Carrying Cash? Be Ready to Lose It

Guest Post by Mark Nestmann

Don’t trust banks to protect the money you’ve deposited? You’re hardly alone.

From a legal standpoint, the money you deposit in a bank no longer belongs to you. Instead, the bank owns it. You are merely just another one of their unsecured creditors. What’s more, in the event of future bank failures, the US government has now signed an international agreement confirming that it will not pay off depositors. Instead, it will force them to submit to a “bail-in” regime, like bank depositors in Cyprus experienced in 2013.

The bail-in scenario, on top of the lowest interest rates in 5,000 years, has led many bank depositors to make the entirely rational decision to withdraw their savings from banks. They’re taking the cash and storing it, often in a home safe. Indeed, sales of home safes are soaring worldwide.

This behavior deeply disturbs the powers that be. In response, they’ve imposed stricter and stricter controls on cash. I wrote about those controls a year and a half ago, and since then, it’s only gotten worse.

In the US, one strategy the government uses to discourage people from holding cash is civil forfeiture. Under this Alice-in-Wonderland legal process, cops can seize your cash – or anything else you own – if they believe that it’s somehow connected to a crime… any crime. You don’t need to be convicted, accused, or even arrested for a crime to lose everything you own.

Consider the case of Emiliano Gomez Gonzolez. During a traffic stop, Nebraska state troopers asked Gonzolez for permission to search his vehicle. During the search, the troopers found bundles of currency totaling $124,700. Based on a dog sniffing narcotics residue on the cash, police seized all the money. This is hardly “proof” that the cash is the proceeds of illegal drug sales; more than 90% of US bills actually contain traces of cocaine.

Gonzolez contested the forfeiture in court. Prosecutors neither convicted nor accused Gonzolez or any of the other owners of the seized cash of any crime. Nor did police find any drugs, drug paraphernalia, or drug records connected to the cash. Despite these facts, a federal appeals court upheld the confiscation of every dollar found in the vehicle.

Gonzolez was an exception because he fought the seizure of his cash. Most defendants don’t because the burden of proof is reversed in a civil forfeiture case. In a criminal proceeding, you have the right to be presumed innocent until a jury finds you guilty “beyond a reasonable doubt.” If police seize your property in a civil forfeiture, it’s “presumed guilty.” It’s up to you to prove that it’s not associated with a crime. That’s a tall order and a big reason why 80% of forfeiture cases go uncontested.

The procedural rules governing forfeiture cases are also very complex. Only a handful of attorneys are familiar with them, and they charge accordingly for this knowledge. The last time I checked, I couldn’t find an attorney willing to help a client reclaim wrongfully seized property from police for a retainer under $20,000. If you’re poor, like most victims of civil forfeiture, there’s no way you’ll be able to come up with the money to contest the seizure.

The biggest reason cops love civil forfeiture is that the seizing agency generally gets to use the seized property for its own purposes. It’s literally “policing for profit.” While each state has its own rules for what cops can buy with the money they confiscate, pretty much anything goes:

  • Milwaukee County sheriffs invested $25,000 in forfeited monies for “customer service training” from the Disney Institute.
  • Police in Bal Harbour, Florida, with an estimated 2014 population of 2,633, spent $23,000 flying first class to Chicago, Las Vegas, and Los Angeles. On arrival, they drove in style in deluxe vehicles such as a Cadillac SRX and a Lincoln Town Car. The police department later spent $7,000 on a banquet and $21,000 on an “anti-drug beach bash.”
  • Romulus, Michigan’s police chief used forfeited assets to buy a $75,000 tanning salon for his wife. He spent another $40,000 on marijuana, alcohol, and prostitutes.
  • A Texas district attorney spent $267,449 in forfeited assets on travel expenses, including numerous junkets to casinos.
  • Another Texas district attorney treated his office and their spouses to Hawaii for a “law conference.” He paid for it with $27,000 in asset forfeiture proceeds.
  • The sheriff of Camden County, Georgia, used $90,000 of forfeited assets to buy a Dodge Viper for the county’s Drug Awareness and Resistance Education (DARE) program. He also paid prison inmates $35,000 to build a “very nice party house” for himself.

Admittedly, a few of these purchases broke even the very lax rules for the permissible use of seized assets. For instance, in 2014, the former police chief of Romulus, Michigan, was sent to prison. He and five other officers allegedly embezzled more than $100,000.

But it’s not just state and local governments that are getting in on all the fun. Federal law has authorized civil forfeiture since the dawn of the Republic more than two centuries ago. And it’s become quite profitable. The Department of Justice alone seized more than $4.5 billion in 2014. It’s just one of many federal agencies with the authority to confiscate property under federal civil forfeiture laws.

