“You Make It, We’ll Take It”: DEA Took a Young Man’s Life Savings Without Ever Charging Him with a Crime

May 12th, 2015

Via: Washington Post:

Joseph Rivers was hoping to hit it big. According to the Albuquerque Journal, the aspiring businessman from just outside of Detroit had pulled together $16,000 in seed money to fulfill a lifetime dream of starting a music video company. Last month, Rivers took the first step in that voyage, saying goodbye to the family and friends who had supported him at home and boarding an Amtrak train headed for Los Angeles.

He never made it. From the Albuquerque Journal:

A DEA agent boarded the train at the Albuquerque Amtrak station and began asking various passengers, including Rivers, where they were going and why. When Rivers replied that he was headed to LA to make a music video, the agent asked to search his bags. Rivers complied.

The agent found Rivers’s cash, still in a bank envelope. He explained why he had it: He was starting a business in California, and he’d had trouble in the past withdrawing large sums of money from out-of-state banks.

The agents didn’t believe him, according to the article. They said they thought the money was involved in some sort of drug activity. Rivers let them call his mother back home to corroborate the story. They didn’t believe her, either.

The agents found nothing in Rivers’s belongings that indicated that he was involved with the drug trade: no drugs, no guns. They didn’t arrest him or charge him with a crime. But they took his cash anyway, every last cent, under the authority of the Justice Department’s civil asset forfeiture program.

5 Responses to ““You Make It, We’ll Take It”: DEA Took a Young Man’s Life Savings Without Ever Charging Him with a Crime”

  1. JWSmythe says:

    Civil forfeiture is a big business. He could get it back, but he’ll spend more than the $16K in legal expenses, and the best he’ll get is a judgement against the state for his legal fees. They can opt not to pay, and run no risk of penalties. So either way, the money is gone.

  2. prov6yahoo says:

    He should have taken the bus.

  3. prov6yahoo says:

    Bet his bank ratted him out.

  4. prov6yahoo says:

    This has got to be one of the scummiest things policing agencies do to people (amongst ALL the others). I really hope that someday there is enough outcry to force feds to outlaw this crap.

  5. Larry Glick says:

    Welcome to the country for which so many of our veterans died and were maimed for life.

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