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San Jose Mercury News
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Sunday, August 29, 1993
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Front Page
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LAW FILLS COPS' COFFERS BUT INVITES ABUSES
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By GARY WEBB
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Mercury News Sacramento Bureau
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After Kay Van Sant's 30-year-old son was arrested on drug trafficking charges
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last spring, the Bakersfield police marched into her bank and drained her
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checking account of $3,912. Van Sant, a self-employed bookkeeper who hasn't
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lived with her son in 10 years, has never been accused of a crime. And she
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hasn't gotten her money back.
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Miluska Portilla and Percy Ormeno, T-shirt vendors who live in Daly City, lost
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$1,045 when San Francisco police raided their house looking for drugs. No
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drugs were found. No arrests were made. The only thing police officers found
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was a piece of paper that they said was a record of narcotics sales -- a
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document the prosecutor who took their cash admitted he'd never seen.
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Roberto De La Torres' pickup was seized in March after his cousin was arrested
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in it with a pound of marijuana. De La Torres, who speaks no English, wanted
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to explain that he'd loaned the truck to his cousin before leaving on a
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Mexican vacation. He never got the chance. Announcing that ``the court doesn't
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speak Spanish,'' a Kern County judge awarded De La Torres' pickup to the
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police, ignoring his pleas for an interpreter.
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These tales and dozens like them are the untold story of California's asset
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forfeiture law, a 5-year-old experiment designed to combat the overlords of
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the state's multibillion-dollar illegal drug industry. The state's top law
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enforcement officers call the experiment -- which they estimate has resulted
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in at least $1 billion in seizures -- an unqualified success, and are pushing
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to make it permanent.
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But a three-month Mercury News investigation found a very different world --
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one of widespread abuses, where suspicion and hearsay can cost you your car,
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your cash, your house, the pictures on your wall and the clothes in your
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closet; where the police seize property first and ask questions later; where
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you're guilty unless you prove otherwise -- and if you can't afford a lawyer,
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too bad.
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It is a world where, if you're poor or ignorant, you stand almost no chance of
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winning -- even if you happen to be innocent.
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Police and prosecutors ``have gone crazy with this law,'' said attorney Robin
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Walters, who ran the Kern County district attorney's asset forfeiture unit for
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two years. ``They're rabid. They'll take anything, whether it has anything to
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do with drugs or not, because they know most people will never be able to get
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it back.''
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No one knows how widespread the problem is, because there is no statewide
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oversight and no real accountability. But cases of abuse are on file in almost
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every courthouse in the state.
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Law enforcement spokesmen deny the law has spawned a statewide bounty hunting
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system. Such ``alleged horror stories,'' they say, are just propaganda.
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``To date, out of all the scores and scores and scores of asset seizures under
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California law, there's not been a problem with one single case. Not one,''
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said Mike Carrington, a spokesman for Gov. Pete Wilson's Office of Criminal
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Justice Planning, which gets 10 percent of all forfeitures made in the state.
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``There has never, ever been a problem. That's how the record stands.''
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Others who have been more directly involved disagree.
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``These seizures have been legal street robberies,'' said former Los Angeles
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narcotics detective Robert R. Sobel, who ran one of Los Angeles County's most
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productive anti-drug squads in the late 1980s. Sobel and Eufrasio Cortez -- a
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former California Narcotics Officer of the Year -- recently told a federal
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corruption jury in Los Angeles that members of their task force routinely lied
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under oath, falsified police reports, invented informants, planted drugs and
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beat suspects to get money and valuables from them. So far, 12 officers have
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been convicted of various crimes.
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The way asset forfeiture works is quite simple: If police officers believe
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you're a drug dealer, they can take nearly anything you own. No crime is
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required; no arrests are necessary.
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You have 10 days to contest the seizure, or your property is gone forever.
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It's up to you to prove to the district attorney that your assets are
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drug-free.
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And don't assume receipts, property titles or paycheck stubs will necessarily
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suffice. You're guilty until proven innocent.
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``Everybody's always got a receipt for something,'' scoffed Deputy District
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Attorney Kyle Hedum, who handles forfeiture cases for Yolo County. ``You ought
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to hear some of the stories I hear. These people are dopers, and it's my job
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to take that money.''