That should come as no surprise. In 1989, the Supreme Court actually ruled the federal government has a legitimate financial interest to maximize forfeiture revenues. Since then, federal agencies have developed highly sophisticated techniques to do just that.

Take the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), for instance. Earlier this year, an investigation revealed that the DEA routinely carries out “data mining” of Americans’ travel information to build profiles of individuals who might be carrying large sums of cash. Using a nationwide network of travel industry informants, the DEA gives special attention to individuals who meet secret “drug courier” profiles, such as buying one-way tickets or purchasing their tickets with cash. Amtrak and airline employees who pass information on to the DEA are eligible for generous commissions if the tip leads to a seizure.

Over the last decade, the agency has seized at least $209 million in cash from 5,200 passengers. In the vast majority of cases, the passengers weren’t arrested; they were given a receipt for the seized cash and sent on their way. For instance, of 1,600 DEA forfeitures in Los Angeles in the last 10 years, only one was in connection with a criminal investigation.

Are you outraged? You should be – and it’s probably about to get worse. President-elect Donald Trump has proposed a “Restoring Community Safety Act” that he claims will reduce “surging” crime in America’s cities. But the fact is that violent crime nationwide has actually been falling for the last 25 years. Given the love affair police at all levels of government have for civil forfeiture, it’s inconceivable that a Trump anti-crime bill won’t further unleash the forfeiture squads on America.

But there’s no law – yet – that says you can’t move a portion of your assets outside the US to countries that don’t have civil forfeiture laws (most don’t). Even if you don’t fit the “profile” for a civil forfeiture – and you probably do, because it’s so broad – you should seriously consider international diversification. A Plan B, if you will.

Today couldn’t be soon enough to begin putting it in place.

Protecting your assets (and yourself) against any threat – from the government, the IRS or a frivolous lawsuit – is something The Nestmann Group has helped more than 15,000 Americans do over the last 30 years.

Feel free to get in touch at [email protected] or call +1 (602) 688-7552 to learn how we can help you.

 

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12 Comments
Iska Waran
Iska Waran
December 6, 2016 9:18 am

I don’t know bout you, but I’m calling 1-800 axe Gary. I don’t understand by what arcane legal theory asset forfeiture is constitutional. “No person shall be … deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law”. 5th amendment.

Greg in NC
Greg in NC
  Iska Waran
December 6, 2016 9:56 am

Article 1 section 10 states that “No state shall make any thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts”. If that doesn’t matter neither does the 5th, 1st, 2nd, etc, and the removal and confiscation of gold way back from 1913 to 1933 was civil forfeiture on a mass scale. Of course, it was for “the good of the people” just like it is today.

It seems that everybody likes and trusts the goobermint to do the right thing as long as “their guy” is president. The fact is we never reverse course no matter whose guy gets in.

Jason Calley
Jason Calley
  Iska Waran
December 6, 2016 10:10 am

Hey Iska! “I don’t understand by what arcane legal theory asset forfeiture is constitutional. ”

Of course you are right; it is NOT Constitutional. The truth is, the US is not a Constitutional Republic any more and has not been for a long time. It is just so painful to face that fact that most Americans refuse to consider it.

The pretend reason why they say it is legal is that the object itself has broken the law. The authorities are not really taking your stuff without paying. The money has committed a crime; it took part in illegal drug deals and now it is being taken into custody by the police. Nothing personal, nothing about you, it is just that that evil roll of $20 bills has to go to jail! As for “innocent until proven guilty”, that gets thrown out as well. After all, the Constitution is for people, and that roll of cash is not a person, so the Constitution does not apply. They say it is guilty, therefore it is guilty.

They call it asset forfeiture — but it is really just theft, just highway robbery. The next time someone tells you that the thin blue line only has a few bad apples, don’t believe it. They are thieves.

Platoplubius
Platoplubius
  Jason Calley
December 6, 2016 12:13 pm

@ Jason
Bravo! Kudos! If most people understood that the U.S. is not a constitutional republic and hasnt been one in a long time, along with all of.the ramifications this entails, maybe we can make some positive headway and real change!
The synchronization of world governments laws to fit under the umbrella of the nefarious institution the United Nations’ “recommendations” and its Declarations of human rights like you are guilty until proven innocent and not by a jury of your peers, rather a tribunal…or that the State can usurp parental rights and can legislate how a child is to be raised by their parents…even removing children from the home regardless of religious beliefs…suggest we live in a neo feudal state run by Big business and an etablished behind the scenes oligarchy!
If the average American realized the significance of Admiralty/Maritime law, codes, regulations, judicial review that has empowered the “recommendations” of the U.N. and relegated the soveriegnty of the U.S. to nothing more than an empty vessel still in possession of the largest military in the world which consistently is being used for the fulfillment of the globalist agenda of the destruction of the nation state as a viable solution for governance
Ente”right wing, nationalist movements” to set up final battles needed for order to be obtained from the chaos being sewn

Anonymous
Anonymous
December 6, 2016 9:33 am

I’m not sure if the law is the same in all jurisdictions, but the only case I’m familiar with in a property seizure action (cash seizure) required the defendant (technically the plaintiff in this action) to post cash bond equal to the amount being contested.

