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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]here's some wikipedia articles for you: [/quote] I fixed the quotation for you so others could understand your question. Wiki is cute. There have to be real world examples of this for you to be this upset about it. I understand how the process works. I also understand that there are ways for suspects to get their property back. The most effective way is to prove the property was not related to criminal activity. That’s easy for innocent people to do.[/quote] Oh ok so you didn't actually read the articles. You should try that, and then you would fine that it is extremely hard, nearly impossible, to get your property back. Some cases report that the victims never got their property back because the police already spent it. [b]Which, getting back to the original topic of this thread, is a huge conflict of interest - that law enforcement directly benefits from the property that they seize without due process.[/b] If you read the article, you would find a list of real world examples cited there.[/quote] Police theft is the second largest problem the public faces besides immunity. Civil asset forfeiture allows law enforcement agencies to seize property, such as cash, vehicles, or real estate, based on the suspicion that the property was involved in criminal activity, even if the owner has not been charged or convicted of a crime. This legal process operates under the principle of in rem jurisdiction, meaning the case is brought against the property itself rather than the individual, treating the property as "guilty" of facilitating a crime. Over 100-200 Billion dollars have been taken from the public in the last 25 years via this legal doctrine. [/quote]
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