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If you fail to persuade the district attorney, your only recourse is to go to
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court. Most cases in California never get there, because it usually costs more
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to get the property back than it's worth. If you lose, your assets are divided
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among the district attorney (13.5 percent), police (76.5 percent) and the
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state (10 percent.)
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In many instances, people who lose assets are drug dealers. But not always.
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``I don't doubt that there may have been an abuse here and there, but the
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Department of Justice and most of the local agencies I know about are very
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cautious and very conservative when it comes to using this law,'' said Joe
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Doane, chief of the attorney general's Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement.
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The California Legislature began experimenting with the idea of allowing
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police and prosecutors to profit from suspected drug crimes in 1989. Since
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then, tens of thousands of forfeitures have taken place. Last year alone, more
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than 6,000 forfeiture cases were filed in California.
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But the experiment is scheduled to end this year, and that prospect has the
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law enforcement establishment frantic, because many agencies are using the
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money to pay salaries and overtime, furnish their offices and pay rent -- uses
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that were never intended when the law was enacted.
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`THEY HAVE TO HAVE IT'
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``Much like a drug addict becomes addicted to drugs, law enforcement agencies
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have become dependent on asset forfeitures,'' said Deputy Attorney General
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Gary Schons, who helped write the state's forfeiture laws. ``They have to have
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it.''
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State Attorney General Dan Lungren agreed: ``We can argue about semantics, but
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the fact of the matter is this is the lifeblood of local law enforcement.''
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Because statewide reporting requirements do not exist -- and some counties
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have not revealed how much they've made -- it is impossible to know exactly
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how much the forfeiture laws have brought to police coffers. The Department of
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Justice estimates that of the estimated $1 billion in seizures, $180 million
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has been forfeited since 1989.
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To keep that pipeline flowing, the law enforcement lobby has launched a
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high-pressure campaign in Sacramento to make the law permanent and to expand
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it so money and property will be easier to get. Other lawmakers -- an unusual
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coalition of liberals and conservatives -- are trying to roll it back, arguing
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that police and prosecutors have become more interested in seizing cash than
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in fighting crime.
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The anti-forfeiture movement is being led by Assemblyman John Burton, D-San
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Francisco, head of the powerful Assembly Rules Committee. On the
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pro-forfeiture side are Senate Minority Leader Ken Maddy, R-Fresno, and
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Attorney General Lungren. Both groups are meeting now and are supposed to
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present a compromise bill to the Legislature in the next few weeks.
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The courts also are taking another look at forfeiture. In recent months, the
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U.S. Supreme Court has handed down two rulings defining the outer limits of
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the federal forfeiture laws. Local prosecutors, though, say the decisions will
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have little impact.
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STRIPPING AWAY SAFEGUARDS
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While their impact may be debatable, the court decisions are the first time
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anyone has succeeded in halting the steady expansion of the forfeiture law.
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Since the first modern forfeiture laws went on the books in the late 1970s,
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police groups have waged a patient and extraordinary lobbying campaign that
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methodically stripped away nearly every safeguard wary legislators had written
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to prevent police profiteering:
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-- The amount of proof the state needed to win a forfeiture case in court has
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been reduced three times, from guilt ``beyond a reasonable doubt'' to the
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current standard of ``more likely than not.'' Now, forfeitures are being
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granted on nothing more incriminating than the lack of a job or a drug dog's
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behavior around a stack of $20 bills.
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Sean Thomas of Los Angeles had $14,500 taken from him by the California
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Highway Patrol and Bakersfield police in November because they didn't believe
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his explanation that he was a rap music promoter and that the money had come
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from ticket sales -- even though a record company executive had confirmed the
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existence of Thomas' production company for police.
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``The story of being a rap concert promoter or rap group promoter is widely
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used by both black as well as Hispanic narcotic traffickers,'' the police
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report said. ``The $14,500 was seized pursuant to asset forfeiture.''
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Thomas, a black man with no criminal record, was a passenger in a van that had
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been stopped for speeding. No drugs were found, and no drug arrests were made.
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Yet Thomas lost his money because the legal fight to recover the funds became
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too expensive.
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-- The amount of drugs necessary to seize a vehicle -- originally set at a
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level high enough to keep the law focused on major narcotics dealers -- has
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been cut in half twice. The variety of drugs that can cause forfeitures has
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been broadened to include common prescription pain relievers.
