades-long abuse of this policy has reached such
extreme proportions that people on all sides of the political aisle have
been turning against it. At this writing (February 20, 2019 for the original version of this article), the Supreme Court has unanimously voted in favor of Tyson Timbs ,
whose $42,000 Land Rover was seized in 2015 following a conviction for
selling $400 in heroin. The court is asserting that asset forfeiture
constitutes a fine and that the Eighth Amendment—which protects citizens
from excessive fines—applies to both state and local governments. The
consequences of the ruling remain to be seen, but it seems nearly
certain that the unanimous decision was motivated by the increasing
outrage against the civil asset forfeiture policies.
In the fight against the egregious violation of property
rights that is asset forfeiture, Americans must not forget who those who
promulgated these laws and birthed a new paradigm of government
aggression against private persons that is proving difficult to
overturn.
FROM THE INTERNET ---------------
I have defended many of these cases and to put it simply if you think
you have property rights you just have not yet had the misfortune to run
into a civil asset forfeiture case, especially an in rem one. I
even had one once where the government ex parte obtained my trust
account and personal bank records on the thesis that my client was
paying me with proceeds of crime and so should claw-back that money.
Gee, wonder if that was not a move to create a conflict between us or
otherwise deprive her of funds to pay me to defend her, /s? The moral
of the story is to hold all your assets using a web of offshore holding
companies with independent directors and ultimate trust beneficiaries,
and even that will only cover you if you have 8 figure wealth only,
anything beyond that and .gov will put in the effort to steal everything
you own. Phuck Biden. --------------
I
remember a case in Las Vegas where a Deputy Sheriff stopped a young
couple just outside Vegas. "How much money have you got in the car?" he
asked. "Well, we just won a few grand at the casino.; that and some traveling money." The deputy armed robber told them, " I'm taking it; could be drug
money." They protested, of course. He replied, "If you don't shut up,
I'll take your car too. You can start hitch-hiking."
"Land of the free, home of the brave?" We sure have to be brave to live here in this increasing jailhouse.
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"Land of the free, home of the brave?" We sure have to be brave to live here in this increasing jailhouse.
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