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Comment by BrenBarn

4 days ago

> That would make legitimate civil asset forfeiture impossible to execute.

Assuming such a thing exists. . .

> The fire department gets called to an exploded meth lab containing a few dead bodies and a safe containing $200,000. What do?

I'm not sure I see how the fact that meth was present changes anything there (i.e., vs. a house fire with a few dead bodies and no meth). If some agency wants to go through a court proceeding to establish that the money was used illegally that's fine. The problem with civil asset forfeiture is it's done without any of that process.

I'd bet this is covered by other laws. Practically if you come back to claim it you probably expose yourself to being advised of running the meth lab. If it's unclaimed it's then abandoned property, and pretty sure there's laws of how that gets dealt with.