treebeard901 3 days ago | next |

The movie, Rebel Ridge, does a decent job showing just how bad this can be in a small town. It's not exactly realistic for how the former Marine depicted chose to try to resolve the situation... It does give room to consider just how corrupt it can all be. Consider if you live in a town with only one bank. Clearly the bank and the police have a relationship and in a small town, odds are they all know each other quite well. Say someone withdraws money from the bank. Then the teller sort of rats you out to law enforcement or someone adjacent to law enforcement. They manufacture an excuse to pull you over just as was done in this Nevada story. The movie Rebel Ridge goes into the difficulty in even getting your money back in the first place. At one point they explain a large part of the police departments funding comes from this. Then again, it isn't just small police departments getting kick backs, it's everyone involved to run up the cost for someone who had their money stolen.

At some point, civil forfeiture laws will lay the foundation for having any amount of cash being a sort of assumption of criminality. Consider too that smaller banks and even large banks have reserve requirements but not enough to cover all of the deposits. When most money exists in digital form in a database somewhere, over time, the concept of real paper money gets that assumption of wrong doing. Almost like it is the financial equivalent of "you must have something to hide, or else you would be using your credit card".

RickS 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

One of the more insidious versions of this is the static thresholds for things like "a suspiciously large amount of cash", which are not inflation adjusted, causing them to effectively shrink over time. A $10K cash travel limit established by the Bank Secrecy Act in 1970 would be over $80K in 2025 dollars. The law is structured so that the net is constantly tightening by default.

nicholasjarnold 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

> When most money exists in digital form in a database somewhere, over time, the concept of real paper money gets that assumption of wrong doing.

It's already happening, and it probably just depends on the teller you get. I have no idea if it's policy or not, but I've been questioned pretty intrusively for cash transactions even under the reporting limit of 10k (see: BSA, CTR).

HWR_14 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

You are probably questioned more about cash transactions under the reporting limit. Over the reporting limit they file a form. Under they have to determine if they need to file a form.

username135 3 days ago | root | parent |

Over 10k in a day of cumulative deposits will automatically trigger a CTR (currency transaction report). Amounts over 3k can trigger a SAR (suspicious activity report) but those are typically at teller discretion unless its a very specific circumstance like a customer buying $2500 in traveller cheques but has a typical average balance under some low threshold.

All those reports go to the banks AML (Anti Money Laundering) group who have to follow specific reporting guidlines from big brother. Lots of data is used to determine your risk level, which gets assigned tonyou when you open an account, especially a business account. Depending on the sic codes you choose determines how heavily you are scrutinized by the banks interal risk structure.

I could go on but you get the gist.

Source: too many decades in financial services orgs

sigmoid10 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

The EU literally got rid of the 500 Euro bank note because it was primarily used by criminals for evading the law.

Y_Y 3 days ago | root | parent |

They literally did not. 500s are still currency, they just stopped printing them.

whycome 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

I think that’s what was implied. Canada “got rid of” the $1000 bill but it’s still legal tender. Canada also got rid of the penny, but it remains legal tender. Banks will take them if vendors don’t.

sigmoid10 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

German Marks can also still be swapped for legal tender. That doesn't mean it is possible to use them like the Euro.

Kon-Peki 2 days ago | root | parent | next |

By making the Mark convertible to Euro indefinitely, Germany decided that it would be the only Euro-zone country that wasn’t going to participate in the confiscation of what turned out to be billions from their own citizens. It’s called seigniorage and has been a thing since Roman times or even before.

matheusmoreira 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

> At some point, civil forfeiture laws will lay the foundation for having any amount of cash being a sort of assumption of criminality.

Already true in Brazil where I live.

It's just the financial arm of global warrantless mass surveillance. I highly recommend not allowing them to do this to you.

Brazilian central bank developed a digital centralized money transfer system called pix. You already know where this is going, right? At first it was great: instant, zero fees, no taxes. Right now the entire nation is angry about the fact our IRS equivalent will start using the pix transaction data to cross reference and audit citizens. If you move more than ~800 USD your financial data gets sent to the government automatically.

I like to believe that Brazil is some kind of test bed for dystopian nonsense like this.

Vilian 2 days ago | root | parent |

They already did it with credit card, I'm actually surprised that they weren't already doing that, not sure if I understand the issue

the-dude 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

> At some point, civil forfeiture laws will lay the foundation for having any amount of cash being a sort of assumption of criminality.

Although we don't have civil forfeiture, this is already true in The Netherlands.

soco 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

Are you sure the "any amount" generalization is true? I know in Switzerland of money confiscated at border control for simple suspicion, but we are talking (tens of) thousands. Although there's a certain obligation of declaration those people always "forget", that situation stays shitty, but in any case it's a very very far cry from "any amount".

jeroenhd 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

One Dutch party in the previous government tried to outlaw carrying more than €2000 in the street. As far as I know, that law didn't pass. Plus you can keep as many cash reserves at home as you want (but good luck getting any back if that gets stolen).

However, there are rules that make cash less useful for large payments. Cash payments over €10000 (€3000 starting in March) are outright banned without involving the government.

There are more practical problems than "I just really want to buy a car without giving out my bank account", though: more and more Dutch stores have stopped taking cash to reduce the risk and losses of robberies. You can still carry cash, but spending it may require some research ahead of time, and not every business is interested in the overhead of going through the money laundering prevention system when normal people usually just buy >€3000 stuff through their bank accounts.

If anything, the Dutch government has been telling people to have cash available in case of emergencies after "geopolitical tension" (read: the Russian invasion into Ukraine). Not that anyone seems to listen, but they encourage having cash reserves. They're still working out an exact amount to recommend, but a couple hundred euros seems to be most likely.

ethbr1 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

Can we note the absurdity of one part of the government banning too much cash, while another part of the government notes that some cash is essential?

Also, prepper realism: a week's worth of cash at hand goes a long way towards handling the most likely disaster scenarios (which are all well short of Road Warrior).

danudey 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

1. Having spare cash around is important to be able to acquire necessities in case of a temporary failure of electronic banking.

2. Making a 3000 euro cash transaction in this day and age is suspicious and we'd like to know about it if it happens to ensure everything is above-board.

I don't see the absurdity. They're not saying don't have cash, they're saying don't use cash for large purchases but keep some around for necessities. Even if you have 10k stashed under your bed in case of ~situation~, you're unlikely to be making a 3000 euro purchase in an emergency situation.

soco 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

Let's not omit that a large reserve of cash will be very unlikely spent all at once, so we are talking different use cases here. You won't buy a car (probably) in a disaster scenario, but water and food from here and there.

tivert 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

> If anything, the Dutch government has been telling people to have cash available in case of emergencies after "geopolitical tension" (read: the Russian invasion into Ukraine). Not that anyone seems to listen, but they encourage having cash reserves. They're still working out an exact amount to recommend, but a couple hundred euros seems to be most likely.

In that scenario, it seems like that would be an insufficient amount to really do anything except handle very basic needs for a week or two.

reaperman 3 days ago | root | parent |

My assumption is that this is being recommended for a situation where Russia might hack the banking system, and the Dutch probably expect they'd be able to get the banks/ATMs working again within a week.

jncfhnb 3 days ago | root | parent |

Which is exactly what’s been going on in Ukraine. Russian hacking efforts have had negligible effects.

graemep 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

> If anything, the Dutch government has been telling people to have cash available in case of emergencies after "geopolitical tension" (read: the Russian invasion into Ukraine). Not that anyone seems to listen, but they encourage having cash reserves.

There is a very strong case for people keeping cash because of its resilience.

People will not do it until something happens to make them realise the problems - maybe cyberwar or natural disaster bringing electronic payment systems to halt.

the-dude 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

If it were really 'any' in the philosophical sense, cash would be outlawed. So no, it is not 'any', it is anywhere between more than a couple of hundred to a couple of thousands, depending on what the police or prosecutor feels is reasonable.

What is wrong with a (couple of) thousand euros?

> I know in Switzerland of money confiscated at border control

You are describing smuggling, I was talking about normal domestic use.

ethbr1 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

> You are describing smuggling

There's a thin line between smuggling and wanting personal money to be somewhere else.

I get why most states want to track cash coming across their border, but it's really none of their business if they can't prove theres a crime.

The absence of a crime does not constitute a crime.

soco 3 days ago | root | parent |

And now the funny part: even after they failed to prove there's a crime, the Swiss police still often refuses to release the money.

nullc 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

> If it were really 'any' in the philosophical sense, cash would be outlawed.

The state doesn't have unlimited power, so no. What you expect to see where cash is being banned outright is a slow erosion of less common uses, larger amounts, and an addition of inconveniences and risks in order to drive people off it so that an eventual ban is less unpopular or is even popular. ("screw those bank distrusting weirdos!")

To ban outright risks backlash and failure.

MEMORYC_RRUPTED 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

While I don't disagree with the general statement, I do want to add the nuance that this isn't true for small amounts of cash money. Recently, the government even recommended people to keep more cash on hand in case of emergency / large scale disruptions to the financial system.

Even with large amounts of money, it's not like they're knocking on doors, looking under yer bed.

RajT88 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

What constitutes a large sum depends a bit based on the situation (or what kind of person you are!).

A 2020 study found the average seized was $1300: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_forfeiture_in_the_United...

In some states, the average seized amount is in the hundreds, or even less: https://thewhyaxis.substack.com/p/cops-still-take-more-stuff...

In Chicago, they are taking amounts less than $100: https://reason.com/2017/06/13/poor-neighborhoods-hit-hardest...

"You are too poor to fairly have $100, so we're taking it" seems insane to me.

the-dude 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

What is small and what is large is a matter of opinion.

If they are out to get you and can't find anything incriminating, cash will do. The press will happily report on this too : 'There was a police raid so and so, nothing was found but they found a (large) amount of cash'.

Furthermore, our government is planning legislation to make cash transactions > € 3000 illegal.

psunavy03 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

The media will sensationalize anything. Another favorite is claiming someone had "hundreds of rounds of ammunition" when even someone who just shoots recreationally, let alone competitively, would burn through that in an afternoon. It's like accusing a golfer of going through hundreds of balls at the driving range . . . yeah, that's the point of going.

