It's official. Obama wants to keep poor people poor.

This fall, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in Alvarez v. Smith, a challenge to Illinois' particularly brutal asset forfeiture law. The law allows the police to keep property seized in warrantless searches for up to six months before giving even a preliminary hearing, even if no criminal charges are filed.

That case is a challenge to a provision in the Illinois forfeiture laws that allow police to keep seized property a year or more before a claimant can have his day in court to get it back. This is particularly harsh on low-income people who may rely a seized car to get to work, or to shuttle kids around.

It’s worth noting that Obama’s Justice Department filed an amicus brief on behalf of the state in that case. They weren’t obligated to. Though the solicitor general’s office is charged with defending all federal laws, the law at issue in Alvarez is a state law, not a federal one. In fact, federal civil forfeiture laws are much friendlier to property owners. So you could make a decent case that the administration could have argued against the Illinois law. At the very least, it could have kept quiet. Instead, it argued that the state should retain the power to take property from people without ever charging a crime (and not necessarily kingpins—the Illinois law in question applies only to property valued at under $20,000), and keep that property for a year or more before affording the owner a chance to get it back.

Taking property from poor people without due process of law in order to enrich local police departments. Seems like the sort of thing Barack Obama might have fought to change in his days as a community organizer.
 
This fall, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in Alvarez v. Smith, a challenge to Illinois' particularly brutal asset forfeiture law. The law allows the police to keep property seized in warrantless searches for up to six months before giving even a preliminary hearing, even if no criminal charges are filed.

That case is a challenge to a provision in the Illinois forfeiture laws that allow police to keep seized property a year or more before a claimant can have his day in court to get it back. This is particularly harsh on low-income people who may rely a seized car to get to work, or to shuttle kids around.

It’s worth noting that Obama’s Justice Department filed an amicus brief on behalf of the state in that case. They weren’t obligated to. Though the solicitor general’s office is charged with defending all federal laws, the law at issue in Alvarez is a state law, not a federal one. In fact, federal civil forfeiture laws are much friendlier to property owners. So you could make a decent case that the administration could have argued against the Illinois law. At the very least, it could have kept quiet. Instead, it argued that the state should retain the power to take property from people without ever charging a crime (and not necessarily kingpins—the Illinois law in question applies only to property valued at under $20,000), and keep that property for a year or more before affording the owner a chance to get it back.

Taking property from poor people without due process of law in order to enrich local police departments. Seems like the sort of thing Barack Obama might have fought to change in his days as a community organizer.

Gee, surprise surprise! Obama is a total fucking douchebag like the resto of them! Who knew? :dunno:
 
Not six months. The amicus brief points out that the respondents demanded a probable cause hearing within ten business days. They're not constitutionally obliged to any hearing prior to the forfeiture hearing, pursuant to 38 F.3d at 324. That's what the disagreement is about.

Not that this is going to mean anything to you retards, but feel free to read it yourself:
http://www.abanet.org/publiced/preview/briefs/pdfs/07-08/08-351_PetitionerAmCuUSA.pdf

What is apparent is that you'll defend the same conservative asset forfeiture policies that were implemented by Reagan and both Bush's, now that they supported by Obama. you're a cheap sellout hack, is what you are. The fact that the PRESIDENT had to intervene with a brief concerning a STATE policy is all that matters. It means your POTUS hates the poor.
 
two things come to mind:

The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized

and

nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.

As we saw in East Texas these sort of laws are used to line the pockets of the cops and to fill the public coffers. Sometimes, just sometimes, I think about watering the tree of liberty.
 
“A Government is instituted to protect property of every sort . . . This being the end of government, that alone is a just government, which impartially secures to every man, whatever is his own.” James Madison
 
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