Picture yourself driving
down the road tomorrow,
heading somewhere to buy
an item you found on Craigslist.
Perhaps a nice mountain
bike for 3,000 dollars.
At that price,
it's probably one of those bikes
with a little electric motor on it --
(Laughter)
maybe some streamers from the handle bars.
(Laughter)
The sellers declared
this a "cash only" deal,
so you have, in the console
of your car, 3,000 dollars.
Suddenly you are pulled over.
During the stop the officer asks,
"Do you have any drugs, weapons
or large amounts of cash in your car?"
You truthfully answer, "yes,"
not to the drugs or to the weapons,
but to the cash.
In the blink of an eye,
you are ordered out of your car.
The officer searches
it and finds your cash.
On the spot, he seizes it and he says
he suspects it's part of a drug crime.
A few days later,
the local district attorney files
paperwork to keep your money ...
permanently.
And all of this happens
without you ever being charged
or convicted of any crime.
Now you might be saying,
"Ach, this would never
happen in the United States."
(Laughter)
Incidents like this occur
every day in our country.
It's one of the most significant
threats to your property rights
most people have never even heard of.
It's called civil forfeiture.
Most of you are generally aware
of criminal forfeiture,
although the term itself
might be a little unfamiliar,
so let's begin with forfeiture.
When we forfeit something
we give up that thing
or we're forced to give it up.
In criminal forfeiture,
someone is charged
and convicted of a crime
and therefore they have to give up
property related to that crime.
For example, suppose you use your car
to transport and deal drugs.
You're caught and convicted;
now you have to give up
or forfeit your car
as part of the sentencing.
That's criminal forfeiture.
But in civil forfeiture,
no person is charged with a crime ...
the property is charged
and convicted of a crime.
(Murmuring)
You heard that correctly.
The government actually convicts
an inanimate object with a crime.
It's as if that thing itself
committed the crime.
That's why civil forfeiture cases
have these really peculiar names
like "The United States of America
v. One 1990 Ford Thunderbird."
(Laughter)
Or "The State of Oklahoma
v. 53,234 Dollars Cash."
(Laughter)
Or my personal favorite:
"The United States of America
v. One Solid Gold Object
in the Form of a Rooster."
(Laughter)
Now you're thinking:
how does something like this happen?
That's exactly what I said
when I first learned
about civil forfeiture
while one a road trip with my wife.
No, we did not get pulled over --
(Laughter)
I was reading about the history
of civil forfeiture
as part of my work as a research
director at the law firm,
and I came across one of the cases
I just mentioned,
"The United States of America
v. One 1990 Ford Thunderbird."
In that case, Carol Thomas
loaned her car to her son.
While in the car, her son committed
a minor drug crime.
Carol didn't commit any crime,
so law enforcement couldn't
convict her and take the car,
but they could --
and did --
use civil forfeiture
to "convict the car" and take it.
Carol was completely innocent
but she lost her car nonetheless.
In other words,
she was punished for a crime
she did not commit.
When I read this I was gobsmacked.
How could this occur?
How is this even legal?
It turns out it began in our country
with maritime law.
Early in our republic, the government
sought to fight piracy --
yes, actual pirates.
The problem was the government
often couldn't catch the pirates,
so instead it used civil forfeiture
to convict the pirates' property
and take it,
and therefore deny the pirates
their illegal profits.
Of course, the government
could've simply taken and kept the booty
without necessarily
using civil forfeiture,
but doing so would've violated
our most basic due process
and property rights.
Now the government rarely used
civil forfeiture until the 1980s
and the war on drugs.
We expanded civil forfeiture law
to cover drug crimes,
and then later, other types of crime.
Canada and the European Union
adopted similar provisions
so that now all kinds of people
are ensnared in the forfeiture web.
People like Russ Caswell.
Russ Caswell owned a small,
budget motel in Tewksbury, Massachusetts.
His father built the motel in 1955
and Russ took it over in the 1980s.
During the years that Russ
owned the motel,
from time to time,
people would rent rooms
and they would commit drug crimes.
Russ didn't condone the activities --
in fact, whenever he found out about it,
he would immediately call police.
Russ was entirely innocent of any crime,
but that did not stop the US Department
of Justice from seizing his motel
simply because other people
committed crimes there.
But Russ' case was not alone.
Between 1997 and 2016,
the US Department of Justice
took more than 635,000 properties.