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Greg Augustus of Sacramento was jailed on drug trafficking charges last year
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because he was found with $230 and 10 Vicodin tablets, a painkiller his doctor
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had prescribed for crippling arthritis. The evidence for his arrest: talking
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to another person ``as if possibly he was engaging in a narcotics
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transaction.''
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The charges were dropped, and Augustus had to go to court to get back his $230
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-- which, ironically, he'd just received from the Sacramento Police Department
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as a settlement for an accident claim in which a police car had crashed into
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his vehicle.
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``I wouldn't have gone to jail if I hadn't had the money on me,'' said
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Augustus, who lives in a poor section of Sacramento called Del Paso Heights.
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``It happens all the time in the Heights because they know some people are
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scared to go back and get it.''
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-- The kinds of property that can be seized -- at first limited to boats and
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airplanes -- have been expanded to include real estate, computers,
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motorcycles, campers, televisions, compact disc players and anything else the
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person may have purchased in the five years prior to the seizure. Weapons were
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added to the list in 1990, and a Department of Justice forfeiture manual
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advises police to seize every gun found on the premises during a drug raid,
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even if they were legally obtained and have no connection to drug trafficking.
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The Mercury News found cases in which police had seized such items as a set of
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tires and rims, a child's Nintendo game, a belt buckle and a jar of pennies.
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Sacramento attorney Phil Cozens said that when police raided an apartment
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owned by one of his clients, they were very discriminating about which assets
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they seized.
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``They took a bottle of Lafitte Rothschild 1984, but strangely enough, they
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left a bottle of Dom Perignon 1982,'' said Cozens, a former prosecutor. ``They
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took some very bizarre red wines and left champagnes and whites.''
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-- The amount of money police and prosecutors can keep from forfeitures has
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soared from nothing under the original law to 90 percent under the current
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law, with the difference coming at the expense of drug prevention programs. In
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1983, the California Department of Mental Health was receiving 50 percent of
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all forfeiture dollars. Now, it gets a maximum of $1.5 million a year --
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roughly 3 percent.
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Up until 1988, police lobbyists had a standard reply to lawmakers who worried
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that innocent people might be harmed: Forfeiture, they reminded them, could
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only be used if the owner had been convicted of drug trafficking.
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A FINAL BARRIER: CONVICTION
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But in 1988, a bill carried by Assemblyman Richard Katz, a Los Angeles
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Democrat, knocked down that final barrier. Convictions were no longer required
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-- and the money started rolling in.
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``When that statute was written, everybody saw dollar signs,'' said Rich
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Bradshaw, a budget officer with the state Justice Department.
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An internal 1988 Justice Department analysis of the Katz bill predicted that
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``aggressive enforcement . . . could eventually produce as much as $10,000,000
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a year for California's law enforcement agencies.''
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The estimate was off by more than 500 percent.
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From 1988 to 1989, the value of asset forfeitures in California soared from $7
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million to $30 million. In 1991, it was $55.8 million.
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PROGRAM FEEDS ITSELF
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``That's not because law enforcement is greedy and selfish and will only do it
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when they get the money,'' Attorney General Lungren assured a legislative
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panel recently. Rather, he said, it's because the money allows the hiring of
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more prosecutors and narcotics agents, which produces more forfeitures.
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Since the current forfeiture law went into effect in 1989, drug arrests in
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California have declined dramatically, but asset forfeiture cases have
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continued to increase. Defense lawyers say they are seeing an unusual number
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of clients who have lost cash and property but have not been charged with a
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crime.
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``They're more interested now in the money than in catching crooks,'' said
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attorney David Weiner of Cameron Park in El Dorado County. ``A lot of them
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would rather let the guys go so they can come around later and pop them again.
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The whole thing has grown into a monster.''
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The narcotics bureau's Doane agreed that the lure of easy money has warped the
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views of some law enforcement officials.
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``There are a lot of people both in and out of law enforcement who believe
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that income generation is the primary point of the law,'' Doane said. ``To me,
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that's not even part of the equation. It's nice if we do (get the money), but
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if we didn't, it's OK by me.''
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A LAW GONE TOO FAR?
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Even some narcotics agents believe the law has gone too far.
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``Truthfully, I would like to see this swung a little bit more back to the
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conservative approach,'' said Sgt. Dearl Skinner, who handles forfeiture cases
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for the Sutter County Sheriff's Department. ``I wouldn't mind if I had to get
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a conviction of possession for sale.''
