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Why sheriffs oppose medical pot: Profits, not public safety

Tudo

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Why sheriffs oppose medical pot: Profits, not public safety

Sheriffs oppose legalizing medical marijuana because they profit from drug arrests, writes Ray Stack of LEAP
<TIME class=trb_article_dateline_time data-datetime-timezone="EDT" data-datetime-monthshort="Sep." data-datetime-day="20" data-datetime-year="2014" data-datetime-weekday="Saturday" data-datetime-weekdayshort="Sat." data-datetime-daydiff="-1 days left" data-datetime-month="September"></TIME>
</HEADER><SECTION class=trb_mainContent data-role="panelmod_articleBody"> The opposition of the Florida Sheriffs Association to Amendment 2 has more to do with cash than public safety. The sheriffs have become so accustomed to federal anti-drug money and property forfeitures that they resist any change that might someday shut off their pipeline of cash, cars and property.
Consider Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd, Florida's most vocal opponent of medical-marijuana reform.

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During his highly publicized debate with attorney John Morgan, Judd vigorously defended his motives: "It may come as a shock to you," he told the audience in Lakeland, "but our budget is not predicated on arrests; it's not predicated on seizures; it's not created so we can spend that operating money on cars, or capital equipment, or operating equipment, or salaries."
Hogwash.
According to Justice Department records, the Polk County Sheriff's Office took in more than $1.2 million from the federal Assets Forfeiture Fund just since 2007, part of the $230 million that all of Florida's law-enforcement agencies received from the fund during that period.
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The fund distributes the proceeds of property seized in law-enforcement asset forfeitures, primarily from those suspected of drug crimes. No arrest is even required, and the standard of proof is significantly less than in a criminal case, making it a favorite tool of police and prosecutors. Carrying excess cash? It can be confiscated if officials can convince a judge the funds came from drug trafficking. Caught driving with a marijuana cigarette? Your car can be hauled away.
Between 1989 and 2010, U.S. attorneys seized at least $12.6 billion in assets, with the fund growing sixfold in just two decades, and from $2.9 billion to $4.4 billion in 2012 alone.

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The states were quick to jump on the forfeiture bandwagon, and Florida was no exception. According to a 2010 Institute for Justice study, Florida law-enforcement agencies seized $104 million in assets between 2001 and 2003.
Florida's Contraband Forfeiture Act lets the sheriffs and other local law-enforcement agencies keep 85 percent of the value of the property they seize, with the remainder given to charities — doubtless buying considerable good will for the elected sheriffs at campaign time.
Where does the money go? In 2003, it was reported that top Tampa police officials kept a 43-vehicle fleet of captured cars that included five Lincoln Navigators, a pair of Ford Expeditions, a BMW, a Lexus and — former Police Chief Bennie Holder's personal favorite — a $38,000 Chevy Tahoe.
More recently, federal officials froze nearly $30 million that had been seized by police in tiny Bal Harbor (population 2,574), after the department was found spending the money on a $100,000 35-foot boat with three Mercury outboards, a $7,000 police chiefs' banquet, a $15,000 laser virtual firing range and an "anti-drug beach bash," with a reported price tag of $21,000.
In the Broward County town of Sunrise, millions in soon-to-be-forfeited cash led narcotics officers to lure international drug buyers into suburban restaurants so the department could confiscate $6 million in just two years. Much of the money went for police overtime in coordinating the seizures, with one narcotics detective in 2012 bringing home a combined salary and overtime of $183,156 — more than his chief of police earned.
Law enforcement should be about protecting the public, not pocketing profits. The Niagara of forfeited money flowing into sheriffs' offices and police departments distorts the police mission — and, in the case of Florida's Amendment 2, has blinded some law-enforcement administrators to the compassionate benefits of medical marijuana.
No amount of money justifies turning otherwise law-abiding patients into criminals or forcing sick people into the illicit drug market, where their dollars support drug cartels and criminal gangs. The only risk posed by Amendment 2 is to the police administrators' bottom lines.
Ray Strack, who worked 27 years as a U.S. Customs special agent, is the principal Florida spokesperson for Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, a national organization.

