U.S. Supreme Court To Hear Case Against UnConstitutional Asset
Forfeitures Against Citizens Awaiting Trial
October 17, 2013 by Ben Bullard
If citizens awaiting trial are truly innocent
until they have been proven guilty in court, why does the state have the power
to commence their punishment (and cripple their chances of a solid legal
defense) from the moment of their indictment?
The Supreme Court will hear a case this week
that could shape the future of Federal forfeiture laws, laws that allow the
state to seize and freeze the assets of the accused. Aside from violating the 5th
Amendment (which guarantees the government cannot seize personal property
without due process), as well as the 6th Amendment (which ensures
the accused a right to legal counsel of their choosing), forfeiture laws also
effectively return the burden of proof to the accused by robbing them of the
wealth they could otherwise use to pay for a robust legal defense.
Before the high court is the case of Kerri and
Brian Kaley, a New York couple who in 2007 were charged in a seven-count
indictment with illegally receiving obsolete or overstocked medical equipment
tossed aside by Ethicon, the device company that employed Kerri Kaley, and
conspiring to resell the equipment to a Miami-based distributor.
At no time has Ethicon ever alleged that the
Kaleys stole any of the equipment the company had voluntarily disposed of.
Rather, the couple learned in 2005 that they were the target of a Federal investigation into the growing “gray market” for
unneeded medical devices caught in the bureaucratic limbo between vendors,
which didn’t want them anymore, and hospitals, which routinely render unused
devices obsolete by adopting newer, pricier equipment as it becomes available.
The Kaleys had retained Miami criminal defense
attorney Howard Srebnick, who has remained on the case throughout its long
history. The couple had planned to finance their long and expensive legal
battle chiefly via a $500,000 home equity loan against their property, which they
converted to certificates of deposit. After their indictment, the government
seized all of that with the expectation that the Kaleys would never get the
money back once they had been found guilty (or had pleaded to some of the
charges).
As Reason succinctly stated in a Wednesday piece, the pre-trial forfeiture assures
prosecutors that the Kaleys “can no longer afford to pay the lawyers they chose
and trust, the people who have been representing them for eight years and are
familiar with the details of their case.”
According to The Miami Herald, Srebnick,
the Kaley’s longtime attorney, will argue before the Supreme Court that his
clients:
…should be allowed to keep their bank accounts
and other worldly possessions unless prosecutors can show before trial that the
evidence supporting an indictment justifies the seizure of those assets.
For decades, prosecutors have only needed to
point to a federal grand jury indictment to argue that defendants’ assets are
traceable to the criminal allegations and therefore can be seized. And judges
have almost always ruled in the prosecution’s favor because of the presumption
that the grand jury found “probable cause” that a crime was committed.
The Kaleys’ chances, though, appeared to be
better than those of many defendants. In a related but separate case arising
out of the Federal investigation, fellow Ethicon employee Jennifer Gruenstrass
went to trial and was found not guilty.
1 comment:
I hope this is beyond just bank accounts.
The system has accused and seized for a long time.
Some examples.
Accuse parents and seize their children from school.
Accuse organic growers and seize their crops and destroy them before their eyes.
Accuse travelers and seize the traveler and give them a trip to jail to seize funds via bail, and seize their property by having their transportation towed as soon as they have removed the traveler from the scene.
Accuse creditors of being debtors and seize their homes through fraud foreclosures in non-judicial states.
Accuse creditors of owing debts not validated and seizing their wages (which is not income) from their employer without court order.
Accuse people of being taxpayers and seizing their bank account or wages (again not taxable if you don't work for the federal government and especially if you are not a US Citizen)
Who has a right to claim ownership of another's property without due process? It boils down to all that we thought of as 'how things are done', is not how it's supposed to be done and you don't have to kill anyone that someone else pointed to you and said 'he/she is the bad guy/girl.'
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