“You follow drugs, you get drug addicts and drug dealers. But you start to follow the money, and you don't know where the f*** it's gonna take you.”
This oft-cited wisdom comes from Detective Lester Freamon, a character in the classic HBO series The Wire, which tracked how an elite task force of (fictional) Baltimore cops used electronic surveillance to bring down criminal networks. But, the sentiment is ironic to a fault: if you keep following the money, it might take you right back to the police.
Asset forfeiture has long been a topic of controversy in law enforcement. Cops and prosecutors have had the power to seize property and cash from suspects before anyone has actually been convicted of a crime (usually narcotics-related). Then these law enforcement agencies have plugged a portion of that money (and money derived from auctioning of property) into their own budgets, allowing them to spend in ways that possibly would not have passed scrutiny during the formal appropriations process.Critics note that asset forfeiture creates a perverse incentive for policing priorities: the more assets cops seize, the more money they get to spend. Satirist John Oliver characterized the practice as akin to “legalized robbery by law enforcement” in a must-watch segment on his show Last Week Tonight. News organizations, including New York Times, the New Yorker and the Washington Free Beacon have recently outlined abuses of the system.
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The Washington Post has released its giant cache of Equitable Sharing Agreements from thousands of local law enforcement agencies around the country. We urge you to dig in, find your local cops, identify out how they’ve spend this money, and let the world know what you find.
(Score: 2) by kaszz on Friday January 23 2015, @07:08AM
Lesson? Start a drug business so you can afford seizures from time to time and still make a big profit? :D
(Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 23 2015, @07:47AM
Carry your cash on your person.
Get multiple wallets if necessary.
-- gewg_
(Score: 2) by urza9814 on Friday January 23 2015, @04:17PM
In many areas, if you're stopped for even a simple traffic violation you get a pat-down automatically. I've been given pat-downs for 5MPH over the speed limit -- and they never even issued a citation. Searched me, asked if I had any drugs or guns in the car (but didn't search it) and sent me on my way. Keep it on your person, they'll DEFINITELY find it. Keep it in your car, they MIGHT find it.
If you must carry it, just keep it well hidden. If it's on your person, you might need to make use of some...cavities.