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/opinion/os-ed-medical-marijuana-sheriffs-092014-20140919-story.html
 

Cool Moe

Active member
Veteran
Further proof that absolute power corrupts, absolutely, and that money is the root cause of so much evil in our world. Look at Roger Goodell and the NFL owners--they'd rather let criminals beat their spouses and children and murderers get away with murder than see any interruption to their cash flow/gravy train--gotta keep that cash rollin' in! Florida State and their rapist, thieving , Heismann trophy winning quarterback--gotta keep that cash rollin' in! Penn State admin giving Sandusky a free pass on child rape for 10 years--gotta keep that cash rollin' in! Catholic church covering up the rape and molestation of hundreds of thousands of Catholic kids--gotta keep that cash rollin' in!
 

stoned-trout

if it smells like fish
Veteran
in florida they can take your car if your caught buying pot in it....everyone makes money off pot arrests...lawyers,police, bail bondsman ect ..there is a whole list of folks benefitting from you being arrested
 

bombadil.360

Andinismo Hierbatero
Veteran
they might as well make gummy bears illegal so they can keep making innocent people into criminals with arbitrary laws based on nonsense and thus increase the amount of people they can scam out of their hard-earned money.
 

Tudo

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It would be good to see some smart computer person figure out all the information that needs to be figured out on these scumbags and publish across the internet.


NOTHING HIDDEN

That'll keep em busy awhile
 

bentom187

Active member
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Land of the free :rolleyes:

Civil Forfeiture Allows Cities to Seize Private Property from People Never Charged with Crimes

The Institute for Justice is leading a class-action lawsuit against the city of Philadelphia and its’ civil forfeiture practices. This litigation comes in light of the city seizing a family’s home because unbeknownst to the parents, their son made a drug deal on the property worth $40.

Civil forfeiture laws allow police departments to seize private property, sell it, and use the proceeds to fund their operations. The real owners of seized property do not have to be convicted or even charged with a crime to lose their property. Government can seize property, such as a car or home, if it’s found to “facilitate” a crime. In essence, the government sues the property itself.

As strange as this all sounds, the names of cases pertaining to civil forfeiture sound even more bizarre, such as Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. The Real Property and Improvements Known as 2544 N. Colorado Street; United States v. 434 Main Street, Tewksbury, Mass; and Commonwealth v. One 1958 Plymouth Sedan. The government literally sues a house or car, not a human. Innocent people can be punished for crimes that they did not even commit.

Even worse, the police departments use something known as equitable sharing, which hands over civil forfeiture cases to the federal government. Then, the feds allow police and prosecutors to keep about 80% of the profits. So even if state or local protections for property owners are there, enforcement can avoid these and still seize and profit off taken property using federal law.

While criminal forfeiture involves seizing property following a criminal conviction, under civil forfeiture, law enforcement can take your property without having to convict you of any crime. Further, those involved in criminal forfeiture are granted full constitutional rights, but those involved in a civil forfeiture receive none of these same protections, and you actually have the burden to prove your innocence, the exact opposite of how our legal system is supposed to operate.

Unfortunately, Philadelphia is not the only place in America where this is a problem. The Institute for Justice’s report “Policing for Profit” has revealed the nationwide practice of police departments profiting from civil forfeiture on real property. In 42 states, law enforcement can keep all the cash, cars and homes seized under civil forfeiture. The Institute for Justice graded the states on how well they protect property owners and only three states received a “B” or higher.

However, Philadelphia is disproportionately taking advantage of this flawed practice. According to Institute for Justice, from 2002-2012, Philadelphia received $64 million from civil forfeiture (about $6 million a year), and used $25 million to pay salaries of law enforcement, including civil forfeiture prosecutors, who all have incentives to see civil forfeiture continue with vigor.

The Institute recommends three changes to combat these actions:

1) Remove the profit incentive by reserving profits to the general treasury, education, or compensating victims

2) Reverse the burden of proof inversion – many people give up their cases because it is too hard to prove the property was not connected to the crime, even though that person is not even charged with a crime

3) Curb equitable sharing with a federal law ensuring that proceeds are distributed in accordance with state law so local agencies can’t get around state laws

Visit the Institute for Justice’s website http://endforfeiture.com to learn more about civil forfeiture.

Tell Your Senators: Support Rand Paul's FAIR Act and Uphold the 5th Amendment
 
I hate crooked cops for one reason, they all eat hypocrisy for breakfast, lunch and dinner. I live in Florida and the pot laws here are crazy. Get caught with more then 20 grams, yeah 20GRAMS not even an Ounce you just got Yourself a Felony son. Caught with any amount of MJ On you even a roach, you just lost your license for 2 yrs. Oh 16 plants mandatory 5 yrs in FSP. Now mind you our officers get Caught all the time with coke, pot, ecstacy, speeding, prostitutes, unjustified shootings, drug planting, And the good ole'... we Can drive you around the Corner and beat your ass or you Can go to jail.
:moon:
 

MJPassion

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It's way past time for Americans to stand up to the tyrants.

There are way more of "us" than "them".
 

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