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Forfeiture: Proceeds Of Criminal Activity Pays Law Enforcement Costs

Last updated on Friday, August 18, 2017

(INDIANAPOLIS) - Two Indiana Prosecutors said on Wednesday that civil forfeiture is a legal procedure, sanctioned by the Indiana Constitution, that saves city, county and state governments over $3 million in law enforcement costs each year.

Marion County Prosecutor Terry Curry and Delaware County Prosecutor Jeff Arnold told the legislative Interim Study Committee on Courts and the Judiciary that forfeiture saves tax dollar expenditures by providing essential supplies to county prosecutor's offices that county budgets cannot pay for. Law enforcement agencies also receive essential funds for needs such as drug dogs.

"The Delaware County Prosecutor's Office has had no budget increase in seven or eight years," said prosecutor Arnold. "Forfeiture money allows us to supplement our county budget. I was able to buy all of my deputy prosecutors laptop computers that they could take to court. That may sound primitive but we would not have been able to purchase those laptops any other way." Arnold said he also was able to provide training for his office's domestic violence unit with forfeiture funds.

Prosecutor Curry explained where, in some forfeiture cases, criminal prosecution cannot be pursued, such as in drug interdiction operations. Displaying a photograph that showed piles of money amounting to $2.6 million in cash, Curry told of a semi destined for McAllen Texas that was stopped on the west side of Indianapolis and upon investigation, a panel inside the trailer was removed and the cash fell out.

"These were clearly illicit funds," said Curry. "Without a forfeiture procedure, there is no way law enforcement could receive this money. This was obviously money destined for a sophisticated drug cartel."

Curry also said that restitution to victims - including Indiana taxpayers - is also possible through forfeiture. A criminal case against a chain of restaurants returned $1.86 million in unpaid sales tax to the state of Indiana.

Additionally, Indiana's forfeiture laws received the second-best rating in the country by the Institute for Justice, based on the protections afforded to property owners and the lack of incentives for law enforcement agencies to police for profit.

Facts about civil forfeiture in Indiana that prosecutors shared include:

To further alleviate misconceptions, Indiana prosecutors are proposing changes to the Indiana Code pertaining to forfeiture. Among the legislative proposals is that if property is returned without a forfeiture action being filed, the owner is not liable for towing, storage or maintenance fees. Additionally, if the court denies a forfeiture, the owner is not subject to charges for storage or other expenses incurred in the preservation of the property.

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