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  • Home
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    BCP’s vision is that free-market municipal policy solutions are broadly available, widely acceptable, and regularly employed, enabling American cities to achieve their full potential as engines of economic prosperity. We reject the idea that cities are lost to free-market principles or policies.
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    BCP uncovers ideas that work, promotes realistic solutions, and forges partnerships that help people in America’s largest cities live free and happy lives.
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    (702) 608-2046‬

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    Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.

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    info@better-cities.org

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Home Clean, Open and Fair Government

Federal court rules Detroit-area civil asset forfeiture program unconstitutional

Use and abuse of civil asset forfeiture extends well beyond Michigan, with same unjust results.

Patrick TuoheybyPatrick Tuohey
September 18, 2023
in Clean, Open and Fair Government, Criminal Justice and Public Safety
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Federal court rules Detroit-area civil asset forfeiture program unconstitutional
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On August 31 the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals struck down as unconstitutional the practice of vehicle forfeiture in Wayne County, Michigan, in which Detroit sits.

The decision, available here, declares the practice of seizing vehicles and subsequently taking months to decide whether to proceed with forfeiture violates citizen protections under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The court instead insisted that the county should offer prompt hearings within two weeks of the cars being seized.

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The opinion notes, “Regardless of the owner’s innocence, Wayne County impounds the vehicles and its contents until the owner pays a redemption fee. This fee is $900 for the first seizure, $1,800 for the second, and $2,700 for the third, not including other fees for towing and storage.” Sadly, this is not surprising. In our recent essay on local civil asset reform, we point out that the practice of seizing assets is often expensive, often preys on the poor and often requires more in legal fees than the asset may be worth.

In a concurring opinion, Judge Amul Thapar wrote, “Does this sound like a legitimate way of cleaning up Wayne County? Or does it sound like a money-making scheme that preys on those least able to fight it? To ask the question is to answer it.” Thapar continued,

Wayne County claims that it seizes cars to fight crime (and holds onto them for months for the same reason). But the County is happy to return those very cars as soon as it gets paid. That practice proves the County’s scheme is simply a money-making venture — one most often used to extort money from those who can least afford it.

The Detroit Free Press coverage of the ruling tells the stories of the three plaintiffs involved in this case. But as the BCP report on Civil Asset Forfeiture makes clear, the abuses extend well beyond Motor City.

Tags: Civil asset forfeitureCivil rightsCourts
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Patrick Tuohey

Patrick Tuohey

Patrick Tuohey is co-founder and policy director of the Better Cities Project. He works with taxpayers, media, and policymakers to foster understanding of the consequences — sometimes unintended — of policies such as economic development, taxation, education, and transportation. He also serves as a senior fellow at Missouri's Show-Me Institute and a visiting fellow at the Virginia-based Yorktown Foundation for Public Policy.

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