PHOENIX β State lawmakers are moving to limit the power of police and prosecutors to take away property they say is involved in criminal activity without first having to convict the owner of a crime.
A wide-ranging measure to reform the stateβs civil-asset forfeiture laws would scrap the current standard, which requires prosecutors to prove only by a βpreponderance of the evidenceβ that the property is linked to a crime. That essentially means it is more likely than not linked, akin to a 51-49 percent balance.
Instead, prosecutors would have to provide βclear and convincing evidenceβ to a judge of the connection between the house, vehicle, cash, computer or other item that they want to seize and convert for their own use.
Thatβs not quite the same as the βbeyond a reasonable doubtβ required for a criminal conviction. But Rep. Eddie Farnsworth, R-Gilbert, said it strikes a reasonable balance between the need to deny criminals the tools of their crimes and the rights of individuals to be free from wanton seizures.
HB 2477 would make changes to some other advantages prosecutors now have in court.
It would make it more likely that property owners get their day in court.
The issue there is financial. βWe have, for example, somebody who loses a $5,000 car because their son has marijuana on the front seat,β Farnsworth explained. βThey have to spend $10,000 to try and get an attorney to get their property back. Well, that doesnβt work.β
But the changes go beyond the property owner being able to recover his or her legal fees. The legislation, awaiting House action after unanimous approval last week by the Government Committee, also would repeal existing laws that can force someone who sues to get property back but loses in court to pay the legal bills of the government agency.
Attorney Amy Kalman said Arizona is only one of two states that has such a provision in the statutes.
βRunning the risk of paying thousands if not hundreds of thousands of dollars if they did not prevail in court really was such a huge chilling effect on even being able to litigate and fight for their property,β said Kalman, who is with Arizona Attorneys for Criminal Justice, a group made up largely of defense lawyers.
βIf a person came to me and said βIβd like to fight to get my car back,β Iβd have to have told them βYou run a huge risk of having to pay a lot more than your car is even worth if you fight this,ββ she said.
Will Gaona of the American Civil Liberties Union said prosecutors are using that provision to deter people from even thinking about trying to get their property back.
He read lawmakers a letter a Pinal County prosecutor sent to a defense lawyer who was raising the issue of the legality of a clientβs seized property. That prosecu- tor, Gaona said, wrote that he always asks judges to award fees as a method of increasing the financial risk for people who choose to fight.
βThe government shouldnβt be able to threaten people with attorneysβ fees to keep people out of court,β Gaona said.
HB 2477 also would eliminate a provision that now precludes property owners from saying that some of the evidence prosecutors are using should not be considered because it was illegally obtained. That right to suppression now exists only in criminal cases.
But under current law, prosecutors can use evidence that is inadmissible in criminal cases in trying to take someoneβs property.
Rep. David Stringer, R-Prescott, questioned whether the changes go far enough.
He asked why the state should be able to take property at all without first getting a criminal conviction, something that requires showing beyond a reasonable doubt that the person is guilty of an offense.
Farnsworth said the problem is that no one knows whether police and prosecutors are abusing the law.
Nor are there any statistics about how many times property is seized and there is no criminal conviction or no one was even charged with a crime.
HB 2477 would require an accounting of all seizures, whether there was a criminal conviction, whether the owner sued, whether that person had a lawyer and what ultimately happened.
Farnsworth said once lawmakers have that information, they will be better able to tell if further changes are necessary.
βWe donβt want to harm law enforcement in the name of going too far,β he said.
βBut law enforcement isnβt my primary concern,β Farnsworth continued. βProtection of citizens against law enforcement that may be doing things that theyβre not supposed to do, thatβs my primary concern.β
So far, prosecutors have not opposed the changes. Where they are balking is on losing their ability to decide how to spend the dollars gained from forfeitures, and handing the final decision to county supervisors.
Deputy Pima County Attorney Kathleen Mayer said that βinjects needless politics into this process.β
βSometimes there are conflicts between a county attorney and the Board of Supervisors,β she said. Mayer wants to know what will happen if the supervisors deny what prosecutors believe is βa perfectly legal request.β
Aimee Rigler of the Arizona Free Enterprise Club said the spending canβt be left to police and prosecutors.
She cited a mailing by Paul Babeu, paid for with civil forfeiture dollars, when he was Pinal County sheriff. It went out to voters about six months before the GOP congressional primary race in which he was running.
Rigler said while it βlooks like electioneering,β it probably fits within whatβs allowed under existing laws, though she questioned whether it would have been allowed had Babeu needed to get permission of supervisors for the expenditure.
Then thereβs the criminal conviction of Christopher Radtke, the former chief deputy for the Pima County Sheriffβs Department. Radtke recently pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges after being accused in a federal indictment of misusing roughly $500,000 that had been seized from criminals.
Thereβs a lot of seized money out there.
Paul Avelar of the Institute for Justice told lawmakers that police and prosecutors have collected more than $485 million in seized assets since 2000 and are sitting on about $66 million right now.