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- Path: sparky!uunet!comp.vuw.ac.nz!canterbury.ac.nz!cantva!civl097
- From: civl097@csc.canterbury.ac.nz
- Subject: Pittsburgh 1991 article pt.III
- Message-ID: <1992Nov18.101207.1@csc.canterbury.ac.nz>
- Nntp-Posting-Host: cantva.canterbury.ac.nz
- Organization: University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 21:12:07 GMT
- Lines: 442
-
- This is a repost of the 1991 posting:
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
- Well the response to these articles continues to be great. I am quite
- happy. Again, I have some more comments.
-
- Several of you have said that there have been similar features in
- other papers, such as the St. Louis Dispatch, some unspecified papers
- in Minnesota and San Jose, the New York Times, and others. Most of you
- have been very helpful, but some of you have berated the efforts of
- the Pittsburgh Press as being "copy-cat" and behind the times. One
- person asked if tie-dye's were still in fashion in Pittsburgh. If you
- know of other similar pieces in major papers across the country,
- please bring them to my attention. Be as specific as you can, please.
-
- About copyrights....these articles are copyrighted by the
- Scripps-Howard news service, the parent company of the Press. I called
- the Press and tried to obtain permission. I explained as best I could
- about the net, and I did nothing but confuse them. One person I talked
- to said, "We try to support academic things as best we can, but we'll
- have to talk to [someone] to see about putting it on a news service
- wire. What's the name of your company again, Inter-what?" On the
- strength of that statement, as meaningless as it is, I'm posting these
- articles. Besides, I have firm belief that I am in no way harming
- sales of the Press. Someone there has promised to call me back. Of
- course, all typos are mine.
-
- Remember, this was originally on misc.legal and alt.drugs, so no need
- to put it there again. /Bernie\, cosell@bbn.com is putting them on
- talk.politics.drugs, so wait at least a day or two to put them there
- if you don't see them. And again, don't post them to inappropriate
- places, regardless of how important you think it is.
-
- About the other articles in the Press relating to this subject: NO, I
- will not type them in.
-
- The timing of this series is especially cool. The national Fraternal
- Order of Police is having a convention here in town, with visits by
- Bob Martinez, and King Bush.
-
- The thing about this article that surprized me the most was the utter
- calousness shown by some of the agents. Read on....
-
-
- Shawn
- -------------------------------------------
-
- The Pittsburgh Press, Tuesday, August 13, 1991
-
- The following article appeared as the HEADLINE on the FRONT PAGE
-
- P R E S U M E D G U I L T Y
- The Law's Victims in the War on Drugs
-
- Police profit by seizing homes of innocent
-
- by Andrew Schneider and Mary Pat Flaherty
-
- Part Three: Innocent owners
-
- The second time police came to the Hawaii home of Joseph and
- Frances Lopes, they came to take it.
-
- "They were in a car and a van. I was in the garage. They said,
- 'Mrs. Lopes, let's go into the house, and we will explain things to
- you.' They sat in the dining room and told me they were taking the
- house. It made my heart beat very fast."
-
- For the rest of the day, 60-year-old Frances and her
- 65-year-old husband, Joseph, trailed federal agents as they walked
- through every room of the Maui house, the agents recording the
- position of every piece of furniture on a video-tape that serves as
- the government's inventory.
-
- Four years after their mentally unstable adult son pleaded
- guilty to growing marijuana in their back yard for his own use, the
- Lopeses face the loss of their home. A Maui detective trolling for
- missed forfeiture opportunities spotted the old case. He recognized
- that the law allowed him to take away their property because they knew
- their son had committed a crime on it.
-
- A forfeiture law intended to strip drug traffickers of
- ill-gotten gains often is turned on people, like the Lopeses, who have
- not committed a crime. The incentive for police to do that is
- financial, since the federal government and most states let the police
- departments keep the proceeds from what they take.
-
- The law tries to temper maoney-making temptations with
- protections for innocent owners, including lien-holders, landlords
- whose tennants misuse property, or people unaware of their spouse's
- misdeeds. The protection is supposed to cover anyone with an interest
- in a property who can prove he did not know about the alleged illegal
- activity, did not consent to it, or took all reasonable steps to
- prevent it.
-
- But a Pittsburgh Press investigation found that those supposed
- safeguards do not come into play until after the government takes an
- asset, forcing innocent owners to hire attorneys to get their property
- back -- if they ever do.
-
- "As if the law weren't bad enough, they just clobber you
- financially," says Wayne Davis, an attorney from Little Rock, Ark.