This means each year,
tens of thousands of people
lose their properties
in cases in which they're never charged
of convicted of any crime.
And we're not talking about --
not necessarily talking about
major drug kingpins
or headline-grabbing financial fraudsters
whose cases involve hundreds
of thousands if not millions of dollars.
Many of these seizures and forfeitures
involve just everyday people
like Russ Caswell,
or you,
or me.
But it gets worse.
Are you wondering,
where does all this cash
and property end up?
In most places, law enforcement keeps it.
And they use it to buy equipment,
or pay for building repairs,
or even pay salaries and overtime.
This is a clear conflict of interest.
It creates a perverse profit incentive
that can distort law enforcement.
And this is a problem that's not lost
on those in law enforcement either.
Former chief of police
in Rochester, Minnesota,
Roger Peterson,
described the choice
that police officers often face.
As he described it,
suppose I'm a police officer
and I see a drug deal.
Now I face a choice:
do I go after the buyer
and remove from the street illegal drugs,
or do I go after the seller
and get cash for my agency to use?
So it's easy to see why
a police officer might go for the cash.
It was just such a circumstance
that compelled police officers
in Philadelphia
to seize an entire house.
In 2014, Chris and Markela Sourovelis' son
sold 40 dollars worth of drugs
down the street from their house.
40 dollars.
The police watched the deal go down.
They could've arrested the buyer
and confiscated the drugs ...
but they didn't.
They could've arrested the Sourovelis' son
right there on the street
and grabbed 40 dollars ...
but they didn't.
They waited to arrest him at home
because then they could seize
their entire house.
The house was worth 350,000 dollars.
That is what I mean
by a perverse profit incentive.
But the Sourovelis' case was no outlier.
Philadelphia, the "City
of Brotherly Love,"
the "Athens of America,"
the "cradle of liberty,"
birthplace to the Constitution,
home to the Liberty Bell
and Independence Hall,
the "City that loves you back" --
(Laughter)
that Philadelphia was running
a forfeiture machine.
Between 2002 and 2016
Philadelphia took more than 77 million
dollars through forfeiture,
including 1200 homes.
Cars, jewelry, electronics --
all of it they sold,
the proceeds they kept,
and they would've kept right on doing it
had it not been
for a class-action lawsuit --
our team's class-action lawsuit --
(Applause and cheers)
Thank you.
We forced them to change
their forfeiture practices
and to compensate victims.
(Applause and cheers)
When our team first began
researching forfeiture in 2007,
we had no idea how much
forfeiture revenue there was.
In fact, no one knew.
It wasn't until our groundbreaking study,
"Policing for Profit"
that we found federal law
enforcement agencies have taken in
almost 40 billion dollars --
billion with a b --
since 2001.
More than 80 percent of that
through civil forfeiture.
Unfortunately we have no idea
how much state and local
agencies have taken in
because in many states,
they don't have to report it.
So until we reform forfeiture,
we'll never know how much
forfeiture activity actually occurs
in the United States.
And we desperately need reform.
Legislatures should
abolish civil forfeiture
and replace it with criminal forfeiture.
And all forfeiture proceeds
should go to neutral fund
such as a general fund.
When forfeiture proceeds stop hitting
law enforcement budgets directly,
that is when we will end
policing for profit.
(Applause)
Now as you can imagine,
law enforcement officials
don't love these recommendations.
(Laughter)
They stand to lose a lot of money,
and they believe civil forfeiture
is an effective crime-fighting tool.
The trouble is, it's not.
In June 2019, we released a study
that found forfeiture does not
improve crime-fighting.
And the report also found
that law enforcement agencies pursue
more forfeiture money
during economic downturns.
So when city and county budgets are tight,
law enforcement will use
forfeiture to find the money.
So it's no wonder then
that law enforcement officials
predict a "criminal apocolypse" --
(Laughter)
if these reforms are adopted.
But some states have
already implemented them,
and we're pushing for reform
all across the country
because until we reform forfeiture,
this is something that could
happen to any of us.
It can happen in the United States,
it can happen in the United Kingdom,
it can happen in countries
throughout the European Union
and beyond.
People like you and me
and the Sourvellis'
and Russ Caswell,
just doing the everyday stuff of life,
can be caught in a scheme
we never thought possible.
It is time we end policing for profit
once and for all.
Thank you.
(Applause and cheers)