The Washington Post has an interesting report about the huge amount of money that Fairfax County spends to go after gambling. The story cites critics who ask “why law enforcement spends valuable time and money on combating sports gambling. The answer is obvious – and explicit in the story: “…police in Virginia are allowed to keep 100 percent of the assets they seize in state gambling cases.” In other words, harassing the gambling business is a profit-making endeavor for police. And it also can be deadly since cops killed an optometrist during a SWAT arrest. The Institute for Justice has a powerful video on the dangers of “policing for profit,” and Fairfax County is just one bad example of how this lures cops into misallocating resources to fight behaviors that shouldn’t even be illegal.
It’s football season, and for millions of Americans that means betting season. …It’s a crime that Fairfax County police take seriously. So seriously that in one recent gambling investigation, they spent — and lost — more than $300,000 in cash to take down a Las Vegas-based online bookie and his group of Fairfax-based associates. …Police critics have long wondered why law enforcement spends valuable time and money on combating sports gambling. In Fairfax, the police rarely publicize their arrests, and the details of their investigations are little known outside the small corps of detectives in the money laundering unit. Unlike drug cases, police in Virginia are allowed to keep 100 percent of the assets they seize in state gambling cases, so other agencies or divisions receive no benefit. And the vast majority of those arrested are placed on probation. “What a waste,” said Nicholas Beltrante, founder of the Virginia Citizens Coalition for Police Accountability, a group formed earlier this year in part to combat unnecessary police spending. “The police should be utilizing their resources for more serious crimes.” Fairfax’s most notorious gambling investigation ended in disaster. In 2006, an undercover detective lost more than $5,000 while betting on NFL games with optometrist Salvatore J. Culosi — and when the detective called in a SWAT team to make the arrest, an officer shot Culosi once in the heart and killed him. …Since 2004, the squad has seized about $1 million in cash and assets annually, but some of those cases landed in federal court, where money is divided among various agencies, Schaible said. …One case from 2006, that of admitted bookmaker Kyle Peters, resulted in police seizing and keeping $566,940 from his bank accounts. Schaible said such funds are recycled “back into investigating cases. It’s helping us resolve these and fight further crime.”
[...] already written about this issue (including an example from my county) and highlighted how asset forfeiture gives government bureaucracies a perverse incentive to [...]
[...] already written about this issue (including an example from my county) and highlighted how asset forfeiture gives government bureaucracies a perverse incentive to [...]
[...] already written about this issue (including an example from my county) and highlighted how asset forfeiture gives government bureaucracies a perverse incentive to [...]
[...] That’s why I’ve criticized abuses of police power, in cases such as asset forfeiture, the destructive war on drugs, videotaping of public officials, and persecution of victimless crime. [...]
[...] sometimes criticize improper police behavior (particularly when I’m the victim), but we should remember that the [...]
[...] sometimes criticize improper police behavior (particularly when I’m the victim), but we should remember that the vast [...]
[...] But these are rare examples of bone-headed behavior by individual cops. I’m much more concerned about bad laws issued by politicians, such as asset forfeiture laws that give cops incentives to harass people who aren’t a threat to society. [...]
Government/Police corruption begins when police can profit from crime prosecution.
“Sometimes you have to burn the village in order to save it.” W. Calley
We’ve developed an unhealthy worshipful attitude about cops in this country. “They lay their lives for us every day,” is common refrain. In fact, being a cop is nowhere near the top of dangerous occupations, being one of the safer ways to make a living. From being generally despised forty years ago to being heroes today is a rather strange development. In fact, they’re neither heroes or pigs – most are just normal guys trying to make a living. Most are OK – some are swine.