The Uniform Controlled Substances Act allows forfeiture of real and personal property used in drug-related offenses. When property is seized under the authority of the Uniform Controlled Substances Act, the seizing enforcement agency must serve notice of the seizure on the owner of the property and on any person having any known right or interest in the property. This notice must be served within 15 days of the seizure of the property.
A person asserting a claim of ownership or right to possession of the seized property must notify the seizing law enforcement agency of their claim within the time period prescribed by statute. If no person notifies the seizing law enforcement agency of the person's claim of ownership or right to possession within 45 days of the seizure of personal property, or 90 days of the seizure of real property, the property seized is deemed forfeited.
Once property is deemed forfeited, the enforcement agency may retain the property for official use, sell the property, dispose of the property, or forward it to the Drug Enforcement Administration. Ten percent of the net proceeds of any property forfeited during the preceding calendar year must be remitted to the state treasurer for deposit to the general fund.
Agencies who seize and forfeiture property in drug cases must keep records about the property seized and forfeited. The records must include:
Each calendar quarter when property is forfeited, the seizing agency must file a report, with all records, to the attorney general. The attorney general must establish and maintain a searchable public website that includes all of the records. The quarterly report does not need to include a record of forfeited property still being held for use as evidence during an investigation or prosecution of a case or during an appeal from a conviction. By March 1st each year, the seizing agency must file with the attorney general a report summarizing the agency's expenditures from the sum of the net proceeds of all seized and forfeited property in each of the following categories:
In all cases, the burden of proof is on the law enforcement agency to establish by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence, that the property is subject to forfeiture.
PRO: This issue has been around for a while going back to 2017. I am a strong friend of law enforcement. I am concerned with property being seized when there is no conviction and there should be extra safeguards. We should know what is happening out there and maybe we should add a proviso in the budget for local government to maintain these records. If property is being seized it should not be easy and the burden of proof should be higher. Other states require a conviction but this bill doesn't go that far.
CON: Some of the reporting requirements in the bill such as the crime of which the suspect was charged and whether the suspect was convicted. The filing decisions in criminal cases are not made for months if not years after the property is seized. There is a backlog of filing decisions. Seizing agencies would be waiting for years to get that information from the prosecutors office. Other reporting requirements such as office supplies, postage, and printing is a bit of overkill. Oftentimes those costs don't come out of seizure funds, and keeping track of every post-it note is not necessary and over-burdensome. The specificity and minute reporting detail is unreasonable.
Information about forfeiture is already available through information requests or through the Department of Commerce. It makes more sense to continue to work through the Department of Commerce. It is an unfunded mandate.
OTHER: There was an effort in 2016 to reform the civil forfeiture laws. Many states including Oregon and California require criminal convictions for any civil forfeiture. Many other states are getting rid of civil forfeiture and going to criminal forfeiture. This is a baby step in the right direction. It requires law enforcement to keep detailed records of seizure and forfeiture so we know what is going on.