Pubdate: Wed, 30 Mar 2011 Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Copyright: 2011 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Contact: http://www.ajc.com/opinion/content/opinion/letters/sendletter.html Website: http://www.ajc.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/28 Author: Steve Visser, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Rhonda Cook, Staff Writer contributed. LAWSUIT TARGETS POLICE DOCUMENTATION OF SEIZED FUNDS Police in Georgia are violating a law requiring them to document cash and assets seized in investigations, traffic stops and arrests, according to an advocacy group that filed a lawsuit in Atlanta Wednesday. Instead, the group says, the money ends up in "slush funds" with little oversight. The Institute for Justice is asking the Superior Court to order the Fulton County sheriff and the Atlanta and Fulton County police forces to produce the annual reports documenting the use of seized assets in 2008, 2009 and 2010 they are required by Georgia law to maintain. The organization said the three agencies failed to produce reports for public scrutiny as required by law. Atlanta police spokesman Carlos Campos declined to comment on the case, citing the pending litigation. Tracy Flanagan, spokeswoman for the Sheriff's Office, declined to comment on the suit but said in 2010 the sheriff used forfeited funds to spend $2,333 on weapons and protective gear. Attempts to get a response from the county police were unsuccessful. "Law enforcement should follow the law," said Anthony Sanders, one of the lawyers who filed the suit. "Georgia law enforcement agencies simply choose to ignore Georgia law." Civil forfeiture laws allow police to petition a court for seized cash and assets the department claims were illicit gains or tools in a criminal enterprise. The law doesn't require authorities to secure a criminal indictment or conviction but requires the property owner to show in court he got the assets legitimately. Sanders said the lawsuit targeted Fulton law agencies because its named plaintiffs are five county taxpayers, but he said the practice of poor or nonexistent documentation is common throughout the state. He said the institute randomly requested documentation from 20 Georgia departments and only two produced adequate responses. The Washington-based Libertarian group then asked for raw data from the state's five largest cities and five largest counties. Savannah was the only department in a major metro area following the law, Sanders said. "Our purpose is to uphold the law, said Julian Miller, spokesman for the Savannah-Chatham Metropolitan Police Department. "We certainly intend to abide by the law ourselves." Frank Rotondo, executive director of the Georgia Association of Chiefs of Police, said he would like to believe most departments filed the reports annually, but he cautioned against concluding that even the violators were using the funds willy-nilly. The money is usually divided among agencies involved in an investigation, with 10 percent going to the district attorney's office, he said. A court has to approve the disbursement of funds to the agencies. "The police agency can't just seize the money and use it," Rotondo said. "Generally those funds have to be earmarked for specific areas; most commonly they go to training and sometimes it is allowed for equipment. They can't use the money for anything they want." Sanders said ensuring police properly use the money is why they're required to include each year's forfeiture reports -- which are to detail forfeitures and how they were used -- when they make their budget requests to their local governments. Rotondo said departments violating the law risk becoming ineligible for federal or state grants. The institute claims Georgia's forfeiture laws are among the most unfair nationwide and that too often the seizures aren't properly documented. The looseness of the law means law enforcement officers have incentive to target property instead of focusing on building strong cases against criminals, Sanders said. The institute cited examples of questionable use of seized money. One was the Camden County sheriff spending $90,000 in forfeiture funds to purchase a Dodge Viper, said Bob Ewing, institute spokesman. Another was the Fulton County District Attorney's Office using seized money to buy football tickets, Ewing said. Attempts to get responses from District Attorney Paul Howard and Camden Sheriff Tommy Gregory were unsuccessful Wednesday. Rotondo said that while some purchases might look questionable they could be legitimate. For instance, the money can go for use in undercover work, Rotondo noted, and a Viper might be used by an agent posing as successful drug dealer. "It is very possible that they allowed the purpose of that piece of equipment," he said. "You can't drive down the road in a [police] Crown Victoria and buy drugs." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.