CADC: Unreasonable retention of property after a case is resolved can violate 4A

Looking to the common law, unreasonable retention of property after a case is resolved can violate the Fourth Amendment. Asinor v. District of Columbia, 2024 U.S. App. LEXIS 20098 (D.C. Cir. Aug. 9, 2024):

The Fourth Amendment provides that ‘[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated.’ U.S. Const. Amend. IV. Under settled law, a seizure of personal effects incident to a lawful arrest is reasonable. This case presents the question whether the Fourth Amendment requires that any continued retention of such personal property—even after release of the arrested individuals—must also be reasonable. We hold that it does.

. . .

The plaintiffs’ allegations satisfy both prongs of this test. The MPD meaningfully interfered with their possessory interests both by taking possession of their property and by keeping it. The ongoing meaningful interference is self-evident; for as long as the MPD had control of the property, the plaintiffs could not possess it at all. And prolonged, unauthorized possession of a person’s property would have been actionable at common law even if the initial taking had been lawful. William Blackstone, “whose works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation,” Alden v. Maine, 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999), directly addressed this question. He described “the amotion or deprivation of … possession” as an injury to the “rights of personal property in possession” that was “divisible into two branches; the unjust and unlawful taking them away; and the unjust detaining them, though the original taking might be lawful.” 3 W. Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England 145 (1768). He further elaborated that “deprivation of possession may also be by an unjust detainer of another’s goods, though the original taking was lawful”—providing as one example a person who refused to return a borrowed horse. Id. at 150-51 (cleaned up). And he then set forth the different remedies available to recover the property and get damages for its wrongful detention, stating that the plaintiff “shall recover damages only for the detention and not for the caption, because the original taking was lawful.” Id. at 151-52.

In other words, the common law recognized that property interests are impaired not only at the instant when an owner loses possession, but also for as long as the owner cannot get the property back. And it provided remedies for wrongful interference with possessory rights regardless of whether the interference became wrongful at the moment of the initial seizure or only later. This history indicates that the Fourth Amendment governs the MPD’s continued retention, as well as its taking possession, of the plaintiffs’ property.

Update: Reason: Police Cannot Seize Property Indefinitely After an Arrest, Federal Court Rules by Patrick McDonald (“Many circuit courts have said that law enforcement can hold your property for as long as they want. D.C.’s high court decided last week that’s unconstitutional.”)

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