-
- Feared for their son
-
- In 1987, Thomas Lopes, who was then 28 and living in his
- parents' home, pleaded guilty to growing marijuana in their back yard.
- Officers spotted it from a helicopter.
-
- Because it was his first offense, Thomas recieved probation
- and an order to see a psychologist. From the time he was young, mental
- problems tormented Thomas, and though he visited a psychologist as a
- tenn, he had refused to continue as he grew older, his parents say.
-
- Instead, he cloistered himself in his bedroom, leaving only to
- tend the garden.
-
- "We did ask him to stop, and he would say, 'Don't touch it',
- of he would do something to himself," says the elder Lopes, who worked
- on a sugar plantation and lived in its rented camp housing for 30
- years while he saved to buy his own home.
-
- Given Thomas' history, and a family history of mental problems
- that caused a grandparent and an uncle to be committed to
- institutions, the threats stymied his parents.
-
- The Lopeses, says their attorney Matthew Metnzer, "were under
- duress. Everyone who has been diagnosed in this family ended up being
- taken away. They could not conceive of any way of getting rid of the
- dope, without getting rid of their son, or losing him forever."
-
- When police arrived to arrest Thomas, "I was so happy because
- I knew he would get care," says his mother. He did, and he continues
- weekly doctor visits. His mood is better, Mrs. Lopes says, and he had
- never again grown marijuana or been arrested.
-
- But his guilty plea haunts his family.
-
- Because his parents admitted they knew what he was doing,
- their home was vulnerable to forfeiture.
-
- Back when Thomas was arrested, police rarely took homes. But
- since, agencies have learned how to use the law, and have seen the
- financial payoff, says Assistant U.S. Attorney Marshall Silverberg, of
- Honolulu.
-
- The also carefully review old cases for overlooked forfeiture
- possibilities, he says. The detective who uncovered the LLopes case
- started a forfeiture action in February -- just under the five-year
- deadline for staking such a claim.
-
- "I concede the time lapse on this case is longer than most,
- but there was a violation of the law, and that makes this appropriate,
- not money-grubbing," says Silverberg. "The other way to look at this,
- you know, is that the Lopeses could be happy we let them live there
- as long as we did."
-
- They don't see it that way.
-
- Neither does their attorney, who says his firm now has about
- eight similar forfeiture cases, all of them stemming from small-time
- crimes that occured years ago but were resurected. "Digging these
- cases out now is a business proposition, not law enforcement," Menzer
- says.
-
- "We thought it was all behind us," says Lopes. Now, "there
- isn't a day I don't think about what will happen to us."
-
- They remain in the house, paying taxes and mortgage, until the
- forfeiture case is resolved. Given court backlogs, that won't likely
- be until the middle of next year, Menzer says.
-
- They've been warned to leave everything as it was when the
- videotape was shot.
-
- "When they were going out the door," Mrs. Lopes says of the
- police, "they told me to take good care of the yard. They said they
- would be coming back one day."
-
- 'Dumb judgement'
-
-
- Protections for innocent owners are "a neglected issue in federal and
- state forfeiture law," concluded the Police Executive Research Forum
- in its March bulletin.
-
- But a chief policy maker on forfeiture maintains that the
- system is actively interested in protecting the rights of the
- innocent.
-
- George J. Terwilliger III, associate deputy general in the
- Justice Department, admits that there may be instances of 'dumb
- judgement.' And says if there's a 'systemic' problem, he'd like to
- know about it.
-
- But attorneys who battle forfeiture cases say dumb judgement
- is the systemic problem. And they point to some of Terwilliger's own
- decisions as examples.
-
- The forfeiture policy that Terwilliger crafts in the nation's
- capital he puts to use in his other federal job: U.S. attorney for
- Vermont.
-
- A coalition of Vermont residents, outraged by Terwilliger's
- forfeitures of homes in which small children live, launched a
- grass-roots movement called "Stop Forfeiture of Children's Homes."
- Three months old, the group has about 70 members from school
- principals to local medical societies.
-
- Forfeitures are a particularly sensitive issue in Vermont
- where state law forbids taking a person's primary home. That
- restriction appears nowhere in federal law, which means Vermont police
- departments can circumvent the state constraint by taking forfeiture
- cases through federal courts.
-
- The playmaker for that end-run: Terwilliger.
-
- "It's government sponsored child abuse that's destroying the
- future of children all over this state in the name of fighting the
- drug war," says Dr. Kathleen DePierro, a family practitioner who works
- at Vermont State Hospital, a psychiatric facility in Waterbury.