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But Skinner acknowledged that his view is not a popular one with most police,
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particularly those in urban counties.
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``They just don't have the manpower to go out and make the (criminal) cases,''
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Skinner said. ``I mean, what they're hoping is that they just file the
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(forfeiture) paperwork and the people won't file a claim, . . . and then it's
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automatically theirs.''
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Contra Costa County District Attorney Gary Yancey, however, thinks the law is
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too restrictive and chafes at the ``loophole'' that prevents him from seizing
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property used for growing marijuana.
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``If an individual is growing marijuana in his house with hydroponics and
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whatever, it's the equivalent of a meth(amphetamine) lab or manufacturing rock
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cocaine,'' Yancey told the Legislature recently. ``You ought to be able to
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take the whole thing.''
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Attorney General Lungren also said he thinks the law doesn't go far enough.
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He'd like to see it expanded so that the state would be able to seize an
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entire apartment complex if the landlord knew one of the tenants was selling
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drugs.
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To critics who argue police are already running wild with this law, Lungren
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says the system has plenty of checks and balances. While the cops might be
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making the seizures, he said, it's the district attorneys who are making the
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decisions about whether or not to keep the property.
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``That, I think, is some protection against a misunderstanding that some
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people have that somehow law enforcement goes out there and grabs whatever
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they think they can find and then refuses to allow people to have their
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property back,'' Lungren testified recently.
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What he didn't mention was that a district attorney often has a more direct
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interest in keeping the items than a police officer does. Under state law,
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13.5 percent of the money a forfeiture case produces goes to the district
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attorney's office. In many counties, that money is used to pay the salary of
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the prosecutor handling the case.
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--
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Is Anyone Immune?
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Before you decide your assets couldn't possibly be seized under the state's
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forfeiture laws, you should know what items authorities would look for in your
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house or on you to make their case that you're a drug dealer. Here is a sample:
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# $20 and$100 bills: The Sacramento County District attorney's Office says
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those denominations are always suspect because "drugs are most frequently sold
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in $20 and $100 sizes."
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# $5, $10, $20 and $50 bills: In Bakersfield, they're on the lookout for those
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denominations because, in the district attorney's opinion, they are
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"consistent with street-based sales of illicit drugs."
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# Pagers or Beepers: Possession of a pager or beeper always raises eyebrows,
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particularly if police don't think you need one. Cases were found in which
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police decided an assistant manager of a muffler shop and a mechanic did not
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have jobs "that would normally require a pager." That was cited as evidence of
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drug dealing.
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# Written notes: They can come back to haunt you if police think they're
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"pay/owrs transactions straight. Terry Dalere, a 41 year old farm worker, had
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his pickup, four guns, and $18,631 seized from his bank account last year
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because Delano police found six marijuana plants growing in his back yard.
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Dalere was charged with selling marijuana. As evidence, police produced what
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they said was a pay/owe sheet. The note, Dalere said, was a list of families
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that had chipped in money to buy a slaughtered cow. The trafficking charges
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were dropped, but Dalere had to hire a lawyer to get his money back.
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# Nothing: When all else fails, there's always the approach Sacramento police
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took with Stephanie Robinson, who lost $1,245 last year after a pinhead-sized
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bit of methamphetamine was found between the front seats of her car. Since a
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search of her house and her body turned up nothing but the money, police
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decided the "lack of narcotics paraphernalia" and "the lack of the suspect
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being under the influence" suggested she'd gotten the money from drug sales.San Jose Mercury News
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Monday, August 30, 1993
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A1
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SWEEPING LAW LEAVES POOR, VULNERABLE WITH LITTLE RECOURSE
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By GARY WEBB
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Mercury News Sacramento Bureau
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Prosecutors like to tell the story of the 1989 Sylmar raid in Southern
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California, when police burst into an unguarded warehouse and found $12.2
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million in cash, just sitting there, surrounded by 21 tons of Colombian
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cocaine.
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If it weren't for asset forfeiture laws, they say, some drug dealer would have
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gotten his money back. Instead, it went to police.
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But for every Sylmar, there are hundreds of Paula Martinezes. Martinez, a
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single mother from south Sacramento, had $244 taken from her in December when
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police found a half-ounce of marijuana in her cigarette pack.
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The money was from the $307 welfare check Martinez gets to support her
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8-year-old daughter.