SketchySeaBeast 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

> What is small and what is large is a matter of opinion.

There's certainly there's some vagueness in the middle, for me a few hundred isn't large, but a grand is, and I don't know that everyone would agree, but I think most everyone would agree that $5 is small and $10,000 is large.

reaperman 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

$10,000 doesn't seem particularly large. Just a few years ago, I bought an old truck for $12,000 in one hundred dollar bills.

If you're worried about large drug transactions, a kilogram of cocaine would cost around $20,000-40,000 in the USA, and significantly more in Europe (actual wholesale price for bulk purchase, not inflated police figures that price it at $150/gram).

Personally I think one month of apartment rent should not be considered a suspiciously large amount of cash, and it should be fine to buy a car from a friend using actual cash. I really don't see the downside of leaving those things legal without a threat of civil asset forfeiture.

SketchySeaBeast 3 days ago | root | parent |

$12,000 is an out of the ordinary large amount of money - that's why you can note it as a special instance. It's certainly not something you keep on yourself every day, right? I'm not arguing that people should be limited in what money they carry, I'm saying there is a normal range of cash, it's not as nebulous as argued.

stonogo 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

That person might note it as a special instance, but 'normal' varies wildly from person to person, and 4.5% of America is unbanked entirely. Setting any limit on the amount of money someone is allowed to carry essentially criminalizes poverty.

ElevenLathe 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

I might not carry that much every day, or ever, but somebody somewhere in the country (probably dozens or hundreds) will have a legal reason to do so on any given day. IMO this is similar to the laws that allow prosecutors to charge (and win!) drug offenders for "distribution" for just having a large amount of a drug. There's a presumption that if you have a brick of weed, you're a drug dealer. Well, maybe, but shouldn't that have to be proven in court?

fn-mote 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

The effect of 25% inflation over the last five years is that what used to be definitely acceptable ($8000) is now an amount to be reported and questioned ($10000).

jncfhnb 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

The reserve requirement comment feels out of place. Banks don’t keep their reserve requirements in physical cash.

insane_dreamer 3 days ago | prev | next |

The US legal system (unlike some other countries) is built on the presumption of innocence. Civil forfeiture completely contravenes that principle and is therefore essentially extortion and corruption.

krispyfi 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

It's never made sense to me, but the standard explanation is that because they aren't accusing a person (the owner of the money), but only accusing an inanimate object (the money itself), constitutional protections don't apply. Pretty scary that this is accepted as normal!

DebtDeflation 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

>It's never made sense to me, but the standard explanation is that because they aren't accusing a person (the owner of the money), but only accusing an inanimate object

That is correct, but you need to understand the context. It originated in the 1600s as a way for maritime law to deal with pirate/smuggler ships who were operating in international waters, not flying the flag of any nation, and with no registered owner. Charging the ship and its contents with the crime rather than an unknown individual made sense in that context. Applying it to a car registered in the United States, driving down a highway in the United States, and being driven by a US citizen makes absolutely no sense because standard law can and should deal with that situation.

lesuorac 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

But when you fly people who clearly have an owner (themself) to another country and they don't have a passport, the country holds the airline accountable.

Why not hold the captain of the ship responsible for loading illegal cargo? Isn't this the whole point of a ship's manifest, to record what's on the ship? Like extend it slightly more to also record the legality.

chipsa 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

If you never want to get captains to be willing to sail to your ports again… also, manifests can be wrong, or insufficiently descriptive. Manifest may accurately say a container is full of machine parts. But neglect to mention the machine they are parts of is a machine gun.

jdeibele 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

Airlines seem to have a policy of passports need to be valid (not expire) for six months after the trip.

Our daughter was going overseas and we had to get her passport renewed because it would expire 3 months after she would have gotten home. The country was fine with that but there was a chance that she would show up at the airport and the airline would not allow her to board because it was less than 6 months.

If the airline lets them fly and they're rejected, the airline has to get them back and the airline doesn't want to risk that.

robertlagrant 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

> But when you fly people who clearly have an owner (themself) to another country and they don't have a passport, the country holds the airline accountable.

> Why not hold the captain of the ship responsible for loading illegal cargo? Isn't this the whole point of a ship's manifest, to record what's on the ship? Like extend it slightly more to also record the legality.

Just because an airline lets you fly somewhere, you can still be rejected at the other end. I think it's a bit much to expect every captain to know the legality of everything in their hold, to all destinations, and enforce that.

lesuorac 3 days ago | root | parent |

> I think it's a bit much to expect every captain to know the legality of everything in their hold, to all destinations, and enforce that.

Is it too much to ask? They should be offloading that to whomever they're getting the cargo from and whomever they're getting their cargo from should have a valid import/export license which means they're willing to go through the steps to ship cargo legally.

KoolKat23 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

Even then that would imply some legal personhood on the part of the vessel and it's operations, much like a registered company.

To me it's a leap too far to assign it to a specific object. It has no ongoing operations, it's not a fluid, "living" thing.

But here we are. This is where a more modern supreme court ruling would come in handy I guess.

dylan604 3 days ago | root | parent |

> This is where a more modern supreme court ruling would come in handy I guess

I'd hate to see how this modern supreme court rules. Odds are likely to be in favor of keeping this policy, especially if some of that money is used to buy an RV or fund fancy vacations

aqme28 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

It's the explanation, but it still makes no sense to me. "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures..."

You really have to twist that in bizarre ways to come out saying "yeah but we can seize that guy's money."

potato3732842 3 days ago | root | parent |

It doesn't make sense because it's insane mental gymnastics being used to justify obviously unconstitutional conduct. The bill of rights is very, very, clear on this.

_DeadFred_ 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

The bill of rights applies to criminal law. Civil asset forfeiture falls under 'civil' law (hence the name) which works under very different rules (for example the standard for a finding of guilt in much lower for civil law than criminal). The US Justice system routinely bypasses controls/limits/restrictions placed on it by moving things over to the 'civil law' side.

Retric 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

The idea that the government can invoke civil law outside of contract disputes or similar matters is inherently problematic due to the lower burden of proof.

It’s only appropriate when any private citizen could do the same thing. IE: The Army suing a supplier for supplying them with a defective bullets is they same thing anyone who buys large quantities of bullets could do, but people would need to voluntarily enter into such relationships before this applies.

marcus0x62 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

That bill of rights does not exclusively deal with criminal law. At least the first and fifth amendments deal partially with civil law. The seventh amendment exclusively relates to civil law.

braiamp 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

Nah, it's not. Things sometimes needs to be spelled out so that there's ZERO wiggle room. That's why the universal declaration of human rights had to be so extensive and verbose. There are people that will justify a missing comma as their actions being allowed by the constitution.

ethbr1 3 days ago | root | parent |

The entire point of enumerating rights in a founding document is that it will be at odds with future interests.

Of course someone in power is going to try and twist the meaning to their own gain.

That inevitable desire is literally why the rights needed to be included in the first place.

braiamp 3 days ago | root | parent |

And yet, the US constitution by all metrics is the one lagging behind every other constitution about guaranteeing rights. The US had a solid first draft, it's time to update it.

andrewaylett 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

It's obviously not, or you wouldn't find so many people (successfully!) arguing against your interpretation.

That's one of the problems with a codified constitution that's as ossified as the one in the US: the language used gets interpreted, and so the meaning of the language depends on the interpretations favoured by whoever's currently holding the reins.

lawn 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

It gets pretty messed up when the police can take custody of an entire house because someone once had drugs there.

There was a case a few years ago where the parents lost their house because their son once was caught with drugs in the house.

coldtea 3 days ago | root | parent |

In general, it's pretty messed up that there's an exceptionalism about drug related crime (and some other kinds of crime).

Crime is crime. If they don't take custody of a house because some kind of crime X happened there, they shouldn't do it for drug related cases either. They can always arrest the person dealing the drugs and forgeit the drugs themselves.

phkahler 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

>> the standard explanation is that because they aren't accusing a person (the owner of the money), but only accusing an inanimate object (the money itself), constitutional protections don't apply

That's easy to refute. By the time they take the cash, hand it to the feds, get a percentage back to locals, then a person wins in court and gets their money back... I don't think they give back the exact same physical cash that was taken as "evidence". So when they say it's evidence they are lying - it's not locked up with other evidence, it's taken to a bank and deposited.

tart-lemonade 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

SCOTUS is out of touch with reality. And I'm not reacting to Trump-era decisions - even under Obama, the justices were watering down the Bill of Rights in cases like Salinas v. Texas (2013).

Previously, if you refused to talk to the police, that was considered invoking your fifth amendment right against self incrimination, hence the standard advice from attorneys to keep your mouth shut until they were present. Now, you must explicitly invoke it every time the police question you or your silence can be used against you, even if that silence was in response to informal questioning on the street with no intention of arrest.

It all makes sense when you consider how privileged the modern Court is: few of the justices in 2013 or today have actually worked as criminal defense attorneys, and only one has ever worked as a public defender (Ketanji Jackson, for two years; I will give Ginsburg credit for her work at the ACLU, but that is still a notable step above being a public defender). We haven't even had a justice whose read the law (became a lawyer without getting a law degree from a law school) since the death of Robert Jackson in 1954. (Robert Jackson is also the man behind the famous quote "any lawyer worth his salt will tell the suspect, in no uncertain terms, to make no statement to the police under any circumstances.")

Now, almost all have come from privileged backgrounds, went to Ivy League institutions, live in gated communities, are completely detached from the reality of what the average American knows about the law, and certainly aren't going to be taken advantage of by the cops. It's no surprise we've seen such an assault on our constitutional rights: they don't understand what life is like outside the ivory tower.

lbschenkel a day ago | root | parent |

> Now, almost all have come from privileged backgrounds, went to Ivy League institutions, live in gated communities, are completely detached from the reality of what the average American knows about the law, and certainly aren't going to be taken advantage of by the cops. It's no surprise we've seen such an assault on our constitutional rights: they don't understand what life is like outside the ivory tower.

In Brazil we have a problem with the Judiciary too, most of it is completely detached from reality, due to these exact same reasons.

buran77 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

> but only accusing an inanimate object (the money itself), constitutional protections don't apply.