-
- The children of Karen and Reggie Lavallee, ages 6, 9 and 11,
- are precisely the type of victims over which the Vermonters agonize.
- Reggie Lavalle is serving a 10-year sentence in a federal prison in
- Minnesota for cocaine possesion.
-
- Because police said he had been involved in drug trafficking,
- his conviction cost his family their ranch house on 2 acres in a small
- village 20 miles east of Burlington. For the first time, the family is
- on welfare, in a rented duplex.
-
- "I don't condone what my husband did, but why victimize my
- children because of his actions? That house wasn't much, but it was
- ours. It was a home for the children, with rabbits, chicken, turkeys
- and a vegetable garden. Their friends were their and they liked the
- school," says Mrs. Lavallee, 29.
-
- After the eviction, "every night for months, Amber cried
- because she couldn't see her friends. I'd like to see the government
- tell this 9-year-old that this isn't cruel and unusual punishment."
-
- Terwilliger's dual role particularly troubles DePierro. "It's
- horrifying to know he's setting policy that could expand this type of
- terror and abuse to kids in every state in the nation."
-
- Terwilliger calls the groups allegations absurd. "If there was
- someone to blame, it would be the parents and not the government."
-
- Lawyers like John MacFadyen, a defense attorney in Providence,
- R.I., find it harder to fix blame.
-
- "The flaw with the innocent owner thing is that life doesn't
- paint itself in black and white. It's oftentimes gray, and there is no
- room for gray in these laws," MacFadyen says. As a consequence,
- prosecutors presume everyone guilty and leave it to them to show
- otherwise. "That's not good judgement. In fact, if defies common
- sense."
-
- Proving innocence
-
- Innocent owners who defend their interests expose themselves to
- questioning that bores deep into their private affairs. Because the
- forfeiture law is civil, they also have no protection against self
- incrimination, which means they risk having anything they say used
- against them later.
-
- The documentation required of innocent owner Loretta Stearns
- illustrates how deeply the government plumbs.
-
- The Connecticut woman lent her adult son $40,000 in 1988 to
- but a home in Tequesta, Fla., court documents show.
-
- Unlike many parents who treat such transactions informally,
- she had the foresight to record the loan as a mortgage with Palm Beach
- County. Her action ultimately protected her interest in the house
- after the federal government seized it, claiming her son stored
- cocaine there. He has not been charged criminally.
-
- The seizure occured in November, and it took until last May
- before Mrs. Stearns convinced the government she had a legitimate
- interest in the house.
-
- To prove herself an innocent owner, Mrs. Stearns met 14
- requests for information, including providing "all documents of any
- kind whatsoever pertaining to your mortgage, including but not limited
- to, loan application, credit reports, record of mortgage and mortgage
- payments, title reports, appraisal reports, closing documents, records
- of any liens, attachments on the defendant's property, records of
- payments, cancelled checks, internal correspondence or notes
- (handwritten or typed) relating to any of the above and opinion letter
- from borrower's or lender's counsel relating to any of the above."
-
- And that was just question No. 1.
-
- Landlord as cop
-
- Innocent owners are supposed to be sheilded in forfeitures,
- but at times they've been expected to become virtual cops in order to
- protect their property from seizure.
-
- T.T. Masonry Inc. owns a 36-unit apartment building in
- Milwaukee, Wis. that's plauged by dope dealing. Between January, 1990,
- when it bought the building, and July 1990, when the city formally
- warned it about problems, the landlord evicted 10 tenants suspected of
- drug use, gave a master key to local beat and vice cops, forwarded
- tips to police, and hired two security firms -- including an off-duty
- police officer -- to patrol the building.
-
- Despite that effort, the city seized the property.
-
- Assistant City Attorney David Stanosz says "oce a property
- develops a reputation as a place to buy drugs, the only way to fix
- that is to leave it totally vacant for a number of months. This
- landlord doesn't want to do that."
-
- Correct, says Jerome Buting, attorney for Tom Torp of Masonry.
-
- "If this building is such a atarget for dealers, use that
- fact," says Buting. "Let undercover people go in. But when I raised
- that, the answer was they were short of officers and resources."
-
- It looks like coke
-
- Grady McClendon, 53, his wife, two of their adult children and
- two grandchildren -- 7 and 8 -- were in a rented car headed to their
- Florida home in August 1989. They were returning from a family reunion
- in Dublin, Ga.
-
- In Fitzgerald, Ga., McClendon made a wrong turn on a one-way
- street. Local police stopped him, checked his identification, and
- asked his permission to search the car. He agreed.
