Quote:
Originally Posted by ShysterJon
No, that's incorrect. There is a forfeiture statute that's separate from the RICO statute. Forfeiture is used in RICO cases, but in many other types of cases as well.
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This is a little different than the above case, but it is one that I wonder about. Frequently, I'll read about a traffic stop on an Interstate hwy where the Highway Patrol pulls a car over and finds a huge amount of cash in the car. No drugs or anything outright illegal, but they newspaper says they Highway Patrol confiscated the cash since "nobody claimed it."
I asked one deputy about this and he said there's a federal law that allows them to confiscate if it's over $10K or, if like the newspaper says, "nobody claims it." His wife came over and he left, so that ended that conversation at the gym.
Is there any law that says how much cash you can have on you? And even if you got the money by the most nefarious of means, why not say it's yours and say nothing more.
Cop: Who's cash is this?
Suspect: Mine
Cop: Where did you get it?
Suspect: I chose to remain silent, may I go now officer?
At this point the cop has your name and a report that you were carrying a large amount of cash. Since you've claimed it, does this mean he can't take it? Or can he still take it and you have to go prove how you got that money before it's released?
The point being, whether you're honest or a crook, do you have the right to carry around a lot of cash and do the cops have a right to confiscated it?
I think there was a lottery winner who won $100 Million and he kept carrying around a lot of cash and once it was known, people kept breaking into his truck (parked outside of strip clubs) and stole $40-$50K each time. He just blew it off and went to the bank to get more. I think he was up there in West Virginia or Pennsylvania. I wonder if the cops would take his money? Causing a nuisance?
Just curious about these cases each time I read about them in the newspaper.