The loophole is that money, unlike most other inanimate objects, isn't considered "property".

Any fine should have the option of a court date attached in order to follow due process, like a traffic fine. But many types of fines don't have the presumption of innocence, or the day in court prescribed. Civil forfeiture is an extension of that process, also relying on the fact that money isn't property so taking it away doesn't violate the "no person may be deprived of property without due process of law" constitutional article.

shkkmo 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

You're just making things up. Civil Forfeiture is used for non-money items regularly, the definition of money has nothing to do with it.

EVa5I7bHFq9mnYK 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

So bitcoins are safe, i assume. And, as a bonus, a dog can't smell it:)

buran77 3 days ago | root | parent |

I think so but then again so is a bank card. The card itself your property. And the money it gives access to are with the bank which means the concept of civil forfeiture no longer works (the police can't just frisk the bank and take the money).

gus_massa 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

Very interesting. So I can walk safetly in the street with a million dollar necklace, but not with $1000 in cash?

buran77 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

As safe as you can be with a million dollar necklace around your neck... But you're safe from legal civil forfeiture. Abusive forfeiture is a whole other matter entirely and (IANAL) I'm willing to bet the ones committing the abuse will get the presumption of innocence and you will have to prove the abuse.

ethbr1 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

> As safe as you can be with a million dollar necklace around your neck...

It's an easy way of declaring ones badassness.

Looking at Mr T, people had to ask themselves, "What kind of person feels confident enough to walk around with that much money on his neck?"

clifdweller 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

not necessarily; If the police recently busted a <gun ring/drug deal/insert generic illegal activity> paying for goods with that same style necklace(or any mental gymnastics to link the item type to a crime) then they could seize it as surely it is part of illegal activity.

insane_dreamer 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

> accusing an inanimate object (the money itself)

yeah, I know that's the argument, but it flies in the face of all reason

It comes from "we know you're guilty but we can't prove it so we're going to take your stuff away". But that's what presumption of innocence means -- if you can't be proved guilty beyond reasonable doubt then you're not guilty, period! (You might in fact be guilty, but under the law you're not guilty.) Otherwise, there is no presumption of innocence and the police can do whatever they want, just like in some countries where the police are a law to themselves.

coldtea 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

It appears that the law is full of totally BS circumventions like this, that only make sense as abuse of the spirit of the law.

Like how you're legally supposed to not have an "expectation of privacy" for your mail, because it's handed by the post office...

chipsa 3 days ago | root | parent |

You don’t have an expectation of privacy for the outside of your mail, because people can see the outside. The inside of the mail you do have an expectation of privacy, because someone can’t just see the inside of your mail. Unless it’s smelly, because people have noses.

okamiueru 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

"It doesn't matter that you don't consent to the search. We're not searching you, just that stuff that is attached to you. So, shut up, or we're arresting you for interfering"

bradgessler 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

Imagine if the same logic was used for a criminal defense: "Your honor, I didn't kill $VICTIM, it was the $WEAPON that killed $VICTIM".

sigmoid10 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

>unlike some other countries

Like which? Presumption of innocence is pretty universal around the globe. It has made its way into Western nations and parts of Asia via Roman law and is also a principle of Islamic law. There used to be some historic outgrowths that could be called presumption of guilt in England, but even that was more similar to civil forfeiture and not an actual guilt-based legal system.

kawsper 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

UK has this addition from the 1994 Criminal Justice and Public Order Act:

> You do not have to say anything. But, it may harm your defence if you do not mention when questioned something which you later rely on in court.

maccard 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

I don't read that as assuming someone is not innocent until proven otherwise at all.

I read that as "Holding back information that may be pertinent in an investigation will be looked upon poorly".

It's not like the US is any better here - If a charge is trumped up or has bolt-ons to get you to take a plea deal, it's exactly the same thing, if not worse.

refurb 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

No, the US is far better.

Silence can’t be used against you.

That is better than silence being used against use.

Conflating that with trumped up charges is irrelevant to that point.

throw0101c 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

> No, the US is far better.

> Silence can’t be used against you.

As sibling comments have mentioned, not (no longer?) true.

"Opinion recap: If you want to claim the Fifth…"

> Because merely keeping quiet when police ask damaging questions is not claiming a right to silence, the Supreme Court ruled Monday, prosecutors may use that silence against the suspect at the trial. If an individual is voluntarily talking to the police, he or she must claim the Fifth Amendment right of silence, or lose it; simply saying nothing won’t do, according to the ruling.

* https://www.scotusblog.com/2013/06/opinion-recap-if-you-want...

"Silence as evidence: U.S. Supreme Court holds that the Fifth Amendment does not bar using a suspect’s silence as evidence of guilt"

* https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=61f0c293-44b7...

dataflow 3 days ago | root | parent |

Er, what? This seems quite better than the UK where claiming the right can still cause it to be used against you...

sigmoid10 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

It can in fact. You should read "You Have the Right to Remain Innocent" by James Duane - the guy who went viral on youtube for explaining why you should never talk to the police and later tried very hard to delete all uploads of this video. Because in the real world that strategy is more likely to get you convicted after all. Especially since the Supreme Court massively weakened the Fifth Amendement in 2013.

echoangle 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

> the guy who went viral on youtube for explaining why you should never talk to the police and later tried very hard to delete all uploads of this video

Do you have a source for that?

sigmoid10 3 days ago | root | parent |

He mentions it in this talk for example: https://youtube.com/watch?v=-FENubmZGj8

It also seems like he succeeded, because the original and all reuploads except for some ultra low-quality copies are gone from youtube.

echoangle 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

There's no mention in this of him trying to delete uploads (or I missed it, do you have a timestamp?).

And also, the original lecture isn't a reupload but found on the channel of his own university (both at the time of the first and the second lecture): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-7o9xYp7eE

sigmoid10 3 days ago | root | parent |

He mentions it several times throughout the talk. It's been a while since I've seen it, so I don't remember the times. But the whole talk basically tries to publicly revert his earlier view from the old presentation. The low quality dupe you found was uploaded years after the original video.

lcnPylGDnU4H9OF 3 days ago | root | parent |

> But the whole talk basically tries to publicly revert his earlier view from the old presentation.

Damn, you need to watch it again. He only updates the advice to say that one needs to be explicit about their intention to remain silent and await an attorney.

ruthmarx 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

> and later tried very hard to delete all uploads of this video.

I didn't know that, that's pretty interesting.

> Because in the real world that strategy is more likely to get you convicted after all.

I don't think that's true. That's true for not cooperating, but you should do so with a lawyer. You shouldn't' talk to police until you get a lawyer. That's all.

lcnPylGDnU4H9OF 3 days ago | root | parent |

If you watch the talk they linked to you can see that the advice has been updated to be "you must explicitly tell the officers you want a lawyer" and it has nothing to do with retracting his previous advice. The original "Don't Talk to the Police" upload seems to still be there (uploaded 12 years ago). Do wait for your attorney to be present but also explicitly tell the officers that you will refrain from any more discussion until then.

coldtea 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

>Silence can’t be used against you

It sure can, but in more hypocritical and roundabout ways:

The cops take suspision on your silence, and push extra hard to get you, instead of letting you go after a routine questioning.

Or the prosecution is offended by your silence and throws the book at you.

Technically both get to swear that your silence was never an issue, while both being motivated to fuck you over because of it.

maccard 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

> Silence can’t be used against you. > Conflating that with trumped up charges is irrelevant to that point.

They're two sides of the same coin. Let's say you are being accused of crime X, and you know you're innocent of it, and can prove it, because your spouse did it/you were hooking up with a congressman on grindr at the time/you were doing something else illegal you don't want to admit to/you believe the US justice system is fair and impartial.

The sentencing for said federal crime is N years. The prosecution charging you with crime X, plus Y plus Z with a potential max sentence of M years, or you can take a plea for N-2 years".

It all boils down to "are you willing to gamble spending M (where M >>>> N-2) years in prison based on an accusation designed to intimidate you".

dataflow 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

> I don't read that as assuming someone is not innocent until proven otherwise at all. I read that as "Holding back information that may be pertinent in an investigation will be looked upon poorly".

Could you explain how one can exercise their right to silence without holding back information?

shkkmo 3 days ago | root | parent |

The US right to remain silent is different from the presumption of innocence.

dataflow 3 days ago | root | parent |

They're different concepts but they're very tightly coupled (hence why both were being discussed here). If you could be presumed guilty then your right to remain silent would be rendered moot. And the entire reason the right to remain silent was established was so that innocent people wouldn't be deemed guilty (and thus punished, tortured, etc.) merely based on being coerced into testifying against themselves. Without it you would be as good as guilty.

shkkmo 3 days ago | root | parent |

They aren't that tightly coupled. The presumption of innocence is a pretty much universal legal concept. The right no remain silent is right specifically granted by law and not nearly as universal; the specifics of how and where you can invoke that right vary from country to country.

insane_dreamer 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

> pretty universal around the globe

except in "rule by law" (as opposed to "rule of law") countries like China where if the police say you're guilty, you will be found guilty, 100% guaranteed

insane_dreamer 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

IIRC the Napoleonic Code doesn't have presumption of innocence, and countries with a legal system built on that code don't have it either -- but I haven't researched it recently so couldn't say which those are.

lores 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

The Napoleonic Code is a civil code, not penal, so presumption of innocence is not part of it. Regardless, all European countries have presumption of innocence, except in very specific cases (like England's libel law).

Gormo 3 days ago | root | parent |

The Napoleonic code is a civil code in contrast to a common-law system, not civil law in contrast to criminal law. These are two different meanings of the term "civil", and the Napoleonic code absolutely does deal with criminal offenses.

sigmoid10 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

The Napoleonic Code was civil law, nor criminal law. It doesn't deal with these issues. And it treated the burden of evidence similarly to how modern civil procedures do. France and all other countries that emerged from it have a variation of In dubio pro reo.

