There is a very good reason not to invest in real estate in the United
States today: Asset Forfeiture!
"Asset forfeiture" is a polite euphemism for the
government confiscation of private property. You probably know about
the doctrine of eminent domain, which lets the government decide to
put a freeway through your land if it wants to. using the power of
eminent domain, they can condemn your land and take it, and there is
very little you can do to stop them. Of course, they have to pay you
for it, because of the Fifth
Amendment's "just compensation" clause, which states:
"... nor shall private property be taken for public use,
without just compensation."
Forfeiture is very similar to eminent domain, but when your property
is confiscated under the forfeiture laws, they don't have to pay you
for it.
Asset forfeiture*
allows the government to confiscate private property without paying
for it, if the property was allegedly purchased with proceeds of
crime, or used to "facilitate" a crime. Under drug
forfeiture laws, land on which a drug transaction occurs can be
confiscated because it "facilitated" the transaction. Cars
used to drive to the scene of a transaction are said to
"facilitate" the transaction.
The Justice Department has gone so far as to argue that depositing
$1 in tainted money in your bank account allows them to forfeit the
entire account!
Property can be confiscated from innocent people for the crimes of
others. Even if you are totally innocent, you have to go through the
whole process, and prove at trial that you didn't know of or consent
to the illegal use of your property before you can get it back.
Forfeiture procedures allow the government to sieze property
without a hearing, and hold onto it until the case is over. Often the
police seize everything of value you own, so that you don't have any
money to hire a lawyer to fight your case. There is no right to court
appointed counsel in forfeiture cases.
In federal law, they make you pay the police 10% of the value of
your property in order to have any right to a trial at all! Even after
you pay the cost bond, you can still be denied the right to trial if
the judge grants "summary judgement" for the government.
This can happen if the judge decides there are no facts to dispute, or
that you don't have enough "credible" evidence to win at
trial.
At trial -- if you get one -- the property is presumed guilty. The
burden of proof is on you to prove your property should not be
forfeited. The courts even let the government use hearsay to prove
their case -- but they won't let you use hearsay to defend yourself.
Some state forfeiture statutes have even taken away the right to a
jury trial in all forfeiture cases.
You may say this could never happen in America because the U.S.
Constitution protects you. There you are wrong, because it is
happening in the U.S. -- at an alarmingly increasing pace.
Yes, it does seem to violate every principle in our Constitution
that our Founding Fathers held dear, including:
- Article III, Section 3, Paragraph 2: "The
Congress shall have power to declare the punishment of treason,
but no attainder of treason shall work corruption of blood, or
forfeiture except during the life of the person attainted." "Attainder"
is an ancient English concept that, upon conviction, all the
felon's or traitor's estate is forfeited. "Corruption of
blood" means the "attainted" person could not
inherit property nor could the person's heirs inherit property
from them. Thus this paragraph means that treason, considered the
most heinous of crimes by our Founding Fathers, could not be
punished by a forfeiture that cuts off the inheritance rights of
the traitor's heirs.
- Fourth Amendment: "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."
- Fifth Amendment: "... nor shall any person be ...
deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of
law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without
just compensation."
- Eight Amendment: "Excessive bail shall not be
required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual
punishments inflicted."
- Fourteenth Amendment: "... No state shall make or
enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges and immunities
of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any
person of life, liberty or property, without due process of law;
nor deny any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection
of the laws ..."
But do these provisions of the Constitution prevent your property from
being seized by police? Not these days. For the past twenty years or
so, constitutional rights have been increasingly eroded in forfeiture
cases. It was not until December of 1992 that the U.S. Supreme Court
recognized any significant constitutional protections in this area of
law. As I will demonstrate in this book, even the four back-to-back
victories in the Supreme Court in 1992 and 1993 are not enough to
protect your real estate from confiscation. The prudent investor
cannot ignore the threat of these laws to the safety of his
investments. It is often said that "ignorance of the law is no
excuse." That is indeed true in forfeiture cases, as many an
unwittting property owner has learned after losing his property
because of some obscure regulation he didn't know about.
This book will arm you with the knowledge of the law you need to
avoid most of the dangers of real property confiscation in the U.S.
today. But just be aware that the laws are rapidly changing. With new
forfeiture statutes being introduced in the legislatures by police
lobbyists every day, real estate investors are wise to stay on top of
the forfeiture laws. This book will get you up to speed for now, but
you'll need to keep current. Appendix D contains a list of
publications that regularly report changes in forfeiture laws and
confiscation practices. If you have money invested in U.S. real
estate, I'd suggest you subscribe to some of these publications.
* In this book I use the
terms "confiscation" and "forfeiture"
interchangeably. "Forfeiture" is the term that is now used
in the courts and legislatures to refer to these laws. but during the
American Civil War, the law was called the Confiscation Act.
Technically, "forfeiture" is the correct legal term for the
legal process that the government has to go through to get title to
confiscated property.
Your House is Under Arrest
by Brenda Grantland
© 1993 The Institute for The Preservation of Wealth, Inc.
Burnsville, MN
This book is available from the
INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY FOR INDIVIDUAL LIBERTY
1800 Market Street, San Francisco, California 94102
Tel: (415) 864-0952 Fax: (415) 864-7506