Something difficult for most people to do since their money has been seized.

A major reason so many seizures go uncontested.

I imagine it will play out the same way with money taken in bank “bail in” actions, technically possible but in reality impossible for most people living in the real world.

Barnum Bailey
Barnum Bailey
  Anonymous
December 6, 2016 12:02 pm

Some states explicitly prohibit CAF.

Trapped in Portlandia
Trapped in Portlandia
December 6, 2016 11:40 am

Why don’t we just replace the eagle on the US emblem with a bunch of bananas to properly symbolize the banana republic we’ve become.

Barnum Bailey
Barnum Bailey
December 6, 2016 12:11 pm

While Civil Asset Forfeiture is a legal travesty, and instances of it are often morally outrageous, we must not forget that the anecdotes remain the exception, not the rule.

Nestmann (among others) promotes what amounts to trusting banks in other countries more than you trust your own system. There’s good money to be made in offering frightened people a “fix.”

For instance, if you want, you can store your wealth in US 100 dollar bills in a vault in Switzerland. No kidding. The minimum is (IIRC) $500,000 and the “fee” collected for storage is about $4-5k per YEAR!

Peace of mind ain’t cheap.

If you withdraw cash, keep good records. NEVER structure; if you think you’ll withdraw or deposit $10,000 or more over some period (your guess is as good as mine, I’d say over a year or two) then DO IT ALL AT ONCE, and make sure it’s at least $10,000.01 so a Currency Transaction Report is filed with FinCEN. Better the official goons see your name on a report than you give them an excuse to rob you and cage you for technical violation of the (misnamed, as usual) Bank Secrecy Act (which eliminated banking privacy in the USA, of course.)

The more records you have, the more proof you were actively abiding by the law, the more ammo you have in the (still relatively low likelihood) event that you’re stopped by a cop, get the full Monte snooping and have your cash confiscated.

My point? ALL your property is at risk of theft under color of law. Cash isn’t unique. It’s the world in which we now live, because our neighbors are fucking morons and they consent to it. You have to accept this if you’re going to make good decisions based on all relevant information.

Barnum Bailey
Barnum Bailey
December 6, 2016 12:19 pm

Regarding “Bail In’s:”

All they are is an admission that,

“Hey, you deposited your money, which is legally a loan to us, the bank, and we loaned it all out (and then loaned nine times more than your deposit, which we created out of thin air), but then Mt. Vesuvi-Debt erupted, and all our borrowers were living in Pompeii, and the value of all our outstanding loans turned into ash. So tl;dr you gave us your money, we loaned it out, and the borrowers are all incinerated. SOOOOOO SOOOORRRRYYY.”

Eventually, most dollar-based wealth will decline by some huge factor, a result of unimaginable levels of debt being repriced from VAST to NEAR ZERO.

How to avoid losing what I’ve saved is a major, vexing endeavor for me. There are no obvious and certain solutions.

Platoplubius
Platoplubius
December 6, 2016 1:10 pm

Sometimes I feel like John McClain in the first Die Hard movie after he throws the body of a terrorist out the window onto the cop car to get the LAPD officer’s attention, when talking to the average American who thinks the U.S. Constitution rules this land,

WELCOME TO THE PARTY, PAL!!!!

THE Constitution runs the same way our curreny works, by fiat, faith-based….it works because people believe it does, but the time is rapidly approaching where the veil of deceit will be removed for all to see and understand our true position in History…
Ironically, because generations of Americans have been indoctrinated into one version of history, the TRUTH is being used to cut through the fog of propaganda and awaken the sheeple, unfortunately this is all part of the globalist plan to destroy the nation state and get people to yearn for peace, what a ruse!!

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
December 6, 2016 3:47 pm

What a bullshit article. The author just repeats the same fear mongering bullshit that has been circulating for years and freshens it up by adding that “it’s probably about to get worse” under Trump so he can flog his services to steal it from you before the banks or LE can do it first. Fuck him!

YourAverageJoe
YourAverageJoe
December 6, 2016 7:32 pm

If this were to happen to me, I’d get all the personal information I could on all the persons involved…
you know….for future reference.