The vehicle was not speeding or driving recklessly. It had no broken lights or expired tags, nor had the car been reported stolen. What it did have was out-of-state plates on a rental car.
This is enough to trigger a traffic stop during Operation Rolling Thunder, the annual five-day law enforcement blitz that turns a 20-mile stretch of freeway between Charlotte, North Carolina, and Atlanta, Georgia, into a gauntlet for travelers.
This seems ripe for federal legislation to ban any civil asset forfeiture in the absence of a criminal conviction. It would be an easy political win for any person or party that managed to get it through.
All true, but once again we find that police will abuse their power to the maximum extent, then wonder why everyone hates them. All those "good apples" should be vigorously opposing policies and practices such as these.
An article like this about behaviors like this could never be written about an organization that was actually there to protect the public.
Oh, sure, definitely. I'm just shocked that something that is so widely abused, and has very little apparent legitimate purpose, hasn't been targeted for legislation.
Last Week Tonight's piece on civil forfeiture. Cops just take your shit and you can't even challenge it.
For instance traveling to buy a car with cash, have cash with you as you're moving to a new job in a new city? Cops stop you, take your money and you can't challenge it in any way, even when you've genuine proof that you're going to buy a car with that money and the deals already made and verified and whatnot.