Gormo 3 days ago | root | parent |

You're using the wrong meaning of "civil law" here. The Napoleonic Code absolutely did include criminal law.

giantg2 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

Civil asset forfeiture isn't different in its principles. It's civil meaning there is no right to an attorney, the burden of proof is lower, etc. Essentially, this is an ex parte action against the asset forcing the owner to prove ownership in order to get legal standing to challenge in the court. It's a terrible system, but it utilizes the same principles found in other Civil laws. These lack of protections is why people push back on things like red flag laws and why legislatures are increasingly looking to use these to bypass things in the criminal side (see TX trying to allow actions against abortion seekers, or CA saying they'll do the same to gun owners).

phkahler 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

>> It's civil meaning there is no right to an attorney, the burden of proof is lower, etc.

That's a cute story, but it still goes directly against the 4th amendment, which make no distinction between criminal or civil or any other "type" of law.

dylan604 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

> or CA saying they'll do the same to gun owners).

But doesn't the CA law explicitly acknowledge this by saying if the TX law is ever knocked back the CA law automatically becomes null and void?

giantg2 3 days ago | root | parent |

I don't know. I heard about the idea of the similar law being stated by one of the politicians there. I didn't think it was actually passed. I thought the TX law was invalidated pretty quickly, likely before CA could even pass their own version for guns. It seemed like more of a political statement than a real law, which makes sense if they have an auto-repeal clause in it.

Either way, my point was that civil laws seem to be increasing in favor when the politicians and interest groups haven't been able to achieve what they want through the criminal side. Abortion and guns tend to showcase this most as they are the most contentious issues.

dylan604 3 days ago | root | parent |

Texas went with vigilante justice to get its desires for abortion. Nothing surprises me anymore about how far red states will go to get their agendas pushed.

giantg2 3 days ago | root | parent |

It's not really vigilante justice if it's through the courts.

dylan604 3 days ago | root | parent |

Okay, so they crowd sourced it out, but the concept of letting the citizens police rather than officials is just one step from vigilante

latency-guy2 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

Forfeiture is different from seizure. Seizure is perfectly legal, and even ought to be required pending completion of a court case.

Forfeiture is the end means of seizure.. usually. Forfeiture does not require a court case. Forfeiture can, in some circumstances, be determined without a court case. Most often and fairly universally means when no one offers a claim on seized property.

I have read on this a many times myself and have conflict with it. I started off with naturally believing it is violation of 5th + 14th amendments. I only hold now that it is likely a violation of the 14th, but its quite complicated.

Seizure in this sense ought to be illegal given no due process. However, SC has opinions that property itself can be ruled against. Further, has ruled in many instances that innocent owner defense is not sufficient, thus innocent owner must prove that the entrusted party acted out of consent/contract.

I recommend reading 983 article guidelines for asset forfeiture/seizure: https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/983

It is not simple, at all. Most guidelines really are in favor returning property. IMO, timelines could be adjusted so they are a bit harsher on government considering speedy trials are not so speedy anymore.

I'm not a lawyer of course

Over2Chars 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

As you note it's not built into other legal systems. In which case, those other legal systems aren't automatically corrupt or based on extortion.

A legal system is designed to advance a purpose: justice, the protection of citizens, etc.

Assumptions of guilt or innocence aren't immutable laws of the universe. They likely simply reflect prejudices held at the time of creation, or inherited from even older systems, like Roman justice.

This story doesn't hint at corruption or extortion: a plausibly innocent man was swept into a forfeiture system that didn't work as it should.

insane_dreamer 3 days ago | root | parent |

> a forfeiture system that didn't work as it should

And I'm arguing that the forfeiture system itself contravenes the principles of justice on which the US is founded.

Have you lived in countries where the police can just take away your stuff without recourse because they are a law unto themselves? I have. Trust me, it's no fun.

Over2Chars 3 days ago | root | parent |

The history of civil forfeiture is maritime law, which has special conditions:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_forfeiture_in_the_United...

If you are an innocent person carrying the suspected proceeds of crime, and can prove it's not from a crime, you should not be impacted.

Recourse is built into the civil forfeiture process, afaict. This article is, as I read it, a case of a man using the channels of recourse successfully.

Your portrayal of the police as an arbitrary force that seizes things without recourse is, I think, incorrect.

insane_dreamer 3 days ago | root | parent |

> can prove it's not from a crime

the problem is that this shifts the burden of proof of innocence on you, instead of the burden of proof of guilt on the authorities. They can say "we have reason to believe you committed a crime to obtain this" and there's not much you can do except to prove them wrong. That goes against "unless you can prove I have a committed a crime, I have committed no crime". That's what I take issue with.

> Your portrayal of the police as an arbitrary force that seizes things without recourse is, I think, incorrect.

You're probably right. There is recourse and procedures, so not quite Wild West level lawlessness. But the system is very much rigged against you if for some reason the police believe (rightly or wrongly) that the assets were obtained illegally or used in illegal activity. And it very much facilitates police corruption since their burden of proof is so low -- who is to say that the police is wrong?

Over2Chars a day ago | root | parent |

1) yes the burden of proof is shifted, but if the recourse is relatively simple administrative appeal (showing a source of income, a history of savings, a chain of withdrawals, to explain why you have $300,000 in small bills in your trunk) vs hiring a defender and a trial, that's seems like a reasonable trade off.

The history of civil forfeiture in maritime law suggests it arose when you captured a pirate of smuggling vessel. They are loaded with stolen or illegal merchandise. The owner of the vessel is in France. You seize it and send a letter to him saying "hey, if this is yours, come get it and tell us why you have it legally. Otherwise it's ours."

2. Lots of things facilitate corruption. This might be one of them, but even if we eliminated it, corruption isn't likely to go away (it is not the unique driver of corruption). Moreover, it may not be even a particularly significant driver of corruption in general (there may be specific cases where it is) - so removing it wouldn't impact all the forces that generate corruption. So removing it would have little or no impact.

That said, if the perception is that it is a corrupting force, it would be useful to make changes to make it seem less so: have all proceeds go to FEMA, for example, instead of back to the departments. Or specify how the recovered moneys can be spent - on buildings but not salaries - like jail improvements- so specific people cannot uniquely benefit.

And if corruption is the problem generally, addressing it directly is likely to be more effective than eliminating civil forfeiture and letting corruption go unchecked otherwise.

casenmgreen 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

I'm afraid that this happened, where it is so plainly and fundamentally wrong, expresses that something is fundamentally wrong with the police, and I think it is across the USA? as this behaviour is I think widespread?

darreninthenet 3 days ago | root | parent |

We have it here in the UK as well, although it's not quite as harsh (except for large amounts of cash, which the police don't consider normal). The seized items were either being actively used in the crime or it can be shown could only have been purchased through proceeds of crime (eg admin assistant earning 20k who was drug dealing) has a million pound house with no other explanation)

SideburnsOfDoom 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

It's a very US thing that for every fine principle such as presumption of innocence, there is an equal and opposite "loophole" or way to bend the rules, that is allowed to make that principle far less effective.

ruthmarx 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

That's not a US thing, that's an every country everywhere thing.

SideburnsOfDoom 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

I disagree; the gap is way wider in the US than the countries that the US would like to compare itself to. It's easy to say "they're all as bad as each other", but it's usually inaccurate, and always dismissive.

ruthmarx 3 days ago | root | parent |

Can you support your argument with some examples?

SideburnsOfDoom 3 days ago | root | parent |

Can you? I'm happy to simply continue to hold a different opinion to you.

You are being dismissive of the issue though; and it's never helpful.

ruthmarx 3 days ago | root | parent |

> Can you?

Generally the burden is on the person making the positive claim.

> I'm happy to simply continue to hold a different opinion to you.

Sure, I have no qualms taking your opinion as just speculation/belief/Ameriphobia.

> You are being dismissive of the issue though; and it's never helpful.

Strong claims require strong evidence. Without evidence it's reasonable to dismiss.

SideburnsOfDoom 3 days ago | root | parent |

Dismiss away, you do you.

I don't regard this as a "strong claim" requiring "extra-ordinary proof". Technically it is a claim, I suppose. Many statements are. I strongly disagree that it any of "speculation" or "Ameriphobia". Those are emotional language, strong claims about me that you throw out. I won't go into biographical details why those just don't fit. And they are, yet again, dismissive.

"All countries are the same" Is quite a claim though. You seem defensive.

"require" makes it seem like I'm obligated though. Counterpoint: as the wise man said regarding when someone disagrees with you online and demands you prove your point: "I've known you for ten seconds and enjoyed none of them, I'm not taking homework assignments from you."

ruthmarx 3 days ago | root | parent |

> Dismiss away, you do you.

With, as I said, good reason. That's important.

> I don't regard this as a "strong claim" requiring "extra-ordinary proof".

Not extra-ordinary proof, proportional proof. For a strong claim, strong evidence.

Saying the US has more loopholes than other developed nations that exploit and bypass the legal system and checks and balances in place compared to other developed nations is indeed a strong claim.

> Technically it is a claim, I suppose. Many statements are.

Many statements are opinions. Many are speculation. Some are claims. Some are strong claims, like this one.

> I strongly disagree that it any of "speculation" or "Ameriphobia".

Ameriphobia is a possibility, not an accusation. Until you are willing to support your claim, it's entirely reasonable that I should only take your claims as speculation.

> And they are, yet again, dismissive.

Because there is reason to dismiss, because you don't want to support your claim. Even though it would have been less effort than typing your last reply, and less effort than typing your reply to this comment, especially since I'm sure you'll respond to each individual point.

> "All countries are the same" Is quite a claim though.

That was never my claim. That's a strawman fallacy and nothing else.

> You seem defensive.

Just not a fan of wild claims that lack evidence.

> "require" makes it seem like I'm obligated though.

In the sense of any obligations inherited whenever implicitly agreeing to engage in civil debate, it is.

> Counterpoint: as the wise man said regarding when someone disagrees with you online and demands you prove your point: "I've known you for ten seconds and enjoyed none of them, I'm not taking homework assignments from you."

Supporting a claim isn't homework. You calling it homework is you attempting to shift the burden of proof onto me, which is dishonest.

SideburnsOfDoom 2 days ago | root | parent |

12 seconds now, and not getting any more enjoyable.

It's an observation, not a PhD thesis requiring academic defence.