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``I was without money for the whole month,'' said Martinez, 23, who was fined
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$60 for marijuana possession. ``I had stuff on layaway in the stores for my
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little girl for Christmas. And I told them that, and they still didn't care. I
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had to borrow the money from my Mom to get my little girl some presents for
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Christmas.''
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Mike R. Galli, the deputy district attorney who prosecutes Santa Clara
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County's forfeitures, calls such cases ``an abomination of the law. . . . We
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don't play ball that way here. The law is designed to take the money from
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people who are trafficking in narcotics. It's not meant to be legalized
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thievery.''
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A Mercury News investigation found that major narcotics dealers -- who can
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secrete assets around the globe and hire lawyers and accountants to defend
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them -- are often successful in fending off forfeitures. It's people like
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Martinez -- the poor, those who speak little English and casual drug users --
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who lose. They were never intended to be forfeiture targets under California's
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law in the first place.
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Taking their money, said forfeiture lawyer Justin Scott of Sacramento, ``is
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like shooting fish in a damned barrel.''
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Because of the way the law works, people who are victimized by forfeiture can
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do very little about it, particularly if they don't have bank accounts or
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don't keep detailed financial records. Many Hispanic families, prosecutors and
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defense lawyers agreed, are especially vulnerable to forfeiture because they
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tend to keep their cash at home or with the most senior man in the family.
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CASH SEEN AS SUSPICIOUS
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``There is a presumption now that if you have cash at your house, over
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whatever figure the police think is appropriate, then it must be from drug
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money,'' Scott said. ``Of course, it could be from anything, but people,
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according to the cops, don't keep cash at home.''
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All it takes to lose your money is an unconvincing or undocumented explanation
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of where you got it.
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Unlike criminal defendants, forfeiture claimants almost never get to plead
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their cases before an unbiased judge or a jury. The vast majority of cases are
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decided by the local district attorney, who keeps 13.5 cents of every dollar
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taken in a forfeiture case.
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The district attorney's ``court'' works like this: If the district attorney
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believes your story, you'll probably get some of your property back. If not,
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you lose. Your only alternative is to go to court.
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That's where the story usually ends. State Justice Department statistics
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reveal that in many counties last year, three of four forfeiture cases never
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got to court. In some, such as Shasta and Solano counties, the figure was more
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than 90 percent.
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TOO EXPENSIVE TO FIGHT
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Why? Lawyers say it's because most cases are so small that it's pointless to
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take them to court. The average forfeiture case in California is worth less
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than $2,000, records and interviews reveal, and the expense of a trial would
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far exceed that.
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``If it's less than a couple thousand dollars, I tell people not to bother
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unless they've got some kind of ironclad proof. And usually when it's cash,
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you don't have it,'' Scott said. ``They're looking at paying $182 just to file
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a claim to ask for the money back. Then they've got to pay me, and then
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there's a chance they can spend all this money and lose anyway. Economically,
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it's just not worth it.''
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Trying to fight forfeiture without a lawyer is suicidal, because the law -- a
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strange hybrid of civil and criminal law -- is a nightmare.
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``I can't even explain it to some lawyers,'' said Michael Yraceburn, a Kern
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County prosecutor who heads the California District Attorneys Association
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asset forfeiture division. ``I'm still learning it five years later.''
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LIMITED OPTIONS
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But most people who have property seized are forced either to defend
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themselves or to give up. Here are the options:
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-- If you want a lawyer, jury or court reporter, you have to pay for them,
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which can be a problem when all your assets have been seized. Because
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forfeiture cases are handled in civil, not criminal court, you have no right
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to a court-appointed attorney.
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When the Santa Barbara County Public Defender's Office volunteered a few years
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ago to defend some forfeiture cases, the district attorney went all the way to
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the California Supreme Court in an unsuccessful effort to get the volunteers
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kicked out of the courtroom.
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``The cops felt that, `Why should we have to fight extra hard against these
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guys with a court-appointed lawyer?' '' said Santa Barbara Deputy District
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Attorney Tom Muscio. `` `Let him hire his own lawyer, or let him represent
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himself, so our job will be a little bit easier.' ''
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-- You have only 10 days from the time of the seizure to file a claim for the
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property, or it's gone forever. Filing a claim, which costs $182, can be tough
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when you're in jail and the police have all your money.
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Robin Walters, who ran the Kern County district attorney's forfeiture unit for
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two years, said she ``loved'' the 10-day deadline when she was a prosecutor.
