Police steal $400,000 from OH couple, no charges filed.

From Reason Magazine

For most of their lives, Luther and Meredith Ricks worked at a steel foundry near Lima, Ohio. They say they’ve lived frugally and managed to save more than $400,000 over the years; they don’t trust banks, so they kept their savings in a safe in their house.

In June 2007 two burglars broke into the couple’s home. Luther and his son were attacked, and his son was stabbed before the elder Ricks was able to shoot and kill one of the intruders. The local police determined that he acted in self-defense and cleared him of any criminal wrongdoing. But they also found a small amount of marijuana in the house, which Ricks says he was using to manage the pain from his arthritis and a hip replacement surgery.

Ricks was never charged for the marijuana. Asset forfeiture laws nonetheless allowed the police to confiscate the couple’s life savings. Although the federal government had nothing to do with the burglary investigation, the Federal Bureau of Investigation soon stepped in and claimed the money for the feds.

Such seizures were supposed to become more difficult after Congress passed the Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act in 2000. But David B. Smith, author of the legal casebook Prosecution and Defense of Forfeiture Cases, says the courts have been steadily mitigating the 2000 bill’s impact, both by narrowly interpreting the protections it grants defendants and by being overly deferential to prosecutors when determining if they’ve met the new evidentiary standard. One provision of the law, for example, says explicitly that the government must reimburse defendants for court and attorneys fees in forfeiture cases the government loses. But Smith argued a case in 2007 in which the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals refused to reimburse the legal fees of several defendants who were able to reclaim money seized by federal agents from a courier.

Ricks told a local newspaper the FBI informed him he has to prove he earned the money legitimately to get it back. Smith says that’s not quite correct. The 2000 law shifted the burden of proof from the owner of the seized property to the government, although it’s still a lower evidentiary standard than in a criminal case. “The FBI would need to show by a preponderance of the evidence that Ricks earned the money through illegal drug sales,” Smith says. Unless the bureau comes up with more evidence, that seems unlikely, given that the amount of marijuana in Ricks’ home was small enough that he wasn’t even charged.

Of course, most people in Ricks’ position aren’t familiar with the latest developments in forfeiture law. And they can’t afford to hire a lawyer who is, because the government has taken all of their money. At press time, several advocacy groups were mulling plans to offer Ricks legal representation.

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This case is absolutely appalling. for those who deny that America is turning into a police state, cases such as this only further prove the point that we are no longer a free people. The government can impose unconstitutional laws,and use said laws as an excuse to steal even more money from a supposedly free people.

When crimes like this are allowed to happen, it only acts to encourage more of the same. People need to stand up and fight for whats theirs. Criminal acts by government agents like this need to be stopped by whatever means necessary.

Feel free to contact the Lima, OH Police Dept. and make your feelings known.

Lima Police Department
117 E. Market St.
Lima, Ohio 45801
419-227-4444

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7 Responses to “Police steal $400,000 from OH couple, no charges filed.”

  1. I call bullshit!

  2. What exactly are you calling it on?

  3. Well thats definitely abuse. But if it was in your home, wouldnt it be well hidden enough that the police couldnt find it?

  4. Good point TOT.

    Even people who dont own guns should have a good sized gunsafe for specifically that reason.

  5. […] Original Post. Share:These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages. […]

  6. Typical case of illegal search and seizure~ I would like to know how much longer are we going to stand around while dirty law enforcement have their way with the American People?
    TOT~ I fully agree with you on that one, they need to practice their hiding abilities!

  7. […] Just out of spite, I am going to cash mine, keep the cash under my mattress, and not spend it. Or better yet, convert it to Euros. I’ll be good as long asfederal agents don’t steal it. […]

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