I strongly advice you to get a grip on yourself.

If any of this is unclear, you can re-read above comments.

ruthmarx 2 days ago | root | parent |

If anyone needs to get a grip it's you. There's no issue here. I'm dismissive of your speculation and that's reasonable since there's nothing to support it.

Nothing more to say.

SideburnsOfDoom 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

Another example would be the fine principle of democracy, and the loopholes of gerrymandering and selective voter suppression.

It makes more sense when you ask "Who bears the burden of these loopholes?" and the answer is always "They disadvantage people of colour".

ppp999 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

> The US legal system (unlike some other countries) is built on the presumption of innocence.

In theory yes, but in practice, I had to plead guilty to get out of jail after spending 6 months in jail, otherwise I would have had to spend another 6 months in jail just waiting for my trial.

So you are presumed innocent but they don't mind keeping you in jail anyways.

_DeadFred_ 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

Sorry, but civil forfeiture is 'civil' not legal. The US Justice system has completely bypassed all kind of US Level systems controls/protections simply by reclassifying them as 'civil' not 'criminal' because our protections only apply to 'criminal' law, such as the huge differences in the standards for a finding of guilt between civil and criminal law.

JumpCrisscross 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

> Civil forfeiture completely contravenes that principle and is therefore essentially extortion and corruption

I hate civil forefeiture, but let’s not get lost in hyperbole. It facilitates extortion and corruption, but so can almost any police power. The problem is in its conflicts of interest and abridgement of due process, particularly, that of elevating probable cause to grounds for the public taking of private goods without compensation.

loa_in_ 3 days ago | prev | next |

Allowing a privileged force to simply take someone's valuables with no recourse or trial, potentially taking their food/gas money while far away from a safe place... Saying that it's the valuables that are suspect. Makes sense... as a punishment

MathMonkeyMan 3 days ago | prev | next |

I wonder what happened. Traffic stop, seizure of "life savings," something about the drug enforcement agency.

I can guess what happened, but it would be nice to know the story behind the lawsuit. Like... cop did a search, found a ton of cash, took it as if it were drug money, gave the money to feds, never charged anybody with a crime, feds give most of the money to the cop's precinct. But I just made that up.

On the other hand, the point of the post is to explain the legal argument that won, and its implications for upholding the right against unreasonable search and seizure. And it did that.

pizza234 3 days ago | root | parent |

It's written in a referenced article (https://ij.org/case/nevada-civil-forfeiture/):

> On his drive from Texas to California, a Nevada Highway Patrol officer engineered a reason to pull him over, saying that he passed too closely to a tanker truck. The officer who pulled Stephen over complimented his driving but nevertheless prolonged the stop and asked a series of questions about Stephen’s life and travels. Stephen told the officer that his life savings was in the trunk. Another group of officers arrived, and Stephen gave them permission to search his car. They found a backpack with Stephen’s money, just where he said it would be, along with receipts showing all his bank withdrawals. After a debate amongst the officers, which was recorded on body camera footage, they decided to seize his life savings.

> After that, months passed, and the DEA missed the deadlines set by federal law for it to either return the money or file a case explaining what the government believes Stephen did wrong. So Stephen teamed up with the Institute for Justice to get his money back. It was only after IJ brought a lawsuit against the DEA to return Stephen’s money, and his story garnered national press attention, that the federal government agreed to return his money. In fact, they did so just a day after he filed his lawsuit, showing that they had no basis to hold it.

Over2Chars 3 days ago | root | parent |

The part about the receipts I had missed.

Although volunteering information about anything seems suspect.

And it also seems to be a matter of DEA dropping the ball, but perhaps they foot drag knowing that anyone with illegal money isn't going to ask for it back, as they'd have to explain why they had it.

I wonder if Elon is going to suggest we defund the DEA as part of his "DOGE"?

UncleMeat 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

While you are legally allowed to refuse search of your vehicle, in practice people get brutalized for standing up for their rights all the time. The exact boundaries of your legal rights are also not clear to most people (even many lawyers) so you risk refusing an actually legal order and ending up in even more trouble.

Plus, a cop can just call for a canine squad and then get the canine to signal and then use that as probable cause for a search if they really want to fuck your day up in a way that is totally legal.

This makes the idea that you should just confidently advocate for your 4th amendment rights actually pretty unappealing.

hiatus 3 days ago | root | parent |

> Plus, a cop can just call for a canine squad and then get the canine to signal and then use that as probable cause for a search if they really want to fuck your day up in a way that is totally legal.

Can't make you wait around for a canine without probable cause. https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/239513-court-ru...

> While officers may use a dog to sniff around a car during the course of a routine traffic stop, they cannot extend the length of the stop in order to carry it out.

UncleMeat 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

Sounds good, but doesn't work. They remanded back to the 8th Circuit, which found that Rodriguez's stop and canine search was legal.

Over2Chars 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

At least on TV, while the first officer is "running their plates" a second k9 unit rolls up and the dog jumps around and pops the bad guy with his 50kg of contraband.

Or at least that was the way it was shown on this one episode of whatever show I saw it on.

potato3732842 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

>I wonder if Elon is going to suggest we defund the DEA as part of his "DOGE"?

I hope. Bespoke single police agencies only serve the purpose of sucking up resources to enforce stuff that a broad police agency (like the FBI) would never or could not justify allocating so many resources toward.

You get these agencies like the DEA that build up this headcount and budget and then go justify it by engaging in all sorts of bad crap. The FBI would rarely (I'm not gonna say never) waste time going after college kids for making "more than personal use" amounts of acid. If they want to waste man hours on petty things to justify their budget they have a whole laundry list of more legitimate petty things to enforce first.

Over2Chars 3 days ago | root | parent |

Well, with all due respect to the heroic efforts of the vast majority of the DEA, if we judge them by their total success or failure, I'd have to go with "failure" as far as the US is concerned.

Being a massive drug market with people dying from drugs on a daily basis is not exactly a shining indicator of success.

That said, for the DEA to succeed we'd need a massive amount of coordination - which is to say real leadership on this issue, I think which may be beyond the DEA by itself.

pizza234 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

> Although volunteering information about anything seems suspect.

I don't live in the USA, but to my understanding, it’s common for individuals from minority groups to be taught by their families specific behaviors for interacting with police, such as how to position their hands. I wouldn’t be surprised if this also includes notifying the police about personal belongings that could potentially raise suspicion.

scarface_74 3 days ago | root | parent |

As a minority, you are taught where to hold your hands. But we taught our sons - “don’t talk to the police when questioned”.

We also taught them in case they did have to call the police in case of something like a home break-in, describe themselves. We lived in a city that was less than 4% Black and was a famous “sundown town” as late as the mid 80s

BrenBarn 3 days ago | prev | next |

Don't hold your breath for the next step where they pass laws criminalizing any attempt to find or use such loopholes, so cops can be jailed for trying to use civil asset forfeiture in any way.

JumpCrisscross 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

> laws criminalizing any attempt to find or use such loopholes

Loopholes aren’t illegal, they’re a problem with the law. Using the law to criminalise loopholes is Kafkaesque.

BrenBarn 3 days ago | root | parent |

In some sense a large amount of law is closing loopholes in earlier law. You're right that my wording was a bit loose, but what I'm saying is Nevada could pass a state law saying "Any attempt by law enforcement to carry out civil asset forfeiture in any way is a felony."

JumpCrisscross 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

> Nevada could pass a state law saying "Any attempt by law enforcement to carry out civil asset forfeiture in any way is a felony.”

Given felonies require prosecution, this gives prosecutors draconian enforcement powers over police. Maybe that’s okay. I suspect it would facilitate corruption.

Better: remove qualified immunity for asset forfeitures.

BrenBarn 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

> Given felonies require prosecution, this gives prosecutors draconian enforcement powers over police. Maybe that’s okay. I suspect it would facilitate corruption.

Civil asset forfeiture already facilitates corruption, but it's worse because that corruption is targeted at innocent random civilians.

> Better: remove qualified immunity for asset forfeitures.

Even better: remove qualified immunity for everything.

scarface_74 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

> Given felonies require prosecution, this gives prosecutors draconian enforcement powers over police

You act as if this is a bad thing. They have those powers over everyone else.

immibis 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

Are you concerned that police will bribe prosecutors to not prosecute, using forfeited money?

JumpCrisscross 3 days ago | root | parent |

> concerned that police will bribe prosecutors to not prosecute, using forfeited money?

No, I'm saying "civil asset forfeiture in any way" covers a hell of a lot of ground, which gives whoever gets that discretion a hell of a lot of power.

immibis 2 days ago | root | parent |

"murder in any way" covers a lot of ground, which gives whoever gets that discretion a lot of power. But isn't that a good thing because it discourages people from murdering?

MathMonkeyMan 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

That would make legitimate civil asset forfeiture impossible to execute.

Better, I think, would be to pass a law that says "civil asset forfeiture is no longer a thing." The problem then would be "so what do we do with property that should be seized by the state?"

The fire department gets called to an exploded meth lab containing a few dead bodies and a safe containing $200,000. What do?

BrenBarn 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

> That would make legitimate civil asset forfeiture impossible to execute.

Assuming such a thing exists. . .

> The fire department gets called to an exploded meth lab containing a few dead bodies and a safe containing $200,000. What do?

I'm not sure I see how the fact that meth was present changes anything there (i.e., vs. a house fire with a few dead bodies and no meth). If some agency wants to go through a court proceeding to establish that the money was used illegally that's fine. The problem with civil asset forfeiture is it's done without any of that process.

dgoldstein0 3 days ago | root | parent |

I'd bet this is covered by other laws. Practically if you come back to claim it you probably expose yourself to being advised of running the meth lab. If it's unclaimed it's then abandoned property, and pretty sure there's laws of how that gets dealt with.

potato3732842 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

>so what do we do with property that should be seized by the state?

Just don't. God forbid a drug dealer keep his car.

It hurts society less to not seize things than to have the police routinely seizing things on the pretext of suspicion of involvement in a crime.

jdasdf 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

>That would make legitimate civil asset forfeiture impossible to execute.

