Oh my god I laughed so hard.Police response times in this forum are freaking terrible
Likewise. I'm still laughing. That was really fucking funny.Oh my god I laughed so hard.
No, it took him a year to respond.I suspect that OC might not be allowed to respond, due to department regs or such.
What is this forum, Virtual Detroit?No, it took him a year to respond.
Couldn't agree with him more. Lookin' at you BC.
Because governments will take whatever the people don't actively stop them from taking, and feel justified in doing so.Still don't understand why this is a thing.
What bugs me more is the police officers that are actively encouraging it. Is that the kind of country they want to live in? Is it the "I'm part of the power structure so it won't harm me" mentality showing up here, or what?Because governments will take whatever the people don't actively stop them from taking, and feel justified in doing so.
It's really hilariously awful that we have separate megathreads for the Police physically beating and then also outright stealing.
Anyone willing to buy a second hand Bandidos bike?About 100 motorcycles from the crime scene were seized through civil forfeiture law and will likely be auctioned off by the county, regardless of whether their owners are bailed or convicted.
The federal agents...showed McLellan paperwork that included deposits to the store’s account at Lumbee Guaranty Bank. The statements showed two deposits made within a 24-hour period totaling $11,400. The statements, they said, indicated he had a history of consistent cash deposits of less than $10,000, which is illegal. Then, the agents told the small business owner [that] The Internal Revenue Service had seized all of the money in L&M’s bank account: $107,702.66.
Well, that's mighty generous of them. Fortunately this story had a somewhat happy ending, where the case was dismissed...just three days after the above story was published.Months after seizing McLellan’s money, the federal government offered him 50 percent of his money back if he agreed to a settlement deal by March 30.
Law preventing property seizures cutting into police budgets
Boo-New Mexico law enforcement agencies say a new state law that prevents authorities from seizing assets from people unless they are convicted of a crime will devastate their budgets.
The issue isn't even that they can write fines. The issue is they get a cut of it. This incentivizes them to write as many fines as they can for profit. I have no problem with the police writing fines for drunk driving or just generally improper vehicle behavior, but those fines should be going towards road and bridge maintenance.Police getting a cut of the fines they write is a horrible thing only around in countries known for their corrupt administration, police states, and the USA. Much as I'd like more cops around here giving out fines for little crap occasionally (the amount of dangerous driving on Belgian roads is beyond help), it's a horrible faux solution.
DoJ shuts down asset forfeiture program after Congress slashes its budget
...
States have been trying to curb this practice, changing state law so that law enforcement agencies wouldn't get to keep the stuff their seized. But the DoJ wouldn't play along, meaning that cops could still keep stuff by confiscating it under federal, not state law.
Attempts to get the DoJ to play along have proved fruitless. After all, the DoJ got to split the take with local law-enforcement.. So in last week's budget bill, Congress took $1.2 billion away from the DoJ, money that they used to administer the program. Without that subsidy, the program became a money-loser. It is dead.
...