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``That almost guaranteed they weren't going to have a lawyer,'' she said.
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-- You have no Fifth Amendment rights. If you don't answer the prosecutor's
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questions, you lose. If you don't answer them fast enough, you can be fined.
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If you don't fill out the claim form exactly right, the game's over.
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Karri Welch was arrested in 1992 for drug trafficking after Sacramento County
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deputies found 0.08 grams of methamphetamine -- about the size of a grain of
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salt -- in her purse. They seized $1,013 and tossed her in jail. When Welch
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got out, she had five days to file a claim and no money to hire a lawyer.
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``By the time I got down to the D.A., all my time had run out. I just barely
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made it. But they didn't notify me until after the time expired that I hadn't
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signed the form correctly,'' said Welch, 35. ``I lost $1,000 because I didn't
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sign the form in two places. I only signed it in one place.''
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No evidence was produced that Welch was a drug dealer. She pleaded guilty to a
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possession charge.
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WEAPON IN THE WRONG HANDS
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William Cummings, who until recently prosecuted Butte County's asset
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forfeiture cases, said that in the wrong hands, forfeiture laws can become a
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bludgeon.
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``If you are aggressive about it and you do everything the law allows you to
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do, you can easily give yourself an unfair advantage,'' Cummings said. ``It
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used to make me sick to see some of the cases D.A.s in other counties would
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write up and send around, where they had taken some poor pro per (a person
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with no lawyer) to court and beaten the hell out of them. They were real proud
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of it.''
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S. Jon Gudmunds, a former Santa Barbara County judge, says police there have
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figured out a way to keep people from even knowing they can file claims.
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Although the law requires police to give you a written notice explaining how
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to claim your property, Gudmunds said officers wait to do that until their
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prisoner is ready to be booked into the county jail.
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10 SECONDS WITH PAPERS
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``They get him in front of the jailer who's going to do the booking, they hand
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him the notice at that moment, and the jailer says, `Empty your pockets, give
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me everything you've got,' and he takes the paper out of the guy's hand,''
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Gudmunds said. ``The guy has the notice in his hand for 10 seconds maybe, if
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|
he's lucky.''
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Another Santa Maria attorney confirmed that.
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|
``That's pretty standard here,'' Dario Bejarano Jr. said, adding that he's
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|
handled a dozen such cases in the past two years. ``By the time we find out
|
|
about it, the 10 days have run, effectively keeping the client from ever
|
|
making a claim. We've complained about it, but it hasn't done any good.''
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|
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|
Deputy Santa Barbara County District Attorney Thomas Muscio first confirmed
|
|
that he'd heard such complaints and called them ``crap,'' then acknowledged it
|
|
was entirely possible.
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|
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|
``You're allowed to keep legal papers in your cell, but if they don't
|
|
understand what it is, it may be taken away from them,'' he said.
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|
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|
Filing a claim is just the start, however. Then come the interrogatories and
|
|
the depositions.
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|
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|
BARRAGE OF QUESTIONS
|
|
|
|
Dozens of cases were found in which claimants without lawyers were barraged
|
|
with 14-page questionnaires containing nearly 200 questions, demanding
|
|
documentation for every purchase they'd made of more than $500, all of their
|
|
bank statements and canceled checks and a list of their medical and dental
|
|
expenses -- for the past five years.
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|
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|
The Justice Department's forfeiture manual advises district attorneys to give
|
|
``most serious consideration'' to conducting depositions of claimants --
|
|
formal sessions at which prosecutors can cross-examine claimants for hours on
|
|
end.
|
|
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|
``The very spectre of facing the prosecutor under oath may be sufficient to
|
|
provoke settlement discussions,'' the manual says.
|
|
|
|
But prosecutors said the reason most forfeiture cases go uncontested isn't the
|
|
high cost or lopsided odds of challenging them: It's because most people who
|
|
have their assets seized are guilty of something.
|
|
|
|
``If they don't have the gumption to go down and file a claim, then they're
|
|
out of luck,'' Muscio said, ``but I think that happens to any consumer in this
|
|
day and age. If you don't speak up, you're going to be in trouble.''
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End.
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"Government is not reason, it is not eloquence - it is force! Like fire it is
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|
a dangerous servant and a fearful master; never for a moment should it be left
|
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to irresponsible action" - George Washington
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