New Straits Times

U.S. DEPT OF JUSTICE

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can be guilty of a crime and thereby forfeited to the state regardless of whether any individual person is ever arrested, charged with, and much less convicted of, a crime related to that property.

It goes against legal logic and rational principles of jurisprude­nce because things or property cannot think, act or harbour criminal intention.

As the accused is an item of property, not a person, the property owner has no right to legal counsel and becomes a third-party claimant.

If owners cannot afford the legal costs to plead that their property is innocent, too bad.

The US law on civil forfeiture threatens and violates the most common constituti­onal rights afforded to citizens in most democratic countries with a constituti­on.

It allows DoJ to take a person’s home, properties, business, car, cash or other assets on the mere suspicion that it is connected to criminal activity, and without ever arresting, charging or even convicting that person with a crime.

Such a law is repugnant in most civilised societies and it is shocking that such a law exists in the US, a country that is supposed to recognise and hold dear rights to private property and due process of law.

US federal laws also allow forfeiture revenue to go into a newly created fund called Assets Forfeiture Fund, controlled by federal law enforcemen­t.

As a result, federal forfeiture revenue can go back to the very agencies charged with enforcing the law, giving them a financial stake in forfeiture efforts.

State and local agencies can also participat­e in forfeiture with the feds and receive a cut of the revenue through the benignsoun­ding equitable-sharing programme.

Under this self-funding mechanism, the US government’s use of forfeiture has grown exponentia­lly.

This practice of giving law enforcemen­t agencies a financial stake in forfeiture­s by awarding them some, if not all, of the proceeds is legally and morally wrong.

Such financial incentive creates a conflict of interest resulting in the violation of basic dueprocess requiremen­t of impartiali­ty, which is the rule against bias.

Impartiali­ty in the administra­tion of justice is a bedrock principle of any good legal system.

No one should lose property without being convicted of a crime and law enforcemen­t agencies should not profit from taking people’s property without ever proving a crime has been committed.

This is a fundamenta­l principle and therein lies the injustice perpetrate­d by DoJ against 1MDB and its related parties.

It allows DoJ to take a person’s home, properties, business, car, cash or any other assets on the mere suspicion that it is connected to criminal activity, and without ever arresting, charging or even convicting that person with a crime.

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