Via WRSA, this from Reason.
Speaking at a National District Attorneys Association conference in Minneapolis Monday, Sessions said state and local law enforcement could expect changes from U.S. Attorneys in several areas: increased prosecution of gun crimes, immigration offenses, gang activity, and prescription drug abuse, as well as increased asset seizure by the federal government.
“[W]e hope to issue this week a new directive on asset forfeiture—especially for drug traffickers,” Sessions said. “With care and professionalism, we plan to develop policies to increase forfeitures. No criminal should be allowed to keep the proceeds of their crime. Adoptive forfeitures are appropriate as is sharing with our partners.”
Except that the use of drug traffickers to make his point is a red herring. Asset forfeiture has occurred with TSA when travelers carry more money than the fedgov thinks they should be, when local police get a call from a pissed off woman who wants her ex- to get his guns confiscated, local, county and state police when a person is suspected or charged with a crime (not convicted of that crime).
Sessions is using drug traffickers as the straw man. But I have a question for attorney general Sessions. If criminals shouldn’t be able to keep the profits of their illegal activities, then what about the federal government? Should they keep their profits, and what makes the heavy taxation any different than theft or home invasion in the middle of the night by masked criminals?
In Scripture, kings who demanded more than God Himself (a tenth) are looked upon as evil. So too are kings who banned weapons. For evidence you need to go no farther than Nebuchadnezzar. Between sales tax, local taxes, state taxes, federal taxes and FICA, we’re way above a tenth, and thus the government is a criminal organization in God’s eyes.
Turning from my question to Sessions, I would also point out as I have before that the notion of a debt to society is a wicked abomination. In Biblical law, when someone is guilty of theft, he repays the innocent party from whom he stole multiple times over. If not, he might just have been put to death. Indentured servitude has a rich Biblical history, and it has to do with repaying debts.
If you raped, kidnapped or murdered someone, the town would take you outside the gates, following Biblical law, and stone you to death. There was no notion of rehabilitation, and the rehabilitative role of modern prisons is a function of pagan philosophy embodied in contemporary men like John Dewey, who also fathered the modern American school system. Man is a tabula rasa, and so he can be unlearned, so they say. There is no accountability, no judgment, no justice in modern “criminal justice.”
No man owes a debt to society at large. Society at large cannot collect a debt from an individual and call or consider it righteous, for it is not, it never was, and it never will be. Prisons are evil, a hotbed for criminal and pagan Muslim recruitment, and the posse – the judgment of the community – far from being vigilante justice, is righteous judgment. [The use of prisons in counterinsurgency is one of the many reasons the U.S. failed so badly in both Iraq and Afghanistan].
Neither the government nor society is God, it cannot lay claim to debts from its citizens, and it cannot rehabilitate criminals.