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What Next | Daily News and Analysis

How to Get Away With Highway Robbery

What Next | Daily News and Analysis

Slate

News, Daily News, News Commentary, Politics

4.62.3K Ratings

🗓️ 11 February 2019

⏱️ 19 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Reporters in South Carolina schlepped to all 46 courthouses in the state to document every civil asset forfeiture case in a three-year period. What they found was an impossibly flawed law that rewards bad police-work. Guests: Anna Lee, reporter for the Greenville News. Read the paper’s series, TAKEN. David Smith, a lawyer and defender of civil asset forfeiture laws, when properly applied. Tell us what you think by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts or sending an email to [email protected]. Follow us on Instagram for updates on the show. Podcast production by Mary Wilson, Jayson De Leon, and Anna Martin. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

So you spent a year going from county to county, courthouse to courthouse just taking pictures

0:11.0

of documents?

0:12.0

Pretty much.

0:14.0

Anna Lee has spent much of the last year traveling around South Carolina, meticulously reviewing

0:20.0

court records.

0:21.0

The work is kind of mind-numbing because you're trying to go as quickly as possible.

0:26.2

Courthouse by courthouse.

0:28.0

She's been filling in this picture of how policing works in her home state.

0:32.0

She's been putting day-to-day interactions with police, like traffic stops, into a big

0:36.4

spreadsheet.

0:37.4

And you're just hunched out of your computer, just typing, typing, typing.

0:42.1

I actually went to a really, really small county and they didn't have computers.

0:48.0

So I actually had to go and pull every single case.

0:52.9

And so just going and pulling these files, it just took forever and ever.

0:59.5

And you would repeat this day after day after day after day.

1:07.2

Just sounds like the basic information is so hard to get.

1:10.4

It is.

1:11.4

It was extremely hard.

1:12.4

In fact, I was, I did not know how hard it was when I first started this story.

1:20.8

Emma has been trying to understand something called civil asset forfeiture, which is a fancy

1:25.4

way of saying that when police suspect you have a crime, they've got a right to take

1:29.2

your stuff.

...

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