There is no such thing, so that is not a concern.

robertlagrant 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

> The fire department gets called to an exploded meth lab containing a few dead bodies and a safe containing $200,000. What do?

Find out whose money it was, and wrap it up in their probate. This should be nothing to do with the police.

echoangle 3 days ago | root | parent |

So you should be able to keep money acquired with illegal acts? If you become a millionaire by selling drugs and get caught, you go to prison but after you get out, the money is yours?

Or what does „wrap it up in their probate“ mean?

cherryteastain 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

If you get convicted the court can seize the funds as part of the sentence

If you don't get convicted...well sounds like there was no crime

echoangle 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

> > The fire department gets called to an exploded meth lab containing a few dead bodies and a safe containing $200,000. What do?

> Find out whose money it was, and wrap it up in their probate. This should be nothing to do with the police.

The example was a meth lab though and the claim was "This should be nothing to do with the police.". Is operating a meth lab not a crime?

robertlagrant 3 days ago | root | parent |

The context is "what to do with the $200000 we just found", not investigating crimes in general.

JumpCrisscross 3 days ago | root | parent |

> context is "what to do with the $200000 we just found"

If literally nobody--including the accused--claims it, it's unclaimed property [1].

[1] https://www.usa.gov/unclaimed-money

Supermancho 3 days ago | root | parent |

Each state and federal body has process for it. It's not uncommon to encounter unclaimed property (including cash), especially with poorly/inaccurately described bank accounts. eg https://www.fdic.gov/bank-failures/unclaimed-property-inform...

Allowing specific state actors to actively claim these goods via civil forfeiture (and bypass these systems) has always been improper. Law enforcement is untrustworthy in many locales, so this is unsurprising.

_DeadFred_ 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

Make a law the the police can only operate under criminal law, not civil law. Problem solved instantly and with common sense. Anything the police do should have the protections/restrictions/rules/requirements of criminal law, not the looser standards used by civil law.

snakeyjake 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

>"Any attempt by law enforcement to carry out civil asset forfeiture in any way is a felony."

Civil asset forfeiture means a lot more than what you think it does.

Do you remember a story a couple of years ago about a couple who foreclosed on a local Bank of America branch after Bank of America wrongfully started foreclosure proceedings on their home? That's civil asset forfeiture.

The sheriff's deputies who went with them to enforce the foreclosure are not criminals.

If you are a freelancer and your client doesn't pay you and you get a court order to collect what you are owed: civil asset forfeiture.

A clerk filing the paperwork to get you your money is not a criminal.

Even the ACLU is fighting civil asset forfeiture ABUSE because as actual lawyers they understand what it means.

https://www.aclu.org/news/by-issue/asset-forfeiture-abuse

FireBeyond 3 days ago | root | parent |

There is a really simple difference here.

The couple who foreclosed on a BoA branch got a court order to do so, otherwise the deputies would not have enforced it.

Seizing money in your trunk because you had a tail light out because you have a "suspicion" that the money is somehow criminal does not have the same standard.

I don't think many people have a concern with that.

So sure, maybe, "any attempt by law enforcement to carry out civil asset forfeiture absent a valid court order shall be a felony".

Gibbon1 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

My preference is 100% of fines and siezed property should go to the Social Security Administration.

Bonus diverting money or property would be a federal crime.

dec0dedab0de 3 days ago | prev | next |

I think the best way to defend against this type of abuse is to make it law that any assets collected by police are not allowed to directly benefit the police or the government they represent.

Maybe just have it all go into an evenly distributed tax rebate, or a giant pizza party for the town. Basically, remove the incentive.

courseofaction 3 days ago | prev | next |

The police should not be financially incentivized to enforce any aspect of the law, because it leads directly to corruption. CMV?

JumpCrisscross 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

> CMV?

Convince me…variably? Cytomegalovirus?

SllX 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

Reddit lingo. Change My View.

Dylan16807 3 days ago | root | parent |

I have never seen anyone abbreviate it like that before. Let's not do that.

SllX 3 days ago | root | parent |

1) Let’s not prescribe language-use on the web instead. Something that originates in one place does not always stay in one place. How does that sound?

2) It’s abbreviated in every single thread on the sub in which it originated: https://www.reddit.com/r/changemyview/

3) Now that you have seen it and received the explanation, you will recognize it and can be the messenger in the future.

Dylan16807 3 days ago | root | parent |

1) I think word use is an ongoing process and sometimes I want to participate in that negotiation.

2) Showing that a phrase is abbreviated on the specific subreddit named after that phrase is one of the least convincing arguments possible for general use of that abbreviation.

3) I could, but that doesn't sound like something I particularly want to happen.

SllX 3 days ago | root | parent |

> I have never seen anyone abbreviate it like that before.

When you phrased your original post like this, I thought that meant you were familiar with the common phrase but somehow missed the abbreviation. So bullet point 2 was not an argument, but context.

Here’s an argument though: being part of the ongoing process of negotiating word use usually takes the form of choosing which words and phrases to make part of your own vernacular and which ones to omit. Nobody wants to hear “let’s not do that” nor “don’t do that”, especially over such a mundane abbreviation.

Dylan16807 3 days ago | root | parent |

> Nobody wants to hear “let’s not do that”

Do you mean nobody wants to hear it directed at them? That's true in general, even in situations where it really needs to be said. So that's not a very compelling reason to not say it.

If you mean nobody wants to hear those words ever, from anyone to anyone, then that's not true.

SllX 3 days ago | root | parent |

In general, but don’t lose the emphasis: especially over such a mundane abbreviation.

cm2187 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

Why not? If you want good meat, give financial incentives to your butcher. If you want good policing, give financial incentives to your police. The problem isn't the presence of financial incentives, but badly designed financial incentives.

l72 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

If your SRE gets a bonus every time they fix an issue in production, you would start incentivizing them to make sure production has lots of issues they can easily fix and get their bonus.

If you de-incentivize them every time there is a problem, they will instead try to hide problems.

How do you come up with fair incentivization?

moomin 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

The problem’s deeper than that: and financial incentive you design, you provide a financial incentive to abuse it. This is why so few people recommend metric-based compensation.

cm2187 3 days ago | root | parent |

Not sure where you saw that few people recommend that. In a company, managers are routinely incentivised based on specific metrics (good or bad, typically budget plus some softer metrics). It's the norm, not the exception.

It was even the case in communist russia by the way. With horribly designed metrics, like maximising tonnage of a factory output, which lead factory managers to ditch better product for lesser, heavier products. I think it was described in the book Red Plenty.

Again the problem isn't incentives, it is badly designed incentives.

ceejayoz 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

> It's the norm, not the exception.

That doesn’t make it good. In both cases, it’s probably heavily responsible for the enshittification we see everywhere.

Every metric winds up gamed.

noisy_boy 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

Depends on the definition of the financial incentive. If it means bonus, then this doesn't handle cases of incompetence or malice, they will still get their salary. If that includes salary too e.g. financial penalties, then you'll get police doing things specifically to preserve their salary and instead of focusing on their core responsibilities.

Just carrots, whatever the definition, won't fix everything, there are assholes in every profession, you need sticks too.

blindriver 3 days ago | prev | next |

How has civil forfeiture not been ruled illegal at this point? It’s one of the most disgusting corrupt things I’ve seen in my lifetime any I can’t believe both parties support this.

sneak 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

Everyone viewed as legitimate in the eyes of the state has stopped using cash, so leaving this in place as an additional risk to carrying or using cash is a nice bonus in the war against financial privacy and freedom.

One more nail in the coffin of being able to transact in ways either unknown to or unapproved by the state.

In 2011 I spoke at the CCC about why it’s essential to have free and censorship-resistant payments that the state cannot veto:

https://media.ccc.de/v/cccamp11-4591-financing_the_revolutio...

Always use and carry cash. Always tip in cash. Don’t do business with places that don’t accept cash. Store some cash in your home and your car (hidden) for emergencies.

tdb7893 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

I can believe it. Both parties are pretty "law and order" and rely on relationships with the police. Why piss off an important group of people for an issue that isn't going to sway any votes.

Reform here is something which would presumably have a large amount of support but that's enough to get a law passed or the US would look very different, there are tons of popular things that will never be laws.

potato3732842 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

Same reason it took half a century for every other rights violation to get in front of a court that matters. The agencies and governments violating people's rights play all sorts of games to prevent it so that they can keep the gravy train rolling.

AngryData 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

Corruption is a large part of what funds our criminal justice system, and politicians will never do anything to make them appear like they are against law enforcement or "soft on crime".

JumpCrisscross 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

> How has civil forfeiture not been ruled illegal at this point?

Isn’t part of the problem prosecutors dropping cases before they make it through appeals? I’m almost ready to PAC an elected prosecutor who commits to taking a test case to SCOTUS.

dragonwriter 3 days ago | root | parent |

> Isn’t part of the problem prosecutors dropping cases before they make it through appeals?

Not really, cases on civil forfeiture do make it to the US Supreme Court, the most recent case being decided in 2024.

_DeadFred_ 3 days ago | root | parent |

Cases the prosecutors think they can win make it. But OPs statement is valid, prosecutors can just drop any case they fear will set a precedent and under our system that is the end of the discussion. OPs point is it gives prosecutors an additional thumb on the scale when it come to court oversight.

nadermx 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

If you ever watch the series "The wire" you might have a sense as to why

aziaziazi 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

I read that as "those who watch it already know".

Could you or someone else share what’s shown in that series? I’m not willing to devote dizains hours to have that answer.

AnthonyMouse 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

The Wire is about the War on Drugs. The War on Drugs is responsible for probably 75% of the shockingly oppressive laws still on the books, with most of the balance being the War on Terror.

defrost 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

There's a scene in which an aide for a city politician is stopped leaving known drug dealing actors and the car is found to have bag stuffed with a large amount of cash which is seized.

The point moving forward is will anybody claim the cash and offer an explanation as to where it came from.

The above "you'll know why" appears to carry an implicit "because all cash with no receipt is criminal proceeds".

The problem with that is stories abound of Police seizing cash and other assets and keeping them, spending money, auctioning goods, etc that were never criminal proceeds .. or rather never proved to be criminal proceeds.

