Louis541
Well-Known Member
As of lately I've seen alot of police hate threads. Most of which are justified. There are a couple that aren't all that serious and people will talk about hanging the cops. Maybe we should have a thread dedicated to the little things. I'll start.
http://www.economist.com/world/united-states/displaystory.cfm?story_id=16219747
In most states the police can seize property they suspect has been used to commit a crime. Under civil asset forfeiture laws, they typically do not have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a crime was committed, or even charge anyone with an offence. What is more, the money raised by auctioning seized houses, boats and cars is often used to boost the budgets of the police department that did the seizing. That can mean fancier patrol cars, badass hardware or simply keeping the budget plump in lean times. In one survey 40% of police executives agreed that funds from civil-asset forfeiture were necessary as a budget supplement. This conflict of interest has predictable consequences. It spurs the police to pay more attention to cases that are likely to involve seizable assets (such as drug busts) and less attention to other ones. A report from the Institute for Justice, a pressure group, calls it Policing for Profit.
http://www.economist.com/world/united-states/displaystory.cfm?story_id=16219747
In most states the police can seize property they suspect has been used to commit a crime. Under civil asset forfeiture laws, they typically do not have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a crime was committed, or even charge anyone with an offence. What is more, the money raised by auctioning seized houses, boats and cars is often used to boost the budgets of the police department that did the seizing. That can mean fancier patrol cars, badass hardware or simply keeping the budget plump in lean times. In one survey 40% of police executives agreed that funds from civil-asset forfeiture were necessary as a budget supplement. This conflict of interest has predictable consequences. It spurs the police to pay more attention to cases that are likely to involve seizable assets (such as drug busts) and less attention to other ones. A report from the Institute for Justice, a pressure group, calls it Policing for Profit.