Cases
The Institute for Justice, which has filed a friend of the court brief in support of the plaintiffs, believes that civil forfeiture is one of the greatest dangers to private-property rights in the nation today. Recent changes in the law of civil forfeiture, which let law enforcement keep the lion’s share of any forfeited assets, have distorted how police and prosecutors do their jobs. Those changes have also led to horrific abuses, where law enforcement has taken ordinary peoples' property without any suspicion that any laws have been broken.
This runaway behavior by law enforcement is inconsistent with the respect the Constitution has for private property. IJ calls for the Court to check executive overreaching, and protect individuals' private-property rights, by holding that the Constitution requires law enforcement to justify its actions as a prompt hearing before a neutral court.
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Essential Background |
Images |
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Latest Release: Institute for Justice Urges U.S. Supreme Court To Curb “Policing for Profit” In Civil Forfeiture |
Client Photo - none available |
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Legal Briefs and Decisions |
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Download: Institute for Justice Supreme Court Amicus (August 2009) |
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Case Timeline |
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Oral Argument: |
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TBD |
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Supreme Court ruling, TBD |
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Additional Releases |
Maps, Charts and Facts |
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| Release: Institute for Justice Urges U.S. Supreme Court To Curb “Policing for Profit” In Civil Forfeiture (August 10, 2009) |
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Op-eds, News Articles and Links |
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Article: IJ Amicus Brief Urges High Court to Rein in "Policing for Profit" Liberty & Law (October 2009) |
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