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   NMA Blog: Be Careful About This . . . <http://blog.motorists.org>
 
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Be Careful About This . .
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Posted: 03 Jun 2013 07:40 AM PDT

*[image: Be Careful About This . . .]
By Eric Peters, Automotive Columnist*

If you like to buy used cars, you may also like to pay cash. It’s a great
way to convince a seller you’re serious — and ready to deal. Unfortunately
— these days — it can also lead to literally unimaginable trouble. Not from
the seller. Not even from street thugs.

But from the thugs acting color of “the law” — who wear state-issued
costumes and drive state-issued vehicles.

Let’s say you’re going to try to close a deal on a car you saw advertised.
You e-mailed or spoke with the owner on the phone. The vehicle sounds like
the ticket and the price he’s asking is in the ballpark as far as what
you’d like to pay. So, you arrange to meet up — with the intention of
buying the thing if it’s as-advertised, checks out mechanically and if you
and the seller can agree on a fair price.

Prior to heading out, you stop by your bank to get the money for the deal
out of your account. If the amount is $10,000 or more, the bank — now a de
facto agent of the government — will (by law) report that to the
government. It is deemed* inherently* “suspicious” merely to withdraw that
sum of your own money from your own account. But that’s not the big danger.
The big danger comes when you *leave* the bank and head out to check out
the car you’re interested in buying.

Let’s say you get stopped along the way for a minor traffic offense. During
the “your papers, please” rigmarole, the cop notices the envelope with the
cash for your purchase sitting on the seat beside you. Uh-oh. That is more
than merely *suspicious*. It is in fact legally sufficient provocation for
the cop to *seize* your money. It is regarded as prima facie evidence of
“drug activity.” No additional or corroborating evidence (such as actual
drugs in the car) is required. Merely to be found in possession of more
cash than the cops (and *courts*) arbitrarily decree to be in excess of
what “common people … carry” is enough — in the words of Tennessee
thug-in-costume (that is, “officer”) Larry Bates, who relieved NJ insurance
adjuster George Reby of $22,000 (story
here<http://jonathanturley.org/2012/05/24/highway-robbery-tennessee-police-are-seizing-cash-from-out-of-state-visitors-in-policy-called-policing-for-profit/>)
merely because Reby was found to be carrying $22,000 in cash during a
probable cause-free search of his vehicle in the wake of a traffic stop.
According to Bates, Reby “could not prove (the money) was legitimate.”

So Bates simply *took* the money.

In other words, it’s up to *us* to prove that whatever cash we have is
“legitimate” — else the state’s badged goons can just take it. This is
called *civil forfeiture* by the organized gangs who justify their
depredations under color of law.

You may never see your money again — and even if you do, be assured, it
will take a great deal of your time and effort (and more of your money) to
get it back. In Reby’s case, he had to travel all the way back to TN from
NJ in order to plead with the state thugs to return *his* money — which
they eventually (and clearly, begrudgingly) did.

And Reby’s ordeal is not a case of a thug cop acting beyond his authority.
This sort of thing is now happening routinely — as deliberate policy — *and
the courts have amen’d it as ok*.

Consider the case of Texas resident Javier Gonzales. He was on his way to
buy a used car (he owned a used car lot at the time) and was carrying
$10,032 in a briefcase. He was pulled over by two Texas costumed highwaymen
— members of the state-sanctioned gang that calls itself the Jim Wells
County Task Force — for the crime of not having a front license plate on
his vehicle. Gonzales made the error of answering yes when the gang members
queried him as to whether he was carrying “large amounts of money.” *
Naturlich*, a drug sniffing dog was then brought up — and it “signaled” the
presence of drugs. No actual drugs were found during the subsequent seizure
of Gonzales’ car — and his cash.

Here’s a look at how the process works; it’s a different case — but the
tactics are the same:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJqq6KCOkdM<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJqq6KCOkdM>

Later on, Gonzales was presented with a waiver that gave him the
opportunity to “sign over his money” and go free — or face arrest for
money-laundering. Again, no evidence of *anything* was produced — let alone
presented to a court. It was sufficient merely to have money — and that the
thugs-in-blue (cammo, lately) wanted it.

A bewildered Gonzalez told NPR:

“So at that time we got in our car and we left, still trying to figure out
what just happened. We got officers that took our cash. We got officers
that told us we can’t get an attorney. So I’m thinking, are these guys
officers of law? *Did I just get robbed of my money?*” (Italics added.)

Yes, Mr. Gonzales — that’s exactly what happened.

And it could just as easily happen to *you*, too.

Gonzales eventually got his money back — after hiring an attorney and
spending a great deal of money and time pursuing his case through the
courts. But the fact that it was taken under color of law and that asset
forfeiture laws have *not* been repealed or even scaled back but in fact
been implemented with ever-increasing aggressiveness is the thing to take
away from all of this.

America has become a country littered with laws — but which has become
essentially a lawless place. It is no longer necessary for the law
enforcers to have *evidence* — tangible, external, substantive — that some
law has been violated. It is enough for them merely to wish to take what
you have, *merely because you have it* — and they do not.

So, be very, very careful when you next go used car shopping. The thugs are
out there, just itching to make you “stand and deliver.”

Comments?

www.epautos.com

*Are You A NMA Member?* If not, read about *the
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Be Careful About This . . .<http://blog.motorists.org/be-careful-about-this/>

Further Reading:

   - Car Buying Tip: Check The Fine Print For These 10
Qualifiers<http://blog.motorists.org/car-buying-tip-fine-print-qualifiers/>
   - How To Buy A Used Car Online: 8 Essential
Tips<http://blog.motorists.org/how-to-buy-a-used-car-online-8-essential-tips/>
   - Dealer Dirty Tricks <http://blog.motorists.org/dealer-dirty-tricks/>
   - The Fixer <http://blog.motorists.org/the-fixer/>
   - 5 Essential Used Car Buying
Secrets<http://blog.motorists.org/used-car-buying-secrets/>

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