Update on the Ricks Forfieture Case
Radley Balko | March 21, 2008, 12:34pm
Bob Ewing of the Institute for Justice has an op-ed in the Cleveland Plain Dealer today on the outrageous case of Luther and Meredith Ricks, a Lima, Ohio couple who lost $400,000 in life savings to civil asset forfeiture.
(Disclosure: After reading about the Ricks case on my personal site and at reason, a friend of mine persuaded his law firm to represent the Ricks pro-bono.)
TrickyVic | March 21, 2008, 4:20pm | #
"""Second, TrickyVic, I would not be so sure that SCOTUS would rule against this so much as uphold it. Please review Kelo vs New London which prompted the 2006 law quoted in the op-ed."""
Kelo was offered compensation for the property seized. The Ricks were not offered compensation for their property seized. If the issue is government seizure. Kelo complied with the constituional requirement of compensation, not so with the Ricks. Assuming property seizure is the issue. SCOTUS would rule with the Ricks since they were not offered compensation. However, I don't know if that would be the issue since the FBI does like charging money with a crime as Fred mentioned. I would love to see a case about charging items with crimes appear before SCOTUS. Fred, I would be curious if in any of those cases, the money received a court appointed defense attorney.
""innocent until proven guilty applies in Criminal cases, not cival cases."""
I think it does, but the standard of proof is lower, the prepoderance of the evidence, in lieu of beyond reasonable doubt, like a criminal trial. However, civil asset forfieture is not about a civil trial anyway. It's about assets used while commiting a criminal act. Get a DWI, they take your car. Sell some pot and they take any money they believe was made from the selling of pot.
It doesn't make any sense in this case because they are not being charged with a crime. My bet is that it is unconstituional. Even if SCOTUS upheld forfietures, they would shoot this one down because it's not connected to due process since the Ricks are not being charged.
No due process, no compensation. They just want to keep the money because it was there.
How could it be constitutional? I firmly believe that SCOTUS would see it for what it is.