Sohcahtoa82 3 days ago | root | parent |

Okay, but there's a world of difference between a large amount of cash that nobody wants to claim because police know it's drug money versus an innocent person that the police have stolen money from without any true suspicion and the person has been fighting in the courts for years to get their money back.

defrost 3 days ago | root | parent |

I fully agree, but I'm merely the person that expanded on the lazy The Wire comment above.

@blindriver was correct (IMHO) to rail against civil forfeiture and @nadermx responded with a low effort opaque un-HN worthy quip.

moomin 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

The Wire is a great show, but it’s still copaganda. Dude managed to create a five year show set in the Baltimore Police Department without mentioning racism once.

potato3732842 3 days ago | root | parent |

Reminds me of the time Frontline(?) had some cameras following around the Newark drug task force (post scandal so they knew to be on their best behavior) and they couldn't hold it together long enough to make enough footage hour or so episode. They initiated a baseless stop and frisk on camera and then dogpiled the guy when he said to leave him alone.

db48x 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

It has its roots in something very necessary: disposal of abandoned property, especially illegal goods for which no owner can be identified. Of course it has gotten slightly out of hand.

Dylan16807 3 days ago | root | parent |

But most abandoned property doesn't go through that process, does it?

db48x 3 days ago | root | parent |

Garbage found at the side of the street, no. A bag of heroin found in an abandoned building, certainly.

Dylan16807 3 days ago | root | parent |

My point is, it really takes the "need" out of the situation.

We have perfectly good ways to handle lost items without forfeiture. Using those systems, the confiscation problem disappears. And if anyone claims a bag of heroin the same way they would claim a lost phone... let them. Then arrest them after they do that.

db48x 3 days ago | root | parent |

As amusing as that would be, forfeiture is how you get judicial oversight of the process. If someone wants to claim their misplaced drugs then they have to show up at the trial and defend their right to posses them.

Consider a more nuanced, and more common, case: a shipment of batteries labeled as Apple™ products arrives in port. The shipping address indicates that they aren’t going to Apple, but to one Louis Rossmann. Clearly these must be counterfeits, right? Nobody else could possibly be allowed to own items with “Apple™” printed on them, after all. Customs seizes the shipment with the intent to destroy them. If Louis wants them he can go to court to prove that he has a right to own batteries with the word “Apple™” on them.

Clearly we want Louis to be able to clear up the misunderstanding and recover his property (genuine batteries salvaged from damaged phones), and clearly customs doesn’t want to risk storing them forever. Both parties want a definitive end state; they don’t want the disagreement to drag on forever. And certainly Louis wants the oversight of a judge who can ensure that procedure is followed correctly, and that it is the same procedure that was documented ahead of time. It might be an annoying procedure, but at least it is one that he can learn about in advance.

Dylan16807 3 days ago | root | parent |

If they suspect the batteries are illegal to have, then once they confirm intentional ownership the government should have a simple choice: give them back or prosecute, and if they lose the case then give them back anyway. He should not have to proactively prove a right to own them.

For items like cash and cars that are not themselves illegal to have and not evidence, then it's even simpler: give them back, and 99% of the time don't take them from people in the first place. Confiscation of ill-gotten goods should happen after a trial proves they're ill-gotten.

What are you worried about with judicial oversight? Is it specifically the case where the owner is unknown? Because in normal cases I think my suggestion has plenty of judicial oversight.

db48x 3 days ago | root | parent |

> and 99% of the time don't take them from people in the first place.

I agree with that part :)

But remember we are talking about times when the owner really is unknown. If you’re actually importing counterfeit goods then you probably aren’t putting your own name on the shipping label. Even if Louis exists, he’s probably just an unwitting participant. And to get the batteries back all he has to do is show up and assert under oath that they’re his and that they're not counterfeit.

Also, I don’t say that this is the only possible way to run things. It’s just the way that we solve certain problems, one that we decided upon long ago. It’s definitely being abused and certainly needs to be fixed, but Chesterton’s Fence is relevant. You must know why a thing exists and what problems it is solving before you’re allowed to tear something down. Those problems will not go away, so whatever changes we make we’ll still need to be able to solve them.

And it does have one very good feature: judicial oversight forces law enforcement to document everything that they take on the public record. Those records are kept by an independent branch of the government, too. In principle people ought to be using those records against elected officials to vote out incumbents who abuse asset forfeiture.

Dylan16807 3 days ago | root | parent |

> But remember we are talking about times when the owner really is unknown.

And what I'm saying is you don't need civil forfeiture for that. Use the normal process for abandoned property. The idea civil forfeiture being "rooted" in how we handle abandoned property is a bad excuse because we don't use civil forfeiture for abandoned property.

> And to get the batteries back all he has to do is show up and assert under oath that they’re his and that they're not counterfeit.

Is this how you want things to work or how you're suggesting they actually work? I'm pretty sure it's not anywhere near that easy to get your items back. You need a bunch of evidence.

bobbob1921 3 days ago | prev | next |

This guy looks familiar from a video on YouTube of the traffic stop and cash seizure. If this in fact is the same guy and case from that video, I wonder what would’ve happened had this not been videotaped / posted online as I’m sure 99% of these similar scenarios are not. Civil forfeiture in the usa really is ridiculous, and I wish it would be radically changed/banned.

kyleblarson 3 days ago | prev | next |

It seems especially ironic that this would happen in Nevada, where carrying large amounts of cash is much more normal due to the gambling industry.

ruthmarx 3 days ago | prev | next |

And it only took them how long to do this?

If our supreme court wasn't compromised, this kind of thing should be heard there to not only prevent this in all states, but hold accountable the thieves an make them return their ill-gotten goods.

ChrisMarshallNY 3 days ago | prev | next |

John Oliver did a section on Civil Forfeiture: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kEpZWGgJks

A lot of folks don't like him (politics, but he can also be a rather shrill person).

He does his homework, though, and his main stories are often apolitical.

nullc 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

I thought he was way better pre-covid-- at least showed empathy for differing views, acknowledged some tradeoffs, etc. He turned very one dimensional during covid and never recovered.

bn-l 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

> He does his homework, though, and his main stories are often apolitical.

His team of researchers and comedians (ex college humor alumns) do the research and it comes out of his off-putting mouth and face.

gosub100 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

Not to worry, they'll turn political again in a few weeks when every single negative event in the world will be blamed on the president.

jdubz79 3 days ago | prev | next |

We need a database of any cop, lawyer, prosecutor or judge that participates in this type of bullshit. Identify, track, punish! Tyrants have home addresses!

opentokix 3 days ago | prev | next |

USA is truly a fucked up country

lolc 3 days ago | root | parent |

The fact that we read about single instances like this means some important things are not that fucked. Namely reporting on police misconduct happened and finally the money was returned.

Looking at this the US is not particularly fucked. I wish I could set a higher bar for the world, but don't expect this to change fast.

elp 3 days ago | root | parent |

This. In my country a stop for a traffic offense is more likely to be for a bribe than for a ticket and if they found the money the officers would just keep it for themselves.

On the other hand we clearly have much better banks the the USA does. Out of interest why other than crime or dodging tax would you ever carry large amounts of cash rather than just do a bank transfer?

ninalanyon 3 days ago | root | parent |

A bank transfer requires both parties to reveal their account number. I have been told by several people in both the US and the UK that this is a risky thing to do. In fact in those countries where there is no national register of residents and identifying oneself relies on things like utility bills that show your address rather than on a unique ID (personnummer in Norway) that a bank, for instance, can verify online they might actually be right, or right-ish at least.

I rarely hear of identity theft in Norway where banking relies on common ID services (BankID for instance) and the folkeregister (population register) but it seems to be a major problem in, for instance, the UK where there is no equivalent.

PoppinFreshDo 4 days ago | prev |

[flagged]

h0l0cube 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

It's amazing how the presumption of innocence – one of the pillars of a fair justice system – has eroded away in the popular consciousness in the last few decades. I'm not sure what inspires takes like this beyond sheer callousness, to simply not wonder what happens to those wrongfully convicted/affected by prejudice. Thinking they did it isn't knowing, and it certainly isn't enough to justify ruining (or taking) someone's life.

simoncion 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

I'm not sure that the presumption of innocence has eroded away in the popular consciousness. I suspect that it's roughly at the same place as it was in the 1980s. I suspect the big differences that shape one's contemporary perception of the topic are the conversion of most major US-based news agencies to publishing very little but "shock and outrage" stories, and the prevalence of the Internet Hate Machine that is clickbait-promoting "social media" pushing rage-and/or-sorrow-inducing stories in one's face.

But, yeah, it's deeply disappointing for people to say "Wow, what a strange thing for that guy to be doing. Clearly he's up to no good, should be stopped immediately, and have his property confiscated."... when the thing that the fellow is doing inflicts no actual harm on anyone at all.

h0l0cube 3 days ago | root | parent |

> I'm not sure that the presumption of innocence has eroded away in the popular consciousness

I'm certain the social media and sensationalist broadcast media have over time nudged people closer to mob justice. Further to that, some of the wins of civil libertarians against draconian law enforcement has been eroded away by giving law enforcement sweeping powers via circumventions on due process such as the Patriot Act and that which is detailed in the OP

simoncion 3 days ago | root | parent |

> ...have over time nudged people closer to mob justice.

I dunno, man. Hang out with better people? Or maybe have a conversation with the ones you do hang out with to discover their actual opinions, rather than taking their Internet-hard-man bloviation at face value?

> ...by giving law enforcement sweeping powers...

What Congresscritters gives the cops has very little to do with what us little people think is important.

h0l0cube 3 days ago | root | parent |

> rather than taking their Internet-hard-man bloviation at face value?

I’ve been living in the world for long enough to see it change.

It doesn’t matter what you or I (or an impartial jury) think if law enforcement can just ignore due process. If people cared enough about civil liberties, legislation like the Patriot Act would have at least been repealed instead of extended, things like fraudulent civil forfeiture and the prison industrial complex would have been dealt with. Instead it has become accepted by everyday people that it’s okay to concede those liberties to reduce the burden of evidence for law enforcement in the name of whatever bogeyman the rabble rousers can invoke (e.g., war on drugs, terrorism, illegal immigration, being ‘tough on crime’). The OP article, along with a growing movement of decriminalization represents perhaps a turning of the tide in repealing this legislation, but even if that is true, you’ve got to wonder how we got here in the first place.

simoncion 3 days ago | root | parent |

> It doesn’t matter what you or I (or an impartial jury) think if law enforcement can just ignore due process.

