Presumed Guilty: The Law’s Victims in the War on Drugs
- 0 Presumed Guilty
- Introduction; from Tue, 26 Oct 1993 02:02:38 GMT
- 1 The Overview
- Part One: The Overview; from Fri, 19 Nov 93 1:00:19 CST
- 2 The Way You Look
- Part 2: The way you look; from Sat, 20 Nov 93 3:39:38 CST
- 3 Innocent Owners
- Pat Three: Innocent owners; from Sun, 21 Nov 93 3:26:31 CST
- 4 The Informants
- Part Four: The informants; from Sun, 21 Nov 93 21:28:43 CST
- 5 Crime and Punishment
- Part Five: Crime and Punishment; from Tue, 23 Nov 93 20:32:08 CST
- 6 Reforms
- Last Part: reforms; from Thu, 25 Nov 93 23:50:30 CST
- 7 About the Authors
- About the Authors; from Fri, 26 Nov 93 22:03:21 CST
- Contaminated Money
- Re: Dectectable Cocaine in money; from 19 Apr 1993 22:19:40 GMT
- Seizure-Out of Control
- SEIZURE: OUT OF CONTROL (Editorial 3); from Fri, 26 Nov 93 22:03:02 CST
- Texas Observer
- The following story appeared in the _Texas_Observer_, a monthly
- Unreasonable Seizures
- UNREASONABLE SEIZURES (Editorial); from Fri, 26 Nov 93 21:59:00 CST
- What Price This War?
- WHAT PRICE THIS WAR (Editorial 2); from Fri, 26 Nov 93 21:59:39 CST
- Turning crime into a profit center
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Asset forfeiture and traffic laws have one dangerous thing in common: they turn danger into a profit center for government.
- Wachovia fines encourage drug trafficking
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Some people are wondering why no one at Wachovia went to jail for money laundering. The authorities received 160 million dollars in forfeiture and fines. Why would they want to discourage future banks from acting as Wachovia did?
- Forfeiture: legalized bribery
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Forfeiture is good for criminals, bad for the innocent. And big money for corrupt governments and law enforcement organizations.