Pubdate: Fri, 16 Nov 2001 Source: Columbian, The (WA) Copyright: 2001 The Columbian Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.columbian.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/92 Author: Michael Zuzel, for the editorial board Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) CIVIL WRONGS Initiative To Curb Civil Forfeiture Is Wrong Tactic For The Right Fight Opponents of civil forfeiture laws, which allow police to seize personal property even if the owner has not been convicted of a crime, face a tougher sell in post-Sept. 11 America. The laws as written have been used mostly in narcotics cases, under the rationale that taking away a dealer's home, cars and money is a good way to shut down the drug pipeline. But law enforcement officials will surely invoke the specter of terrorism as a reason to continue the practice. Wisely, the reformers in Washington state are taking aim specifically at drug crimes. Emboldened by last week's passage of three statewide ballot measures, they're hoping to use the power of initiative to force the Legislature into action. Initiative 256 would require a criminal conviction before any owner's assets could be seized and would mandate the sale, not government use, of forfeited property. Even if the initiative doesn't gain the required 198,000 signatures by January, state lawmakers should move quickly to curtail civil forfeiture in drug cases. It's a practice that not only violates due process but also is ripe for abuse. Under current law, police have wide latitude to seize an individual's property simply by demonstrating probable cause that the person committed a crime. No need to wait for an actual trial and guilty verdict; under the probable-cause standard, mere suspicion is good enough for confiscation. Worse, current law allows the local law enforcement agency to keep 90 percent of the value of whatever it confiscates. The practice has become a big business: Statewide, civil forfeiture generates an average of $4 million a year. In the nine years ending with 2000, the Clark County Sheriff's Office, Vancouver Police Department and Clark- Skamania Drug Task Force alone collected a total of about $2.4 million from suspected drug dealers. Such a lucrative practice threatens to put profit ahead of justice. It's unfortunate that the Legislature hasn't scrapped civil forfeiture already. Lawmaker had the opportunity last session with Senate Bill 5935, which enjoyed bipartisan support but never emerged from the limbo of the Senate Rules Committee. Initiative 256 closely mirrors SB 5935, with a few exceptions. Instead of redirecting half the local proceeds from seized property to the state crime laboratory, for example, the initiative would send that money to the public school fund. As always, lawmaking by initiative creates fertile ground for unintended consequences. The actual text of the measure weighs in at almost 5,700 words. That's more than all the words on this and the page opposite combined. How many voters will actually take the time to read the entire initiative before signing? If initiative backers manage to collect the requisite signatures, the Legislature will be required either to adopt the initiative, to put it on the ballot or to draft its own alternative, with both versions going to a public vote. Voters should take a pass on the petitions. But lawmakers had better demonstrate that an initiative isn't needed. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth