Forfeiture of property of the innocent: The Bulwark: It’s Too Easy for Police to Take Your Stuff

The Bulwark: It’s Too Easy for Police to Take Your Stuff by Matthew Prensky and Arif Panju:

IN EARLY DECEMBER, the San Antonio Police Department auctioned off thirteen vehicles. The auction marked the completion of a process known as civil forfeiture, which allows law enforcement to seize people’s property and work with prosecutors to sell it and pocket the proceeds.

Police claim civil forfeiture allows them to keep communities safe by taking criminals’ property, stymieing their ability to commit crimes. The only problem is that two of the thirteen vehicles auctioned off last December were taken from innocent people with no clear connection to the alleged crimes involving their vehicles. Court filings make no mention of the registered owner’s name in either case, yet police still moved forward to forfeit—that is, permanently expropriate—their property.

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