-
- Within minutes, police pulled open suitcases and purses,
- emptying-out jewelry and about 10 Florida state lottery tickets. They
- also found a registered handgun.
-
- Then, says McClendon, the police "started waving a little
- stick they said was cocaine. They told me to put on my glasses and
- take a good look. I told them I'd never seen cocaine for real, but
- that didn't look like TV."
-
- For about six hours, police detained the McClendon family at
- the police station where officers seized $2,300 in cash and other
- items as "instruments of drug activity and gambling paraphernalia" --
- a reference to the lottery tickets.
-
- Finally, the gave the McClendon's a traffic ticket and
- released them, but kept the family possessions.
-
- For 11 months, McClendon's attorney argued with the state,
- finally forcing it to produce lab test results on the "cocaine."
-
- James E. Turk, the prosecutor who handled the case, will say
- only "it came back negative."
-
- "That's because it was bubble gum," says Jerry Froelich,
- McClendon's attorney. A judge returned the McClendon's items.
-
- Turk considers the search "a good stop. They had no proof of
- where they lived beyond drivers' licenses. They had jewelry that could
- have been contraband, but we couldn't prove it was stolen. And they
- had more cash than I would expect them to carry."
-
- McClendon says, "I didn't see anything wrong with them assking
- to search me. That's their job. But the rest of it was wrong, wrong,
- wrong."
-
- Seller, beware
-
- Owners who press the government for damages are rare. Those
- who do are often helped by attorneys who forgo their usual fees
- because of their own indignation over the law.
-
- For nearly a decade, the lives of Carl and Mary Shelden of
- Moraga, Calif., have been intertwined with the life of a convicted
- criminal who happened to buy their house.
-
- The complex litigation began when the Shelden's sold their
- home in 1979, but took back a deed of trust from the buyer -- an
- arrangement that made the Shelden's a mortgage holder on the house.
-
- Four years later the buyer was arrested and convicted of
- running an interstate prostitution ring. His property, including the
- home on which the Shelden's held the mortgage, was forfeited. The
- criminal, pending his appeal, went to jail, but the government allowed
- his family to live in the home rent-free.
-
- Panicked when they read about the arrest in the newspaper, the
- Shelden's discovered they couldn't forclose against the government and
- couldn't collect mortgage payments from the criminal.
-
- After tortuous court appearances, the Shelden's got back the
- home in 1987, but discovered it was so severelt damaged while in
- government control that they can now stick their hands between the
- bricks near the front door.
-
- The home the Shelden's sold in 1979 for $289,000 was valued at
- $115,500 in 1987 and now needs nearly $500,000 in repairs, the
- Sheldens say, chiefly from uncorrected drainage problems that caused a
- retaining wall to let loose and twist apart the main house.
-
- Disgusted, they returned to court, saying their Fifth
- Amaendment rights had been violated. The amendment prohibits the
- taking of private property for public use without just compensation.
- Their attorney, Brenda Grantland of Washington, D.C., argues that when
- the government seized the property but failed to sell it promptly and
- pay off the Sheldens, it violated their rights.
-
- Between 1983 and today, the Sheldens have defended their
- mortgage through every type of court: forclosures, U.S. District
- Court, Bankruptcy, U.S. Claims.
-
- In January, 1990, a federal judge issued an opinion agreeing
- the Sheldens rights had been violated. The government asked the judge
- to reconsider, and he agreed. A final opinion has not been issued.
-
- "It's been a roller coaster," says Mrs. Shelden, 46. A
- secretary, she is the family's breadwinner. Shelden, 50, was
- permanently disbaledwhen he broke his back in 1976 while repairing
- his home. Because he was unable to work, the couple couldn't afford
- the house, so they sold it -- the act that pitched them into their
- decade-long legal quagmire.
-
- They've tried to rent the damaged home to a family -- a real
- estate agent showed it 27 times with no takers -- then resorted to
- rewnting to college students, then room-by-room boarders. Finally,
- they and their children, ages 21 and 16, moved back in.
-
- "We owe Brenda (Grantland) thousands at this point, but she's
- really been a doll," says Shelden. "Without people like her, people
- like us wouldn't stand a chance."--
- Shawn Valentine Hernan |Wizard-wanna-be | STOP
- Computing and Information Services|Systems & Networks |the war on drugs!
- University of Pittsburgh |valentin@unix.cis.pitt.edu| It is a
- (412) 624-6425 |valentin@PITTVMS.BITNET | WITCHHUNT!
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- reposted by:-
- Brandon Hutchison,University of Canterbury,Christchurch
- New Zealand
-
-