Sure. Agreed.

> If people cared enough about civil liberties, legislation like the Patriot Act would have at least been repealed instead of extended [and] things like fraudulent civil forfeiture.. would have been dealt with.

Nah. The average person has effectively zero input into what happens at the Federal level. It's not that they don't care. It's that they can't do shit about it.

h0l0cube 2 days ago | root | parent |

> The average person has effectively zero input into what happens at the Federal level.

A lot of people cared about the Mexican border the last election, and it made a real impact on votes. For better or worse, Trump now has a mandate on border and immigration policy that he'll most likely put to use. That's not to say that election policy platforms are always followed through with (e.g., Obama doubled down on Iraq instead of ending the war, disillusioning many of his voters), but they often are. If people cared more about civil liberties as they did border immigration, a political party would tap into that sentiment, but I'm not seeing that.

simoncion 2 days ago | root | parent |

> ...it made a real impact on votes.

Votes from the little people don't have an impact on what happens at the Federal level, they just change who's in the seat talking with the folks who actually have input into the decision-making process.

(As you mention, campaign promises aren't actually considered to be promises by the people that make them... they're soundbites built to try to get the little people to put the candidate in the seat.)

> A lot of people cared about the Mexican border the last election...

And I'd argue that a much, much larger reason Harris wasn't elected was that housing, food, and fuel costs have been and continue to rise rapidly, but Harris's political party continues to repeat the "Inflation is under control. Look at the numbers! The economy is doing great!!" soundbite. Will someone wearing the other team's jersey actually attempt to do something about the problem? I doubt it... but roughly half of the people who chose to vote seem to have thought it was worth a shot.

h0l0cube 2 days ago | root | parent |

> Votes from the little people don't have an impact

I agree to disagree here. The election of, say, Trump vs not-Trump, will have a huge impact not just domestically, but on geopolitics writ-large.

> much larger reason Harris wasn't elected was that housing, food, and fuel costs have been and continue to rise rapidly

Maybe. There's a plurality of reasons (and influential demographics) that could be cited. Certainly one strong signal that came through—demography-wise—was that Hispanic males swung to GOP. One theory on this is that new waves of northwards immigration are causing some in-group tension, specifically around access to jobs.

But certainly all economic indicators in November were looking good. The damage was done on inflation, but the inflation rate was brought back under control. Unemployment was ticking upwards but still only slightly higher than pre-pandemic. But as you say, long-term declines in real wages and housing stock are squeezing peoples' finances, and certainly no political party seems willing to attend to that before heads start rolling.

jjallen 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

Possession of money should not be a crime. Not everyone with money is “shady”.

JoshTriplett 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

Exactly. And the appropriate "safeguard" is conviction of a crime. At sentencing, it would be appropriate for a court to consider whether some amount of money constitutes the proceeds of a crime, and what the appropriate disposition of that money would be to best provided restitution to those harmed by the crime. And if there is some belief that something might happen to the assets before then, we have processes like preliminary injunctions, which have a high burden of proof. Until one of those things happens, there are no grounds to justify seizure of any assets.

NoMoreNicksLeft 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

>Possession of money should not be a crime.

Cash has been illegal for a long time, and it's not just civil forfeiture that makes it illegal. Your bank has been deputized to spy on you if you deposit sums above a limit, at the limit, and "below the limit" (that's structuring also a crime). Other "negotiable instruments" have been outlawed, so that if you want to carry around your wealth, you have to do it in (at most) $100 increments, and they have threatened all my life to stop printing those and bump it down to $20. Meanwhile, in the last two decades we've had two major incidents where if you deposited the money anyway, it could just disappear out from under you without any real guarantees. And when none of that is enough to deter you, they inflate it away day after day until 20 years later it is worth only half of what it used to be. The strong-armed the swiss into no longer offering numbered accounts 30 years ago now. These things aren't coincidences. Money is very much illegal.

simoncion 3 days ago | root | parent | prev | next |

> Cash has been illegal for a long time...

Weird. I pay for nearly everything with cash.

I agree that nearly all of the rest of the stuff your comment describes is totally real and totally bullshit, but please don't ruin a good retelling of the facts with breathless hyperbole.

AngryData 3 days ago | root | parent |

People do illegal stuff all the time without even knowing it, that doesn't mean the cops and courts can't still fuck you over with it at any time. And even if you just had $20 in your pocket, a cop could seize it and claim they think it was used to buy or was going to sometime in the future buy drugs, and legally that is a completely valid reason even if you have zero drugs in your system and zero on you and were inside a McDonalds waiting in line to buy a burger.

simoncion 3 days ago | root | parent |

> People do illegal stuff all the time without even knowing it...

If using and carrying cash was illegal, I wouldn't be able to go to -say- Wal*Mart and hand them cash in exchange for goods and services.

I agree that cops in many jurisdictions are permitted to engage in consequence-free-for-the-perpetrators highway robbery whenever they encounter someone carrying cash. The thing that's illegal in that scenario is the robbery.

AngryData 3 days ago | root | parent |

Except the robbery isn't illegal because it is legally civil forfeiture which has repeatedly been upheld.

If you want another example of things that technically should be and people think are illegal for the government to do but are not because the government decided the constitution is inconvenient, look at the 100 mile border zone around the US, of which 2/3rds of people live in, that allows the government to ignore the 4th amendment and other rights. If the feds decide they want to search you without cause, they can just claim they think you are involved with or are an illegal and search you and your property without cause or proof of anything and also setup checkpoints and stop and search everyone in it. And even outside of the external borders, airports have also on occasion been considered a border point to justify such searches and checkpoint stops.

Just because some law isn't regularly enforced over some situation doesn't mean there isn't a law somewhere on the books to do so.

simoncion 3 days ago | root | parent |

> Except the robbery isn't illegal...

It depends on the particulars. Not every roadside seize stands up to actual inspection. I'd bet that MOST of them (by number of seizures performed) wouldn't. See [0] for a few examples that caught the attention of the news.

> ...the 100 mile border zone...

I live in San Francisco. I'm quite aware. However, that -too- is policy that's continually being eroded by repeated court scrutiny. It's also -in fact- limited to warrantless inspection of immigration documentation... for anything else, you need either "probable cause" or a warrant (which is true for all searches everywhere in the US). [1]

[0] https://www.npr.org/2008/06/16/91555835/cash-seizures-by-pol...

[1] https://www.aclu.org/know-your-rights/border-zone#are-there-...

AngryData 3 days ago | root | parent |

> limited to warrantless inspection of immigration documentation

That's a pretty massive limit considering there is no form of federal citizenship ID people carry around and there is no straight forward way to prove you are a US citizen on the spot. It is essentially "Papers please!" except most people don't have papers. Even my state driver's license doesn't say "US citizen" on it, nor is it proof of citizenship since non-citizens also get state drivers licenses. So what if they claim they think im an illegal? Then detain me for not having my immigration papers? Throw me in a jail cell and the only thing that happens when im let out is "Oops, see ya next time!". What if they know im a full US citizen but decide to claim they think im hiding illegals in my vehicle? They are under no obligations to pay for damages done during a legal search and merely claiming to suspect illegals in my vehicle could result in them searching it and ripping my seats out.

At no point will be I be compensated for the disregard of my rights because it is legal. If I take monetary losses because of these stops, there is also no recourse except maybe in the most extreme examples they might pay end up paying for a repair, but only after I gamble significant amounts of money on a lawyer, that not everyone has to start with, nor does everyone win.

ty6853 3 days ago | root | parent | next |

CBP claimed there was drugs up my ass, dragged me to a hospital in cuffs (twice) then stuck me with the ER bill when nothing was found. Oh and got a warrant AFTER to retroactively cover their ass, based on fictitious PC.

simoncion 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

Most of the stuff you're het up about here is stuff sub-par-to-bad cops do to regular folks. That's not immigration stuff, that's authoritarian cop stuff and it's shit that has happened throughout human history.

> They are under no obligations to pay for damages done during a legal search...

Nah, I don't believe this. I totally believe that they're not obligated to compensate you for time spent waiting for them to get done jacking themselves off over your car, nor are they obligated to help you perform basic reinstallation work [0] to get yourself back on the road, but I don't believe your claim as written. Link me to some court cases that support it.

[0] For example, reinstalling removable seats would be basic reinstallation. Reassembling and reinstalling a disassembled primary fuel tank would not.

AngryData 2 days ago | root | parent |

Do you really think cops are going to take the time and the tools to properly disassemble a vehicle for inspection and not rip apart panels, cut into seats, and break shit? Their search is legal and so they have qualified immunity from damages if there is even the slightest hint of possibility that they might have found evidence for a crime they suspected in the process. Harlow v.Fitzgerald established qualified immunity as it stands today and it is all but blanket immunity as long as there is any legal backing for their actions, which we have already established they have.

A 5 second google search will bring you up endless legal explanations from lawyer firms that if it is a legal search you have almost no chance of getting your money back unless you can someone get an officer to admit to damaging your property without cause, and good luck with that when they know they can just claim they were performing a legal search. And a few more minutes you will find endless cases of damage awards being denied, even in many cases where the search was found to not be legal to start with and all criminal charges dropped.

yieldcrv 3 days ago | root | parent | prev |

Hyperbolic

If you don’t mind reporting when moving into the electronic cash system or between borders then it is not illegal

NoMoreNicksLeft 3 days ago | root | parent |

The "they didn't hassle me or even notice this time" theory of non-illegality.

yieldcrv 3 days ago | root | parent |

Uhm no

The vast vast majority of the money supply exists as electronic balances, the entire M2

If you have a liquidity concern about harassment then have balances and passive growth in all forms of liquidity. Cash, electronic cash, crypto. Then you never have to transfer balances between those systems and dont have to make it your whole identity.